Pirates Top Prospects No. 25: Is There Still Hope for Anthony Solometo?

Anthony Solometo, Pittsburgh Pirates
20240316, The Pittsburgh Pirates Minor Leagues face the Baltimore Orioles at Pirate City, Bradenton, Florida (Photos by Harrison Barden)

This is one in a series of stories breaking down PBN’s Top 30 Pittsburgh Pirates prospects.

When the Pittsburgh Pirates selected prep left-hander Anthony Solometo in the second round of the 2021 draft, the decision looked like a good one.

Solometo was one of a trio of prep players the Pirates took after drafting Henry Davis with the top pick in round one. The others were right-hander Bubba Chandler and outfielder Lonnie White Jr.

The strategy was easy enough to see. The Pirates cut a deal with Davis at the top of the draft to allocate more resources later on in the draft to high-ceiling players, but ones who would need over-slot deals to pry them away from their college commitments.

After signing with the Pirates for a bit less than $3 million, Solometo began his professional career in impressive fashion.

The left-hander’s first experience in professional baseball came in 2022, when he totaled 13 appearances/eight starts with the Bradenton Marauders in the Florida State League. Solometo went 5-1 with a 2.64 ERA and struck out 51 batters in 47.2 innings.

The following season, Solometo split time evenly between High-A Greensboro and Double-A Altoona. In 12 starts with the Grasshoppers to begin the season, Solometo posted a 2.30 ERA and recorded 68 strikeouts in 58.1 innings pitched.

He didn’t find the same immediate success in Altoona as he did in Bradenton and Greensboro, but Solometo finished with a fairly-respectable 4.35 ERA in 12 starts with the Curve.

Solometo’s success early in his career led to MLB Pipeline ranking him as the 84th-best prospect in the game entering the 2024 season. However, his status as a top prospect didn’t last long.

Solometo made 20 appearances/17 starts with the Curve in 2024 and went 1-7 with a 5.98 ERA. His strikeout totals dipped drastically (7.1 strikeouts per nine innings) while his walks skyrocketed (5.4 walks per nine innings).

A left shoulder injury cost Solometo essentially his entire 2025 season. The 22-year-old made just three starts — two with Altoona and one with Bradenton — and did not appear in a game after a rehab outing with the Marauders on June 18.

A once-promising start to his career now has more questions than answers. For starters, how will Solometo respond following a lost season due to an injury to his pitching arm? Secondly, will he prove that 2024 was just a one-off, or will his struggles continue at the same level two years later?

The Pirates are hoping that 2026 provides the answers they’re looking for on both accounts.

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Ron Cokain

A big concern with him was a big drop in velocity as well as the control issues. Hopefully, the shoulder gets straightened out and he comes back, at least in a relief role.