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The one crippling hole in Matt Wallner’s game reared its head early in the season, when he posted a 51.5% strikeout rate across 33 plate appearances. Wallner spemt much of the first half in the minors, but he came back just before the All-Star break and has been white-hot ever since. While 2023 was worth plenty of praise, he’s been even better in 2024. Still, it doesn’t feel like he gets enough appreciation.
Matt Wallner is approaching an entire season’s worth of plate appearances, spread over three years. After his 2022 debut, in which he posted a .709 OPS in a minimal sample, he emerged as part of the Twins' future in 2023 by posting an .877 OPS. Despite a horrid start to 2024, Wallner carries a .948 OPS so far. We’re left with a slash line of .251/.367/.518 across 158 games and 539 plate appearances. According to Weighted Runs Created Plus, that’s elite offensive output, 48% better than the average hitter over that period.
The context of Wallner’s performance, particularly the last two seasons, is also essential. The Twins had a very unimpressive first half of the 2023 season, and Wallner played a massive part in turning the offense around. In 2024, he’s been one of the few bright spots in a lineup missing Byron Buxton and Carlos Correa for much of the second half, while several other expected contributors have struggled. It’s interesting to wonder where the Twins would be in either of the last two years, without Wallner.
Defensively, Wallner has been perfectly fine in the corner outfield. He ranks below average in Outs Above Average, which measures the ground he can cover, but his 99th-percentile arm more than makes up the difference. His defense will never be his calling card, but it is still vital. Next season, with Kepler set to hit free agency, the Twins should have an adequate full-time replacement. What Wallner lacks in defensive metrics, he should more than make up for between his throwing arm and his bat.
The Twins are preparing to slot Wallner right in to replace Kepler in 2025. Not only has Wallner been the one to slide over to right field in Kepler’s absence, but he’s also taken Kepler’s role as the left-handed hitter in the lineup to play every day, regardless of matchup. While he hasn’t fared particularly well against southpaws so far, it’s encouraging that the Twins appear to be preparing him for a full-time role in 2025.
Wallner remains far from a perfect player. His strikeout rate still sits above 35%, but his performance is partially anchored to the start of the season. It’s unlikely that we ever see Wallner significantly cut down the strikeouts like we saw with Trevor Larnach this year, but we’re approaching the point where we have to accept that he’s capable of making it work anyway. He may not be the guy you want up to move a runner over, but his swing-and-miss, high-powered profile is much more of a complement to the current Twins lineup. Without multiple players like Miguel Sanó or Joey Gallo in the fold, the Twins can afford to have someone with Wallner’s profile playing every day.
The perception of Wallner has probably skewed toward him being underrated. Strikeouts are frustrating, and Wallner is one of the few hitters left in the Twins lineup who commit the mortal sin of striking out over 30% of the time. Last offseason, some accused Wallner of having a fluky second half that was sure to come crashing down due to his strikeout issues. They were proven right early on in 2024, and for some, that handful of early plate appearances may still carry weight in their mind.
Matt Wallner’s numbers in his career are elite. After helping save the Twins offense in 2023, he’s done it again in 2024. For those who detest strikeouts to the point that nothing else a hitter does matters, Wallner will continue to be doubted. For those watching the impact he makes in the lineup every day, they know they’re watching a star offensive player.
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- DocBauer, Cory Engelhardt and DJL44
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