Best MLB Walks Matchups — Tuesday, June 2, 2026
Top walks spot: Jorge Soler
Jorge Soler (LAA) tops the board at 100, facing RHP Tomoyuki Sugano. The righty is working counts at — BB/PA against righties this year, a solid bat that turns into a walk in about 9% of his trips. And Tomoyuki Sugano has been thin against righties lately. The bullpen behind him is roughly average to that side. He's hitting in a spot worth about 4.7 trips, so the volume's there. He's owned Tomoyuki Sugano too — .333 across 3 career trips. It all sets up in a neutral park, weather helping.
The rest of the top of the board
- Jake McCarthy (COL) (100) vs RHP Grayson Rodriguez: a solid bat at .085 into an arm with little track record against the same side.
- Mike Trout (LAA) (90) vs RHP Tomoyuki Sugano: a solid bat at .085 into an arm with little track record against the same side.
- Willi Castro (COL) (90) vs RHP Grayson Rodriguez: a solid bat at .085 into an arm with little track record against the same side.
- Chandler Simpson (TB) (87) vs RHP Jack Flaherty: a solid bat at .085 into an arm with little track record against the same side.
- Gleyber Torres (DET) (87) vs LHP Steven Matz: a solid bat at .085 into an arm with little track record against the same side.
- Jarren Duran (BOS) (87) vs RHP Shane Baz: a solid bat at .085 into an arm with little track record against the same side, hot bat.
- Taylor Ward (BAL) (87) vs LHP Connelly Early: a solid bat at .085 into an arm with little track record against the same side, due to bounce back.
How it played out
4 of the top 10 walks matchups landed at least one walk. Top play Jorge Soler finished with 0 walks. We post the result next to every projection so you can grade the board yourself — and so the model gets re-tuned against what actually happened.
How to read these walks matchups
Each score (0–100) starts with the hitter's walks 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.