Batting second Juan Soto, RF
Behind Lindor in this dream lineup, we have Juan Soto. You can make the statistical case for Soto to bat leadoff. The downside, after swatting a career-high 43 home runs, is that many more become solo shots. Soto is an elite OBP guy and batting one spot lower doesn’t really make enough of a difference. Put him where he’s comfortable.
Although seeing Soto patrol right field is more of a nightmare at times than a dream, it’s where he should play the majority of time in 2026. It’s too soon to move him off of the position permanently. A few starts at DH is acceptable. For what it’s worth, the Mets only gave him 3 starts in the DH spot all of last season. It’s actually his fewest in a couple of seasons.
There isn’t a bad place to put Soto in the lineup. Second maximizes his plate appearances than having him bat third where the Mets tried him for a period last year. Anything lower and you start to take away from his opportunities.
Adding stolen bases to his repertoire, swiping an NL-leading 38 this past year in 42 tries, has made this power-hitting star feel even more like a top of the order bat than ever before in his career. Teams no longer think of the second hitter in a lineup as the lighter-hitting second baseman who’ll smack a ball to the right side. It can and should be a place for one of your club’s better hitters. Why wait until number three?
