
LF · Rangers
Grade SAM Haggerty
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On the field, SAM Haggerty grades out as an excellent LF for Rangers (A- Performance). That places him 15th of 75 graded left fielders. The public read is negative (D- Sentiment), drawn from current news and social signal rather than the box score.
| Year | Team | GP | AVG | HR | RBI | OPS | SB | H |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Career | ![]() | 296 | 0.23311897 | 11 | 54 | 0.65545744 | 46 | 145 |
| 2026 | ![]() | 36 | .159 | 0 | 1 | .395 | 2 | 7 |
| 2025 | ![]() | 64 | .253 | 2 |
Sam Haggerty's on-field production earns an A- performance grade against left fielder peers across MLB. His 2026 season marks a significant disconnect between his performance evaluation and the statistical reality on display: through 36 games, he carries a .159 AVG with 0 home runs and 16 strikeouts, numbers that paint a picture of a player struggling to generate consistent offensive impact at the big-league level. The grade appears anchored in what Haggerty does bring—speed, defensive versatility, and the kind of positional flexibility that bench depth requires—rather than any standout hitting metrics or power production. Operating in a depth role with limited at-bats and mounting strikeouts, he represents the organizational comfort level with a serviceable bench piece whose value is situational and matchup-dependent rather than foundational. As an established veteran eight seasons into his career, Haggerty remains a fringe roster contributor whose role is precisely what the Rangers appear to be signaling: a left-handed utility option to cycle through platoon situations and late-inning defensive flexibility, with little indication of an expanded pathway to everyday opportunity. The team's recent signings of position players and continued roster tinkering suggest organizational acknowledgment that Haggerty is a symptom of a broader left-handed bat shortage rather than a solution, making his performance grade a reflection of competence in a limited capacity rather than star-caliber production.
SAM Haggerty ranks 15th of 75 graded left fielders by performance. That slots SAM between Christian Yelich (A-) just ahead and Starling Marte (A-) just behind.
Graded higher
Christian YelichBrewersA-Cody BellingerYankeesA-Richie PalaciosRaysA-Graded lower
Starling MarteRoyalsAuto-moderated fan forum with 5-minute speaker turns
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SAM Haggerty is a player on the Rangers roster listed at LF for the Rangers. FanVerdicts covers every MLB player, team, GM, and transaction — and puts your verdict on all of it. Sign in to cast your Fan Verdict on SAM Haggerty, see where the crowd lands, and argue the call. FanVerdicts also brings its own read — performance, sentiment, and Contract Value Index — as one honest input alongside the crowd's. Where FanVerdicts has weighed in so far: Performance A-, Sentiment D-.
The crowd's Fan Verdict moves in real time as fans vote on this profile. FanVerdicts' own read updates as new data lands — performance recalculates when MLB game stats post, sentiment shifts with media coverage and fan discussion, and the Contract Value Index recomputes when contract terms change.
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| 13 |
| .698 |
| 12 |
| 41 |
| 2024 | ![]() | 8 | .067 | 0 | 1 | .192 | 1 | 1 |
| 2023 | ![]() | 52 | .253 | 1 | 5 | .705 | 10 | 23 |
| 2022 | ![]() | 83 | .256 | 5 | 23 | .738 | 13 | 45 |
| 2021 | ![]() | 35 | .186 | 2 | 5 | .538 | 5 | 16 |
| 2020 | ![]() | 13 | .260 | 1 | 6 | .715 | 4 | 13 |
| 2019 | ![]() | 11 | .000 | 0 | — | .000 | 0 | 0 |
Public perception of Sam Haggerty sits at a D- sentiment grade, with the Rangers conversation tracking his fringe-roster status rather than any trajectory toward expanded opportunity. Media and fan narrative frames him squarely as a left-handed utility outfielder whose value is anchored in speed and defensive versatility—the kind of depth piece that teams cycle through on an annual basis rather than build around. A pickoff blunder, an IL stint, and recent headlines explicitly questioning the Rangers' left-handed bat situation have reinforced the perception that Haggerty is a symptom of a roster construction problem, not a solution to one. The Rangers' decision to retain him on a one-year rookie scale deal signals organizational comfort keeping him around, but the transactional nature of that move—coupled with simultaneous signings of position players like Cody Freeman and Blain Crim—suggests the front office is actively exploring alternatives rather than betting on Haggerty's growth. The bottom line: Haggerty is a serviceable, replaceable bench piece with real roster security but little narrative momentum heading into the stretch run of a middling 24-27 Rangers squad.
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