Buxton is also the best overall hitter, Correa insisted, and he could have cited traditional statistics: Through Friday, Buxton was tied for the major league lead in homers, with nine, while hitting .290. His combined on-base and slugging percentage was 1.109.
Instead, Correa mentioned Weighted Runs Created Plus, a metric that measures overall runs created, accounting for ballpark factors. Buxton leads in that category over the last two seasons, with 181, according to Fangraphs. He trails only Mike Trout and Juan Soto since 2020.
The 2022 M.L.B. Season
A season that was in doubt is suddenly in full gear.
- All the Right Moves: Nestor Cortes of the Yankees was struggling to make it in the majors before he leaned in on the oddities that made his repertoire work.
- Is it the baseball?: Mets batters are being hit by pitches at an alarming rate and a star pitcher for the team thinks a change in the baseballs is to blame.
- Musical Chairs: In a series of unexpected off-season moves, franchise icons for the Dodgers and the Braves swapped places — even though neither seemed to want to leave.
- Call Her Manager: Rachel Balkovec is the first woman to manage a team in affiliated baseball. Her players know who is in charge.
To find Buxton on those leaderboards, though, you have to adjust the thresholds for playing time. Since making his debut in 2015 — three years after the Twins drafted him second overall, just behind Correa — Buxton has missed time with injuries to his left thumb, groin, left great toe, left wrist, right wrist, left shoulder, right hip and left hand. He has also lost time to migraines and a concussion. He left Saturday’s win over Oakland with soreness in his hip.
When people call him injury-prone, Buxton said, he does not care. When they call him the best player in the world, it lands a little nicer but makes the same impact.
“That doesn’t matter to me, either,” Buxton said. “For me to do that, I’ve got to go out there and prove that. I know I haven’t played enough games, but I know I can be that, which is fun to me. That’s what keeps me on my toes — something’s always gonna happen. There’s that anxiousness. For me that’s a challenge, and I like challenges.”