Franmil Reyes had a solid four-year run from 2018 through 2021. He struck out at an unhealthy 29.5% rate, but he also walked in 9% of his plate appearances. He hit 92 home runs in 529 games and produced a batting line of .260/.325/.503. That production was 19% above league average, as evidenced by his 119 wRC+, a figure that placed him in the top 65 among qualified league hitters. He was also fairly consistent, with his wRC+ never slipping below 111 in any season of that stretch and topping out at 129.
He qualified for arbitration for the first time after that 2021 season and agreed to a $4.55MM salary with the Guardians. Unfortunately, his consistent offensive production got away from him for the first time in 2022. His strikeout rate ticked up to 33.2% while his walk rate dipped to 6.3%. His power also seemed to diminish, as he hit just 14 home runs on the year after being around a 30-per-year pace in the earlier portion of his career. He finished the season with a slash line of .221/.273/.365 and a wRC+ of 80, indicating he was 20% below the league average hitter.
That swoon at the plate was untenable for a player like Reyes since his bat is his only carrying tool. He doesn’t bring anything in the speed or defense departments. He has managed six stolen bases in his career but his sprint speed was in the 20th percentile among qualified players last year. Defensively, he got over 500 innings in the outfield in 2018 and 2019 but got poor results and has been sent out to the grass less often recently. He spent less than 100 innings out there in both 2021 and 2022.
Given his one-dimensional profile, he needs to be clicking at the plate to be valuable. His struggles were strong enough last year that the Guardians put him on waivers in August. The Cubs put in a claim and let him play out the string for them, but he was outrighted at season’s end and elected free agency.
There’s no denying that the 2022 season was rough, but it’s possible it was merely a blip. He still clobbered the ball despite his struggles, with Statcast placing him in the 92nd percentile in terms of average exit velocity last year. He also ranked in the 85th percentile in terms of maximum exit velocity, 79th in hard hit rate and 80th in terms of barrel rate. It seems the tools are still there for some team that can find a better way of utilizing them.
It’s possible that the league changed its plan of attack against Reyes. According to Statcast, 33.7% of the pitches he saw in 2021 were breaking balls. That shot up to 40% in 2022, with fastballs and offspeed pitches coming across less often. Reyes posted a batting average of .219 against those breaking pitches in 2021 with a .521 slugging percentage, but those numbers dropped to .191 and .321 last year.
That change in approach could have been responsible for his increased strikeouts. His chase percentage went from 25.8% to 28.4%. Not only did he chase more, he did worse when he did. His chase contact rate went from 49.5% in 2021 to to just 36% last year. That came despite the fact that 50.4% of the pitches he saw were in the zone, a slight increase from the 48.1% rate of the year before. He also went up hacking throughout the year as his first pitch swing rate went to 34.5%, a few ticks above his 30% rate from the year before and the 29.5% league average. Perhaps he was getting more breaking balls to begin at-bats or he merely went up looking to smash a fastball before he got deeper into the count. Pitchers also threw 61.3% of first pitches in the zone, an uptick on the 55.4% clip from the year before. So, more first-pitch strikes, more first-pitch swings, but more strikeouts and less power.
While all this led to a pretty gloomy year for Reyes, it’s possible that he could adjust to this new plan of attack and get back to the hitter he was before. As mentioned, the tools still seem to be there in terms of crushing the ball. If he can alter his approach and get his strikeouts down a few points, it’s possible he could again be a feared middle-of-the-order slugger. The fact that Reyes is primarily a designated hitter surely limits his market, but there could still be fits. Even if Reyes can’t find a full-time job, serving as a bench bat and/or the short side of a platoon could be an option. He was equally poor against both righties and lefties in 2022 but has been stronger with the platoon advantage over his career, posting a 125 wRC+ against southpaws and a 104 otherwise.
For a rebuilding team like the Reds, they have a handful of lefties in their corner outfield/designated hitter mix, including TJ Friedl and Jake Fraley. While Joey Votto is questionable for Opening Day, that might leave first base open for players like Wil Myers and Tyler Stephenson, perhaps leaving some at-bats for Reyes. The Tigers currently have a strongly left-handed outfield with Austin Meadows, Riley Greene, Akil Baddoo and Kerry Carpenter all hitting from that side. Adding Reyes would further squeeze out Miguel Cabrera in what could be his final season, but he’s probably not ticketed for full-time duty anyway. The Rangers don’t really have a strict designated hitter right now, with Mitch Garver potentially playing there when healthy and not catching. Otherwise, left-hander Brad Miller and his career 67 wRC+ against lefties could be the frontrunner. The Diamondbacks have a lot of lefties and added Evan Longoria as a veteran righty. He’ll likely be DHing while splitting third base with Josh Rojas, but one injury elsewhere on the diamond means they’re both ticketed for everyday infield duty. The A’s have very few players locked into jobs, and some of their most-established guys are lefties like Seth Brown, Tony Kemp and Jace Peterson.
Nelson Cruz, another bat-only player, recently said he had received offers for 2023. He has a more impressive track record than Reyes but he’s going to turn 43 in the upcoming season and is also coming off a down year. Reyes will be turning 28 in July and shouldn’t cost much. He was projected by MLBTR contributor Matt Swartz for an arbitration salary of $6MM before being cut loose by the Cubs. The fact that Reyes cleared waivers and was outrighted suggests that no one wanted him at that price point and he could be signed for something beneath that figure. He could also be retained via arbitration for 2024 in the event he has a bounceback season, since he’s currently between four and five years of MLB service time. He even has options and could be sent down to the minors, though players who reach five years of service can’t be optioned without their consent. Reyes is at 4.115 and would cross that five-year threshold after a couple of months in the majors, since a new “year” starts at 172 days.
Gwynning
Franimal for LF/DH duty, compadres?
damascusj
I’d love to see it, if for nothing else but to have him sing with the crowd
Javia135
Padres reunion?
Gwynning
Jinx! Ha, I’m down to float him for an April audition, of sorts.
redsox for_life
Him or Duval for Boston
Angry Disgruntled Sox Fan
I don’t think we sign him when we have Turner at DH.
kmk1986
No for sox
This one belongs to the Reds
I see they mentioned he might be useful for the Reds. Probably why they will not sign him, plus he is a major leaguer, not a minor leaguer.
DonOsbourne
I’m hoping he goes to Detroit. I could see him putting up video game numbers in Cincy.
phieralph
Jay Bruce II
dsett75
No room in Detroit. Otherwise, I’d agree….as anemic as the offense is.
Big whiffa
I’d say he’s on reds radar. They’d prob sign him if he’d play for reds. Nice bounce back candidate that would make Fraley earn his job
In Seager/Hader We Trust > the 70 MM DH Ohtani
Texas’s new left fielder maybe? He would be quite exciting if they don’t get Reynolds or Kepler.
rememberthecoop
Darragh sounds like he’s his player rep. Maybe he has a future in that field.
ClevelandSteelEngines
The Tigers should throw him a line. Red Sox doesn’t need him but could be nice.
TrumpTucker2024
Buy low candidate for my hapless Nationals.
Larry Bernandez 1324IM
Jerry Dipoto hoping to make a trade with whoever signs him
avenger65
I don’t think anyone is going to sign him based on his statistics the last two years. When you’re released by a team like the cubs you know you’ve hit rock bottom.
Jung Like My Daddy
Clearly Franmil isn’t giving Jobu enough rum. No wonder he can’t hit the breaking stuff.
User 899214610
Are you trying to say Jesus Christ can’t hit a curveball?
rhandome
That’s a great comp actually. He’s Pedro Cerrano IRL.
TurkeyClubSamich
He even played for Cleveland!
cincinnatikid
I’d rather have Adam Duvall with his power plus gold glove defense than Reyes. But I can’t see the reds spending the 4 to 5 million it would take to bring him back to Cincinnati
This one belongs to the Reds
I can’t argue with either of those points.
This one belongs to the Reds
They already lost Cueto at a contract they could well afford.
BeansforJesus
Well done, Darragh. A Franmil article should be a paragraph at most and you managed to make a whole dang article.
Impressive
Big whiffa
Seems like a guy Tampa could get the most out of
Rsox
Franimal in Denver crushing moon shots. He’s the type of cheap offense you would think the A’s and Rays would jump at.
Lloyd Emerson
Dat ol’ hoss been put out to the pasture.
Motor City Beach Bum
I was hoping the Tigers might grab him last year but the chances of them fixing anyone last year was slim to none. If they take a flyer on him this year I’d be good with that, but I think Meadows and Carpenter are likely to soak up the at bats he might get and Cabrera is still there too.
BuyBuyMets
Miguel Sano might be a better cheap, bat first option
Rsox
Sano’s awful start from last season aside (0-20 with 10 K’s, or his awful season in general), the fact that there has been little to no chatter about him either means the knee isn’t healthy enough to be ready for spring training or teams don’t see enough to even extend a minor league invite. Sano may certainly benefit from a stint in the NPB or KBO if he can’t find an opportunity here. The Brewers could use some cheap power and have DH/1B (against lefties) AB’s to give and the Rays could probably use another 1B option
Samuel
Was an extremely well researched and written article. Kudos!
There’s no dismissing the contents, teams have to factor that in. But Franmil can still survive in the major leagues as he’s only 27 years-old, but he has to make some major adjustments. He’s too old to get by on potential. Jesús Aguilar has had troubles hitting breaking balls at times during his career, yet he got 6 years in…but it appears that the times are a-changin’.
Franmil is a fun-loving great guy that managers, coaches and teammates enjoy being around. The issue he appears to have is a shortcoming in discipline:
1) Reporting to ST in playing shape and working to remain in shape throughout the season; 2) being a disciplined hitter (as the stats above show); and 3) being able to incorporate instruction he’s given into his game (which the stats also reflect).
MLB has become extremely competitive for roster spots as we see with teams going through well over 50 – and usually over 60…and sometimes 70 – players a year on their 26 person roster. There’s lots of money floating around. Everyone is paid to produce – not just players but FO people, coaches, managers, scouts, analytical people, etc. Jesús Aguilar has hung around for 6 years (at a low salary), on the potential of being a big run-producing bat. But even he looks like he’ll have trouble finding a spot in the future even though he’s only 32 years old.
brucenewton
Slim pickins out there, if we talking about this guy.
Diggydugler
Atkins will sign this guy to platoon DH…$7M should do it.
Jake1972
He can’t run and field, so a minor league offer at best or him going to Japan instead.
vikingbluejay67
KBO
C Yards Jeff
8 hours ago Anthony is writing about the Guards needing outfield help, 4 hours ago Darragh writing here about Franmil looking for a home. Telling that there is no indication the Guards would consider a reunion?
User 3014224641
He’s not really an outfielder…his play out there leaves a ton to be desired.
sergefunction
Tigers are openly looking for the exact opposite kind of hitter. Contact with strike zone control is all Scott Harris is pitching. Don’t see Tigers for him.
Padres like his personality but not his game.
If him I’d be looking at Colorado or Cincinnati to reinvent the offensive numbers but hiding his defense is a monumental problem. He plays in the field as if he is a monument.
The suggestions above that he hit the International market makes the most sense. Kind of surprised his bat fell so far so fast.
msqboxer
The DH position is evolving from the power hitter who is a washed up position player, to a platoon position with players that can play in the field. With the way rosters are configured now you can have a positional dead spot.
PaulyMidwest
Wish he would’ve accepted his outright. If he did I bet he would have a chance to crack the cubs opening day roster.