Leody Taveras is entering his fifth season with the Texas Rangers. Last season, Taveras had his best year as a Major Leaguer, hitting .266 with an OPS of .733 and 67 RBI at the bottom of the order. However, the start of 2024 hasn’t gone Leody’s way. Taveras started 2024 going 16 for 80 with six extra-base hits and 16 strikeouts.
“I think the first few weeks, as most hitters want to get out to a good start, he was trying to force the issue a lot with a lot of body and a lot of pull-side ground balls,“ Rangers hitting coach Tim Hyers said regarding Taveras’s first few weeks. “Recently, we’ve seen him use the whole field, stay on balls, and work on his swing and path to stay through the ball.”
A positive during that stretch was that Taveras’ chase rate was lower than usual. Therefore, according to Rangers’ offensive coordinator Donnie Ecker, the struggles to start the year were more about bat-to-ball than chasing out of the zone. “More movement [and Leody’s] ability to impact the baseball. We’ve seen it on the right trends [and] fully expect that to start to come back for him,“ Ecker told me.
In his fifth season, the full potential hasn’t quite been reached for Leody Taveras, with Evan Carter and Wyatt Langford in the big leagues, which may have put extra pressure to perform. “It’s human nature,“ Hyers told me when asked if that contributed to Taveras’s early struggles. “I think, first of all, he has high expectations for himself; all of these guys do. Competition and the number of good players in the organization all, to some degree, put pressure on themselves in that matter, and that could play a bit of a part in the start.“
Hyers mentioned that in Spring Training, he noticed that Leody wasn’t getting the results and could tell that Taveras was getting frustrated. Hyers felt like this added to the pressure, which carried over to begin the season.
Ecker told me that he felt Taveras wasn’t necessarily searching for results but agreed that Taveras views a high standard for himself. “This game is really hard in general, and players go through certain stretches. I think where the friction comes from for him is that his standard is so high for himself. He had glimpses like last year in the first half, where he rolled a .900 OPS for us for four months. He’s got a really high standard for himself [and] he’s working hard to get back to that.”