The Yankees announced that infielder/outfielder Marco Luciano has been sent outright to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. That indicates he cleared waivers after being designated for assignment a week ago. He’ll stick in the organization as non-roster depth. He will likely be invited to big league camp in spring training.
No player wants to lose his roster spot but there’s probably at least some relief for Luciano, who has been riding the DFA carousel all winter. A longtime Giants prospect, that club put him on waivers in early December. He went to the Pirates, Orioles and Yankees via the waiver wire over the past few months. Now that he has finally cleared, he has been dropped to non-roster status but at least he now knows where to report when spring training begins next week.
Now 24, Luciano raked through the minor leagues as a prospect. He came up as a shortstop and was once considered the heir apparent to Brandon Crawford as the mainstay at that position in San Francisco.
However, he didn’t find as much success in the upper levels of the minors. He also struggled defensively and the Giants moved him to left field last year, with Willy Adames signed to take over shortstop, only putting more pressure on his bat.
Over the past two years, Luciano has taken 939 trips to the plate at the Triple-A level, with 33 home runs in the hitter-friendly Pacific Coast League. He drew a walk in 16% of his trips to the plate, an excellent clip, but was also punched out 29.1% of the time. His combined .229/.354/.400 line in that two-year span translated to a 101 wRC+. Luciano also exhausted his three option years over the past three seasons. He got brief looks in the majors, getting sent to the plate 126 times, but struck out in 35.7% of those trips while producing a .217/.286/.304 line.
Given the former prospect pedigree and his relative youth, teams are clearly still interested, hence all the waiver claims. But the strikeouts, lacks of options and defensive questions all pushed him to a fringe roster position.
The Yankees will try to unlock something with Luciano in Triple-A. He only played the outfield in 2025 but the Yanks announced him as an infielder/outfielder, so perhaps they will try him on the dirt a bit. He does hit from the right side and the Yanks have a fairly lefty-heavy lineup. They have been connected to righty bats like Paul Goldschmidt, Randal Grichuk and Austin Slater in free agency but perhaps Luciano can offer some help in that department as the season goes along. If he gets added back to the roster at some point, he is out of options but has less than a year of service time and can therefore be controlled for six seasons before reaching free agency.
Photo courtesy of Robert Edwards, Imagn Images

