Category: Defense

  • Oral History: Ichiro Suzuki’s Defensive Legacy

    Oral History: Ichiro Suzuki’s Defensive Legacy

    Photo: John Froschauer/Icon Sportswire

    As we’ve done with Scott Rolen and Adrian Beltré the last two years, we wanted to tell the story of new Hall-of-Famer Ichiro Suzuki’s defensive excellence through those who saw him close-up.

    Over the last couple of months, we talked to several of Ichiro’s teammates, rivals, and former managers to get a better sense of his defensive legacy.

    Our tale begins with a scene from Ichiro’s Japanese rookie season, when he was an 18-year-old kid with the Orix Blue Wave in Nippon Professional Baseball.

    Kelvin Torve, ex major leaguer and Orix Blue Wave teammate (1992-1993) – “I get to the ballpark and go down to the field to stretch. Ichiro’s standing in center field by himself. He’s got his hat over his heart and he’s facing the center field stands, screaming at the top of his lungs for 5, 10 minutes.

    I asked our interpreter, ‘What’s gotten into Ichiro?’ And he said that yesterday there was a fly ball behind second base. Ichiro and our second baseman ran into each other.

    So, what Ichiro was screaming was ‘My name is Ichiro Suzuki and I’m learning to use my voice.’ It was a punishment.

    I coach American Legion baseball in South Dakota now and I use that story with my outfielders – that if you don’t talk, I’d hate to do what did to Ichiro. It was a teaching lesson for him and a coaching lesson for me.”

    The message gets through to Torve’s outfielders and it certainly got through to Ichiro by the time he joined the Mariners in 2001 after nine seasons in Japan.

    Mariners broadcaster Rick Rizzs – “He was so disciplined. He did everything right.

    Before he was posted and signed with the Mariners, he came here for a few days in 1999 to work out with the ballclub. I’ll never forget. He went out to right field with Jay Buhner and was taking outfield practice.

    I saw a fly ball to right field. He grabs it and throws a seed to home plate. And it had such my life on it. And it was accurate, so accurate. I remember thinking to myself, ‘Who is this guy? If he hits a baseball as well as he throws one, he’s going to be a great player.’”

    There were two components to Ichiro’s excellence – preparation and execution.

    Regarding the former, one of the things Ichiro told his teammates about was the importance of a Japanese word, ‘kaizen.’

    Mike Cameron (Mariners teammate, 2001-2003): “It is a Japanese business philosophy to emphasize continuous improvement across an organization. The goal of Kaizen is to gradually improve processes, products, and services. Always improving, continuously working, no matter good or bad.

    By the time he got to the ballpark, he had already probably worked out one time and then he would come to the ballpark, he would get the massage then he would go through another training workout with those special machines.

    I tried to do it a couple of times and I was sore for two weeks. My body wasn’t accustomed to it. But those machines were made for him and the movements he’d want to have over the course of time.”

    Willie Fraser (Orix teammate, 1996-1998): “I’ve never seen anyone stretch as much as him.”

    Casey Kotchman (Mariners teammate, 2010; also once thrown out at home plate by Ichiro): “He really reaped what he sowed as far as all the work that he put in. He was always working and getting ready for his next move to put himself in a position of success.”

    Doug Jennings (Orix teammate, 1995-1997): “He was the hardest-working superstar I ever played with.”

    Willie Bloomquist (Mariners teammate, 2002-2008): “He’d take his shoes off and he’d have this little wooden tool that he would dig into his feet. He was a big believer in keeping his feet healthy and loose. He would dig this little wooden tool into his feet and then he would sit, his ankles would be up on his thighs. He’d sit there reading and eating his rice ball with a plum in the middle of it. He’d do that every day.”

    Cameron: “I used to tell him every day, make sure his wife makes two extra rice balls. Because I want to try it.”

    He took care of himself as well as he could take care of himself. He ate the right foods and got the proper rest. His preparation, concentration and determination were top notch.”

    Bob Melvin (Mariners manager, 2003-2004) “Everything he did, starting with when he woke up in the morning, was all about preparing for a game. The work ethic made him who he is.”

    John McLaren (Mariners manager, 2007-2008): “He would take balls off the bat in batting practice. A lot of outfielders do that. He did it to the extreme.”

    Melvin: “Whether it was balls off the wall or balls in the gap, he was like a handball player. The ball was hit, and he knew where it was going to go.”

    And Ichiro could catch it too. You don’t post a standard-setting 30 Runs Saved in a season in right field (as he did in 2004) without making some improbable defensive plays.

    Bloomquist: “He never made a bad route to a baseball.

    He covered a lot of ground. He never dove head-first for a ball in all the years I saw him play. That frustrated some teammates every once in a while. But his philosophy was that he was faster running through than he was diving or sliding. I asked him once, ‘Why don’t you dive?’ And he said ‘Do you ever see a sprinter diving through the finish line?

    When you heard him, it made sense. He was the guy that you knew that if it was hit anywhere out there, it’s an out.”

    Cameron: “He was playing so fast, but he played so poised. He was twisting and bending and everything and he never allowed his hat to come his head either. He’d hold onto his hat while making plays.

    I used to try to get him to dance all the time. I called him the dancing cat, because he could bounce around, he could climb walls, and he had amazing flexibility. But he couldn’t dance a lick. I would die laughing when we’d try to get him to dance.”

    Arguably Ichiro’s best catch came in 2005 against the Angels, robbing Garret Anderson of a two-run home run.

    Cameron: “I saw him make plays that were crazy. His back to the fence in right field, jumping into the wall like Spiderman and reaching back, holding onto the ball and catching the ball over his right shoulder. That’s so hard.”

    Bloomquist: “He had to twist his body around and still caught it over the top of the wall.”

    Ichiro didn’t just track balls down. In his early years, He could throw better than any outfielder in MLB.

    Melvin: “Off the charts: 80 arm, 80 accuracy. It was all wrapped in one package that was about as perfect as you get.”

    Kotchman: “A cannon.”

    Jennings: “Him and our left fielder, So Taguchi, had such remarkable arm strength. One of the things they would do between innings is throw the ball from corner to corner in long toss. They did it to thrill the fans, see how far they could throw the ball.”

    Rizzs: “He threw with every inch of his body, from his toes to the tip of his cap to his fingertips. That’s why he was able to get that incredible whip and backspin on the ball to make it so true and never had a hump on it.”

    Kotchman: “He threw the ball straight and true. Some outfielders or infielders will cut it or sink it, and it doesn’t have a nice ball flight. His ball would just really take off.”

    Ichiro’s signature defensive play happened in his eighth major league game, a throw from right field to third base to nail Terrence Long of the A’s.

    McLaren: “I can see it like it was yesterday.”

    Melvin: “That’s when it all came into play. Reading the ball off the bat, charging the ball quickly, corralling it really quickly, getting rid of it with his arm strength. I think that particular play showed baseball, that’s a guy you’re not going to run on.”

    McLaren: “He threw one knee-high to David Bell. Bell didn’t move his glove.”

    Ichiro passed on his knowledge about how to play defense to his teammates, including Cameron, who won his first Gold Glove Award in Ichiro’s rookie MLB season, 2001.

    Cameron: “We had an instant chemistry playing amongst each other. I understood him, he understood me.

    “He told me about what I needed to start using body-wise when I threw and we worked on it every day. Every day. I used to get on top of the ball. He helped me lower my arm angle, which allowed it to have more accuracy. He made me use my lat and my back and my torso a lot more. He forced me to improve those things. He made my arm more accurate and stronger, and I got better as an outfielder.”

    Ichiro was that rare player who was a baseball phenomenon. His popularity was off the charts, both with the American and Japanese baseball audience.

    Cameron: “It was almost like I got a chance to play with Michael Jordan, baseball-wise.”

    Melvin: “A big part of what he did was entertain people that came to watch him. That’s why he never wanted to take a day off.”

    Cameron: “I’ve never seen a baseball player with that much cachet. When Ichiro showed up, the madness that he created was unbelievable.”

    Melvin: “He felt like if someone was there to watch him on that day and he wasn’t performing, he wasn’t doing his job. The first time I tried to give him a day off, I told him when it was gonna be. We were in Chicago, and I said, ‘Look, just try to take it easy. Come out here in the seventh or eighth inning and see if I need you.’

    Fifteen minutes before the game, he’s sitting on the bench, gloves on, he’s got his bat next to him, rocking up and down. Right then, a kid walked by wearing an Ichiro jersey. Ichiro didn’t even say anything. He just nodded his head to the kid, and I got it. That was part of who he was. He felt he needed to be out there to entertain the people who came to watch him.”

    Ichiro finished his MLB career with more than 3,000 hits, 500 stolen bases, 10 Gold Glove Awards, and three Fielding Bible Awards in over 2,600 games. His defense made him a complete major league player. Now, he still plays and coaches in Japan. When he’s in Seattle, he’s Julio Rodriguez’s pre-game throwing partner. He can’t help but stay connected to the game.

    Melvin: “He’s one of a kind. Probably one of my favorite guys ever.”

    Cameron: “It was a gift to see and play with him. He was special. So special.”

  • Stat of the Week: New Year’s Resolutions With A Defensive Twist

    Stat of the Week: New Year’s Resolutions With A Defensive Twist

    Photos: Nick Wosika (left), Charles Brock (right)/Icon Sportswire

    It’s the middle of January and most of us have probably broken or abandoned our New Year’s Resolutions by now. But the subject (and a lack of notable transactions recently) got me to thinking about defense-minded New Year’s Resolutions for 2025.

    Here are a few that came to mind:

    For Corbin Burnes: I will do my part to hold baserunners better

    Corbin Burnes allowed an MLB-high 41 stolen bases last season, more than double his prior career high of 18. This was an issue regardless of whether Adley Rutschman or James McCann was catching him. Burnes’ average time to the plate was about .13 seconds slower in 2024 than it was in 2023 and he ranked in the bottom 10% of pitchers in that stat last season.

    This season, he’ll primarily be throwing to one of MLB’s best defensive catchers, Gabriel Moreno of the Diamondbacks. Moreno won a Fielding Bible Award two years ago, largely on the strength of his limiting basestealing. Last year, Moreno allowed 40 stolen bases, one fewer than Burnes, catching almost 550 more innings than Burnes pitched.

    For Aaron Judge: I won’t let my World Series blunder impact my return to form in right field

    Aaron Judge had such a ridiculous season as a hitter that it overshadowed his poor defensive numbers in center field (-9 Runs Saved). Judge’s center field defense came back to get him in the World Series, when he dropped a fly ball during the Dodgers’ five-run rally in the fifth inning of the series-clinching Game 5.

    With the Yankees signing Cody Bellinger and losing Juan Soto to the Mets, Judge will move back to right field, a position where he’s twice led the majors in Runs Saved and won a Fielding Bible Award, albeit as a younger player. Judge turns 33 in April and has dealt with injuries that have slowed his defensive game down. So, he’ll be challenged by more than just the stigma of that one miscue.

    For Willy Adames: I’ll fix my forehand

    Willy Adames went from being a reliable shortstop to a defensive issue last season. He totaled an MLB-worst -16 Defensive Runs Saved at shortstop.

    Adames had the same number of touches on his forehand (balls he touched in the field) in 2024 as he had in 2023 but was successful in recording at least one out 20 fewer times. He went from being one of the best defenders on those balls to one of the worst.

    Adames is now on a team that is hungry for good defense at the position. The Giants have gotten -38 Runs Saved at shortstop the last three seasons, the second-worst total in MLB.

    For the Minnesota Twins: We’ll have a better backup plan

    The Twins got exposed defensively when some of their regular players went down with injuries or didn’t play. Byron Buxton had 2 Runs Saved in the 94 games he played in center field. The Twins got -11 Runs Saved at the position when he didn’t play. There was a similar issue at shortstop with Carlos Correa and his injury replacements as well.

    One problem for the Twins was that though they had good defensive versatility with Willi Castro and Austin Martin, those players didn’t perform at a high level relative to their peers. Castro totaled -18 Runs Saved split between five positions. Martin had -13 split between left and center field (we should note he was a rookie and was drafted as an infielder).

    The Twins haven’t had a particularly active offseason but there’s still time to attack these issues if they choose.

  • Stat of the Week: Chase Utley and the Hall of Fame

    Stat of the Week: Chase Utley and the Hall of Fame

    Photos: Chris Livingston/Icon Sportswire

    BY MARK SIMON

    I’m still a few years away from having a vote for the Baseball Hall of Fame and I’ve been wondering recently whether Chase Utley will still be on the ballot when I do have a vote.

    Utley got just below 30% of the vote last year in his first year on the Baseball Writers Association of America ballot. He’s probably going to do better than that this year, but he’s still going to be well short of the 75% needed for election to the Hall of Fame. The ballots are in for this year’s class, which will be announced on January 21.

    Utley’s candidacy is driven by his six-year peak from 2005 to 2010 when he was the most complete player in baseball. He totaled 45.5 WAR per Baseball-Reference, a figure surpassed in that span by only Albert Pujols.

    Most Wins Above Replacement – Position Players

    2005 to 2010 (Baseball-Reference Version)

    Player WAR
    Albert Pujols 52.1
    Chase Utley 45.5
    Alex Rodriguez 38.3
    Mark Teixeira 33.4
    Joe Mauer 31.8
    David Wright 30.0

    Utley averaged 27 home runs and 15 stolen bases per season and played an average of 145 games per year in those six seasons. His OPS was 33% better than MLB average when adjusted for ballpark and his OPS as a second baseman was at least 40% better than the average second baseman in five of the six years.

    Additionally, Utley’s 119 Defensive Runs Saved and 14.2 Defensive WAR (another figure calculated by Baseball-Reference) were also the best in the majors in that time.

    Within the years Defensive Runs Saved has existed (it dates back to 2003) only three other players have tallied that many Runs Saved over a six-season span: Andrelton Simmons, Kevin Kiermaier, and Mookie Betts.

    In those six seasons, Utley finished in the top three in Runs Saved among second basemen five times. His 126 career Runs Saved rank second overall at second base behind Mark Ellis (128).

    In 2008, Utley had 35 Runs Saved from his range and positioning (we give him and not the team credit for where he was positioned) and saved 46 plays more than the average second baseman would have against the same assortment of batted balls. The 35 Range Runs Saved are tied with Simmons (2017) for the most at any position in a season since the stat was first compiled.

    In the postseason from 2007 to 2010, Utley had a .902 OPS, 10 home runs, 25 RBI, and 38 runs scored in 46 games. He was a statistical superstar from April to September and he was one in October too.

    Utley was still a good player in the first four years post-peak (2011 to 2014). Where he fizzles is in the last four seasons of his career when he posted a .682 OPS, had -12 Runs Saved, and totaled 2.3 WAR. He went 0-for-30 in his last 15 postseason games.

    A stronger finish would have allowed him to clear 2,000 hits (he finished with 1,885), 300 home runs (he totaled 259), and 70 Wins Above Replacement, which would have made his candidacy stronger.

    As it is, his career stats are still good enough to clear Bill James’ Hall of Fame Value (HOF-V) benchmark. HOF-V is defined as the sum of a player’s Win Shares (Utley tallied 291) and four times his Wins Above Replacement (64.5). Utley scores a 549.2. The only players on this year ballot with a higher score and who are untainted by either PED use allegations, a cheating scandal, or domestic violence allegations are Bobby Abreu (596.7) and Ichiro Suzuki (564.0). A score of 500 is generally the bar for Hall of Fame worthiness.

    Utley isn’t one of those slam-dunk, easy-decision candidates. But he has the credentials in 2025 and any year moving forward to be Cooperstown worthy. If he’s still on the ballot when I have a vote, I’ll be checking off his name.

  • Chris Sale Would Have Been Even Better If Not For His Outfield Defense

    Chris Sale Would Have Been Even Better If Not For His Outfield Defense

    Braves starter Chris Sale is almost certainly going to win the NL Cy Young Award today and deservedly so. Sale won the NL’s pitching Triple Crown with 18 wins, a 2.38 ERA and 225 strikeouts.

    What’s amazing about Sale’s season is that he actually could have been even better.

    The Braves finished with -8 Defensive Runs Saved in games in which Sale pitched. Take those runs off Sale’s ledger and his ERA would be right around where his FIP ended up (2.09). Sale was one of 13 pitchers whose teams had -8 Runs Saved or worse on the batted balls against him in 2024.

    By comparison fellow Cy Young finalist Paul Skenes basically had an average defense fielding his balls (-1 Runs Saved) and Zack Wheeler’s defense played well behind him (4 Runs Saved). The pitcher who is going to win the AL Cy Young, Tarik Skubal, got 6 Runs Saved from the Tigers defense. Fellow finalist Seth Lugo got 6 Runs Saved from the Royals defense. And Guardians closer Emmanuel Clase got 11(!) Runs Saved from his defense (we wrote about that).

    Sale was a victim of the adventures (or misadventures) of the Braves outfield. When Sale was on the mound, Braves outfielders combined for -9 Runs Saved. They turned 55% of the fly balls and line drives hit to the outfield against Sale into outs. MLB average is usually in the low 60s. That 55% ranks in the bottom 15% of qualifying pitchers.

    A few examples:

    This ball was scored a triple and the batter, Jahmai Jones, subsequently scored when the next hitter grounded out. To call that an earned run seems unfair to Sale.

     

    This is a tough one too – a ground rule double that seemed to be a mental error by Jorge Soler, who ran after it as if he thought it was a foul ball. The Braves left fielders and center fielders had good defensive seasons overall. But their right fielders ranked last in Runs Saved.

     

    Something similar happened here with Eddie Rosario in left field:

     

    Here’s another one where scoring this a hit is penalizing the pitcher for his defense’s mistake – a fielder overrunning a pop up.

    On that one, Sale more than bailed his defense out. He struck out 12 in 7 scoreless innings, as if he knew he had to be even better with the wind blowing at 14 MPH and the knowledge that his outfield defense was possibly going to struggle.

    That’s not to say that the Braves outfield didn’t do right by Sale too.

     

    But as the numbers show, the negatives outweighed the positives.

    You’re probably going to hear a lot on Wednesday about all that Sale overcame to win the Cy Young Award, with the injuries he’s dealt with the last few years.

    But saying he overcame physical adversity is only part of the story. He overcame defensive-induced adversity in several games this season too.

  • Several Standout Defenders Join Hall of Fame Ballot

    Several Standout Defenders Join Hall of Fame Ballot

    Photo: John Cordes (l) and Jeff Zelevansky (r)/Icon Sportswire

    Did you notice that the additions to this year’s Hall of Fame class include a bunch of defensive studs?

    There are already some great defensive players on the ballot (we wrote about Chase Utley last year and there are several longtime holdovers, some with problematic off-field histories, too) but the addition of these players makes the ballot really defense-rich.

    Ichiro Suzuki headlines the first-year eligible candidate group and while fans often marvel at his hitting, his defense in his MLB prime was high end.

    Ichiro reached a Defensive Runs Saved total that few right fielders have reached. He had 30 in 2004, the second season for which that stat is tracked. The only right fielder with more in a season is Mookie Betts, who had 33 in 2016 and 32 in 2017. Ichiro was never able to replicate anything close to that 2004 season in terms of defense, but totaled at least 10 Runs Saved in five other seasons. His arm rated best in the early part of his career when he had numerous highlight-reel throws. He also tallied 10 home run robberies from when we first started fully tracking them in 2004. Only five players have more.

    In all, Ichiro is one of three players with at least 100 Runs Saved in right field and is a 3-time Fielding Bible Award winner at that position.

    Most Defensive Runs Saved – Right Field

    Name Runs Saved
    Jason Heyward 159
    Mookie Betts 141
    Ichiro Suzuki 104

    Ichiro isn’t the only ballot newcomer with at least 100 Runs Saved at a position. Dustin Pedroia ranks third among second basemen with 107 Runs Saved. He’s directly behind second-year Hall candidate Chase Utley. And two spots behind Pedroia is another ballot newcomer, Ian Kinsler.

    Both Pedroia and Kinsler were solid players, though most will likely dub them a fit for the ‘Hall of Very Good.’ Pedroia twice led second basemen in Defensive Runs Saved in a season and finished in the top five at that position six times. He perfected a pre-pitch hop that allowed him to get a quick first step in making a play. Pedroia has the most Fielding Bible Awards among second basemen with 4.

    Kinsler has the most Double Play Runs Saved of any second baseman. He ranked in the top five in Defensive Runs Saved at second base seven times in a 14-year career and led the majors in Runs Saved there in 2009. He won a Fielding Bible Award at second base in 2015.

    Most Defensive Runs Saved – Second Base

    Name Runs Saved
    Mark Ellis 128
    Chase Utley 126
    Dustin Pedroia 107
    Orlando Hudson 101
    Ian Kinsler 86

    Shortstop Troy Tulowitzki had one of the best defensive seasons of anyone at that position within the history of Defensive Runs Saved. He led shortstops with 31 Runs Saved in 2007 and finished in the top five in Runs Saved there five other times. Tulowitzki’s specialty when he was at his best, was making plays deep in the shortstop-third base hole that other shortstops weren’t making. Tulowitzki is a 3-time Fielding Bible Award winner at shortstop.

    From 2009 to 2011, Ben Zobrist was one of the best players in baseball and a primary reason for that was his defense. Zobrist ranked tied for second in Runs Saved among right fielders and fourth among second basemen in Defensive Runs Saved over that three-year period.

    SIS began tracking which catchers were getting more strikes than expected for their pitchers in 2010 and from the start, it was apparent that Russell Martin was pretty good at it.

    Since that season, Martin ranks third among catchers in Runs Saved overall and fourth in Strike Zone Runs Saved, which measures pitch framing. Even before that, Martin rated well as a catcher. He led the position in Runs Saved in 2007 and then again in 2013 and ranked in the top five in five other seasons.

    Other newcomers on the ballot who were notable defenders include Curtis Granderson, who finished second among right fielders in Runs Saved in 2015 after finishing third among center fielders in 2007. There’s also the odd case of Adam Jones. Though Jones ranks second-worst in the range component of Defensive Runs Saved for center fielders dating back to 2003, he ranks No. 1 overall in Outfield Arm Runs Saved at the position in that time. Plus, his signature play is a home run robbery at the World Baseball Classic.

  • Stat of the Week: Several Key Free Agents Don’t Have Great Defensive Stats

    Stat of the Week: Several Key Free Agents Don’t Have Great Defensive Stats

    Photo: Mark Goldman (l) and Nick Wosika (r)/Icon Sportswire

    Five of the best hitters available in free agency had negative Defensive Runs Saved in 2024.

    In the grand scheme of things, what these players do at the plate will far outweigh what they do in the field. But that’s not to say that it doesn’t matter at least a little bit. Let’s explore their individual situations.

    Juan Soto

    At the rate Soto is going, he’s going to be an all-time great hitter and he’s going to get paid an incredible amount of money to be one. Soto has shown that he can be a good defensive outfielder, but he’s also shown he can be below-average too.

    After accruing 6 Defensive Runs Saved in 2021, he’s totaled -5, -2, and -1 the last three seasons. He played right field in 2021, 2022, and 2024 and left field in 2023.

    Soto rated well in right field for most of the 2024 season. But in September, he had -5 Runs Saved (worst among right fielders) and 6 Defensive Misplays and Errors (tied for the most in the position). As far as range goes, in both 2022 and 2024, Soto was penalized the most on balls hit to the deepest part of right field.

    Soto’s Runs Saved would have been worse but for the value of his arm. The last two seasons he’s combined for 6 Outfield Arm Runs Saved.

    Soto had 4 outfield assists in the Yankees’ first 19 games in 2024. Both that and playing in a small ballpark like Yankee Stadium may have had something to do with baserunners advancing an extra base against him on 43% of the balls he fielded in 2024. The MLB average rate for right fielders was 51%.

    There isn’t anything about Soto’s defense that should scare teams off. A little below average isn’t going to cause a lot of trouble over 162 games. But it’s important to have a full understanding of what you’re getting when he’s on your team.

    Anthony Santander

    Santander hit a career-high 44 home runs last season, topping the 33 and 28 that he hit the previous two seasons, respectively. But in both 2022 and 2024, his defense held his WAR (Baseball-Reference version) down a little bit.

    Santander played 130 games in right field last season, the most he’d ever played at one position in a season. Our defensive metrics weren’t kind to him. He finished with -7 Runs Saved, which contributed to a  2.9 bWAR. Of the 19 40-homer seasons since 2021, Santander’s bWAR was worse than 16 of them.

    Santander’s defensive issues were different from Soto’s. By our calculations, he made 11 plays fewer than an average fielder on shallow and medium balls hit to the outfield, but he was 5 plays better than expected on balls hit to the deepest part of right field.

    Santander was also dinged for his arm. He allowed 61% of baserunners to take an extra base against him, 10 percentage points worse than the average right fielder. Among the 35 players who played right field the most last season, only Starling Marte had a worse rate.

    Santander had good defensive numbers in the past. He totaled a combined 14 Runs Saved in 85 games in right field in 2019 and 2020 and he had 3 Runs Saved there in 2023. With him it’s a question of whether his future performance will resemble his most recent play.

    Willy Adames

    We mentioned last week that Adames is a curious case. He had 9 Runs Saved as a shortstop in 2022 and 8 Runs Saved in 2023. But then he was a MLB-worst -16 Runs Saved in 2024.

    Our stats showed that Adames completely cratered. He went from 13 plays made above average in 2023 to 19 below average in 2024. As the chart below shows, he went from being one of the most reliable fielders on his forehand to one of the least reliable.

    Willy Adames- 2024 When Fielding On His Forehand

    Year Plays Made-Opportunities Success Rate
    2023 289-304 95% (1st in MLB)
    2024 269-304 89% (30th of 35)

    Interest in Adames is going to be high given his 32 home runs and 21 stolen bases in 161 games last season. Perhaps indicative of concerns about his defense is talk that one team, the Mets, is looking at him as a third baseman. As we wrote in a study done in 2022, moving from shortstop to third base isn’t necessarily an easy switch (spoiler: the study shows some fielders handle it well and others don’t). But perhaps in this case it will be a necessary one.

    Jurickson Profar

    Profar, who had the best offensive year of his career last season with the Padres, has a history of not being a good defensive player. After putting decent defensive numbers up in left field in repeated sets of small samples early in his career, he’s had -11 and -8 Runs Saved in left field the last two years, respectively. He’s played other positions and not fared well at those either.

    Statcast data indicates that Profar doesn’t chase balls down well. He rated below average in the amount of ground he covers in the first three seconds after a hitter makes contact. The team that signs him would do well to work with him on that … if they don’t make him a DH.

    Pete Alonso

    Alonso is an oddity in that he’s had three seasons with negative Runs Saved and three seasons with positive Runs Saved and he’s never had two in a row of either. In sum, he comes out as an average defensive first baseman through the first six years of his career.

    Alonso does two things in high volume. He led all first basemen with 39 Good Fielding Plays related to catching throws in 2024. No one else had more than 26. He also aggressively leaves his feet. He’s finished first or second at the position in the number of times he’s slid, dove, or jumped to make a play. There’s no lacking for effort in how he plays defense, which is good so long as he doesn’t injure himself in the process.

     

  • Stat of the Week: Celebrating The Fielding Bible Award Runners-Up

    Stat of the Week: Celebrating The Fielding Bible Award Runners-Up

    It would be inappropriate to say that the winners of this year’s Fielding Bible Awards were the only players deserving of the honor. We had a great field of candidates at each position, so, as we did last year, we thought it would be worthwhile to acknowledge those who were the runners-up in the voting at each position.

    First Base – Christian Walker of the Diamondbacks was the two-time reigning Award winner before being dethroned by four-time Award winner Matt Olson this year. Walker finished fifth at the position in Defensive Runs Saved. His 33 Runs Saved at first base over the last three seasons are the most of anyone at the position.

    Second Base – Brice Turang of the Brewers led all second basemen with 22 Runs Saved in 2024 but lost a close vote to the only repeat winner from 2023, Andrés Giménez of the Guardians. Turang was an MLB-best 22 plays made above average on balls hit to his right, repeatedly taking away hits on balls hit up the middle.

    Third Base – Ryan McMahon of the Rockies was a runner-up for the second straight season after finishing tied for second in Runs Saved at the position. He’s finished in the top four in voting at third base in each of the last four seasons but has never won an Award.

    Shortstop – Ezequiel Tovar of the Rockies was one of six shortstops to record at least 10 Runs Saved in 2024. He ranks second in Runs Saved at this position since the start of the 2023 season. Tovar excelled at turning batted balls into outs and turning double plays, though slightly less so statistically than position Award winner Masyn Winn.

    Left field – Steven Kwan of the Guardians was a two-time reigning winner before being dethroned by Riley Greene of the Tigers this year. This was Kwan’s best year in terms of his throwing. He had 4 Outfield Arm Runs Saved and allowed only 27% of runners to advance an extra base on balls he fielded (MLB average for left field is 39%).

    Center Field – Daulton Varsho of the Blue Jays was the runner-up in center field after finishing with the second-most Defensive Runs Saved there (he also had the second-most in left field). However, Varsho likely isn’t complaining. After all, he won both our Multi-Position Award and Defensive Player of the Year.

    Right Field – Sal Frelick of the Brewers was neck-and-neck with Wilyer Abreu in Runs Saved right up to the very end of the season. In fact, he led the position in the Range component of the stat. But he came up a little short, both in overall Runs Saved and in the Award voting, to Abreu.

    Catcher – Cal Raleigh of the Mariners had standout numbers in our pitch framing and stolen base metrics but had the misfortune of going against a defensive superstar in Giants catcher Patrick Bailey, who rated slightly better than Raleigh in both areas.

    Pitcher – Spencer Schwellenbach of the Braves is a former college shortstop and fields his position like one. He tied for second among pitchers in Defensive Runs Saved and came the closest to winning the voting among the second-place finishers. We wouldn’t be surprised to see him winning the Award next year.

    Multi-Position – Jarren Duran of the Red Sox had the second-most Runs Saved of anyone with his 23 split between center field and left field. Duran made huge improvements in center field in particular. He totaled 17 Runs Saved there after tallying -5, -9, and -5 the previous three seasons.

    For more Fielding Bible Awards content, visit SportsInfoSolutions.com. You can also check out FieldingBible.com for all the latest defense-related stats.

  • 2024 Fielding Bible Awards Ballots & Voting Tally

    2024 Fielding Bible Awards Ballots & Voting Tally

    Last week Sports Info Solutions announced the winners of The Fielding Bible Awards.

    The 2024 Awards were determined by a panel of 16 voters, who ranked the top 10 players at each defensive position (including a spot for multi-position players) on a scale from 1 to 10 at the conclusion of the regular season. A first place vote gets 10 points, second place gets 9 points, third place gets 8 points, etc. Total up the points for each player, and the player with the most points wins the award. A perfect score is 160 points. There were no unanimous selections this year.

    The panel also voted its top three choices for Defensive Player of the Year, with first place getting 5 points, second place 3 points, and third place 1 point.

    Our voting panel consisted of SIS co-founder John Dewan, along with Daniel Álvarez-Montes (El Extra Base, editor/writer), Ben Clemens (FanGraphs, writer), Chris Dial (sabermetrician), Alyson Footer (MLB.com, editor), Tyler Kepner (The Athletic, writer), Bill Ladson (MLB.com, writer), Eduardo Pérez (ESPN, broadcaster), Hal Richman (Strat-O-Matic, founder), Eno Sarris (The Athletic, writer), Travis Sawchik (The Score, writer), Bobby Scales (Detroit Tigers, radio broadcaster), Joe Sheehan (Joe Sheehan’s Baseball Newsletter, writer), Mark Simon (SIS, writer), Dani Wexelman (MLB Network Radio, broadcaster), and an aggregate vote from the SIS Video Scout staff.

    (scroll right, over the table to see the full list of ballots and the overall point total)

    Catcher

    Name Footer Clemens Ladson Scales Dial Wexelman Álvarez-Montes Pérez Sarris Richman Sheehan Dewan Simon SIS Video Scouts Sawchik Kepner Points
    Patrick Bailey 1 1 2 1 2 2 1 1 2 1 3 2 1 1 1 1 153
    Cal Raleigh 2 2 1 2 1 1 2 2 1 2 2 4 2 2 2 2 146
    Alejandro Kirk 7 4 3 3 3 3 4 5 3 7 4 3 7 4 3 4 109
    Jake Rogers 4 3 5 5 7 6 5 4 4 3 5 8 4 5 6 3 99
    Freddy Fermin 3 7 10 4 4 9 3 1 5 3 3 4 5 82
    Austin Wells 6 5 7 7 8 7 6 7 5 10 5 6 7 6 62
    Bo Naylor 5 6 4 6 9 4 7 6 6 6 7 10 7 60
    Gabriel Moreno 8 10 6 10 6 8 8 8 7 9 6 6 8 8 5 52
    William Contreras 8 9 10 5 3 10 10 8 10 8 8 32
    Jose Trevino 9 8 9 8 1 10 9 23

    Others receiving votes: Christian Vázquez 18, Adley Rutschman 10, J.T. Realmuto 7, Will Smith 7, Sean Murphy 6, Francisco Alvarez 5, Elias Díaz 4, Jonah Heim 4, Nick Fortes 1.

    First Base

    Name Footer Clemens Ladson Scales Dial Wexelman Álvarez-Montes Pérez Sarris Richman Sheehan Dewan Simon SIS Video Scouts Sawchik Kepner Points
    Matt Olson 1 2 1 3 1 2 1 1 2 3 1 1 1 1 2 142
    Christian Walker 1 1 2 4 3 1 6 2 1 2 2 3 2 2 1 132
    Carlos Santana 2 3 7 3 1 2 3 3 3 3 1 4 2 3 4 6 126
    Bryce Harper 5 4 6 7 5 6 4 8 4 7 4 6 8 6 5 7 84
    Ryan Mountcastle 4 5 3 5 6 5 6 5 9 9 8 5 5 5 7 9 80
    Michael Toglia 8 7 2 4 4 2 9 3 4 4 3 3 79
    Michael Busch 6 5 6 9 7 8 7 7 10 8 7 7 8 8 51
    Nathaniel Lowe 7 8 10 7 5 5 4 6 10 6 42
    Freddie Freeman 6 10 9 8 7 9 8 8 10 10 9 4 34
    LaMonte Wade Jr. 9 4 10 9 7 6 8 9 10 27

    Others receiving votes:  Vladimir Guerrero Jr. 18, Jake Cronenworth 16, Paul Goldschmidt 13, Anthony Rizzo 12, Vinnie Pasquantino 9, Spencer Torkelson 5, Nolan Schanuel 4, Connor Joe 3, Josh Naylor 2, Pete Alonso 1.

    Second Base

    Name Footer Clemens Ladson Scales Dial Wexelman Álvarez-Montes Pérez Sarris Richman Sheehan Dewan Simon SIS Video Scouts Sawchik Kepner Points
    Andrés Giménez 2 1 1 1 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 156
    Brice Turang 1 2 3 2 1 1 3 2 4 3 3 2 2 1 3 2 141
    Marcus Semien 3 4 5 3 3 3 2 3 2 2 2 3 3 3 2 7 126
    Ketel Marte 5 5 2 4 6 5 4 4 5 6 8 5 4 4 6 6 97
    Bryson Stott 4 7 4 5 8 4 6 5 7 7 5 4 6 6 7 3 88
    Nico Hoerner 6 6 6 7 7 6 5 3 5 4 6 7 7 4 5 81
    Otto Lopez 3 6 4 10 7 6 6 4 10 7 5 5 5 8 68
    Ozzie Albies 10 8 5 7 7 10 8 6 8 9 8 4 42
    Xander Bogaerts 8 9 10 9 10 9 11
    Isiah Kiner-Falefa 9 9 10 8 8 11

    Others receiving votes: Isiah Kiner-Falefa 10, Jose Iglesias 10, Michael Massey 10, Jeff McNeil 7, Richie Palacios 7, Thairo Estrada 6, Zack Gelof 5, Nicky Lopez 4, Luis García 3, Gavin Lux 3, Brendan Rodgers 3, Brett Wisely 1.

    Third Base

    Name Footer Clemens Ladson Scales Dial Wexelman Álvarez-Montes Pérez Sarris Richman Sheehan Dewan Simon SIS Video Scouts Sawchik Kepner Points
    Matt Chapman 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 159
    Ryan McMahon 2 5 2 1 3 2 3 2 6 2 4 3 2 2 3 2 132
    Joey Ortiz 6 2 3 3 4 4 2 3 2 4 3 8 4 5 6 8 109
    Nolan Arenado 3 4 4 8 2 6 5 4 3 5 5 4 9 6 4 3 101
    Ke’Bryan Hayes 3 6 9 3 6 6 5 3 2 2 3 3 2 4 97
    Alex Bregman 4 7 5 4 6 7 4 5 4 7 7 10 5 7 7 5 82
    José Ramírez 5 9 10 5 5 8 10 8 7 8 9 7 10 5 6 53
    Josh Rojas 10 6 9 7 7 5 8 6 8 9 9 9 10 40
    Ernie Clement 8 9 8 10 5 6 4 8 9 32
    Maikel Garcia 9 10 6 9 7 7 9 10 6 26

    Others receiving votes: Manny Machado 23, Oswaldo Cabrera 8, Alec Bohm 6, Max Muncy 5, Austin Riley 3, Eugenio Suárez 2, Gio Urshela 1, Jordan Westburg 1.

    Shortstops

    Name Footer Clemens Ladson Scales Dial Wexelman Álvarez-Montes Pérez Sarris Richman Sheehan Dewan Simon SIS Video Scouts Sawchik Kepner Points
    Masyn Winn 1 4 1 1 2 1 8 1 2 8 1 4 3 1 1 1 136
    Ezequiel Tovar 3 1 3 4 4 1 4 7 3 6 5 1 4 8 3 108
    Dansby Swanson 4 3 7 5 3 7 4 6 4 1 3 3 4 6 2 7 107
    Brayan Rocchio 6 2 8 3 2 3 6 9 8 7 5 2 5 2 86
    Zach Neto 2 9 3 4 6 2 2 10 6 8 5 3 72
    Francisco Lindor 8 2 5 3 5 1 2 5 9 10 4 67
    Anthony Volpe 6 5 6 6 7 9 9 5 4 4 9 10 4 5 65
    J.P. Crawford 7 5 9 1 5 8 10 2 7 9 9 49
    Taylor Walls 2 10 9 7 1 6 3 6 44
    Bobby Witt Jr. 10 8 10 10 5 10 3 6 2 10 9 6 43

    Others receiving votes: Miguel Rojas 29, Geraldo Perdomo 22, Gunnar Henderson 15, Elly De La Cruz 13, Jeremy Peña 10, Corey Seager 9, Ha-Seong Kim 5.

    Left Field

    Name Footer Clemens Ladson Scales Dial Wexelman Álvarez-Montes Pérez Sarris Richman Sheehan Dewan Simon SIS Video Scouts Sawchik Kepner Points
    Riley Greene 1 2 1 1 4 1 3 3 3 2 2 2 1 1 2 2 145
    Steven Kwan 5 4 3 2 8 3 6 7 2 1 1 1 3 3 1 3 123
    Ian Happ 2 8 4 3 1 4 1 1 5 5 7 3 2 4 4 1 121
    Wyatt Langford 3 7 2 5 3 2 5 6 4 7 3 4 4 2 3 6 110
    Alex Verdugo 4 6 9 4 6 5 2 2 7 6 4 7 5 6 5 87
    Colton Cowser 9 1 6 6 5 9 8 1 4 5 9 8 5 5 73
    Lourdes Gurriel Jr. 6 3 5 8 6 4 8 9 6 6 7 10 6 59
    Brandon Marsh 9 8 7 8 7 10 3 5 6 7 4 47
    Brandon Nimmo 10 7 7 7 10 4 10 10 10 10 7 7 33
    Jackson Chourio 5 9 10 9 6 8 8 9 9 9 28

    Others receiving votes: Taylor Ward 26, Miguel Andujar 9, Joey Loperfido 9, Bryan Reynolds 4, Michael Conforto 2, Tyler O’Neill 2, Brendan Donovan 1, Luke Raley 1.

    Center Field

    Name Footer Clemens Ladson Scales Dial Wexelman Álvarez-Montes Pérez Sarris Richman Sheehan Dewan Simon SIS Video Scouts Sawchik Kepner Points
    Brenton Doyle 5 2 3 1 2 5 1 5 3 1 3 5 3 5 7 1 124
    Daulton Varsho 6 1 6 7 1 8 3 5 1 1 1 1 1 3 109
    Pete Crow-Armstrong 1 3 8 4 1 3 7 7 1 3 5 8 7 3 3 6 106
    Jacob Young 6 1 4 8 3 6 5 6 2 2 4 9 2 6 4 5 103
    Jose Siri 2 8 7 7 5 4 3 1 4 6 6 4 5 4 5 10 95
    Jarren Duran 2 5 10 2 2 2 2 2 4 2 2 2 95
    Michael Harris II 5 2 8 4 8 7 10 7 6 8 8 7 52
    Michael A. Taylor 6 7 4 8 7 3 8 7 38
    Kevin Kiermaier 7 10 9 10 4 6 10 9 6 28
    Jake Meyers 10 4 4 10 6 10 6 10 28

    Others receiving votes: Michael Siani 23, Blake Perkins 18, Jackson Merrill 16, Julio Rodríguez 13, Johan Rojas 13, Parker Meadows 11, Kyle Isbel 8.

    Right Field

    Name Footer Clemens Ladson Scales Dial Wexelman Álvarez-Montes Pérez Sarris Richman Sheehan Dewan Simon SIS Video Scouts Sawchik Kepner Points
    Wilyer Abreu 1 1 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 2 1 3 154
    Sal Frelick 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 4 2 1 2 2 2 1 2 1 144
    Mike Yastrzemski 2 3 4 4 4 6 3 6 5 5 6 4 7 4 6 96
    Jo Adell 4 5 3 3 3 4 2 5 7 3 6 3 7 88
    Fernando Tatis Jr. 4 7 5 10 8 8 6 3 3 6 5 8 8 6 2 76
    Tyrone Taylor 1 8 5 4 3 3 7 3 4 61
    Max Kepler 7 5 10 7 7 7 5 4 8 7 5 49
    Jonny Deluca 6 10 3 6 4 8 5 10 36
    Dominic Fletcher 10 8 9 8 4 6 4 5 34
    Seiya Suzuki 8 9 7 9 6 7 10 5 9 8 32

    Others receiving votes: Lawrence Butler 20, Wenceel Pérez 17, Juan Soto 17, Jake Fraley 14, Lars Nootbaar 14, Ramón Laureano 8, Jesús Sánchez 7, George Springer 6, Adolis García 2, Mitch Haniger 2, Josh Lowe 2, Anthony Santander 1.

    Multi-Position 

    Name Footer Clemens Ladson Scales Dial Wexelman Álvarez-Montes Pérez Sarris Richman Sheehan Dewan Simon SIS Video Scouts Sawchik Kepner Points
    Daulton Varsho 1 3 5 6 1 1 1 3 4 3 1 1 1 1 122
    Jarren Duran 3 2 6 2 2 2 2 5 4 3 2 2 3 105
    Isiah Kiner-Falefa 2 4 2 6 9 3 3 6 3 1 2 3 3 5 102
    Mauricio Dubon 4 1 1 1 8 3 9 6 1 2 2 4 6 8 8 101
    Ceddanne Rafaela 6 7 2 7 4 5 4 7 3 1 6 5 4 4 2 98
    Mookie Betts 10 6 1 10 10 4 2 5 7 7 8 5 9 59
    Kevin Newman 9 4 2 5 6 9 6 5 9 4 51
    Tyrone Taylor 10 3 9 6 6 7 8 10 5 9 7 6 7 50
    Jared Triolo 5 8 3 7 8 5 9 8 9 7 6 46
    Kiké Hernández 5 4 5 5 10 9 8 10 9 8 8 10 10 10 43

    Others receiving votes: José Caballero 27, Matt Vierling 16, Vidal Bruján 12, Jazz Chisholm 12, Rickie Palacios 12, Zach McKinstry 8, Willi Castro 7, Jake McCarthy 7, Max Schuemann 1.

    Pitcher

    Name Footer Clemens Ladson Scales Dial Wexelman Álvarez-Montes Pérez Sarris Richman Sheehan Dewan Simon Video Scouts Sawchik Kepner Score
    Tanner Bibee 1 5 3 2 4 2 3 2 8 3 7 3 2 2 2 116
    Spencer Schwellenbach 2 1 1 1 2 1 4 8 5 1 1 1 1 114
    Seth Lugo 2 6 4 8 3 4 5 1 3 1 4 4 5 7 97
    Ranger Suárez 6 5 9 3 6 8 1 2 1 2 7 6 3 84
    Jake Irvin 9 2 3 2 3 8 5 4 10 8 5 3 3 6 83
    Griffin Canning 4 6 5 6 4 5 4 8 5 4 4 66
    Luis Severino 5 1 7 2 8 7 9 2 9 9 9 53
    Martín Pérez 8 7 5 6 3 6 6 7 10 41
    Michael Wacha 10 9 7 5 6 9 6 8 8 8 34
    Michael King 3 8 9 9 1 10 5 32

    Others receiving votes: Zach Eflin 22, José Berríos 17, Chris Flexen 15, Zach Wheeler 15, Shota Imanaga 14, Tarik Skubal 14, Chris Sale 12, Paul Skenes 9, Max Fried 7, Ronel Blanco 6, Sonny Gray 6, Framber Valdez 5, George Kirby 4, Cole Ragans 4, Brady Singer 4, Aaron Civale 3, Michael Lorenzen 1, Charlie Morton 1, Jose Quintana 1.

    Player of the Year

    Player Footer Clemens Ladson Scales Dial Wexelman Álvarez-Montes Pérez Sarris Richman Sheehan Dewan Simon SIS Video Scouts Sawchik Kepner Points
    Daulton Varsho 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 2 36
    Andrés Giménez 2 2 1 2 1 2 2 2 3 29
    Patrick Bailey 1 2 2 3 2 3 3 1 22
    Matt Chapman 1 3 1 11
    Masyn Winn 3 1 1 11

    Others receiving votes: Brice Turang 10, Pete Crow-Armstrong 6, Jarren Duran 5, Cal Raleigh 4, Jacob Young 3, Christian Walker 3, Brenton Doyle 2, Marcus Semien 1, Bobby Witt Jr. 1.

  • 2024 Fielding Bible Award Winners

    2024 Fielding Bible Award Winners

    Fielding Bible Award winners
Defensive Player of the Year - Daulton Varsho
1B- Matt Olson
2B- Andres Gimenez
3B- Matt Chapman
SS- Masyn Winn
LF- Riley Greene
CF- Brenton Doyle
RF- Wilyer Abreu
C- Patrick Bailey
Multi-Position- Daulton Varsho
P- Tanner BibeeSIS is pleased to announce the winners of the 2024 Fielding Bible Awards. This marks the 19th season that we have honored the best defensive players in MLB. The awards are voted on by a panel of experts who consider statistical analysis, the eye test, and any other factors that they wish to utilize. 

    We are also announcing the winner of our second annual Defensive Player of the Year award.

    This year’s group of winners includes three players who previously won a Fielding Bible Award and seven first-time winners. It also marks the first time that two rookies won the Award in the same year (Winn and Abreu). The Giants and Guardians were the only teams to have multiple players win an Award this year.

    The winners are:

    Defensive Player of the Year

    Daulton Varsho is our second annual Defensive Player of the Year. Varsho led all players with 28 Defensive Runs Saved. Varsho’s defensive dominance extends beyond this past season. He leads all players in Defensive Runs Saved over the last three seasons combined.

    “Daulton Varsho is a highly deserving winner of Defensive Player of the Year,” said SIS editorial operations lead, Mark Simon. “He played with an incredible effort level and a determination to make every play he possibly could. He had a fantastic season and this is one of his rewards for it.”  

    Said Blue Jays manager John Schneider: “Daulton never ceases to amaze us. We are really spoiled with him out there. Guys love playing with him because he makes tough plays look routine and makes everyone around him better. It feels like he makes game-changing plays and picks us up every single night. We’ve been saying he’s the best defender in baseball for the last two years, and I’m glad he’s starting to get the proper recognition for it.”

    Individual Positions

    First Base – Matt Olson, Atlanta Braves

    Olson won a Fielding Bible Award for the fourth time in his career. He previously won it in 2018, 2019, and 2020. The only first baseman to win it more often than Olson is Albert Pujols (five times).

    Olson led all first basemen with 13 Defensive Runs Saved. After recording 27 and 26 Defensive Misplays & Errors in 2022 and 2023, respectively, he cut that number to 19 in 2024. As per usual for him, he also rated well above average on balls hit to his right. 

    Olson is also highly durable. He led MLB in innings played at first base and has played 162 games in each of the last three seasons.

    Olson is the first Braves player to win an Award since pitcher Max Fried won in 2020. Olson is the only Braves player to win the Award at first base. 

    Second Base – Andrés Giménez, Cleveland Guardians

    Giménez won his second straight Fielding Bible Award, joining Dustin Pedroia (2013, 2014) and Kolten Wong (2018, 2019, 2020) as second basemen to do that since the Awards began in 2006.

    Giménez put up nearly identical defensive numbers to those he had in 2023. His 20 Defensive Runs Saved ranked second among second basemen. He was 11 plays saved above average on balls hit to his right and 10 plays above average on balls hit to his left, each of which ranked second-best in MLB. He easily led second basemen with 33 Good Fielding Plays.

    The Guardians have now had multiple Fielding Bible Award winners in three straight years, with Steven Kwan and Myles Straw winning in 2022, Giménez and Kwan winning in 2023, and Giménez and Tanner Bibee winning in 2024 .

    Giménez is the only Guardians player to win an Award at second base.

    Third Base – Matt Chapman, San Francisco Giants

    Chapman won a Fielding Bible Award for the third time in his career. He also won it in 2018 and 2019. He was one vote shy of being a unanimous selection in all three instances.

    Chapman easily led third basemen with 17 Defensive Runs Saved. No one else at the position had more than 10 Runs Saved in 2024. Chapman rated above average on balls hit to his right, to his left, and straight-on.

    Chapman and Patrick Bailey are the third and fourth Giants to win an Award, joining Pedro Feliz (third base, 2007) and Buster Posey (catcher, 2015 and 2016).

     Shortstop – Masyn Winn, St. Louis Cardinals

    Winn won his first Fielding Bible Award. He is the seventh different shortstop to win the Award in the last seven years. Winn and Wilyer Abreu are the fifth and sixth rookie to win a Fielding Bible Award, joining Troy Tulowitzki (2007), Mike Trout (2012), Ke’Bryan Hayes (2021), and Steven Kwan (2022).

    Winn was MLB’s premier shortstop when it came to turning double plays. In fact, his 6 Double Play Runs Saved is tied with Andrelton Simmons for the most in a season by a shortstop since Runs Saved was first tracked in 2003.

    The Cardinals have won an MLB-best 21 Fielding Bible Awards since the Awards were first given in 2006. Winn is the first Cardinals shortstop to win an Award. 

    Left Field – Riley Greene, Detroit Tigers

    Greene won his first Fielding Bible Award and snapped Steven Kwan’s two-year run of winning the Award in left field. 

    Greene led all left fielders with 14 Defensive Runs Saved, which was helped by 3 home run robberies. He led the position in Runs Saved despite ranking 19th in innings played.

    Greene is the first Tigers player to win an Award since Ian Kinsler won at second base in 2015 and is the first Tigers left fielder to win a Fielding Bible Award.

    Center Field – Brenton Doyle, Colorado Rockies

    Doyle, runner-up for a Fielding Bible Award last year, won the award in a close vote this year.

    Though Doyle got off to a slow start, he led center fielders in Defensive Runs Saved from May 1 through the end of the season. His 22 Good Fielding Plays for the season were the most among center fielders. He led the position in that stat last year as well.

    Doyle is the first Rockies outfielder to win a Fielding Bible Award.

    Right Field – Wilyer Abreu, Boston Red Sox

    Abreu, a rookie, won his first Fielding Bible Award. He and Masyn Winn are the fifth and sixth rookie to win a Fielding Bible Award, joining Troy Tulowitzki (2007), Mike Trout (2012), Ke’Bryan Hayes (2021), and Steven Kwan (2022).

    Abreu led all right fielders with 17 Defensive Runs Saved and 6 Outfield Arm Runs Saved. He had above-average range on shallow, medium, and deep fly balls.

    Abreu is the second Red Sox player to win an Award in the last four years (Kiké Hernández, multi-position, 2021). He is the second Red Sox right fielder to win a Fielding Bible Award. The other is Mookie Betts, who won it for them in 2016, 2017, and 2018. 

    Catcher – Patrick Bailey, San Francisco Giants

    Bailey, the runner-up for a Fielding Bible Award last year, won for the first time this year.

    Bailey led all catchers with 20 Defensive Runs Saved. He led all catchers in Strike Zone Runs Saved, a stat that measures a catcher’s skill at getting more strikes than expected. He also ranked tied for third in Stolen Bases Runs Saved.

    Bailey joined Buster Posey as the only Giants catchers to win a Fielding Bible Award. Posey won it in 2015 and 2016.

    Pitcher – Tanner Bibee, Cleveland Guardians

    Bibee, the MLB co-leader in Defensive Runs Saved for pitchers, won his first Fielding Bible Award.

    Bibee’s 6 Runs Saved were equally split between the range component and the stolen base component. He held baserunners to 6 stolen bases against 6 caught stealing. He also co-led the American League and ranked third in the major leagues with 4 pickoffs.

    Bibee is the only Guardians pitcher to win a Fielding Bible Award.

    Multi-Position – Daulton Varsho, Toronto Blue Jays

    Varsho narrowly missed out on a Fielding Bible Award last year but would not be denied in 2024. He won the Award for the first time in his career.

    Varsho ranked second among center fielders with 16 Defensive Runs Saved AND tied for second among left fielders with 12 Runs Saved. He did that despite ranking 27th in innings played in center field and 36th in innings played in left field. This is the second consecutive year that Varsho had at least 10 Runs Saved at each of those positions. Varsho excelled at catching both deep and shallow fly balls and also had 3 Outfield Arm Runs Saved.

    Varsho is the first Blue Jays player to win the multi-position Award, which has been voted on annually since 2014. This is the second straight year a Blue Jays player won a Fielding Bible Award. Kevin Kiermaier won in center field last season.

    The 2024 Awards were determined by a panel of 16 voters, who ranked the top 10 players at each defensive position (including a spot for multi-position players) on a scale from 1 to 10 at the conclusion of the regular season. A first place vote gets 10 points, second place gets 9 points, third place gets 8 points, etc. Total up the points for each player, and the player with the most points wins the award. A perfect score is 160 points. There were no unanimous selections this year.

    The panel voted its top three choices for Defensive Player of the Year, with first place getting 5 points, second place 3 points, and third place 1 point. 

    Our voting panel consisted of SIS co-founder John Dewan, along with Daniel Álvarez-Montes (El Extra Base, editor/writer), Ben Clemens (FanGraphs, writer), Chris Dial (sabermetrician), Alyson Footer (MLB.com, editor), Tyler Kepner (The Athletic, writer), Bill Ladson (MLB.com, writer), Eduardo Pérez (ESPN, broadcaster), Hal Richman (Strat-O-Matic, founder), Eno Sarris (The Athletic, writer), Travis Sawchik (The Score, writer), Bobby Scales (Detroit Tigers, radio broadcaster), Joe Sheehan (Joe Sheehan’s Baseball Newsletter, writer), Mark Simon (SIS, writer), Dani Wexelman (MLB Network Radio, broadcaster), and an aggregate vote from the SIS Video Scout staff.

  • Defensive Scouting Report: Los Angeles Dodgers

    Defensive Scouting Report: Los Angeles Dodgers

    The Dodgers ranked 3rd in the majors in Defensive Runs Saved in 2024, which, given the names on the roster, probably leads you to think that certain players must have had big defensive seasons.

    But that’s actually not the case. The Dodgers’ success was a collective effort, one they’ll try to carry through the World Series beginning Friday night.

    Here’s a deeper look at the team’s performance in 2024.

    Strengths

    Defensive Positioning

    We wrote about this back in May. What makes the Dodgers’ defense so good is not so much the skill of their players but that their players are often situated in the best spots to make plays.

    The Dodgers led the majors with 51 Positioning Runs Saved this season. Both their infield positioning total (34) and outfield positioning total (17) ranked No. 1 in MLB.

     

    Though the sport has made changes to try to limit the usage of shifts, teams still play partial versions of them. They’ll move their shortstop or second baseman adjacent to second base to try to cut balls off and move other infielders around to limit the damage on pulled ground balls.

    During the regular season, the Dodgers had a partial shift on against 83% of the balls in play, the second-highest rate in MLB (Mariners 86%). Against left-handed batters, they had it on for 97% of balls in play, basically matching the Mariners for the highest rate. And it paid off.

    Track record

    The Dodgers have four past Fielding Bible Award winners on their roster in Mookie Betts, Tommy Edman, Kevin Kiermaier, and Kiké Hernández. 

    They also have several other players with strong defensive reputations. Freddie Freeman has been one of the game’s best throw-scoopers. At age 35, Miguel Rojas, even hampered by a thigh strain, is putting up numbers better than his peers, most of whom are at least 5 years younger than him. Will Smith and Max Muncy also have good defensive histories.

    Kiermaier had 10 Runs Saved in center field this season. Edman has 11 Runs Saved in about the equivalent of one season in his career at shortstop. Rojas had 8 Runs Saved at shortstop. Hernández played 6 positions this season (not counting pitcher) and was average or better at all of them. Betts has only 3 Runs Saved over his last 150 games in right field (2023 and 2024 combined) but would have had more if he wasn’t at shortstop for much of the year.

    These players may not be at their peak, but if you’re looking for one good defensive moment from them in a key spot, these players are capable of excellence.

    And this goes hand in hand with …

    Versatility

    If you want to play for the Dodgers you have to be flexible. When someone significant gets hurt (see Freddie Freeman), the Dodgers can replace him without losing as much as other teams would. 

    Look at the Dodgers’ starters around the infield and outfield in Game 6 of the NLCS.

    (career totals)

    1B- Max Muncy: 

    Has made at least 90 starts at 3 positions

    2B- Chris Taylor: 

    Has made at least 10 starts at 6 positions

    SS- Tommy Edman: 

    Has made at least 50 starts at 5 positions

    3B- Kiké Hernández: 

    Has made at least 10 starts at 7 positions

    LF- Teoscar Hernández: 

    Has made at least 75 starts at all 3 outfield positions

    CF- Andy Pages: 

    Has made at least 4 starts at all 3 outfield positions (in less than a full season)

    RF- Mookie Betts: 

    Has made at least 70 starts at 4 positions

    We mentioned that Edman, Kiké Hernández, and Betts have won Fielding Bible Awards. They’ve each won for multi-position play.

    Weaknesses

    Andy Pages and Teoscar Hernández as currently situated

    Andy Pages has posted good defensive numbers in right field this season. So has Tesocar Hernandez. But neither is likely to play there this series barring an injury to Mookie Betts.

    So the Dodgers will live with Pages’ -8 Runs Saved in center field (much of which was accumulated early in the season) and Hernández’s -8 in left field and hope that their bats outweigh whatever happens in the field. 

     

    Pitch Blocking and Pitch Framing

    This one surprised us because it hasn’t been a noticeable issue in the NLDS or NLCS. Will Smith, normally a solid defensive catcher, had a rough year when it came to both pitch blocking and pitch framing, totaling -5 Runs Saved in each. Only three catchers were worse by Runs Saved in framing, 2 were worse in blocking. Neither of these had been a significant problem for Smith in the past.

    And it should be pointed out that Smith makes up for this. His 8 Runs Saved on stolen bases led MLB (his caught stealing percentage is 28% at a time when average is around 21%).

    Three other things

    * Speaking of stolen bases, here’s a look at how some of the Dodgers’ prominent pitchers fared when it came to limiting them.

    Pitcher SB-CS
    Walker Buehler 12-2
    Blake Treinen 8-1
    Jack Flaherty 5-2 (with Dodgers)
    Alex Vesia 5-5
    Yoshinobu Yamamoto 3-1

    * Gavin Lux’s return from a knee injury this year didn’t go well on the defensive side. Lux had defensive issues in spring training that necessitated his flipping positions with Mookie Betts. 

    Lux played regularly at second base in 2024 but didn’t live up to his past numbers (15 Runs Saved spaced out over four seasons). He totaled -2 Runs Saved, in particular not doing well statistically on balls hit in the 3-4 hole.  He didn’t start Games 4, 5 or 6 of the LCS and it will be interesting to see what his World Series role is.

    * Austin Barnes had a bigger role in postseasons past as Clayton Kershaw’s catcher. He’s appeared in only one game this postseason and probably won’t see the field unless Will Smith is hurt. Though Barnes is a standout pitch framer and pitch blocker, in today’s game he’s a liability. He allowed 48 stolen bases and had only 3 caught stealings during the 2024 regular season.