Padres Mission’s countdown of the top 20 prospect in the San Diego Padres’ organization comes to a conclusion with the No. 1 prospect, as voted on by our writers.
Check out all of the other entries in the ranking here:
No. 1: Ethan Salas (San Antonio Missions)
Despite being born in Kissimmee, Fla., Salas qualified as an international free agent with family ties to Venezuela. As a 16-year-old, he was the No. 1 prospect in the 2023 class, signing with the Padres for a $5.6 million bonus, at the time the largest handed out in the current capped system.
Year
Age
AgeDif
Tm
Lg
Lev
Aff
G
PA
AB
R
H
2B
3B
HR
RBI
SB
CS
BB
SO
BA
OBP
SLG
OPS
TB
GDP
HBP
SH
SF
IBB
2023
17
-7.4
San Antonio
TL
AA
SDP
9
33
28
2
5
1
0
0
3
0
1
4
8
.179
.303
.214
.517
6
1
1
0
0
0
2023
17
-5.3
Fort Wayne
MIDW
A+
SDP
9
37
35
3
7
1
0
0
3
0
0
2
10
.200
.243
.229
.472
8
0
0
0
0
0
2023
17
-4.2
Lake Elsinore
CALL
A
SDP
48
220
191
35
51
11
2
9
35
5
2
24
57
.267
.350
.487
.837
93
3
2
0
3
0
2024
18
-4.3
Fort Wayne
MIDW
A+
SDP
113
469
412
38
85
27
2
4
53
10
3
47
98
.206
.288
.311
.599
128
4
3
0
7
0
2024
18
-4.2
Peoria
AZFL
Fal
Â
23
107
92
14
21
6
0
4
21
4
1
13
27
.228
.327
.424
.751
39
1
1
0
1
0
2025
19
-5.0
San Antonio
TL
AA
SDP
10
41
32
5
6
1
0
0
5
2
0
6
5
.188
.325
.219
.544
7
0
1
1
1
0
Salas, who played with players twice his age in the Venezuelan winter league just months before signing, made his debut in the Padres organization two days before his 17th birthday, playing for the Low-A Lake Elsinore Storm.
Coming from a baseball family—dad Jose Salas Sr. played catcher in the Atlanta system, his paternal grandfather and his dad’s brother played in the minors and Ethan has two brothers currently in the minors (Jose Jr. with the Minnesota Twins and Andrew with the Miami Marlins)—Salas had a wealth of knowledge that helped elevate his prospect status. Plus, being a 6-foot-2, 185-pounder who would have had to wait another year or two before being drafted doesn’t hurt, either.
He was a rare catcher that not only had elite defense, but had a good approach at the plate as a left-handed hitter. He has a proclivity for hitting the ball to all fields and was scouted with plus power. Salas showed those skills at Lake Elsinore. In his first 48 professional games, Salas had a slash line of .267/.350/.487 with nine homers, 35 RBIs and five stolen bases. Defensively, he had just one error and threw out eight of 37 steal attempts.
As the Padres are wont to do, Salas was quickly promoted to the High-A Fort Wayne TinCaps. He wasn’t there very long, playing in just nine games with Fort Wayne and struggling offensively with a .200/.243/.229 slash line. With the season coming to an end, the Padres surprisingly moved Salas up again, this time to the Double-A San Antonio Missions, where he spent another nine games. There, he had a slash line of .179/.303/.214.
Baseball America and MLB Pipeline each had Salas ranked as the No. 8 prospect in baseball as he returned to Fort Wayne to start the 2024 season as a 17-year-old, the youngest player in the Midwest League. This time, he stuck around for 113 games, but the offense he showed at Lake Elisnore wasn’t there. Salas put together a .206/.288/.311 slash line with four homers, 53 RBIs and 10 steals, playing against players who on average were 4.3 years older than he was. He threw out 28 of 111 runners attempting to steal in 67 games at catcher. With a full season under his belt, the Friars sent him to the Arizona Fall League, a prospect showcase. The offense was still a work in progress as he finished with a .228/.327/.424 slash line, but he did pop four homers and drove in 21.
The lack of offense started to dampen Salas’ prospect luster, as Baseball America dropped him to No. 31 and MLB Pipeline to No. 33 entering 2025. Now 18 years old, Salas went up to Double-A, where he was five years younger than the average player in the Texas League. But just 10 games into the season, Salas’ campaign came to an abrupt end with a stress reaction in his lower back.
Salas, now 19, is likely returning to San Antonio to begin 2026. He participated in major-league camp this year, but went just 2-for-11 (.182). He slid further in the prospect rankings, tumbling to No. 90 in the Baseball America list and not being included in MLB Pipeline’s Top 100. Some outlets even moved Salas to No. 2 in the Padres’ system, behind last year’s first-round draft pick, left-handed starter Kruz Schoolcraft.
All of this adds up to making 2026 a key year for Salas. The defense is still there, with improvements made to his throwing process to better cut down runners. His approach at the plate has been considered simple (in a good way, with fewer moving parts) and he had an 86% in-zone contact rate in 2024 and his brief stint in 2025 before being hurt. He improved his strikeout rate by about five percentage points from 2023 to 2024 even though he didn’t fare well against breaking balls.
How the Friars treat Salas if he has success offensively will be something to watch. Double-A pitching is sometimes better than Triple-A pitching due to the number of prospects at the second-highest minor-league level, so any development on that front would be a huge boon for the best catcher in the system.
While he was out injured last year and continuing this offseason, Salas worked with a number of people who have catching experience in the Padres’ organization, including A.J. Ellis, Scott Servais and Mike Borzello, a current advance scout with a lot of experience on championship-winning teams as a bullpen catcher and catching coach.
It helped Salas with game-planning and other items to sharpen him defensively. He is now up to 215 pounds (and down to 6-foot-1 in revised measurements) and worked to shorten his swing to improve his offense.
“Cerebrally he’s advanced for his age, and for as little as he’s played, he absorbs the information really well,” Borzello told the San Diego Union-Tribune. “Now it’s just about playing and getting reps.”
Added Salas: “I think that’s why I didn’t see last year as the biggest negative in the world. I just took a lot of time to reflect, kind of make a plan starting forward and how I want to start going about things and I want to start playing and taking care of my business.”
With better health, Salas could make a loud return to top prospect lists around the league in 2026. Hard as it is to believe, he’s still just a teenager, as he won’t turn 20 until June.
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