Collette Calls: Rethinking Steals

This season has seen multiple players like Juan Soto record high steals totals despite mediocre sprint speed. What's going on?
Collette Calls: Rethinking Steals
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We know what the components are when attempting to identify base stealers. Ideally, we want someone athletic and fast who gets on base enough to utilize those skills and plays for a manager who is more like Kevin Cash than Buck Showalter. We can look at Chandler Simpson or Trea Turner and see they are lightning quick. We can look at Alejandro Kirk and Pete Alonso and see that any stolen base from those guys is likely to require several defensive missteps. The change in the stolen base rules in recent seasons has put an increased emphasis on stolen bases because they are once again more plentiful than they were throughout most of the previous decade. 

The question of late has been how much should fantasy managers and analysts weigh each of those components. Should we treat speed, managerial tendencies and opportunities equally? The data, as in many cases, can provide you with both examples and counter examples to each point.

Consider these two players and their sprint speed percentile scores in 2024 and 2025:

PLAYER

2024 SPRINT SPEED PERCENTILE

2025 SPRINT SPEED PERCENTILE

2024 SB

2025 SB

PLAYER A

99th

100th

36

32

PLAYER B

36th

15th

7

32

Player A is Victor Scott, while Player B is Juan Soto. Scott swiped as many as 94 bases in a minor league season on his way up the organizational ladder, but like many before him, has not found things so easy at the big-league level. Meanwhile, Soto's previous

We know what the components are when attempting to identify base stealers. Ideally, we want someone athletic and fast who gets on base enough to utilize those skills and plays for a manager who is more like Kevin Cash than Buck Showalter. We can look at Chandler Simpson or Trea Turner and see they are lightning quick. We can look at Alejandro Kirk and Pete Alonso and see that any stolen base from those guys is likely to require several defensive missteps. The change in the stolen base rules in recent seasons has put an increased emphasis on stolen bases because they are once again more plentiful than they were throughout most of the previous decade. 

The question of late has been how much should fantasy managers and analysts weigh each of those components. Should we treat speed, managerial tendencies and opportunities equally? The data, as in many cases, can provide you with both examples and counter examples to each point.

Consider these two players and their sprint speed percentile scores in 2024 and 2025:

PLAYER

2024 SPRINT SPEED PERCENTILE

2025 SPRINT SPEED PERCENTILE

2024 SB

2025 SB

PLAYER A

99th

100th

36

32

PLAYER B

36th

15th

7

32

Player A is Victor Scott, while Player B is Juan Soto. Scott swiped as many as 94 bases in a minor league season on his way up the organizational ladder, but like many before him, has not found things so easy at the big-league level. Meanwhile, Soto's previous season high was 12, done in both 2019 and 2024, and he's now set to potentially triple that in his first year with the Mets. Soto has embraced the tutelage of Antoan Richardson, who was 6-for-6 in his very brief major-league career but also was an impressive 85.1 percent successful in his 464 professional stolen base attempts, successfully converting 395 of them while toiling various leagues over 12 seasons. To put that in perspective, Tim Raines had a career stolen base success rate of 84.7 percent as a major leaguer and is widely considered the most proficient basestealer in recent history. I will save you the time; Rickey Henderson was successful in 80.7 percent of his 2129 attempts across a 30-year baseball career from 1976 to 2006.

Richardson believes stolen bases are a 50/50 game: 50 percent physical and 50 percent mental. This recent video from the No More Fielders channel on YouTube is a fantastic breakdown of Richardson's approach and his influence on the Mets' running game:

When I shared these thoughts with some friends who are suffering Mets fans, the common reaction was, "Imagine where the Mets would be if they weren't doing this?!" We know the league is a copycat league, and what the Mets are doing this season could very well be picked up by other organizations looking to jumpstart their running games. 

2011 was the only season which there were at least 50 players who swiped 20 or more bases until the rules were altered in 2023. We have seen at least 50 in each of the previous two seasons and are very likely to see it again, with 38 players already there and another 25 players with 16 to 19 steals with just under two weeks remaining. We aren't seeing anyone step up and fill the role Elly De La Cruz had last season when he attempted steals more frequently than any player since the 1980s, but the league is still putting runners in motion slightly more frequently than it did in 2024. MLB attempted steals 7.0 percent of the time in 2024 when the next base was unoccupied; this season, that rate has slightly increased to 7.2 percent. The chart below shows each team's Stolen Base Frequency (SBF) rate as well as its success rate:

TEAM

SBO

SB

CS

SBF

SB%

TBR

1970

183

46

11.6%

80%

MIL

2172

153

51

9.4%

75%

CHC

2017

153

33

9.2%

82%

SEA

2058

149

36

9.0%

81%

WSN

1931

123

45

8.7%

73%

CLE

1826

114

33

8.1%

78%

TEX

2029

126

29

7.6%

81%

MIA

2096

118

39

7.5%

75%

BOS

2166

126

36

7.5%

78%

NYY

2074

123

32

7.5%

79%

KCR

1941

103

41

7.4%

72%

ARZ

2088

115

35

7.2%

77%

NYM

2105

134

17

7.2%

89%

PIT

2025

111

34

7.2%

77%

BAL

2017

105

35

6.9%

75%

PHI

2120

119

27

6.9%

82%

League Average

2056

106

31

6.7%

78%

CIN

2028

100

29

6.4%

78%

MIN

2086

99

29

6.1%

77%

COL

1914

81

36

6.1%

69%

SDP

2106

99

27

6.0%

79%

LAA

1906

81

25

5.6%

76%

LAD

2119

85

23

5.1%

79%

STL

2116

84

23

5.1%

79%

CHW

2047

82

21

5.0%

80%

ATH

2101

76

26

4.9%

75%

HOU

2164

77

26

4.8%

75%

ATL

2096

75

24

4.7%

76%

TOR

2202

74

23

4.4%

76%

SFG

2080

65

21

4.1%

76%

DET

2071

58

15

3.5%

79%

The difference between the two seasons is a more condensed grouping. Last season, Brice Turang, Shohei Ohtan, and De La Cruz each swiped 50 or more bases, but only Jose Caballero has any chance of doing so this season. Teams around the league are getting better at deterring the running game, as batteries have prevented 21 of attempts this season, up from 18 percent in 2023 and 19 percent in 2024. The data from BaseballSavant shows that 15 such preventions have come from throwing speed and 26 preventions have come from better exchanges. The work on exchanges was expected after watching the league decline in this area from 2023 to 2024. 

Being fast is still a strong contributing factor to stealing bases, but the Mets are showing that speed isn't everything. They are not alone, either, as Josh Naylor has a chance at 30 steals this season and is easily the slowest player by sprint speed of all players with at least 25 steals this year:

Name

2024 Sprint Speed Percentile

2025 Sprint Speed Percentile

2025 SB

Jose Caballero

75th

71st

46

Chandler Simpson

n/a

98th

40

Jose Ramirez

74th

77th

38

Oneil Cruz

88th

94th

38

Trea Turner

96th

100th

36

Bobby Witt Jr.

100th

100th

36

Elly De La Cruz

100th

91st

35

Pete Crow-Armstrong

99th

97th

35

Luis Robert Jr.

88th

90th

33

Juan Soto

36th

15th

32

Victor Scott II

99th

100th

32

Jazz Chisholm Jr.

82nd

56th

30

CJ Abrams

81st

74th

30

Francisco Lindor

58th

48th

30

Fernando Tatis Jr.

77th

84th

30

Trevor Story

70th

82nd

28

Randy Arozarena

71st

56th

28

Josh Naylor

7th

2nd

27

Nico Hoerner

78th

81st

27

Geraldo Perdomo

40th

44th

26

Julio Rodriguez

96th

91st

26

Corbin Carroll

96th

98th

26

Zach Neto

73rd

69th

26

Kyle Tucker

18th

27th

25

What Naylor lacks in speed he makes up for in managerial willingness. Torey Lovullo let Naylor run, as Naylor went 11 for 13 under his guidance, but the trade to Seattle, managed by Dan Wilson and his lead foot, really helped Naylor's pursuit of 30 steals, as he's a perfect 16-for-16 in just 44 games since joining the Mariners. 

Perhaps Richardson is right: stealing bases is 50 percent physical and 50 percent mental. However, what a player lacks in the physical can be made up on the mental side, whether it comes from better reading and understanding of pitcher tendencies and/or a manager willing to take more chances than most of his peers. If this season has taught us anything, we shoiuld be paying more attention to the mental side of stealing bases and not be so focused on the measurable physical attributes when looking for our stolen bases. After all, 20 percent of the players on the current stolen base leaderboard have sprint speeds below 50 percent.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Jason has been helping fantasy owners since 1999, and here at Rotowire since 2011. You can hear Jason weekly on many of the Sirius/XM Fantasy channel offerings throughout the season as well as on the Sleeper and the Bust podcast every Sunday. A ten-time FSWA finalist, Jason won the FSWA's Fantasy Baseball Writer of the Year award in 2013 and the Baseball Series of the Year award in 2018 for Collette Calls,and was the 2023 AL LABR champion. Jason manages his social media presence at https://linktr.ee/jasoncollette
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