2018 Rookie Of The Year Mlb

Posted By admin On 10/04/22

NOTE: Shohei Ohtani was named the 2018 AL Rookie of the Year.

Billy Eppler still remembers when he first saw Shohei Ohtani on a baseball field. The Angels’ general manager couldn’t forget it if he tried.

The year was 2013, Ohtani’s rookie season in Nippon Professional Baseball. Eppler was a Yankees assistant general manager on a trip to scout players across Japan, namely Rakuten righthander Masahiro Tanaka.

2021 Vezina Trophy Odds Tracker. Ryan Sura - Sep. 2020 NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year Odds Tracker 2020 NFL Offensive. Royals: Daniel Lynch, LHP (No. 54) The first pieces from Kansas City’s pitching-dominant 2018 Draft class arrived this past season in Brady Singer and Kris Bubic, with the rookie hurlers combing for 22 starts and 114 1/3 innings. 34 overall pick in ’18, could be the next to arrive. 2018 American League Rookie of the Year Award The winner of the 2018 American League Rookie of the Year Award was Shohei Ohtani of the Los Angeles Angels. Shohei Ohtani, RHP/DH. Projected Rookie Role: SP. Calling Card: The Japanese two.

Eppler’s charge was to focus on priority targets eligible to come to the United States in the near future. Ohtani, just 18 years old, was too young to be one of them.

But every time Eppler beared down on another player, Ohtani kept popping up, swerving into Eppler’s field of vision and demanding his attention. An executive in title but scout at heart, Eppler couldn’t help but look again and again at the tall, gangly teenager playing both ways as both a hitter and pitcher.

“It was a very explosive-looking athlete, kind of had everything you wanted,” Eppler recalled. “If you have a scouting background you really enjoy watching tools. To see those types of tools on both sides of the inning come from the same person was unique. That’s the best way to put it. It was something you hadn’t seen before.”

Eppler was hardly alone in that assessment, which was reinforced to him in follow-up trips to Japan in 2014 and 2015. Dozens of other evaluators across baseball felt the same way, setting the stage for a highly anticipated move to MLB.

When the move finally came this season, Ohtani showed the wider baseball world that he was, indeed, unlike anything they’d seen before.

Ohtani, 24, delivered a nearly unprecedented season as a rookie with the Angels, simultaneously excelling as both a hitter and pitcher and shattering all notions about what is possible in today’s game. Even considering Ohtani was limited to 10 starts and just over a half-season’s worth of plate appearances due to injury and the demands of juggling both roles, his performance stands out as historic.

Ohtani hit .285 with a .925 OPS and 22 home runs in 367 plate appearances (a 34-homer pace), numbers in line with Paul Goldschmidt’s.

He delivered a 3.31 ERA, 11.0 strikeouts per nine innings and a 1.16 WHIP on the mound, numbers in line with Luis Severino’s.

Ohtani joined Babe Ruth in 1919 as the only players in major league history to hit 15 home runs and pitch 50 innings in a season. He became the first player with 15 home runs and 50 pitching strikeouts in a season, something not even Ruth accomplished.

For living up to impossible expectations and starring as both a pitcher and hitter at the highest level of baseball in the world, Ohtani is the 2018 Baseball America Rookie of the Year.

“I didn’t really know what to expect here, so I didn’t really set any expectations for myself,” Ohtani said through translator Ippei Mizuhara before the Angels’ final series of the season in Anaheim. “But once I got here, I feel like I got the level of competition early, even though there were some struggles.”

Ah yes, those struggles. For a brief moment, it looked like the hype was too good to be true.

Ohtani entered spring training with the eyes of the baseball world watching him, and he promptly struck out 10 times in 32 at-bats in the Cactus League while getting pummeled on the mound, even in minor league “B” games. It got so bad opposing evaluators questioned if he’d be best served starting in the minors. Hitting and pitching at the same time in Japan was one thing, but this was the major leagues, and a century of history said it could not be done.

Eppler and the Angels, however, never wavered.

“There was a lot of confidence, and I think a lot of our mindset, perhaps it has something to do with the scouting background, was trust the tools,” Eppler said. “Guys that I had been around in baseball that helped developed me, the Bill Liveseys and the Gene Michaels, it was ‘trust the tools, trust the tools,’ and the tools were out of this world. And the performance at, again, the level that is closest to the majors leagues as you can get (NPB) was out of this world. So all signs were pointing toward you letting this guy get an opportunity to go do what he does.”

Once the games actually began to count, it took Ohtani all of one week to silence his skeptics.

In his first career start, Ohtani beat the Athletics with six strong innings, touching 99.6 mph. He followed by hitting a home run in each of his next three games, including a 400-foot shot to the opposite field off Corey Kluber. And then he delivered his coup de grace, taking a perfect game into the seventh inning against the A’s in his first home start and finishing with seven scoreless frames, one hit allowed and 12 strikeouts.

It was a definitive statement, one that put the questions to rest. Yes, it was possible to excel as a pitcher and a hitter at the same time in the major leagues today.

And yes, Ohtani was the man to do it.

“I have no satisfaction showing (people) up or anything like that because looking at my numbers during spring training, I can’t really blame them for saying those type of things,” Ohtani said. “Maybe I really was not major league-ready at that time. But that time was really important to me now that I look back at it. Without those struggles, maybe I wouldn’t have had success this year. I tried to take positive stuff out of it.”

Ohtani’s feats continued throughout the season.

There was the 11 strikeouts in 6.1 innings against the Twins. There was the nine strikeouts in 7.2 dominant innings against the Mariners. There was the run of five consecutive starts allowing two earned runs or less, the 15 home runs of at least 410 feet and, oh by the way, 10 stolen bases.

As long as his body allowed him, Ohtani impacted the game both ways unlike anything seen in almost a century.

“He was as advertised, if not more,” Athletics manager Bob Melvin said. “I was a little bit skeptical. You saw the pitching end of it, we saw early on how dominant he can be, and anybody who throws 100 miles an hour with a plus split and good breaking stuff is going to have success and he did, and I think we were the team that saw it the most.

“But I didn’t know he was going to be this good a hitter. You look at the numbers and you say ‘Yeah, this is a true two-way guy who’s fast and has got some power, but would both ends of it translate here?’ And it absolutely has. He’s a force at the plate. He’s a unique athlete for this game and probably better than we expected.”

But there is a caveat. Ohtani’s body didn’t allow him to do it for long.

Ohtani had a partial tear in his right ulnar collateral ligament when he signed with the Angels and further damaged it during the season, limiting him to 51.2 innings. He had Tommy John surgery after the season and will be unable to pitch all of 2019, though the plan is for him to continue to hit through the season as the Angels’ designated hitter.

The Angels were prepared for this eventuality. They did everything in their power to prevent it, collecting physical and medical data from Ohtani every single day and making decisions to play him or not based on that info, as well as feedback from Ohtani himself.

But Ohtani’s UCL still tore despite that level of care and vigilance, and Eppler even admits it wasn’t entirely unforeseen.

“One of the questions I asked Shohei very, very early in the process, I asked him ‘When was the first time you touched 97 miles an hour?’ and he said ‘16 or 17’,” Eppler said. “And I said OK, it kind of fits the bill. It’s been eight years of throwing at an extreme velocity, and that’s kind of normal, it’s not irregular, for a ligament to start getting compromised after that many years of throwing that hard. ... The elbow did not go because of a singular event. The elbow went because of the totality of the work over those eight years of him being able to throw over or touch 97 miles an hour.”

The question now becomes whether Ohtani can physically handle pitching and hitting at the same time over a full major league season.

Ohtani has not pitched 150 innings in a season since 2015 in Japan. By the time he returns to the mound in 2020, it will be five years since he handled a major league-level pitching workload.

Even Ruth, the standard-bearer for two-way excellence, eventually settled on one. After hitting 20 home runs for the first time in 1919 as a 24-year-old—the same age Ohtani is now—Ruth pitched only five more games the rest of his career. (Although Ruth also did not have the DH available to him).

Eppler is definitive: As soon as Ohtani’s elbow is healed, he will return to the mound as a starter while continuing to hit in the middle of the Angels lineup.

“I want him out there doing both disciplines because that’s what he’s trained for,” Eppler said. “I know that’s a goal of his and I think now that people have seen it, I think it’s a goal of everybody to continue to see him do that.

“It’s hard to say an exact workload. There’s been models in what he’s done in Japan, I think those are pretty good thumbprints to look at it. Sometimes that can end in 130-150 innings on the mound and somewhere between 280-350 plate appearances. It really varies. But he’s impactful on both sides and we want to try to maximize his ability to impact the game and be out there as much as possible.”

Ohtani, for his part, is just focusing on the near future.

“I got the injury so in that case it wasn’t a fully satisfying season,” Ohtani said.

“Since I got hurt and am going to be not pitching next year, my initial plans or goals have kind of changed. As a pitcher, my focus is to go through the rehab and try to make it back in 2020 as an even better pitcher than I was in the past. As a hitter, I just want to concentrate next year on trying to play full time and obviously try to make the postseason and win the World Series. That’s my biggest goal.”

There is understandable skepticism Ohtani can hold long-term up over such a dual workload. Then again, there was understandable skepticism that anyone could excel as both a starting pitcher and hitter in Major League Baseball today for any extended capacity, and Ohtani did so in spectacular fashion.

With an exhilarating rookie season, Ohtani lived up to all the hype. He pitched like an ace and hit like an All-Star, and reset the standard for what is, in fact, achievable in the game today.

All across the game, rookies are having a monumental impact. It's gotten to a point that nearly every contending team, in some form, has a rookie to thank for their success.

The Dodgers reached the 2017 World Series in part because of back-to-back National League rookies of the year Corey Seager and Cody Bellinger. The Yankees rode 2017 American League ROY Aaron Judge to within a game of the World Series.

The NL runner-up Cubs continued to debut an impact rookie yearly with Ian Happ. A trio of rookie pitchers—Kyle Freeland, German Marquez and Antonio Senzatela—helped guide the Rockies to their first playoff berth in nine years, and Andrew Benintendi finished among the team leaders in every offensive category for the AL East-champion Red Sox.

If the recent past is any indication, many of this year's preseason top 20 rookies will make a similar impact on their team's fortunes.

1. Shohei Ohtani, RHP/DH
Angels
Age: 23. Projected Rookie Role: SP.

Calling Card: The Japanese two-way legend boasts an upper 90s fastball that touches 100 mph, a devastating splitter and a plus slider. At the plate, his massive lefthanded power produced 30 home runs in his final 613 plate appearances in Nippon Professional Baseball.

2018 Outlook: Ohtani immediately becomes one of the Angels' top starters and will serve as their designated hitter on some of his off days. Even if playing both ways proves too difficult, his pitching alone can make him elite.

2. Ronald Acuna, OF
Braves
Age: 20. Projected Rookie Role: LF.

Calling Card: An electrifying power-speed center fielder, Acuna won Minor League Player of the Year after hitting .325 with 21 homers, 44 steals and a .374 on-base percentage. His offensive ability is what makes him a standout, but he also boasts plus speed and a plus arm from the outfield.

2018 Outlook: With Ender Inciarte entrenched in center, Acuna is slated to be the Braves' left fielder this year. He may begin the season in Triple-A for service time reasons, but should be in Atlanta before long as a cornerstone of their rebuild.

3. Gleyber Torres, SS
Yankees
Age: 21. Projected Rookie Role: 2B.

Calling Card: Torres hit .309 with a .406 on-base percentage at Triple-A before an awkward slide led to Tommy John surgery on his non-throwing elbow last summer, sidetracking an otherwise rapid ascent toward the majors.

2018 Outlook: Torres has to show he's healthy and may even start back at Triple-A to get re-acclimated, but the Yankees' second base job is his for the taking once he's ready.

4. Lewis Brinson, OF
Marlins
Age: 24. Projected Rookie Role: CF.

Calling Card:The physical specimen hit .331 with 11 homers and 13 steals in just 76 minor league games last year while playing excellent outfield defense, and made his major league debut in June.

2018 Outlook: Brinson should get plenty of at-bats in the Marlins outfield. Staying healthy, which has been an issue in the past, is his only impediment to regular playing time.

5. J.P. Crawford, SS
Phillies
Age: 22. Projected Rookie Role: SS.

Calling Card:A gifted defensive shortstop with an excellent batting eye, Crawford posted a .356 on-base percentage in his big league debut after a September callup.

2018 Outlook: The trade of Freddy Galvis makes Crawford the Phillies' everyday shortstop. His on-base skills and defense give him a chance to shine, and hitting in Citizens Bank Park could boost his power numbers.

2018 Rookie Of The Year Mlb

6. Austin Hays, OF
Orioles
Age: 22. Projected Rookie Role: RF.

Calling Card:The first member of the 2016 draft class to reach the majors, the free-swinging, powerful Hays hit .329 with 32 homers in his first minor league season and earned a September callup.

2018 Outlook:The departure of Seth Smith creates an opening for Hays in right field. His 4.4 percent walk rate is concerning, but his big power and ability to get to it should get him plenty of at-bats.

7. Willie Calhoun, OF
Rangers
Age: 23. Projected Rookie Role: LF.

Calling Card: Calhoun's long track record of hitting and hitting for power culminated in 31 home runs at Triple-A last year, and he made his big league debut for the Rangers in September after coming over from the Dodgers in the Yu Darvish trade.

2018 Rookie Of The Year Mlb Prospects

2018 Outlook: Calhoun is slated to be the Rangers' starting left fielder on Opening Day. He's a defensive liability, but his bat is middle-of-the-lineup caliber.

8. Willy Adames, SS
Rays
Age: 22. Projected Rookie Role: 2B.

Calling Card: Adames is a promising hitter who batted .277 with a .360 on-base percentage as a 21-year-old at Triple-A last season, while showcasing a big arm and an improving glove at shortstop.

2018 Outlook: With Adeiny Hechavarria, Daniel Robertson and Joey Wendle as the Rays current middle infield options, it shouldn't be long before Adames is starting in St. Petersburg.

9. Luiz Gohara, LHP
Braves
Age: 21. Projected Rookie Role: SP.

Calling Card: The portly Gohara throws 97 mph heat and a devastating slider from the left side, which helped him rise from high Class A all the way to the majors last season.

2018 Outlook:Gohara still has to develop his third pitch and fine-tune his command, but he is a favorite to win a spot in the Braves' rotation and has a chance to rack up loads of strikeouts.

10. Miguel Andujar, 3B
Yankees
Age: 23. Projected Rookie Role: 3B.

Calling Card: Andujar consistently hits for average and shows growing power, which culminated in career-highs in doubles (36) and home runs (16) last year and his first major league callup.

2018 Outlook: The Yankees acquired Brandon Drury in the first days of spring training, but Andujar will get the chance to grab the third base job before long. He has the offensive ability to put up big numbers, although whether he has the hands for third base has been up for debate.

11. Ryan McMahon, 1B
Rockies
Age: 23. Projected Rookie Role: 1B.

Calling Card: A bat-first infielder, McMahon hit .355 with a career-best 20 home runs across Double-A and Triple-A last year while cutting his strikeout rate from 30 to 18 percent, earning his first big league callup.

2018 Rookie Of The Year Mlb Rookies

2018 Outlook:McMahon is tentatively slated to be the Rockies' starting first baseman, and his penchant for hard contact could yield prolific offensive numbers in Coors Field.

12. Alex Reyes, RHP
Cardinals
Age: 23. Projected Rookie Role: RP.

Calling Card: With a 96-100 mph fastball and knee-buckling curveball, Reyes was a frontrunner for the 2017 NL rookie of the year award before Tommy John surgery wiped out his season.

2018 Outlook:Reyes is expected to be back pitching in the majors by May, and if healthy can help the Cardinals as either a high-octane starter or flamethrowing closer.

13. Victor Robles, OF
Nationals
Age: 21. Projected Rookie Role: CF.

Calling Card: Robles' graceful actions and elite speed make playing center field look easy, and he hit .300 with 10 homers and 27 steals in the minors before he was called up and kept on the Nationals' playoff roster as a pinch-runner and late-game defender.

2018 Outlook: Robles will likely start the year in Triple-A, but as soon as injuries hit he'll be up in Washington playing elite outfield defense and collecting stolen bases by the bunch.

2018 Rookie Of The Year Mlb Nl

14. Nick Senzel, 3B
Reds
Age: 23. Projected Rookie Role: 3B.

Calling Card: An elite hitter in every sense, Senzel hit .321 with 40 doubles, 14 homers and 14 steals in his first full minor league season while playing top-notch defense at third base.

2018 Outlook: Senzel will start the season at Triple- A Louisville, but talent like his has a habit of forcing a way into the lineup.

15. Scott Kingery, 2B
Phillies
Age: 24. Projected Rookie Role: 2B.

Calling Card: A unique power-speed middle infielder, Kingery had 26 homers and 29 stolen bases across Double-A and Triple-A in 2017.

2018 Outlook: Kingery lacks an obvious path to playing time without a trade of Cesar Hernandez or Maikel Franco, but he could force his way into the mix with a strong start at Triple-A.

16. Walker Buehler, RHP
Dodgers
Age: 23. Projected Rookie Role: RP.

Calling Card: With a fastball that comfortably sits 96-99 mph and two swing-and-miss breaking balls, Buehler rocketed from high Class A all the way to the majors last season.

2018 Outlook: The Dodgers' pitching depth keeps Buehler out of the rotation to start the year, but he figures to get starts as injuries hit and could serve as a power reliever in the interim.

17. A.J. Puk, LHP
Athletics
Age: 23. Projected Rookie Role: SP.

Calling Card: The lanky lefty brings a 94-97 mph fastball, a vicious side-to-side slider and an improving curveball and changeup, all of which led to him leading minor league starters with 13.2 strikeouts-per-nine.

2018 Outlook: Puk will begin in Triple-A, where he will continue to refine his control. He should see time in Oakland, where young pitchers figure to be coming and going all year long.

18. Jack Flaherty, RHP
Cardinals
Age: 22. Projected Rookie Role: SP.

Calling Card: Flaherty's four-pitch mix with advanced command became more potent after his fastball jumped to 93-94 mph, and he moved into the Cardinals' rotation as a September callup.

2018 Outlook: Flaherty may start in Triple-A but will be one of the first starters up as soon as injuries hit, and has every opportunity to settle into the back of St. Louis' rotation.

19. Brett Phillips, OF
Brewers
Age: 23. Projected Rookie Role: OF.

Calling Card: A speedster with a big arm, Phillips impressed at the plate by hitting .276/.351/448 in his first big league stint last season.

2018 Outlook: Phillips is talented enough to start for many teams, but is limited to a bench role by Milwaukee's outfield log jam. He should still see playing time in all three outfield spots, with the chance to make an impact with his speed and defense at the least.

20. Yoshihisa Hirano, RHP
D-backs
Age: 34. Projected Rookie Role: RP.

Calling Card: Hirano saved 60 games the last two seasons for Orix in Nippon Professional Baseball, with his 90-94 mph fastball and swing-and-miss splitter doing most of the work.

2018 Outlook: Hirano will compete with Archie Bradley and Brad Boxberger to be the D-backs' closer, and has the chance to join Kaz Sasaki, Takashi Saito, Akinori Otsuka and Koji Uehara as the latest impact Japanese reliever to make it to the majors in his 30s.

Ten More Rookie Names To Know

  • Sandy Alcantara, RHP, Marlins: Alcantara brings triple-digit heat and tantalizing, but wildly inconsistent, secondaries. The Marlins' shortage of arms gives him a chance to work out his kinks in their rotation.
  • Brian Anderson, 3B, Marlins: After popping 22 home runs and making his big league debut last year, Anderson stands to get plenty of at-bats as the Marlins start from scratch.
  • Steven Duggar, OF, Giants: Duggar already shows the center field defense, speed and baserunning of an everyday big leaguer. If he takes steps as a hitter, the Giants center field job is likely his.
  • Dustin Fowler, OF, Athletics: If Fowler proves he has recovered from his grisly knee injury, the A's center field job is there for the taking.
  • Michael Kopech, RHP, White Sox: The 100 mph flamethrower made enormous strides with his control at the end of last year and finished strong in Triple-A, putting him in prime position to ascend to Chicago.
  • Chris Shaw, 1B/OF, Giants: Shaw is coming off back-to-back 20 home run seasons and possesses the lefthanded power the Giants need.
  • Chance Sisco, C, Orioles: Sisco still needs to make defensive strides, but his offensive upside is superior to Caleb Joseph and Andrew Susac.
  • Alex Verdugo, OF, Dodgers: His excellent contact ability, strong defense and cannon arm make him an intriguing option for the Dodgers, but Verdugo has a group of veterans ahead of him on the depth chart in both center and left field.
  • Jesse Winker, OF, Reds: Winker hit .298 with seven home runs in his big league debut, but at-bats could be tough to come by behind Adam Duvall and Scott Schebler in the Reds outfield.
  • Brandon Woodruff, RHP, Brewers: After debuting in August and making eight starts as Milwaukee chased a playoff berth, Woodruff is primed for a larger role.