A great deal has changed since we ranked all 30 MLB farm systems going into the 2024 season, with much of that change coming in the past few weeks with the next wave of prospects from the MLB draft and then front offices adding — or subtracting — young players at the MLB trade deadline.
Now that the dust has settled on two of the most impactful periods for any farm system, it's time to see how all 30 organizations stack up and what has changed most since Opening Day.
These rankings were done, for the most part, the same way as my previous versions. The dollar amounts for each farm system come from projecting what each is expected to do, using historical examples.
With that, it's pretty easy to project how much they'll be paid in their six-plus cost-controlled years for that projected performance, adjust for time value of money/performance, apply the price teams pay per win on the free agent market for how much that performance is worth and poof: each player has a dollar value.