Marcell Ozuna

Marcell Ozuna

33-Year-Old DHDH
Atlanta Braves
2024 Fantasy Outlook
Ozuna struggled to a .687 OPS in 2022 and appeared to be in danger of being cut out of Atlanta's regular lineup last season after going 5-for-59 in April, but he quickly turned things around and finished 2023 with a career-high 40 homers, 100 RBI, 84 runs and a .274/.346/.558 slash line in 144 contests. That was good for a 139 wRC+, which is a vast improvement on his 85 wRC+ over the previous two years. His 2023 production was supported by a career-high 16.6 percent barrel rate and 49.0 percent hard-hit rate, which helped lead to a .284 xBA and .583 xSLG. Ozuna almost exclusively served as Atlanta's designated hitter, as he made only two appearances (one start) in the outfield, so his positional eligibility will be limited to begin 2024. That'll hardly matter to fantasy managers if he's able to replicate his 2023 campaign, but year-to-year consistency has never been the 33-year-old's forte. Ozuna's results last season were supported by strong underlying numbers and sets him up for another productive campaign in 2024, but he still carries some risk for fantasy managers given his boom-or-bust trends the past few years. Read Past Outlooks
RANKS
Rest of Season From Preseason
#146
ADP
$Signed a four-year, $64 million contract with Atlanta in February of 2021. Contract includes $16 million team option ($1 million buyout) for 2025. Optioned exercised in November of 2024.
Option officially picked up
DHAtlanta Braves
November 4, 2024
Atlanta exercised Ozuna's $16 million club option for 2025, Mark Feinsand of MLB.com reports.
ANALYSIS
The transaction was a given after Ozuna batted .302/.378/.546 with 39 home runs and 104 RBI in 2024. He is a full-time designated hitter at this point in his career, having not played a single inning in the outfield this season, but Ozuna should be a middle-of-the-order force again in 2025 in what will be his age-34 season.
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Batting Stats
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2022
2021
2020
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Batting Order Slot Breakdown
vs Right-Handed Pitchers
vs RHP
#1
#2
#3
#4
#5
#6
#7
#8
#9
77
2
37
vs Left-Handed Pitchers
vs LHP
#1
#2
#3
#4
#5
#6
#7
#8
#9
33
13
Left/Right Batting Splits
Since 2022
 
 
+9%
OPS vs RHP
2024
 
 
+3%
OPS vs RHP
2023
 
 
+11%
OPS vs LHP
2022
 
 
+54%
OPS vs RHP
OPS PA R HR RBI SB AVG OBP SLG
Since 2022vs Left .793 447 60 18 56 0 .266 .340 .453
Since 2022vs Right .868 1339 176 84 204 3 .272 .338 .531
2024vs Left .904 162 23 5 24 0 .319 .407 .496
2024vs Right .931 525 73 34 80 1 .297 .370 .561
2023vs Left .980 139 23 12 24 0 .278 .345 .635
2023vs Right .881 453 61 28 76 0 .272 .347 .535
2022vs Left .497 146 14 1 8 0 .200 .260 .237
2022vs Right .763 361 42 22 48 2 .236 .280 .484
More Splits View More Split Stats
Home/Away Batting Splits
Since 2022
 
 
+7%
OPS at Home
2024
 
 
+4%
OPS on Road
2023
 
 
+24%
OPS at Home
2022
 
 
+1%
OPS at Home
OPS PA R HR RBI SB AVG OBP SLG
Since 2022Home .878 891 120 53 136 3 .272 .346 .532
Since 2022Away .822 895 116 49 124 0 .268 .331 .491
2024Home .908 336 41 19 55 1 .285 .375 .533
2024Away .940 351 55 20 49 0 .317 .382 .559
2023Home 1.000 304 51 23 54 0 .301 .372 .629
2023Away .804 288 33 17 46 0 .244 .319 .484
2022Home .692 251 28 11 27 2 .222 .275 .417
2022Away .682 256 28 12 29 0 .229 .273 .408
More Splits View More Split Stats
Stat Review
How does Marcell Ozuna compare to other hitters?
This section compares his stats with all batting seasons from the previous three seasons (minimum 400 plate appearances)*. The bar represents the player's percentile rank. For example, if the bar is halfway across, then the player falls into the 50th percentile for that stat and it would be considered average.

* Exit Velocity and Barrels/PA % are benchmarked against 2019 data (min 400 PA) and Hard Hit Rate is benchmarked against last season's data (min 400 PA). See here for more exit velocity/barrels stats plus an explanation of current limitations with that data set.
  • BB/K
    Walk to strikeout ratio
  • BB Rate
    The percentage of plate appearances resulting in a walk.
  • K Rate
    The percentage of plate appearances resulting in a strikeout.
  • BABIP
    Batting average on balls in play. Measures how many of a batter’s balls in play go for hits.
  • ISO
    Isolated Power. Slugging percentage minus batting average. A computation used to measure a batter's raw power.
  • AVG
    Batting average. Hits divided by at bats.
  • OBP
    On Base Percentage. A measure of how often a batters reaches base. Roughly equal to number of times on base divided by plate appearances.
  • SLG
    Slugging Percentage. A measure of the batting productivity of a hitter. It is calculated as total bases divided by at bats.
  • OPS
    On base plus slugging. THe sum of a batter's on-base percentage and slugging percentage.
  • wOBA
    Weighted on-base average. Measures a player's overall offensive contributions per plate appearance. wOBA combines all the different aspects of hitting into one metric, weighting each of them in proportion to their actual run value.
  • Exit Velocity
    The speed of the baseball as it comes off the bat, immediately after a batter makes contact.
  • Hard Hit Rate
    A measure of contact quality from Sports Info Solutions. This stat explains what percentage of batted balls were hit hard vs. medium or soft.
  • Barrels/PA
    The percentage of plate appearances where a batter had a batted ball classified as a Barrel. A Barrel is a batted ball with similar exit velocity and launch angle to past ones that led to a minimum .500 batting average and 1.500 slugging percentage.
  • Expected BA
    Expected Batting Average.
  • Expected SLG
    Expected Slugging Percentage.
  • Sprint Speed
    The speed of a runner from home to first, in feet per second.
  • Ground Ball %
    The percentage of balls put in play that are on the ground.
  • Line Drive %
    The percentage of balls put in play that are line drives.
  • Fly Ball %
    The percentage of balls put in play that are fly balls.
BB/K
0.44
 
BB Rate
10.8%
 
K Rate
24.7%
 
BABIP
.359
 
ISO
.244
 
AVG
.302
 
OBP
.378
 
SLG
.546
 
OPS
.925
 
wOBA
.400
 
Exit Velocity
92.2 mph
 
Hard Hit Rate
40.2%
 
Barrels/PA
9.9%
 
Expected BA
.290
 
Expected SLG
.584
 
Sprint Speed
20.6 ft/sec
 
Ground Ball %
38.0%
 
Line Drive %
23.6%
 
Fly Ball %
38.4%
 
Advanced Batting Stats
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Additional Stats
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Defensive Stats
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Batted Ball Stats
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Past Fantasy Outlooks
2023
2022
2021
2020
2019
2018
2017
2016
2015
2014
2013
2012
Ozuna sat out most of 2021 with an injury and also served a suspension for violating MLB's domestic violence policy, but he returned to the fold for Atlanta in 2022 and played in 124 games. The veteran slugger clubbed 23 home runs but failed to hit with any consistency and had a .226/.274/.413 slash line. The power is clearly still there, but his strikeout rate (24.1 percent) and walk rate (6.2 percent) were near the worst figures of his big-league career. He should see most of his action at designated hitter given his poor and still-declining outfield defense, but William Contreras is also in that mix for Atlanta after broke out with 20 homers and an .860 OPS last season. Now entering his age-32 campaign, Ozuna remains under contract for $16 million in 2023 and 2024 and should at least see semi-regular playing time, but he may not be in the lineup every day, and his inconsistency makes him a volatile fantasy option, albeit with some upside given his previous success.
Ozuna was arrested May 29 of last year after police officers in Sandy Springs, Georgia, while responding to a 911 call, witnessed Ozuna attacking his wife. A felony charge was later dropped and Ozuna entered a diversion program in September. If he meets the resolution's conditions within six months, the misdemeanor charges stemming from the incident will be dropped, per the Fulton County DA. Major League Baseball suspended Ozuna in November, retroactive to Sept. 10, meaning he's already served the ban while he was on administrative leave. The expectation is that Ozuna will be back in Atlanta in 2022.
Ozuna signed a pillow contract with Atlanta once the free-agent market dried up for him last winter, and if not for his own teammate in Atlanta, Ozuna could very well have been the 2020 NL MVP. Ozuna had exactly the type of season a pending free agent wants to have as he was an absolute monster in the middle of the Atlanta lineup setting career highs in walk rate, batting average, OBP, SLG, ISO, and exit velocity. His Statcast measures for what happened when he made contact were all within the top 6% of the league in 2020. Now comes the challenge of which team is going to pony up the cash to sign this impact bat. The power plays anywhere; a universal DH would open up suitors considerably because he is a liability if he has to be in the field everyday. He was a 2020 bargain, but he likely won't slide past the fourth round in 2021.
Chances are, 2017 will always be the outlier for Ozuna. He slugged 37 homers that year and ranked as the 13th-best rate contributor in the game by wRC+ (143). He has largely underperformed in the three seasons around 2017, with wRC+ marks ranging from 107 to 110 despite elite batted-ball numbers. His BA dipped close to 40 points in his second season with the Cardinals, though his average exit velocity and hard-hit rate both ranked within the top 7% of the league. His xBA was .288. Ozuna walked at a career-best clip (11.3%) and ran more than he ever had in the majors, stealing 12 bases in 14 attempts. Even with the uptick in walks, Ozuna still lags a little bit in the OBP department, and his defense is shaky at times, but the 29-year-old will continue to play every day after signing a one-year deal with Atlanta and will see a significant boost in park factors. A return to $20 hitter status is entirely possible.
Compared to former outfield mates Christian Yelich and Giancarlo Stanton, Ozuna didn't make as much of a splash in his first year outside Miami. Ozuna eventually found his swing after a slow start to his Cardinals career, slashing .299/.346/.482 with 20 home runs from May 21 onward. It still marked a step back from the .924 OPS and 37 long balls he supplied in 2017, though regression was always coming after he needed a 23.4% HR/FB -- nearly nine points above his career rate -- to achieve that production. Moreover, Ozuna battled a sore right shoulder for a good portion of the second half that later required offseason arthroscopic surgery, further explaining the power downturn on some level. There's always a risk that such a procedure continues to sap his slugging output, but the improved contact skills Ozuna has displayed the last few years coupled with his guaranteed spot in the heart of the order give him a fairly dependable four-category floor.
Ozuna had shown flashes of greatness in the past, but few could have predicted his monster 2017. As a 25-year-old, Ozuna exceeded his home-run total from the previous two seasons combined while adding nearly 50 points to his batting average. He finished with a 142 wRC+ (15th among qualified hitters) and .388 wOBA, and the numbers from Statcast were generally encouraging; Ozuna had a .357 xwOBA and 90.7 mph average exit velocity, which ranked 15th among 237 players with at least 250 at-bats. He added to his walk rate, boosting it to a career-high 9.4 percent, but his BABIP was slightly inflated at .355 and it's possible Ozuna's average will settle closer to the .270s in the years to come. A .270 batter with 30-plus homers and 100 RBI isn't as rare as it used to be, but it's still plenty valuable. With Ozuna leaving Miami for St. Louis in a December trade, we feel even better about his chances for another $20-plus season.
Ozuna rebounded from a disappointing 2015 campaign to essentially match his breakout 2014 season, showing latent skills growth in the process. The 26-year-old's future is back on the upswing. He walked more and whiffed significantly less than in the previous season. It's the improved contact rate that's most intriguing. The only negative last season was a 20-point drop in BABIP for the second straight year. Assuming a great deal of that is variance, if Ozuna maintains most or all his contact gains, what looks to be a stable average in the .265 range could head north quickly with a BABIP reversion. While the power drop in 2015 can't be ignored, it can be discounted meaning there could be a buying opportunity if the market doesn't similarly adjust. Plus, Ozuna is lofting a few more flyballs away from challenging the 30-homer mark, and he's at an age where this often occurs. Don't hesitate to cast a line toward him.
The power Ozuna showed in 2014 dissipated in 2015, as he hit just 10 home runs in 494 plate appearances and saw his slugging percentage dip below .400 for the second time in three years. Ozuna’s performance was so poor that the Marlins stashed him in the minors for 33 games, likely in an extremely Marlins attempt to game his service time clock. Giving up on Ozuna at this point would be a grave overreaction, however; he was a 24-year-old playing in one of the most difficult parks for power hitters in the game’s recent history. Slumps will happen. Counting the minor leagues, Ozuna has four 20-homer seasons in the past six years, and he’s far too young to give up on. His strikeout rates are concerning — he has yet to post one below 19.6 percent — but if the power he showed in 2014 and in the minors resurfaces, everybody will forget all about that right quick.
A surprise offensive breakout player during his 2013 rookie campaign, Ozuna managed to sneak up on us once again in 2014 as he made significant strides in most every aspect of his game. The 24-year-old outfielder re-discovered the power stroke he displayed throughout the minors and socked 23 home runs to go along with 26 doubles and five triples while tallying 83 RBI over 153 games during his first full season in the majors. Ozuna continued to swing and miss with regularity (26.8 K%), but also showed a slight increase in walk rate (6.7% in 2014 compared to 4.5% as a rookie). He continues to provide steady defense in the outfield and has settled in as the full-time center fielder after the team tried to mix and match defensive alignments early on. Ozuna should be fully recover from the ankle injury that cost him the last two weeks in September by the time camp rolls around, and he'll enter the season with ample RBI opportunities while batting in the middle of the Marlins’ order.
Ozuna turned heads when he got the nod over some of the Marlins' more accomplished outfield prospects in late May and perhaps his presence on the 40-man roster played a role. Ozuna did, however, make the most of his opportunity, putting together a BABIP-fueled tear where he batted .336 over his first 33 games with the Marlins. More of a power prospect than a contact hitter -- Ozuna popped one home run every 20.9 at-bats in minors with a strikeout rate hovering around 20% -- it was no surprise to see his line dip to .265/.303/.389 before he was finally shut down with a thumb injury that required surgery in late July. Despite struggling during the end of his run in Miami, Ozuna gained some valuable experience as an everyday player, contributing solid defense in the outfield and showing the ability to handle right-handed pitching at the major league level. He is not quite of the Christian Yelich/Jake Marisnick ilk, but with a reduced strikeout rate, improved patience at the plate and some more authoritative contact, Ozuna could threaten 20 home runs annually as he hits his prime. Heading into the spring, Ozuna looks to be the favorite to earn the starting job in center field with Miami as he enters his sophomore season.
Ozuna spent his 2012 season at High-A Jupiter and followed up his fine season the previous year with more of the same. He continues to flash plus power, slugging 24 home runs over 489 at-bats last season while posting a strong .804 OPS. Ozuna has mashed 69 home runs over three minor league seasons and appears ready to take a jump to the next level in 2013. Though his 116 strikeouts in 129 games last season lend doubt to the notion that he will ever provide positive value in terms of batting average, his power is absolutely for real. Keeper league owners should invest now, as he'll likely spend his 2013 season at Double-A Jacksonville.
Ozuna is no Mike Stanton, but the 21-year-old has plus-power and began to develop other aspects of his game in 2011, upping his walk rate, cutting back on the strikeouts and stealing an impressive 17 bases in 19 attempts at Low-A. The plate discipline is still a work in progress, and Jupiter can be a tough place to hit so don't be shocked if his numbers at High-A take a bit of a tumble, but he's a legitimate prospect who would be among the best in the Marlins system even if it weren't depleted.
More Fantasy News
Option will be exercised
DHAtlanta Braves
October 4, 2024
Atlanta president of baseball operations Alex Anthopoulos said Friday that the team plans to exercise Ozuna's $16 million club option for 2025, Grant McAuley of 92.9 The Game Atlanta reports.
ANALYSIS
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Three XBH in win
DHAtlanta Braves
September 18, 2024
Ozuna went 3-for-4 with a solo home run, two doubles, two runs scored and two total RBI during Wednesday's 7-1 win over the Reds.
ANALYSIS
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Another three hits in win
DHAtlanta Braves
August 18, 2024
Ozuna went 3-for-3 with a three-run homer, a walk and three runs scored in Saturday's win over the Angels.
ANALYSIS
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Racks up three hits in loss
DHAtlanta Braves
August 16, 2024
Ozuna went 3-for-4 with a walk and a run scored in Friday's 3-2 loss to the Angels.
ANALYSIS
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Mashes 33rd homer
DHAtlanta Braves
August 9, 2024
Ozuna went 2-for-4 with a walk, a home run and two RBI in Thursday's loss to the Brewers.
ANALYSIS
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Latest Fantasy Rumors
Open to Home Run Derby
DHAtlanta Braves
June 28, 2024
Ozuna indicated Friday he'll take part in the 2024 Home Run Derby if asked by Major League Baseball, reports Justin Toscano of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
ANALYSIS
The 33-year-old slugged 40 homers last season and has been one of the best hitters in baseball in 2024 with 21 long balls and a .953 OPS through 79 games, so he figures to be on the shortlist for the All-Star Weekend showcase. Ozuna has scuffled a bit over the past couple weeks with a .150/.277/.250 slash line in his past 11 games.
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