Ronald Acuña Jr.
(Redirected from Ronald Acuña)
Ronald Jose Acuña Blanco
(Sabanero Soy, Eld Da La Sabana, El Abusador, La Bestia)
- Bats Right, Throws Right
- Height 6' 0", Weight 180 lb.
- Born December 18, 1997 in La Guaira, Vargas Venezuela
Biographical Information[edit]
Outfielder Ronald Acuña was the winner of the 2018 National League Rookie of the Year award. He was named the winner of the 2017 USA Today Minor League Player of the Year Award and the Baseball America Minor League Player of the Year Award. The son of minor league player Ron Acuña, he was signed by the Atlanta Braves before the 2015 season as a 17-year-old by scout Rolando Petit, who had first spotted him before he had turned 15. His younger brother, Luisangel Acuña, reached the majors in 2024. Another brother, Bryan Acuna, began his professional career in 2022.
He made his debut splitting his first season between the GCL Braves and Danville Braves, hitting a combined .269/.380/.438 in 55 games. In 2016, he played two games in the Gulf Coast League and 40 with the Rome Braves of the South Atlantic League, his season being shortened by an injury. When he did play, he continued to shine, with a batting line of .312/.392/.429. In 2017, he played at three levels, starting in Class A with the Florida Fire Frogs of the Florida State League, where he hit .287 in 28 games. Promoted to the AA Mississippi Braves, he hit .326 in 57 games, then finished the year in AAA with the Gwinnett Braves after being promoted on July 13th. With Gwinnett, he hit a home run in his second at-bat and finished at .344 in 54 games, his batting average having improved at every level. Overall, in 139 games, his batting line was .325/.374/.522, with 13 doubles, 8 triples and 21 home runs. He scored 88 runs and drove in 82 while stealing 44 bases. He was named to play in the 2017 Futures Game, then after the season was distinguished by USA Today and Baseball America as the minor league player of the year. He was also named #2 on the top 100 prospects list compiled by mlb.com in February 2018. The only player, ahead of him, Shohei Ohtani, was not really a true prospect, having already played a number of seasons in Nippon Pro Baseball, so it could be argued that Acuna was in fact #1.
To say there was a lot of hype around Acuña when he joined the Braves for spring training in 2018 would be a major understatement. Between fans clamoring he be given a starting outfield spot immediately, reporters who were saying he was the chosen one who would turn around the team's fortunes, and observers who made comparisons to all-time greats like Hank Aaron or contemporary superstars like Mike Trout, it was a lot for a 20-year-old to digest. But he seemed unfazed, as he went on a 14-for-25 tear in Grapefruit League games, making it hard for the Braves to send him down, even though from a business point of view, it was in the Braves' interest to delay his debut by at least a few weeks to push back his eligibility for salary arbitration. They did decide to put finances ahead of immediate on-field results, sending Acuna down to the minors on March 19th. He started off slowly in AAA, hitting .232 with 1 homer and 2 RBI in 17 games for the renamed Gwinnett Stripers. As expected, shortly after the period to delay his arbitration by a year had passed in late April, he was called up and was expected to start regularly from that point forward. With 21-year-old Ozzie Albies already on the team, the Braves now had the two youngest players in the major leagues on their roster.
In his major league debut on April 25, 2018, Acuña went 1 for 5 starting in left field against the Cincinnati Reds. His first hit was a single in the 8th inning, and he later came around to score the winning run in a 5-4 victory. He wore uniform number 13 in tribute to fellow Venezuelans Dave Concepción, Ozzie Guillén and Omar Vizquel. On April 26th, his second game, he hit his first career homer, a tape-measure blast off Homer Bailey that traveled 416 feet into the second deck at Great American Ballpark. He added an RBI double in the 8th and scored another run as the Braves prevailed again, 7-4. On May 8th, his long home run off Blake Snell of the Tampa Bay Rays was the only run in a 1-0 Braves win; he became the youngest player to hit a home run in a 1-0 game since September 25, 1935, when 19-year-old Phil Cavarretta had done so. On May 28th, he stumbled while running down the first base line in a game against the Boston Red Sox and was taken out of the game with an apparent knee injury. The Braves initially feared the worst, but an MRI only detected a mild sprain, and while Acuña was placed on the disabled list, his stay was expected to be short.
He missed a full month, returning to the Braves on June 29th. On August 13th, he accomplished a very rare feat by leading off both games of a doubleheader against the Miami Marlins with a home run. He started off the bottom of the 1st in game one with a blast off Pablo López as Atlanta went on to win handily, 9-1, then in the second game, hit one off Merandy González, making his first big league start, as Atlanta prevailed again, 6-1. He was just the fourth player to do this, following Hall of Famers Harry Hooper and Rickey Henderson (in 1913 and 1993, respectively), and Brady Anderson, who had been the most recent player to do so on August 21, 1999. The following day, he also led off the game with a homer and became the youngest player in history to hit homers in five consecutive games. For good measure, he added another long ball in the 8th in a 10-6 Braves win over the Marlins. On August 15th, Marlins starter José Ureña decided to take the law into his own hands and plunked him on the elbow with his first pitch of the game, a 97-mph fastball. The benches cleared and Ureña was immediately ejected, as was Braves manager Brian Snitker. Acuña had to leave the game in the 2nd inning with a bad bruise but escaped serious damage, while commentators were outraged at the pitcher's stupid behavior - with one notable exception being Keith Hernandez (who claimed it was normal to go after such a hot hitter). He did not miss any additional time and ironically, the hit by pitch was part of a streak of 9 consecutive games in which he reached base as the game's leadoff hitter. He was named the NL Rookie of the Month for August on the strength of a .336 average, 11 homers and 21 RBI. He finished the season at ,.293 in 111 games, with 26 homers, 76 runs scored, and 64 RBI as the Braves won the National League East. When he connected for a grand slam off Walker Buehler of the Los Angeles Dodgers in Game 3 of the NLDS on October 7th, he became the youngest player in postseason history to do so, displacing Mickey Mantle.
As a further honor stemming from his outstanding rookie season, he was selected to be card #1 of the 2019 Topps baseball card set. On April 2, 2019, he signed a contract extension with the Braves, covering 8 years and guaranteeing him $100 million. On June 10th, he hit his first career regular season slam, off Alex McRae of the Pittsburgh Pirates, in the 2nd inning of a 13-7 win. He made the All-Star team for the first time that year and was a regular feature on highlight shows for his spectacular outfield catches, routinely robbing opposite batters of homers or extra-base hits. On August 18th, manager Brian Snitker removed him from a game for lack of hustle: he had stood at home plate to watch one of his drives, which he thought was headed for the seats, only to have it hit off the wall as he had to settle for a single. To make things worse, he was then caught stealing, at which point Snitker replaced him by Adam Duvall to teach him a lesson about focus. On August 23rd, he became the second youngest member of the 30-30 club, trailing only Mike Trout, when recorded his 30th stolen base in a game against the New York Mets. He had already hit 36 homers by this point, and his stolen base total was leading the National League. On September 19th, he hit his 40th homer; he just needed 3 stolen bases to join the extremely exclusive 40-40 club, but he did not steal another base, finishing with 41 homers and 37 steals. In addition to stolen bases, he led the league in runs scored with 127 and plate appearances with 71. He won a Silver Slugger Award and finished 5th in the MVP voting.
On September 4, 2020, he hit the 17th leadoff homer of his career, tying the Braves franchise record set by Felipe Alou from 1964 to 1969. On September 25th, he hit a blast measured at 495 feet at Truist Park against Chris Mazza of the Boston Red Sox, the longest hit in the majors that season. Overall, he batted .250 in 46 games with 11 doubles and 14 homers, scoring 46 runs and driving in 29. His OPS+ was 152 and he again won a Silver Slugger Award. He continued his good work in the postseason, as the Braves made it to within one win of the World Series. He played all 12 games, scored 10 runs on 10 hits, with 4 doubles and a homer. At the start of the 2021 season, he flashed some of his outstanding speed: on April 11th, he led off a game against the Philadelphia Phillies by scratching an infield hit on a perfectly routine grounder to shortstop, then the next day, he tripled and then scored on a shallow fly ball just behind second base. He got off to a great start, being named the National League Player of the Month for April after hitting .341 with 8 homers, 18 RBIs and 25 runs scored in 24 games. On May 19th, he hit the first walk-off homer of his career, a solo shot off Jacob Barnes of the New York Mets that broke a 4-4 tie in the bottom of the 9th. On June 20th, he hit his 100th career homer, off Kwang Hyun Kim of the St. Louis Cardinals, the only run in a 1-0 Braves victory. The homer came in his 378th game; he was 6th fastest to reach the mark and was also the fastest to reach that total and collect 75 stolen bases as well. He was also in the all-time top ten of youngest players to hit their 100th homer. On July 10th however, his season ended abruptly when he tore his right ACL on an attempted catch of a ball hit by Jazz Chisholm of the Miami Marlins in the 5th inning; he failed to catch the ball, which went for an inside-the-park homer. He was able to get up and walk a few steps but was in obvious pain and had to be carted the rest of the way off the field. Tests after the game revealed the extent of the injury, and he had to undergo season-ending surgery. In 82 games, he had hit .283 with 24 homers and 52 RBIs and was leading the National League with 74 runs scored. He had been elected a starter in the All-Star Game.
After missing all of the second half of the 2021 season, including the Braves' run to a World Series title, and the first weeks of the 2022 season, he made his return to the field on April 28th. It appears that the Braves brought forward his return by one week due to injuries and a poor start. In his return, he went 1 for 5 with 2 stolen bases in a 5-1 win against the Chicago Cubs. On May 6th, he hit a homer that was spectacular not because of its distance, although it was a 450-foot bomb, but because after connecting, he fell down and tumbled to the ground, something usually only associated with the most extreme swings-and-misses. It came in the 4th inning of a 6-3 loss to the Milwaukee Brewers, against Eric Lauer. He ended up playing 119 games and making the All-Star team for the third time, finishing at .266 with 15 homers, 71 runs and 50 RBIs. His OPS+ was 114 and while he stole 29 bases, finishing third in the NL, he led the league with being caught stealing 11 times. He returned to the postseason after missing the party the year before and went 5 for 15 as the Braves were upsed by the Philadelphia Phillies in the Division Series.
He got off to a great start in 2023 as he was named the National League Player of the Month for April, his second time winning the award. He hit .352 with 4 homers and 14 RBIs in 27 games, scoring 23 runs and stealing 13 bases. On June 16th, he swiped his league-leading 30th stolen base of the season and thus became the first player in the history of the AL and NL to have 30 steals and 15 homers in his team's first 70 games. He was the leading vote-getter in all of baseball for the 2023 All-Star Game, receiving over 3 million votes. He was deserving, but was also helped by a successful ballot-stuffing campaign by Braves fans that resulted in one of the team's players being nominated for the run-off vote at almost every position. He repeated as NL Player of the Month in June, after batting .356 with 9 homers and 22 RBIs, not to mention 26 runs and 14 steals in 25 games. On July 3rd, he stole his 40th base, making him the first player with 20 homers, 40 steals and 50 RBIs before the All-Star break; in fact, just the combination of 40 steals and 20 long balls was unprecedented, with Rickey Henderson having come closest with 17 homers and 41 steals in 1990. He stole his 60th base and hit his 29th homer on August 28th, becoming just the 4th player to have 20 homers and 60 steals in a season after Henderson (three times), Joe Morgan (twice) and Eric Davis, but one more homer would make him the charter member of the 30/60 club. He hit that homer on August 31st, and it was a grand slam that helped beat the Braves' main rivals for the title of best team in baseball, the Los Angeles Dodgers, 8-7. Oh, and also that day, he married his long-time fiancée, Maria Laborde, the mother of his two young sons, at a small ceremony in a private house in the mountains outside Los Angeles, CA. He said that while he had been planning the ceremony for a while, he had not mentioned it to anyone - including manager Brian Snitker. It was also his second 30/30 season, making him just the 14th player to have multiple instances of this (his previous one had come in 2019). Two days later, on September 2nd, a home run ball of his was recorded at 121.2 mph, making it the hardest-hit ball by anyone that season, according to Statcast. On September 22nd, he joined the 40-40 club when he hit his 40th homer of the year, the first new member to join the exclusive congregation since Alfonso Soriano in 2006. He then inaugurated the 40-70 club with a theft of second based on September 27th, moments before scoring the winning run in the 10th inning of a 6-5 win over the Chicago Cubs. His 73rd stolen base on September 30th moved him past Otis Nixon for the modern franchise record. He was named the NL Player of the Month again for September, after hitting .340 with 11 homers and as many stolen bases during the month. He finished the season with amazing numbers, including leading the NL in hits (217), runs (149), stolen bases (73), total bases (383), OBP (.416) and OPS (1.012), in addition to hitting .337 with 41 homers and 106 RBIs. His OPS+ was 168, also a league-leading figure, and he won a third Silver Slugger Award before topping it all off by being named the unanimous winner of the 2023 National League Most Valuable Player Award and the Hank Aaron Award as the best hitter in the NL. The only blemish on his season was that the Braves made a quick postseason exit, being defeated for the second straight year by the Phillies in the Division Series, during which he went 2 for 14 in the four games.
On April 22, 2024, his 10th stolen base of the season was also the 190th of his career, allowing him to break the record for the Atlanta Braves that had been held until then by Rafael Furcal. He was still a long ways away from the all-time Braves franchise record, which was held by 19th century player Herman Long, with 433, when the team was still based in Boston, MA. While he was among the National League leaders for steals and runs at that point, his power was significantly down, as he hit only one long ball in his first 21 games. On May 26th, his season came to an abrupt end for the second time in four years, when in a game against the Pittsburgh Pirates at PNC Park, he made a feint of stealing third base while the catcher was throwing the ball back to the pitcher, then changed in mind, and in the process of turning back to second, tore the ACL in his left knee. He was tagged out as he was writhing in pain on the grass, and had to undergo an operation. In 49 games, he was hitting .250 with 4 homers and 15 RBIs for an OPS+ of 104.
As a sign that Acuña's popularity was reaching beyond the habitual baseball circles, in June 2021 Atlanta-based alt-folk singer-songwriter Faye Webster released a single entitled "A Dream About a Baseball Player", all about her impossible crush for the Braves' slugger.
Notable Achievements[edit]
- 2017 Baseball America Minor League Player of the Year, Florida Fire Frogs Florida State League, Mississippi Braves Southern League and Gwinnett Braves International League
- 2018 NL Rookie of the Year Award
- 2018 Topps All-Star Rookie Team
- 4-time NL All-Star (2019 & 2021-2023)
- NL MVP (2023)
- 3-time NL Silver Slugger Award Winner (2019, 2020 & 2023)
- NL On-Base Percentage Leader (2023)
- NL OPS Leader (2023)
- NL At-Bats Leader (2023)
- 2-time NL Runs Scored Leader (2019 & 2023)
- NL Hits Leader (2023)
- NL Total Bases Leader (2023)
- 2-time NL Stolen Bases Leader (2019 & 2023)
- 200 Hits Seasons: 1 (2023)
- 20-Home Run Seasons: 4 (2018, 2019, 2021 & 2023)
- 30-Home Run Seasons: 2 (2019 & 2023)
- 40-Home Run Seasons: 2 (2019 & 2023)
- 100 Runs Scored Seasons: 2 (2019 & 2023)
- 100 RBI Seasons: 2 (2019 & 2023)
- 50 Stolen Bases Seasons: 1 (2023)
- Won one World Series with the Atlanta Braves in 2021 (he did not play in the World Series)
NL Rookie of the Year | ||
---|---|---|
2017 | 2018 | 2019 |
Cody Bellinger | Ronald Acuña Jr. | Pete Alonso |
NL MVP | ||
2022 | 2023 | 2024 |
Paul Goldschmidt | Ronald Acuña Jr. | Shohei Ohtani |
Further Reading[edit]
- David Adler: "Are we watching the next Griffey Jr.?", mlb.com, April 26, 2020. [1]
- David Adler: "The secret to Acuña's historic basestealing", mlb.com, July 27, 2023. [2]
- Scott Boeck: "Braves phenom Ronald Acuña Jr. named NL Rookie of the Year", USA Today, November 12, 2018. [3]
- William Boor: "Acuna feeds off family, flourishes in Fall League", mlb.com, November 17, 2017. [4]
- Mark Bowman: "High ranking meaningful to prospect Acuna: Outfielder proud to represent Braves on new Top 100 list", mlb.com, January 28, 2018. [5]
- Mark Bowman: "If Acuna excels, Braves could accelerate path: All eyes will be on Atlanta's top prospect at Spring Training", mlb.com, February 8, 2018. [6]
- Mark Bowman: "Aaron, Trout, Harper ... Acuna? Scout thinks so: Ralph Garr says Braves' top prospect could be HOF-worthy", mlb.com, March 15, 2018. [7]
- Mark Bowman: "Acuna leads off both games of twin bill with HRs", mlb.com, August 14, 2018. [8]
- Mark Bowman: "Acuna set to smash records this season: Outfielder hit 19 home runs in the second half", mlb.com, February 13, 2019. [9]
- Mark Bowman: "How Acuña stacks up through age-21 season", mlb.com, May 18, 2020. [10]
- Mark Bowman: "Acuña arrives at camp early ready to show 'unfathomable' talent: Further removed from a torn ACL, Braves slugger poised to rediscover All-Star form", mlb.com, February 14, 2023. [11]
- Mark Bowman: "5 years after debut, Acuña's talent remains 'ridiculous'", mlb.com, April 26, 2023. [12]
- Mark Bowman: "With his 40th stolen base, Acuña makes more history", mlb.com, July 3, 2023. [13]
- Mark Bowman: "Acuña steals 60th base, eyes creating his own special club", mlb.com, August 29, 2023. [14]
- Mark Bowman: "'My name is alone': Acuña Jr. becomes rarest member of elite 40-40 club", mlb.com, September 23, 2023. [15]
- Mark Bowman: "Unanimous! Acuña named NL MVP after historic '23", mlb.com, November 16, 2023. [16]
- Mark Bowman: "Acuña sets Atlanta-era record for most stolen bases", mlb.com, April 22, 2024. [17]
- Mark Bowman: "Acuña has torn ACL, will miss rest of season", mlb.com, May 26, 2024. [18]
- Anthony Castrovince: "Acuna's plunking isn't what baseball needs: Braves outfielder among must-see young players in today's game", mlb.com, April 16, 2018. [19]
- Michael Clair: "Indie artist writes love song about Acuña: 'If music be the food of love, play ball!'", mlb.com, June 24, 2021. [20]
- Theo DeRosa: 2Acuña, Betts among best leadoff seasons ever", mlb.com, September 23, 2023. [21]
- Steve Gardner: "Why the Braves sent top prospect Ronald Acuna to the minors", USA Today Sports, March 19, 2018. [22]
- Kyle Glaser: "2017 Minor League Player Of The Year: Ronald Acuna", Baseball America, September 8, 2017. [23]
- Ray Glier: "Minor League Player of the Year: Braves prospect Ronald Acuna improves at every level", USA Today Sports, September 6, 2017. [24]
- Thomas Harrigan: "Acuña making it look easy in comeback season: Superstar outfielder slashing .368/.457/.737 during Braves' 11-game win streak", June 12, 2022. [25]
- Beth Harris (The Associated Press): "Braves star Ronald Acuña Jr. gets married, then hits grand slam to become 1st 30-HR, 60-SB player", Yahoo! Sports, September 1, 2023. [26]
- Richard Justice: "Acuna, Ohtani named Rookies of the Year: Braves OF wins NL honor; Angels' two-way phenom claims AL prize", mlb.com, November 13, 2018. [27]
- Gabe Lacques: "No rule - written or unwritten - excuses Jose Ureña's 'purpose' pitch to Ronald Acuña Jr.", USA Today, August 15, 2018. [28]
- Gabe Lacques (USA Today): "Pushing 70 steals, Braves' Ronald Acuña Jr. becomes fifth member of MLB's 40-40 club", Yahoo! Sports, September 22, 2023. [29]
- Sarah Langs: "By the numbers: A look at Acuña's jaw-dropping season thus far", mlb.com, September 1, 2023. [30]
- Bob Nightengale: "'Best young player I've ever seen': Just 21 years old, Braves' Ronald Acuña Jr. looks like an all-time great", USA Today, August 26, 2019. [31]
- Jorge L. Ortiz: "Top prospect Ronald Acuna has Braves dreaming of return to glory days", mlb.com, March 17, 2018. [32]
- Jorge L. Ortiz: "'Future is now' for Braves thanks to historic young duo of Ozzie Albies, Ronald Acuña Jr.", USA Today Sports, May 23, 2018. [33]
- Do-Hyoung Park and Daniel Kramer: "Acuna HBP sparks strong reaction around MLB", mlb.com, August 15, 2018. [34]
- Mike Petriello: "Albies and Acuna could be on path to history: Only 4 teams have had two above-average hitters 21 or younger", mlb.com, May 16, 2018. [35]
- Mike Petriello: "How Acuña is bucking MLB's strikeout trend: Atlanta star has cut whiff rate from 30% to 13%", mlb.com, May 6, 2021. [36]
- Mike Petriello: "How reigning MVP Acuña can get ... even better", mlb.com, January 24, 2024. [37]
- Andrew Simon: "The staggering numbers behind Acuña's push for baseball history", mlb.com, May 20, 2023. [38]
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