Taiwanese pitcher Lin Wei-en, a left-hander with the Athletics’ Double-A affiliate, the Midland RockHounds, has been listed on Baseball America’s Top 100 Prospects list.
Lin ranked No. 93 overall on the list, which was released yesterday.
He is the first Taiwanese player in 18 years to make the list, since former infielder Hu Chin-lung in 2008.
Photo: CNA
The other Taiwanese players to make the list were former slugger Chen Chin-feng from 2000 to 2002, and Tsao Chin-hui, the first Taiwanese pitcher to play in the MLB, from 2001 to 2004.
MLB organizations collectively have nearly 5,000 players in their farm systems.
The ranking comes after Lin was named Texas League’s Pitcher of the Week following seven scoreless innings last week for the Midland RockHounds.
Twenty-year-old Lin is 188cm tall and weighs 81kg, with a fastball that can exceed 150kphr.
He signed with the Athletics in June 2024 and began his professional career in the US in 2025, earning rapid promotions from Low-A to High-A and then Double-A.
He has posted a 1.61 earned run average over 28 innings in six starts this season.
Meanwhile, MLB Pipeline ranks Lin as the Athletics' No. 4 prospect.
NO HARD FEELINGS: Taiwan’s Lin Hsiang-ti and Indonesia’s Dhinda Amartya Pratiwi embraced after fighting to a tense and rare 30-29 final game in their Uber Cup match The Taiwanese men’s team on Wednesday fought back from the brink of elimination to defeat Denmark in Group C and advance to the quarter-finals of the Thomas Cup, while the women’s team were to face South Korea after press time last night in the Uber Cup quarter-finals in Horsens, Denmark. In the first match, Taiwan’s top shuttler Chou Tien-chen faced a familiar opponent in world No. 3 Anders Antonsen. It was their 16th head-to-head matchup, with the Dane taking his fourth victory in a row against former world No. 2 Chou, winning 21-14, 13-21, 21-15 in 1 hour, 22 minutes. The
Marta Kostyuk’s maiden WTA 1000 title in Madrid came on Saturday thanks to her power, poise and a pair of unexpected lucky shorts. The world No. 23 beat eighth-ranked Mirra Andreeva 6-3, 7-5 in under 90 minutes to secure the most prestigious trophy of her career, her third professional singles title and second in less than a month after Rouen. Yet as the 23-year-old Ukrainian posed for photographs at the Caja Magica, it was not just the silverware that caught the eye. Held alongside her team and her two dogs, Kostyuk showed off a piece of black men’s underwear, prompting
Throwing more than US$5 billion at a divisive new tour and walking away after five seasons does not look like good business, but LIV Golf was not all bad news for Saudi Arabia. Oil-funded LIV, which poached top stars and sent golf’s establishment into a tailspin, helped push the conservative kingdom into global view — one of its key aims, experts said. The exit, confirmed on Thursday after weeks of speculation, does not signal a flight of Saudi money from sport, even after the Middle East war that sparked Iranian attacks around the Gulf, they said. “Saudi Arabia is not
Anastasia Potapova on Wednesday turned tennis heartbreak into history by becoming the first lucky loser to reach a WTA 1000 semi-final with her thrilling 6-1, 6-7 (4/7), 6-3 victory over Karolina Pliskova at the Madrid Open, as Taiwan’s Hsieh Su-wei exited in the women’s doubles quarter-finals. The Russian-born Austrian, who lost in qualifying last week, has capitalized on her unexpected main draw entry and stunned former world No. 1 Pliskova in a roller-coaster clash despite squandering three match points. Potapova’s run has included impressive victories over former French Open champion Jelena Ostapenko and world No. 2 Elena Rybakina. Asked if she had thought