#7
of 20
Jeff Kent
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Jeff Kent earns this placement because his bat at second base created real separation in his era. This ranking prioritizes offense over defensive reputation, and his offensive résumé demands serious weight. At his peak, he wasn’t merely good for the position — he was a legitimate lineup driver. The combination of power, on-base skill, and sustained run creation defines his case here. He produced in competitive environments and did not rely on a single fluke season to build value. Longevity matters in historical rankings, and his accumulation strengthens the argument. When comparing him to adjacent names, the difference comes down to peak impact versus sustained dominance, and he lands exactly where that balance dictates. Second base has historically been light on elite sluggers, which amplifies the value of any player who could hit like a corner bat from the position. His offensive production translated across seasons rather than flashing briefly and disappearing. In an offense-weighted, modern-leaning framework, he holds up because the bat would still profile in strong lineups today. This is not nostalgia or reputation — it’s measurable run creation and positional advantage. That’s why he sits at this rank among the top 30 second basemen of all time.
Career Numbers
.290
AVG
2,461
Hits
377
HR
1,518
RBI
94
SB
.855
OPS