The Capital

Looks like it’s only up from here

October can be launching pad for baseball’s younger stars

- By Jake Seiner

A funny thing about this year’s likely MVPs — none were valuable enough to push their teams into the postseason.

Shohei Ohtani, Bryce Harper, Fernando Tatis Jr., Juan Soto, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. — all contenders for the individaua­l prize, and all set to watch from home while a champion is crowned.

Other big names remain — Freddie Freeman, Mookie Betts, Jose Altuve and Aaron Judge are plenty familiar. Of course, they were all there last year, too, when Rays rookie Randy Arozarena stole the show.

Arozarena set postseason records with 10 homers and 29 hits, winning the AL championsh­ip series MVP, and made a wild scramble home to help the Rays push the Dodgers to six games in the World Series. It was a remarkable rise for a then-25-yearold who had just 42 regular-season games under his belt, propelling him from no-name rookie to a standout on baseball’s biggest stage.

Stars are cemented in October. Here are five budding ones that might stick in the spotlight this month:

Wander Franco Rays shortstop

An AL rookie of the year candidate despite playing just 70 games, Franco successful­ly transforme­d from a minor league phenom to a big league contributo­r. The 20-yearold switch-hitter batted .288 with seven homers and an .810 OPS, matching Hall of Famer Frank Robinson’s 43-game on-base streak in 1956 for the longest by a player 20 or younger.

Flashy yet polished, Franco looks destined for stardom regardless of this postseason, but it could speed his ascent into the conversati­on for best player in baseball.

Another Ray to watch: rookie righthande­r Shane Baz, who was 2-0 with a 2.03 ERA in his first three big league starts in September to potentiall­y force his way into the Rays’ postseason rotation.

Tyler O’Neill Cardinals outfielder

The son of a champion body builder, the stoutly built O’Neill muscled the Cardinals to a franchise-record 17-game winning streak in September. He clubbed 13 homers over the final 31 games with an NL-most 30 RBIs in that time. After hitting 21 homers combined in his first three big league seasons, the 26-year-old Canadian had 34 to form a dangerous mid-order trio with All-Stars Paul Goldschmid­t and Nolan Arenado.

Austin Riley Braves third baseman

Riley stepped up bigger than any other Braves player after Ronald Acuna Jr.’s season-ending knee injury in July.

The 24-year-old slugged his way into NL MVP considerat­ion with 33 homers, 107 RBIs and an .898 OPS, production fueled by a .333 batting average in the second half of the season.

Riley slumped in the spotlight last October, hitting .143 while the Braves lost the NLCS to the Dodgers in seven games.

He came back for 2021 showing his best form yet for the four-time defending NL East champs.

A redemptive postseason for Riley could translate to the Braves’ first World Series appearance since 1999.

Luis Garcia Astros right-hander

The Astros are still led by many of the same stars as their tainted 2017 championsh­ip team — Altuve, Carlos Correa, Alex Bregman and Yuli Gurriel — but their 2021 aspiration­s rely largely on the 24-year-old Garcia.

A 6-foot-1 rookie with tree-trunk legs, Garcia was 11-8 with a 3.30 ERA over 30 games, including 28 starts.

With two-time AL Cy Young Award winner Justin Verlander out for the season following Tommy John surgery and one-time AL Cy Younf winner Zack Greinke likely pushed to the bullpen following a late-season injury, Garcia might slot behind Lance McCullers Jr. in a critical spot for a young rotation.

LaMonte Wade Jr. Giants first baseman/outfielder

Late Night LaMonte — pronounced “lah-MONT” — has been the feel-good, breakout star this season for the surprising Giants.

A castoff by the Twins, Wade worked his way into regular duty and contribute­d several big hits as the Giants ended the Dodgers’ reign as eight-time defending NL West champs.

Wade went 13-for-23 with 12 RBIs in ninth-inning at-bats, including a walk-off hit to sink the Diamondbac­ks on Friday night.

A day later, Wade was given the team’s Willie Mac Award, a prestigiou­s honor voted on by players, coaches, staff and fans to recognize the club’s most inspiratio­nal player.

 ?? JEFF ROBERSON/AP ?? Tyler O’Neill hit 13 home runs and an NL-best 30 RBIs in the last 31 games of the regular season for the red-hot Cardinals.
JEFF ROBERSON/AP Tyler O’Neill hit 13 home runs and an NL-best 30 RBIs in the last 31 games of the regular season for the red-hot Cardinals.

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