The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Moncada could be a top 40 player next year

- By Brandon Williams

A can’t miss prospect began to display why he won’t, and a former MVP flexed his muscles to save what has been an injury-plagued season. Meanwhile, another Pirates hitter sent chills down his offensive numbers and one of the game’s best young talents saw his star dim along with his team’s postseason hopes.

Cheers

Yoan Moncada, 2B, White Sox: The potential cornerston­e to a future Pale Hose revival woke up on Sept. 10 with a .182 batting average and appeared head- ed toward a long offseason of debates on whether he would reach his immense upside. Since then, he’s let his bat do the talking, raising his batting average 59 points while hitting three homers with eight RBIs and 13 runs scored. Much of his damage came in a weeklong spurt from Sept. 14-21 when Moncada put up a slash line of .407/.448/.741 with a 1.189 OPS. Lest we forget, he added a pair of stolen bases to boot. What has sparked Moncada’s Septem- ber has been a combinatio­n of improved plate discipline and an improved empha- sis toward hitting the ball hard. He has an OBP of .388 this month despite a strike- out rate of 32.8 percent and has a .557 slugging percentage­dueinpartt­oa39per- cent mark in balls hit hard. When Moncada makes contact, there is an 88 percent chance the ball is hit either medium (49 percent) or hard, a further indication of what he is capable of as he continues to adjust to playing in the majors. From the moment he made his profession­al baseball debut with the Red Sox more than two years ago, Moncada’s offensive potential has evoked images from Bo Jackson to

Mike Trout. Only 22 years old, his recent surge is cur- rently making a difference forhis fantasy owners while also setting the foundation for Moncada to be among the top 40 or 50 players off draft boards next February and March. Josh Donaldson, 3B, Blue Jays: Should they make the postseason, Twins pitchers will be grateful for not seeing Toronto’s lineup, especially Donaldson, who scorched them for 10 hits in 17 at-bats during a four-game set last weekend. Donaldson lit up Target Field with five homers, seven RBIs and eight runs scored as p artofa September that has seen the 2015 AL MVP hit .316 with seven homers, 13 RBIs and 10 runs scored to go along with a 1.120 OPS. Despite injuries that kept him side- lined six weeks in April and May, Donaldson has his third straight season of at least 30 h o mers. Injuries and a move to the second spot in the lineup will keep him from recording a fifth straight season of at least 93 RBIs, but his 16 percent walk rate has helped him put up a .387 OBP that would be the second-best of his career should he maintain his cur- rent pace down the stretch. Donaldson has a fly ball rate of 41.1 percent and while his profile continues to show him as a dominant pull hitter, he has returned to hitting the ball to center more consistent­ly (33.1 percent) than he did last season (27.6 percent). He will finish the season strong, but the ques- tion surroundin­g Donaldson is whether the Blue Jays will consider fielding offers for him this winter as the team embarks on what could be a drastic overhaul.

Jeers

Josh Bell, 1B, Pirates: His season will be filled with enough posit ives to feel encouraged about his long-term potential, yet Bell’s bat feels like he got a head start on the offseason. Entering this weekend, Bell has only one home run this month as pitchers have figured him out to the tune of a .182 batting average. Just two of his 12 September hits have resulted in extra bases while Bell is whiffing at a 25.7 percent rate, an indication that he may simply be running out of steam consid- ering he had a season-best .405 OBP last month. Part of the answer behind Bell’s September skid could be that his long-awaited power (.210 ISO) has eventually come at the cost of his walk rate, which is at 10.4 percent after the promising 13.8 per- cent walk rate he had during his 45-game debut last year. He has been an albatross on a host of NL-only leagues despite the 24 homers and 83 RBIs he brings into the weekend. Unless there are no better options, sitting down Bell for the remainder of the season is well advised.

Tears

Manny Machado, 3B, Orioles: Regarded by some to potenti ally b ecome the game’s first $400 million player,M achado’s numbers have been fool’s gold this season. Sure, he has a third straight 30-homer season and holds an outside chance to record his first 100-RBI campaign, yet Machado has seen a decline in most of his other numbers. His five-tool skills feel more like 4.4 as he has only nine stolen bases a year after swiping a career-high 20 bags, yet with his team staring at an opportunit­y to seize the second AL wild card spot, Machado has failed to step up and take the baton for the Orioles, hitting just .229 with three homers and six RBIs this month. He has not recorded a multihit game since September 10. One of the most telling numbers on Machado’s season is a .267 BABIP, easily his lowest since arriving in the majors in 2012. He’s still hitting the ball hard (39.3 percent) but he’s also become less of a line drive hitter, falling from 20 percent last season to just a shade below 16 percent. The homers are good, but Machado has been a huge disappoint­ment for fantasy owners this season. Perhaps the payday speculatio­n should cease for now.

 ?? ATED PRESS DAVID J. PHILLIP/THE ASSOCI- ?? ChicagoW hite Sox’s Yoan Moncada gestures after hitting a two-run home run against the Houston Astros during the fourth inning Wednesday in Houston.
ATED PRESS DAVID J. PHILLIP/THE ASSOCI- ChicagoW hite Sox’s Yoan Moncada gestures after hitting a two-run home run against the Houston Astros during the fourth inning Wednesday in Houston.

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