Francisco Lindor Is Already a Plausible Hall of Famer

Orlando Ramirez-USA TODAY Sports

Last week, my colleague Jay Jaffe noted that Mets shortstop Francisco Lindor had just entered the list of top 20 shortstops in JAWS, his system for assessing players’ Hall of Fame worthiness, which factors in a mix of career value (WAR) and peak value (WAR over their seven best seasons). That’s not the only notable thing about Lindor’s season, of course, as after a slow start to 2024, he has forced his way into the NL MVP conversation. With a .270/.339/.492 line, 135 wRC+, and 7.2 WAR, he may be having his best season in a career that has him looking increasingly Cooperstown-bound.

It seems almost absurd, but Lindor’s OPS didn’t take even the tiniest of peeks over .700 until June 5 — he’s been so hot that you’d think he was produced in Brookhaven’s Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider. With Shohei Ohtani fighting for the first ever 50-50 season, Lindor may now be the biggest obstacle to the former’s coronation. Given the relatively modest impact even the biggest baseball stars have in comparison to their peers in football or basketball, no individual can really carry a team, but Lindor is certainly trying his best: The Mets have the second-most wins in baseball since the start of June (54), with the offense going from 17th to sixth in seasonal wRC+ over the same timeframe:

NL Position Player WAR Leaders since June 1
Name HR SB BA OBP SLG wRC+ WAR
Francisco Lindor 21 18 .300 .371 .557 160 5.7
Elly De La Cruz 14 30 .271 .340 .504 126 3.9
Shohei Ohtani 31 33 .264 .360 .617 162 3.8
Ketel Marte 20 5 .323 .415 .631 181 3.7
Jackson Merrill 19 9 .295 .322 .575 147 3.5
Jackson Chourio 14 13 .313 .372 .545 151 3.4
Corbin Carroll 17 17 .253 .338 .513 132 3.3
Matt Chapman 14 9 .257 .351 .469 130 3.2
Eugenio Suárez 21 0 .266 .339 .549 140 3.0
Dansby Swanson 10 11 .256 .327 .423 110 2.9
Tyler Fitzgerald 13 13 .308 .364 .567 159 2.9
Ian Happ 17 9 .260 .357 .510 142 2.9
Willy Adames 21 10 .252 .335 .487 126 2.8
Manny Machado 20 6 .301 .350 .544 147 2.8
Bryce Harper 13 2 .292 .370 .518 144 2.6
Oneil Cruz 11 17 .289 .346 .491 126 2.6
Mark Vientos 21 0 .279 .335 .552 147 2.5
Marcell Ozuna 21 0 .304 .374 .545 152 2.5
Seiya Suzuki 14 11 .279 .365 .505 142 2.4
Freddie Freeman 15 5 .290 .379 .527 149 2.4

In that stretch, Lindor has edged out the other NL hitters by nearly 2 WAR. One of the odder consequences of the shape of Lindor’s performance is that it may result in a Hall of Fame player having missed the All-Star Game in the best season of his career. In fact, despite ranking fifth in WAR among hitters since the start of 2020 (behind Aaron Judge, Juan Soto, Freddie Freeman, and José Ramírez), Lindor hasn’t made an All-Star squad since 2019. I wouldn’t have thought it was possible for a player who plays in baseball’s largest market and has a $341 million contract to be underrated, but here we are!

Ranking 20th at your position in JAWS is already a mighty impressive feat, but it’s even more impressive when you’re only 30 years old, meaning there’s a lot of time left to add heft to your career WAR, which makes up half of JAWS. With Lindor’s (relatively) disappointing 2021 Mets debut even farther back in the rear-view mirror, it seems like a good time to provide an update on his rest-of-career projections:

ZiPS Projection – Francisco Lindor
Year BA OBP SLG AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB OPS+ WAR
2025 .263 .334 .461 601 98 158 34 2 27 94 55 126 23 119 6.6
2026 .259 .331 .447 580 93 150 32 1 25 86 53 121 18 115 5.8
2027 .250 .324 .421 549 85 137 29 1 21 77 51 116 15 106 4.7
2028 .242 .315 .401 516 76 125 26 1 18 68 47 110 12 99 3.8
2029 .237 .311 .386 472 67 112 23 1 15 59 43 103 9 93 3.0
2030 .231 .306 .368 424 58 98 20 1 12 50 39 96 7 88 2.2
2031 .230 .304 .364 374 50 86 18 1 10 42 34 86 5 86 1.7
2032 .228 .300 .354 325 42 74 15 1 8 36 29 75 4 82 1.2
2033 .223 .297 .343 309 38 69 14 1 7 33 27 72 3 78 0.9
2034 .222 .293 .331 239 29 53 11 0 5 24 20 57 2 74 0.5
2035 .211 .283 .307 166 19 35 7 0 3 16 14 40 1 65 0.0

Even projecting a typical decline through his 30s — there’s a reason the vast majority of Hall of Fame cases are largely built when players are in their 20s — Lindor’s mean ol’ ZiPS forecast offers ample opportunity for him to put up some seriously gaudy career totals. The median ZiPS projection has Lindor finishing with 400 career homers on the nose, enough to rank him as one of the best power-hitting shortstops in baseball history:

Career Home Runs for Shortstops (40% of Games at SS)
Player HR From To BA OBP SLG
Alex Rodriguez 696 1994 2016 .295 .380 .550
Ernie Banks 512 1953 1971 .274 .330 .500
Cal Ripken Jr. 431 1981 2001 .276 .340 .447
Miguel Tejada 307 1997 2013 .285 .336 .456
Hanley Ramirez 271 2005 2019 .289 .360 .486
Derek Jeter 260 1995 2014 .310 .377 .440
Robin Yount 251 1974 1993 .285 .342 .430
Jose Valentin 249 1992 2007 .243 .321 .448
Vern Stephens 247 1941 1955 .286 .355 .460
Francisco Lindor 245 2015 2024 .274 .342 .476
Marcus Semien 233 2013 2024 .256 .323 .440
Jimmy Rollins 231 2000 2016 .264 .324 .418
Nomar Garciaparra 229 1996 2009 .313 .361 .521
Troy Tulowitzki 225 2006 2019 .290 .361 .495
Rico Petrocelli 210 1963 1976 .251 .332 .420
Jhonny Peralta 202 2003 2017 .267 .329 .423
Corey Seager 200 2015 2024 .290 .360 .512
Juan Uribe 199 2001 2016 .255 .301 .418
Barry Larkin 198 1986 2004 .295 .371 .444
Jay Bell 195 1986 2003 .265 .343 .416
Asdrúbal Cabrera 195 2007 2021 .266 .329 .423
J.J. Hardy 188 2005 2017 .256 .305 .408
Rich Aurilia 186 1995 2009 .275 .328 .433
Carlos Correa 186 2015 2024 .275 .353 .472
Alan Trammell 185 1977 1996 .285 .352 .415
SOURCE: Baseball-Reference

Home Runs While Playing Shortstop
Player From To HR G BA OBP SLG
Cal Ripken Jr. 1981 1997 345 2297 .278 .347 .455
Alex Rodriguez 1994 2005 344 1264 .308 .382 .581
Miguel Tejada 1997 2011 291 1937 .288 .340 .466
Ernie Banks 1953 1961 269 1076 .291 .355 .558
Derek Jeter 1995 2014 255 2668 .310 .378 .441
Francisco Lindor 2015 2024 238 1342 .273 .341 .473
Jimmy Rollins 2000 2016 229 2211 .265 .325 .420
Troy Tulowitzki 2006 2019 223 1265 .291 .361 .496
Barry Larkin 1986 2004 194 2075 .295 .371 .445
Jose Valentin 1993 2005 192 1182 .245 .324 .453
Corey Seager 2015 2024 191 967 .292 .363 .515
J.J. Hardy 2005 2017 188 1526 .257 .306 .409
Nomar Garciaparra 1996 2008 187 1052 .318 .366 .541
Carlos Correa 2015 2024 184 1085 .275 .353 .472
Alan Trammell 1977 1996 177 2106 .286 .352 .416
Hanley Ramírez 2005 2014 174 1074 .304 .376 .506
Vern Stephens 1941 1953 174 1071 .285 .359 .470
Jhonny Peralta 2003 2016 173 1442 .271 .334 .432
Xander Bogaerts 2013 2024 168 1331 .296 .361 .463
Trevor Story 2016 2024 159 774 .270 .337 .513
Alex Gonzalez 1998 2014 156 1534 .247 .292 .399
Willy Adames 2018 2024 147 831 .249 .323 .449
Brandon Crawford 2011 2024 145 1587 .250 .318 .395
Trea Turner 2015 2024 141 949 .292 .347 .471
Edgar Renteria 1996 2011 140 2092 .286 .343 .399
SOURCE: Baseball-Reference

Whether you look at players who primarily played shortstop or only consider performance while playing the position, Lindor features prominently. His 30 home runs this season gives him 245 for his career, 10th all-time among shortstops, while finishing with 400 would be enough to put him fourth all-time. If we look only at home runs while playing short, Lindor is sixth and is just over 100 homers behind Cal Ripken Jr. for the top spot. Given that Lindor is an elite defensive player, it doesn’t seem like he’s ticketed for an easier position anytime soon, short of a serious injury that necessitates a move.

Before last season, I gave ZiPS the ability to project career JAWS. In an era that’s rich in star shortstops, Lindor is currently projected to finish at the top of this generation. Here’s a projected JAWS chart, once all the currently active major league players have headed off into the sunset:

ZiPS Projected Shortstop JAWS Leaders
Player JAWS
Honus Wagner 98.3
Alex Rodriguez 90.9
Cal Ripken Jr. 76.1
Arky Vaughan 65.5
George Davis 64.7
Francisco Lindor 62.5
Robin Yount 62.4
Luke Appling 61.1
Ernie Banks 59.9
Ozzie Smith 59.7
Alan Trammell 57.7
Bill Dahlen 57.7
Barry Larkin 56.9
Derek Jeter 56.8
Bobby Wallace 56.2
Lou Boudreau 56.1
Pee Wee Reese 55.2
Carlos Correa 54.5
Joe Cronin 54.2
Jack Glasscock 51.5
Joe Sewell 46.1
Corey Seager 45.2
Bobby Witt Jr. 45.1
Bert Campaneris 44.9
Xander Bogaerts 44.9
Jim Fregosi 44.8
Luis Aparicio 44.3
Dave Bancroft 44.0
Nomar Garciaparra 43.7
Joe Tinker 43.1
SOURCE: Baseball-Reference + ZiPS

Even just the median projection would make Lindor a shoo-in on his first Hall of Fame ballot and put him meaningfully ahead of the other shortstops who debuted in the 21st century — for now, at least. If Bobby Witt Jr. keeps his beast mode switched on, he’ll rocket up this list fairly quickly (Gunnar Henderson just missed the list, along with Trea Turner). Given his already impressive place in history, I think Lindor would still make the Hall pretty easily even if his career ended tomorrow, as the Sandy Koufax of shortstops. The Mets’ penchant for sudden, often hilarious implosions makes watching them sometimes feel like an especially cringe-inducing episode of The Office. But if you aren’t tuning into their games, you’re missing out on the peak of a possible future Hall of Famer. And as countless players from Mike Trout to Miguel Cabrera to Ken Griffey Jr. have demonstrated, the opportunity to see these players at their best is frequently far more fleeting than we hope.





Dan Szymborski is a senior writer for FanGraphs and the developer of the ZiPS projection system. He was a writer for ESPN.com from 2010-2018, a regular guest on a number of radio shows and podcasts, and a voting BBWAA member. He also maintains a terrible Twitter account at @DSzymborski.

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PC1970Member since 2024
7 months ago

The MVP vote will be fascinating. Boils down to how do you trust defensive metrics vs the DH penalty.

As of this AM, Ohtani has a 169 wRC+, Lindor is at 135 wRC+. If Lindor can shave that 34 pt difference to 15-20 by the end of the year, I think he has a legit shot..That would get his offensive contributions close enough to not have his case so reliant on defensive value.

We all know a great fielding SS has more value than a DH, but, I think the voters still would like the offensive contributions to be closer in value before pulling the trigger for the SS.

I guess the other widcard (pun intended) is if the Mets make the playoffs. If they do & Lindor plays well these last 3 weeks that would be another point writers would point to. Fair or unfair, I think Ohtani is viewed as part of a star studded Dodgers team, while Lindor is the unquestioned leader of the Mets.

Last edited 7 months ago by PC1970
sadtromboneMember since 2020
7 months ago
Reply to  PC1970

I think that the positional adjustment is a bit too generous for shortstops–maybe 5.0 instead of 7.5. And I think that OAA is a bit aggressive in assigning credit and failures at the extremes.

Without doing the math, I think that would knock Lindor down to approximately Ohtani’s fWAR. Which would mean that in terms of “deservingness” you could make a case for either and be fine.

In terms of who will actually win? I don’t presume to know the minds of MVP voters but I do wonder Lindor (who is actually five months older and has another 3 seasons in MLB on Ohtani) might get some votes because he is the “fresh” face. Meaning, Lindor hasn’t averaged something like 8.5 WAR per year over the previous three years.

fjtorres
7 months ago
Reply to  PC1970

I dunno but 50/50 will push Ohtani to the top.
He’s at 46 hrs with 19 games to go.

HappyFunBallMember since 2019
7 months ago
Reply to  fjtorres

Yeah. Voters do like their round magic numbers.

Only thing that bumps Ohtani is if something entirely unexpected crawls out from under his translator’s gambling investigation.

lacslyer
7 months ago
Reply to  PC1970

While you’re probably right that if Lindor can shave the WRC+ difference it’ll be competitive, I just don’t see that happening with the schedules. The Mets have one of the harder schedules left while the Dodgers will face the Marlins and Rockies in 9 games.

tomerafan
7 months ago
Reply to  lacslyer

The flipside of that coin is that if it does happen, it will likely mean that the Mets have finished strong. And since they have 7 games left against the Phillies, “finishing strong” could mean a September surge to the once-unthinkable NL East Crown with the Mets seven games back this morning.

Low likelihood…. but if it happens, then he has to win the MVP.

lacslyer
7 months ago
Reply to  tomerafan

The Mets have been riding a wave of wins thanks to their pitching and hitting, but they’ve also faced like only 3 pitchers over the last few weeks that have an ERA below 4.

I’m not a Phillies fan, but there’s just no way they let the Mets steal the division like that, particularly with 7 games left against them, on top of the fact that the other Phillies’ games only include 3 against another current playoff team. It’s not just the Phillies they’ll have a hard time with either. They have 2 games against the Braves and 3 against the Nats. That’s another 5 games against top 10 pitching staffs. So you’re talking about 9 games against two of the best staffs in the league and another 3 against a top 10 staff of the Nats.

synco
7 months ago
Reply to  PC1970

I think it will be interesting in the sense of seeing how much Ohtani wins by and if Lindor gets any first place votes. But Ohtani going to win, barring something truly insane happening in the last three weeks.

Dan B
7 months ago
Reply to  PC1970

Theoretically, if Ohtani can hit like this and throw some innings he has the MVP “locked up” for the next little while. Some voters might see this as the last chance to vote for someone else for a while.

HappyFunBallMember since 2019
7 months ago
Reply to  Dan B

People would vote today based on what they think a player might do in future seasons?

That’s lunacy. I mean … clearly we are nation with a significant share of lunatics who vote in ways that defy logic … But, seriously?

The Ghost of Johnny DickshotMember since 2025
7 months ago
Reply to  Dan B

Throw some innings? What??

MikeD
7 months ago
Reply to  PC1970

The narrative around Ohtani is so strong that I think there is little Lindor can do beyond enjoy his second-place finish. Ohtani is the MVP, but certainly Lindor can close the gap to make it more interesting.

fjtorres
7 months ago
Reply to  MikeD

A second place MVP finish still helps his HOF resume.