ESPN expert almost veered into forbidden territory with Konnor Griffin hype

Whoa.
2025 MLB All-Star Futures Game
2025 MLB All-Star Futures Game | Daniel Shirey/GettyImages

There’s prospect hype, and then there’s the kind of language that makes even jaded baseball lifers blink, lean back in their chairs and mutter, “Whoa.”

ESPN's Kiley McDaniel came awfully close to crossing that line with his latest evaluation of Pittsburgh Pirates phenom Konnor Griffin.

“Fernando Tatis Jr. meets Bobby Witt Jr.”

“Top prospect in baseball by a mile.”

“Almost put him in the 70 FV tier with Bryce Harper and Mike Trout.”

“MVP ballots.”

“5-plus WAR seasons every year.”

That isn’t normal draft-pick praise. That’s baseball’s version of forbidden territory –– the kind of territory Pirates fans have learned not to visit too often, lest the baseball gods notice and intervene.

And yet, here we are.

McDaniel isn’t a hot-take artist. He isn’t a fan blogger trying to juice engagement. He’s one of ESPN’s most analytical, process-driven evaluators. He lives in the land of variance, probability and caution. Future value grades are his religion. He doesn’t casually invoke Trout and Harper. He doesn’t hand out 70 FV the way influencers hand out “generational.” The fact that he almost did for Griffin tells you how far beyond normal this has gone.

Konnor Griffin hype reaches unprecedented levels with Bryce Harper, Mike Trout comps

Griffin was already a top-10 pick with freaky tools. That was the baseline. But what’s happened since has pushed him into an entirely different stratosphere. He didn’t just look good in A-ball. He dominated two levels and held his own in Double-A as a teenager. He didn’t just show tools — he fixed a swing that some evaluators thought might be a fatal flaw. And that’s the part that bends reality.

High-variance athletes are supposed to take years to stabilize. They’re supposed to yo-yo between flashes and frustration. They’re supposed to need reps, patience, runway. Griffin erased those assumptions in months. McDaniel essentially admits that projecting further improvement now feels “like a formality.”

For a Pirates organization that has lived through years of empty promises for “the next can’t-miss bat,” those words carry weight — and danger. We’ve seen ceilings collapse. We’ve seen timelines stall. We’ve learned to temper.

But McDaniel isn’t asking for belief. He’s presenting inevitability. He even entertains the idea that Griffin could break camp in 2026, win Rookie of the Year, and hand the Pirates a bonus draft pick. That’s Juan Soto territory. That’s “the rules don’t apply to him” territory.

Add Griffin to Paul Skenes, and suddenly this isn’t just a rebuild with promise — it’s the skeleton of something electric. Something that changes how national media talks about Pittsburgh. Something that shifts the Pirates from “cute young core” to “problem.”

That’s why this hype feels dangerous. Because it isn’t hyperbole. It’s measured. It’s reluctant. It’s the kind that comes with footnotes and disclaimers — and still lands like thunder.

McDaniel stopped short of anointing Griffin as Trout-tier because he hasn’t seen him in the majors yet. Not because he doubts the talent. Not because the ceiling isn’t there. Simply because his personal rules won’t allow it. That's the terrifying part.

The door is open. And for the first time in a long time, the Pirates may have a player whose ceiling is so high that even the experts are afraid to say it out loud.

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