Suddenly A Bryson Stott-Edmundo Sosa Platoon Makes Sense
At the beginning of the season, the idea of platooning Bryson Stott with anyone would have driven me up a wall. Bryson Stott seemingly earned the chance to play every day last year. Plus his righty-lefty splits are not even severe. I think I may be ready to cross over to the dark side though.
After watching how much Stott is struggling at the plate, vs both lefties and righties, I am completely okay with Stott and Edmundo Sosa splitting time.
Bryson Stott Struggling At The Plate
Year 3 has been a slog for Bryson Stott. I wrote about it a few weeks back, but he has been no better since I wrote that.
Related: It Is Time To Talk About Bryson Stott’s Struggles At The Plate
His slash line now sits at .235/.323/.346/.699. He was okay against the Dodgers, but then he went hitless against the A’s and Pirates. He is not the only Phillies player to struggle in those 2 series, but he has also struggled all season long so he also does not get the grace other guys who struggle will get.
Stott had a golden opportunity to step up and earn himself a true everyday role. While Trea Turner was out, he pretty much played every day. Other guys on the team, like Nick Castellanos, stepped up. Stott did not. Now that everyone is healthy finally, it is costing him playing time.
Stott is routinely sitting against lefties. He missed 2 games against the Pirates because they had a lefty starter on the mound.
The thing is, I can’t blame Thomson for it anymore. I have been staunchly against it for Stott’s entire time with the Phillies. But with how poorly he is performing at the plate, I understand it. Especially when you have someone on the bench behind him who has undeniably been the better player this season.
Edmundo Sosa Having A Career Year
If the option behind Stott was Whit Merrifield, I would say just let Stott play through it. It is not worth replacing Stott with a guy who is even worse than him. But the guy behind Stott is actually having a great year.
There is a case to be made that Edmundo Sosa is among the 5 best hitters on the team this year. It is a small sample size, but his slash line is .277/.335/.458/.793. For guys who have played at least 50 games, that is the 4th best AVG, 6th best OBP, 4th best SLG, and 5th best OPS. If you care about WAR, he has the 5th best WAR on the team among hitters.
I think some of that is skewed by not playing every day. If he had played 91 games like Stott, those numbers might go down a bit as he gets overexposed. But in his role of filling in here and there, he has been excellent.
Sosa has only 59 games to Stott’s 91, so his counting stats are a bit behind. But if you project Sosa’s number over 91 games, we would have 76 hits to Stott’s 72, 14 doubles to Stott’s 9, and 8 HRs to Stott’s 6. The only stat Stott runs away with is steals, where he has 22 to a projected 8 for Sosa.
Even on defense, which Stott is still excellent at, Sosa is not that far behind. Sosa has elite range, perhaps better range than Stott does. Stott has the better glove overall, but it’s not like you are replacing Stott with a liability on defense, Sosa is a tremendous fielder in his own right. Especially at 2nd where the biggest weakness in his fielding, his arm, is less exposed.
So What Should The Phillies Do?
I am not saying to bench Stott. I still don’t think Sosa is a true everyday player. But in terms of those two splitting time, I am on board with that. I am shocked that I am saying that. Again, I complained as much as anyone when Thomson platooned Stott in the past. But Stott’s poor play does not merit an everyday role.
For now, splitting time between those 2 is the right move. If Stott gets back to what he was last season, then maybe that will change.