Best MLB H+R+RBI Matchups — Thursday, July 16, 2026
Top h+r+rbi spot: Juan Soto
Juan Soto (NYM) tops the board at 100, projected for about 0.45 H+R+RBI per plate appearance across 4.5 projected trips. We build the number bottom-up — summing his projection on every component board — so it moves with each of those matchups instead of a single rate, and inherits their tuning.
The rest of the top of the board
- A.J. Ewing (NYM) (88) vs RHP the starter: a league-average bat at .423 into an arm with little track record against the same side.
- Kyle Schwarber (PHI) (82) vs RHP the starter: a league-average bat at .424 into an arm with little track record against the same side.
- Bryce Harper (PHI) (70) vs RHP the starter: a league-average bat at .416 into an arm with little track record against the same side.
- Trea Turner (PHI) (63) vs RHP the starter: a light bat at .388 into an arm with little track record against the same side.
- Eric Wagaman (NYM) (59) vs RHP the starter: a league-average bat at .409 into an arm with little track record against the same side.
- Francisco Lindor (NYM) (58) vs RHP the starter: a league-average bat at .399 into an arm with little track record against the same side.
- Carson Benge (NYM) (54) vs RHP the starter: a league-average bat at .410 into an arm with little track record against the same side.
Lineup watch
18 of today's hitters are still on projected lineups, drawn from each team's last game. Batting order drives the score, so these flip the moment official lineups post — usually about two hours before first pitch. Anyone who doesn't make the official card gets flagged "Not starting" and drops to the bottom.
How to read these h+r+rbi matchups
Each score (0–100) starts with the hitter's combined hits + runs + RBIs per plate appearance against the hand he's facing — weighted toward the last two weeks, then the season, then a two-year baseline. Then it layers in the bullpen, his spot in the order, and park and weather. Higher means more of it points his way. It's context, not a lock — a great spot still goes 0-for-4 sometimes, and a tough one runs into one. The edge is in stacking the odds, and since we grade every board, you can see how often the top of the list delivers.