One name is keeping the entire St. Louis Cardinals on high alert, watching every swing and every game: Joshua Baez.
With the Memphis Redbirds’ Triple-A team acting as a “final checkpoint” before MLB, Baez has not only emerged as one of the organization’s most notable prospects—but is also being internally assessed as a potential candidate for a future closer role, a path not typically taken by an outfielder.
But with his exceptional shooting and hitting power, coupled with his ability to create explosive swing moments, Baez is forcing the Cardinals to reconsider his future.
Joshua Baez isn’t a safe prospect. He’s the kind of player whose every swing can change the course of a game.
At Triple-A this season, Baez continues to demonstrate the characteristics that made him famous in the Cardinals’ farming system:
Extremely high exit velocity, many hits exceeding 110 mph
Top-tier raw power
Ability to create home runs from seemingly unremarkable pitches
In recent games, Baez has consistently produced “fire-burning” hits, with pitches flying straight over the fence or through the gap outfield, leaving opponents with almost no way to react.

According to internal analysis from the MLB Pipeline system, Baez possesses one of the strongest “power tools” in the entire Cardinals system currently.
What makes Baez special — and also controversial — is the contrast between:
Incredible power
But inconsistent ball contact
At Triple-A, he is facing a familiar problem: experienced pitchers exploiting weaknesses in plate discipline. In some series, Baez’s strikeout rate increased when facing high-quality breaking balls.
However, the Cardinals didn’t see this as an absolute negative sign. Instead, they viewed it as the “final test” to determine if Baez could become an MLB impact player.
The most surprising thing from within the Cardinals: Baez is being evaluated not only as a hitter, but also as a player with the potential to transition to a pitcher role in certain special development models — or at least as a hybrid “late-inning weapon.”
The reasons stem from:
Extremely strong arm strength from outfield play
High pitching speed during testing
Rare athletic profile (speed + power + arm elite)

In modern baseball, players with toolset like Baez are sometimes considered for versatile roles, especially if the bat doesn’t develop consistently at the MLB level.
Although no official decision has been made, his mention in discussions about a “late-game leverage role” suggests the Cardinals highly value his physical potential.
According to the latest internal analysis, Baez is currently experiencing a “mixed performance” phase in Memphis:
Power is consistently present,
But consistency in contact fluctuates,
His ability to handle breaking balls remains an area for improvement.
Some experts within the system believe:
“Baez doesn’t lack tools. The question is simply: what kind of player will he become in MLB?”
The St. Louis issue now isn’t simply “when to call Baez up to MLB,” but rather:
Will he be a pure power hitter?
A versatile role player?
Or will he be tested in a completely different direction?
With the Cardinals restructuring their youth roster, Baez has become one of the most important pieces.
In the Cardinals Triple-A system, Baez is being compared to names like Blaze Jordan and Jimmy Crooks. But the difference lies in his “potential ceiling”:
Jordan: contact + discipline
Crooks: stable catcher profile
Baez: high-risk, high-reward superstar ceiling
This is precisely what makes him the most debated name in the entire prospect pool.
The Cardinals understand one thing: Joshua Baez will not develop in a straight line.
He could:
Become a dangerous slugger in MLB
Or become an “unfinished toolset” case
Or unexpectedly explode if his contact improves at the right time
But one thing is certain: he cannot be ignored any longer.
Joshua Baez is not just an ordinary Cardinals prospect. He is a symbol of a bigger question: is pure strength enough to survive in modern MLB?
The Triple-A system is providing the answer day by day.
And Cardinals — and indeed the entire NL Central — are waiting to see if this rough gem will crack open… or shatter under the pressure of peak performance.