With Spring Training under way and the 2017 season almost upon us, MiLB.com looks at the state of all 30 farm systems over the next couple weeks and ranks them, according to certain changing criterion with each edition. This opening edition focuses specifically on position player prospects and considers the quality and quantity of top talent in each system in its current state. Part I of these rankings can be found here and Part II here. Part III is below:

10. New York Mets

Amed Rosario

Dominic Smith

Gavin Cecchini

Brandon Nimmo

Desmond Lindsay

9. Colorado Rockies

Brendan Rodgers

Raimel Tapia

Ryan McMahon

Tom Murphy

8. Boston Red Sox

Chris Sale

Yoán Moncada

Michael Kopech

Luis Alexander Basabe

Victor Diaz

Andrew Benintendi

Rafael Devers

Sam Travis

7. Chicago Cubs

Eloy Jiménez

Ian Happ

Jeimer Candelario

6. Los Angeles Dodgers

Adrian Gonzalez

Cody Bellinger

Alex Verdugo

Willie Calhoun

Will Smith

Keibert Ruiz

Edwin Ríos

Johan Mieses

Austin Barnes

5. Philadelphia Phillies

J.P. Crawford

Mickey Moniak

Jorge Alfaro

Nick Williams

Dylan Cozens

Roman Quinn

Cornelius Randolph

Rhys Hoskins

Scott Kingery

Malquin Canelo

Cole Stobbe

Andrew Knapp

4. Pittsburgh Pirates

Austin Meadows

Josh Bell

Gregory Polanco

Starling Marte

Kevin Newman

Ke'Bryan Hayes

Will Craig

3. Atlanta Braves

Dansby Swanson

Ozzie Albies

Kevin Maitan

Travis Demeritte

Alex Jackson

Rob Whalen

Max Povse

2. Milwaukee Brewers

Brett Phillips

Isan Díaz

Josh Pennington

Travis Shaw

Tyler Thornburg

Jacob Nottingham

Bubba Derby

Khris Davis

Lucas Erceg

1. New York Yankees

Gleyber Torres

Aroldis Chapman

Clint Frazier

Andrew Miller

Blake Rutherford

Aaron Judge

Jorge Mateo

Dustin Fowler

Miguel Andújar

Tyler Wade

Josh Jackson is a contributor to MiLB.com. Follow and interact with him on Twitter, @JoshJacksonMiLB.

, MLB.com's, and(No. 63) -- both at big league camp -- made the 2016 Double-A Binghamton season something special following the arrival of the latter from Class A Advanced St. Lucie in late June. Rosario, a shortstop who turned 21 in November, batted .324/.374/.459 with 19 stolen bases and 13 triples across the two levels, while Smith, a 21-year-old first baseman, was good for a .302/.367/.457 line with 14 homers, 29 doubles and 91 RBIs in 130 Eastern League games. They may spend significant time in the Majors this year and certainly have the potential to affect the NL East for several seasons to come., a "greater than the sum of his parts" middle infielder, already made an impact there,with New York last year. Outfielderraked against PCL pitching last year and batted .274 in 32 big league games. He's ready when there's an opening for him, even if it's as a fourth or fifth outfielder. Don't sleep on 2015 second-rounderas a speedy center fielder who posted a .418 OBP in 32 games for Class A Short Season Brooklyn last summer.After missing half of his debut campaign due to leg problems, 2015 third overall pickstayed healthy last year and hit .281/.342/.480 with 19 homers and 31 doubles in 110 games for Class A Asheville. He was rewarded by being named the South Atlantic League's Most Outstanding Major League Prospect. In January, MLB Pipeline ranked the middle infielder as its. Outfielder, 23, raked at Double-A all season, was even better through a short stint at Triple-A and held his own through 22 games in the Majors. Corner infielderdidn't connect with the ball with the same consistency in his first crack at Double-A. The Rockies had him play predominantly first base in the Arizona Fall League, but the left-handed hitter continued to drive the ball to all parts of the field. Catcher, who hit .327 with a 1.008 OPS and 19 homers in 80 games for Albuquerque, should contend for the starting spot behind the plate for Colorado.Even after the blockbusterdeal that costand, the Red Sox boast two prospects among Pipeline's top 20., who's ranked No. 1 but will lose his prospect status after 25 more at-bats in the Majors, showed what he can do when he reached the game's highest level in August. He put up a .295/.359/.476 slash line in 34 games, then went 3-for-9 with a homer and a double in the playoffs.(No. 17) has pop, hits consistently and has a strong arm and good instincts at third base. His speed rates a 40 on the 20-80 scouting scale, but he stole 18 bases as a 19-year-old in the Class A Advanced Carolina League last year -- a nice complement to his 11 homers, eight triples, 32 doubles and .335 on-base percentage. Beyond that incredible pair, the position-playing talent in the Boston organization thins. Look for, who has the potential to be a solid big league hitter without much more seasoning, to reestablish himself after losing almost all of last season to a torn ACL.It's a testament to the scouting and player development departments that even though the Cubs feature a young core that carried them to a World Series title, there's still some top-tier talent in the system. Outfielder's breakout year made him MLB.com's No. 14 overall prospect -- he hits for power and gets on base, he's a superb defender in the corner spots, reportedly has great makeup and is extremely bright. Fourteen spots behind him on the top-100 list is second baseman/outfielder. The 2015 first-rounder finished last year at Double-A and totaled 15 homers and 16 steals in 134 games. Albert Almora (No. 75) and(No. 96) continue to excite, although the big club's depth has yet to give either the chance to settle into a role in The Show.Withplaying in Chavez Ravine,saw a bit of time in the outfield last year, and that versatility may get him to the Majors fairly soon if Gonzalez's balky elbow doesn't give him an opening first. Bellinger is a, making him extra valuable in that spot. That said, his bat is what will make him a thrilling player in any role -- Bellinger has hit 56 dingers in 245 Minor League games over the last two seasons and has a .349 career OBP. While he's the Dodgers' only position player ranked among the top 50 at No. 13, outfielder(61) and slugging second baseman(82) give Los Angeles three on the top-100 list. First-rounder, catcher, third basemanand outfielderalso bear watching, while catcher/utilitymanmay not be long for prospect status.With shortstopand center fielderamong MLB.com's top 20 prospects and catcherranked 72nd, the Phillies feature an up-the-middle trio with sky's-the-limit potential. A handful of outfielders ---- contribute to an exceptionally bright future. With less touted but intriguing infielders likeand-- not to mention catcher-- also coming along, it's no wonder the Phillies won the staff vote forNo. 10 overall prospectsoon may be knocking on the door and raking first baseman(No. 27) already has seen enough time in the Majors that he's seven at-bats shy of losing his prospect status. Withand Andrew McCutchen patrolling the outfield at PNC Park, there's no reason to rush Meadows. And Bell's offseason knee surgery means that although he's vowed to be ready for Opening Day, he may stick around in the Minors a bit at the beginning of the season. A tick farther down the ladder but also of great promise is shortstop(No. 59), who scores 60s on the 20-80 scouting scale in hitting, running and fielding. Additional depth can be found on the left side of the infield in third basemen/first-roundersandand shortstop Cole Tucker.Considering how deep the Braves are in thrilling young arms, it's hard to believe there's room in one system for three of the game's best middle infield prospects.(No. 4 overall prospect) and(No. 11) have the potential to make Atlanta's new ballpark a special place for years to come, and the future is wide open for shortstop(No. 32), a 17-year-old switch-hitter signed out of Venezuela last July. Also in the system is second baseman, who belted 28 homers and posted a .361 on-base percentage while splitting 2016 between the Rangers and Braves organizations., the 2014 sixth overall Draft pick, was perhaps ready for a change of scenery when Atlanta acquired him from Seattle in November for hurlersand. Don't be surprised to see 19-year-old outfielder Ronald Acuna, who hit .311 in 40 games for Class A Rome last year and has plus speed, jump into MLB.com's top 100 by the end of the year.The Brewers may not have the flashiest system, but they make a case for the deepest in terms of legitimate prospects up and down the Minors. Over the last two seasons, Milwaukee's rebuild has come together with a couple blockbuster trades (Lewis Brinson,andweren't even the whole packages in deals with Texas, Houston and Arizona), a few slightly lower profile swaps (Mauricio Dubon,, big leaguerand a player to be named from the Red Sox forfrom the A's with pitcherfor) and some nurturing of Draft picks (Corey Ray,and Trent Clark are three recent position players). Brinson, Ray and Diaz are ranked among MLB.com's top 70 prospects. While it may not have an upper-echelon name like Swanson, Milwaukee's depth among position players puts it second behind only the ...The Bombers were pretty stacked with standout position players across the Minors through July, but as the Trade Deadline passed, they were sitting in the catbird seat. Shortstop, whom the Yankees got from the Cubs in thedeal, is MLB.com's, while outfielder-- the key piece in theswap with Cleveland -- comes in at No. 24. Beyond that duo, New York took(No. 37) with the 18th pick in last year's Draft, and he batted .351 with 14 extra-base hits across two Rookie-level leagues in his first crack at pro ball. Add in(No. 45) and(No. 47), and the Yankees have five top-50 prospects -- all of whom are position players.andhave been in the system longer than the new guys, but they still have lots of potential. It's a good time to be a pinstriped prospect.