Baseball Prospectus has moved the righty pitcher up to No. 10 on its annual list of Top 101 prospects overall. He's one of four pitchers in the top-10, behind only Lucas Giolito (No. 3, Nationals), Julio Urias (No. 6, Dodgers) and Steven Matz (No. 9, Mets). For perspective, Reyes checked in at No. 55 on the 2015 list.

Reyes has one of the most electric right arms in the minors, writes Jeffrey Paternostro and Wilson Karaman. His fastball sits in the upper 90s and touches triple digits. He pairs that with a potential wipeout curve that he can throw for strikes or bury to put away hitters. He struggles at times to harness both pitches, and his command of the fastball is presently below average. The optimist might say that just means he has a chance to get even better, and minor-league hitters were no match for him in 2015 as it stood. The pessimist might point to the command troubles and the lack of an average changeup projection, and see “only” a good late-inning arm. Both would probably agree he has one of the highest ceilings of any current pitching prospect.