Chandler Simpson is turning the clock back — and MLB can’t keep up
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Chandler Simpson is turning the clock back — and MLB can’t keep up originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
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The early part of the 2026 season has produced plenty of power numbers across baseball, but Chandler Simpson is proving a different formula still works. Through just over two weeks, the Tampa Bay Rays outfielder isn’t just off to a hot start, he’s redefining what dominance can look like without hitting the ball over the fence.
According to MLB’s official post, Simpson’s numbers jump off the page:
.407 batting average (1st in AL)
24 hits (1st in AL)
7 stolen bases (tied for 3rd in AL)
.910 OPS
It’s not just production,. it’s separation. In an era dominated by launch angle and exit velocity, Simpson is leading the American League by doing almost none of that.
Chandler Simpson in 2026:
— MLB (@MLB) April 15, 2026
🔵 .407 AVG (1st in AL)
🟡 24 H (1st in AL)
🔵 7 SB (T-3rd in AL)
🟡 .910 OPS pic.twitter.com/8RGxcIgfFb
Contact, speed, and pressure: Simpson’s blueprint is working
Simpson’s rise isn’t random. It’s the continuation of a profile he’s carried since college and the minors — elite bat-to-ball skills paired with game-breaking speed.
Before reaching the majors, Simpson led Division I with a .434 batting average at Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets baseball and routinely posted batting averages above .350 in the minors. More importantly, he paired that contact ability with historic stolen base totals, including 104 steals in 2024 — a number rarely seen in modern professional baseball.
That same identity is translating immediately at the MLB level.
He’s putting the ball in play, forcing defenders to rush, and turning routine singles into chaos. Every at-bat becomes pressure. Every time he reaches base, the defense is on edge.
More: JJ Wetherholt records first multi-home run game as Cardinals rookie shows power
Why this start matters more than just early stats
Hot starts happen every April. What makes Simpson’s surge different is how sustainable the underlying skills appear.
A .407 average will come down — that’s inevitable. But his profile isn’t built on luck or streaky power. It’s built on:
Elite contact rate
Top-tier sprint speed
Consistent approach at the plate
Those traits tend to stabilize better over time than power spikes.
It also helps that Simpson already showed he can maintain long stretches of production. As a rookie in 2025, he set a Rays record with an 18-game hitting streak, signaling that this isn’t a one-week breakout.
Rays may have found a throwback star in a modern game
For a Rays team that thrives on efficiency and marginal advantages, Simpson is a perfect fit. He doesn’t need to slug to impact the game. He creates runs by existing on the basepaths.
In many ways, he represents a throwback style — the kind of player built on contact, speed, and instincts — but with modern consistency.
If this continues, Simpson won’t just be one of the best early stories of 2026. He could become one of the most disruptive offensive players in baseball, simply by doing things most of the league has moved away from.
And right now, no one in the American League is doing it better.
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