The Arizona Diamondbacks’ first-base situation has become hard to ignore, and Pavin Smith is right in the middle of it.
Arizona has gotten almost no offensive stability from that spot, and that’s a problem for any team trying to piece together a lineup. First base is supposed to give you power, on-base ability, or run production. For the D-backs, it hasn’t delivered much of any of that.
Smith’s numbers tell the story. He’s hitting .141 with one home run and six RBIs this season, and Arizona is on pace to get the lowest OPS from its first basemen of any team since 1920.
That’s not just a rough stretch. It’s a level of production that puts the position in a place no club wants to be.
The longer it goes on, the harder it is to defend keeping the status quo. Baseball gives players time to work through slumps, but when the struggles stretch across months, patience starts to look expensive. That’s why Tyler Locklear has entered the conversation.
Locklear has been swinging it well in Reno, where he’s posted a .346 batting average and a .469 on-base percentage during July. Those numbers don’t promise instant success in the majors, but they do give Arizona something Smith hasn’t provided: momentum and a real shot at offensive upside.
The frustration around Smith isn’t only about the stat line. It’s also about how the team handles production. Winning clubs tend to reward performance wherever they find it, and when a productive minor leaguer is waiting while a struggling regular keeps getting chances, questions about priorities come quickly.
For the Diamondbacks, first base looks like the most obvious place to make a change. If the offense is going to find some consistency, that’s where the conversation starts.
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Eduardo Rodriguezs spring and summer have carried the kind of momentum Arizona hoped for when it brought him in, and a lot of it traces back to what happened in March with Venezuela. He was effective in the World Baseball Classic, working 4 1/3 scoreless innings as Venezuela pushed all the way to the title, and he came out of that run with a sharper sense of what he wanted to lean on. For a pitcher who has spent years building a reputation as a steady big-league arm, the WBC offered a different sort of stage and, by the looks of his early work since then, a useful boost.
The Diamondbacks have had a close view of Rodriguez for a long time, which made his rise this season feel especially meaningful around the organization. Torey Lovullo and Mike Hazen both know him well, and Lovullo was the one who delivered the news when Rodriguez was named an All-Star, a moment that carried extra weight because of how long their paths have crossed. Arizona has seen plenty of Rodriguezs game over the years, but this version, sharpened by the WBC and rewarded with a first trip to the Midsummer Classic, has given the club another reason to feel good about where his season is headed. [Read more 🡒]
