For years, calling JosĂ© RamĂrez âunderratedâ felt almost like a badge of honor.
It was a way for fans to signal that they were paying closer attention than everyone else.
That they understood the numbers behind the noise. That they saw greatness hiding in plain sight while louder stars took the spotlight.

That era might finally be over.
On Wednesday night, MLB Network did something it had never done so definitivelyâit removed the ambiguity.
JosĂ© RamĂrez was ranked the No. 1 third baseman in baseball, not by debate, not by reputation, but by a margin analysts openly admitted was unusually wide.

Not just first. Clearly first.
The list itself was stacked: Max Muncy, Alex Bregman, Matt Chapman, Manny Machadoânames that usually dominate conversations at the position.
And yet, when former third baseman Mike Lowell described the ranking, the tone wasnât competitive.
It was declarative.
âThereâs nothing he doesnât do great,â Lowell said.

And then came the line that quietly reframed everything: there may not have been another position ranking where the gap between No.1 and No.2 felt this large.
Thatâs not praise. Thatâs separation.
RamĂrezâs rĂ©sumĂ© already reads like a Hall of Fame outlineâseven All-Star selections, six Silver Sluggers, perennial MVP votes.

But whatâs striking now is how little resistance there was to putting him on top. No heated panels. No split opinions. Just consensus.
In 2025, he hit .283 with 30 home runs, 34 doubles, 85 RBIs, and stole 44 bases. Another 30â30 season. Again. At 33. While playing elite defense. While running the bases like someone ten years younger.
And yet, the most telling part of this moment isnât the ranking itself.
Itâs how long it took.

RamĂrez doesnât look like the prototype. He isnât towering. He doesnât dominate highlight reels with raw size. His excellence is compact, relentless, almost routine.
The kind that doesnât demand attentionâbut keeps winning anyway.
That may be why the âunderratedâ label stuck for so long. He didnât need marketing. He didnât need theatrics. He just kept closing seasons with numbers that quietly dared people to argue otherwise.
Now, after signing a seven-year, $175 million extension with Cleveland and leading the Guardians to their third AL Central title in four years, the league finally seems willing to say what itâs been circling for nearly a decade.
JosĂ© RamĂrez isnât just one of the best.
Heâs the standard.
MLB Network recently ranked him fifth overall among the top 100 players entering 2026âbehind names like Ohtani and Judgeâbut even that feels like a separate conversation.
At third base, the debate appears finished.
Whatâs left is a subtler question.
If this gap has truly existed all along, why did it take so long for it to be acknowledged? And what else about RamĂrezâs career have we normalized simply because excellence arrived without noise?
Because now that the crown is official, the silence around his dominance feels louder than ever.
And it leaves an uncomfortable thought lingering: was JosĂ© RamĂrez ever underratedâor did the rest of baseball just take too long to catch up?
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