Talented baseball players, not good base stealers. Good base stealers study pitchers religiously. Nobody does that any longer. They depend on coaches reports and if a guy is a total slug pitching the ball to home plate, they will steal off of him. Guys used to have starting pitcher's moves to first down pat. Of course now that starting pitchers only stay in the game for an average of 6 innings meaning some are only going to be around for 5, there is simply not as much incentive to put in that work. MLB has purposely pursued turning MLB into a power game, power hitting and power pitching. No real telling how it will work out. But there is no question that is what they are trying to do.