Eloy Jimenez

Eloy Jimenez

28-Year-Old DHDH
 Free Agent  
Free Agent
2025 Fantasy Outlook
Injuries were a problem again for Jimenez in 2024, as he made two trips to the injured list during the first half due to adductor and hamstring issues. Even more worrisome was that the 28-year-old didn't hit at all when on the field, easily setting career lows with a .626 OPS, 78 wRC+ and just six home runs in 98 games between the White Sox and Orioles. Jimenez did still make quality contact, ranking in the 90th percentile both in hard-hit rate and average exit velocity. Unfortunately, much of that contact was again on the ground, with Jimenez's 56.1 percent ground ball rate representing the fifth-highest mark in baseball among players with at least 300 plate appearances. The free agent is still young enough that a rebound is possible, but since 2021 he's averaging just 89 games and 12.5 homers per season. Read Past Outlooks
$Signed a six-year, $43 million contract extension with the White Sox in March of 2019. Traded to the Orioles in July of 2024. Contract includes $16.5 million team option ($3 million buyout) for 2025 and $18.5 million team option ($3 million buyout) for 2026. Club option declined in November of 2024.
O's decline option
DHFree Agent  
November 2, 2024
The Orioles declined Jimenez's $16.5 million club option for 2025 on Saturday, Andy Kostka of TheBaltimoreBanner.com reports.
ANALYSIS
This past season was Jimenez's worst at the plate in his six-year career, as he slashed just .238/.289/.336 over 324 plate appearances between the White Sox and Orioles. Because of his poor performance, it makes sense that Baltimore would rather pay the 27-year-old's $3 million buyout than give him $16.5 million to join the team's already-crowded lineup.
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Batting Stats
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2024
2023
2022
2021
2020
2019
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Batting Order Slot Breakdown
vs Right-Handed Pitchers
vs RHP
#1
#2
#3
#4
#5
#6
#7
#8
#9
2
7
23
15
8
2
vs Left-Handed Pitchers
vs LHP
#1
#2
#3
#4
#5
#6
#7
#8
#9
6
9
7
3
Left/Right Batting Splits
Since 2022
 
 
+7%
OPS vs RHP
2024
 
 
+14%
OPS vs RHP
2023
 
 
+3%
OPS vs RHP
2022
 
 
+2%
OPS vs RHP
OPS PA R HR RBI SB AVG OBP SLG
Since 2022vs Left .708 273 26 6 29 2 .265 .319 .390
Since 2022vs Right .757 892 89 34 112 1 .269 .321 .436
2024vs Left .569 94 4 0 3 2 .236 .277 .292
2024vs Right .647 255 21 6 20 1 .238 .294 .353
2023vs Left .739 98 11 3 15 0 .267 .316 .422
2023vs Right .762 391 39 15 49 0 .273 .317 .445
2022vs Left .842 81 11 3 11 0 .300 .370 .471
2022vs Right .863 246 29 13 43 0 .293 .354 .509
More Splits View More Split Stats
Home/Away Batting Splits
Since 2022
 
 
+9%
OPS at Home
2024
Even Split
2023
 
 
+6%
OPS at Home
2022
 
 
+17%
OPS at Home
OPS PA R HR RBI SB AVG OBP SLG
Since 2022Home .776 590 61 21 77 1 .280 .334 .442
Since 2022Away .714 575 54 19 64 2 .255 .306 .408
2024Home .625 160 12 2 9 1 .236 .294 .331
2024Away .627 189 13 4 14 2 .239 .286 .341
2023Home .777 266 27 10 38 0 .285 .327 .450
2023Away .735 223 23 8 26 0 .256 .305 .430
2022Home .925 164 22 9 30 0 .315 .384 .541
2022Away .790 163 18 7 24 0 .274 .331 .459
More Splits View More Split Stats
Stat Review
How does Eloy Jimenez compare to other hitters?
This section compares his stats with all batting seasons from the previous three seasons (minimum 400 plate appearances)*. The bar represents the player's percentile rank. For example, if the bar is halfway across, then the player falls into the 50th percentile for that stat and it would be considered average.

* Exit Velocity and Barrels/PA % are benchmarked against 2019 data (min 400 PA) and Hard Hit Rate is benchmarked against last season's data (min 400 PA). See here for more exit velocity/barrels stats plus an explanation of current limitations with that data set.
  • BB/K
    Walk to strikeout ratio
  • BB Rate
    The percentage of plate appearances resulting in a walk.
  • K Rate
    The percentage of plate appearances resulting in a strikeout.
  • BABIP
    Batting average on balls in play. Measures how many of a batter’s balls in play go for hits.
  • ISO
    Isolated Power. Slugging percentage minus batting average. A computation used to measure a batter's raw power.
  • AVG
    Batting average. Hits divided by at bats.
  • OBP
    On Base Percentage. A measure of how often a batters reaches base. Roughly equal to number of times on base divided by plate appearances.
  • SLG
    Slugging Percentage. A measure of the batting productivity of a hitter. It is calculated as total bases divided by at bats.
  • OPS
    On base plus slugging. THe sum of a batter's on-base percentage and slugging percentage.
  • wOBA
    Weighted on-base average. Measures a player's overall offensive contributions per plate appearance. wOBA combines all the different aspects of hitting into one metric, weighting each of them in proportion to their actual run value.
  • Exit Velocity
    The speed of the baseball as it comes off the bat, immediately after a batter makes contact.
  • Hard Hit Rate
    A measure of contact quality from Sports Info Solutions. This stat explains what percentage of batted balls were hit hard vs. medium or soft.
  • Barrels/PA
    The percentage of plate appearances where a batter had a batted ball classified as a Barrel. A Barrel is a batted ball with similar exit velocity and launch angle to past ones that led to a minimum .500 batting average and 1.500 slugging percentage.
  • Expected BA
    Expected Batting Average.
  • Expected SLG
    Expected Slugging Percentage.
  • Sprint Speed
    The speed of a runner from home to first, in feet per second.
  • Ground Ball %
    The percentage of balls put in play that are on the ground.
  • Line Drive %
    The percentage of balls put in play that are line drives.
  • Fly Ball %
    The percentage of balls put in play that are fly balls.
BB/K
0.31
 
BB Rate
6.3%
 
K Rate
20.1%
 
BABIP
.285
 
ISO
.099
 
AVG
.238
 
OBP
.289
 
SLG
.336
 
OPS
.626
 
wOBA
.279
 
Exit Velocity
92.0 mph
 
Hard Hit Rate
35.3%
 
Barrels/PA
5.7%
 
Expected BA
.248
 
Expected SLG
.382
 
Sprint Speed
21.5 ft/sec
 
Ground Ball %
56.1%
 
Line Drive %
15.3%
 
Fly Ball %
28.6%
 
Prospect Rankings History
Advanced Batting Stats
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Additional Stats
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Defensive Stats
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Batted Ball Stats
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Stats Vs Upcoming Pitchers
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Recent RotoWire Articles Featuring Eloy Jimenez See More
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100 days ago
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Past Fantasy Outlooks
2024
2023
2022
2021
2020
2019
2018
2017
2016
Jimenez missed three weeks in May due to an appendectomy but otherwise stayed mostly healthy in 2023, and his 120 games played is the most since his rookie campaign. Sitting out 42 games is still significant but marks a major improvement from the previous two years, when he appeared in a combined 139 contests. He still missed some time here and there with calf and groin issues, and his .272/.317/.441 slash line was a notable drop from his .295/.358/.500 line in 2022. Jimenez totaled 18 homers, 64 RBI and 50 runs last season, while his .169 ISO was the worst mark of his MLB career. Potential versus durability continues to be the theme for Jimenez, with durability concerns unfortunately winning out to this point. That seems unlikely to change in 2024, though he would be an incredible value for fantasy managers on the off chance he's finally able to play a full season.
In a season where we saw offense decline as a whole across the league, Jimenez had a chance to shine at the plate in what was a loaded lineup on paper in Chicago. Like many things on the southside, things worked out poorly and Jimenez played in just 84 games on the season. The .295/.358/.500 slash line with 16 homers and 54 RBIs in essentially half a season shows what the young man is capable of when his body and mind are in sync. We should be thankful he did not injure himself in Spring Training with silly stunts, but the hamstring injury in mid April kept him out until early July. Once he shook off the rust, he hit .323/.391/.558 in the second half with 14 of the 16 homers. We do not know what baseball awaits us in 2023, but we do know that this young man has all the potential in the world even if we have yet to see it over the course of a full major league season.
Jimenez, who would have once been the No. 1 fantasy prospect in the game were it not for Vladimir Guerrero Jr., was a prime candidate to ascend into stardom after breaking out in the sprint 2020 season. However, he ruptured his left pectoral tendon while trying to rob a home run late in spring training and was initially handed a four-to-five month timeline. Jimenez returned in late July on the short end of that estimate, but he performed under his usual standards, both from a batting average and power standpoint. Even after returning from the pectoral injury, Jimenez dealt with minor groin and knee injuries over the final 10 weeks of the season. Dating back to his prospect days, Jimenez has seemingly always dealt with minor injuries, so durability is a weakness, particularly as long as the White Sox insist on playing him in the field -- he fits best at designated hitter. When healthy, he should still be seen as a four-category force, with 2020 representing his true talents much more than his injury-affected 2021.
Most 23-year-olds in pro ball are toiling in Double-A, but Jimenez now has 730 PA at the big-league level under his belt before his 24th birthday. In that time, he has inflicted quite a bit of punishment on baseballs and avoided the dreaded sophomore slump in 2020. Jimenez has been an impatient hitter at the plate, but it is because he has supreme confidence in his abilities. If you want to find a fault in his game, the lack of walks and lack of steals would be it. The batting average, the power and the run production are all there, and the sky is the limit for where his numbers can end up. Remember, we have not had a complete season at the big-league level for Jimenez as the only things which have held him back are his June promotion in 2019 and the pandemic of 2020. If you want to pick a non-Mike Trout name for 2021 MVP, this is a good sleeper bet to win it. The tools are all there.
Rather than playing service-time games with their top prospect, the White Sox locked Jimenez into the Opening Day roster after inking him to an extension late in spring training. The 23-year-old was nagged by a hamstring injury early on and took some time to adjust to MLB pitching, but by the end of his rookie year, he looked like the premium power threat he had been billed as while moving through Chicago's system. Over the last two months, Jimenez sported a manageable 24.4 K% and hit .308 with a .917 OPS, which was a top-40 mark for all batters in that span. Entering his second season, Jimenez may need to improve on a weak 6.0 BB% to vault into the elite ranks of hitters, but his pedigree and late-2019 flurry will have many pegging him for a breakout. The positive buzz may push up Jimenez's cost as draft season rolls on, so his backers should be ready to invest at least a top-75 selection to secure him.
Jimenez will debut in April and has extreme upside in the four non-speed roto categories, making him worthy of a top-100 pick in redraft leagues. He improved after a promotion to Triple-A (157 wRC+ at Double-A, 179 wRC+ at Triple-A) while cutting his strikeout rate from 17.1% to 13.2%. The righty-hitting slugger slashed .327/.364/.570 against same-handed International League pitchers and almost a third of his hits (32.8%) went to the opposite field. Knee, pectoral, adductor and quadriceps injuries caused him to miss time in 2018 and he missed a third of 2017 with a variety of injuries, so durability is the only concern. He could be the best hitter in White Sox camp and will have a spot in the middle of the big-league lineup waiting for him once the team has secured an extra year of control by keeping him at Triple-A for a few weeks. Jimenez is the No. 2 prospect (behind Vladimir Guerrero Jr.) for redraft and dynasty leagues.
“If not now, when?” That was the Cubs’ explanation for dealing their remaining prospect gold for Jose Quintana in mid July. Jimenez, who headlined the White Sox’s return, seemingly embraced the same mantra, doing more damage with his bat than any other hitter in the minors after that trade. He hit .348/.405/.635 with 11 home runs, 16 doubles and a 37:17 K:BB in 195 plate appearances across stops at High-A and Double-A with his new organization. Unlike the game’s other elite outfield prospects, the chiseled 6-foot-4 Jimenez won’t be contributing with his legs, but profiles perfectly as a middle-of-the-order run producer. He has the raw power to string together 40-plus homer campaigns in his peak seasons, but in this era of widespread power, his potential to hit .290 or better might be just as appealing. With just 18 games under his belt at Double-A, Jimenez’s ETA is difficult to peg. He could be ready for the majors in July, but if the White Sox are disciplined enough to hold him down in a non-competitive season, they would gain an extra year of control.
The top international prospect in the 2013 international free agent class, Jimenez showed flashes of his potential with short-season Eugene in 2015. However, few could have seen him making this much progress between his age-18 and age-19 seasons. He led the pitcher-friendly Midwest League by a wide margin with a .901 OPS despite being 2.5 years younger than league average. Jimenez was raking when the weather was chilly in April and May and he kept raking all season long, even when most prospects hit a wall in July and August during their first exposure to a full-season league schedule. He continued to turn heads in the Arizona Fall League, where he became a Statcast darling due to some elite exit velocities. If someone wanted to nitpick Jimenez's offensive game, it would sound like this: "I kind of wish he walked a bit more as a 19-year-old." This is a top-10 dynasty league prospect with the potential to challenge for batting titles and hit 30-plus homers annually in the middle of one of baseball's best lineups.
The mere fact that he's even in the minors at his age says enough about Jimenez's potential. He was signed by the Cubs out of the Dominican Republic in 2013 as a 16-year-old pup, and he's already a veteran of two minor league seasons, covering more than 400 plate appearances. While his strikeout rate is a tad high, it's certainly not exorbitant and he did improve in that area (19.5-percent in 2014, 17.2-percent in 2015) for short-season Eugene last year. Understandably, he has a long way to go before he's patrolling the outfield at Wrigley, but seven home runs in 232 at-bats for Eugene as an 18-year-old bodes well for his future. Put simply, you could do worse than to throw a dart at Jimenez in a deep dynasty league.
More Fantasy News
Accepts move to Triple-A
DHBaltimore Orioles  
September 24, 2024
Jimenez accepted Baltimore's decision to option him to Triple-A Norfolk on Tuesday, Jake Rill of MLB.com reports.
ANALYSIS
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Not playing regularly vs. RHPs
DHBaltimore Orioles  
September 11, 2024
Jimenez is out of the lineup for Wednesday's game against the Red Sox.
ANALYSIS
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Heading to bench Monday
DHBaltimore Orioles  
September 2, 2024
Jimenez is out of the lineup for Monday's game against the White Sox.
ANALYSIS
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Hits first homer with new team
DHBaltimore Orioles  
September 1, 2024
Jimenez went 1-for-4 with a solo home run in Saturday's 7-5 loss to the Rockies.
ANALYSIS
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Taking seat Thursday
DHBaltimore Orioles  
August 15, 2024
Jimenez is absent from the lineup for Thursday's game versus the Red Sox.
ANALYSIS
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Latest Fantasy Rumors
Bound for free agency
DHBaltimore Orioles  
October 30, 2024
The Orioles are expected to decline Jimenez's $16.5 million club option for 2025, reports Roch Kubatko of MASNSports.com.
ANALYSIS
The move is essentially a formality at this point given that Baltimore optioned him to Triple-A Norfolk in late September. Jimenez was acquired by the Orioles from the White Sox at the trade deadline and had a .238/.289/.336 slash line with six homers in 98 regular-season games. The 27-year-old entered the 2024 campaign with an .811 OPS through five MLB seasons, but his inability to stay healthy plus the poor production this year will leave him with a limited market in free agency.
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