CLEVELAND, Ohio — For years, calling JosĂ© RamĂrez the most underrated player in Major League Baseball felt like a convenient shortcut, an easy label attached to a superstar who never quite seemed to get his full national due, but on Wednesday night that familiar narrative finally collapsed in spectacular fashion as MLB Network delivered a verdict that sent shockwaves across the league and erased any lingering doubt about where RamĂrez truly stands in the game.
In a reveal that immediately lit up front offices, clubhouses, and social media feeds, RamĂrez was officially ranked as MLB’s No. 1 third baseman right now, finishing well ahead of a star-studded field that included Max Muncy, Alex Bregman, Matt Chapman, Manny Machado, and Austin Riley, a declaration that felt less like an opinion and more like a statement of fact. Coming just days after RamĂrez put pen to paper on a massive seven-year, $175 million extension with the Cleveland Guardians, the timing could not have been more emphatic, as if the league itself was acknowledging what Cleveland has long known: this is not merely an elite player, but a generational force who has redefined excellence at the hot corner.
MLB Network analyst and former All-Star third baseman Mike Lowell did not hesitate in his assessment, delivering a line that quickly became the night’s most quoted soundbite when he said, “He has no weaknesses at the third base position,” before going even further and declaring, “I don’t think there’s a position in all the years where we’ve done the Top 10 where there’s been such a big gap between No. 1 and No. 2.” That single sentence captured the gravity of the moment, because rankings often invite debate, but this one arrived with an unusual sense of finality, the kind that suggests separation rather than competition.

RamĂrez’s dominance is not built on one loud season or a single flashy tool, but on a body of work that has quietly grown into a Hall of Fame–caliber rĂ©sumĂ©, something Lowell openly acknowledged as he praised the switch-hitter’s complete game, from elite baserunning to Gold Glove–level defense and a bat that punishes left-handed pitching while remaining devastatingly effective from the left side against right-handers. The numbers only reinforce the argument, especially after RamĂrez helped power the Guardians to their third American League Central title in four years in 2025, batting .283 with 34 doubles, 30 home runs, and 85 RBIs while once again joining the exclusive 30–30 club, finishing with 30 homers and 44 stolen bases in 51 attempts, an achievement that underscores both his power and his relentless aggression on the bases.
At 33 years old, RamĂrez is not slowing down; instead, he appears to be refining his craft, blending experience with explosiveness in a way that makes his peak feel sustained rather than fleeting. His accolades tell the same story, with seven All-Star selections, six Silver Slugger Awards, and seven top-six finishes in American League MVP voting, including a second-place finish and three third-place finishes, achievements that would define most careers on their own but somehow still feel like footnotes in his larger legacy. What makes RamĂrez’s rise even more compelling is that he has never fit the traditional prototype of a third baseman, lacking the towering frame or imposing build typically associated with the position, yet consistently outperforming those expectations through instincts, durability, and an edge that shows up in every at-bat and every sprint down the line.

MLB Network’s rankings, built on a blend of traditional statistics and advanced Statcast metrics across multiple seasons, were designed to reward sustained excellence, and by that measure RamĂrez did not just win the top spot, he ran away with it. The separation became even clearer when placed in the broader context of the league, as MLB Network recently ranked RamĂrez fifth among the top 100 players heading into the 2026 season, making him the highest-ranked player from Latin America and placing him behind only Shohei Ohtani, Aaron Judge, Bobby Witt Jr., and Cal Raleigh, names that define the sport’s current era. For Guardians fans, the message was both validating and thrilling, a confirmation that their franchise cornerstone is no longer hiding in plain sight but standing front and center on baseball’s biggest stage. For the rest of the league, it was a warning wrapped in recognition, because the days of casually labeling JosĂ© RamĂrez as underrated are officially over, replaced by a far more daunting reality: he is the standard, and everyone else is chasing him.