There wasn’t another free agent on this year’s market more polarizing than infielder Luis Arraez, who’s reportedly joining the Giants on a one-year, $12 million pact.
Is Arraez the best pure hitter in the game, one who evokes shades of Tony Gwynn? Is he propped up by high batting averages that distract from his litany of weaknesses? Or, is the truth somewhere in the middle?
Despite the lack of consensus, Arraez is objectively the only player in baseball with his specific set of skills. If nothing else, he makes for an absolutely fascinating player, one whose profile merits a deep dive.
The 28-year-old’s superpower is obvious: He makes contact more than anyone in the sport, and it’s not remotely close.
Arraez made his debut in 2019 which, somewhat serendipitously, was the same year that Hall of Famer Ichiro Suzuki played his final game. Since his first game, Arraez leads all qualified hitters with a contact rate of 93.8 percent. He’s led the majors in contact rate in each season over the last four seasons, peaking at 95.9 percent last year with the Padres.
With contact comes hits, and with hits comes batting average. Arraez owns a career .317 average, which is the highest among active players. This millenium, only Vladimir Guerrero Sr. (.318) and Barry Bonds (.322) have higher batting averages. Arraez, then, is a true throwback hitter in an era where batting averages have plummeted due to advancements in pitching.
Arraez also has a knack for delivering timely hits, owning a career .349 batting average and .837 OPS with runners in scoring position. That ability to hit in big moments isn’t insignificant for the Giants, which finished 17th in on-base percentage and 19th in batting average with runners in scoring position last season.
Given his sky-high contact rates, it should come as no surprise that Arraez is essentially allergic to striking out.
Since 2019, no qualified hitter has a lower strikeout rate than Arraez’s mark of 6.1 percent. In ’25, Arraez only struck out 21 times over 675 plate appearances, good for a career-low 3.1 percent strikeouts. The presence of Arraez and Jung Hoo Lee, another bat-to-ball savant, should provide stylistic variance to the Giants’ lineups.
With his elite bat-to-ball skills, high batting aveages and miniscuile strikeout rates, Arraez has nabbed two Silver Slugger, earned three All-Star appearances and won three batting titles (for three different teams). Throw in his career .777 OPS (115 OPS+) and $12 million feels like a bargain. But if Arraez’s strengths are easy to see, then so are his weaknesses.
Arraez seldom strikes out, but he also seldom walks (6.5 percent career walk rate). He sprays the ball all over the field, but he does not provide much pop (.413 career slugging percentage). With a 25th percentile sprint speed, Arraez won’t provide much value on the bases either.
Over the last two seasons, Arraez’s offensive production has been closer to average than excellent. After posting a 107 OPS+ in 2024, Arraez finished with a 99 OPS+ in ’25, his first season of being a below-average hitter by that metric.
Arraez’s underlying metrics paint a bleak story as well. Last season, Arraez posted career-lows in average exit velocity (86.1 mph), expected batting average (.287), expected slugging percentage (.363) and hard-hit rate (16.7 percent).
There’s also the defense to consider as well since Arraez will usurp Casey Schmitt as the team’s starting second baseman.
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Flanking Arraez at first base will likely be Rafael Devers, who is still learning the position after picking it up last season. From a defensive perspective, Arraez and Devers could be one of the worst right sides in baseball. That wouldn’t bode well in general, but it’s especially ominous given San Francisco’s pitching staff generates a ton of grounders. Ron Washington, the team’s new infield coach, will have his hands full.
So, what is Luis Arraez? To the Giants, he’s a difference maker.
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