Cal Raleigh’s 2026 season has been a long way from the monster year he put together in 2025, and the numbers make that clear in a hurry.
After blasting 60 home runs and finishing second in American League MVP voting last year, the Seattle Mariners catcher has hit a wall this season. He missed a month with an oblique strain, and even when he’s been on the field, the production hasn’t come close to matching the standard he set a year ago. Through Wednesday’s off day, Raleigh was batting .164 with a .268 on-base percentage, along with eight home runs and 23 RBIs.
The drop-off has been a major reason Seattle’s offense has struggled so consistently in 2026.
So what’s behind it? A look at the underlying numbers points to a hitter whose weaknesses have become more exposed.
In 2025, Raleigh still had some clear blemishes even in the middle of a historic season. His chase rate sat in the 24th percentile and his whiff rate was in the 10th percentile, which showed that he was still swinging outside the zone and missing plenty.
He also struck out a lot, ranking in the 14th percentile. But those issues were masked by the damage he did when he connected.
He was crushing the ball, and pitchers clearly wanted no part of him, which helped drive a walk rate that sat in the 95th percentile.
That balance has shifted in 2026.
There’s a lot more blue in the picture now, and the hard contact hasn’t been there nearly as often. The flaws that were manageable a year ago have become much louder. Raleigh is now in the 16th percentile in chase rate and the eighth percentile in strikeout rate, while his walk rate remains strong but has also come down.
One area that stands out is how vulnerable he’s been to pitches up in the zone. That’s always been a spot where Raleigh could be attacked, but it has shown up even more this season. His swing percentage by zone in 2026 reflects that problem more sharply than it did in 2025.
As for what he can do about it, the answer is straightforward: better swing decisions, one pitch and one at-bat at a time. Raleigh needs to put himself in more favorable counts.
Too often, he’s finding himself behind 0-1 or 0-2 after expanding the zone and taking himself out of the at-bat. If he can get to 1-0 and 2-1 more often, he’ll force pitchers into the strike zone and give himself a chance to do damage.
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