That Name Again Is Brandon Lowe
Through Monday night, major league baseball teams have played 415 games, the same number of games they had played on April 28 of last year. Back then, Cody Bellinger, Christian Yelich and Mike Trout were the top three players by WAR. Also in the top 10 were Matt Chapman, Marcus Semien, Pete Alonso, Anthony Rendon, Javier Báez, and Paul DeJong, who all went on to have good-to-great seasons. Elvis Andrus, on the other hand, put up 1.5 WAR through most of April and was replacement-level the rest of the way. Moving one month forward, a stretch equivalent to half of this season, Pete Alonso was replacement-level in May. Marcus Semien put up an 80 wRC+. All of which serves as a good reminder that in this shortened season, it’s best not to make too much of one month’s worth of performance when looking forward. That said, though, let’s take a look at the current WAR Leaderboard for position players:
Name | Team | PA | OBP | SLG | wRC+ | WAR |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mike Yastrzemski | Giants | 133 | .429 | .645 | 184 | 2.2 |
Fernando Tatis Jr. | Padres | 134 | .396 | .678 | 183 | 2.1 |
Mookie Betts | Dodgers | 122 | .369 | .664 | 174 | 1.8 |
Anthony Rendon | Angels | 117 | .453 | .558 | 179 | 1.8 |
Brandon Lowe | Rays | 118 | .398 | .676 | 190 | 1.8 |
Kyle Lewis | Mariners | 125 | .456 | .585 | 190 | 1.7 |
Nelson Cruz | Twins | 119 | .429 | .699 | 198 | 1.7 |
Trent Grisham | Padres | 131 | .369 | .514 | 140 | 1.4 |
Bryce Harper | Phillies | 96 | .453 | .667 | 191 | 1.4 |
Ian Happ | Cubs | 108 | .411 | .575 | 161 | 1.4 |
Over the last month, Ben Clemens has written about Mike Yastrzemski, Mookie Betts, and Ian Happ; Jay Jaffe has added his own piece on Betts. Fernando Tatis Jr. has been featured in posts from Jaffe and Dan Szymborski, and ranked very highly in our Trade Value Series. Jake Mailhot has written up Kyle Lewis and Trent Grisham. While Anthony Rendon, Nelson Cruz, and Bryce Harper have all been great and perhaps deserve articles of their own, their greatness isn’t too far removed from our general expectations for them. That just leaves Brandon Lowe, whose start definitely merits attention. Read the rest of this entry »