Steven Kwan’s 2026 season has taken a turn nobody expected.
The Cleveland Guardians outfielder, 28 and coming off back-to-back All-Star nods, entered the year with the kind of profile that usually signals a player settling into his best stretch. Instead, his first half has been filled with numbers that stand out for the wrong reasons, and one of them has put him near the bottom of an ugly league list.
“MLB Worst OPS Leaders: 2. Steven Kwan, 0.574,” Thomas Nestico posted.
Kwan’s .574 OPS ranks second-worst among qualified MLB players, sitting just .001 behind Salvador Perez of the Kansas City Royals. Perez, at 36 and with nearly 1,800 career games behind him, is in a very different stage of his career, so his slide is easier to understand.
Kwan’s decline has been much harder to see coming. He did open the season with seven hits in his first 22 at-bats, but that early start has not held.
Entering play Monday, he was hitting .210, more than 70 points below his career average entering the season. His OPS is also .130 under the .705 mark he posted last year, which had been his previous career low.
There are a few possible explanations floating around. Kwan has been looking for a contract extension for more than a year, but the Guardians still have not reached one with him. He remains under team control through next season, and that uncertainty could be part of the picture.
He also made a position change this season, moving mostly from left field - where he won a Gold Glove in each of his first four years - to center field. His defense has stayed elite, which suggests he may be putting more of his energy there.
Then there was the MLB bereavement list stint earlier this month. The reason for that absence has not been made public, but it is another factor that could still be affecting him.
None of that proves what is behind the slump, but with Kwan’s age and track record, the expectation was that he would be near his physical peak by now. Instead, he finds himself on a list no player wants to see next to his name.
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The standings picture has shifted quickly, too, with the club going from a half-game lead on June 13 to a one-game deficit behind the White Sox. The Twins are still hanging around as well, which makes every missed opportunity feel a little bigger for a Guardians team that needs some help, some health and a little stability before the division race gets away from it. [Read more 🡒]
Guardians May Soon Face Their Toughest Gabriel Arias Decision Yet
Gabriel Arias keeps giving the Guardians reasons to believe in the raw ability, even if the production has been harder to pin down. In a recent game, he flashed the kind of power and defensive range that still make him such an intriguing part of Clevelands roster picture, launching a 429-foot home run and turning in a strong play at third base, the sort of reminder that the tools are very real even as the consistency at the plate remains uneven.
The bigger issue is what all of that means for his future in Cleveland, especially with Jose Ramirez working his way back from hand surgery and the roster picture set to tighten around the trade deadline. Arias has spent time at second base, shortstop and third, yet the Guardians still have not settled on where he fits best long term, which leaves his next few weeks carrying more weight than a typical hot streak or slump. [Read more 🡒]
