Will Slugger Nick Kurtz And Other 2025 Rookies Stand Test Of Time?

Nick Kurtz of the Athletics is the top player among 242 who made their Major League Baseball debuts in 2025. He is far and away the leader among the 448 players who still had rookie status after first making the big time in previous seasons.

Kurtz crashed 36 homers, had 86 RBI and scored 90 runs to lead all rookies in those categories. He also batted .290 in 117 games.

Here is a look at the 2025 rookie leaders in various categories:

242 debuts

Youngest: Didier Fuentes, Braves, 20 years, 3 days

Oldest: Tomoyuki Sugano, Orioles, 35 years, 170 days

OFFENSIVE LEADERS

Games: Caleb Durbin & Agustin Ramirez, 136

Hits: 124, Agustin Ramirez

Runs: 90, Nick Kurtz

HR: 36, Nick Kurtz

RBI: 86, Nick Kurtz

SB: 44, Chandler Simpson

Avg (min 50 games): .299, Daylen Lile

PITCHERS

Games: 67, Jack Dreyer

IP: 157, Tomoyuki Sugano

W: 11, Cade Horton

SV: 6, Grant Taylor

K: 145, Shane Smith

ERA (min 50 IP): 1.94 Matt Svanson

Overall, it was a down year for debut seasons, especially when you compare it to some of the greatest in history. Then again, Kurtz’s numbers dwarfed debuts made by some Hall of Famers. Clearly, one season does not define a career.

From Rags To Riches

The great Ty Cobb hit only .238 in his first 41 games at age 18 in 1905 for the Detroit Tigers. In 98 games the next year, he hit .316 with 23 stolen bases.

Remarkably, he never hit that LOW again. Cobb batted .370 over his next 22 seasons and has the highest batting average in history at .366.

Barry Bonds did not exactly set the league on fire in 1986 at age 21 for the Pittsburgh Pirates. He had 16 home runs with 48 RBI and a .223 average in 113 games. Who would have thought he’d bash a record 773 homers and bat .298 over 2,986 games? Or drive in 100+ runs in 12 of 15 seasons between 1990 and 2004?

Would you have predicted Mike Schmidt to win three MVP awards and make the Hall of Fame based on his first 145 games? He hit .206 over 13 games in 1972 and .196 in 132 games in 1973. From 1974 to 1986, he led the NL in homers eight times, in RBI four times. Over 18 seasons, he had 548 homers, 1,595 RBI and lifted his career average to .267.

Over his first two years, Greg Maddux had an 8-18 record, 5.59 ERA for the Chicago Cubs in 1986-87. From 1988 through 2002, the right-hander had a 265-134 record and 2.62 ERA. He pitched until age 42 in 2008, finishing at 355-277, 3.16 with only 999 walks allowed in 5,000 1/3 career innings.

These are just four great players of many who turned it around.

Great From Day One

Joe DiMaggio was great from the start. He went 3-for-6 in his first game for the New York Yankees in 1936. Overall as a 21-year-old rookie, he batted .323 with 29 homers, 125 RBI, 132 runs and an AL-leading 15 triples.

Joltin’ Joe had a record 56-game hitting streak in 1941 and batted .325 with 361 homers and 1,537 RBI in 1,736 career games.

As a rookie in 1939, Ted Williams hit .327 with 31 homers, 131 runs and an AL-leading 145 RBI. For his career, he hit .344 with 521 homers, 1,839 RBI in 2,292 games. His .482 career on-base percentage is the finest ever.

Many others were successful from the start such as Pete Rose, Tom Seaver, Willie McCovey, Stan Musial, Dizzy Dean, Eddie Murray and Albert Pujols.

A Look At 2021-24

Cal Raleigh had 60 homers and 125 RBI this year. In his debut season of 2021, he hit .180 with 2 homers in 47 games.

That same year, Wander Franco batted .288 with 7 homers in 70 games. Franco was an all-star in 2023, hitting .281 with 17 homers and 30 stolen bases. He has not played since Aug, 12, 2023, battling sexual abuse charges in the Dominican Republic. He may never be permitted to play again.

Here’s the career leaders for players making their MLB debuts, 2021-24:

2021

265 debuts

AL ROY: Randy Arozarena, Rays

NL ROY: Jonathan India, Reds

Youngest: Wander Franco, Rays, 20.113

Oldest: Cory Abbott, Cubs: 25.258

CAREER LEADERS

Games: Andrew Vaughn, 674

Hits: Andrew Vaughn, 625

Runs: Jonathan India, 371

HR: Cal Raleigh, 153

RBI: Cal Raleigh, 376

SB: Jarren Duran, 91

AVG (min. 200 games): Wander Franco, .282

PITCHERS

Games: Griffin Jax, 299

IP: Logan Gilbert, 835.1

W: Logan Gilbert, 47

SV: Camilo Doval, 108

BB: Edward Cabrera, 210

K: Logan Gilbert, 884

ERA (min 100 IP): Dylan Lee, 2.82

2022

303 debuts

AL ROY: Julio Rodriguez, Mariners

NL ROY: Michael Harris II, Braves

Youngest: Francisco Alvarez, Mets, 20.315

Oldest: Jason Krizan, Giants, 32.305

CAREER LEADERS

Games: Bobby Witt Jr.: 626

Hits: Bobby Witt Jr.: 722

Runs: Bobby Witt Jr.: 403

HR: Julio Rodriguez, 112

RBI: Bobby Witt Jr., 373

SB: Bobby Witt Jr.: 148

AVG (min 200 games): Bobby Witt Jr.: .290

PITCHERS

Games: Jhoan Duran, 246

IP: George Kirby, 637.2

W: George Kirby, 45

SV: Jhoan Duran, 90

K: George Kirby, 621

ERA (min 100 IP): Felix Bautista, 2.01

2023

261 debuts

AL ROY: Gunnar Henderson, Orioles

NL ROY: Corbin Carroll, Diamondbacks

Youngest: Eury Perez, Marlins, 20.027

Oldest: Drew Maggi, Pirates, 33.345

CAREER LEADERS

Games: Anthony Volpe, 473

Hits: Elly De La Cruz, 417

Runs: Elly De La Cruz, 274

HR: Elly De La Cruz, 60

RBI: Elly De La Cruz, 206

SB: Elly De La Cruz, 139

AVG (min 200 games): Xavier Edwards, .298

PITCHERS

Games: Ryan Walker, 193

IP: Tanner Bibee, 498

W: Tanner Bibee, 34

SV: Mason Miller, 50

K: Tanner Bibee, 490

ERA (min 100 IP): Abner Uribe, 2.32

2024

255 debuts

AL ROY: Luis Gil, Yankees

NL ROY: Jackson Merrill, Padres

Youngest: Jackson Chourio, 20.018

Oldest: Brady Feigl, Pirates, 33.243

CAREER LEADERS

Games: Colt Keith, 285

Hits: Jackson Chourio, 293

Runs: Jackson Chourio, 164

HR: Jackson Chourio, 42

RBI: Jackson Chourio, 157

SB: Jackson Chourio, 43

AVG (min 100 games) Jacob Wilson, .301

PITCHERS

Games: Cade Smith, 150

IP: Paul Skenes, 320.2

W: Shota Imanaga, 24

SV: Cade Smith, 17

K: Paul Skenes, 386

ERA (min 100 IP): Paul Skenes, 1.96

Top Rookies Must Stay Healthy

MLB history is littered with phenoms whose careers fizzled for various sad reasons.

Rookie of the year winners Ken Hubbs (plane crash), Jose Fernandez (boat crash) tragically died early.

Rookie winners such as Herb Score (eye, arm), Mark (The Bird) Fidrych (arm), Dwight Gooden, Darryl Strawberry and Steve Howe (drugs), Joe Charboneau (back), Kerry Wood (arm) played through their troubles but never truly met was expected after their brilliant beginnings.

The future seems bright for Nick Kurtz, Chandler Simpson, Cade Horton, Paul Skenes, Gunnar Henderson, Jackson Chourio, Elly De La Cruz and other young stars. Here’s hoping they stay strong and deliver long careers.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/chuckmurr/2025/09/30/will-slugger-nick-kurtz-and-other-2025-rookies-stand-test-of-time/