Padres Video
Last Wednesday night at Citizens Bank Park, Cristopher Sánchez earned the kind of standing ovation a pitcher rarely receives after allowing a run. His streak of 50⅔ scoreless innings—the fifth-longest in MLB history—had come to an end, and Philadelphia thanked him with a full minute of applause. A beautiful moment.
But there was another story unfolding that night, and it belonged to the pitcher who shut down the Phillies from the Padres’ mound.
Walker Buehler delivered six strong innings. A performance that, twelve months ago, would have seemed almost impossible.
Buehler arrived in San Diego after two seasons that tested the patience of anyone who still believed in him. In 2024, with the Red Sox, his overall Run Value fell into the 2nd percentile. His fastball produced negative value, opponents posted a .424 xwOBA against him, and they slugged .583. He was a pitcher who had survived two Tommy John surgeries but still hadn’t figured out how to be himself again on a major-league mound.
What Statcast shows in 2026 tells an entirely different story.
Percentile Rankings — Walker Buehler
|
Metric |
2024 |
2025 |
2026 |
|
Pitching Run Value |
2 |
13 |
83 |
|
Fastball Run Value |
6 |
19 |
98 |
|
Breaking Ball Run Value |
1 |
12 |
83 |
|
xERA |
18 |
6 |
29 |
The number that jumps off the page is that fastball Run Value in the 98th percentile. Not because the pitch is faster; in fact, Buehler is averaging 92.4 mph this season, virtually identical to 2025. Rather, it's because he’s dominating in a completely different way: location, timing, and situational usage.
A 92-mph fastball ranking in the 98th percentile for value generated is the signature of a pitcher who knows exactly how and when to throw it. The contact-quality results back it up. Hitters are doing far less damage when they make contact.
Year-to-Year Changes — Contact Quality Against
|
Metric |
2024 |
2025 |
2026 |
Change (25-26) |
|
Opponent SLG |
.506 |
.437 |
.348 |
−.089 |
|
Opponent wOBA |
.370 |
.348 |
.300 |
−.048 |
|
Opponent xwOBA |
.336 |
.355 |
.337 |
−.018 |
|
Barrel Rate (%) |
7 |
9.5 |
8.1 |
−1.4 |
|
Hard-Hit Rate (%) |
37.8 |
37.8 |
40.7 |
2.9 |
|
Average Exit Velocity (mph) |
88.3 |
87.9 |
90.4 |
2.5 |
There’s an apparent contradiction in those numbers that deserves attention. His average exit velocity and Hard-Hit% have both ticked upward, yet the slugging percentage and wOBA have dropped significantly.
What that tells us is that Buehler is allowing hard contact in less damaging situations (bases empty, two outs, and counts where the damage can be managed). And there’s another trend supporting that conclusion: Buehler’s remarkable adjustment in finishing hitters off once he gets to two strikes.
The league has hit just .114 against him in those situations, while producing the lowest Barrel/BBE rate (3.1%) of his career. Opponents’ xSLG in two-strike counts has fallen from .328 during his final season with the Dodgers in 2024 to just .236 this year.
Part of that improvement has come through broader adjustments across his game. His command has improved dramatically. His walk rate has dropped from 10.6% in 2025 to 8.2% in 2026, while his strikeout rate has climbed from 16.3% to 20.1%. Fewer walks and more strikeouts is exactly the combination his arsenal needed to become consistently effective again.
Plate Discipline — Buehler 2026 vs. Career
|
Metric |
2024 |
2025 |
2026 |
Career Average |
|
K% |
18.6 |
16.3 |
20.1 |
24.1 |
|
BB% |
8.1 |
10.6 |
8.2 |
7.3 |
|
First-Pitch Strike Rate (%) |
60.5 |
63.5 |
66.8 |
64 |
|
Chase Rate (%) |
24.5 |
25.8 |
27.9 |
29.2 |
|
Whiff Rate (%) |
19.4 |
19.2 |
19.7 |
24.3 |
That 66.8% first-pitch strike rate is the highest of his recent career and reflects a pitcher attacking hitters from pitch one.
His 27.9% Chase Rate still sits below his career norm, which suggests there may be even more room for growth. But the trend is unmistakable, and it’s moving in the right direction.
What makes all of this particularly significant is where he started. Going from the 2nd percentile to the 83rd percentile in overall Run Value over two years isn’t simply a minor adjustment. It’s a complete reconstruction, carried out quietly, far from the spotlight that follows Los Angeles, in a city and an organization willing to bet on him when few others would.







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