Checking up on the Rookies After 10 Games

PLAYER GP PA H AVG OBP TB SLG HR AB/HR RBI PA/RBI
POWER 10 61 5 .111 .344 5 .111 0 N/A 4 15.3
ALONGI 9 55 14 .326 .473 21 .488 2 21.5 3 18.3
MOORE 8 55 6 .130 .273 15 .326 3 15.3 4 13.8
PRATER 6 36 3 .111 .333 3 .111 0 N/A 1 36.0
ZELLER 4 23 0 .000 .174 0 .000 0 N/A 0 N/A
CONNOLLY 4 19 3 .176 .263 3 .176 0 N/A 3 6.3
KIRSTEN 2 12 0 .000 .083 0 .000 0 N/A 1 12.0
PLAYER GP IP RA ERA H BB WHIP K K/6 K/BB BAA
POWER 2 12 5 2.50 7 19 2.17 11 5.5 0.6 .163
MOORE 3 8.2 14 9.69 4 25 3.35 23 16.8 0.9 .140
If the Rookie of the Year award were awarded today, it would belong to Charles Alongi. He's played in all but one game and has a sizable lead in all of the primary offensive stats: +.150 in batting average, +.162 in slugging percentage, and +.200 in on-base percentage. Those numbers also make Alongi the only rookie to crack some offensive top ten lists for all qualified hitters (23+ PA). Overall, Charles is tied for fifth in hits, tied for eighth in total bases, ninth in batting average, and tenth in on-base percentage. Alongi wasn't even the most talked about rookie on his team before the season (#preseasonrankingsaredumb), but he's had the biggest impact on the games since they started counting.
Pitching, so far, does not look like it will play much of a factor in a RotY decision. Only two rookies have taken the mound through the first three weeks. Jordan Power seemingly came out of nowhere to put up the better numbers of those rookie pitchers in the most crucial stats. Even while racking up fewer strikeouts, Power's ERA is just 25.8% of his rookie counterpart, and his WHIP is 1.17 lower. His 2.50 ERA is fifth on the list of league leaders. Twelve innings pitched is a small sample size, especially with the majority of those coming against a poor hitting team, but if Jordan's able to keep up this work on the mound and boost his production at the plate, then he could find himself in the RotY discussion at year's end.
The two rookies who were most talked about after the Wind-Up haven't made much noise in the regular season (#preseasonrankingsaredumb). Andrew Moore was highly thought of as a pitcher coming in. He had a good first outing (5 IP, 1 RA, 15 K), but he has struggled with control since the last inning of that game and appears to have been bumped down to the third spot in the S'Nuts rotation. Andrew's three home runs offensively are his most impressive stat so far, where he's tied at sixth with a pack on the leaderboard. Tom Zeller put on a power display at the Wind-Up gaining him a lot of praise, but he (almost literally) hasn't shown up in the regular season: Zeller's only appearance has been in the four games from Week 2.