Fernando Tatis, in 2021, at age 22, hit 42 home runs in 130 games. Sometime after that he was involved in, depending on who you talk to, one or multiple motorcycle accidents, followed by a quad injury a couple years later. He has not surpassed 25 dingers since.
So far this season, Tatis has hit...two home runs. It happens so infrequently now that one of them was hit in the ninth inning of a game in San Diego that a colleague of mine attended. Maybe it's cause he can't attend anymore games. But still, we've gone from 42 in a shortened season to 2 in 72 games. That's jarring. It's clear something's changed in his swing, and the power ceiling that was there in the early part of the decade might not be as high as it was.
However, Tatis is still having a positive season. .284 average, 79 hits, 26 RBIs. Not a worldbeater, but he's shifted to doing contact work that can aid the already contact-heavy Padres [Bogaerts, Cronenworth, and Merrill are also good in that department]. He's also still one of the team's best hitters. But...here's the thing. The idea was for Tatis and Machado, and to a lesser extent Gavin Sheets, to represent an ironclad power core for this Padres team going forward, and to this point they'd obliged. But now Tatis isn't hitting for power, Machado's power's gotten a ton more one-dimensional, and Sheets is doing more work than he honestly should be. So if this team doesn't really have a power game...and the solo contact guys are doing most of the work...then what are we even doing here? The depth's been sweated away, and when you're down to guys like Rodolfo Duran, Will Wagner and Samad Taylor needing to jump in, it's clear how much has strayed from the plan.
The Padres are hitting .218 as a team. A lot of that is due to Manny Machado not even pretending to reach .200, and Freddy Fermin, Jake Cronenworth and Nick Castellanos not finding it either. If the pitching wasn't better, especially the bullpen, this team would have no chance. But King, Vasquez, Buehler and Giolito are somehow doing enough to keep games close, and the bullpen can very easily finish it off. So as wild as it seems that THIS Padres team, with Tatis not finding the stands and Machado not finding the grass, is still a 2nd place team [and over .500]...well, they're pitching well. That's the key. It's not enough to lap the Dodgers, especially not now, but it's enough to keep them ahead of the D-Backs, who arguably have better individual starting performances and better hitting but keep getting their clocks cleaned by streaky teams.
Who knows. Maybe they're gonna start hitting. Maybe Tatis is gonna start raking. But as it stands now, this is no way to hit one's way past the Dodgers.
Coming Tonight: It's an unsteady tightrope, being a marquee guy for a team who can't keep talent around, but this guy might have it figured out.

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