Looking In at Juan Soto’s Career Projections

There’s a reason that many of the wealthiest teams were bidding obscene amounts of money to get him.

Looking In at Juan Soto’s Career Projections
Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports

Earlier this week, when Juan Soto agreed to a 15-year, $765 million contract with the New York Mets, I included a projection chart with some very pretty numbers. Now that the dust has settled on the seismic signing, I think it would be interesting to look a little bit deeper at Soto’s long-term projections, which reflect his possible place in baseball history beyond his immediate impact on the Mets.

This time, I’m including the full rest-of-career projections for Soto, along with the career totals should the projections be shockingly — and unrealistically — inaccurate.

ZiPS Projection – Juan Soto
Year BA OBP SLG AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB OPS+ WAR
2025 .276 .426 .521 528 108 146 26 2 33 100 137 109 7 167 6.2
2026 .274 .427 .518 525 109 144 25 2 33 98 140 106 7 167 6.2
2027 .274 .430 .513 522 108 143 25 2 32 96 143 104 7 167 6.2
2028 .271 .429 .505 521 107 141 25 2 31 93 144 103 6 164 6.0
2029 .263 .424 .481 520 105 137 24 1 29 90 145 103 5 157 5.5
2030 .261 .421 .472 521 103 136 24 1 28 88 144 103 5 153 5.2
2031 .259 .418 .464 522 101 135 24 1 27 86 143 104 5 150 4.9
2032 .258 .417 .457 523 99 135 24 1 26 85 142 104 4 148 4.7
2033 .256 .414 .448 524 96 134 24 1 25 83 141 105 4 145 4.4
2034 .255 .412 .442 525 94 134 24 1 24 81 140 107 3 143 4.2
2035 .254 .409 .437 512 90 130 23 1 23 77 134 105 3 141 3.9
2036 .248 .402 .416 469 78 116 20 1 19 67 120 97 2 133 2.9
2037 .244 .395 .404 423 68 103 18 1 16 58 106 88 2 128 2.2
2038 .244 .394 .401 381 59 93 16 1 14 51 94 80 1 127 1.9
2039 .242 .390 .393 343 52 83 14 1 12 44 83 73 1 124 1.4
2040 .239 .385 .383 306 44 73 12 1 10 37 72 65 1 119 1.0
Career .266 .416 .481 10946 2076 2917 527 35 583 1826 2797 2252 121 151 103.2

Suffice it to say, that’s a line that would lead to an obvious Hall of Fame election during his first year on the ballot. Soto’s long-term projections have shot up quite a bit the last two seasons after his relative slump a couple years ago. After 2022, the season he was traded to the Padres, he dipped to a 146 wRC+ and 3.7 WAR — good enough numbers for the vast majority of the baseball world, but they felt a little underwhelming considering his earlier trajectory. After all, Soto is one of the few players to ever get Ted Williams as one of their near-age offensive comps.

This projection puts him right on pace to get to 3,000 hits, at just below a coin flip (43%). Among active players, only Freddie Freeman projects to finish with more career hits (3,012, 52% at 3,000). It’s also the first time Soto has hit the century mark in projected WAR. Just for fun, here’s a look at the projected career WAR leaders among active players from a decade ago, before 2015.

Career WAR Projections – Hitters (Pre-2015)
Player Final WAR Actual WAR
Alex Rodriguez 113.6 113.6
Mike Trout 100.8 85.7
Albert Pujols 95.2 89.9
Andrew McCutchen 85.9 52.5
Buster Posey 85.0 57.9
Miguel Cabrera 76.9 68.8
Derek Jeter 73.4 73.0
Evan Longoria 73.3 55.1
Yadier Molina 70.5 55.6
David Wright 70.1 51.3
Chase Utley 68.0 61.5
Troy Tulowitzki 65.9 37.8
Dustin Pedroia 63.8 44.8
Giancarlo Stanton 63.7 42.5
Russell Martin 62.5 54.5
Bryce Harper 61.4 52.5
Brian McCann 60.0 52.1
Manny Machado 58.9 53.6
Hanley Ramirez 57.9 41.8
Ichiro Suzuki 57.6 57.5

And here’s how it looks today.

Career WAR Projections – Hitters (Pre-2025)
Player WAR
Juan Soto 103.2
Mike Trout 95.6
Aaron Judge 82.4
Julio Rodríguez 80.5
Mookie Betts 79.3
Francisco Lindor 79.2
Bobby Witt Jr. 76.4
Freddie Freeman 73.0
Ronald Acuña Jr. 70.0
José Ramírez 68.3
Gunnar Henderson 66.9
Shohei Ohtani 66.8
Elly De La Cruz 65.3
Jose Altuve 65.0
Bryce Harper 64.7
Manny Machado 64.2
Fernando Tatis Jr. 63.5
Jackson Merrill 62.6
Yordan Alvarez 62.4
Corbin Carroll 59.1

Note that the Ohtani projection is only as a hitter.

Overall, Soto’s career projections give him a JAWS score of 74.4 – ZiPS projects JAWS natively these days – enough to rank him as the seventh-best right fielder in baseball history, sandwiched between Roberto Clemente and Al Kaline.

Those 583 projected home runs are the most among active players as well, giving Soto the best chance — a very slim shot — at reaching the career totals of Babe Ruth (714, 2%), Henry Aaron (755, 0.62%), and Barry Bonds (762, 0.55%). Soto is one of only three current hitters projected to finish with more than 500 homers; the other two, Judge and Ohtani, are both projected to finish at 549.

And since we’re saber-nerds, Soto is projected to seize the all-time walks record from Bonds. What’s even more shocking is that Soto’s projected walk total (2,797) is nearly double the projected total of Harper, who ranks second of the projected leaderboard among active players, with 1,489 walks. Soto also paces the all-time walks leaderboard for players through their age-25 season — by 99!

BB Leaders Through Age 25
Name BB
Juan Soto 769
Mickey Mantle 670
Mel Ott 622
Eddie Yost 620
Bryce Harper 585
Mike Trout 571
Eddie Mathews 561
Jimmie Foxx 556
Rickey Henderson 520
John McGraw 518
Harlond Clift 498
Ted Williams 495
Donie Bush 468
Arky Vaughan 466
Adam Dunn 462
Joe Kelley 445
Rusty Staub 433
Elbie Fletcher 427
Ken Griffey Jr. 426
Willie Randolph 425

So, will this all come true? Probably not. But Juan Soto is a special hitter who is tremendously accomplished for a hitter still only in his mid-20s. There’s a reason that many of the wealthiest teams were bidding obscene amounts of money to get him.

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