Second base has always been an unusual offensive position. It is not first base, where power is expected. It is not shortstop, where defense often dominates. It sits somewhere in the middle, historically shaped by contact hitters, table-setters, high-average stars, defensive specialists, and, every so often, an offensive outlier who bends the position out of shape.
That makes second base a useful test case for a peer-adjusted study.
The question is not simply: who had the biggest numbers?
That would favor certain eras too heavily. It would also blur the positional standard. A second baseman in 1925, 1976, 1999, and 2024 was not being measured against the same offensive environment. The better question is:
Who was the most dominant offensive second baseman relative to the other second basemen of his own time? That is the same method I used for third basemen. The logic is simple. Compare each player only to his same-year positional peers. Convert that separation into z-scores. Then add up the value across seasons.
Greatness, in this framework, is not just production. It is Euclidean distance from the scores of the mediocre players.
Methodology
Using the Lahman Database, I identified second-base seasons through the fielding table, then evaluated only offensive production from the batting table. Fielding was used only to determine who qualified as a second baseman. It was not used in the scoring.
A player is considered season-qualified if the player had:
At least 50 games at second base
At least 300 plate appearances
For each qualified second baseman-season, I calculated six offensive measures:
OBP
SLG
HR per PA
BB per PA
Runs per PA
RBI per PA
Each category was converted into a z-score within that year’s second-base peer group. The season score was the sum of those six z-scores. Partial seasons were weighted by playing time, with full credit beginning at 600 plate appearances.
So the basic structure was:
Season Score =
OBP z + SLG z + HR/PA z + BB/PA z + R/PA z + RBI/PA z
The result is a measure of offensive dominance relative to position and era.

Figure 1: Career Offensive Dominance
The career ranking produces a fascinating result. I must admit, I didn’t expect this. I thought I would see Rogers Hornsby leading the way, how about you?
Joe Morgan finishes first with a career peer-adjusted offensive score of 169.3. Rogers Hornsby is second at 136.7. Eddie Collins, Charlie Gehringer, Jeff Kent, Lou Whitaker, Bobby Doerr, Bobby Grich, Joe Gordon, and Nap Lajoie complete the top ten.
This is not the result many people might initially expect. Hornsby is often thought of as the greatest offensive second baseman ever, and in raw hitting terms, that case is obvious. He was a world-class hitter. But this method is not asking who produced the most extravagant slash lines. It is asking who accumulated the most separation from the second-base baseline across his qualified second-base seasons.
Morgan’s advantage is career breadth. He qualified for 19 seasons in this study. Hornsby qualified for 11. That difference comes into play.
Morgan was not merely good for a long time. He was repeatedly far above the offensive norm for second basemen, especially because his value came from a broad package: on-base ability, walks, power for the position, runs, and enough run production to dominate his peers.
Hornsby remains extraordinary. But Morgan’s long arc wins the career version of the question.

Figure 2: Best Seven-Season Peaks
The seven-season peak ranking narrows the debate.
Morgan’s best seven-season score is 100.5. Hornsby’s is 99.0. That is remarkably close. Charlie Gehringer follows at 70.9, then Joe Gordon, Jeff Kent, Ryne Sandberg, Eddie Collins, Bobby Doerr, Bobby Grich, and Chase Utley.
This figure changes the conversation. Morgan does not win only because of longevity. His peak also stands with Hornsby’s.
That is the key finding of the second-base study.
Hornsby’s offensive peak was legendary, but Morgan’s best run was also historic when measured against other second basemen. His 1970s peak combined elite walk rates, surprising power, run scoring, and positional dominance. He was not a conventional batting-average star. He was something more modern: a player whose value was built from patience, efficiency, speed, and power relative to position.
The gap between Morgan and Hornsby is tiny here. The gap between them and the rest of the field is not. They have clearly separated themselves.

Figure 3: Career Value Versus Peak Dominance
The career-versus-peak scatterplot makes the structure of the argument clear.
Morgan and Hornsby occupy the top-right corner. No one else is near them.
Below them is a second tier: Charlie Gehringer, Eddie Collins, Jeff Kent, Joe Gordon, Ryne Sandberg, Bobby Doerr, Bobby Grich, Lou Whitaker, Nap Lajoie, Chase Utley, Robinson Cano, and Roberto Alomar. These players differ in style, but they share the same general position in the graph. They were great, sometimes historically great, but not quite Morgan-Hornsby great by this scoring system.
The scatterplot also clarifies the Morgan-Hornsby distinction.
Hornsby’s peak is almost identical to Morgan’s, but his career score is lower because he had fewer qualified second-base seasons in the dataset. Morgan’s profile is the stronger combination of peak and persistence.
That does not make Hornsby smaller. It makes the question more precise.
If the question is “Who was the most overwhelming second-base hitter at his absolute best?” Hornsby has a serious case. If the question is “Who accumulated the most peer-adjusted offensive dominance while playing second base?” the answer is Morgan.

Figure 4: Best Individual Offensive Seasons
The single-season ranking is one of the most interesting figures in the study.
The top season belongs to Joe Morgan in 1976, with a score of 20.7. That is an enormous number. It is higher than the best individual third-base season in the earlier study. Hornsby follows with several monster seasons: 1925, 1922, 1924, 1921, 1928, and 1929 all appear in the top twenty.
Morgan also appears repeatedly: 1972, 1975, 1976, 1977, and 1974.
This is where the Morgan case becomes especially strong. He does not merely win by compiling. His best seasons are among the very best second-base offensive seasons in the database.
The list also contains some useful reminders. Joe Gordon’s 1942 season is excellent. Jeff Kent’s 2000 season stands out. Jackie Robinson’s 1952 season appears. Ketel Marte’s 2024 season makes the list, which is a reminder that this method can incorporate modern seasons naturally as long as the Lahman data includes them.
Still, the top of the figure belongs to Morgan and Hornsby.
They are not just first and second in the career rankings. They also dominate the historical single-season landscape.

Figure 5: Rogers Hornsby Versus the Field
This figure isolates Hornsby’s qualified second-base seasons and compares him to the best non-Hornsby second baseman in each year. 1930 is missing due to a broken ankle.
The visual is striking. Hornsby repeatedly towers over the field. His seasons in the early and mid-1920s are so far above the second-base norm that they look almost detached from ordinary positional comparison.
That matters because Hornsby’s case rests on peak intensity. He was not merely a great hitter who happened to play second base. He was an offensive anomaly at a position where that kind of production was not expected.
The same figure also hints at why Morgan can still win the career ranking. Hornsby’s period of extreme second-base separation was shorter. Morgan’s total advantage is spread across more seasons.
Perhaps that is the central tension of the study:
Hornsby was the more explosive offensive force.
Morgan built the stronger peer-adjusted second-base career.
Both statements can be true.

Figure 6: Balanced Offensive Greatness Score
The balanced score combines career value and peak value over seven seasons.
Morgan again finishes first, with a balanced score of 269.7. Hornsby is second at 235.8. Eddie Collins and Charlie Gehringer are nearly tied for third and fourth. Jeff Kent, Lou Whitaker, Bobby Doerr, Joe Gordon, Bobby Grich, and Ryne Sandberg follow.
This figure may be the cleanest summary. It does not ignore peak. It does not ignore career. It gives credit for both.
And by that standard, Morgan is the answer to this post’s question.
This also reframes the usual conversation around second basemen. Hornsby remains the Hall of Famer that he is. Eddie Collins remains one of the great long-career offensive second basemen. Gehringer looks excellent. Jeff Kent’s bat grades very well. Lou Whitaker, Bobby Grich, and Bobby Doerr all emerge as major offensive figures relative to their positions.
But Morgan is the most complete case of offensive dominance.

Figure 7: Offensive Component Profile
The component profile explains why Morgan and Hornsby are both elite, but in different ways.
Morgan’s profile is built around OBP, walks, runs, and balanced power. His walk component is massive. That fits the historical picture. Morgan’s offensive value was not simply about batting average or home runs. It came from controlling the strike zone, reaching base, scoring runs, and adding enough power to separate from other second basemen.
Hornsby’s profile is different. He dominates through slugging, home-run rate, OBP, and RBI production. His profile looks more like a traditional slugger placed at a middle-infield position. In that sense, he resembles the second-base version of Mike Schmidt or Eddie Mathews from the third-base study, though Hornsby’s batting average and slugging environment give him his own signature.
Eddie Collins shows another type of greatness. His OBP and run-scoring profile are excellent, but he does not dominate the home-run component. Jeff Kent is almost the opposite. His power and RBI components are enormous, while his OBP component is relatively modest compared with Morgan, Collins, or Hornsby.
This figure is important because it prevents the study from becoming a single-number exercise. Morgan, Hornsby, Collins, Gehringer, Kent, Whitaker, Doerr, and Grich are not the same kind of hitter. They produced offensive value through different paths.

Figure 8: Dendrogram of Offensive Similarity
The dendrogram clusters the top 15 career scorers by offensive shape rather than by total value.
Several patterns stand out.
Joe Morgan and Eddie Collins cluster together, which makes sense. Both were high-OBP, run-creating, walk-driven second basemen whose value was not primarily based on home-run power.
Rogers Hornsby clusters closer to Nap Lajoie and Jeff Kent. That is interesting because those players represent different eras, but the shape of their offensive value has similarities: strong slugging and run production relative to the position.
Charlie Gehringer, Lou Whitaker, Roberto Alomar, and Chase Utley form a balanced group. These are players whose offensive value was distributed across categories rather than concentrated in one extreme area.
The dendrogram reinforces the larger point: second-base offensive greatness has multiple forms. Morgan’s greatness was not Hornsby’s greatness. Hornsby’s greatness was not Collins’s greatness. Kent’s greatness was not Whitaker’s greatness.
The rankings tell us who separated the most. The clusters tell us how they did it.
What the Study Shows
The second-base study gives us a more complicated answer than the third-base study.
At third base, Mike Schmidt was the clear answer. He won the career, peak, and balanced rankings.
At second base, Joe Morgan and Rogers Hornsby split them up. Morgan wins the career score. Morgan narrowly wins the seven-year peak score. Morgan wins the balanced score. He also owns the best individual season in the study, 1976.
Hornsby, however, remains the great offensive peak figure. His top seasons are astonishing. He appears over and over again on the single-season leaderboard. When he was at his best, he was not simply the best offensive second baseman in baseball. He was operating in another offensive category.
The final answer depends on the exact wording of the question.
If the question is: Who had the greatest offensive second-base career relative to his peers? The answer is Joe Morgan.
If the question is: Who was the most devastating pure hitter ever to spend his prime at second base? The answer may still be Rogers Hornsby.
But because this study combines peak, career, and positional peer adjustment, Morgan comes out on top.
Here are four figures comparing Morgan directly to Hornsby.
Figures 9 through 12 sharpen the Morgan-Hornsby comparison by moving beyond the overall ranking.

Figure 9 shows that Morgan and Hornsby created value in very different ways. Morgan’s edge comes from OBP, walks, and run scoring, while Hornsby’s advantage comes from slugging, home-run rate, and RBI production. In simple terms, Morgan’s profile is patience and pressure; Hornsby’s is impact and force.

Figure 10 explains why Morgan wins the study. Hornsby accumulates value faster in his early second-base seasons, but his qualifying second-base career is shorter. Morgan keeps adding high-value seasons, eventually passing Hornsby and building a clear career advantage.

Figure 11 keeps the debate over the peak alive. Morgan owns the single best season in the comparison, 1976, but Hornsby’s top ten seasons are deeper and more consistently clustered at a high level. That supports the idea that Hornsby remains the great pure-hitting counterargument.

Figure 12 summarizes the tradeoff neatly. Morgan has more broadly valuable seasons, especially at the lower elite threshold, while Hornsby has more seasons above several of the higher dominance cutoffs. So the conclusion holds: Morgan wins the peer-adjusted career argument, while Hornsby remains the explosive peak-rate alternative.
Conclusion
Second base is a position of changing expectations. Sometimes it rewards contact. Sometimes speed. Sometimes defense. Sometimes on-base skill. Rarely does it produce a hitter who bends the position around himself.
Joe Morgan did that. Rogers Hornsby did too.
That is why this debate is so interesting. It is not a debate between greatness and drunken bar patron opinion. It is a debate between two kinds of dominance. Hornsby was an offensive eruption. Morgan was a system of pressure: walks, runs, power, patience, speed, and constant separation from the positional baseline.
Measured against his peers, year after year, Morgan built the strongest offensive second-base profile in the Lahman Database.
Hornsby may still feel larger than life. But Morgan’s advantage is mathematical and historical. He was not merely excellent. He was repeatedly far from normal.
And in this framework, that is what greatness means. Three cheers and a tiger for both men; they were simply outstanding.





























