Nolan Arenado Trade to Astros Offers Solution for Third Base
Arenado, 33, is already thinking about the future because he is convinced that with an offseason of work, he can get back to the superstar production he featured over the first 10 seasons of a career that will likely end up in the Hall of Fame. His numbers declined in a dismal 2023 for the Cardinals and cratered from a power perspective in ’24. His 16 homers are his fewest in 11 years, when he was a Rockies rookie.
Rather than being discouraged, Arenado’s eyes light up when he discusses the work it’s going to take for him to again be a consistent threat to pull fastballs into the left-field seats.
“I played over 150 games, I didn’t have the back issues I did last year and there’s no doubt my body can hold up,” Arenado told MLB.com prior to the Cardinals’ 6-5 loss to the Giants on Saturday. “I know that I can work on my swing all I want, but for me to be where I need to be, I’m going to have to get back in the gym and work differently. Work with my training and do things that I’ve done in the past, but also add stuff that’s going to allow me to sustain feeling fresh and explosive.”
Explosiveness was an issue all season for Arenado, whose first homer didn’t come until the 14th game of the season; the second didn’t flash until the third game of May. And he’s been homerless over his last 14 games of another season that will fall short of the playoffs. Homers on May 28 in Cincinnati and May 31 in Philadelphia were his only ones in consecutive games, and they came following an off-day for the Cards and a personal day off. Not only is his .394 slugging percentage a career low, but it’s 65 points off last season’s, when he failed to hit 30 homers for the first time in seven full seasons.
The eight-time All-Star, whose OPS+ dipped to 101 and 19 points lower than his career average, knows he is paid to drive the ball for a Cardinals team that has slumped badly with runners in scoring position. To his credit, Arenado has been quick to accept blame for the failings of 2024 and knows the hopes for ’25 rest on his revival
Leave a Reply