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For most of his major-league career, Kody Clemens has fit the mold of a traditional left-handed hitter. He could damage right-handed pitching, but lefties consistently gave him problems. That trend has taken a surprising turn in 2026.
Clemens has significantly narrowed the gap between his production against right-handed and left-handed pitchers. The results have been encouraging, but the underlying numbers may be even more promising. Improved contact quality and fewer swings and misses have helped him become a more complete hitter and a more valuable player for the Twins.
For his career, Clemens owns a .223/.269/.335 (.604) line against southpaws across 204 plate appearances. He had managed only four home runs while striking out 47 times and drawing just nine walks. His overall OPS against lefties sat more than 110 points below what he produced against right-handed pitching.
Those numbers painted a familiar picture. Left-handed hitters often struggle against same-side pitching, and Clemens appeared destined to remain a platoon option.
This season has told a different story. In 54 plate appearances against lefties during 2026, Clemens is hitting .240/.283/.400 (.683) with four extra-base hits. Just as encouraging is his improved plate discipline. His .400 slugging percentage against lefties would be a career-high. He's struck out in only 17% of his PAs, a dramatic improvement from the swing-and-miss tendencies that plagued him earlier in his career.
So what's changed?
The answer starts with contact quality. Clemens currently ranks eighth in Major League Baseball in the percentage of balls in play classified as "Perfect Contact." Few hitters have been as efficient at centering the baseball on the barrel. That ability helps explain why the additional bat speed he added last spring has translated into improved offensive production.
In 2024, his bat speed was at 70.5 mph, which would have ranked in baseball’s lower half if he had enough plate appearances to qualify. In 2025, he improved to 72.2 mph, ranking exactly at MLB’s midpoint, before decreasing a little this season to 71.8 mph. While a boost of 1.3 mph compared to 2024 might not seem like that much, it has made a significant difference for Clemens.
The gains are especially noticeable when comparing his performance against left-handed pitching to previous seasons. Last year, opposing lefties consistently attacked him low and inside. Those pitches generated frequent whiffs, and Clemens struggled to get the barrel to the baseball. Even when he made contact, it often lacked authority.
This season, that weakness has become far less pronounced. He is missing those pitches significantly less often, particularly in the lower part of the strike zone. Rather than swinging through low-and-inside offerings, Clemens is making more competitive contact and avoiding the empty swings that previously put him behind in counts.
The improvement shows up in his run value profile as well. A season ago, his heat maps against left-handed pitching were filled with negative-value zones. Nearly every area of the strike zone represented a weakness that pitchers could exploit. The results this year still show some negative values, but the overall picture is much more encouraging.
The largest improvements have come on pitches low and inside, as well as offerings up and away. Those areas once represented some of his biggest vulnerabilities. Now they are no longer automatic outs for opposing pitchers.
That doesn't mean Clemens has suddenly become a dominant hitter against left-handed pitching. The sample size remains relatively small, and 54 plate appearances are far from enough to declare the issue solved. Still, the underlying indicators suggest that something real may be happening.
“[I’m] trying to make some good swing decisions and make sure I’m swinging at good pitches,” Clemens said after Tuesday’s game, where he hit his seventh homer in 19 games. “Trying to stay within myself. I think sometimes I get too big, and that’s when I’ll swing and miss or foul one off or hit it in the air or whatever. But just trying to stay consistent and go day by day.”
The improved contact rates, reduced swing-and-miss tendencies, and elite "Perfect Contact" numbers all point toward a hitter making meaningful adjustments. Even if some regression is inevitable, Clemens has narrowed the gap between his production against lefties and righties in a way he never has before.
For a player who arrived in Minnesota as an emergency acquisition for cash considerations, that's another reminder that Clemens keeps finding ways to exceed expectations.
What has stood out about Clemens this season? Can he build off these improvements? Leave a comment and start the discussion.







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