Skip to content

How did Yandy Diaz turn into one of MLB’s best hitters? By finding enough security with the Rays to let his power play

The Tampa Bay Rays are not sneaking up on anyone. Not anymore. Between a 13-game winning streak to start the season, their stature atop baseball’s best division and 22-year-old Wander Franco’s affirmation that he’s a superstar-in-the-making and an MVP candidate right now, the Rays have shed their nerdy Clark Kent glasses — or at least added a cape.

Out in front, leading with a cartoon hero’s thundering steps and well-defined pectoral muscles, is Yandy Diaz. The 31-year-old Cuban infielder bats leadoff every night in Kevin Cash’s lineup, and right now, he’s the best hitter on the team. By OPS+, the park-adjusted measure of offensive production, Diaz ranks fifth in MLB.

The difference between the solid contributor Diaz has been for years and his keeping company with the likes of Aaron Judge and Yordan Alvarez this season has come in the power department. Long a master of getting on base, Diaz is now also running a career-best .539 slugging percentage. Having crushed 12 homers already in 2023, he will almost certainly eclipse his personal best (14 homers in 2019) before the All-Star break.

The long wish-casted development — for the man whose appearance inspires muscle emojis to add them to his stat line — is a product not of Diaz changing who he is as a hitter but of gaining the security to take some chances.

Getting on base to secure a future

The first impression of Diaz often swings more towards “Holy biceps, Batman” than an appreciation for his superlative baseball skill. Back when Diaz originally surfaced in Cleveland’s organization, the internet’s favorite photo of him wasn’t on the field. It was in the gym.

He was, in essence, baseball’s DK Metcalf. But that sort of visible physical potential, which is far from a direct line to success in football, tells you even less about a player’s future in baseball. (For the record, though, Diaz said he successfully bench-pressed one rep at 400 pounds this offseason.)

As Diaz broke into the majors, he provided an almost flippant commentary on the sport. In the first 88 games of his career, split across 2017 and ’18, he managed one home run, while his unimposing, 5-foot-9 teammate José Ramirez bashed 68 by learning to lift and pull the ball like clockwork.

After Diaz landed with the Rays in a three-team trade ahead of 2019, Tampa Bay hitting coach Chad Mottola was initially curious whether Diaz’s shredded upper body afforded him the flexibility to get to all the pitches he needed to hit. The answer to that was yes, but Mottola found that Diaz took the most pride in maintaining his razor-sharp eye at the plate.

Since joining the Rays, Diaz has the 10th-lowest chase rate in baseball, swinging at only 19% of balls outside the strike zone. Between 2019 and 2022, he hit only 38 homers but walked nearly as much as he struck out and logged a .374 on-base percentage that ranked among the top 15 in baseball over that span. That level of plate discipline — which puts Diaz in the realm of Juan Soto, Mike Trout and Brandon Nimmo — combined with his ability to put the bat on the ball gave Diaz a rock-solid baseline that was in many ways more precious than a home run power in today’s MLB. As long as he maintained that, he would be a big-leaguer.

“I think I’ve always been a contact hitter rather than a power hitter,” Diaz told Yahoo Sports in Spanish through Rays communications manager Elvis Martinez, “even though the power is there.”

The drumbeat of calls for him to add power quieted as Diaz established himself as a productive player, but they never went away. Invigorated by Statcast metrics that showed he did indeed post top-of-the-charts maximum exit velocities, fans, analysts and teammates wondered what it would look like if Diaz adjusted his launch angles, if he bought into the mantra of “elevate and celebrate.”

“Because of the strength I have physically, naturally, they didn’t make fun of me,” Diaz said, “but they were like, ‘Swing, swing, swing so the ball will go [out] ’cause you’re so strong.'”

This offseason, Diaz reached a deal with the Rays on a three-year, $24 million guaranteed contract that took him off the year-to-year arbitration schedule. It bought out one would-be free-agent season and gives the Rays a club option for 2026. And with the future more secure, Mottola found that Diaz was open to trying more things outside his comfort zone.

“Being comfortable with what he was good at and just staying within that box is something where he knew he was going to make a lot of money,” Mottola said. “Now that the contract came, it was, ‘OK, let’s explore where your ceiling is. Let’s make some mistakes and see if we can get more power.'”

How Diaz is tapping into his strength

The way Diaz tells it, his uptick in home run power is about pitch selection — a remarkable claim for someone who was already one of baseball’s choosiest hitters. But it’s not just about swinging at strikes and laying off balls. It’s also about recognizing the moments when the game allows for a bolder move.

For a hitter, that’s when he has forced the pitcher into throwing a strike.

“We’re just trying to encourage him to take more shots in advantage counts,” Mottola said, adding that the opportunistic approach has been a focus across the team.

That’s why, if you go looking for visual evidence of Diaz’s changes, you probably won’t find much. For all the mid-2010s chatter about swing changes, the best way to achieve power has proven to be more about bat speed and timing. Connecting with the ball earlier in its flight, in front of the plate instead of over top of it, leads to more fly ball contact and more home runs.

But as Eno Sarris recently explained in detail at The Athletic, that inherently means starting to swing earlier, which cuts down on the already microscopic amount of time hitters have to determine whether the incoming pitch is a good one.

That means Diaz, who builds his game off his expertise in that arena, has to push himself to get just a touch reckless, in a calculated way, in game situations in which he is likely to get a pitch he can drive.

“It’s actually led to some decisions he hasn’t liked and to expanding the zone at times, probably a total of 10 times on the season,” Mottola said. “But we keep giving him the message that those are worth what you’re doing.”

So when Diaz talks about pitch selection, it’s about choosing when to start his forward motion a bit sooner, when to throw a little caution to the wind, when to unleash the power stored in his impressive frame.

“I don’t like to hit a lot of pop-ups,” Diaz said, maintaining a focus on the bad outcomes he works so hard to avoid, “so when I hit a homer, it just comes from selecting better pitches and swinging harder.”

Hannah Keyser contributed reporting to this story.