The San Diego Padres’ fifth-round pick from the 2024 MLB Draft out of Firth, Nebraska, Kale Fountain made his professional baseball debut 2025. He had a decent start to his season in the Arizona Complex League, hitting .262/.386/.364 with one home run, 18 RBI, and 12 stolen bases. However, once he was moved up to the next level in Low-A, Fountain had his weaknesses exposed, hitting only .195 with 17 walks and 34 strikeouts over 148 plate appearances with the Lake Elsinore Storm.Â
Fountain has great plate discipline, as he demonstrated in Rookie Ball, and was scouted with 65-grade power while still in high school, but his power has yet to show itself in the minors. That will need to be the next step in his development, especially if he expects to play one of the corner infield positions long-term.
As Fountain has a full year in the Friars’ system under his belt, he will need to show improvements in his game. The 2025 campaign saw more weakness exposed than upside. He still grades out with a 65 in raw power and 55 in in-game power, but everything else in his game sits at 40 or below in fielding, running, and his overall hit tool.
In turn, Fountain is a boom-or-bust prospect in the classic sense. He’s got a big frame (6’4″, 225 pounds) and was impressive enough in high school to convince the Padres to go way over-slot to sign him (he was originally committed to LSU). Tommy John surgery on his throwing elbow in October 2024 certainly didn’t help matters either — with a fully healthy offseason under his belt, there’s reason to believe he can turn things around.
A corner-infield prospect who played entirely at first base in 2025, there have been ravings about his excellent arm as well. If he can remain nimble as he further fills out his hulking frame, a move to right field could be in the cards (and would take a little pressure off of his bat to develop into a perennial 30-homer threat). And even with middling grades regarding his running ability, he stole more than 20 bases last year and holds Nebraska’s state record for career stolen bases (84) at the high school level.Â
Fountain only turned 20 last August, so there’s still plenty of growth and development that can change the course of his future. But the performance in his debut season is cause for some concern about where his floor is at. If he maintains at his current pace, then he may never make much noise in the big leagues, but if he can develop his power into more results and fewer strikeouts, then he will reach his ceiling and ascend up this list in future seasons.
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