Billy Hamilton

Billy Hamilton

34-Year-Old OutfielderOF
 Free Agent  
Free Agent
2024 Fantasy Outlook
There was no outlook written for Billy Hamilton in 2024. Check out the latest news below for more on his current fantasy value.
$Signed a minor-league contract with the Rays in August of 2023.
Latches on with Rays
OFTampa Bay Rays  
August 30, 2023
Hamilton signed a minor-league contract with the Rays on Wednesday, Marc Topkin of the Tampa Bay Times reports.
ANALYSIS
Hamilton was cut loose by the White Sox a week ago, but a right shoulder injury has kept him out of action in Triple-A since July 7. When healthy, the 32-year-old outfielder hasn't been very impressive with a .147/.261/.253 slash line across 89 plate appearances. Hamilton will be an option to fill a pinch-running role down the stretch.
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Batting Stats
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Left/Right Batting Splits
Since 2022
 
 
+85%
OPS vs RHP
2024
No Stats
2023
No Stats
2022
 
 
+114%
OPS vs RHP
OPS PA R HR RBI SB AVG OBP SLG
Since 2022vs Left .111 10 5 0 0 2 .000 .111 .000
Since 2022vs Right .205 15 10 0 0 10 .071 .133 .071
2024vs Left 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
2024vs Right 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
2023vs Left .000 0 2 0 0 0 .000 .000 .000
2023vs Right .000 2 0 0 0 2 .000 .000 .000
2022vs Left .111 10 3 0 0 2 .000 .111 .000
2022vs Right .237 13 10 0 0 8 .083 .154 .083
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Home/Away Batting Splits
Since 2022
 
 
+338%
OPS at Home
2024
No Stats
2023
No Stats
2022
 
 
+454%
OPS at Home
OPS PA R HR RBI SB AVG OBP SLG
Since 2022Home .311 10 9 0 0 9 .111 .200 .111
Since 2022Away .071 15 6 0 0 3 .000 .071 .000
2024Home 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
2024Away 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
2023Home .000 2 2 0 0 2 .000 .000 .000
2023Away 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
2022Home .393 8 7 0 0 7 .143 .250 .143
2022Away .071 15 6 0 0 3 .000 .071 .000
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Recent RotoWire Articles Featuring Billy Hamilton See More
Collette Calls: Value in the Scrap Heap for 2024
358 days ago
Jason Collette highlights 10 hitters and 10 pitchers who have been nearly forgotten about in the first handful of 2024 drafts, including shortstop Tim Anderson.
Collette Calls: The Homestretch
August 8, 2022
Jason Collette examines everything that's possible down the stretch by taking a look at some of the best stretch runs of the past few seasons.
AL FAAB Factor: Waiver Pickups of the Week
August 7, 2022
Erik Siegrist checks out the post-trade deadline free agent pool as Baltimore's Felix Bautista is just one of a few new potential closers in the American League.
National League Trade Deadline Reactions
August 6, 2022
Juan Soto was the headline trade in the National League, but Jeff Erickson breaks down all of the NL trades at the deadline.
NL FAAB Factor: Waiver Pickups of the Week
July 3, 2022
Jan Levine has identified a few relief pitching options, including one leading the way in Atlanta.
Past Fantasy Outlooks
2023
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2013
2012
2011
If you're playing in a very deep league where you're desperate for steals and Hamilton has just earned a call-up, he's not a bad option for a temporary boost. For anyone else, it's likely not worth your time even reading to the end of this paragraph. When he plays, he's going to run, as seen from the fact that he stole 10 bases while coming to the plate just 23 times last season. But there's no reason to draft a player for whom 23 plate appearances is a reasonable projection, and there's no reason to alter that projection by much. Across the last four seasons, Hamilton has hit just .206/.263/.289 with three homers. He struck out 12 times last season while grabbing just one hit at the big-league level, and he hit a miserable .188/.264/.229 across 25 Triple-A contests. He's a true specialist in the Terrance Gore mold at this point in his career and, like Gore, may not even crack a big-league roster until rosters expand in September.
Billy Hamilton. His name in Billy Hamilton. And there is a million things he hasn't done, but just you wait, just you wait. Actually, don't wait because the most important thing he hasn't done is hit. Hamilton's offensive game has been in decline for some time, but 2020 was the bottom of the barrel as he posted a 3 wRC+ with a .125/.171/.219 slash line. His entire season was essentially the final game of the season when he walked, stole two bases and hit a home run, winning someone some DFS cash that day. Otherwise, he is the emptiest of steals who will hang around as a defensive replacement and pinch-running specialist. He's closer to Terrance Gore than Jarrod Dyson or Rajai Davis, and is only rosterable in the deepest of single-league formats which utilize a bench. You must have the surplus on your roster to carry this anemic bat.
Unsurprisingly, Hamilton struggled to hit for average throughout the 2019 campaign, and his stolen base total took a hit as a result. He slashed .218/.289/.275 with 15 RBI and 22 stolen bases, splitting time with the Royals and Braves. Kansas City DFA'd Hamilton in mid-August, and he managed to improve at the dish over his last 26 games of the season after being scooped up by Atlanta, hitting .268 with four stolen bases. Strikeouts continue to be a concern for the speedster, as he ended the year with a 24.6 K%. His 50 wRC+ was also the worst of his seven-year big-league career. Hamilton is a talented athlete, but it's been a struggle for teams to keep his bat in the lineup, even with his unmatched speed on the basepaths. He's likely headed for a bench role in 2020.
Last season was a poor one on the whole for pure stolen-base artists, highlighted by disappointing seasons from Hamilton and Dee Gordon. When you pay full price for someone like Hamilton, you need him to get 50-plus steals to be worth the cost, as he's already going to cost you standings points in homers and RBI, and likely won't help you in batting average. When he hits just .236 and steals 34 bags, it's an unmitigated disaster for your team. Hamilton dropped to the bottom of the order early in the season and ended up there for 111 games, as opposed to just 31 games in the leadoff spot. After being non-tendered by the Reds, Hamilton signed with the Royals -- a perfect destination for someone who otherwise might have been ticketed for a bench role. He should have regular playing time and the green light to run. While there's little reason to think he will suddenly start hitting, he could find himself leading off with Ned Yost pulling the strings.
Last year Hamilton gave back most of the small gains he made at the plate in 2016. After hitting .260 in 2016, that mark dropped back to .247 in 2017, his walk rate dropped from 7.8 percent to 7.0 percent, and he slugged a mere .335, down from .345 the previous year. He still is a major contributor in stolen bases, notching 59 last season while spending all but four games in the leadoff spot. With Jesse Winker knocking on the door, there's a chance that the Reds might start playing Hamilton less frequently, moving him down in the order or maybe even trading him to another organization. Should any of these options come into play, his stolen-base opportunities will decline, stripping Hamilton of his one true offensive contribution. If you draft Hamilton, you may not get the full complement of bags that you expected, all while getting substandard production in the other four categories.
Hamilton pushed his OBP to a career-best .321 last season -- a 47-point jump from 2015 -- and that improvement was fueled by his second straight season with an increased walk rate (7.8 percent). He also maintained his improved efficiency as a basestealer, going 58-for-66 on the heels of his 57-for-65 mark in 2015. Finally, Hamilton hit the ball on the ground more frequently last season (47.7 percent groundball rate), which allowed him to use his speed to push his batting average to a career-high .260. Health is a major issue for Hamilton, as he returned from offseason shoulder surgery to begin 2016, and proceeded to lose time due to a concussion, thumb contusion, minor knee injury and an oblique injury that eventually shut him down for good. Hamilton declared himself to be healthy in December, and the skills growth he showed last season points to a potential spike in the stolen-base department if he can avoid the injury bug.
Hamilton improved on the basepaths but regressed at the plate in 2015, and it's that latter quality that has us worried about his long-term prospects. But first, the good news: he was 57-for-65 in stolen base attempts in 114 games after getting caught 23 times in 2014. Those gains were canceled out by his performance at the plate, as his ISO dropped to a paltry .063 in 2015, giving opposing pitchers little reason to avoid challenging him in the strike zone. Thus, it's going to be extraordinarily difficult for him to raise his walk rate above 10 percent and make him an acceptable leadoff hitter. He spent more time batting ninth (226 plate appearances) than leading off (208) in 2015, and that's unlikely to change in the future. His season ended early with a shoulder injury, and that same injury has kept him out of spring games early in camp, so his status for Opening Day is in question.
If the season ended on August 31, Hamilton's rookie season would have been a rousing success. He hit for more power than expected and was hitting .267/.302/.382 with 54 stolen bases. But he collapsed in September, hitting just .123 with 19 strikeouts in 65 at-bats and had just two more stolen bases before missing the final four games with a concussion. He fell short of his projected stolen base total in part because of that September slump, but also because he was caught a whopping 23 times on the season (seven of those coming on pickoffs). As he plays more at the major league level, his success rate should improve as he learns how to read opposing pitchers better, but he also has to get on base more frequently, having walked a mere 34 times in 611 plate appearances in 2014. While we don't ever expect him to be Tim Raines, we do suspect there will be some improvement in 2015, both in his ability to get on base and being able to run more without getting caught.
True speed demons like Hamilton have among the biggest fantasy swing potentials among all players. Is he going to be like Vince Coleman and dominate a category, or is he going to be more like Dee Gordon and lose playing time and struggle to keep a major league job? Much of Hamilton's value rests in the format of your league. If you play in the NFBC or any other no-trade league, Hamilton is especially tricky to value. A full season of him in the lineup gets you half of the way there in the stolen-base category, if not more. But if you draft him, chances are you are avoiding other elite stolen base guys, as a surplus in the category gets you nowhere, plus you have to draft power-heavy hitters to make up for Hamilton's shortfall there. If Hamilton scuffles and subsequently gets demoted, your team goes from likely winning the category to falling to the back of the pack. Hamilton struck out nearly 20 percent of the time at Triple-A without being a power threat (.343 slugging percentage) - there's a good chance that strikeout rate hits 25 percent or higher at the major league level, which will make it difficult for him to hit for a decent batting average. Be very cautious with Hamilton - the burn potential is high.
After Hamilton set the minor league single-season record for stolen bases in 2012, the Reds resisted the urge to call him up for the September stretch run, instead preserving their ability to keep him off the 40-man roster for another offseason. And in fairness, Hamilton probably isn't ready to face major league pitching, nor was there a place for him to play. Those things might change by midseason 2013, especially if the Reds don't reach outside the organization to find a leadoff hitter. Hamilton did more than steal bases last year - he also learned to master the strike zone, improving his walk rate as he climbed the organizational ladder. He still has no palpable power, so that ability to get on-base will need to translate at Triple-A and then the majors to allow him to cash in on his world-class speed. He played center field in the Arizona Fall League, so that could be his ultimate position once he hits the majors, especially if the Reds are locked in on Zack Cozart at shortstop.
Two numbers stand out when looking at Hamilton's 2011 stats: 103 and 39. That's 103 stolen bases (in 123 attempts) and 39 errors. Hamilton stayed at shortstop all season after playing much of 2010 at second base, so growing pains had to be expected. But while Hamilton has great range, he hasn't received good marks for his arm or his hands, so he might not stick at shortstop. He's a very raw prospect, so even with an organizational problem at shortstop, Hamilton is not a candidate for a quick promotion. However, it's worth noting that he really came on strong at Low-A Dayton after hitting .195 through May - he just needs plenty of time at each level to develop.
Hamilton was drafted out of a Mississippi high school in the second round of the 2009 draft and started to hit his stride last year in the Pioneer League, where he hit .318/.383/.456 with a whopping 48 stolen bases in 69 games. So far he hasn't hit for power, and this production came at a pretty low level, but Hamilton's raw tools should put him on your long-term radar.
More Fantasy News
Cut loose by Pale Hose
OFFree Agent  
August 23, 2023
The White Sox released Hamilton on Tuesday.
ANALYSIS
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Outrighted to Triple-A
OFChicago White Sox  
June 15, 2023
The White Sox sent Hamilton (hamstring) outright to Triple-A Charlotte on Thursday, Daryl Van Schouwen of the Chicago Sun-Times reports.
ANALYSIS
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Starting rehab assignment
OFChicago White Sox  
Hamstring
June 6, 2023
Hamilton (hamstring) has been sent to Triple-A Charlotte to begin a rehab assignment, Vinnie Duber of AllCHGO.com reports.
ANALYSIS
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Close to starting rehab assignment
OFChicago White Sox  
Hamstring
May 30, 2023
White Sox general manager Rick Hahn said Monday that Hamilton (hamstring) could begin a minor-league rehab assignment in a week to 10 days, Jay Cohen of the Associated Press reports.
ANALYSIS
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Placed on injured list
OFChicago White Sox  
Hamstring
May 10, 2023
The White Sox placed Hamilton on the 15-day injured list Wednesday with a left hamstring strain, Daryl Van Schouwen of the Chicago Sun-Times reports.
ANALYSIS
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Latest Fantasy Rumors
Toronto has interest
OFFree Agent  
August 20, 2022
The Blue Jays are looking at Hamilton for outfield depth, reports Shi Davidi of Sportsnet.ca.
ANALYSIS
Toronto lost Bradley Zimmer on waivers to the Phillies on Thursday and is considering signing Hamilton to fill the void. The 31-year-old Hamilton was outrighted by the Marlins last Friday and elected free agency rather than play for Triple-A Jacksonville. The Blue Jays have a wealth of outfielders and it seems unlikely that they would sign Hamilton to anything other than a minor-league pact. The speedster was 1-for-13 with eight strikeouts and seven stolen bases in 20 games for Miami, primarily appearing as a pinch runner or defensive replacement.
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