#13
of 20
Nomar Garciaparra

Nomar Garciaparra

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Nomar’s peak is the late-90s offensive shortstop dream: huge average, huge slug, and real superstar separation. There were years where he wasn’t just the best shortstop hitter—he was one of the best hitters in baseball, period. A .357 season with 30+ homer power from short is the kind of thing that breaks positional expectations. He hit with authority and sprayed the ball in a way that made him hard to game-plan against. Injuries chopped the prime, but that doesn’t erase how bright and heavy the prime was. Offense-weighted rankings should reward players who hit at an MVP level at premium positions, and Nomar did that. He had multiple seasons where the bat alone carried a superstar profile. His issue isn’t quality—it’s quantity, because the elite window was shorter than the names above him. But if you’re comparing peaks, he can stare down almost anyone outside the top ten. He’s one of the cleanest examples of “peak matters” at shortstop. Give him more healthy seasons and he’s threatening the top ten. As is, he’s a top-15 bat at the position and deserves it.

Career Numbers

.313
AVG
1,747
Hits
229
HR
936
RBI
95
SB
.882
OPS