James Wood’s latest hot streak earned him another piece of hardware Monday, as he was named National League Player of the Week after a six-game burst that put him atop the league in just about every major offensive category.
The announcement came on MLB Network, and it marked Wood’s second Player of the Week honor this season. It also gave the Nationals their fourth MLB award of the year, with Wood previously winning for the week of April 7, Luis García Jr. taking the award for the week of June 29 and Nasim Nuñez earning Play of the Week for the week of March 30.
Wood, 23, was blistering from July 6-12, going 10-for-20 with a .500 average, a double, five home runs, eight RBI, nine walks and 11 runs scored.
The week was packed with headline numbers. Wood launched three leadoff homers, pushing his season total to a Major League-best 10. That’s also the most leadoff homers in a single season in franchise history for the Nationals/Montreal Expos.
He scored in all six games during the stretch and crossed the plate at least twice in four of them. His 89 runs scored lead all of Major League Baseball, and he’s 21 ahead of the next player. Per Elias Sports Bureau, that 21-run cushion is the biggest gap between No. 1 and No. 2 in runs scored at the All-Star break since Ted Williams and Johnny Pesky were separated by 19 in 1946.
Wood also drew nine walks, moving him into the Major League lead with 79 on the season. And with two stolen bases added to the mix, he became the only player in baseball with 25 home runs and 15 steals this year.
An All-Star for the second time, Wood heads into the break leading MLB in extra-base hits with 52, walks with 79 and runs scored with 89. He also sits atop the National League in on-base percentage (.410), OPS (.985), slugging (.575) and total bases (212), while ranking second in home runs with 28, fourth in doubles with 23, seventh in hits with 103 and seventh in RBI with 64.
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Hassell is still in the organization after clearing waivers and being sent to Triple-A Rochester, but that does not mean his name is out of the rumor mill. The Nationals could still view him as a possible trade piece if they decide to chase relief help before the deadline, though his market is murky after the recent setback. For a player once seen as a significant part of the return in the James Wood deal, the next step may say as much about Washingtons bullpen needs as it does about Hassells future. [Read more 🡒]
