Who is baseball’s most irreplaceable player in 2022? This does not mean the most valuable player, and in terms of the playoff hunt, the hardest player to replace is not necessarily the best one. Some teams are either cruising to the playoffs or effectively eliminated in practice, if not in purely mathematical terms (hello, Tigers and Royals). To answer this question, I ran the updated ZiPS projected standings after Tuesday’s games and then re-ran the entire simulation with the assumption that each relevant player missed the rest of the season due to injury.
For the NL, ZiPS estimates that nine teams remain plausible playoff contenders, which I define as having a 5% chance of making MLB’s new 12-team playoff format. The exceptions are the Diamondbacks, Cubs, Rockies, Pirates, Nationals, and Reds. Seven of the nine remaining teams are above 50%, with only the Phillies (27%) and Marlins (8%) between a coin flip and that arbitrarily chosen 5% threshold. Let’s jump right into the NL’s top 10 list.
Burnes was always going to make this top 10 list, but Brandon Woodruff‘s ankle injury and Freddy Peralta‘s more significant shoulder injury push him into the top slot. The hit may even be more severe than the -11% listed here; ZiPS puts a lot of stock in Aaron Ashby‘s presence, but any kind of forearm pain for a pitcher should lead fans to look sadly into the middle distance. Nobody on the Brewers comes even close to Burnes in playoff impact, so a nasty surprise here ought to make them very aggressive about picking up a pitcher. After all, we’re already into the Chi Chi González portion of the depth chart.
Ronald Acuña Jr. has a better projection than Olson, but ZiPS sees Atlanta’s options at first base to be relatively bleak. That was one of the team’s biggest questions back when Freddie Freeman was a free agent, and though Atlanta has patched together DH somewhat, all bets are off with a serious Olson injury. In the event he goes down, I expect it’s more likely that Austin Riley plays first with Phil Gosselin playing third than Adam Duvall or Eddie Rosario getting shifted to first, but since ZiPS is not a Gosselin-stanner, it thinks that’s just shuffling a hole around.
The Phillies have had a healthy rotation this year, with their front five making all but four of the starts this season. But it does not take a lot to test this team’s rotation depth, and ZiPS is extremely unenthused by the prospect of Bailey Falter or Cristopher Sánchez stepping in for the rest of the season. Noah Skirrow possibly having a breakout season does raise ZiPS ‘eyebrows a bit, but given his lack of real prospect status coming into the season, I doubt the Phillies would aggressively push him to the majors unless there was a superspreader event in the clubhouse.
The Padres have more than survived so far without the services of Tatis Jr., but that does not mean that’s an experiment they want to keep trying, and San Diego’s high playoff probability contains the assumption that he is most likely to return sometime around the All-Star break. Having Ha-Seong Kim as a spare option, at least when Manny Machado is healthy, is a good thing, but Tatis Jr. would have been the best-projected player in baseball entering 2022 if not for ZiPS being suspicious about his health.
Remember, the Phillies basically needed to sign Nick Castellanos spirit Kyle Schwarberbecause their outfield options were bleak, and this issue has not magically fixed itself since April. Any outfield injury likely leads to a lot more Matt Vierling, who is a lot closer to his 2022 line than last season’s small sample .324 / .364 / .479 line. ZiPS does not see Mickey Moniak as even a decent emergency plan, leaving Philadelphia’s best option being a trade for someone like Tommy Phamsomething complicated by the fact that the organization has had a lot of failures lately in player development.
ZiPS likes Jakob Junis, Sean Hjelleand Gregory Santos as replacements who are safely above replacement level. Matthew Boyd was just shut down for another month due to a flexor strain, but he remains at least a theoretical possibility in August and September. Despite this depth, ZiPS is a big fan of Webb, so it sees his loss as being the most significant one the Giants could face. Carlos Rodón isn’t far behind, just missing the top 10, but ZiPS already assigned a higher probability to losing him to injury than Webb. None of the team’s position players come even close to making this list, a testament to how well constructed this roster is to combat nearly every eventuality.
7. Ronald Acuña Jr., Atlanta Braves, -7.6%
Acuña Jr. ranks surprisingly low based on the simple fact that Drew Waters exists. More playing time for Duvall or Rosario would not be an ideal situation, but like last year, it would be enough to get by, though quite obviously not the desired scenario. The baseball gods better not do this with Tatis Jr. not having played this season and Juan Soto trapped on an extremely lousy team.
Like Tampa Bay, St. Louis rarely ranks highly in this exercise. But ZiPS has been much less excited about the team’s depth in 2021 and ’22 than in past seasons. Helping is that ZiPS still isn’t giving up on Paul DeJong and thinks a scenario in which Tommy Edman is at third and DeJong back as the shortstop is not really that frightening.
Nola appears here for the same reason that Wheeler does: Philadelphia’s rotation depth is basically a trade or an emoji shrug. The Phillies ought to be highly concerned that Nola only has a 2023 club option and there’s no flood of imminent pitching past Mick Abel. Losing him to free agency after 2023 would be a massive blow to the franchise.
10. Manny Machado, San Diego Padres, -7.0%
Machado leads the league in WAR, but the Padres have a decent playoff cushion, and Tatis Jr. simply projects as the superior player. I know “decent playoff cushion” is something that was written about the Padres last season, but their rotation depth has not been nearly as tested as it was last year, and Jake Arrieta is safely retired.
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