
24-year-old Yankees utility outfielder/infielder prospect Marco Luciano is having a somewhat surprising breakout season in the Yankees’ Double-A affiliate, the Somerset Patriots, to begin the 2026 season. Luciano, in 25 games for Somerset, has posted a .307 batting average with 9 home runs, 16 RBI’s, and a 1.034 OPS.
Luciano, who the Yankees claimed off waivers from the San Francisco Giants on January 22nd, per Bryan Hoch, was highly regarded in the Giants system at one point as a top prospect, and was listed as a top 100 prospect in MiLB’s rankings from 2020 up until 2024. Scouts have raved about Luciano during his time with the Giants, citing his “quick bat speed” and “raw power to all fields”, according to the minor League’s prospect rankings website.
Luciano Was Highly Regarded Giants Prospect
Heading into the 2024 season, Luciano was ranked as the Giants’ second-best prospect, which earned him a call-up from 2023-24, in which he appeared in 41 games and had a .590 OPS with a lowly .217 batting average. The Giants originally signed Luciano for $2.6 million out of the Dominican Republic in the 2018 draft class. Luciano was claimed by the Orioles on January 7th, then placed on waivers again and claimed by the Yankees just two weeks later.
Looking at this from a Yankees perspective, the front office may have struck lightning in a bottle, given Luciano’s still relatively young age and dominant success in the Yankees’ farm system to this point. Luciano, as of today, has already had two extra-base hits in the Somerset Patriots game, one of which reportedly was 108.7 mph off the bat in right-center field, according to the Somerset Patriots social media post on Twitter (X).
Luciano has not cracked the Yankees’ top 30 prospects list in 2026, but with his performance in the early stretch of this season, that could change rather soon, given his tools and early outlook in Somerset.
Luciano posted moderately decent seasons in the Giants‘ farm system, his best being 2019, where he hit for a .302 average with 10 home runs and 42 RBI’s in rookie ball. Since then, though, Luciano struggled to find consistency in professional baseball until now. Luciano has hit for plenty of power; however, through parts of six minor league seasons, he’s hit 97 career minor league home runs with a career .811 OPS.
He’s yet to produce when he had a brief cup of coffee with the Giants in the majors in 2023 and 2024, but if he keeps up this production with the Yankees in Double A, it could potentially earn him another big league opportunity at some point in 2026.
Low Risk High Upside Acquisition For The Yankees
And for the Yankees front office, this is a low-risk, high-reward upside type of move. With infielders Anthony Volpe, Oswaldo Cabrera, and George Lombard Jr in Triple A, the Yankees have plenty of infield depth should they need to utilize it at the big league level.
That could pay dividends down the stretch in a potential pennant and championship run for a team that needs all the talent they can get if they want to go all the way this year. Luciano’s versatility, having experience both in the infield and outfield covering multiple positions, also makes him valuable, as well as pertains to roster flexibility, especially as a possible bench piece on the Yankees’ big league roster if he keeps up this type of production.
But for the time being, keep an eye on what Luciano is doing in the Yankees farm system, considering he’s been one of the more interesting breakout candidates in the Yankees system pipeline the first month of this season.
This Former Top Prospect Finding Success In Yankees Farm System