Juan Soto

Dominican baseball player
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External Websites
Also known as: Juan José Soto Pacheco
Quick Facts
In full:
Juan José Soto Pacheco
Born:
October 25, 1998, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic (age 26)
Also Known As:
Juan José Soto Pacheco

Juan Soto (born October 25, 1998, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic) is a superstar outfielder who is considered by many to be a generational baseball talent and whose hitting prowess has been compared to that of the great Ted Williams. Soto played for the Washington Nationals and the San Diego Padres before being traded to the New York Yankees for the 2024 Major League Baseball (MLB) season.

Early years

Soto was born to parents Belkis Pacheco and Juan Soto, Sr., in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, home to many future major league players. As a boy Soto idolized Dominican-born stars Manny Ramirez and Robinson Canó; Soto’s friends called him “Little Robbie.” His dad would throw him bottle caps to hone his swing.

Soto grew up in a tough neighborhood, and his mom limited how much time he spent outside, so he got creative with playing indoor baseball. He fashioned a makeshift ball by crumpling a couple of pieces of paper and covering them with tape. Then he would hit the ball in the hallway and pretend to run the bases. Juan Sr. took the younger Soto to his men’s softball league games. Before the games, Soto’s dad threw batting practice for his son. Soto was naturally right-handed, but he took his father’s suggestion that he throw and bat left-handed to get an advantage in baseball. When Soto was 16, the Washington Nationals signed him to a $1.5 million bonus.

A meteoric rise

The Nationals called Soto up to the majors in 2018 at the age of 19, after he dominated the competition in parts of three seasons in the minor leagues, where he batted .362 with a 1.043 on-base-plus-slugging percentage (OPS)—an important barometer of hitting prowess. In his rookie season in the big leagues, he hit .292 with 22 homers in just 116 games and finished second in the National League Rookie of the Year voting, to Ronald Acuña, Jr., of the Atlanta Braves.

Soto emerged as a dominant player in 2019, hitting 34 homers and 110 runs batted in (RBIs) while posting a .949 OPS. He was a key cog in the Nationals’ 2019 playoff run: He celebrated his 21st birthday while hitting .333 with 3 home runs and a 1.178 OPS during the World Series. The Nationals beat the Houston Astros in seven games, bringing a World Series title to Washington, D.C., for the first time in 95 years. The New York chapter of the Baseball Writers’ Association of America selected Soto and teammate Stephen Strasburg as joint winners of the Babe Ruth Award as the 2019 postseason Most Valuable Players.

The following year, the COVID-19-shortened 2020 season, Soto, still just 21, hit .351 to become the youngest player to win the NL batting title. The previous youngest winner was the Brooklyn Dodgers’ 22-year-old Pete Reiser, who hit a league-best .343 in 1941. Soto also led the league with a .490 on-base percentage and .695 slugging percentage. In 2021 he batted .313 with a .999 OPS and finished second in the NL MVP voting to former teammate Bryce Harper.

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An April 2022 Sports Illustrated profile by baseball writer Tom Verducci called Soto “the greatest hitting prodigy since Ted Williams” and compared him to the composer and pianist Frédéric Chopin. Verducci wrote that through their first 464 games, Soto and Williams were the only players with at least 90 homers and 350 walks. Other stories likened Soto to Mickey Mantle, Ken Griffey, Jr., and Mike Trout. As of the 2023 season, Soto had been named an All-Star three times and had won the Silver Slugger award four times.

A monster trade

The Nationals knew that Soto was a transcendent player, and during the 2022 season they offered him a 15-year, $440 million extension, which would have been the biggest contract in baseball history. But the 23-year-old superstar turned them down, even while insisting that he wanted to stay with the team. “I’ve been a National since day one,” he told reporters on the eve of the 2022 All-Star Game in Los Angeles. “Why should I want to change? I’ve been here my whole life and my career. I feel great where I’m at.” But he also expressed annoyance that the news of the contract extension offer had become public, calling it “pretty tough and pretty frustrating because I try to keep my stuff private.”

The Nationals, fearful of losing him as a free agent with little compensation for the team, traded him and Josh Bell at the 2022 trade deadline to the San Diego Padres for a significant package of prospects that included shortstop CJ Abrams. That deal continued a dismantling of the 2019 World Series championship team, following the trade of shortstop Trea Turner and pitcher Max Scherzer to the Los Angeles Dodgers the previous year. Ten days after the trade, Soto returned to Nationals Park in his new uniform, and fans gave him a standing ovation. Soto admitted that the time leading up to the trade was the most difficult of his career. “I love this game,” he told Sports Illustrated in 2023. “…And there were some days when I felt like it wasn’t fun anymore.” Soto said he had cried when he learned that he had been traded. He also recalled that turning down the Nationals’ contract offer pitted “all the fans, all the Dominicans, even my family against me.”

Soto struggled after the trade, hitting just .236 over the last two months of the 2022 season with San Diego. But after a slow start to the 2023 season, he again put up big numbers, ending the year with 35 home runs, 109 RBIs, and a .930 OPS.

In December 2023 the Padres traded Soto to the New York Yankees. He proved to be an important addition to his new team in the 2024 season, the last year of his contract. Soto finished the season with a career-high 41 home runs as well as 109 RBIs and a .989 OPS. He was a crucial contributor in the playoffs as well, most notably in game five of the American League Championship Series, when Soto hit a go-ahead three-run home run in the top of the 10th inning to send the Yankees to the World Series.

Fred Frommer