Baseball America

TRUST THE TOOLS

Where did that come from?

Many left 2020 asking that question about Ke’Bryan Hayes’ incendiary September performance. The 23-year-old Pirates third baseman hit .376 with five home runs in 24 games during his big league debut. His 1.124 OPS ranked fourth among qualifiers in September, and he showed the array of secondary skills necessary to believe his breakout was no fluke.

No, Hayes won’t maintain a .450 batting average on balls in play, but the rookie hit the ball hard with frequency, took his walks, turned in a 79th percentile sprint speed and delivered on projected Gold Glove-caliber defense at the hot corner.

The incredulity surrounding Hayes stemmed more from his minor league track record—consistently good but never great—than his

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Baseball America

Baseball America4 min read
In Memoriam
Mike Martin, the winningest coach in college sports history, died on Jan. 31 after a battle with Lewy body dementia. He was 79. Martin was the head coach of Florida State, his alma mater, for 40 years before retiring in 2019. In all 40 of those seaso
Baseball America2 min read
Baseball America
EDITOR IN CHIEF J.J. Cooper @jjcoop36 EXECUTIVE EDITOR Matt Eddy @MattEddyBA CHIEF INNOVATION OFFICER Ben Badler @benbadler VICE PRESIDENT, DESIGN & STRATEGY Seth Mates @SethMates HEAD OF AUDIENCE DEVELOPMENT Mark Chiarelli @Mark_Chiarelli DIRECTOR O
Baseball America3 min read
Breakout Players
While we haven’t yet seen an uninterrupted Lewis season, he is capable of crazy numbers if he can stay on the field. In his brief MLB career, he has hit .307 with home run and RBI totals that scale to 35 and 100 at 150 games. Lewis hits the ball hard

Related Books & Audiobooks