A month ago, I asked him about Jordan Walker. If the prodigious prospect is going to make the majors, we know itâll be as a starter, not a role player. So, if Walker is going to make the club out of spring training, he has to earn a starting outfield job. Which means, not just show heâs good enough to play in the majors, but also prove that heâs better than who is already in the majors.
âI sure hope heâs waking up every morning and thinking about winning a job and taking somebodyâs job,â Marmol said. âAnd I hope the other guys are waking up every morning making sure that their jobs are not taken.â
Which leads us to Tyler OâNeill. Sure, Dylan Carlson or Lars Nootbaar will have to battle for their outfield jobs, too. But those guys swing lefty bats â and Nootbaar, after his big second half, is sure on an upswing. OâNeillâs spot seems vulnerable right now, at least from this spot on press row. A year ago at this time, that wouldâve sounded improbable. His 2021 was superb. But his 2022 was subpar. The slugger didnât slug. And he was often injured.
So, yeah, heâs waking up every morning to make sure his job isnât taken (though, sometimes, heâs already up, since he and his wife just had a baby girl).
Asked Saturday about working to plant his flag in left field, OâNeill said, âOf course, thatâs where I want to be. I want to want to be on the field with these guys, I want to help them win ballgames â and you canât do it from left bench.â
This quest to stave off Walker â and, at least, make it Dylan or Larsâ problem â has already begun for the 27-year-old OâNeill, who sure seems in a better spot mentally. Entering last season, his arbitration case loomed.
âIt was a lot, mentally â lost a bit of sleep over it,â he shared Saturday.
But as reported in this newspaper, he avoided arbitration this year and will make $4.95 million in 2023.
âIt feels like a weight lifted off my back,â he said.
And while fighting to earn a starting spot in the outfield, heâs already earned another starting spot in an outfield â OâNeill shared that heâll play for Team Canada in the World Baseball Classic (heck, at this point, it seems like the only Cardinal not in the World Baseball Classic is Jordan Walker).
OâNeill has spent ample time in St. Louis this offseason, even working on his hitting with Cardinals Hall of Famer Jim Edmonds. But as OâNeill refines his sculpted body and his scrutinized swing (he slugged just .392 last year), the looming question is how much of his 2022 production was injury-related â and how much was regression?
John Mozeliak, the Cardinalsâ president of baseball operations, didnât spend money on a free agent outfielder (to be fair, there werenât many A-listers available ⦠though there sure were some A-list shortstops and starting pitchers available). âMoâ knows that Walker could crack the majors this year â and is one of the best offensive prospects St. Louis has ever had. But in the short-term, the strength of this Cardinals team isnât based solely on its super-strong stars, but rather on the supporting cast in the meat of the lineup.
Sure enough, the first player Mozeliak named in his 30-plus minute meeting with the media was ⦠Tyler OâNeill.
âThe key for the St. Louis Cardinals as you think about 2023 is really going to be â who are we?â he said. âAnd what I mean by that is â what is Tyler OâNeill? What is Dylan Carlson? What are we going to get out of Jack Flaherty? And these guys performed the expectations that we believe theyâre capable of, we think weâre going to be very talented and competitive and compelling team to watch.â
Regarding OâNeill, his strikeout rate is always going to be alarming. Itâs just part of his makeup. But last year, his hard hit percentage dropped from 52.2 to 43.3.
Asked what OâNeill can improve upon, Mozeliak said: âI think the simple thing there is to see that power, see that consistency, right? When youâre a middle-of-the-order hitter, are you contributing as a middle-of-the-order type of bat? And so, you know, taking injuries aside and we think back to two years ago, and the season he had, he was able to put the St. Louis Cardinals on his back from time to time and carry us. When you have two players like (Paul Goldschmidt and Nolan Arenado), you have to support that with other players. And I do feel like the emergence of Lars, for example, heâs someone that might turn into that, as well.
âBut in the meantime, weâve also had the time to watch somebody like Dylan Carlson or Tyler OâNeill. And I will say, going into the year, expectations are high. The key is obviously being healthy and when youâre looking from just a pure productivity standpoint, itâs power, itâs being able to hit doubles and trying to mitigate your strikeouts. But if the tradeoff is an increase in power, that might be a fair tradeoff.â
To be fair to OâNeill, this column couldâve also been written about Carlson. Both guys had high expectations in 2022 â and both guys finished with an OPS right around .700 and an OPS+ right around 100 (or average). But Carlson is only 24. And a switch-hitter. Heâs earmarked to play the important defensive position of center field. He was a highly-rated prospect who is still finding his overall game. He could sure have his job taken, as Marmol suggested. But for now, it sure seems like OâNeill is the one who has to put up the strongest fight.
âI really believe in what Iâm doing again (this offseason),â OâNeill said. âIâm not getting away from what makes me me.â