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kagami
@kagami
how and why is james wood the biggest all-star snub this year? a few casts on how good wood is this year, why he should be starting the all-star game, and his future trajectory a mix of video, statcast and fangraphs data, and baseball savant to illustrate wood's bright future https://x.com/MLB/status/1936619887163478331
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kagami pfp
kagami
@kagami
let's start with a little background on james wood wood was drafted out of high school in the 2nd round by the padres. the padres later traded wood (in addition to more prospects) to the washington nationals for juan soto. wood made his debut for the nats in 2024 and in his first 162 games (a full baseball season) has produced a line similar to juan soto and bryce harper: - james wood: 31 hr / 105 rbi / 166 h / .859 ops - bryce harper: 31 hr / 77 rbi / 175 h / .873 ops - juan soto: 31 hr / 107 rbi / 171 h / .921 ops while wood debut season didn't qualify for minimum plate appearances for statcast to rank him, we can also see how well he stacks up against harper and soto in xwoba, avg exit velocity, barrel %, and hard hit %. - james wood: .348 xwoba / 92.8 mph / 10.6 barrel % / 52 hard hit % - bryce harper: .418 xwoba / 91.4 mph / 12.9 barrel % / 47.5 hard hit % - juan soto: .372 xwoba / 90.5 mph / 9.8 barrel % / 42.2 % hard hit % having similar counting stats to soto and harper is one thing. but wood also has the underlying metrics that are similar to harper and soto's rookie years. that's both really impressive and highly encouraging for his future.
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