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  • Luis Arraez Entering the AL Rookie of the Year Race


    Cody Christie

    Luis Arraez has fought his way into an everyday role on one of the best offenses in baseball history. This is no small feat, especially for a 22-year old rookie. Since he wasn’t a highly-ranked prospect, Arraez has surprised many fans with his professional approach at the plate. Could he surprise the rest of baseball and walk away with the American League Rookie of the Year Award?

    Image courtesy of © Ben Ludeman-USA TODAY Sports

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    The Arraez Resume'

    Arraez entered play on Tuesday hitting .350/.421/.446 with 12 extra-base hits in just over 200 plate appearances. He has coaxed 22 walks and has struck out only 14 times. Among AL rookies with 200 plate appearances, he has the highest batting average by 50 points and the highest OBP by 40 points. His 6.9 K% is almost half as low as the second-place rookie on the leaderboard.

    One of Arraez’s biggest hurdles to winning the award will be his lack of plate appearances. He should finish with close to 370 plate appearances, but some other rookies already have over 300 plate appearances to their credit. Arraez will also be hurt because other rookies will be able to accrue more WAR because of their getting to the big leagues before him.

    According to FanGraphs, Arraez currently ranks fourth in WAR among AL rookie batters. Less than a week ago, he ranked sixth on this list. He currently trails Tampa’s Brandon Lowe (2.5 WAR), New York’s Mike Tauchman (2.5 WAR) and Seattle’s Daniel Vogelbach (2.2 WAR). None of these players are exactly household names but the real competition might come from other more well-known players.

    The Competition

    Toronto’s Vladimir Guerrero Jr. is the big name in the AL ROY competition. So far this season, he has hit .274/.346/.459 with 34 extra-base hits in 367 plate appearances. FanGraphs has his WAR total as 0.5 and his total is low because of his negative value as a baserunner and a defender. He still had a ton of hype coming into the year and he has compiled a solid offensive resume.

    Some other former top prospects to consider are Chicago’s Eloy Jimenez and Toronto’s Cavan Biggio. Jimenez’ 19 home runs are second among AL rookies, but his other offensive numbers might make it tough to consider him a front-runner. He is hitting .237/.294/.453 with 27 extra-base hits and he has provided negative value on the defensive side. Biggio’s .205 batting average is tough to swallow, but he is getting on base a third of the time and he has 17 extra-base hits in 63 games.

    As far as pitchers, Spencer Turnbull has been worth 2.0 WAR on a bad Tigers team. He has a 3.68 ERA, a 1.32 WHIP, and a 98 to 42 strikeout to walk ratio in 107 2/3 innings. John Means represented the Orioles in the All-Star Game this season and he has a 3.36 ERA with a 1.16 WHIP to go along with an 83 to 28 strikeout to walk ratio. Both players have been decent, but neither will likely have a shot at the award.

    The Race

    Minnesota hasn’t had a top-three finisher for AL ROY since 2015 when Miguel Sano finished a distant third behind Carlos Correa and Francisco Lindor. During Minnesota’s last run to a division title in 2010, Danny Valencia earned enough votes to finish a distant third in the voting. One must go back all the way to the mid-90s to find Minnesota’s last AL ROY winner when Marty Cordova took home the hardware after beating out Garret Anderson and Andy Pettitte.

    Voting for the Rookie of the Year Awards is different than voting for other year-end honors. While most awards go to the player that had the best overall season, this isn’t always the case of the ROY. I’ve heard from voters that they approach voting for this award by looking at the candidates and voting for not only who had a good season, but also who will have a long-term impact on the game.

    Over the last seven years, some of the AL winners include Shohei Ohtani, Aaron Judge, Carlos Correa, Jose Abreu, Wil Myers and Mike Trout. All those batters had at least 88 games played at the big-league level with Myers having the fewest. He batted .293/.354/.478 that season and he was one of baseball’s top prospects. He only had to beat out Jose Iglesias and Chris Archer for the top spot.

    Does Arraez have a shot at the AL ROY? It seems more likely for Guerrero to finish on top but that still doesn’t take anything away from the impact Arraez has had on the Twins line-up.

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    As long as its a natural add but I really don't care if he adds it or not as long as he gets on base a lot. Worse thing Twins did for Nick Punto IMO is make him the regular 3rd baseman without telling him they didn't want him trying to hit for power. He started swinging for the fences and hit with neither power or average. I think the same happened with Ben Revere. .320 and OBP over .360 is very valuable. He doesn't need to be Kirby Puckett. Rod Carew would be just fine.

    players without power are inherently flawed as hitters. Arraez will need to develop some, or he won't be a regular, because its extremely doubtful he'll maintain either his current BA or OBP.

     

    And for the record, I dont think either Punto or Revere suffered because nobody told them not to worry about power.

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    players without power are inherently flawed as hitters. Arraez will need to develop some, or he won't be a regular, because its extremely doubtful he'll maintain either his current BA or OBP.

    And for the record, I dont think either Punto or Revere suffered because nobody told them not to worry about power.

    I agree its extremely doubtul he maintains his current BA or OBP because his current pace is better than Rod Carew or Tony Gwynn.   At every level he has hit at least .318 with at least a .365 OBP and his career average is .331 and .385.    If he develops power then great but I think there is still a place for a high on base top of the lineup 2nd baseman.    ......................

    We can differ on our opinions of Punto and I have nothing to back it up but observation.   In 2006 Tony Batista was our Opening Day 3rd baseman and Punto was our utility guy.   When Batista was either hurt or cut Punto was the place holder.  He hit .290 and was one of the piranha's and lived up to the name.   He was a battler and a tough out.    When he was named the 3rd baseman in 2007 I could see almost immediately that he was swinging way harder than the prior year.    He was hitting more fly balls and striking out more.    It was only speculation but I imagined that as a third base man he thought he needed to hit for more power.    Its just not who he was.   He was valuable as a .290 .352 OBP guy and had little value as a small guy trying to hit home runs.      If Arraez can hit .300 with a .360 OBP or better I won't consider him a flawed hitter.   I will consider him a good guy to have in the lineup.

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    Anyway, my point is that power is easier to add than contact. If you have great hand-eye coordination, it transfers well to hitting the ball hard and far.

     

    HR and double right on cue.

     

    Stance and swing is very reminiscent of Eduardo Escobar.

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    Polanco wasn’t a power hitter in the minors either. Arraez projects to about an 8-10 pace over a full season. That’s obviously low in this era but I don’t think his discerning eye or contact skill is going away. Lack of power certainly doesn’t make someone “inherently flawed” as a hitter. It makes them a different type of hitter. Was Rod Carew inherently flawed?

     

    Baseball has had a tendency to go in cycles. Power was all the rage in the 50s and 60s, but then in the 70s and early 80s, it turned to a game of speed, where contact was important. Who knows, it could shift again.

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    I'm not worried about whether or Luis develops over-the-fence power, but IMO he'll have to find some gaps with more frequency or become a defensive wizard to be a long-term, everyday player ... at least at one position.

     

    Utility guy that won't kill you at multiple positions, isn't a liability on the basepaths, can work a count, and slap singles around is a valuable piece to have - basically Marwin-Lite, and there's nothing wrong with that.

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