Archive for Cardinals

Prospect Limbo: The Best of the 2025 Post-Prospects

Jeff Curry and Katie Stratman, Imagn Images

The need to define a scope, to create a boundary of coverage, creates a hole in prospect writing. Most public-facing prospect publications, FanGraphs included, analyze and rank players who are still rookie-eligible because, contrary to what you’ve probably learned about my capacity to be long-winded over the years, you just have to stop somewhere. Because of this, every year there are players who fall through the cracks between the boundaries of prospect coverage and big league analysis. These are often players who came up, played enough to exhaust their rookie eligibility, and then got hurt and had a long-term rehab in the minors. Or who graduated and then have been mothballed at Triple-A due to clogged major league rosters ahead of them. The goal of this piece is to highlight some of the players who no longer fit the parameters of my prospect lists and provide an updated long-term scouting prognosis for each of them.

Oswald Peraza, SS, New York Yankees

Peraza was evaluated as an average everyday shortstop when he was last a prospect. Backburnered due to the emergence of Anthony Volpe, Peraza is still an above-average shortstop defender despite average arm strength. He’s always had a slight power-over-hit offensive skillset, and that dynamic has continued; Peraza still has above-average bat speed but only had a 71% contact rate in 2024. He dealt with a shoulder strain which kept him out for most of the first two months of the season and might have impacted his hitting ability. If the shoulder injury continues to affect his bat and he ends up with closer to a 30-grade hit tool instead of his projected 45, he would end up as a utility man rather than a regular.

Endy Rodriguez, C, Pittsburgh Pirates

Rodriguez came to Pittsburgh via the three-team Joe Musgrove deal in 2021, and graduated in 2023 as a 55-FV prospect thanks to projected plus contact ability and catching defense. He needed Tommy John surgery after the 2023 season and missed almost all of 2024, except for 10 games in September at Altoona and Indianapolis. Rodriguez looks bigger and stronger now, and the receiving aspect of his catching defense was fine when he returned, though he had only a few opportunities to throw (he popped 1.97, and 1.90 on a throw cut in front of the bag) and wasn’t really forced to block any pitches in the dirt in his few games back there. Offensively, he looked rusty. He wasn’t rotating as well as before the injury, but he still flashed low-ball bat control from both sides of the dish. I’m wondering if the Pirates had conversations about Rodriguez playing winter ball as a way to get him live reps and, if so, why they decided not to send him. He didn’t play enough to have cogent, updated thoughts on anything but his defense, which I thought looked fine.

Marco Luciano, 2B/OF, San Francisco Giants

I started to move off of Luciano prior to the start of the 2023 season, when he fell to the very back of my Top 100, then was completely off it in 2024. Not only had he made zero progress as a shortstop defender but cracks began to show in his offense. Across the last couple of seasons, as opposing pitchers’ fastball velocity climbed while Luciano traversed the minors, his ability to pull fastballs completely evaporated. He can crush a hanging breaking ball, but his bat path is such that he can really only inside-out heaters to right field. Through my own learned experience, this has become a warning sign when it’s true of low-level prospects. If Luciano can’t pull fastballs when they’re 92 mph, what happens when they’re 95? Well, we’re finding out that it means he has a 70% contact rate, and that in effort to be more on time against fastballs he’s lunging at sliders and missing 40% of those. For a player who is only now just starting to learn the outfield, and therefore not really bringing anything polished to the table at the moment, that’s a problem. The late transition on defense was a stubborn misstep, probably by some combination of Luciano and the org. The Giants were perhaps trying to preserve Luciano’s prospect value for as long as possible (which I suppose worked to an extent, just not here at FG) by leaving him at shortstop and hoping nobody would notice he couldn’t actually play there.

The good news is that Luciano still hits the ball really hard, as do the couple of good big league outfielders who power through their sub-70% contact rates, which appears to be what Luciano will have to do. Think of guys like Teoscar Hernández and Brent Rooker, who broke out in their late 20s. Outcomes like that are perhaps an eventuality for Luciano, but the Giants aren’t exactly in a long-term rebuild such that they’ll be happy to wait around for it to happen. Luciano is also entering his final option year, which means if they want to retain him, those growing pains will have to occur under the big league spotlight. His tenure with San Francisco has been painted into a bit of a corner. He’s still a 40+ FV player for me, and I think Luciano will have a meaningful power-hitting peak in his physical prime, but I think that’s more likely to occur in a different uniform.

Luis Matos, LF, San Francisco Giants

I’m still keen on Matos who, despite some relevant flaws, is a special contact hitter with unique pull power characteristics. Matos graduated as a 55-FV prospect in 2023, in part because I believed he could play a viable center field (he cannot). He spent most of 2024 at Triple-A and has struggled to find big league footing, slashing a career .235/.288/.344 in 400 total plate appearances across a couple of seasons. Despite a frustrating tendency to chase, Matos has still maintained high-end contact rates (92% in-zone, 85% overall), and he has a special ability to cover high fastballs with power. A body blow to Matos’ fit on a big league roster is that he’s a below-average corner defender. That’s fine for guys like Juan Soto, Yordan Alvarez, Riley Greene, and Anthony Santander, but less so for one-note offensive performers, which is what Matos might be. Matos’ chase, and the way it saps his game power because he’s putting sub-optimal pitches into play, makes it more likely that his FV hovers in that 30-to-40 range when you stack him against the other corner outfielders across the next several seasons.

Jordan Walker, RF, St. Louis Cardinals

Walker was sent down to Memphis in April, didn’t come back up until mid-August, and struggled on both sides of the ball upon his return. The Cardinals have a new hitting coach and so this might change, but Walker’s swing (and more specifically his spray despite his style of swinging) is bizarre. He hits with an enormous open stride, bailing way out toward third base, the swing of someone trying like hell to pull the ball. But he still mostly doesn’t, certainly not as much as you’d expect from someone swinging like this. Walker has also never had especially good secondary pitch recognition, and changeups and sliders both performed like plus-plus pitches against him last year. His current swing certainly doesn’t help him cover those outer edge sliders.

On defense, Walker made a full-time transition from third base to the outfield in 2023, but he’s never looked comfortable catching the baseball out there, and that remained true at the end of 2024. Walker is still only 22 years old and has impact tools in his power, speed, and arm strength. His top-end speed for a 6-foot-6, 250-pound guy is amazing, his outfield arm is one of the better ones in baseball, and his bat speed is near elite. Aside from his lack of plate discipline, Walker shares a lot of similarities with Pat Burrell. Burrell was also a heavy-footed outfielder who relied on his arm on defense, and his issues with secondary pitches continued throughout his career, but ultimately his power made him a very productive player for a long time. Walker was in the big leagues before he turned 21, and Burrell didn’t debut until well after his 23rd birthday. I think Walker deserves more runway, and I’m still optimistic that he can be a middle-of-the-order hitter during his window of team control, but there probably has to be a swing change here.

Nick Pratto, 1B/OF, Kansas City Royals

For the last couple of years, Pratto’s strikeout rates have continued to hover around 30%, even in the minors, and while his swing still has superlative lift, his raw power has plateaued and is insufficient for a first baseman striking out this much. He’s out of options and is on the Royals’ roster bubble.

Taylor Trammell, OF, Houston Astros

Trammell only played 10 big league games last year. He looks pretty much the same as he did in 2021 when he was struggling to get his footing in Seattle. He still has above-average power and speed, but he’s a 65% contact hitter who hasn’t been able to cover high fastballs. Despite his speed, Trammell is still not an especially skilled defender; he is a clunky fit in center, and his arm makes left field his best spot. He doesn’t make enough contact to be a regular, but he fits great on a roster as the fifth outfielder. He brings big energy and motor to the party, and he can run into the occasional extra-base hit coming off the bench.

Vaughn Grissom, INF, Boston Red Sox

Grissom, who was traded straight up for Chris Sale, looked pretty bad in 2024 amid multiple hamstring injuries. He is not a good defensive second baseman (the only position he played last year), and has a 50-hit, 40-power combination on offense. That’s a fringe big leaguer.


Effectively Wild Episode 2284: Season Preview Series: Astros and Cardinals

EWFI
Ben Lindbergh and Meg Rowley banter about Ben’s new sound-dampening windows, listener defenses of MLB’s altered two-way-player rule, and the latest intolerable “breakout” pick, followed by Stat Blasts (15:49) about the teams with the most winless, non-lossless pitchers and the all-time past-their-prime/time-travel teams. Then they preview the 2025 Houston Astros (32:41) with The Athletic’s Chandler Rome, and the 2025 St. Louis Cardinals (1:25:07) with The Athletic’s Katie Woo.

Audio intro: Ted O., “Effectively Wild Theme
Audio interstitial 1: El Warren, “Effectively Wild Theme
Audio interstitial 2: Liz Panella, “Effectively Wild Theme
Audio outro: Alex Glossman and Ali Breneman, “Effectively Wild Theme

Link to windows explainer
Link to breakout push notification
Link to Ragans article
Link to late-2023 pitcher WAR
Link to Stathead results
Link to Kram’s Stat Blast
Link to 2005 payrolls
Link to Ryan’s Stat Blast data
Link to Michael’s Stat Blast data
Link to offseason spending
Link to FG payrolls page
Link to Astros depth chart
Link to Astros offseason tracker
Link to Chandler’s author archive
Link to Chandler’s podcast
Link to Cardinals depth chart
Link to Cardinals offseason tracker
Link to 2024 attendance change
Link to Katie’s author archive
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Link to MLBTR on Ragans
Link to EW gift subscriptions

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2025 ZiPS Projections: St. Louis Cardinals

For the 21st consecutive season, the ZiPS projection system is unleashing a full set of prognostications. For more information on the ZiPS projections, please consult this year’s introduction and MLB’s glossary entry. The team order is selected by lot, and the penultimate team is the St. Louis Cardinals.

Batters

The 2024 St. Louis Cardinals experienced a bit of a bounce back from the team’s worst season in decades, but in a year where it took 89 wins to grab the final NL Wild Card spot, the Red Birds were still well short of being able to squeeze back into the playoffs. While things were sunnier than they were the year before, the Cardinals were outscored on the season, and neither of the stars in the lineup, Paul Goldschmidt and Nolan Arenado, returned to their 2023 form. It doesn’t appear as if the Cards feel like they’re on the precipice of an October return, as they’ve largely spent the offseason trying to trade Arenado.

Might Arenado actually be underrated at this point? While his offensive production has come down quite a bit from its peak, his 149 wRC+ in 2022 was likely always a late-era outlier, and a 102 wRC+ is hardly lousy for a third baseman. He’s no longer a star without a resurgence at the plate, but he was at least a good player in 2024, amassing 3.1 WAR thanks to very good defense at the hot corner. I think the perception of Arenado’s 2024 might be a lot worse than his season actually was. When I posted the depth chart graphic on social media, it led to a couple of conversations about ZiPS projecting a comeback season, even though the 2.9 WAR it forecasts is below his 2024 number!

With two glaring exceptions, ZiPS mostly thinks that the Cards are adequate to good around the diamond. Masyn Winn projects as the lineup’s second-best player, and though ZiPS isn’t crazy about Thomas Saggese, it likes Brendan Donovan enough to end up with a good second base WAR number, assuming the latter gets the plate appearances projected on our Depth Charts. The system projects that Willson Contreras will be good enough offensively that he could be a reasonable first baseman, and though it pulls back considerably on Iván Herrera’s rookie offense, the tandem of him and Pedro Pagés also looks solid.

Where ZiPS is unhappy is in the non-Lars Nootbaar portions of the outfield. In center field, Victor Scott II’s defense isn’t enough to completely cancel out a bleak offensive projection, and the computer doesn’t see Michael Siani as providing much of a shove. Scott’s a weird one to project in that he actually hit pretty decently in Double-A in 2023, but he was absolutely horrific in the minors last year, putting up a 59 wRC+. Note that that’s not the translation, but his actual number. Scott hit somewhat better in July after changing his stance, putting up a .711 OPS for the Triple-A Memphis Redbirds, but that hint of production disappeared in the majors and he earned a demotion in mid-September.

As for the other exception, Jordan Walker, ZiPS actually thinks he improved his defense somewhat in 2024, to the point that he’s not a pure designated hitter, just a fairly lousy right fielder who could play if he hits. But that’s kind of the problem. Walker now has about 500 PA of not hitting Triple-A pitchers. If Scott had a 93 wRC+ at Triple-A, it would be cause for optimism, but it’s completely inadequate for someone who is supposed to be valued entirely for his bat. Walker isn’t old, and you can squint and still kind of see his upside, but the odds are against him being a real contributor in 2025.

Pitchers

I’m not sure why ZiPS is suddenly reminded of a couple of knuckleballers, Phil Niekro and Tom Candiotti, when it looks at Sonny Gray, but removing them from the large cohort doesn’t change Gray’s projection, which makes him the favorite to represent the Cardinals at the All-Star Game this summer. It’s hard to tell how seriously the team really considered trading Gray, but he does have some pretty decent value with two years left on his contract. Of course, that assumes that his forearm tendinitis isn’t something darker, but really, you could say that about every pitcher who has ever existed.

He projects as having lower long-term upside than either Quinn Mathews or Tink Hence, but ZiPS is increasingly a fan of Michael McGreevy, who has good control and keeps the ball down, which has value in front of what ZiPS projects to be an above-average infield. Both Mathews and Hence project as legitimate starters right now, with ZiPS a little more confident about the former for 2025. ZiPS isn’t expecting quite as good a year from Erick Fedde, but it remains comfortable with the back of St. Louis’ rotation, both in terms of its non-horrendous quality and its reasonable depth.

It might be a stretch to say that ZiPS sees the Cardinals bullpen as “Ryan Helsley and some other guys,” but their hard-throwing closer is the only reliever who the computer can summon any excitement about. Helsley lost a couple of strikeouts per game coming back from his 2023 injuries, but ZiPS isn’t worried about that, as his velocity is intact and his contact rate is consistent with that of a whiffier pitcher. Ryan Fernandez, JoJo Romero, and John King all project as a bit above average, and the computer would put Matthew Liberatore in that group as well. ZiPS is rather meh on the low-leverage portion of the bullpen, and while the Cardinals could certainly add an arm or two there, this doesn’t appear to be a team that intends to make so much as a ripple in free agency.

Unlike most seasons, ZiPS does’t see the Cardinals as being in the same tier as the Brewers and Cubs. St. Louis has better projections than the Pirates and Reds, at least for now, but even then, only barely. It has been an incredibly quiet offseason in St. Louis outside of the constant Arenado rumors, with the team doing just about nothing, and we’re now only a few weeks from the opening of spring training. The team’s biggest signing this winter? Ryan Vilade. Even throwing in the towel would be more interesting, and probably more helpful than cosplaying as the heat death of the universe.

Ballpark graphic courtesy Eephus League. Depth charts constructed by way of those listed here. Size of player names is very roughly proportional to Depth Chart playing time. The final team projections may differ considerably from our Depth Chart playing time.

Batters – Standard
Player B Age PO PA AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB CS
Nolan Arenado R 34 3B 580 527 61 139 28 1 18 77 42 85 2 2
Masyn Winn R 23 SS 639 584 87 148 29 5 14 71 44 116 13 4
Willson Contreras R 33 C 422 362 50 86 19 0 16 52 44 107 4 2
Brendan Donovan L 28 LF 584 514 69 144 26 2 12 63 53 76 4 4
Lars Nootbaar L 27 RF 475 405 63 99 22 3 16 55 63 97 7 2
Alec Burleson L 26 LF 545 501 63 139 23 2 17 73 34 74 6 2
Nolan Gorman L 25 2B 511 461 67 106 19 0 27 75 46 170 6 1
Iván Herrera R 25 C 386 335 47 84 16 2 8 42 43 84 5 1
Jimmy Crooks L 23 C 409 367 42 90 18 2 7 46 32 100 2 0
Thomas Saggese R 23 SS 585 541 70 132 24 4 15 73 28 151 7 3
César Prieto L 26 3B 524 496 55 128 25 2 8 59 18 70 4 5
Leonardo Bernal B 21 C 432 395 42 90 16 2 7 41 33 106 3 4
Bryan Torres L 27 CF 507 450 62 123 22 2 1 44 43 89 18 8
Brandon Crawford L 38 SS 316 281 34 64 13 1 8 34 28 78 2 1
Pedro Pagés R 26 C 355 322 30 71 12 1 8 40 26 93 2 0
Matt Koperniak L 27 LF 500 459 50 116 18 2 11 58 33 102 5 4
Victor Scott II L 24 CF 532 480 58 107 15 5 7 47 33 106 32 6
Mike Antico L 27 CF 511 468 60 106 19 3 10 54 32 129 23 4
Sammy Hernandez R 21 C 371 330 41 64 12 2 5 39 25 84 1 1
Ryan Vilade R 26 RF 489 443 52 105 18 3 8 51 36 119 11 5
Arquímedes Gamboa B 27 SS 374 333 39 69 12 2 5 31 38 106 5 2
Jordan Walker R 23 RF 589 536 57 131 27 3 19 71 42 136 6 3
Jose Barrero R 27 SS 375 342 40 71 14 2 10 44 21 128 11 2
José Fermín R 26 SS 321 279 40 64 11 1 5 34 29 39 9 3
Gavin Collins R 29 C 212 191 19 41 7 0 5 24 13 44 0 0
Michael Siani L 25 CF 459 409 52 86 12 3 5 36 38 115 21 6
Luken Baker R 28 1B 480 425 46 90 17 0 21 66 47 132 1 0
Chance Sisco L 30 C 129 116 12 20 5 0 3 14 9 45 0 0
Carlos Linarez R 23 C 133 125 7 23 4 0 1 9 6 45 1 0
Matt Carpenter L 39 DH 192 162 18 32 9 0 6 21 24 59 0 1
Chase Davis L 23 CF 464 419 44 86 19 1 8 46 37 137 4 1
Alfonso Rivas III L 28 1B 383 332 41 76 17 2 4 39 39 103 3 0
Chase Adkison R 25 C 230 207 18 45 8 1 2 22 15 53 0 1
Chris Rotondo R 26 RF 404 362 45 78 15 2 5 40 27 138 8 3
Jacob Buchberger R 27 3B 426 392 46 85 12 3 6 38 30 114 7 4
Ramon Mendoza R 24 2B 278 245 25 50 10 1 3 23 21 72 1 1
Dakota Harris R 23 2B 363 333 38 77 16 0 6 40 13 89 4 3
Graysen Tarlow R 23 C 89 79 5 14 2 0 1 6 8 24 0 0
Nathan Church L 24 RF 522 478 60 112 18 1 4 47 29 70 13 4
Joshua Baez R 22 RF 348 314 36 61 14 1 8 38 24 147 15 3
Noah Mendlinger L 24 2B 422 374 41 89 15 1 1 39 29 62 3 4
Jeremy Rivas R 22 SS 479 431 47 93 11 1 2 35 33 109 14 6
R.J. Yeager R 26 1B 473 436 55 102 17 1 10 52 25 76 6 2
Matt Lloyd L 29 DH 437 392 46 87 18 0 10 48 34 110 7 2
Brody Moore R 24 SS 408 376 41 82 13 2 2 30 23 101 13 6
Anyelo Encarnacion R 21 2B 343 307 38 59 11 1 5 28 28 122 5 3
Wade Stauss L 26 C 129 109 8 18 4 0 1 12 11 59 0 0
Trey Paige L 24 3B 395 356 41 68 14 3 1 29 30 119 3 1
Michael Curialle R 24 3B 351 315 37 65 15 2 4 35 21 117 3 2
Zach Levenson R 23 LF 309 277 28 51 11 1 6 31 25 84 4 2
Tre Richardson R 23 2B 347 307 28 57 10 4 1 26 25 105 8 5
Miguel Villarroel R 23 SS 428 405 44 92 16 2 2 36 13 110 16 3
Kade Kretzschmar L 25 LF 348 311 33 67 9 3 1 30 26 84 3 2
Darlin Moquete R 25 DH 312 286 40 58 8 1 8 32 17 87 7 3
Johnfrank Salazar R 21 1B 338 311 29 68 13 0 3 30 18 59 0 1
Chandler Redmond L 28 1B 425 385 39 77 13 1 10 43 35 161 2 1
Won-Bin Cho L 21 CF 457 411 45 85 13 3 3 37 31 153 10 7
William Sullivan L 24 1B 169 154 13 26 4 0 2 16 11 64 1 1
Alex Iadisernia L 24 LF 439 399 43 79 17 3 6 40 29 120 11 6
Miguel Ugueto R 22 LF 251 239 22 49 10 2 2 20 7 60 5 3
Osvaldo Tovalin L 25 1B 394 370 35 76 13 1 4 38 12 82 4 2
Brayden Jobert L 24 RF 370 328 33 55 9 1 6 36 28 125 7 3

Batters – Advanced
Player PA BA OBP SLG OPS+ ISO BABIP Def WAR wOBA 3YOPS+ RC
Nolan Arenado 580 .264 .321 .423 106 .159 .285 5 2.9 .321 102 73
Masyn Winn 639 .253 .307 .392 94 .139 .295 5 2.9 .304 97 75
Willson Contreras 422 .237 .341 .422 113 .185 .293 -2 2.6 .336 106 54
Brendan Donovan 584 .280 .360 .408 115 .128 .310 2 2.5 .339 113 78
Lars Nootbaar 475 .244 .344 .432 116 .188 .284 4 2.3 .337 114 62
Alec Burleson 545 .277 .325 .433 110 .156 .297 2 2.0 .328 111 73
Nolan Gorman 511 .230 .301 .447 106 .217 .300 -4 1.9 .322 109 64
Iván Herrera 386 .251 .342 .382 103 .131 .312 -2 1.9 .321 102 45
Jimmy Crooks 409 .245 .314 .363 89 .117 .320 4 1.9 .298 93 42
Thomas Saggese 585 .244 .291 .386 88 .142 .312 -1 1.6 .295 92 64
César Prieto 524 .258 .292 .365 83 .107 .287 8 1.3 .287 84 56
Leonardo Bernal 432 .228 .289 .331 74 .104 .294 7 1.3 .276 79 40
Bryan Torres 507 .273 .336 .337 90 .064 .338 -2 1.1 .300 89 58
Brandon Crawford 316 .228 .304 .367 87 .139 .287 2 1.0 .293 78 32
Pedro Pagés 355 .220 .282 .338 73 .118 .285 4 1.0 .274 73 31
Matt Koperniak 500 .253 .308 .373 90 .120 .304 6 1.0 .299 91 55
Victor Scott II 532 .223 .280 .318 68 .096 .272 5 0.7 .265 71 52
Mike Antico 511 .226 .283 .344 75 .118 .292 1 0.7 .277 77 52
Sammy Hernandez 371 .194 .274 .288 58 .094 .245 7 0.6 .255 62 27
Ryan Vilade 489 .237 .299 .345 80 .108 .306 8 0.6 .284 81 50
Arquímedes Gamboa 374 .207 .292 .301 67 .093 .289 3 0.6 .268 67 31
Jordan Walker 589 .244 .306 .412 99 .168 .294 -5 0.5 .312 102 70
Jose Barrero 375 .208 .270 .348 72 .140 .299 0 0.4 .272 72 35
José Fermín 321 .229 .315 .329 82 .100 .251 -4 0.4 .290 84 32
Gavin Collins 212 .214 .280 .329 70 .115 .253 -1 0.2 .271 69 18
Michael Siani 459 .210 .281 .291 61 .081 .280 4 0.2 .258 64 40
Luken Baker 480 .212 .292 .400 92 .188 .254 -1 0.1 .300 94 50
Chance Sisco 129 .173 .256 .294 54 .121 .252 2 0.1 .249 54 9
Carlos Linarez 133 .185 .227 .241 32 .056 .280 5 0.0 .210 33 7
Matt Carpenter 192 .197 .308 .363 88 .166 .267 0 0.0 .298 80 19
Chase Davis 464 .205 .276 .312 65 .107 .284 3 0.0 .261 70 37
Alfonso Rivas III 383 .229 .323 .328 84 .099 .320 -1 0.0 .294 83 36
Chase Adkison 230 .217 .280 .294 62 .077 .283 0 0.0 .258 64 18
Chris Rotondo 404 .215 .287 .309 68 .094 .333 6 -0.1 .268 70 35
Jacob Buchberger 426 .217 .277 .309 64 .092 .290 3 -0.1 .260 66 36
Ramon Mendoza 278 .204 .275 .290 59 .086 .277 2 -0.1 .255 61 20
Dakota Harris 363 .231 .276 .333 70 .102 .298 -1 -0.2 .268 72 33
Graysen Tarlow 89 .176 .258 .239 41 .063 .239 0 -0.2 .230 39 5
Nathan Church 522 .234 .289 .301 66 .067 .267 8 -0.2 .263 68 46
Joshua Baez 348 .194 .265 .322 64 .128 .334 3 -0.3 .261 73 31
Noah Mendlinger 422 .238 .312 .292 71 .054 .283 -5 -0.4 .275 73 36
Jeremy Rivas 479 .216 .277 .260 52 .044 .284 2 -0.4 .245 57 37
R.J. Yeager 473 .234 .286 .346 76 .112 .263 2 -0.4 .278 77 45
Matt Lloyd 437 .222 .291 .345 78 .123 .283 0 -0.5 .280 77 41
Brody Moore 408 .218 .267 .279 54 .061 .293 -1 -0.6 .245 55 33
Anyelo Encarnacion 343 .192 .266 .284 55 .091 .301 0 -0.6 .248 62 26
Wade Stauss 129 .165 .282 .229 46 .064 .346 -5 -0.7 .244 44 7
Trey Paige 395 .191 .258 .256 45 .065 .284 5 -0.7 .233 48 24
Michael Curialle 351 .206 .277 .304 63 .098 .314 -4 -0.7 .261 64 28
Zach Levenson 309 .184 .262 .296 57 .112 .241 1 -0.9 .251 64 23
Tre Richardson 347 .186 .262 .254 46 .068 .279 1 -0.9 .235 51 24
Miguel Villarroel 428 .227 .257 .291 54 .064 .307 -4 -1.0 .241 57 35
Kade Kretzschmar 348 .215 .289 .273 59 .058 .292 0 -1.0 .256 63 26
Darlin Moquete 312 .203 .253 .322 60 .119 .262 0 -1.1 .253 63 26
Johnfrank Salazar 338 .219 .269 .290 57 .071 .261 2 -1.1 .248 63 25
Chandler Redmond 425 .200 .271 .317 64 .117 .314 1 -1.1 .261 65 34
Won-Bin Cho 457 .207 .270 .275 54 .068 .321 -2 -1.2 .246 61 35
William Sullivan 169 .169 .243 .234 35 .065 .273 -2 -1.3 .220 44 9
Alex Iadisernia 439 .198 .263 .301 58 .103 .268 1 -1.3 .252 63 36
Miguel Ugueto 251 .205 .231 .289 45 .084 .266 -1 -1.5 .227 49 18
Osvaldo Tovalin 394 .206 .247 .279 47 .073 .254 3 -1.7 .235 52 27
Brayden Jobert 370 .168 .254 .256 44 .088 .249 -2 -1.9 .234 48 24

Batters – Top Near-Age Offensive Comps
Player Hit Comp 1 Hit Comp 2 Hit Comp 3
Nolan Arenado Bill Madlock Mike Lowell Brooks Robinson
Masyn Winn Jimmy Rollins Robin Yount Zoilo Versalles
Willson Contreras Mike Stanley Chris Hoiles Ray Mueller
Brendan Donovan Mark Grace Orlando Gonzalez Nick Markakis
Lars Nootbaar Mike Jorgensen Tommy Henrich Phil Stephenson
Alec Burleson Derrick May Chad Tracy Lou Piniella
Nolan Gorman Dean Palmer Pedro Alvarez Jeff Kent
Iván Herrera Doug Robbins Shawn McGill Mike Stanley
Jimmy Crooks Frank Zupo Jim Bonnici Johnny Edwards
Thomas Saggese Alex Gonzalez Max Alvis Sheldon Neuse
César Prieto Luis Sojo Bruce Miller Bobby Pfeil
Leonardo Bernal Bill Fahey Conrado Lezcano John Wathan
Bryan Torres Joey Gathright Tony Gwynn Jr. Orlando Gonzalez
Brandon Crawford Chris Speier Don Lang Charlie Hayes
Pedro Pagés Dusty Brown Martín Maldonado Chad Moeller
Matt Koperniak Andy Dirks Art James Del Unser
Victor Scott II Keith Curcio Mel Stocker Tike Redman
Mike Antico Gary Brown Dave Jacas Eric Fox
Sammy Hernandez Wynston Sawyer Ben Rortvedt Gerry Brooks
Ryan Vilade Gary Thomas Winston Ficklin Jamie Hoffmann
Arquímedes Gamboa Darrel Chaney Anderson Machado Ken Jackson
Jordan Walker Frank Demaree Les Norman Darryl Motley
Jose Barrero Haley Young Carlos Duncan Tony Thomas
José Fermín Sonny Jackson Jeff Huson Al Newman
Gavin Collins Cody Clark Jerry Zimmerman Jim Command
Michael Siani Patrick Biondi Steve Murphy Mike Mesh
Luken Baker Eric Munson Cotton Nash R C Stevens
Chance Sisco Jeff Hearron Gary Tremblay Fred Hofmann
Carlos Linarez Josh Davis Juan Nunez Angel Diaz
Matt Carpenter Woodie Held Duke Snider Eric Hinske
Chase Davis Jake Skole Sean Dwyer Andy Rohleder
Alfonso Rivas III Reid Fronk Derek Nicholson Joe Bracchitta
Chase Adkison David Fore Matt Kennelly Jorge Maduro
Chris Rotondo Mark Doran Torii Hunter Juan Piniella
Jacob Buchberger Shane Turner Ed Lucas Jeff Bertoni
Ramon Mendoza Chuck Scrivener Zach McKinstry John Hamilton
Dakota Harris Rex Hudler Luis Gonzalez Pat Meares
Graysen Tarlow Mark Carroll John Harrell Raul Jimenez
Nathan Church Bobby Moore Pookie Wilson Chad Wright
Joshua Baez Tyler Johnson Todd Steverson Dylan Johnston
Noah Mendlinger Douglas Palmer Irving Lopez Raymond Rivas
Jeremy Rivas Jhonny Carvajal Chone Figgins Guillermo Reyes
R.J. Yeager Tony Martinez Ken Foster Garrett Guzman
Matt Lloyd Andy Barkett Larry DiPippo Danny Ozark
Brody Moore James Lofton Robbie Hudson Ryan Rutz
Anyelo Encarnacion Joe Morales Wayne Busby Kevin Flora
Wade Stauss Jim Baxter Matt Allen Bodie Shepherd
Trey Paige Jack Lind Zach Strong Pooh Hines
Michael Curialle Rob Marconi Rob Mackowiak Ronald Schmitt
Zach Levenson Joe Mackay Theodore Savia Dan Madsen
Tre Richardson Rick Wolff Ron Dillard Kevin Flora
Miguel Villarroel Tony Pena Jr. Tim Olson Juan Ciriaco
Kade Kretzschmar Justin Maffei Matthew Acosta Jared James
Darlin Moquete Sthervin Matos Jeffrey Baez Jerry Simmons
Johnfrank Salazar Ruben Cruz Jeffrey Ronevich Mark Elliott
Chandler Redmond Ron Durham Phil Westendorf Chip Cannon
Won-Bin Cho Greg Burns Josh Womack Kevin Kiermaier
William Sullivan Onesimo Perez Ryan Davis Matt Brooks
Alex Iadisernia Duane Singleton Josh Beauregard Wynter Phoenix
Miguel Ugueto Walker Gourley Cristian Paulino Julio Pacheco
Osvaldo Tovalin Scott Gillitzer David Hicks Christopher Minaker
Brayden Jobert Brian Blair Enoch Simmons Brad Bennett

Batters – 80th/20th Percentiles
Player 80th BA 80th OBP 80th SLG 80th OPS+ 80th WAR 20th BA 20th OBP 20th SLG 20th OPS+ 20th WAR
Nolan Arenado .295 .350 .470 127 4.3 .237 .295 .375 86 1.4
Masyn Winn .280 .334 .444 113 4.4 .230 .282 .348 75 1.4
Willson Contreras .262 .367 .467 131 3.6 .208 .317 .365 92 1.6
Brendan Donovan .304 .386 .450 133 3.8 .248 .333 .364 96 1.1
Lars Nootbaar .270 .369 .493 137 3.4 .220 .319 .380 97 1.1
Alec Burleson .307 .355 .485 130 3.4 .249 .295 .385 91 0.6
Nolan Gorman .259 .330 .511 129 3.4 .202 .270 .388 84 0.5
Iván Herrera .281 .369 .440 124 2.9 .222 .310 .341 83 0.9
Jimmy Crooks .273 .339 .421 112 3.0 .217 .283 .322 71 1.0
Thomas Saggese .272 .318 .442 108 3.0 .219 .269 .343 70 0.2
César Prieto .286 .318 .413 103 2.6 .225 .262 .321 64 0.0
Leonardo Bernal .259 .323 .383 97 2.5 .198 .261 .291 56 0.3
Bryan Torres .303 .369 .378 109 2.4 .241 .304 .297 70 -0.1
Brandon Crawford .257 .332 .419 109 1.9 .196 .272 .315 64 0.2
Pedro Pagés .251 .310 .385 92 1.8 .189 .251 .292 54 0.1
Matt Koperniak .283 .339 .421 110 2.1 .226 .281 .329 71 -0.2
Victor Scott II .248 .304 .359 84 1.8 .195 .259 .278 51 -0.5
Mike Antico .250 .306 .382 91 1.7 .201 .257 .303 57 -0.5
Sammy Hernandez .233 .307 .342 83 1.7 .165 .243 .244 41 -0.2
Ryan Vilade .262 .326 .386 97 1.6 .216 .277 .303 64 -0.4
Arquímedes Gamboa .232 .320 .347 86 1.4 .174 .262 .260 49 -0.3
Jordan Walker .271 .333 .463 118 1.9 .221 .278 .367 80 -0.9
Jose Barrero .234 .295 .402 94 1.5 .179 .240 .296 51 -0.5
José Fermín .258 .343 .376 101 1.2 .205 .288 .287 65 -0.3
Gavin Collins .243 .307 .386 93 0.8 .184 .249 .280 50 -0.4
Michael Siani .237 .305 .331 78 1.1 .182 .254 .257 46 -0.8
Luken Baker .235 .311 .453 109 1.0 .188 .268 .350 75 -0.9
Chance Sisco .202 .286 .357 78 0.4 .151 .227 .248 35 -0.2
Carlos Linarez .221 .262 .283 53 0.4 .156 .204 .198 14 -0.3
Matt Carpenter .222 .340 .423 108 0.5 .168 .277 .303 64 -0.5
Chase Davis .231 .300 .354 82 1.0 .177 .251 .268 46 -1.0
Alfonso Rivas III .257 .351 .375 103 0.9 .202 .294 .289 65 -1.0
Chase Adkison .248 .312 .342 83 0.6 .184 .253 .253 44 -0.6
Chris Rotondo .250 .318 .359 89 1.0 .189 .260 .270 49 -1.0
Jacob Buchberger .241 .303 .355 83 0.9 .190 .252 .274 48 -0.9
Ramon Mendoza .236 .308 .341 81 0.7 .178 .251 .253 43 -0.7
Dakota Harris .257 .301 .371 88 0.7 .206 .252 .293 54 -0.9
Graysen Tarlow .206 .294 .277 59 0.0 .148 .229 .202 23 -0.4
Nathan Church .262 .316 .342 84 0.9 .207 .263 .267 50 -1.3
Joshua Baez .230 .294 .376 86 0.7 .171 .237 .274 45 -1.2
Noah Mendlinger .264 .338 .325 86 0.5 .209 .286 .257 55 -1.2
Jeremy Rivas .245 .307 .296 69 0.7 .194 .255 .234 40 -1.2
R.J. Yeager .263 .314 .395 96 0.7 .208 .261 .305 59 -1.6
Matt Lloyd .249 .318 .395 97 0.7 .193 .261 .299 56 -1.6
Brody Moore .240 .294 .311 69 0.2 .189 .243 .247 38 -1.4
Anyelo Encarnacion .219 .299 .337 77 0.3 .163 .240 .238 34 -1.5
Wade Stauss .203 .317 .276 69 -0.3 .136 .252 .189 28 -1.0
Trey Paige .223 .286 .300 64 0.2 .165 .230 .222 28 -1.6
Michael Curialle .235 .302 .349 80 0.0 .182 .249 .268 46 -1.5
Zach Levenson .214 .290 .349 77 -0.1 .161 .238 .259 41 -1.5
Tre Richardson .212 .289 .294 65 -0.1 .158 .235 .218 28 -1.7
Miguel Villarroel .255 .284 .326 70 0.0 .199 .230 .253 36 -1.9
Kade Kretzschmar .242 .314 .310 74 -0.4 .189 .260 .237 42 -1.8
Darlin Moquete .231 .282 .375 80 -0.2 .177 .228 .279 44 -1.8
Johnfrank Salazar .249 .297 .331 76 -0.3 .194 .240 .255 39 -1.9
Chandler Redmond .230 .300 .366 83 -0.1 .174 .243 .276 45 -2.1
Won-Bin Cho .239 .298 .318 74 -0.1 .182 .243 .243 38 -2.1
William Sullivan .195 .268 .281 51 -1.0 .144 .214 .198 17 -1.7
Alex Iadisernia .225 .289 .344 76 -0.4 .175 .240 .262 42 -2.2
Miguel Ugueto .237 .261 .334 65 -0.8 .178 .202 .248 26 -2.1
Osvaldo Tovalin .232 .275 .317 65 -0.8 .179 .220 .238 29 -2.7
Brayden Jobert .193 .281 .293 60 -1.1 .145 .228 .219 28 -2.7

Batters – Platoon Splits
Player BA vs. L OBP vs. L SLG vs. L BA vs. R OBP vs. R SLG vs. R
Nolan Arenado .273 .338 .439 .260 .315 .418
Masyn Winn .263 .323 .427 .248 .297 .372
Willson Contreras .248 .356 .455 .234 .336 .410
Brendan Donovan .268 .349 .396 .285 .365 .414
Lars Nootbaar .239 .331 .389 .247 .349 .449
Alec Burleson .267 .314 .398 .282 .331 .450
Nolan Gorman .222 .289 .393 .233 .307 .469
Iván Herrera .254 .349 .389 .249 .338 .378
Jimmy Crooks .230 .297 .320 .251 .320 .378
Thomas Saggese .247 .297 .388 .242 .289 .386
César Prieto .250 .285 .346 .262 .294 .374
Leonardo Bernal .232 .289 .336 .226 .290 .330
Bryan Torres .256 .317 .318 .280 .345 .346
Brandon Crawford .228 .295 .342 .228 .307 .376
Pedro Pagés .226 .291 .348 .217 .278 .333
Matt Koperniak .245 .297 .357 .256 .313 .380
Victor Scott II .214 .268 .275 .226 .285 .335
Mike Antico .220 .275 .312 .229 .287 .358
Sammy Hernandez .204 .278 .327 .190 .273 .272
Ryan Vilade .244 .307 .355 .232 .294 .339
Arquímedes Gamboa .202 .281 .312 .210 .296 .295
Jordan Walker .250 .316 .438 .241 .300 .398
Jose Barrero .214 .275 .365 .204 .266 .338
José Fermín .224 .311 .318 .233 .318 .337
Gavin Collins .225 .291 .352 .208 .273 .317
Michael Siani .209 .278 .288 .211 .283 .293
Luken Baker .214 .298 .417 .210 .287 .389
Chance Sisco .167 .242 .300 .174 .260 .291
Carlos Linarez .190 .227 .214 .181 .225 .253
Matt Carpenter .182 .288 .295 .203 .317 .390
Chase Davis .197 .264 .291 .209 .281 .321
Alfonso Rivas III .209 .298 .308 .237 .332 .336
Chase Adkison .227 .288 .318 .213 .277 .284
Chris Rotondo .219 .297 .333 .214 .282 .298
Jacob Buchberger .232 .298 .326 .209 .265 .299
Ramon Mendoza .205 .283 .284 .204 .272 .293
Dakota Harris .233 .282 .340 .230 .273 .330
Graysen Tarlow .185 .267 .222 .173 .254 .250
Nathan Church .233 .286 .295 .235 .290 .304
Joshua Baez .198 .268 .337 .192 .264 .315
Noah Mendlinger .225 .298 .265 .243 .317 .301
Jeremy Rivas .221 .283 .269 .213 .275 .255
R.J. Yeager .244 .299 .356 .229 .280 .342
Matt Lloyd .211 .278 .307 .227 .296 .360
Brody Moore .215 .267 .289 .220 .267 .275
Anyelo Encarnacion .198 .277 .297 .189 .260 .277
Wade Stauss .152 .282 .182 .171 .284 .250
Trey Paige .188 .248 .240 .192 .262 .262
Michael Curialle .204 .275 .306 .207 .279 .304
Zach Levenson .186 .268 .302 .183 .259 .293
Tre Richardson .184 .266 .235 .187 .260 .263
Miguel Villarroel .227 .259 .305 .227 .256 .285
Kade Kretzschmar .200 .274 .247 .221 .295 .283
Darlin Moquete .210 .266 .330 .199 .246 .317
Johnfrank Salazar .229 .281 .295 .214 .262 .286
Chandler Redmond .191 .254 .278 .204 .278 .333
Won-Bin Cho .195 .258 .265 .211 .275 .279
William Sullivan .163 .250 .256 .171 .240 .225
Alex Iadisernia .187 .254 .271 .202 .266 .312
Miguel Ugueto .213 .241 .320 .201 .227 .274
Osvaldo Tovalin .200 .252 .261 .208 .245 .286
Brayden Jobert .169 .257 .225 .167 .253 .268

Pitchers – Standard
Player T Age W L ERA G GS IP H ER HR BB SO
Sonny Gray R 35 11 7 3.43 26 26 149.7 129 57 17 41 156
Michael McGreevy R 24 9 8 3.99 28 27 153.3 155 68 18 41 108
Andre Pallante R 26 7 7 3.82 36 18 117.7 115 50 9 47 87
Quinn Mathews L 24 6 6 4.05 25 25 126.7 115 57 15 46 122
Ryan Helsley R 30 7 3 2.77 58 0 61.7 45 19 5 22 75
Erick Fedde R 32 8 9 4.21 26 26 143.3 143 67 21 45 129
Drew Rom L 25 5 5 3.98 18 17 83.7 80 37 9 29 73
Tink Hence R 22 5 5 4.20 26 26 98.7 95 46 13 34 83
Kyle Gibson R 37 7 8 4.47 25 25 139.0 141 69 18 55 116
Gordon Graceffo R 25 7 9 4.42 25 24 124.3 126 61 16 41 86
Lance Lynn R 38 6 8 4.44 23 23 125.7 125 62 19 46 115
Matthew Liberatore L 25 6 5 4.15 43 15 102.0 96 47 12 38 93
Steven Matz L 34 4 4 4.10 21 16 83.3 86 38 10 27 73
Miles Mikolas R 36 7 10 4.63 25 25 140.0 151 72 21 28 95
Sem Robberse R 23 5 5 4.41 21 19 100.0 100 49 13 35 78
Zack Thompson L 27 5 6 4.27 26 18 92.7 86 44 11 44 91
Max Rajcic R 23 8 11 4.62 24 23 120.7 126 62 17 37 84
Alex Cornwell L 26 5 5 4.50 22 15 90.0 97 45 12 26 62
Packy Naughton L 29 2 2 3.71 20 8 43.7 43 18 4 12 38
Adam Kloffenstein R 24 5 5 4.61 20 19 95.7 96 49 12 41 74
Victor Santos R 24 6 7 4.52 28 14 93.7 95 47 11 28 62
John King L 30 4 3 3.58 53 1 60.3 63 24 5 15 39
JoJo Romero L 28 5 4 3.60 57 0 55.0 49 22 6 18 55
Tekoah Roby R 23 3 4 4.48 16 16 64.3 65 32 9 20 49
Ryan Fernandez R 27 4 3 3.71 53 0 60.7 55 25 6 23 60
Roddery Muñoz R 25 6 8 4.84 26 21 109.7 108 59 18 49 93
Ian Bedell R 25 3 3 4.82 21 18 93.3 94 50 14 36 71
Kyle Leahy R 28 4 4 4.39 39 6 84.0 85 41 10 32 64
Riley O’Brien R 30 3 3 4.44 29 7 50.7 46 25 6 27 51
Zane Mills R 24 4 6 4.80 26 10 80.7 89 43 11 25 47
Keynan Middleton R 31 2 1 3.93 39 0 36.7 33 16 5 15 39
Ryan Loutos R 26 3 2 4.14 46 0 58.7 58 27 6 23 49
Chris Roycroft R 28 5 5 4.19 53 0 68.7 66 32 7 32 57
Wilfredo Pereira R 26 4 6 5.03 26 13 91.3 98 51 13 35 58
Oddanier Mosqueda L 26 4 3 4.33 49 1 60.3 54 29 7 29 58
Cooper Hjerpe L 24 3 4 5.11 17 17 56.3 52 32 9 30 53
Bailey Horn L 27 4 4 4.50 41 2 54.0 52 27 7 28 49
Nick Raquet L 29 4 6 4.78 32 5 75.3 80 40 10 31 53
Matt Svanson R 26 3 4 4.55 45 1 59.3 61 30 7 21 43
Jacob Bosiokovic R 31 3 3 4.47 38 0 46.3 44 23 6 23 43
Benito Garcia R 25 3 3 4.65 30 1 60.0 65 31 8 16 37
Josh James R 32 1 0 4.87 21 1 20.3 19 11 2 14 18
Ryan Shreve R 27 4 4 4.55 36 0 63.3 66 32 8 24 45
Andre Granillo R 25 4 5 4.63 45 0 58.3 55 30 8 31 55
Jack Ralston R 27 3 3 4.71 34 1 49.7 46 26 6 30 47
Michael Gomez R 28 3 4 4.61 38 0 54.7 53 28 6 25 42
Nathanael Heredia L 24 2 3 5.48 34 1 44.3 43 27 5 32 35
Andrew Marrero R 25 3 4 5.24 37 0 46.3 45 27 7 27 42
Leonardo Taveras R 26 2 3 5.26 39 0 53.0 51 31 7 35 46
Edwin Nunez R 23 3 5 6.00 27 12 69.0 71 46 11 42 48

Pitchers – Advanced
Player IP K/9 BB/9 HR/9 BB% K% BABIP ERA+ 3ERA+ FIP ERA- WAR
Sonny Gray 149.7 9.4 2.5 1.0 6.7% 25.4% .284 120 112 3.49 84 2.9
Michael McGreevy 153.3 6.3 2.4 1.1 6.3% 16.7% .287 103 105 4.14 97 2.1
Andre Pallante 117.7 6.7 3.6 0.7 9.1% 16.9% .292 107 108 3.99 93 1.6
Quinn Mathews 126.7 8.7 3.3 1.1 8.6% 22.7% .287 101 104 4.07 99 1.6
Ryan Helsley 61.7 10.9 3.2 0.7 8.8% 29.9% .274 148 143 2.87 68 1.6
Erick Fedde 143.3 8.1 2.8 1.3 7.4% 21.1% .295 98 94 4.29 103 1.6
Drew Rom 83.7 7.9 3.1 1.0 8.1% 20.3% .292 103 106 4.05 97 1.1
Tink Hence 98.7 7.6 3.1 1.2 8.0% 19.6% .285 98 101 4.30 102 1.1
Kyle Gibson 139.0 7.5 3.6 1.2 9.1% 19.1% .297 92 84 4.49 109 1.1
Gordon Graceffo 124.3 6.2 3.0 1.2 7.6% 16.0% .284 93 97 4.55 108 1.1
Lance Lynn 125.7 8.2 3.3 1.4 8.5% 21.2% .295 92 84 4.55 108 1.0
Matthew Liberatore 102.0 8.2 3.4 1.1 8.7% 21.2% .290 99 103 4.18 101 0.9
Steven Matz 83.3 7.9 2.9 1.1 7.5% 20.3% .308 100 92 4.07 100 0.9
Miles Mikolas 140.0 6.1 1.8 1.4 4.8% 16.1% .293 89 83 4.48 113 0.9
Sem Robberse 100.0 7.0 3.2 1.2 8.1% 18.1% .289 93 99 4.45 107 0.9
Zack Thompson 92.7 8.8 4.3 1.1 10.8% 22.4% .293 96 98 4.34 104 0.9
Max Rajcic 120.7 6.3 2.8 1.3 7.1% 16.1% .288 89 93 4.74 113 0.8
Alex Cornwell 90.0 6.2 2.6 1.2 6.6% 15.9% .297 91 94 4.53 110 0.7
Packy Naughton 43.7 7.8 2.5 0.8 6.5% 20.7% .302 111 112 3.52 90 0.7
Adam Kloffenstein 95.7 7.0 3.9 1.1 9.6% 17.4% .290 89 94 4.83 112 0.7
Victor Santos 93.7 6.0 2.7 1.1 7.0% 15.6% .284 91 96 4.41 110 0.7
John King 60.3 5.8 2.2 0.7 5.9% 15.2% .297 115 113 3.81 87 0.6
JoJo Romero 55.0 9.0 2.9 1.0 7.8% 23.8% .289 114 114 3.74 88 0.5
Tekoah Roby 64.3 6.9 2.8 1.3 7.2% 17.8% .287 92 98 4.55 109 0.5
Ryan Fernandez 60.7 8.9 3.4 0.9 8.9% 23.3% .293 111 113 3.67 90 0.5
Roddery Muñoz 109.7 7.6 4.0 1.5 10.1% 19.2% .283 85 90 5.12 118 0.4
Ian Bedell 93.3 6.8 3.5 1.4 8.9% 17.5% .284 85 89 5.02 117 0.4
Kyle Leahy 84.0 6.9 3.4 1.1 8.7% 17.4% .292 93 95 4.45 107 0.3
Riley O’Brien 50.7 9.1 4.8 1.1 12.0% 22.7% .290 92 92 4.60 108 0.3
Zane Mills 80.7 5.2 2.8 1.2 7.1% 13.4% .293 86 91 4.86 117 0.2
Keynan Middleton 36.7 9.6 3.7 1.2 9.5% 24.7% .289 105 104 4.13 96 0.2
Ryan Loutos 58.7 7.5 3.5 0.9 9.0% 19.1% .297 99 101 4.12 101 0.1
Chris Roycroft 68.7 7.5 4.2 0.9 10.5% 18.8% .291 98 98 4.42 102 0.1
Wilfredo Pereira 91.3 5.7 3.4 1.3 8.7% 14.4% .289 82 84 5.07 122 0.1
Oddanier Mosqueda 60.3 8.7 4.3 1.0 11.0% 22.1% .283 95 97 4.60 105 0.0
Cooper Hjerpe 56.3 8.5 4.8 1.4 12.0% 21.2% .277 80 86 5.29 125 0.0
Bailey Horn 54.0 8.2 4.7 1.2 11.7% 20.4% .292 91 94 4.72 110 0.0
Nick Raquet 75.3 6.3 3.7 1.2 9.3% 15.8% .295 86 86 4.89 116 0.0
Matt Svanson 59.3 6.5 3.2 1.1 8.1% 16.7% .293 90 94 4.63 111 0.0
Jacob Bosiokovic 46.3 8.4 4.5 1.2 11.0% 20.6% .290 92 89 4.69 109 -0.1
Benito Garcia 60.0 5.6 2.4 1.2 6.2% 14.4% .292 88 92 4.68 113 -0.1
Josh James 20.3 8.0 6.2 0.9 14.6% 18.8% .288 84 79 5.05 119 -0.1
Ryan Shreve 63.3 6.4 3.4 1.1 8.7% 16.2% .293 90 92 4.58 111 -0.1
Andre Granillo 58.3 8.5 4.8 1.2 11.7% 20.8% .288 89 93 4.72 113 -0.2
Jack Ralston 49.7 8.5 5.4 1.1 13.0% 20.3% .288 87 90 4.79 115 -0.2
Michael Gomez 54.7 6.9 4.1 1.0 10.4% 17.4% .285 89 90 4.88 112 -0.2
Nathanael Heredia 44.3 7.1 6.5 1.0 15.2% 16.7% .286 75 80 5.64 134 -0.5
Andrew Marrero 46.3 8.2 5.2 1.4 12.6% 19.5% .288 78 83 5.47 128 -0.5
Leonardo Taveras 53.0 7.8 5.9 1.2 14.2% 18.6% .288 78 80 5.48 128 -0.6
Edwin Nunez 69.0 6.3 5.5 1.4 12.9% 14.8% .280 68 74 6.21 146 -0.7

Pitchers – Top Near-Age Comps
Player Pit Comp 1 Pit Comp 2 Pit Comp 3
Sonny Gray Phil Niekro Tom Candiotti Luis Tiant
Michael McGreevy Ariel Jurado Nate Minchey Peter Lambert
Andre Pallante Joe Kelly Dakota Hudson Bob Darnell
Quinn Mathews Sean Manaea Randy Wolf David Price
Ryan Helsley Rich Gossage Felix Rodriguez 로드리게스 Craig Kimbrel
Erick Fedde Merrill Kelly 켈리 Jim Clancy Rick Helling
Drew Rom Christian Friedrich 프리드릭 Kevin Bearse Dan Smith
Tink Hence Nick Pesco Joe Skalski Todd Burns
Kyle Gibson Jack Morris Jose Contreras Rick Sutcliffe
Gordon Graceffo Daniel Mengden Braden Shipley Tyler Mahle
Lance Lynn Mark Gardner Dave Stewart Elmer Singleton
Matthew Liberatore John Gebhard Bobby Shantz Hal Hudson
Steven Matz Hippo Vaughn Bob Kuzava Bill Flynt
Miles Mikolas Jeremy Guthrie Jason Hammel Jeff Samardzija
Sem Robberse Rusty Richards Bob Tewksbury George Case
Zack Thompson Brian Burres Steven Brault Jorge De La Rosa
Max Rajcic Henderson Alvarez Alec Asher Tyler Mahle
Alex Cornwell Kurt Peltzer Kellen Raab Ryan Yarbrough
Packy Naughton Tim Kubinski Jan Dukes Ken Frailing
Adam Kloffenstein Sam Hinds Buster Narum Vic Martin
Victor Santos Kendry Flores John Simms Chih-Wei Hu
John King T.J. McFarland Ken Lehman Matt Grace
JoJo Romero Don Gross Jose Luis Garcia Paul Assenmacher
Tekoah Roby Bob Stocker Marcus Tyner Sonny Garcia
Ryan Fernandez Mark Lowe Darryl Scott Jim Miller
Roddery Muñoz Jim Bullinger Rex Rupert Pat Overholt
Ian Bedell Matt Esparza Doug Waechter Matt Petersen
Kyle Leahy Jordan Lyles Drew VerHagen Eddie Butler 버틀러
Riley O’Brien Kevin Campbell Roman Mendez Hector Heredia
Zane Mills Gary Wilson Joey Cramblitt Artie Lewicki
Keynan Middleton Dave Tobik Johnny Murphy John Costello
Ryan Loutos Calvin Medlock Randy Messenger Jason Martin 마틴es
Chris Roycroft Jake Petricka Sam Coonrod Victor Moreno
Wilfredo Pereira Jesus Tinoco Barrett Astin Chad Beck
Oddanier Mosqueda Dave LaRoche Rob Kaminsky Pedro Martinez
Cooper Hjerpe Mike Tanzi Mike Mason Dave Martinez
Bailey Horn Nick Maronde Russ Rohlicek Kyle Bird
Nick Raquet Derrin Ebert Pete Olsen David Maust
Matt Svanson J.R. Graham Paul Quinzer Duaner Sanchez
Jacob Bosiokovic Ryan Garton Dave Wallace Jimmy Rogers
Benito Garcia Mike Moat Mike Welch Corey Baker
Josh James Jack Berly Gary Waslewski Dwight Bernard
Ryan Shreve Larry Corr Steve Rowe Michael Cisco
Andre Granillo Alex Maestri 마에스트리 Steve Cishek Tom Ebert
Jack Ralston Jose Valdez Jeff Jones Mike Shade
Michael Gomez Sam Marsonek Carroll Sembera Steve Shea
Nathanael Heredia Tom Miali Mike Pomeranz Larry Dierks
Andrew Marrero Adam Lau Austin Glorius Mario Alcantara
Leonardo Taveras Myles Smith Adrian Hollinger Jordan Foley
Edwin Nunez Yunior Marte Jason Backs Carl Randle

Pitchers – Splits and Percentiles
Player BA vs. L OBP vs. L SLG vs. L BA vs. R OBP vs. R SLG vs. R 80th WAR 20th WAR 80th ERA 20th ERA
Sonny Gray .223 .283 .363 .231 .283 .372 3.8 1.8 2.86 4.09
Michael McGreevy .274 .336 .462 .241 .273 .359 2.9 1.1 3.56 4.56
Andre Pallante .236 .306 .322 .263 .337 .406 2.3 0.9 3.40 4.36
Quinn Mathews .230 .318 .370 .239 .308 .390 2.6 0.8 3.51 4.63
Ryan Helsley .206 .281 .324 .194 .257 .298 2.3 0.7 2.07 3.87
Erick Fedde .254 .314 .428 .254 .308 .429 2.4 0.5 3.71 4.94
Drew Rom .225 .292 .343 .256 .325 .413 1.7 0.5 3.46 4.55
Tink Hence .249 .316 .396 .247 .305 .419 1.8 0.5 3.65 4.75
Kyle Gibson .267 .344 .429 .247 .313 .411 1.9 0.1 3.92 5.23
Gordon Graceffo .262 .331 .444 .254 .307 .402 1.8 0.4 4.00 4.90
Lance Lynn .265 .348 .466 .243 .298 .402 1.8 0.1 3.78 5.27
Matthew Liberatore .225 .288 .308 .251 .329 .429 1.7 0.2 3.58 4.74
Steven Matz .269 .341 .385 .258 .313 .425 1.4 0.2 3.58 4.94
Miles Mikolas .279 .320 .461 .261 .295 .436 1.7 0.0 4.12 5.29
Sem Robberse .246 .329 .421 .263 .310 .411 1.5 0.2 3.91 5.03
Zack Thompson .236 .328 .349 .242 .330 .409 1.6 0.1 3.71 5.00
Max Rajcic .262 .338 .433 .264 .313 .439 1.5 0.1 4.14 5.12
Alex Cornwell .265 .318 .429 .271 .325 .439 1.2 0.1 4.05 5.09
Packy Naughton .214 .254 .304 .270 .325 .426 1.0 0.3 3.12 4.52
Adam Kloffenstein .262 .355 .437 .249 .326 .394 1.2 0.1 4.19 5.16
Victor Santos .249 .312 .403 .266 .317 .415 1.2 0.1 4.03 5.08
John King .238 .287 .300 .277 .322 .428 1.0 0.2 3.08 4.06
JoJo Romero .200 .264 .277 .248 .317 .421 1.1 -0.1 2.86 4.40
Tekoah Roby .239 .311 .367 .271 .321 .465 0.9 0.0 3.95 5.19
Ryan Fernandez .238 .328 .406 .235 .287 .341 1.0 -0.1 3.09 4.45
Roddery Muñoz .267 .349 .485 .238 .322 .396 1.1 -0.3 4.35 5.40
Ian Bedell .266 .349 .467 .247 .320 .404 1.0 -0.2 4.30 5.39
Kyle Leahy .248 .325 .393 .263 .325 .425 0.8 -0.2 3.89 4.99
Riley O’Brien .238 .354 .393 .234 .333 .378 0.8 -0.2 3.67 5.28
Zane Mills .292 .352 .465 .261 .315 .428 0.7 -0.3 4.33 5.37
Keynan Middleton .242 .329 .419 .228 .295 .392 0.5 -0.2 3.15 5.06
Ryan Loutos .255 .336 .402 .250 .312 .383 0.5 -0.3 3.62 4.76
Chris Roycroft .272 .370 .416 .225 .302 .352 0.5 -0.5 3.72 4.94
Wilfredo Pereira .277 .353 .446 .261 .326 .437 0.5 -0.5 4.58 5.57
Oddanier Mosqueda .193 .306 .301 .257 .355 .426 0.5 -0.5 3.70 5.08
Cooper Hjerpe .238 .347 .317 .240 .344 .468 0.5 -0.5 4.51 5.84
Bailey Horn .229 .313 .386 .257 .352 .421 0.5 -0.4 3.91 5.11
Nick Raquet .281 .358 .438 .260 .333 .431 0.4 -0.6 4.31 5.43
Matt Svanson .274 .352 .463 .252 .323 .374 0.4 -0.4 4.02 5.13
Jacob Bosiokovic .271 .347 .435 .221 .330 .379 0.4 -0.4 3.77 5.18
Benito Garcia .294 .345 .486 .252 .308 .389 0.3 -0.5 4.04 5.27
Josh James .243 .391 .378 .238 .340 .357 0.1 -0.4 4.17 6.20
Ryan Shreve .264 .339 .436 .262 .318 .404 0.3 -0.6 4.00 5.14
Andre Granillo .276 .390 .469 .219 .289 .359 0.3 -0.6 3.98 5.28
Jack Ralston .239 .352 .402 .240 .342 .380 0.3 -0.6 4.09 5.51
Michael Gomez .253 .357 .411 .246 .338 .381 0.2 -0.7 4.07 5.33
Nathanael Heredia .255 .379 .345 .246 .384 .424 -0.2 -1.0 4.89 6.41
Andrew Marrero .256 .389 .449 .243 .342 .408 -0.2 -0.9 4.68 5.96
Leonardo Taveras .271 .398 .438 .227 .344 .391 -0.3 -1.1 4.73 6.00
Edwin Nunez .269 .385 .479 .253 .376 .429 -0.3 -1.3 5.47 6.84

Players are listed with their most recent teams wherever possible. This includes players who are unsigned or have retired, players who will miss 2025 due to injury, and players who were released in 2024. So yes, if you see Joe Schmoe, who quit baseball back in August to form a Norwegian Ukulele Dixieland Jazz band that only covers songs by The Smiths, he’s still listed here intentionally. ZiPS is assuming a league with an ERA of 4.11.

Hitters are ranked by zWAR, which is to say, WAR values as calculated by me, Dan Szymborski, whose surname is spelled with a z. WAR values might differ slightly from those that appear in the full release of ZiPS. Finally, I will advise anyone against — and might karate chop anyone guilty of — merely adding up WAR totals on a depth chart to produce projected team WAR. It is important to remember that ZiPS is agnostic about playing time, and has no information about, for example, how quickly a team will call up a prospect or what veteran has fallen into disfavor.

As always, incorrect projections are either caused by misinformation, a non-pragmatic reality, or by the skillful sabotage of our friend and former editor. You can, however, still get mad at me on Twitter or on BlueSky.


Who Is Nolan Arenado Anymore, and How Can He Be Traded?

Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images

I want to start off by saying that I was devastated — devastated — to learn that Nolan Arenado reportedly vetoed a trade to the Houston Astros. I guess it would’ve made some baseball sense, as Alex Bregman’s departure leaves a vacancy at third base, and new acquisition Isaac Paredes could easily slide across the diamond to first. Plus, Arenado is a three-time National League home run leader with a long history of hitting the ball in the air and to the pull side. Surely he’d find something to like about the Crawford Boxes.

But mostly, I wanted this to happen because I had a joke lined up. Read the rest of this entry »


Better Late Than Never: The Hall Calls for Dick Allen and Dave Parker

Tony Tomsic and Malcolm Emmons-Imagn Images

DALLAS — The collision of human mortality and baseball immortality is a jarring one that has resonated throughout the history of the National Baseball Hall of Fame, and Sunday night’s announcement of the voting results of the Classic Baseball Era Committee was yet another reminder. Four years after dying of cancer at the age of 78, and three years after falling one vote short for his second straight ballot, Dick Allen finally gained entry. Also elected was 73-year-old Dave Parker, who has been rendered frail while waging a very public battle with Parkinson’s Disease in recent years.

The two sluggers were the only candidates from among a slate of eight elected by the 16-member committee, which met on Sunday at the Winter Meetings here in Dallas. The panel was charged with considering candidates from an overly broad swath of the game’s history. By definition, all eight candidates made their greatest impact prior to 1980, but weighing the merits of John Donaldson, who pitched in the major Negro Leagues from 1920–24 (and for Black baseball teams predating the Negro Leagues as early as 1915), against the likes of Parker, whose major league career ran from 1973–91, is a nearly impossible task, particularly within the limitations of a format that allows each voter to choose a maximum of three candidates from among the eight.

Parker, who had fallen short on three previous Era Committee ballots, received the most support from the panel, totaling 14 votes out of 16 (87.5%), while Allen received 13 (81.3%). Tommy John received seven (43.8%) in his fifth Era Committee appearance. The other five candidates — Ken Boyer, Donaldson, Steve Garvey, Vic Harris, Luis Tiant — each received less than five votes, according to the Hall.

To these eyes, Allen was the most deserving of the non-Negro Leagues candidates on this ballot. In a 15-year-career with the Phillies (1963–69, ’75–76), Cardinals (’70), Dodgers (’71), White Sox (’72–74), and A’s (’77), he made seven All-Star teams; led his league in OPS+ three times, in home runs twice, and in WAR once; and won NL Rookie of the Year and AL MVP awards (’64 and ’72, respectively) while hitting 351 homers and batting .292/.378/.534. Among players with at least 7,000 plate appearances, his career 156 OPS+ is tied with Hall of Famer Frank Thomas for 14th all time.

Allen accrued just 1,848 hits, and so he joins 2022 Golden Days honoree Tony Oliva as the only post-1960 expansion era players in the Hall with fewer than 2,000 hits. The marker has served as a proxy for career length, for better or worse, and in doing so has frozen out players whose careers were shortened for one reason or another, as well as those who built a good portion of their value via on-base skills and defense. BBWAA voters have yet to elect one such player, though Andruw Jones (1,933) is climbing toward 75%, and Chase Utley (1,885) made a solid debut on the 2024 ballot.

Not a particularly adept defender, Allen bounced from third base to left field to first base while traveling around the majors. He accrued his most value while playing third; he’s 17th in both WAR (58.7) and JAWS (52.3) at the position, slightly below Boyer (62.8 WAR, 54.5 JAWS), who had the advantage of a much less controversial career.

Allen’s career was shortened by what seemed to be a constant battle with the world around him, one in which the racism he faced in the minor leagues and in Philadelphia played a major role. Six years after governor Orval Faubus called in the Arkansas National Guard in order to prevent the court-ordered desegregation of Little Rock Central High School, the Phillies sent the 21-year-old Allen to become the first affiliated Black professional baseball player in the state. Faubus himself threw out the first pitch while picketers carried signs with slogans such as “Don’t Negro-ize baseball” and “N***** go home.”⁠ Though Allen hit a double in the game-winning rally, he was greeted with a note on his car: “DON’T COME BACK AGAIN N*****,”⁠ as he recounted in his autobiography, Crash: The Life and Times of Dick Allen.

The Phillies themselves — the NL’s last team to integrate, 10 years after Jackie Robinson debuted — were far behind the integration curve, as was Philadelphia itself. Allen quickly became a polarizing presence, covered by a media contingent so unable or unwilling to relate to him that writers often refused to call him by the name of his choosing: Dick Allen, not Richie.

Allen rebelled against his surroundings. As biographer Mitchell Nathanson wrote in God Almighty Hisself: The Life and Legacy of Dick Allen, “He refused to pander to the media, refused to accept management’s time-honored methods for determining the value of a ballplayer, and, most explosively, refused to go along with and kowtow to the racial double standard that had evolved within Major League Baseball in the wake of the game’s integration in 1947.”

Allen struggled for support during his 1983–97 run on the BBWAA ballot, never reaching 20%, and he similarly lagged in the voting of the expanded Veterans Committee from 2003–09. However, thanks in part to a grassroots campaign by former Phillies groundskeeper Mark Carfagno, he received a fresh look from the 2015 Golden Era Committee and fell just one vote short of election. The change in Era Committee formats meant that his case wasn’t scheduled to be reconsidered until the 2021 Golden Day Era Committee ballot, but the COVID-19 pandemic led the Hall to postpone that election. In a cruel blow, Allen died of cancer on December 7, 2020, one day after his candidacy would have been considered. Crueler still for his family, he again fell one vote short when the committee finally met in December 2021. Thus his election is a bittersweet moment, one that would have been greatly enriched by his being able to enjoy it.

Whatever quibbles there are to be had with the election of Parker, we can be grateful he’s still around to savor it. A five-tool player whose power, ability to hit for average, and strong, accurate throwing arm all stood out, he spent 19 years in the majors with the Pirates (1973–83), hometown Reds (’84–87), A’s (’88–89), Brewers (’90), Angels (’91), and Blue Jays (’91). He hit 339 homers and collected 2,712 hits while batting .290/.339/.471 (121 OPS+) and making seven All-Star teams, and at his peak, he was considered the game’s best all-around player. In his first five full seasons (1975-79), he amassed a World Series ring (in the last of those years), regular season and All-Star MVP awards, two batting titles, two league leads in slugging percentage, and three Gold Gloves, not to mention tremendous swagger and a great nickname (“The Cobra”).

A 14th-round draft pick out of Cincinnati’s Courier Tech High School — he fell from the first or second round due to multiple knee injuries that ended his pursuit of football, his favorite sport — Parker debuted with the Pirates in July 1973, just seven months after the death of Roberto Clemente. He assumed full-time duty as the team’s right fielder a season and a half later, and appeared to be on course to join the Puerto Rican legend in Cooperstown, but cocaine, poor conditioning, and injuries threw him off course. While he recovered well enough to make three more All-Star teams, play a supporting role on the 1989 World Series-winning A’s, and compile hefty career totals while playing past the age of 40, his game lost multiple dimensions along the way.

Parker debuted with just 17.5% on the 1997 BBWAA ballot and peaked at 24.5% the next year, but only one other time in his final 13 seasons of eligibility did he top 20%. In appearances on the 2014 Expansion Era ballot and ’18 and ’20 Modern Baseball ones, only in the last of those did he break out of the “received less than X votes” group; he got seven (43.8%) that year.

Because his defense declined to the point that he was relegated to DH duty, Parker ranks just 41st in JAWS among right fielders (38.8), 17.9 points below the standard. Still, this is not Harold Baines Redux. While Baines collected 2,866 hits — and might have reached 3,000 if not for the two players’ strikes that occurred during his career — he never put up much black ink or finished higher than ninth in MVP voting, spent the vast majority of his career as a DH, and ranks 77th in JAWS among right fielders (30.1). He was never close to being considered the best hitter in the game, let alone the best all-around player. His 2019 election was a shock, and a result that felt engineered given the makeup of the panel.

As I noted in my write-up of Parker, the contemporary whose case bears the most resemblance to his is that of Dale Murphy, for as different as the two were off the field — and you can’t get much further apart than the distance between Parker’s drug-related misadventures and Murphy’s wholesome, milk-drinking persona. A two-time MVP, Murphy — who fell short on the 2023 Contemporary Baseball ballot and will be eligible again next year — had a peak that’s vaguely Hall-caliber, but he’s ranks 27th in JAWS among center fielders, 14.4 points below the standard, because myriad injuries prevented him from having much value outside that peak.

I had Allen atop my list as the most deserving non-PED-linked position player outside the Hall. While I was lukewarm on Parker, it’s impossible not to feel some amount of empathy for his hard-won wisdom — his autobiography Cobra: A Life in Baseball and Brotherhood, written with Dave Jordan, is frank and poignant — and his battle with Parkinson’s, not to mention his prominent role in raising money to fight the disease. Again, it is far better that he is alive to enjoy this honor than to have it granted posthumously, as would have been the case for Tiant, who died in October at age 83. Boyer died in 1983 at age 52. John is 81, Garvey 75. For as tiresome as it may sometimes feel to see their candidacies reheated every three years or so, one can understand the desire to honor them while they’re alive — but then again, the same goes for the candidates they’re crowding off the ballot.

The most frustrating aspect of this election is how little traction the two Negro Leagues candidates had, as they were the top returning members from the 2022 Early Baseball ballot, with Harris — the most successful manager in Negro Leagues history — having received 10 votes (62.5%) and Donaldson — a legendary pitcher who spent most of his playing years barnstorming endlessly out of economic necessity — getting eight (50%). The 16-member panel did include two bona fide Negro Leagues scholars in Larry Lester and Leslie Heaphy. However, in my opinion and those of many Negro Leagues experts, it would be far better for a full panel of such researchers and scholars to consider these candidates and the unique and difficult context of their careers without having to battle for attention and space with much more famous players from a relatively recent past.

Appointed by the Hall’s board of directors, this ballot’s 16-member committee consisted of Hall of Famers Paul Molitor, Eddie Murray, Tony Perez, Lee Smith, Ozzie Smith, and Joe Torre; major league executives Sandy Alderson, Terry McGuirk, Dayton Moore, Arte Moreno, and Brian Sabean; and veteran media members/historians Bob Elliott, Steve Hirdt, and Dick Kaegel as well as Heaphy and Lester. In contrast to years past, this group had far fewer obvious connections to candidates, with Torre having played with Allen in St. Louis in 1970, Alderson serving as the general manager of the A’s when they traded for John in mid-’85 and Parker in December ’87, and Sabean in the scouting department of the Yankees when John had his second go-round with the team starting in ’86. [Update: As readers have pointed out, I missed that Perez and Parker were teammates in Cincinnati from 1984–86, and Molitor and Parker were teammates in Milwaukee in ’90.] Where both the 2023 and ’24 Contemporary Era Committees (the latter for managers, executives, and umpires) had just three media members/historians, this one had five.

The Era Committee process is an imperfect one, and by some measures these were imperfect candidates. If they weren’t, they probably wouldn’t have been relegated to Era Committee ballots in the first place, though not necessarily through their own fault. The voting results won’t please everyone, but hopefully even critics of the process can see some value in Sunday’s result.


JAWS and the 2025 Hall of Fame Ballot: Carlos Beltrán

Robert Deutsch-Imagn Content Services, LLC

The following article is part of Jay Jaffe’s ongoing look at the candidates on the BBWAA 2025 Hall of Fame ballot. For a detailed introduction to this year’s ballot, and other candidates in the series, use the tool above; an introduction to JAWS can be found here. For a tentative schedule, and a chance to fill out a Hall of Fame ballot for our crowdsourcing project, see here. All WAR figures refer to the Baseball-Reference version unless otherwise indicated.

Carlos Beltrán was the quintessential five-tool player, a switch-hitting center fielder who harnessed his physical talents and became a superstar. Aided by a high baseball IQ that was essentially his sixth tool, he spent 20 seasons in the majors, making nine All-Star teams, winning three Gold Gloves, helping five different franchises reach the playoffs, and putting together some of the most dominant stretches in postseason history once he got there. At the end of his career, he helped the Astros win a championship.

Drafted out of Puerto Rico by the Royals, Beltrán didn’t truly thrive until he was traded away. He spent the heart of his career in New York, first with the Mets — on what was at the time the largest free-agent contract in team history — and later the Yankees. He endured his ups and downs in the Big Apple and elsewhere, including his share of injuries. Had he not missed substantial portions of three seasons, he might well have reached 3,000 hits, but even as it is, he put up impressive, Cooperstown-caliber career numbers. Not only is he one of just eight players with 300 home runs and 300 stolen bases, but he also owns the highest stolen base success rate (86.4%) of any player with at least 200 attempts.

Alas, two years after Beltrán’s career ended, he was identified as the player at the center of the biggest baseball scandal in a generation: the Astros’ illegal use of video replay to steal opponents’ signs in 2017 and ’18. He was “the godfather of the whole program” in the words of Tom Koch-Weser, the team’s director of advance information, and the only player identified in commissioner Rob Manfred’s January 2020 report. But between that report and additional reporting by the Wall Street Journal, it seems apparent that the whole team, including manager A.J. Hinch and general manager Jeff Luhnow, was well aware of the system and didn’t stop him or his co-conspirators. In that light, it’s worth wondering about the easy narrative that has left Beltrán holding the bag; Hinch hardly had to break stride in getting another managerial job once his suspension ended. While Beltrán was not disciplined by the league, the fallout cost him his job as manager of the Mets before he could even oversee a game, and he has yet to get another opportunity.

Will Beltrán’s involvement in sign stealing cost him a berth in Cooperstown, the way allegations concerning performance-enhancing drugs have for a handful of players with otherwise Hall-worthy numbers? At the very least it kept him from first-ballot election, as he received 46.5% on the 2023 ballot — a share that has typically portended eventual election for less complicated candidates. His 10.6-percentage point gain last year (to 57.1%) was the largest of any returning candidate, suggesting that he’s got a real shot at election someday, though I don’t expect him to jump to 75% this year. Read the rest of this entry »


That’s Paul There Is. There Isn’t Any More.

Gregory Fisher-USA TODAY Sports

This year’s free agent class features a recent — as in the past two years — MVP. He’s playing the same position he has his entire career and has suffered no recent major injuries: 151 games played in his MVP campaign, 154 in each of the two that followed. And yet interest in this legend of the game is expected to be limited.

On the Top 50 free agents list, Ben Clemens ranked him 41st, which is third at his own position and lower than eight — EIGHT! — relief pitchers. I don’t know why I’m being coy about this player’s identity, actually, because presumably you can see the headline and header image and already know I’m talking about Paul Goldschmidt. Read the rest of this entry »


Sunday Notes: Nick Pivetta Believes In Pitching To His Strengths

The team that signs Nick Pivetta this offseason will be getting a veteran starter who, as my colleague Ben Clemens stated in our 2025 Top 50 Free Agents rundown, has “long been a favorite of pitching models.” The team will also be getting someone who believes in pitching to his strengths. The 31-year-old right-hander is studious about his craft, but with a notable exception. Poring over scouting reports isn’t his cup of tea.

“I think about it not as a specific hitter, but more of, ‘Is he a lefty or a righty?,’” explained Pivetta, whose past four-plus seasons have been with the Boston Red Sox. “I have certain sequences that I do against lefties or righties. I do the same sequences against either side, no matter the hitter.”

That’s not to say he totally ignores weaknesses. As Pivetta told me in our last-weekend-of-the-season conversation, there are certain hitters who struggle with a particular pitch and/or location, so he might vary his “same game plan around a certain spot.” But for the most part, he is “doing the exact same thing over and over again, just trying to execute.”

The extent to which that is optimal is open for debate. As his 50 Free Agents blurb spells out, Pivetta’s numbers suggest that he has never reached — and perhaps not even approached — his full potential. The stuff is unquestionably plus, but the consistency has clearly been lacking.

The Victoria, British Columbia native has pitched more than 1,000 innings over eight big-league seasons, so opposing teams have a pretty good idea of what to expect when he takes the mound. Moreover, certain lineups will present, at least on paper, a greater challenge for his pitch mix and standard attack plan. Might adherence to advance reports be a meaningful advantage add? Read the rest of this entry »


2025 Classic Baseball Era Committee Candidate: Ken Boyer

Malcolm Emmons-USA TODAY Sports

The following article is part of a series concerning the 2025 Classic Baseball Era Committee ballot, covering long-retired players, managers, executives, and umpires whose candidacies will be voted upon on December 8. For an introduction to the ballot, see here, and for an introduction to JAWS, see here. Several profiles in this series are adapted from work previously published at SI.com, Baseball Prospectus, and Futility Infielder. All WAR figures refer to the Baseball-Reference version unless otherwise indicated.

2025 Classic Baseball Candidate: Ken Boyer
Player Career WAR Peak WAR JAWS
Ken Boyer 62.8 46.2 54.5
Avg. HOF 3B 69.4 43.3 56.3
H HR AVG/OBP/SLG OPS+
2,143 282 .287/.349/.462 116
SOURCE: Baseball-Reference

One of three brothers who spent time in the majors, Ken Boyer spent the bulk of his 15-year career (1955-69) vying with Hall of Famers Eddie Mathews and Ron Santo for recognition as the National League’s top third baseman. An outstanding all-around player with good power, speed, and an excellent glove — but comparatively little flash, for he was all business – Boyer earned All-Star honors in seven seasons and won five Gold Gloves, all of them during his initial 11-year run with the Cardinals. In 1964, he took home NL MVP honors while helping St. Louis to its first championship in 18 years.

Boyer was born on May 20, 1931 in Liberty, Missouri, the third-oldest son in a family of 14 (!) children whose father, Vern Boyer, operated a general store and service station in nearby Alba, where the family lived. Ken was nearly four years younger than Cloyd Boyer, a righty who pitched in the majors from 1949–52 and ’55, and nearly six years older than Clete Boyer, also a third baseman from 1955–57 and ’59–71; four other brothers (Wayne, Lynn, Len, and Ron) played in the minors. As a teen, Ken often competed against a shortstop named Mickey Mantle, who played for the Baxter Springs Whiz Kids, based in Kansas, just across the border from Oklahoma.

At Alba High School, Ken starred in basketball and football as well as baseball, and received scholarship offers from more than a dozen major colleges and universities. The Yankees were interested, but with Boyer’s high school coach, Buford Cooper, serving as a bird dog scout from the Cardinals, he leaned toward St. Louis. In 1949, Cardinals scout Runt Marr recommended him for a special tryout at Sportsman’s Park, and the team liked him enough to sign him as a pitcher, paying him a $6,000 bonus, $1,000 under the limit that would have required him to remain on the major league roster (a “bonus baby”). While Boyer’s pitching results weren’t awful, he took his strong arm to third base when the need presented itself on his Class D Hamilton Cardinals team in 1950; he hit .342, slugged .575, and showed off outstanding defense.

In 1951, the Cardinals committed to Boyer as a full-time third baseman. At A-level Omaha, he overcame a slow start to hit .306/.354/.455, refining his game on both sides of the ball under the tutelage of manager George Kissell, a legendary baseball lifer whose six decades in the St. Louis organization spanned from Stan Musial’s pre-World War II days as a pitcher to Tony La Russa’s tenure as a manager. Boyer’s progress to the majors was interrupted by a two-year stint in the Army during the Korean War; serving overseas in Germany and Africa, he missed the 1952 and ’53 seasons. Upon returning, the 23-year-old Boyer put in a strong season at Double-A Houston in 1954, then made the Cardinals out of spring training the following year, and even homered in his major league debut, a two-run shot off the Cubs’ Paul Minner in a blowout. That was the first of 18 homers Boyer hit as a rookie while batting .264/.311/.425 (94 OPS+); he also stole 22 bases but was caught a league-high 17 times.

Boyer came into his own in 1956, batting .306/.347/.494 (124 OPS+) with 26 homers and making his first All-Star team. According to Sports Illustrated’s Robert Creamer, in the spring, Cardinals manager Fred Hutchinson marveled at his 6-foot-1, 190-pound third baseman. “He’s the kind of player you dream about: terrific speed, brute strength, a great arm. There’s nothing he can’t do,” said Hutchinson. “I think he has the greatest future of any young player in the league.” However, Boyer’s calm in the face of some second-half regression — he didn’t walk or homer at all in August while hitting just .219/.217/.254 — led to criticism from Hutchinson and general manager Frank Lane, as well as a stint on the bench. More via Creamer:

“Lane talked to me,” Boyer said. “He’s talked about drive and aggressiveness. I don’t think I really know what he means. I know that I try, that I give everything I have. I don’t loaf. I know that all my life people have been saying that to me, that I don’t look as if I’m trying. I guess I don’t look as if I’m putting out. But I am.

“I don’t think hustle is something you can see all the time. Like Enos Slaughter. Everybody talks about the way he runs in and off the field between innings. That’s the least important part of Slaughter’s hustle. The thing that counts is the way he runs on the bases and in the outfield. That’s what makes him a hustling ballplayer, not the way he runs off the field.”

Fortunately, Boyer finished the season with a strong September. It was the first year of a nine-season run across which he hit a combined .299/.364/.491 (124 OPS+) while averaging 25 homers and 6.1 WAR. He ranked among the NL’s top 10 in WAR seven times in that span, with five top-10 finishes in both batting average and on-base percentage, and four in slugging percentage. In 1957, the Cardinals took him up on his offer to play center field so as to allow rookie Eddie Kasko to play third base. Boyer fared well at the spot defensively (Total Zone credits him with being eight runs above average in 105 games) but moved back to the hot corner full time in 1958 when the team called up 20-year-old prospect Curt Flood, who had been acquired from the Reds the previous December. In 1959, the Cardinals named Boyer team captain.

Boyer set career highs in home runs (32), slugging percentage (.570) and OPS+ (144) in 1960, then followed that up with highs in WAR (8.0), AVG, and OBP while hitting .329/.397/.533 (136 OPS+) in ’61. He made the All-Star team every year from 1959–64, including the twice-a-summer version of the event in the first four of those seasons.

The Cardinals were not a very good team for the first leg of Boyer’s career; from 1954–59, they cracked .500 just once, going 87-67 in ’57. With Boyer absorbing the lessons of Musial and helping to pass them along to a younger core — Flood, first baseman Bill White, second baseman Julian Javier, and later catcher Tim McCarver — the team began trending in the right direction. The Cardinals went 86-68 in 1960, and continued to improve, particularly as right-hander Bob Gibson emerged as a star.

After going 93-69 and finishing second to the Dodgers in 1963 — a six-game deficit, their smallest since ’49 — they matched that record and won the pennant the following year, spurred by the mid-June acquisition of left fielder Lou Brock. They beat out a Phillies team that closed September with 10 straight losses despite the strong play of rookie Dick Allen, who is also on the ballot and was then known as Richie. Boyer hit .295/.365/.489 (130 OPS+) in 1964 while driving in a league-high 119 runs. In a case of the writers rewarding the top player on a winning team with the MVP award, he took home the trophy, though his 6.1 WAR ranked a modest 10th, well behind Willie Mays (11.0), Santo (8.9), Allen (8.8), and Frank Robinson (7.9), among several others.

Though Boyer hit just .222/.241/.481 in the seven-game World Series against the Yankees and his brother Clete, he came up big by supplying all the scoring in the Cardinals’ 4-3 win in Game 4 with his grand slam off Al Downing. Additionally, he went 3-for-4 with a double and a homer in their 7-5 win in Game 7. Clete also homered in the latter game, to date the only time that brothers have homered in the same World Series game.

Hampered by back problems, Boyer slipped to a 91 OPS and 1.8 WAR in 1965, his age-34 season, after which he was traded to the Mets — whose general manager, Bing Devine, had served as the Cardinals’ GM from late 1957 until August ’64 — for pitcher Al Jackson and third baseman Charley Smith. At the time, it was the biggest trade the Mets had made. Boyer, whom Devine had acquired as much for his veteran leadership as for his playing skills, rebounded to a 101 OPS+ and 2.9 WAR, albeit on a 95-loss team going nowhere. The following July, he was traded to the White Sox, who were running first in what wound up as a thrilling four-team race that went down to the season’s final day. The White Sox were managed by Eddie Stanky, who had been at the helm when Boyer broke in with the Cardinals. Though Boyer didn’t play badly, he appeared in just 67 games for the team before being released in May 1968. He was picked up by the Dodgers and spent the remainder of that season and the next with them in a reserve role.

The Dodgers asked Boyer to return as a coach for 1970, but he instead chose to return to the Cardinals organization so he could manage in the minors. He spent five seasons guiding various Cardinals affiliates in Arkansas, Florida, and Oklahoma, interrupted by a two-year stint (1971–72) as a coach on the big league staff. Bypassed when the Cardinals hired Vern Rapp to succeed Red Schoendienst after the 1976 season, he spent ’77 managing the Orioles’ Triple-A Rochester affiliate, but when the Cardinals fired Rapp after a 6-10 start in ’78, he returned to take over. The team went just 62-82 on his watch, but the next year, Boyer guided the Cardinals to an 86-76 record and a third-place finish.

Alas, when the Cardinals skidded to an 18-33 start in 1980, the team replaced Boyer with Whitey Herzog, whose tenure in St. Louis would include three pennants and a championship. Boyer accepted reassignment into a scouting role, and was slated to manage the team’s Triple-A Louisville affiliate in 1982, but he had to decline the opportunity when he was diagnosed with lung cancer. He was just 52 years old when he died on September 7, 1982. The Cardinals retired his number 14 in 1984, and 40 years later, he’s still the team’s only former player with that honor who’s not in the Hall of Fame.

On that subject, Boyer never got much traction in the BBWAA voting, either before or after his death. From 1975–79, he maxed out at 4.7%, and was bumped off the ballot when the Five Percent rule was put in place in ’80. He was one of 11 players who had his eligibility restored in 1985, and he was among the five players who cleared the bar to stay on the ballot, along with Allen, Flood, Santo, and Vada Pinson. He remained on the ballot through 1994, topping out at a meager 25.5% in ’88, nowhere near enough for election. Neither did he fare well via the expanded Veterans Committee in the 2003, ’05, and ’07 elections, maxing out at 18.8% in the middle of those years. Similarly, on the 2012 and ’15 Golden Era ballots, and the ’22 Golden Days ballot, he didn’t receive enough support to have his actual vote total announced; customarily, the Hall lumps together all of the candidates below a certain (varying) threshold as “receiving fewer than x” votes to avoid embarrassing them (or their descendants) with the news of a shutout.

All of which is to say that once again, Boyer feels more like ballast than a true candidate, here to round out a ballot without having much chance at getting elected. That’s a shame, because he was damn good. For the 1956–64 period, he ranked sixth among all position players in value:

WAR Leaders 1956–64
Rk Player Age AVG OBP SLG OPS+ WAR/pos
1 Willie Mays+ 25-33 .315 .389 .588 164 84.2
2 Henry Aaron+ 22-30 .324 .382 .581 164 73.0
3 Mickey Mantle+ 24-32 .315 .445 .615 189 68.2
4 Eddie Mathews+ 24-32 .275 .381 .508 146 60.5
5 Frank Robinson+ 20-28 .304 .390 .556 150 58.7
6 Ken Boyer 25-33 .299 .364 .491 124 55.0
7 Al Kaline+ 21-29 .307 .377 .503 134 50.8
8 Ernie Banks+ 25-33 .280 .341 .531 132 50.0
9 Rocky Colavito 22-30 .271 .364 .514 136 38.6
10 Roberto Clemente+ 21-29 .312 .349 .450 117 37.7
SOURCE: Baseball-Reference
+ = Hall of Famer.

That’s a pretty good group! Of course the comparison is manicured perfectly to Boyer’s best years, but even if I expand the range to cover the full extent of his career, he’s ninth on the list, in similar company (Kaline, Clemente, and Banks pass him), and one spot ahead of Santo. Boyer was a better fielder than Santo (via Total Zone, +73 runs to +20), and a better baserunner (+20 runs to -34, including double play avoidance), though not as good a hitter (116 OPS+ to 125).

Even though he probably would have reached the majors earlier if not for his military service, Boyer ranks 14th among third basemen in JAWS, just 1.8 points below the standard, with a seven-year peak that ranks ninth, 3.0 points above the standard. At a position that’s grossly underrepresented — there are just 17 enshrined third basemen, not including Negro League players, compared to 20 second basemen, 23 shortstops, and 28 right fielders — that should be good enough for Cooperstown.

To these eyes it is. I included Boyer on both my 2015 and ’22 virtual ballots, both of which allowed voters to choose four candidates from among a slate of 10. With the 2022 tweaks to the Era Committee format, voters can now tab just three candidates out of eight, and so for as much as I believe Boyer is worthy, the new math requires a more extensive ballot triage. His past levels of support illustrate that he’s never gotten more than 25% on an Era Committee ballot, suggesting that he’s a long shot. Even though he has a slightly higher career WAR, peak WAR, and JAWS than Allen (58.7/45.9/52.3), the fact that the latter — who endured considerable racism and shabby treatment during his career — has fallen one vote short in back-to-back elections opposite Boyer has already led me to dedicate one of my three spots to him. That leaves me just two to play with. For now, the best I can do is to leave Boyer in play for one of those spots, but I already think I’m leaning away from selecting him for my final ballot.


2025 Classic Baseball Era Committee Candidate: Dick Allen

Imagn Images

The following article is part of a series concerning the 2025 Classic Baseball Era Committee ballot, covering long-retired players, managers, executives, and umpires whose candidacies will be voted upon on December 8. It is adapted from a chapter in The Cooperstown Casebook, published in 2017 by Thomas Dunne Books. For an introduction to the ballot, see here, and for an introduction to JAWS, see here. All WAR figures refer to the Baseball-Reference version unless otherwise indicated.

2025 Classic Baseball Candidate: Dick Allen
Player Career WAR Peak WAR JAWS
Dick Allen 58.7 45.9 52.3
Avg. HOF 3B 69.4 43.3 56.3
H HR AVG/OBP/SLG OPS+
1,848 351 .292/.378/.534 156
SOURCE: Baseball-Reference

Dick Allen forced Philadelphia baseball and its fans to come to terms with the racism that existed in this city in the ’60s and ’70s. He may not have done it with the self-discipline or tact of Jackie Robinson, but he exemplified the emerging independence of major league baseball players as well as growing black consciousness.”⁠ — William Kashatus, The Philadelphia Inquirer, April 2, 1996

At first glance, Dick Allen might be viewed as the Gary Sheffield or Albert Belle of his day, a heavy hitter seemingly engaged in a constant battle with the world around him, generating controversy at every stop of his 15-year career. It’s unfair and reductive to lump Allen in with those two players, however, for they all faced different obstacles and bore different scars from the wounds they suffered early in their careers.

In Allen’s case, those wounds predated his 1963 arrival in the majors with a team that was far behind the integration curve, and a city that was in no better shape. In Philadelphia and beyond, he was a polarizing presence, covered by a media contingent so unable or unwilling to relate to him that writers often refused to call him by the name of his choosing: Dick Allen, not Richie. Read the rest of this entry »