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Posted
Image courtesy of Malamut Photography (photo of Marek Houston)

The Minnesota Twins will be on the clock with the third overall selection in next month's MLB Draft. If recent history is any indication, there's reason to believe another top-tier talent could soon be joining the organization's growing collection of premium prospects. Recent first-round picks have seen varying levels of success during their professional careers. Brooks Lee, the eighth overall pick in 2022, endured his share of growing pains early in his major-league career but has emerged as an everyday contributor in Minnesota. Walker Jenkins, selected fifth overall in 2023, remains the organization's top prospect and one of the most highly regarded young players in baseball, despite battling injuries.

Kaelen Culpepper, the club's first-round selection in 2024, quickly established himself as one of the best prospects in the system and was named the Twins' Minor League Player of the Year. Now, Marek Houston appears ready to continue that trend.

The Twins promoted Houston to Double-A Wichita this week after an outstanding first half with High-A Cedar Rapids. The move represents another significant milestone for the 2025 first-round pick and reinforces the organization's recent success in identifying impact talent at the top of the draft.

Viewed by many evaluators as the best defensive shortstop in the 2025 draft class, Houston entered professional baseball with a reputation built largely around his glove. The former Wake Forest standout has certainly validated that assessment. What's been even more encouraging has been his offensive development. After struggling through a brief 12-game introduction to High-A following last year's draft, Houston returned to Cedar Rapids this season looking like a completely different player. Before his promotion, he slashed .325/.406/.461 with five home runs, 23 RBIs, and 24 stolen bases in 26 attempts across 268 plate appearances.

His approach at the plate has been particularly impressive. Houston consistently controls the strike zone, makes frequent contact, and creates value on the bases. Those traits forced the Twins' hand and earned Houston a promotion to Wichita just one year after being drafted.

The next challenge will be considerably tougher. Double-A is often viewed as the biggest developmental jump in minor-league baseball, and it wouldn't be surprising if Houston experiences an adjustment period similar to the one he encountered during his pro debut last summer. Still, his performance to this point has been difficult to ignore.

The Kaelen Culpepper Comparison

What makes Houston's start even more intriguing is how closely it mirrors what Culpepper accomplished at the same level. Before his promotion last summer, Culpepper posted a .274/.368/.440 slash line in 318 plate appearances for Cedar Rapids. Houston's overall Cedar Rapids numbers are remarkably similar:

Kaelen Culpepper (High-A Cedar Rapids)

  • .274/.368/.440
  • 16.7% strikeout rate
  • 10.7% walk rate
  • 147 wRC+
  • 17-for-19 on stolen-base attempts

Marek Houston (High-A Cedar Rapids)

  • .296/.377/.423
  • 17.9% strikeout rate
  • 11.0% walk rate
  • 126 wRC+
  • 25-for-29 on stolen-base attempts

Both players demonstrated advanced strike-zone awareness, strong contact skills, and enough athleticism to impact games on the bases. Culpepper showed a little more power, while Houston offered slightly better speed production and defensive value at shortstop. Considering Culpepper entered professional baseball with more offensive upside, Houston producing nearly identical numbers at the same level is a significant accomplishment.

A Future Infield Taking Shape

The Twins have already seen Culpepper establish himself as one of the top prospects in baseball. If Houston continues along a similar trajectory, Minnesota could soon face an enviable problem. Houston's defensive reputation gives him a realistic path to becoming the organization's everyday shortstop. If his bat remains productive against upper-level pitching, the Twins may ultimately decide his glove is too valuable to move elsewhere.

That possibility could create a domino effect throughout the infield. A future alignment featuring Royce Lewis at first base, Culpepper at third base, Houston at shortstop, and Brooks Lee at second base is no longer difficult to envision. Luke Keaschall's long-term defensive home remains a question, but Minnesota suddenly has an abundance of talented young infielders capable of forcing their way into the conversation.

Another First-Round Success Story?

Houston's promotion arrives at an important time for the organization. Following last year's trade deadline sell-off, the Twins have leaned heavily on player development to replenish the system. Jenkins, Culpepper, Houston, and fellow 2025 first-rounder Riley Quick have quickly become central pieces of that effort.

Quick has already reached High-A and continues to develop as a starting pitching prospect. Jenkins and Culpepper are returning from injury and remain on the doorstep of the major leagues. Now, Houston has reached Double-A less than a year after being drafted.

The Twins still have plenty of work to do before they can declare their recent drafting success a complete turnaround. Prospects must eventually produce in the majors for draft classes to be remembered favorably. But as Minnesota prepares to make another top-three selection next month, Houston serves as the latest reminder that the organization's recent first-round track record looks dramatically different from what it did just a few years ago.


How will Minnesota’s infield look in two seasons? Can Houston continue to follow in Culpepper’s footsteps? Leave a comment and start the discussion.


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Posted

Good article.  I agree with all of it.  It will be interesting to see who wins the 2B role between Keaschall and Lee.  It's looking like Lee now but let's see if Keaschall can become an elite defender at 2nd.  Keaschall can move to LF if needed.

Posted

Considering that two of those players haven’t even sniffed the majors yet, I would likely tap the brakes a bit.  It would, however, be nice if we had some players develop and transition to the majors more seamlessly than we’ve had in the past.  Let’s hope this all comes true.  

Posted

At a >90 OPS+, Houston would be a guy you could win with at SS…win a ton with if there’s a good group around him. Obviously, the jury still out on whether he can get to that. There are some positive signs. I’m very high on Houston, because the hitting bar for him to have very good value is pretty low…and seems realistic.

Posted

If his (Houston’s) bat remains productive against upper-level pitching, the Twins may ultimately decide his glove is too valuable to move elsewhere.
 

I don’t understand this statement. Obviously his hitting will determine whether he makes it to the majors. But IF he’s playing for the Twins there’s no scenario where he is not at SS. He could be hitting like Mendoza or he could be hitting like Mantle…either way, he’d be playing shortstop. Your best active shortstop is always going to play shortstop…(or ride pine if the bat struggles too much.) And nobody is countering the claim that he’s the no. 1 defensive SS in the system.

Posted

The question I have for people regards their experiences watching minor league games. Have you seen Marek Houston play? How many times? It seems like folks have crowned Houston as a web gem constant. We know what the scouts said before he was drafted and we know he has been only used as a shortstop by the Twins. Quite a few people like to go by what the so called "experts" say as far as who are the top defensive shortstops across the minor leagues. I don't really necessarily agree with that. It is worth noting that Marek Houston did not gain any accolades in 2025 for his defense. Konnor Griffin, Franklin Arias, and a half dozen others were highly acclaimed with Griffin walking away as the best by a fair bit as a defensive shortstop. 

I have been trying to catch Marek Houston in action as often as is possible (watching Wichita right now). Houston looks athletic at shortstop. He moves well and has a decent arm. He made a nice catch going back into the outfield tonight but was unable to successfully complete a  difficult ground ball up the middle. There is no doubt in my mind that Houston is a good shortstop but he will need to hit to stick because I'm not seeing a glove that stands out as super special based on roughly 25+ plays.

Where I see a big improvement from Houston is at the plate. Whether it is confidence, a few small adjustments, or just Marek getting better the bat looks quicker than last year. It also seems like Houston has a much improved idea of the strike zone as well as recognizing pitches more frequently. I'm higher on Marek now than I was earlier in the year. 

This is, naturally, just my own thoughts based on roughly several dozen games watched and in no way holds any weight compared to those who have watched much more of Houston much less the professional view from the coaches and guys who assess players for the Twins organization.

 

Posted

"Another First-Round Success Story?"  Hard to call anything a success until they break into the majors and do it there consistently.  Sure, it is great to play well in majors and be high on prospect lists, but if you flop in the majors then who cares.  Even when you have a good year, that does not make it a success, you need multiple years. 

Three years ago we would be saying Lewis was a success story, and so was Wallner, but both got sent down to AAA this year.  Yes, Lewis has made a bit of a bounce back and maybe a return star status, but still only 17 games since returning. 

So no a success yet, just hopefully will be.  I am excited to see both Houston and Culpepper in coming years, playing SS and 3b hitting near top of line up.  

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