He also hits for way more power. And that doesnt factor in his away splits.
If you arent willing to make the trades and your ownership isnt willing to spend, then the team won't be competitive. Its really that simple. Keiboom isnt going to help the team two to three years from now when Rendon and Max are gone, Zimmerman is useless, Strasburg is broken, and the Nats wont pay for free agents to make the team competitive
You gotta get called out on this one. Realmuto by the numbers has some very bizarre BABIP between Home and Away. Like 100 points difference bizarre. Looking at Ozuna, Stanton, Yelich, and even Dee Gordon, no one had as extreme splits between home and away BABIP. That isn't park factor, that is just super weird. I don't think Realmuto is a .356 hitter at another stadium just because his splits say that. The sample at home is much larger, and even given park factor, I think Realmuto's BABIP will be much closer to .300. Realmuto also hits .236 ISO on the road, and that won't translate to being a .236 ISO hitter at a new home park. He is probably closer to a .200 ISO which is still excellent, but Grandal probably projects to be a .210 ISO hitter, and give some credit to the fact that Dodgers Stadium on list of park factor isn't much ahead of Marlins Park.
Realmuto is the flashy name, likely the better pure hitter, but weaker defensively (except for throwing runners out), hits for a bit less power, but is overall the higher WAR player. Is that worth trading Kieboom and Robles when they both fill needs on the MLB team (assuming Harper does not return)? I think I'd rather lose a draft pick, suck up 16M a year for a catcher who will be 34 at the end of his deal, and keep Kieboom and Robles. I'll take more years of control with Robles and Kieboom over two years of Realmuto.