Tom Stone's latest dispatch from Now Taking the Field offers a stark, data-driven autopsy of the 2024 baseball season, revealing a league increasingly defined by extremes. Rather than focusing solely on the gleaming MVP trophies, Stone zeroes in on the paradoxical nature of modern records: the same season that produced historic offensive explosions also birthed franchise lows in batting averages and defensive efficiency. This is not a celebration of glory, but a forensic look at how the game's evolving mechanics are rewriting the history books in ways both brilliant and broken.
The Paradox of Excellence
Stone begins by dismantling the assumption that a record-breaking year looks the same across every franchise. He notes that while 2023 saw ten teams fail to set any new records in his dataset, 2024 saw only eight, yet the nature of those records tells a complex story. "In 2023 there were 10 teams that didn't have any new records set for the statistics I considered. This year, there were 8 such teams," Stone writes, immediately grounding his analysis in the sheer volume of historical shifts. The author's framing is effective because it forces the reader to confront the fact that "records" are not always positive achievements; sometimes, they are markers of systemic failure.
Consider the Atlanta Braves, a team often lauded for offensive power. Stone points out that their most significant 2024 achievement was defensive: "Fewest errors in a full season. Leaving aside the shortened 2020 campaign, the Braves this year set a new franchise record with only 68 errors—yes, even fewer than other shortened seasons like 1981, 1994, and 1995." This is a remarkable feat of precision in an era where contact rates are plummeting. However, the commentary highlights a tension: in a game increasingly dominated by strikeouts, the value of a clean glove is becoming a rare commodity. Stone's decision to highlight this defensive record alongside the offensive ones suggests that the game is bifurcating into specialists who excel in narrow lanes while failing in others.
"As a result, they also tied their franchise record for highest overall fielding percentage at .988 (also achieved in 2021.)"
Critics might argue that focusing on fielding percentage ignores the broader context of defensive shifts and the difficulty of modern hitting, but Stone's data holds up: the ability to simply not make a mistake has become a historic anomaly.
The Strikeout Epidemic
The most pervasive theme in Stone's coverage is the relentless rise of the strikeout, a trend that has moved from a nuisance to a defining characteristic of the sport. The author meticulously catalogs how this trend has set new, often unflattering, franchise records. "Elly De La Cruz is an exciting player, but in 2024 he did set the all-time Reds franchise record with 218 strikeouts," Stone writes, capturing the bittersweet reality of modern star power. The excitement of a player's speed and power is inextricably linked to their inability to make contact.
This trend reaches a fever pitch in the National League West and the American League. Stone observes that the Pittsburgh Pirates "set an all-time franchise record with 1,506 [strikeouts], nine more than the 1497 they had in 2011." Even more striking is the Colorado Rockies, who Stone notes "went well past that with 1,617 strikeouts in 2024. That is the third most by any team, ever." The sheer volume of these numbers suggests a fundamental shift in the approach to the game. As Stone puts it regarding the Seattle Mariners, "The Mariners' batters struck out a whopping 1,625 times—the second most of any team ever, behind only the 2023 Twins."
The author's choice to list these negative records with the same gravity as positive ones is a powerful editorial stance. It refuses to let the narrative of "power hitting" obscure the reality that teams are increasingly failing to put the ball in play. A counterargument worth considering is that these records are a natural byproduct of optimized pitching and defensive shifts, not necessarily a decline in skill. Yet, Stone's data implies that the cost of this optimization is a significant reduction in the traditional flow of the game.
The Extremes of Failure
Perhaps the most sobering section of Stone's piece is his documentation of teams that set records for the wrong reasons. The Chicago White Sox and the Tampa Bay Rays serve as cautionary tales of how quickly a franchise can slide from contention to historical irrelevance. Stone writes bluntly about the White Sox: "Obviously. Ignoring shortened-seasons, this club's 41 wins in 2024 are the lowest total in the 162-game era, and correspondingly their 121 losses are the highest total." The use of "Obviously" here is a rhetorical device that underscores the absurdity of the situation; the records were so bad they were inevitable.
The Rays, conversely, experienced a dramatic reversal of fortune. "What a difference a year can make! In 2023 the Rays scored 860 runs, the most in franchise history. In 2024, that total dropped to 604, the fewest in franchise history," Stone notes. This volatility highlights the fragility of modern team construction. The author details how the Rays set new lows in hits, batting average, on-base percentage, and slugging percentage, painting a picture of an offense that completely collapsed. "Their 1,241 total hits in 2024 set the new low bar for the franchise, and was far below the 1,293 they managed in 2012," he writes.
"Hard to score a lot of runs when you set new franchise lows in hits and all three slash line stats."
Stone's analysis of the Rays and White Sox serves as a reminder that in baseball, as in any competitive field, the gap between the elite and the bottom is widening. The data suggests that the margin for error has vanished; a single year of poor performance can now etch a team's name into the record books for the wrong reasons.
The Bright Spots in a Dark Field
Despite the overwhelming focus on negative records, Stone does find moments of genuine brilliance that cut through the noise. The Los Angeles Dodgers, led by Shohei Ohtani, provide a stark contrast to the struggling franchises. "Shohei Ohtani's NL MVP 2024 season appears in lots of top-10 all-time Dodgers franchises lists. But most prominent are the two records he set, with 54 HR (Shawn Green had 49 in 2001) and 99 extra-base hits (Babe Herman had 94 in 1930)," Stone writes. Here, the data confirms that individual greatness can still transcend the league-wide trends.
Similarly, the Kansas City Royals saw a breakout from Bobby Witt Jr. that defied the odds. "Bobby Witt Jr. had a truly outstanding season in 2024, including setting two new franchise records. His 374 total bases surpassed the 363 that George Brett had in 1979," Stone notes. This comparison to George Brett, a legendary figure in Royals history, elevates Witt's achievement beyond mere statistics. It suggests that while the game is changing, the potential for historic, franchise-defining performances remains.
The author also highlights the efficiency of base stealers in an era of caution. "Zach McKinstry had a perfect 100% SB success rate in 2024 as we swiped 16 bags and was never caught," Stone writes regarding the Detroit Tigers. This efficiency stands in sharp contrast to the high strikeout rates elsewhere, proving that speed and precision can still be effective weapons.
Bottom Line
Tom Stone's 2024 record round-up is a masterclass in using data to tell a story of divergence. The strongest part of his argument is the unflinching presentation of negative records alongside positive ones, forcing the reader to acknowledge that the game's evolution has created a landscape of extreme polarization. His biggest vulnerability is a slight lack of context regarding why these trends are accelerating, leaving the reader with the "what" but not the full "how." As the sport moves forward, the most critical question to watch is whether the league can find a way to balance the power and the strikeouts, or if these extremes will become the permanent new normal.
"The 2024 Mariners' pitchers set a new franchise standard for lowest WHIP—a very stingy 1.077, well below the 1.173 from 2014."
This piece ultimately serves as a historical marker, capturing a season where the boundaries of possibility were pushed in every direction, for better and for worse.