The only thing that can seemingly hold down Jesús Made is Mother Nature.
Baseball's top-ranked prospect returned from a one-day hiatus due to a left quad contusion and looked no worse for wear, driving in four runs for Double-A Biloxi during its 14-3 win in the opening game of Friday's doubleheader against Columbus at Keesler Federal Park.
Made got the Shuckers offense going again during Game 2 with an RBI single before rain suspended the contest in the third inning. Biloxi rolled in the opener thanks in large part to Milwaukee's No. 1 prospect, who reached base three times while matching his season high in RBIs.
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The 19-year-old struck out in his first at-bat but helped break open the game during the Shuckers' eight-run second inning, ripping a bases-loaded double to left that scored all three runs. Made reached base again on a walk in the third and plated his fourth run with a single in the fourth.
It was the third four-RBI game of the year for the Dominican Republic native, who is only 13 shy of equaling his career high of 61 set last season when he appeared in 115 games across three Minor League levels.
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Although there was no serious concern from the organization, Made was forced from Wednesday's game against the Clingstones in the seventh inning after colliding with teammate Josh Adamczewski (MIL No. 10). The duo was tracking a fly ball to shallow left field in the sixth when they ran into each other.
Made was hunched over in pain while attended to by trainers but completed the frame before being replaced to start the next frame.
Made has spent his entire pro career proving he belongs by excelling against older competition. Including his one plate appearance in the suspended game, the switch-hitter is batting .283 with a .790 OPS, 48 RBIs and 21 stolen bases this season at age 19, five years younger than the average competitor in the Double-A Southern League. He's already matched his career high with six homers, a figure he did not achieve until his 96th game in 2025.
One piece of Milwaukee's future core arrived earlier this week in the form of Cooper Pratt (MIL No. 4/MLB No. 62). Performances like Friday are a loud reminder that Made, one of baseball's brightest young stars, continues his meteoric rise toward an eventual spot beside him in the Majors.

