GOODYEAR, Ariz. â The message coming out of the desert is not subtle. After a 2025 season in which their outfield ranked dead last in Major League Baseball in run production, the Cleveland Guardians are not chasing a blockbuster free agent. They are not scrambling for a veteran stopgap. Instead, they are doubling down on youth â and betting their offensive future on a tidal wave of prospects, led by the towering, tantalizing presence of Chase DeLauter.
âIn the offseason, people want to talk about what free agents are they going to get,â Ideastream Public Media commentator Terry Pluto said this week. âAnd the Guardians keep saying, âWell, our free agents in effect are really the guys coming up through our farm system.ââ
That statement is either visionary â or dangerously bold.
At the center of the gamble stands DeLauter, the 16th overall pick in the 2022 MLB Draft out of James Madison University. At 6-foot-4, with a swing built for damage and a presence that immediately commands attention, he looks every bit the impact outfielder Cleveland has lacked in recent years.

âThe other day he played, hit a home run and a double,â Pluto said. âAnd if Chase DeLauter hits like not just what the Guardians think he will, but what Iâve seen and what I think he will, the Guardians have a chance to really have an impact player in the outfield and middle of their lineup.â
Thatâs not small talk in a franchise starving for outfield thunder.
Last season, Clevelandâs outfield unit struggled to produce consistently, with All-Star Steven Kwan serving as the lone steady force. Beyond Kwanâs contact bat and defensive reliability, the production simply wasnât there. The result? A lineup too often dependent on pitching brilliance and narrow margins.
Now, the front office appears ready to flip the script.
But DeLauterâs story is layered with both promise and caution. Talent has never been the question. Durability has. He underwent right wrist surgery last year and sports hernia surgery as well. Just last month, he missed four spring games with precautionary lower-body soreness. For a player with only 583 professional at-bats, health has become the subplot shadowing the headline.
And yet, when he plays, the numbers demand attention: a .302 career minor league average, 20 home runs, 40 doubles. Those are not flashes â those are foundations.
His major league debut came in the postseason last year, a 6-1 Guardians victory that hinted at the organizationâs belief in his poise. Throwing a young hitter into playoff intensity is not common. Itâs a statement.
Still, DeLauter is not alone in this outfield revolution.

George Valera, once a fixture on top prospect lists, finally reached Cleveland late last season. Injuries â including knee surgery â slowed his ascent, but evaluators continue to see offensive upside. The bat speed. The leverage. The potential for power that could lengthen a lineup starving for extra-base hits.
Then thereâs Kahlil Watson, a former first-round pick by the Miami Marlins who arrived in Cleveland as part of a trade involving veteran first baseman Josh Bell. Originally developed as an infielder, Watson is transitioning to the outfield, reshaping his defensive profile while continuing to mature offensively. He spent most of the past two seasons at Double-A Akron before logging 43 Triple-A games in Columbus. Pluto doesnât expect him to break camp with the big club, but the trajectory suggests he could surface later in the year.
âI donât see him making the team this year,â Pluto said, âbut he could go to Double-A at Akron and then maybe move to Triple-A and come up later in the season.â
This is not a single prospect story. Itâs a movement.
Pluto admitted he hasnât paid this much attention to a cluster of young hitters rising simultaneously in Clevelandâs system in a long time. âThey always talk about wave of players,â he said. âIâm not saying itâs tsunami, but ⌠they got some waves coming and theyâre good waves.â
That metaphor matters.
Because the Guardians believe their pitching depth remains strong enough to contend. Leadership is intact. The clubhouse culture is stable. What they need â what they desperately lacked â is outfield impact.

And instead of buying it, theyâre building it.
Even beyond the outfield, names like first baseman Ralphy Velazquez are generating internal buzz. Velazquez impressed at Double-A Akron with what Pluto called a âsharp bat,â drawing comparisons to how DeLauter stood out during his first professional season in 2023.
The Guardians have 18 spring training games left before Opening Day on March 26 in Seattle. Eighteen auditions. Eighteen chances for these young hitters to force decisions.
The gamble is clear. Cleveland is trusting development over dollars. Youth over certainty. Projection over proof.
If DeLauter becomes the middle-of-the-order force they envision, this wonât look like a risk â it will look like a masterstroke.
But if the injuries linger, if the bats stall, if the wave never fully crashes ashore, the questions will come fast.
For now, in Goodyear, belief is louder than doubt.
The kids are swinging.
And the Guardians are all in.