A college standout at Florida State, Taylor Walls didn't have to travel far when the Tampa Bay Rays grabbed him with their third-round pick in 2017. Since making his big-league debut in 2021, the versatile infielder has given the club masterclass defense wherever he is plugged into the dirt, bouncing effortlessly between second base, third base, and shortstop. While his offensive baseline has historically leaned toward the lighter side, his premier glove is an absolute game-changer that routinely forces him into Kevin Cash's plans.
That defensive genius was on full display in 2022 when Walls led all of the American League with a massive 2.8 defensive bWAR. He backed up those defensive instincts during an injury-shortened 2024 campaign, leading all American League shortstops with 15 total zone runs above average despite logging just over 620 innings at the position. For Walls, his value has always been built on preventing runs rather than driving them in.
The 2025 season provided a highly encouraging step forward. Appearing in 101 games, Walls turned in the most offensively productive stretch of his career. While his baseline approach remained patient, he lifted his batting average to a personal-best .220 and drove in a career-high 38 RBIs, fueled by a scorching hot June in which he delivered 17 RBIs—the most by any Rays shortstop in a single month in nearly four years. He paired that offensive bump with 14 stolen bases and another 2.5 bWAR season before a late-summer groin strain prematurely ended his campaign in August.
As the Rays look toward the horizon of the upcoming 2026 season, Walls stands as the projected anchor of the Tampa Bay infield.

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