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    Owen Caissie Continues to 'Be Himself' as he Draws One Step Closer to the Big Leagues


    Theo Tollefson

    The big prize of the Chicago Cubs' trade sending Yu Darvish to the Padres in late 2020 is almost ready to pay tangible dividends. After an auspicious season in Double-A last year, he's now adjusting to life at the highest level of the minor leagues.

    Image courtesy of Rob Thompson, St. Paul Saints

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    If there’s one thing the Cubs organization has no shortage of in 2024, it’s outfield depth, from Cody Bellinger, Ian Happ, Seiya Suzuki, and Mike Tauchman on the active roster to Pete Crow-Armstrong, Alexander Canario, and David Peralta in Triple-A. (They'll dip into it this week, according to reports, recalling Canario as part of an as-yet-unknown roster move.)

    There’s one other outfielder at Triple-A making his mark, following his best season in professional baseball with the Double-A Tennessee Smokies in 2023: Canadian slugger Owen Caissie. His 2023 was phenomenal, as he had a triple slash of .289/.399/.519 with a .918 OPS, 22 home runs, and 84 runs batted in, across 120 games. 

    The breakout performance has made him one of the top five prospects in the Cubs system, according to many prospect rankings. Caissie attributes it to finding a balance within himself, and an ability to take everything one pitch at a time. 

    “The biggest takeaway was just finding an inner peace with myself,” Caissie said on the success of his 2023 season at Double-A. “And not letting failure get to me as much. Literally, just telling myself to relax, honestly, I am going to get another pitch to hit, another AB and my career isn’t going to end tomorrow.”

    Caissie’s career is far from over. The 22-year-old Burlington, Ontario native has yet to hit a home run in Triple-A, but has a .250 batting average along with a .733 OPS and 8 RBIs. Like many players across professional baseball, he’s adjusting to the new season and still finding his rhythm.

    “I’m at the stage in my career where I’ll get more chances and just show who I am. It’s one pitch at a time and not letting a situation get too big for me. It’s just really staying in my approach entirely and not letting me be someone else I am not,” Caissie said. 

    His new manager, long-time I-Cubs skipper Marty Pevey, has quickly recognized the capabilities Caissie brings to the roster in an outfield that could be as good as those of some big-league clubs.

    “He’s got to continue to perform, but he has superior bat speed and an A-plus arm from the outfield. The defense in the outfield in both left and right has really improved over the last 12 months," Pevey said. "He’s a hard worker, and he knows how to play.”

    One player on the I-Cubs roster that Pevey is happy to have around his young outfielders Caissie, Crow-Armstrong, and Canario is Peralta. The 10-year MLB veteran has only been on the active roster since Thursday, but he’s someone Pevey points out for all his young hitters to pay attention to.

    “Watching him go about his daily work is really impressive," Pevey said. "Having him here is a boon for us, just watching him get prepared, not just on the field but off. Because the best thing as an outfielder you can do is play the ball off the bat, and watching him play even today when he’s not even in the outfield is super impressive.” 

    Fortunately for Caissie, he had his locker in Spring Training close to Peralta, and it took little time for the two of them to catch up once the veteran joined the I-Cubs for their road trip in St. Paul. But Peralta was not the only sherpa Caissie sought out in his first big-league camp. 

    “Really anyone, like Mike Tauchman, Ian Happ, everyone was a great help, Cody Bellinger. If I was just around them, I’d honestly listen more than talk, just to feel and understand how they do things and how they go about it because they’ve been in the game longer than I have,” said Caissie.

    Caissie’s fly-on-the-wall approach around the veterans of the Cubs organization has been a tremendous asset to the start of his 2024 season. But he’s still learning the pitching at this level for himself.

    “I feel like they’re better at actually pitching, they sequence better. But I am still learning and trying to hone into my zone and just stay middle-middle, and just try to put the bat on the ball, because when I do that, good things happen.” 

    The most noticeable difference between the pitchers at Triple-A compared to Double-A, according to Caissie is their focus to get him out by any means necessary. Whereas it seemed every pitcher one rung down the ladder was trying to get him out via the strikeout, the more savvy Triple-A hurlers know how to seek harmless contact, too. The change has Caissie focused on keeping himself within his zone more often than not. 

    With the vast number of outfielders ahead of him on the Cubs depth chart, it might be a while before Caissie gets the call to the big leagues. Even so, he knows he is right where he needs to be right now, and as long as he keeps being himself, the opportunity will present itself before 2024 is over.

    “I just need to be me and the best I can be every day; that’s all I can really ask of myself.” 


    Interested in learning more about the Chicago Cubs' top prospects? Check out our comprehensive top prospects list that includes up-to-date stats, articles and videos about every prospect, scouting reports, and more!

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