The division reports debuted last year. The goal of this article series is to provide a quick overview of all dynasty-relevant information from each division. Each team has multiple levels each containing plenty of impactful prospects which can feel impossible to keep up with. This article series, which will be updated once per month, will help dynasty managers stay up to date on performances, injuries, promotions, and more. New this season is the inclusion of tiers in the rankings. Next to their rank, each prospect is assigned a tier. The tier range is 1-5.
- Tier 1: A potential difference-making dynasty prospect. Somebody who would rank in the top-20ish prospects for dynasty baseball
- Tier 2: A still very good dynasty prospect who holds plenty of value. This prospect would typically rank in the 21-75 range
- Tier 3: A mid-tier prospect who could be valuable but has questions and concerns present in his profile ranking in the 76-150 range
- Tier 4: A prospect who is worth knowing, but is reserved for deeper leagues. This prospect would rank 151-250
- Tier 5: The rest of the prospects fall into Tier 5
This article details all of the changes dynasty managers need to know on prospects from the Angels. The goal is to help dynasty managers stay updated on the latest information with in-depth looks at each specific team! Each division will come with a monthly update that readers can look forward to.
This list features prospects not currently in the Majors.
Notable Prospect Promotions and News
- After returning to action last month, Caden Dana has been promoted to the Angels. He recently made his first start for the big league club of the season, and he struck out 4 batters and allowed just a run over 5 innings against the Royals. This is a good a chance as any for Dana to prove he should be in the Angels’ rotation in 2026.
- Part of the big league shuffling was Christian Moore being optioned to Triple-A. He is under the AB threshold, but he did spend enough time on the big league club to lose his prospect status. He would be in the top spot otherwise.
- Mitch Farris, who did not make this list last month, has been promoted to the majors after posting a 28 percent strikeout rate in Double-A. At the time of writing, he has a pair of starts under his belt, totalling 11 innings with 7 strikeouts and a 2.45 ERA.
Notable Prospect Performances
- A promotion to Triple-A did not hinder Nelson Rada in the slightest. He ended the month of August hitting .341 at the level in the month of August. He added 16 steals in that time with 20 walks and 18 strikeouts, all post-promotion. This is astounding considering he’s just 20 years old. In theory, he could be higher on fantasy lists, but his skillset is not one that usually translates to a ton of fantasy helium. His real-life value is fantastic. He’s kind of a Chandler Simpson-esque profile. Slightly more power, meaning he’s actually hit a ball over the fence, and less speed.
Nelson Rada with a bunt single and stolen base against Lance McCullers Jr. pic.twitter.com/5hINpuTJ7k
— AngelsMiLB (@AngelsMiLB) August 16, 2025
- The artful inconsistency of George Klassen is enough to be heart-attack-inducing to anyone who has the misfortune of rostering him. I’m looking in a mirror as I say that. In the month of August, Klassen allowed 14 ER in 21.1 innings across 5 starts. That’s not ideal; however, 13 of those runs came in 2 starts. That means in over half of his starts, he was brilliant. It’s a reach, but it speaks to how good he can be, and shows what we are all dreaming of. In his trio of good starts, he threw 16 innings, allowing just a run and striking out 22 batters.
George Klassen is off and running tonight with 4 K's over his first 2.0 IP… pic.twitter.com/DRy8Znk74Z
— Rocket City Trash Pandas (@trashpandas) September 4, 2025
