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Yes, we know that this is taking a while!

As many of you know, we at Notinhalloffame.com are slowly generating the top 50 of each major North American sports team. That being said, we maintain and update our existing Top 50 lists annually.  As such, we are delighted to present our pre-2025/26 revision of our top 50 Tampa Bay Rays.

As for all of our top 50 players in baseball, we look at the following: 

1.  Advanced Statistics.

2.  Traditional statistics and how they finished in Major League Baseball.

3.  Playoff accomplishments.

4.  Their overall impact on the team and other intangibles that are not reflected in a stat sheet.

Last year, the Rays finished fourth in the American League East with a 77-85 record.  As this is a young franchise that constantly overhauls talent, there were new entrants and multiple elevations on this year’s list, especially with the new algorithm.

As always, we present our top five, which saw a change due to the new algorithm.

1. Evan Longoria
2. Carl Crawford
3. Ben Zobrist
4. David Price
5. Kevin Kiermaier

You can find the entire list here.

Infielder Yandy Diaz moved up two spots from #10 to #8.

Pitcher Drew Rasmussen makes his first appearance, skyrocketing to #18.  We admittedly failed to rank him last year.

Notably, Pitcher Shane McLanahan, who missed 2024 and 2025 but returned in 2026, fell by one spot to #21.

Infielder Taylor Walls had a huge jump, moving from #45 to #29.

Pitcher Zack Littell, who was traded to the Cincinnati Reds during the 2025 campaign, debuts at #49.

Greg Vaughn and Steven Souza Jr. fell off the list.

We thank you for your continued support of our lists on Notinhalloffame.com.

There are few pitchers in modern baseball who better personify the thin line between elite dominance and medical fragility than Drew Rasmussen. Blessed with an explosive, high-spin fastball and a devastating slider-cutter combination, the right-hander has spent his career showcasing front-line potential while battling an extraordinarily brutal gauntlet of elbow injuries. Drafted originally by the Rays in 2017 but unsigned due to his health track, he underwent two separate Tommy John surgeries before even cementing himself in the major leagues with the Milwaukee Brewers. But since returning to the Tampa Bay organization via a franchise-altering May 2021 blockbuster trade that sent Willy Adames to Milwaukee, Rasmussen has transformed himself into one of the most efficient, unhittable, and resilient forces in the American League East.

After showing massive flashes down the stretch in 2021, Rasmussen's absolute arrival as an upper-echelon starter came during the 2022 campaign. Weaponizing a high-velocity arsenal with pinpoint control, he anchors the Rays' rotation by logging an 11–7 record and a stellar 2.84 ERA across 146 innings. His signature moment arrived on August 14, 2022, when he put on an absolute clinic against Baltimore, carrying a flawless perfect game into the ninth inning before surrendering a solitary double. He looked poised to build on that dominance in early 2023, roaring out to a 4–2 record and a 2.62 ERA over eight starts before disaster struck yet again. Chronic elbow issues flared up, forcing him to undergo a grueling internal brace surgery in July 2023 that sidelined him for over a calendar year.

The road back was slow and calculated, a testament to Tampa Bay's meticulous pitching development. Rasmussen finally resurfaced in August 2024, working primarily as a high-leverage multi-inning weapon out of the bullpen to protect his arm, posting a strong 2.83 ERA in 16 appearances.

That careful management paid off in historic fashion during the 2025 season, a triumphant campaign that stands as the absolute masterpiece of his professional life. Reinserted into the starting rotation for the first time since his 2023 internal brace procedure, Rasmussen shattered all expectations regarding his durability by establishing career-highs across the board with 31 starts, 150 innings pitched, 127 strikeouts, and a stellar 4.5 bWAR. Limited to exactly 150 frames due to meticulous workload restrictions, his microscopic 2.76 ERA paced the entire Tampa Bay rotation and ranked fourth among all qualified American League starting pitchers. He displayed unmatched, game-to-game consistency by permitting four runs or fewer in all 31 of his outings while leading the major leagues with 24 starts yielding four hits or fewer—the most in Rays franchise history for a traditional starter. This magnificent, resilient performance earned him his very first career All-Star selection and the prestigious Paul C. Smith Champion Award from the Tampa Bay chapter of the BBWAA, recognizing him as the ultimate embodiment of professionalism both on and off the diamond.

Entering the upcoming 2026 campaign, Rasmussen has officially evolved from an injury risk with high upside into a bonafide, front-line terror.