Kansas City Royals

It took time, but this Royals’ youngster is starting to emerge

When Kansas City selected Jac Caglianone sixth overall in the 2024 MLB Draft, the noise couldn’t have been louder. At the University of Florida, Caglianone’s legendary 516-foot home run headlined a thrilling draft profile that also included triple-digit velocity on the mound.

While the Royals never entertained the Tampa native as a pitcher, his shimmering potential at the plate is finally starting to show. With a vicious swing and, of course, an elite outfield arm, the tools have always been there. Ever since becoming a professional, it’s been all about adjustment for Caglianone.

In June of 2026, the Royals’ outfielder is pacing the entire league offensively. His .538 AVG, .625 OBP, and 1.587 OPS each lead the 194 qualified hitters in the month. He slugged three home runs, and stole a pair of bases. This month, he’s averaging an exit velocity of 94.6 mph and barreling up 20% of balls he puts in play. It’s a dominant stretch at the dish right now, but it hasn’t always been this way.

A rough first taste of MLB action

Less than a year after he got drafted, the Royals called up Caglianone in June of 2025. While he fared extremely well at both Double-A and Triple-A, the jump to the Major Leagues didn’t go as planned.

Caglianone’s 20 homers over 66 minor league games forced the hand of Kansas City. Their Major League roster lacked power, and Caglianone’s 1.025 OPS down on the farm was too loud to ignore.

When he came onto the scene, Caglianone went into an instant struggle. He chased a massive 38.5% of the time, which influenced the quality of his batted balls. Instead of looking like the promised slugger, he was simply swinging at the wrong pitches. Because of this, his big-time power didn’t translate right away.

Caglianone’s difference between bat speed and average exit velocity was among the five most drastic gaps in the MLB. What that basically means is that his swing wasn’t making proper contact on most swings. Despite clocking the seventh-hardest swing in the league, the extra-base power wasn’t showing up in the box score.

In his first season, Caglianone finished the year batting .157 with seven homers over 232 plate appearances. One could argue that the only factor that kept him in the big leagues was his prospect status. Given his ugly -1.4 WAR, it’s very likely that a “no name” with his numbers wouldn’t have played as many big league games as he did.

It is important to note that Caglianone missed over a month with a hamstring issue, although by that point he was batting just .147 over a healthy 41-game sample.

Having already dug into Caglianone’s major league development, the Royals counted on him as their Opening Day right fielder. In the middle of June, that decision is paying dividends for Kansas City.

Small fixes, big results

One of the most valuable prospects you can have is one that doesn’t need to change a whole lot to find success. That’s exactly what the Royals have in Jac Caglianone.

In 2026, Caglianone is swinging more patiently, and the quality of his contact reflects it. He jumped from averaging an 89.4 mph exit velocity to a 93.9 mph. His barrel rate is up to 15.9%, and his hard-hit rate ranks fifth in all of baseball.

His maturing isn’t just about adding power, it’s also making it more valuable. Caglianone’s launch angle sweet-spot%, which tracks the percentage of balls hit at an optimal launch angle, jumped from one of the worst to one of the better marks in the league. Not only is he showcasing his raw power, but he’s putting it into line drives, rather than grounders.

He’s a completely revitalized player, compared to what we saw in 2025. All of a sudden, Caglianone is actively outproducing his superstar teammate Bobby Witt Jr. at the plate. He’s batting .275 on the year with eight homers and an .808 OPS.

That is not something you’d expect to say about a kid who pressed his way through a miserable 2025 campaign. However, talent of his magnitude was bound to show up at some point. We just didn’t think it would happen so quickly and so abruptly.

What’s next for Cags?

Don’t press, and don’t try to do too much. The differentiator between streaky youngsters and polished up-and-comers typically lies in the approach.

Take, for example, the Detroit Tigers’ new golden boy Kevin McGonigle. He’s not the frontrunner for AL Rookie of the Year because of any off-the-charts tools (unlike Caglianone). He’s one of the league’s most projectable players because his approach is consistent, and he doesn’t do too much.

The key for Caglianone throughout the early part of his career will be trusting his power. Expanding the zone, trying to hit his way out of slumps, those are the holes he needs to avoid falling into. Patience, maturity over the strike zone, and swinging at his pitch are the pathways to a really strong sophomore campaign for the Royals’ right fielder.

Willy Warren

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  • The story of Caglianone's development is a perfect case study in performance volatility-the gap between potential and execution. Sustained success requires mastering the micro-adjustments. It reminds me that even in high-stakes pursuits, consistent strategy and knowing when to take calculated risks, whether on the diamond or in a fun jollibee777 game, is key to the breakout moment.

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