Luis Arraez, the active leader in batting average, waited until February for a one-year, $12 million contract—proof that in 2026, OPS is the currency and .317 hitters are the dime-a-dozen change.
The Freeze-Frame Moment
Andrew Benintendi spelled it out in plain English at Camelback Ranch: “The game kind of changes where the money is… so players obviously will chase that.” The White Sox outfielder spent the winter rebuilding his swing for lift, not line drives, because front offices pay for slug, not singles.
Why GMs Deleted .300 from Their Spreadsheets
Front offices stopped worshipping batting average for three ruthlessly simple reasons:
- It treats a bleeder past second base the same as a 110-mph rocket into the gap.
- It ignores walks—free tickets to first that inflate run expectancy by 23 percent.
- It camouflages platoon bats who can’t slug league-average pitchers.
OPS—on-base plus slugging—solves all three in one clean column. The result: onlytrustedinfo.com’s review of 2025 leaderboards shows a record-low seven qualified hitters reached .300, matching 2024 for the smallest club since 1968.
The Arraez Paradox
Three batting titles, a .317 lifetime clip, 452 career strikeouts in 3,393 plate appearances—numbers that once screamed “cornerstone.” Yet Arraez lingered on the open market until the Giants dangled a one-year, $12 million pact and everyday reps at second base. The reason: an ISO that peaked at .111 and a career 5.2 percent walk rate—both below league average. In OPS terms, he’s a 108 wRC+ bat, good but not bank-breaking.
What the .245 League Mark Really Hides
MLB sat at .245 last season, essentially flat since the 2023 rule changes. Don’t mistake stability for revival. Chris Young, Rangers president of baseball ops, admitted average is “a preliminary indicator,” but Texas decision-makers chase exit velocity, hard-hit rate and chase percentage long before they sort by AVG. Jed Hoyer echoed that in Chicago, calling average “not something we look at at the beginning of an evaluation.”
Player Adjustments Happening in Real Time
Benintendi’s swing overhaul is the league-wide lab experiment. From 2016-23 he hit .276 with 14 homers per 162; the last two seasons he’s slugged 25.8 jacks per 162 while batting .234. The trade-off raised his OPS 62 points and secured him a five-year, $75 million deal in 2023—cash a singles approach never would have generated.
The Kids Still Look, But They Know the Chequebook
Reds rookie Sal Stewart batted .309 across Double-A and Triple-A last season. He checks the average column every morning, yet Cincinnati’s player-development syllabus preaches “on-base the most.” The contradiction is purposeful: teach contact early, let analytics optimize slug later.
Fan Translation—Why It Matters in Fantasy and in the Stands
- Draft boards: A .300 hitter with 8 HR and 5% walks is waiver-wire fodder; a .235 bat with 35 HR and 12% walks is a top-40 pick.
- Ballpark conversations: Fans still lead with “He’s hitting .284,” but the front office already moved on to “He’s 35% above league average by OPS+.”
- Contract extensions: Expect agents to package slugging spikes, not batting crowns, when arbitration numbers fly.
Looking Forward—The Next Stat to Dethrone OPS
Progressive teams already stack OPS with expected metrics—xwOBA, barrels, chase-whiff profiles. Within five seasons, public discourse will pivot to “expected runs created per 100 plate appearances,” a decimal-heavy mouthful that bundles quality of contact and swing decisions. Until then, OPS rules the wallet and the lineup card.
Bottom line: Batting average still shirts the baby-faced rookie, but when extension season arrives, slug and walks speak loudest. Keep that in mind the next time a .315 hitter shockingly hits the market—and signs for half the guarantee of a .235 masher.
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