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5 Middle Infielders That Posted Surprisingly Strong 2018 Seasons

By Jeff Todd | September 24, 2018 at 11:29am CDT

It’s an exceedingly quiet day on the transactional front, which affords an opportunity to look at some higher-level developments around the game as the 2018 season comes to an end. My perusal of the stat pages revealed that there are several interesting middle infielders — by trade, if not always by use this year — who have posted surprisingly strong campaigns.

There are obviously other shortstops and second basemen who have likewise excelled beyond expectations — e.g. Scooter Gennett and Trevor Story — but it feels as if they’ve received proper recognition and examination already. It’s worth taking a closer look at this handful of players:

  • Jurickson Profar, Rangers: Yes, folks, the former top overall prospect in baseball has finally arrived … at the ripe old age of, um, 25. Through 567 plate appearances this season, Profar has produced a .255/.337/.457 slash with 18 home runs and ten steals. He has gone down on strikes just 79 times while drawing 52 walks. While the defensive work hasn’t been valued as highly — whether due to frequent position shifts, Profar’s shoulder issues, short-sample blips, or otherwise — he has made up for that with highly valued work on the bases. All said, it’s the sort of campaign that was once envisioned for a player who debuted at 19 years of age. He’ll remain arbitration eligible for two more campaigns and could step in at third base if Adrian Beltre departs, though Profar’s capabilities in the middle infield still help buttress the Rangers’ options (including in potential trade scenarios).
  • Johan Camargo Braves: While Camargo has been handling third base this year, and doing so with aplomb, he spent most of his time in the minors at short and could still factor there in the future, so he gets a spot on this list. Interesting young infielders abound in Atlanta, but this one has come from way off the radar to turn in a season every bit as impressive (if not moreso) than those of his more celebrated brethren. If his 2017 results suggested some likelihood of regression, Camargo’s 2018 follow-up indicates that he has made serious strides. Through 499 plate appearances, he owns a .273/.353/.457 slash with 18 home runs. He’s drawing free passes in ten percent of his trips to the dish (double his rookie rate) while strikeout out twenty percent of the time. Only a surprisingly poor baserunning grade (-3.4 BsR) has held him to an even 3.0 fWAR on the season.
  • Joey Wendle, Rays: Entering his age-28 season, Wendle had appeared in just 36 MLB contests. Thus far in 2018, he has contributed 521 plate appearances of .301/.356/.439 hitting with seven long balls and 15 steals. Wendle may struggle to sustain those numbers, given that he’s relying upon a hefty .355 BABIP and isn’t quite supported by Statcast (.341 wOBA vs. .320 xwOBA). Still, he offers value in the other facets of the game and at worst seems to be quite a useful, affordable asset for the surprising Rays. It’s all the better for Tampa Bay given that Wendle was acquired out of DFA limbo over the winter.
  • Marcus Semien, Athletics: We can probably stop waiting for Semien to break out at the plate. He’s yet again firmly ensconced between the 90 and 100 wRC+ range — smack dab in the middle, in fact, at 95. He might finish with only about half the dingers he smacked in 2016 (27), but is reaching base at a palatable enough clip. So … his inclusion on this list is almost entirely dependent upon what one thinks of his glovework. Semien is humming along at +8 DRS and +7.8 UZR after mostly posting poor metrics in past seasons. He hasn’t entirely eliminated the errors that once plagued him, though with twenty this year he’s still well shy of the 35 he recorded in 2015. What he is doing is earning big marks for ranging to balls and converting them into outs. The result? 3.6 fWAR and 4.0 rWAR.
  • Jose Peraza, Reds: There isn’t a ton to get excited about with Peraza, who has posted solidly average marks in most regards while providing an extra boost on the bases. Still, that makes him a potential regular player — much more than he seemed capable of after his first full MLB run in 2017. At 24 years of age, he’s youthful and controllable. Peraza has made clear strides in the power department, where he has socked nearly as many dingers (13) as he had at all levels in the prior three seasons combined (14). He’s also converting his frequent contact into a high-enough batting average (.290) to support a reasonable on-base percentage (.328) despite a piddling (albeit still-improving) 4.4% walk rate. Though the defensive metrics aren’t in love with the glove, it’s good enough to hold down the position. The overall package is sufficient to induce the Reds to pencil in Peraza at short for some time, giving top prospect Nick Senzel a look in the corner outfield this fall rather than exploring other potential infield configurations.
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Atlanta Braves Cincinnati Reds MLBTR Originals Oakland Athletics Tampa Bay Rays Texas Rangers Joey Wendle Johan Camargo Jose Peraza Jurickson Profar Marcus Semien

Silver Linings: American League East
Main
AL West Notes: Rangers, Felix, Cruz
View Comments (63)
Post a Comment

63 Comments

  1. Whos123

    7 years ago

    Roughed Odor also had a big turnaround

    2
    Reply
    • bentkarnes

      7 years ago

      Not compared to last year. More like he turned around his first half slump.

      Reply
  2. Norm Chouinard

    7 years ago

    I know that it’s a SSS, but Jeff McNeil was a revelation.

    3
    Reply
  3. Syndergaarden Cop

    7 years ago

    Pretty sure everyone was expecting more from a former #1 prospect than a .255/.337/.457 slash.

    5
    Reply
    • davidcoonce74

      7 years ago

      He missed two full seasons with a serious shoulder injury and most people expected him to wash out completely. A .794 OPS is outstanding for a middle infielder, and a 2+ win player in the middle infield is a very good player indeed.

      4
      Reply
      • JrMint

        7 years ago

        2 wins makes him an adequate regular player, not “very good”

        Reply
        • davidcoonce74

          7 years ago

          A 2+ win player in the middle infield is pretty good.

          1
          Reply
    • Meow Meow

      7 years ago

      Everyone was, several years ago, but that ship has sailed. The campaign he put together this year is reasonably “Surprisingly Strong” given how his career had been going before now.

      9
      Reply
    • Codeeg

      7 years ago

      I remember him being touted as a high floor type prospect. That’s not anything to scoff at but if you told me the top prospect was a 3/4 WAR guy with little room for improvement over a guy who could be 8 WAR or below average I’d take the surer bet.

      2
      Reply
      • davidcoonce74

        7 years ago

        Exactly; most “prospects” never make the majors or wash out immediately. Anything the Rangers get out of Profar, after his injuries, is a bonus. The vast majority of prospects will never even have a single season as good as Profar’s 2018. It’s just the nature of the beast.

        2
        Reply
    • ab3b29

      7 years ago

      Profar was never seen as a Mike Trout overall stud #1 prospect. He was seen as full of intangibles and a leader. The numbers he has put up this year are exactly what was forecasted of him. Injuries have prevented him from reaching these numbers earlier in his career, but he has arrived now.

      1
      Reply
    • imgman09

      7 years ago

      Sorry .255 is very Average,let’s just go with he has improved ,but then again ,our standards these days are low

      Reply
      • mlb1225

        7 years ago

        I mean, he has improved. Not saying that he’s some superstar, but he’s solid overall. Plus batting average doesn’t tell the full story. An OPS of nearly .800 is pretty good.

        2
        Reply
        • cro1100

          7 years ago

          Perhaps a better way to evaluate Profar’s season is take a look at his numbers after he settled in w Andrus’s injury. His May was pretty bad. From June 1 on; however, he was .265/.350/.483 (and it’s worth considering how he looked in the month of August when he almost exclusively played one posn, .278/.365/.500.) even if he’s a super UT guy, whose best posn is 2b where he’s hardly played, an .833 ops has a great deal of value, particularly w the Rangers unknowns at ss and 3b heading into the off season.

          1
          Reply
      • davidcoonce74

        7 years ago

        My lord, when are we going to get rid of batting average as some evaluative tool? The difference between a 250 hitter and a 300 hiiter is, uh, 5 hits in 100 at bats. Five hits. Give me a break.

        1
        Reply
    • tsc32

      7 years ago

      Well yes but finally being a productive major leaguer is a big step. Could be a late bloomer. Only 25.

      Reply
  4. koz16

    7 years ago

    I’m not sure how you can leave Adalberto Mondesi off of this list. Sure, he only has 250 at bats this season, but in that time 12HR, 26SB, and an .808 OPS and good defense should not be overlooked.

    3
    Reply
    • bucketbrew35

      7 years ago

      koz16, its probably because he was mentioned in the Silver Linings article they did recently on the NL Central.

      I’m happy for Profar. He’s had some really bad injury issues and it’s nice to see him rebound. He’s still only 25 years old so he has time to improve as well.

      3
      Reply
    • Jeff Todd

      7 years ago

      I already highlighted Mondesi and Merrifield in the AL Central “Silver Linings” post. So … it’s just a different look here.

      Also, I was sort of looking at guys who had really played full seasons on something like an everyday basis. No particular reason for that, just how I went about it. As I noted, I just had this handful sort of stand out to me, not to say it’s meant to be exhaustive or particularly meaningful other than that this group deserves a closer look/acknowledgement.

      4
      Reply
      • koz16

        7 years ago

        Gotcha

        Reply
  5. dgrimes248

    7 years ago

    What? no Muncy ??

    Reply
    • baseballpun

      7 years ago

      1B is only middle infield on extreme shifts.

      8
      Reply
      • fred-3

        7 years ago

        He started 30 games at 3B, most when Turner was out, and about 15 at 2B.

        1
        Reply
        • CCCTL

          7 years ago

          3B is also not “middle infield”. Muncy’s breakout was unexpected, but you can’t you demand recognition on this list for a guy who only played 2B for a couple weeks.

          1
          Reply
        • matt4baseball

          7 years ago

          I agree just 3b is not enough, That’s why ROY should go to Ohtani or Joey Wendle…As for Wendle, he played over 35 games each at SS, 2b, 3b along with another 30 games in all 3 OF and 1b positions! He has the most hits of all rookies and over 300 ba.

          Reply
        • SaberSmuckers

          7 years ago

          Andujar has more hits, and it’s not even close. Not that it matters, quoting hits and average in a vacuum is ridiculous, are we back in the 80’s? Ohtani should be the ROY.

          1
          Reply
        • matt4baseball

          7 years ago

          As i said his WAR is above everyone except Ohtani. That’s because Wendel Plays about 7 positions!

          Reply
  6. djsims10

    7 years ago

    Good list, but I have to give a shout out to Adalberto Mondesi: switch hitter going .287/.310/.498 with 27 XBH (12 HR), 26 SB, wRC+ of 116 and plus defense at short and 2nd in just 69 games. This on the heels of a 2016 of .185/.231/.281 and a 2017 of .170/.214/.245 (72 games between those two years). If he can learn to walk even 6% of the time at the big league level, he’s a legitimate star.

    2
    Reply
    • dgambill

      7 years ago

      I don’t know that Whit was expected to be this good either.

      4
      Reply
  7. dgrimes248

    7 years ago

    Muncy played 2B in many games

    1
    Reply
  8. matt4baseball

    7 years ago

    Extra cudos to Joey Wendel, What your stats didn’t mention is Wendel played every position except catcher and pitcher!!! and very well too! Wendel is almost everything Zorbist is. What is Zorbist’s WAR. Joey is clearly underrated…. ROY!

    Reply
    • jdgoat

      7 years ago

      Wendle is ROY if Ohtani and Torres didn’t play this season

      Reply
      • hiflew

        7 years ago

        Except none of those three are going to win ROY. Andujar will.

        3
        Reply
        • CubsRule08

          7 years ago

          I think you’re selling Ohtani a bit short…he will have a strong case for ROY. Also, Torres might steal some votes away from Andujar since they’re teammates, so it’s not as convincing as you think it may be.

          Reply
        • thegreatcerealfamine

          7 years ago

          Yes, people need to look at his numbers, and where he ranks.

          Reply
        • Go Angels

          7 years ago

          Ohtani will run away with ROY.

          1
          Reply
        • jdgoat

          7 years ago

          I forgot Andujar but he’s going to finish behind Ohtani and Torres anyways

          1
          Reply
        • matt4baseball

          7 years ago

          No benefit when you play 7 of the 9 position on the field? I get Ohtani but Wendle has a higher average and better defense than the Yankee rookies? Small markets get no respect right?

          Reply
        • simschifan

          7 years ago

          Ohtani will probably win, they love the whole pitching hitting gimmick, and he pulled it off.

          Reply
        • Cat Mando

          7 years ago

          “gimmick”. Really? That’s how you describe something that has rarely been done?

          2
          Reply
        • davidcoonce74

          7 years ago

          Yes, he was a well-above average pitcher and a well-above average hitter. That’s not exactly the definition of the word “gimmick.” That is an example of very good use of a unique resource

          2
          Reply
  9. arc89

    7 years ago

    Reason for Semien low error rate goes to Matt olson gold glove at 1B. Olson saves so many errors on his length and his ability to catch the balls in the dirt.

    2
    Reply
    • damon389

      7 years ago

      There’s as bit of truth to that (I heard something along the lines of Olson leading the league in ‘scoops.) but from someone that literally held his breath every time the ball was hit to SS his improvement is miraculous. To think that he’s now a ‘better than average’ fielding SS is really amazing.

      If you figure that he was mainly throwing the ball to Yonder Alonzo (for sure a top 3 AL 1B-man w/the glove) when he went through his most egregious run of errors Semien needs a great deal of credit for the work he put into making himself a better SS. That, and Ron Washington…

      2
      Reply
  10. ksoze

    7 years ago

    If they hold onto Gennett, the Reds Infield will be set for several years to come. If only they had a decent Rotation.

    3
    Reply
    • joeshmoe11

      7 years ago

      If they get rid of Gennett and play Senzel there they’ll have a much better defense and zero drop-off on offense

      Reply
      • ksoze

        7 years ago

        If they didn’t retain Gennett, you’d put Herrera at 2B. Senzel is destined to be an outfielder. 2019 OF is probably LF Schebler, CF Senzel, RF Winker.

        I do see the point of trading Gennett, you’d free up his salary for a FA pitcher, and could receive a top 50 major league ready prospect, with a 1 or 2 more quality prospects in return. However if you don’t see that return for trading him, I’d much rather resign Gennett at 2B for the next 3 – 4 years.

        Reply
        • getright11

          7 years ago

          Gennett isnt bringing back a top 50 prospect, let alone two more “quality” prospects, too. Lmao.

          Reply
        • ksoze

          7 years ago

          Why? He is a left handed middle infielder which is rare.
          2017 .295 BA, .342 OBP, 27 HR, 97 RBI
          2018 .315 BA, .363 OBP, 23 HR, 92 RBI
          And if you look at his splits he hit .302 against left handed pitching. So again why does that sound crazy to you?

          Reply
  11. tharrie0820

    7 years ago

    I was just thinking last night…the Braves have 3 shortstops (Swanson, Camargo, and Albies) and Freddie Freeman

    4
    Reply
  12. Asfan0780

    7 years ago

    A’s middle infield for next year? Do they bring back lowrie at 35 yrs old? semien trade bait for pitching? Do they trust Franklin baretto? Also they have Jorge Mateo who struggled in AAA. Eli white was their breakout prospect in AA and was ranked by baseball America as the best defensive second baseman in Texas league, he also was drafted as a shortstop and has experience in CF. Richie Martin after 3 years finally healthy and hit well. Is considered an above average defensive shortstop. If the progress of mateo and martin can be fast tracked, I wouldn’t be opposed to trading semien

    1
    Reply
    • damon389

      7 years ago

      I think that Fowler will be flipped for pitching. Seems that Laureano has won the job and Fowler really has nothing else to prove in AAA. I could also see Canha traded this offseason. He’s certainly rebuilt his value, a bit of a ‘trade high’ situation. Can play LF, adequate CF, 1B and 3B in a pinch. He murders lefties to the tune of a .946 OPS..

      Because Pinder has more flexibility, I would see the A’s parting with Canha over Pinder.

      I’d be surprised if we flip Semien, as I just do not see anyone that is quite ready to be slotted in to take over SS in ’19.

      Reply
  13. jcraft21

    7 years ago

    Senzel should go to short
    Peraza to 2nd
    Scooter to corner
    Schebler to cf

    Move on from billy

    Reply
  14. cmk3dmk

    7 years ago

    Jonathan villar has had a good season overall

    Reply
    • Codeeg

      7 years ago

      Is it surprising or just a turn around from last seasons poor results?

      Reply
  15. tv 2

    7 years ago

    oh God paraza sucks because he hits the ball and does not walk. lol

    1
    Reply
  16. 1988wasalongtimeago

    7 years ago

    Simmons from the Angels and Muncy from the Doyers!

    Reply
  17. southi

    7 years ago

    Camargo has had an excellent season and his emerging has definitely been a blessing for Atlanta.

    Reply
  18. GarryHarris

    7 years ago

    When I read this article, the first name that came to mind was Scooter Gennett. Then came Miguel Rojas. I forgot about Jurickson Profar and didn’t notice that Jose Peraza was having such a good year until now. Johan Camargo and Marcus Semien did NOT surprise me.
    Jeff McNeil, Niko Goodrum and Joey Wendle are surprise rookies. No one expected the years that Trevor Story and Javy Baez are having.
    On the flip side, losing Corey Seagar for the season and the suspension of Robinson Cano were unpredictable. Max Muncy and Christian Villanueva don’t fit into the MI category.

    Reply
  19. Lanidrac

    7 years ago

    If Semien deserves a spot on this list, then so does a very similar player known as Kolten Wong.

    Reply
  20. DockEllisDee

    7 years ago

    wow.. I have to wonder if the staggering number of commenters who clearly missed the point of this article are some of the same ones who constantly bash the site for spelling errors and questionable sentence structure in obviously hastily written pieces.

    Reply
  21. samson04

    7 years ago

    Ehire Adrianza?

    Reply
  22. bhambrave

    7 years ago

    I wouldn’t say that Camargo came from way off the radar, exactly. He played pretty well last year, albeit with an elevated BABIP, but he was just 23 years old. Braves fans believed in him, even if management and some in the media didn’t.He’s hitting even better this year, even with a suppressed BABIP.

    Reply
  23. bhambrave

    7 years ago

    What would a trade for Trout from the Braves look like? I’m thinking it would start with Enciarte, Camargo, Anderson and Allard. Who else?

    Reply

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