The Yankees announced their non-roster spring training invitees on Thursday, a total of 27 players. This means 14 new pitchers will be reporting to camp: seven from within the organization and seven who signed some version of a minor-league contract for the 2026 campaign. Among the invitees are two of the organizations’s most notable pitching prospects and a few more players who found success last season and will look to keep the momentum alive.
The prospects headlining the list are the two pitchers by far the most likely to pitch in the Bronx at some point in the near future: Ben Hess and Carlos Lagrange. As a reminder, well-regarded young starter Elmer Rodríguez will be there as well, but’s already on the 40-man roster and doesn’t need an NRI.
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Hess was the Yankees’ first-round draft pick in 2024, and rewarded their investment by posting much better numbers as a pro than he ever did at the University of Alabama. The 23-year-old has a lively fastball that sits in the mid-90s and a deep arsenal with two plus breaking balls and an effective changeup. He ended the season with Double-A Somerset, and while he’s likely to start the 2026 season there as well, Hess is a top candidate to earn a promotion to Triple-A sometime this year. If all goes right, he could even make his MLB debut à la 2025 Cam Schlittler — though the latter gained far more in-season helium last year.
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Lagrange’s stock is in a similar place as Hess’s with both pitchers usually somewhere in the back end of Top 100 overall prospects lists, but his career journey to this point has looked a lot different. The 6-foot-7 Lagrange struggled severely with command issues prior to last season and walked 20 percent of the hitters he faced in Low-A and the Complex league in 2024. His 2025 campaign was a revelation, as much-improved control allowed his lethal fastball-slider combination to pop. He struck out 33.4 percent of the hitters he faced. The walks issue was more apparent in Double-A than it was in High-A and a few flare-ups caused his BB% and ERA to inflate, but when Lagrange was on his “A” game, he recorded several of the most impressive starts at any level of the Yankees’ minor leagues. If the 22-year-old’s ability to reign in his electric stuff continues on its current path of linear development, he will be an incredibly exciting pitcher and should draw comparisons to the Brewers’ Jacob Misiorowski, who shares not only Lagrange’s frame but also many of his strengths and weaknesses.
Kyle Carr fits the mold of the crafty left-handed starter that found success around MLB in 2025; a pitcher who won’t blow hitters away with his fastball but has a deep enough arsenal to navigate starts effectively and efficiently. His numbers in the minor leagues jumped off the page. Carr posted a 1.96 ERA in 119.1 innings at High-A Hudson Valley despite a mediocre 11.9 K-BB%. He was older than most High-A hitters and will turn 24 in May, so Double-A will be a big test for him this upcoming season.
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The Yankees drafted Brendan Beck out of Stanford in the second round of the 2021 MLB Draft, and the now-26-year old finds himself on the verge of a big-league debut after only being able to make 10 professional starts from the time he was drafted up through the end of 2024. Finally healthy last year, Beck spent 2025 between Double-A and Triple-A. Beck dominated Somerset with a 1.82 ERA in 54.1 innings, but hit a wall for the first time in his pro career in Scranton with a 4.44 ERA in 77 innings. It’s unlikely Beck plays a pivotal role at the big-league level in 2026, but his proximity could make him a viable trade candidate. If you’re watching the World Baseball Classic this year, you’ll also probably glimpse him on Team Great Britain alongside his brother, Tristan (of the Giants), and the Yankees’ Jazz Chisholm Jr.
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Michael Arias spent four years in the Cubs organization between 2021-24 before signing a minor-league contract with the Yankees for 2025. Arias pitched just 29.2 innings last season, but did so across four levels and ended the season with Double-A Somerset (and was briefly on the 40-man roster). He turned 24 in Novmber. Although Arias records a lot of strikeouts, he struggles with his command to the point where it could derail him from ever reaching the big leagues.
Harrison Cohen is another high-strikeouts, high-walks type and is primarily deployed out of the bullpen. Cohen spent his 2025 between Double-A and Triple-A where he recorded an ERA of 2.01 and 1.57 respectively, and picked up five saves. He walked 14.4 percent of the hitters he faced last season, so that number will need to come down for him to be considered a legitimate bullpen option in the Bronx. The 26-year-old will also be on the Team Israel pitching staff in the World Baseball Classic.
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A former Rule 5 pick by the Rangers who was returned after never pitching for Texas, Carson Coleman made his first professional appearance since 2022 last season, spreading his 17 innings out between Low-A, High-A, and Double-A. He posted a 1.59 ERA with a 23.8-percent strikeout rate and 3.2-percent walk rate, but the sample size is too small to get excited about. FanGraphs put a 70-grade on his fastball, however, so that pitch coupled with the pinpoint command he displayed in 2025 could put the 27-year-old on the radar this season with more opportunities.
Dylan Coleman has 93 innings of MLB experience under his belt, almost entirely with the Kansas City Royals. He appeared in 68 games in 2022 and was a reliable bullpen option for Kansas City with a 2.78 ERA. His performance fell off a cliff the following year, and he pitched just one inning in 2024 with the Houston Astros before missing out on MLB play last year entirely. A stint with the Orioles’ Triple-A team went awry, and after being released in May, he exclusively trained with Feole Pitching. The minor-league contract he signed with the Yankees in January represents a comeback opportunity for the 29-year-old’s career.
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Alexander Cornielle spent three years with the Milwaukee Brewers’ High-A affiliate before earning a long-awaited promotion to Double-A where he spent most of 2025 before getting a cup of coffee with the Triple-A team to end the season. The 24-year-old will probably report to the Yankees’ counterpart in Scranton and remain there for most, if not all of the season unless Matt Blake and company have a trick up their sleeves with him.
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Yovanny Cruz is another career minor-leaguer who spent 2017-23 with the Cubs organization with most of his time spent in the lower levels of professional baseball. He took a two-year hiatus in 2020 & 2021 due in part to COVID-19 and Tommy John surgery, and never pitched more than 30 innings in a season again until logging 59.1 innings in Double-A last year as part of the Red Sox organization. Command issues have plagued Cruz his entire career, and at 26 years old he’ll need to sort them out now in order to reach the next level.
Drake Fellows spent the past five years in the Pirates organization, and spent most of that time getting hit pretty hard. He pitched 112.1 innings in Triple-A last season with a 4.41 ERA, which was the lowest mark of his career since 2021 in the Complex league. It’s a step in the right direction, but for a guy who will turn 28 next month, he has many more steps still to take before popping up on the big-league radar.
Bradley Hanner is a bullpen arm who was with the Cleveland Guardians organization from 2023-25. He pitched well in Double-A during those first two seasons, but Triple-A proved to be a daunting challenge and he posted a 4.74 ERA at the level in 49.1 innings in 2025. Hanner struck out an impressive 29 percent of hitters, but the contact he did allow was loud and punishing. Entering his age-27 season, Hanner appears to be a minor leaguer for the foreseeable future.
The one MLB inning Adam Kloffenstein pitched in 2024 went smoothly and he got out unscathed, but 2025 was disastrous as he pitched 82 frames in Triple-A with the Toronto Blue Jays organization to the tune of a 6.26 ERA. Kloffenstein had a good year in 2023 at the Double-A and Triple-A levels, but his results since then have been a lot closer to the dud of a season he recorded last year. The 25-year-old will likely come out of the Triple-A bullpen in 2026.
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Travis MacGregor spent most of 2023 and 2024 in Triple-A with the Pittsburgh Pirates and Los Angeles Angels organizations, but the Milwaukee Brewers and Texas Rangers chose to deploy him in Double-A instead in 2025. The Yankees will be his fifth team in three years, and he’s less likely to earn a spot in this big-league bullpen as he was with the rest. The 28-year old is not exactly expected to make his MLB debut in the immediate future.
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