With less than two months until the start of the regular season, we have been taking a look at the projected starters at each position. After ranking the starting American League third basemen, let’s move on to the National League.
As a subjective list, many of the players can almost be considered interchangeable as to where they are ranked. Projected lineups were taken from Fangraphs.
Nolan Arenado, Rockies
Arenado has been in the big leagues for seven years. He has seven Gold Gloves. The premier defensive third baseman isn’t too shabby at the plate either. He’s won four Silver Sluggers and hit .315 with a .962 OPS and 41 home runs in 2019. Arenado has finished no lower than eighth in NL MVP voting since 2015.
The fantasy community is undervaluing Nolan Arenado’s consistent dominance, as @almelchiorBB and I discuss in today’s Fantasy Baseball in 15. https://t.co/2JvHwomNQC
— Michael Beller (@MBeller) February 6, 2020
Eugenio Suárez, Reds
Suárez had a magnificent 2019 and finished 15th in NL MVP voting. The 28-year-old clobbered 49 homers, drove in 103 runs, and posted a .930 OPS. He can be a tad error-prone but is far from a liability manning the hot corner.
The Reds have Eugenio Suarez for six more years and I giggle every time I think about it
— Sean Ross Sapp of Fightful.com (@SeanRossSapp) February 4, 2020
Kris Bryant, Cubs
The 2016 NL MVP, Bryant also will likely again spend some time in the outfield as he has occasional struggles at third base. Offensively, he continues to shine as last year he hit .282 with a .903 OPS, 31 home runs, 35 doubles, and 108 runs.
🚨 HOT STOVE CHECK IN 🚨
— Joe Giglio (@JoeGiglioSports) February 7, 2020
-@JackFritzWIP on #BryantLent, how much to offer for Kris Bryant, what a trade would mean and who to watch for in spring training. https://t.co/iqw1ymH7zA
Manny Machado, Padres
In his first year with the Padres last season, Machado didn’t necessarily have the impact that his previous play provided. He still was solid though with 32 home runs and a .796 OPS (down from .905 in 2018). The two-time Gold Glove winner remains a plus in the field at third base (not as much when he moves to shortstop).
#PadresInDepth -- With Manny Machado entrenched at third, the #Padres depth chart at the position is short, but still solid in prospects: https://t.co/OUyzgmnuuD …
— Bill Center (@PadresCentral) February 6, 2020
Justin Turner, Dodgers
Still going strong at the age of 35, Turner tied a career-high with 27 home runs in 2019. He doesn’t strike out at a high rate and finished with an .881 OPS last year. Even as he advances in age, Turner has always been a reliable fielder who makes few errors.
Dodgers projected 2020 lineup (career BA in postseason):
— Paul Hembekides (@PaulHembo) February 5, 2020
Mookie Betts (.227)
Max Muncy (.217)
Justin Turner (.310)
Cody Bellinger (.178)
A.J. Pollock (.111)
Corey Seager (.203)
Gavin Lux (.222)
Will Smith (.077)
Jeff McNeil, Mets
All McNeil has done in his two big league seasons is get hit after hit. After hitting .329 in 225 at bats in 2018, he batted .318 (fourth in NL) in 510 at bats last year to go along with 23 homers and 38 doubles. He’ll likely spend time at second base and the outfield as well since only 17 of his 176 career starts have come at third.
On the plus side, Jeff McNeil is possibly the best third baseman in the National League East #LGM #LFGM https://t.co/7Ic341NGQu
— Rising Apple (@RisingAppleBlog) February 5, 2020
Eduardo Escobar, Diamondbacks
It was a career-year for the 31-year-old Escobar in 2019. He connected on 35 homers, drove in 118 runs (tied for fourth in the NL), and finished with an .831 OPS. He’s rarely embarrassed himself in the field during his career and made just seven errors last season.
Heading in Opposite Directions: Eduardo Escobar surged in 2019, while Whit Merrifield lost value. Are those trends likely to continue in 2020? https://t.co/wQkY0MPUQB @rotographs #Diamondbacks #Royals
— Al Melchior (@almelchiorBB) October 22, 2019
Jonathan Villar, Marlins
One of the rare players who still often looks to steal, Villar has swiped 160 bags over the last four seasons. He didn’t miss a game last year for the Orioles and had a career-best 24 homers to go along with 111 runs. He is expected to often play at third base, a position he has only started at 48 times in his career.
#Marlins new Infielder/Outfielder ? Jonathan Villar on where we may see him in the field in 2020. pic.twitter.com/S4W16v7zUd
— Craig Mish (@CraigMish) February 7, 2020
Scott Kingery, Phillies
After a subpar rookie season in 2018, Kingery improved in every aspect last year. The 25-year-old hit 19 homers and 34 doubles, stole 15 bases, and had a .788 OPS. He performed well wherever he was positioned in the field for Philadelphia, but he should mostly play third base in 2020.
Alec Bohm: 👋
— Joe Giglio (@JoeGiglioSports) February 6, 2020
Spencer Howard: 🚫
Scott Kingery: 😬
Here’s how much the Phillies should and shouldn’t offer the Cubs for Kris Bryant. https://t.co/3MT2g6n61S
Matt Carpenter, Cardinals
Can Carpenter return to the player who averaged about 4.2 WAR from 2013-18 according to Baseball-Reference (and finished ninth in NL MVP voting in 2018), or will he remain the one who had just 0.8 in 2019? It was a miserable season for the 34-year-old last season as he hit just .224 with 15 homers and walked less frequently than the elite level he had in previous years.
Mike Shildt: Matt Carpenter needs to create clarity about "what type of hitter he needs to be." #STLCards pic.twitter.com/yrR493aGa2
— MLB Network Radio on SiriusXM (@MLBNetworkRadio) February 7, 2020
Evan Longoria, Giants
Entering his 13th season, Longoria still remains strong in the field and did improve last year from the worst offensive year of his career in 2018. In 2019, he hit .254 with a .762 OPS and 20 homers. He has reached the 20 home run mark in 10 of his 12 seasons.
Evan Longoria does not sound happy with Astros 'cheaters'https://t.co/1HFZcbS4L6 pic.twitter.com/flhcEDRUQS
— KNBR (@KNBR) January 17, 2020
Asdrubal Cabrera, Nationals
The 34-year-old Cabrera turned it around after joining the Nationals in early August of last year. After posting just a .711 OPS with the Rangers in 368 plate appearances, he had a .969 OPS in 146 plate appearances with Washington. He doesn’t have a ton of range, but he rarely mishandles the routine plays.
Will #Nats top prospect Carter Kieboom win the starting third-base job over Asdrubal Cabrera? @zachsilver takes a look at the battle for the hot corner: https://t.co/dee9GuNDmT pic.twitter.com/2eZNymwEAz
— MLB Pipeline (@MLBPipeline) February 7, 2020
Brewers, Eric Sogard
If this list was just based on 2019, Sogard would be higher as he finished with a .290 average, 13 homers, and an .810 OPS. Coming into last year though, he had just 11 career home runs and a .623 OPS in 1,743 plate appearances. He’s mostly been utilized at second base, but Milwaukee already has Keston Hiura there.
The newest #Brewers on Tap is up at https://t.co/5QDUOP8R9J - I chat with @EricSogard and @AdrianHouser12 & recap @Brewers on Deck! pic.twitter.com/LnDgQEbZMQ
— Lane Grindle (@lanegrindle) January 31, 2020
Johan Camargo, Braves
While Camargo was a very good player in 2018 for Atlanta, the same can’t be said for last year. In 248 plate appearances, he hit just .233 with a .663 OPS. Still only 26 years old, the Braves surely have hope he can return to the reliable player he was in his first two seasons (2017-18).
Working through my #Braves Positional Preview Series on the Infield and found a wild stat.
— Grant McAuley (@grantmcauley) February 7, 2020
Johan Camargo had a .591 (!!!) BABIP during his two weeks in Gwinnett. I mean, he hit .483 in 64 plate appearances.
Colin Moran, Pirates
Moran is halfway decent at the plate, but defensive metrics rate him as arguably the worst at fielding his position. In 503 plate appearances last year, he hit .277 with 13 home runs and a .751 OPS.
There are two former Astros on the Pirates' roster. Both Joe Musgrove and Colin Moran said they had limited knowledge about the team's sign-stealing scheme.
— The Athletic Pittsburgh (@TheAthleticPGH) January 27, 2020
From @RobBiertempfel: https://t.co/iM4qqWU0Co