The Wobbling Kyle Schwarber

Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images

When I go jogging, I wrap a rubber band around my keys so they don’t jingle in my pocket. I put my phone in a different pocket, an extra one I sewed into the front of my shorts so it’s close enough that it won’t tug on the headphone cord. I tuck the ends of my shoelaces in above the tongue so they don’t flop all over the place. I go to all this trouble for two reasons. First, I’m a sensitive soul. Second, I don’t really love running. I love the feeling of having run, but every step is a fight against the voice in my head telling me that I should just stop because running is for suckers. After a mile or so, any one of those slight annoyances – jangling keys, slight tugging on my earbuds, shoelaces flapping against my shoes – will start to bother me so much that I’ll give in to that very obvious truth.

I’m sharing this preamble with you because although I normally write about small, obscure subjects, what I’m writing about today is so small and so obscure that I feel like I owe you an explanation as to why I noticed it at all. As I hope I’ve made clear, I noticed it because I’m weird. Read the rest of this entry »


Jay Jaffe FanGraphs Chat – 5/13/25

12:18
Avatar Jay Jaffe: Good afternoon, folks! Welcome to another edition of my Tuesday chat, and apologies if the non-standard start time threw anybody for a loop; I needed to take care of some business after filing today’s piece a bit later than usual — a quick look at Jonathan Aranda’s breakout that took me a bit longer to complete than I expected because I had colleague Davy Andrews over for beers last night as ww watched some baseball. Anyway, that should go up at 1 pm ET.

Yesterday I wrote about Javier Báez’s rebound after two dismal seasons in Detroit. https://blogs.fangraphs.com/the-new-look-javier-baez-is-fun-again/. On Friday I took a look at some statistical anomalies within extra-innings play thus far this season https://blogs.fangraphs.com/weird-stuff-is-going-on-in-extra-innings-m…

12:18
Avatar Jay Jaffe: Anyway, on with the show!

12:18
You have weakened: Your reverse-jinx powers are no match for the supernova that is Judge. I swear, every night he doesn’t show up in the highlights, I’m like, well, guess he had a bad game. (Looks at last night’s box score – 2-3 with a double and 2 walks)

12:20
Avatar Jay Jaffe: We’re seeing one of the best runs — if not the best — by a hitter in the 21st century. He’s hitting .414/.500/.783 (255 wRC+) six weeks into the season! Caught a few of his at-bats in the last couple of days and it’s like he’s using a pool cue out there to place the ball where the fielders ain’t.

12:20
Sodo Mojo: Who ends up with more Career WAR Julio Rodriguez or Aaron Judge.  I don’t think Julio ever approaches Judges single season rate stats but got a 4 year head start.

12:22
Avatar Jay Jaffe: I’m gonna go with the guy who looks like he might be on his way to his third 10-win season out of four.

Read the rest of this entry »


Shohei Ohtani and the Unusual, Improbable, So High, Very Rad Run-to-RBI Ratio

Dale Zanine-Imagn Images

Shohei Ohtani leads the National League in runs. It’s not even close. He has scored 44 times in 2025. That’s 10 more runs than Fernando Tatis Jr., the next highest-scoring NL player. A couple of qualified NL batters haven’t even scored 10 runs yet this season.

Ohtani does not lead the National League in RBI. Not even close. If you visit our leaderboards and sort by RBI, you’ll have to click to the second page of names to find the reigning NL RBI king. Ohtani is tied for 36th in the senior circuit with 21 runs batted in. That’s only one more than the league median for a qualified hitter. Here’s another way to put it: The average NL batter has one RBI for every 8.8 plate appearances. Ohtani has averaged one RBI every 8.7 PA. It’s not so often that Ohtani is on the second page. It’s not so often that he’s a rounding error away from league average.

Runs and RBI might not be the best metrics for evaluating past performance or projecting the future, but they’re still two of the foremost storytelling statistics. So far, the story of Ohtani’s season is that he is scoring runs at an almost unbelievable rate but driving them in at a pedestrian pace. Since the beginning of the Live Ball era in 1920, we have records of 11,326 individual player seasons of at least 500 PA. In just 481 of those seasons, fewer than 5%, did the player finish with a higher run-to-RBI ratio than Ohtani’s current mark of 44:21 (2.095). As per usual, Ohtani stands out even among that small group of players. Take a look at this list of every player from the past decade who’s had a single-season run-to-RBI ratio higher than Ohtani’s 2.095. I’d like you to try and see if maybe, just maybe, you have a keen enough eye to spot the difference between Ohtani and the others: Read the rest of this entry »


The Rockies’ Hard Place

Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images

When the Rockies fired Bud Black on Sunday, the immediate reaction — a sarcastic “Oh, sure, that’ll solve everything” — missed… not all the point, but some of the point.

Last year, we watched the Chicago White Sox lose more games than any major league team in history, and if the White Sox hadn’t gotten white hot in the last week of the season, the final number would’ve been much more embarrassing than 121. This year’s Rockies are worse. Maybe a lot worse. Read the rest of this entry »


When Should You Intentionally Walk Aaron Judge?

Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

If you’ve ever struck up a conversation with a stranger at the ballpark, you might have noticed that the FanGraphs readers are easy to spot. Let’s say you find yourself discussing the Yankees. A FanGraphs reader might ponder whether the 30-point gap between Paul Goldschmidt’s wOBA and xwOBA will catch up to him, while a non-reader is more likely to fret over whether Brian Cashman is too reliant on analytics when constructing the team’s roster. But sometimes, the two groups ask the same thing. So today, let’s consider one of those broad questions: Should teams be intentionally walking Aaron Judge more often?

Admit it. You’ve wondered. If you’re a Yankees fan, you’ve wondered just how long Judge is going to be allowed to hit in big spots. If you’re a fan of the team the Yankees are playing, you’ve wondered how your team’s manager ought to solve this impossible puzzle. And if you’re a neutral fan, well, Aaron Judge is the biggest story in baseball right now. He’s having one of the best offensive stretches in the history of the game. Don’t you want to know if there’s anything that can be done about it?

Ever since Barry Bonds broke the sport in the early 2000s, every hot streak in baseball comes with questions about the “Bonds treatment.” Now, that doesn’t necessarily mean 120 intentional walks, Bonds’ tally in 2004 and the single-season record. (It’s the single-season record by 52 walks. Second place? Barry Bonds. Third place? Barry Bonds.) The best non-Bonds total was Willie McCovey’s 45 in 1969. The most Judge has ever racked up in a single season is a measly 20. So the question isn’t whether teams should treat him like Bonds, because no, they shouldn’t. But should they treat him like McCovey? And more importantly, how should opposing managers handle Judge in a playoff game, when all the chips are on the table? Let’s do some math. Read the rest of this entry »


Ben Clemens FanGraphs Chat – 5/12/25

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FanGraphs Power Rankings: May 5–11

We’re now a quarter of the way through the regular season, and even though the playoff races have largely taken shape, there’s still plenty of time for some of the early disappointments to get things right. Last week, it was the Twins and Cardinals who caught fire with matching eight-game winning streaks.

Last year, we revamped our power rankings using a modified Elo rating system. If you’re familiar with chess rankings or FiveThirtyEight’s defunct sports section, you’ll know that Elo is an elegant solution that measures teams’ relative strength and is very reactive to recent performance. To avoid overweighting recent results during the season, we weigh each team’s raw Elo rank using our coin flip playoff odds (specifically, we regress the playoff odds by 50% and weigh those against the raw Elo ranking, increasing in weight as the season progresses to a maximum of 25%). The weighted Elo ranks are then displayed as “Power Score” in the tables below. As the best and worst teams sort themselves out throughout the season, they’ll filter to the top and bottom of the rankings, while the exercise will remain reactive to hot streaks or cold snaps.

First up are the full rankings, presented in a sortable table. Below that, I’ve grouped the teams into tiers with comments on a handful of clubs. You’ll notice that the official ordinal rankings don’t always match the tiers — there are times where I take editorial liberties when grouping teams together — but generally, the ordering is consistent. One thing to note: The playoff odds listed in the tables below are our standard Depth Charts odds, not the coin flip odds that are used in the ranking formula.

Complete Power Rankings
Rank Team Record Elo Opponent Elo Playoff Odds Power Score Δ
1 Dodgers 27-14 1601 1499 97.7% 1603 0
2 Phillies 24-16 1568 1509 81.0% 1568 5
3 Mets 26-15 1562 1493 83.1% 1565 3
4 Tigers 26-15 1551 1482 85.4% 1555 1
5 Cubs 23-18 1548 1541 64.7% 1546 -3
6 Padres 25-14 1541 1488 62.5% 1545 -2
7 Yankees 23-17 1542 1503 88.4% 1542 3
8 Mariners 22-17 1537 1501 73.0% 1536 -5
9 Royals 24-18 1530 1477 52.8% 1531 4
10 Guardians 23-17 1523 1492 38.9% 1524 1
11 Diamondbacks 21-20 1530 1523 46.2% 1524 1
12 Cardinals 22-19 1526 1504 29.5% 1523 9
13 Twins 21-20 1528 1486 50.1% 1523 10
14 Giants 24-17 1520 1497 46.6% 1522 -6
15 Braves 19-21 1530 1499 60.9% 1522 -6
16 Red Sox 22-20 1514 1484 48.7% 1511 2
17 Astros 20-19 1512 1496 50.9% 1508 -3
18 Blue Jays 20-20 1512 1512 34.8% 1507 1
19 Rangers 20-21 1506 1518 38.3% 1500 -3
20 Athletics 21-20 1490 1487 15.9% 1488 -5
21 Rays 18-22 1489 1511 14.3% 1482 -4
22 Brewers 20-21 1486 1486 18.6% 1482 0
23 Reds 20-22 1471 1487 7.7% 1466 -3
24 Orioles 15-24 1457 1500 7.8% 1448 0
25 Nationals 17-24 1443 1508 0.3% 1435 0
26 Angels 16-23 1436 1492 0.8% 1430 0
27 Pirates 14-27 1431 1504 1.1% 1421 1
28 Marlins 15-24 1423 1516 0.1% 1416 -1
29 White Sox 12-29 1365 1490 0.0% 1358 0
30 Rockies 7-33 1328 1520 0.0% 1324 0

Tier 1 – The Dodgers
Team Record Elo Opponent Elo Playoff Odds Power Score
Dodgers 27-14 1601 1499 97.7% 1603

The Dodgers split a big four-game series against the Diamondbacks last weekend, and Friday night’s game was an especially wild affair. There were four lead changes, and Los Angeles won after scoring six runs in the ninth inning, a rally that was capped off by a go-ahead three-run bomb from Shohei Ohtani, his fourth home run of the week. Freddie Freeman also hit four homers last week and collected 10 other hits. The Dodgers’ roster was depleted even further when Teoscar Hernández and Evan Phillips hit the IL on Tuesday — they now have 15 players on the IL — but they’ve continued to prove they have enough talent to maintain their spot as the top team in baseball.

Tier 2 – On the Cusp of Greatness
Team Record Elo Opponent Elo Playoff Odds Power Score
Phillies 24-16 1568 1509 81.0% 1568
Mets 26-15 1562 1493 83.1% 1565

The Mets took two out of three games in both of their series last week, but the Phillies did them one better, going 5-1 on their roadtrip through Tampa Bay and Cleveland. Suddenly, the NL East looks very tight at the top. New York is still in first place, but its hold on the division is now just 1.5 games, down from five as recently as April 26. The good news for the Mets is that, even as that gap has narrowed, Juan Soto’s bat has woken up; he blasted three home runs last week, the same amount he hit in all of April, and he’s up to five dingers since the calendar flipped to May. The Mets have a big subway series against the Yankees lined up for this weekend as they try to cling to their division lead. Meanwhile, the Phillies return home to host the surging Cardinals before the Pirates come to Philly for an intrastate rivalry series over the weekend.

Tier 3 – Solid Contenders
Team Record Elo Opponent Elo Playoff Odds Power Score
Tigers 26-15 1551 1482 85.4% 1555
Cubs 23-18 1548 1541 64.7% 1546
Padres 25-14 1541 1488 62.5% 1545
Yankees 23-17 1542 1503 88.4% 1542
Mariners 22-17 1537 1501 73.0% 1536
Royals 24-18 1530 1477 52.8% 1531

So far, the Cubs have faced the toughest schedule in the majors by a pretty significant margin, which makes their 23-18 record all the more impressive. Thankfully, they won’t face another opponent with a record over .500 until early June, as their series against the Marlins, White Sox, Reds, and Rockies will take them through the rest of the month. Chicago was already without Justin Steele and Javier Assad when Shota Imanaga landed on the IL with a hamstring strain early last week. In response, the team called up its top pitching prospect, Cade Horton, to make his major league debut over the weekend, using him as the bulk guy in Saturday’s 6-5 win over the Mets. The easier schedule should alleviate some of the pressure on the patchwork rotation, though the Cubs will definitely want to find some reinforcements before the dog days of summer set in.

The Yankees snapped the Padres’ six-game winning streak on Tuesday, though San Diego got back on track with two wins against the Rockies over the weekend, including a 21-0 drubbing on Saturday. As for New York, the offense carried the team through two series wins last week. Aaron Judge went hitless in two games early in the week but got his bat going again against the A’s in Sacramento. He blasted two home runs on Saturday and collected four hits on Sunday, pushing his batting average back over .400. He enters Monday’s series opener in Seattle slashing .409/.494/.779 with 14 home runs, a 254 wRC+ and 3.8 WAR.

Speaking of the Mariners, their streak of nine consecutive series wins was snapped over weekend when they were swept at home by the Blue Jays. They’re still leading the AL West, but they have two difficult series ahead of them this week: the aforementioned matchup with the Yankees, followed up a three-game set in San Diego.

Over in the AL Central, the Tigers continue to hold onto the best record in the AL, but they dropped their weekend series to the Rangers. The Royals entered their weekend series against the Red Sox on a seven-game winning streak with five straight series wins before Boston’s pitching slowed them down. Kansas City lost on Saturday and Sunday and was held to just one run in each game.

Tier 4 – The Melee
Team Record Elo Opponent Elo Playoff Odds Power Score
Guardians 23-17 1523 1492 38.9% 1524
Diamondbacks 21-20 1530 1523 46.2% 1524
Cardinals 22-19 1526 1504 29.5% 1523
Twins 21-20 1528 1486 50.1% 1523
Giants 24-17 1520 1497 46.6% 1522
Braves 19-21 1530 1499 60.9% 1522

The Cardinals and Twins are the hottest teams in baseball right now, with each club carrying eight-game winning streaks into the new week after struggling over the first month of the season. Ten days ago, St. Louis was six games out of first place and five games under .500; now the club is just a game behind the Cubs in the NL Central. Pitching has led the way for the Cardinals during their ascent, as they allowed a total of seven runs last week. Matthew Liberatore’s long-awaited breakout is the big story; he outpitched Paul Skenes in a seven-inning gem on Tuesday, giving up one run while striking out eight.

Meanwhile in Minnesota, Royce Lewis and Willi Castro were both activated off the IL last week, giving the roster a much needed boost. Likewise, it’s the pitching that’s driving their success; the Twins held opponents to two or fewer runs in their first five games last week before Sunday’s 7-6 walk-off win over the Giants. The offense still hasn’t really clicked, but their excellent run prevention has allowed them to post a +19 run differential despite sitting just a game over .500. Unlike the Cardinals, though, the Twins are still in fourth place and five games out of first because the AL Central — featuring the Tigers, who have the best record in the AL, as well as the Royals and Guardians — is one of the most competitive divisions in baseball.

Tier 5 – The Muddy Middle
Team Record Elo Opponent Elo Playoff Odds Power Score
Red Sox 22-20 1514 1484 48.7% 1511
Astros 20-19 1512 1496 50.9% 1508
Blue Jays 20-20 1512 1512 34.8% 1507
Rangers 20-21 1506 1518 38.3% 1500
Athletics 21-20 1490 1487 15.9% 1488
Rays 18-22 1489 1511 14.3% 1482

In the wake of Triston Casas’s season-ending knee injury, the Red Sox unnecessarily walked into another ugly spat with their franchise cornerstone last week, when chief baseball officer Craig Breslow asked Rafael Devers if he would be open to playing first base. It’s not an outrageous ask from a baseball perspective, but the problem is the lack of clear communication, both public and private, between Boston’s front office and its most important player. Thankfully, none of this has affected Devers at the plate; he collected 10 hits last week, including two home runs, and his season wRC+ is now up to 146.

The Astros placed Yordan Alvarez on the IL early last week with some inflammation in his hand. Then, on Saturday, Jose Altuve exited the game early with hamstring tightness. Neither injury is considered serious, but it’s just another hurdle Houston has to overcome this year. The Astros are virtually tied with the Athletics in the AL West standings, two games behind the Mariners and a game ahead of the Rangers. Both Texas teams went 3-3 last week, while the A’s dropped both their series against the Mariners and Yankees.

Tier 6 – Adrift in the NL Central
Team Record Elo Opponent Elo Playoff Odds Power Score
Brewers 20-21 1486 1486 18.6% 1482
Reds 20-22 1471 1487 7.7% 1466

The Cardinals’ hot streak has pushed the Brewers and Reds down a notch in the NL Central standings. Jackson Chourio is clearly talented, but his hyper-aggressive approach this season has led to inconsistent results. He’s supposed to be leading Milwaukee’s offense, but no one is really hitting right now. The pitching has been good considering all the injuries the staff has had to overcome — Brandon Woodruff and Aaron Civale are both nearing their returns — but a team that can’t score runs consistently won’t go anywhere.

For Cincinnati, a rash of injuries has derailed any success the team might have enjoyed earlier in the season. Hunter Greene, Noelvi Marte, and Jake Fraley all hit the IL last week, though thankfully Austin Hays returned from his own injury on Friday. After the Reds had scored just 10 runs across their previous six games, they erupted for 13 runs against the Astros on Saturday. Of course, they were shut out a day later; their offensive woes won’t be solved that easily.

Tier 7 – No Man’s Land
Team Record Elo Opponent Elo Playoff Odds Power Score
Orioles 15-24 1457 1500 7.8% 1448
Nationals 17-24 1443 1508 0.3% 1435
Angels 16-23 1436 1492 0.8% 1430

After getting swept by the Twins, the Orioles bounced back with a series win against the Angels last weekend. If you’re looking for signs of hope, Zach Eflin was activated off the IL on Sunday and looked pretty good in a five-inning outing. On the offensive side of things, Jackson Holliday is showing some signs of life; he’s collected a pair of home runs and nine hits this month.

Tier 8 – Hope Deferred
Team Record Elo Opponent Elo Playoff Odds Power Score
Pirates 14-27 1431 1504 1.1% 1421
Marlins 15-24 1423 1516 0.1% 1416
White Sox 12-29 1365 1490 0.0% 1358
Rockies 7-33 1328 1520 0.0% 1324

Both the Pirates and Rockies fired their managers last week, though neither Derek Shelton nor Bud Black were to blame for the struggles of their respective teams. Instead, the two managers are just the latest scapegoats for two beleaguered franchises going nowhere. At least Pittsburgh has some excellent pitching to witness every few days, with some more exciting prospects on the way. The situation in Colorado is much more bleak. The Rockies allowed a whopping 66 runs last week. On Thursday, they lost both games of a doubleheader by a combined score of 21-3, and somehow things got worse from there — they needed only one game on Saturday against the Padres to surrender 21 more runs. Final score: 21-0. Ouch.


The New-Look Javier Báez Is Fun Again

Jonathan Hui-Imagn Images

Through his first three seasons in Detroit, Javier Báez was largely a disappointment, with a combination of flashy defense and free swinging that yielded such diminishing returns that he sank below replacement level while battling injuries last year. He missed the late-season run that helped the Tigers capture a Wild Card spot, and as spring training opened, a full-time place in their lineup wasn’t guaranteed. Amid a rash of injuries to other Tigers, he’s not only split his time between center field — a position he hadn’t played in a regular season game before — third base, and shortstop, he’s been a productive hitter thanks to better health and some adjustments to his swing.

Even while going hitless on Friday and Sunday against the Rangers, the 32-year-old Báez is hitting .300/.336/.455 with three homers and a 127 wRC+. The peripherals underlying that are admittedly shaky, and he’s walking just 3.4% of the time, but thanks to positive defensive contributions at comparatively unfamiliar positions, he’s fourth among the team’s position players with 1.1 WAR — and he’s done it for a team that has the AL’s best record (26-15, .634) and largest division lead (2 1/2 games). For the first time in awhile, watching him is a whole lot of fun.

The Tigers signed Báez to a six-year, $140 million deal in November 2021, after he’d split his season between the Cubs and the Mets (who dealt away Pete Crow-Armstrong in the package to acquire him) — a strong one in which he posted a 117 wRC+ and 4.1 WAR. He was serviceable at best during his first season in Detroit (.238/.278/.393, 89 wRC+, 2.0 WAR) but sank to .222/.267/.325 (63 wRC+) with 0.8 WAR in 2023, then hit just .184/.221/.294 (43 wRC+) in 80 games last year. He missed nearly a month in June and July due to lumbar inflammation; the problem flared up again in August, accompanied by right hip inflammation. Under the belief that the Tigers were going nowhere at 62-66, he played his last game of the season on August 22 before undergoing surgery. Without their highest-paid player — a coincidence that was tough to miss given his underperformance — the Tigers went a major league-best 24-10 and snatched the third AL Wild Card spot, their first playoff berth in a decade. Read the rest of this entry »


The Red Sox Are Pulling the Wrong Levers With Rafael Devers

Dale Zanine and Peter Aiken-Imagn Images

Since 2019, Rafael Devers has put up 25.2 WAR for the Red Sox. Over that span, only one other player has even reached 10.0; it was Xander Bogaerts, who is no longer with the team. With the exception of the shortened 2020 season, Devers has never finished worse than second on the team in WAR. That includes last season, when he recorded 4.1 WAR despite playing through injuries to both shoulders. He was arguably the worst defensive third baseman in baseball, but he hit so well that he was inarguably the best player on the team, the face of the franchise, and one of the most productive third basemen in the game.

The Red Sox traded away Mookie Betts. They let Bogaerts walk. They kept Devers. When erstwhile chief baseball officer Chaim Bloom signed Devers to a 10-year, $313.5 million contract extension in January 2023, Michael Baumann’s headline read, “The Red Sox Have Finally Extended Rafael Devers.” He’s the longest-tenured member of the team, and only Kristian Campbell, whose extension contains team options for 2033 and 2034, is under contract further into the future. The Red made Devers the cornerstone, but in something straight out of a Suzy Eddie Izzard bit, they have spent the past couple months trying to dig him up and plop him down in different spots. The moves make baseball sense. That’s not the problem. The problem is communication. The team seems to be doing its level best to alienate its biggest star, repeatedly saying one thing in public, and then another to Devers in private. Read the rest of this entry »


How Many Wins Is a Pope Worth?

Matt Marton-Imagn Images

A papal conclave is the ultimate news story. It’s an event shrouded in ceremony and secrecy, which takes place incredibly rarely; only three times in the past 40 years, in fact. Even in this era when seeing everything has made the mysterious mundane, the world is left waiting in total ignorance for news of white smoke. Billions of observers, Catholic or not, look on in rapt fascination. And when the conclave produced the first American-born pope, Leo XIV, things only got more fascinating.

I come from a Catholic extended family, but for the most part, I was a devoted low-church protestant in my youth and am largely irreligious now. Nevertheless, I’ve always held the Vatican in a certain esteem. Its grandeur, its rituals, its dense and ancient jargon — all of that looks mystical and romantic from a distance. Is it the sole conduit to Almighty God? Perhaps not, from where I sit. But it’s a fascinating institution nonetheless.

That cloud of fairy tale wonder evaporated in an instant on Thursday, when the cardinal electors chose Cardinal Robert Prevost of Chicago to inherit St. Peter’s throne. Read the rest of this entry »