Does the name Brad Komminsk ring any bells?Heyward was sold as a possible HOF with comparisons to Aaron, just as Frenchie was sold as Murph 2.0. Neither lived up to either. Mac and Freddie, on the other hand, were exactly as advertised.
Does the name Brad Komminsk ring any bells?Heyward was sold as a possible HOF with comparisons to Aaron, just as Frenchie was sold as Murph 2.0. Neither lived up to either. Mac and Freddie, on the other hand, were exactly as advertised.
The first swing Heyward took as a big leaguer, the ball landed 450+ft away. The power potential was there. He just couldn‘t utilize it, for some reason.He never really hit many HRs, and never really posted a great ISO, even before being drilled.
I don't think being hit by a pitch affected his exit velocities. Fact of the matter is his power was always way overrated. We just didn't know those reports were full of shit because we didn't have any Statcast data to look at. Nowadays we would know he had mediocre power when he was in AAA. He didn't even have Harris-level power (who also hits far too many grounders).
Was it it measured at 477?The first swing Heyward took as a big leaguer, the ball landed 450+ft away. The power potential was there. He just couldn‘t utilize it, for some reason.
All to well, but exactly how does he figure in?Does the name Brad Komminsk ring any bells?
Not in this conversation but I remember his over the top hype (perhaps more than either Heyward or Francouer) when he was called up...HoF, better than Aaron...and he was, at best, a journeyman.All to well, but exactly how does he figure in?
I don't remember the Aaron level comparison but I do remember the idea of a 2nd Murph on the other outfield corner with him. And yes, he was a bust.Not in this conversation but I remember his over the top hype (perhaps more than either Heyward or Francouer) when he was called up...HoF, better than Aaron...and he was, at best, a journeyman.
My memory was that Heyward came up and set the world on fire... and was pacing 30+ homers in April and early May. I believe he won rookie of the month for both months - definitely April. Then he suffered a sprained thumb in mid May and never came back the sameHe never really hit many HRs, and never really posted a great ISO, even before being drilled.
I don't think being hit by a pitch affected his exit velocities. Fact of the matter is his power was always way overrated. We just didn't know those reports were full of shit because we didn't have any Statcast data to look at. Nowadays we would know he had mediocre power when he was in AAA. He didn't even have Harris-level power (who also hits far too many grounders).
Your memory is correct.My memory was that Heyward came up and set the world on fire... and was pacing 30+ homers in April and early May. I believe he won rookie of the month for both months - definitely April. Then he suffered a sprained thumb in mid May and never came back the same
Now that's before the league had a book on him, etc. But for the first quarter of the season his rookie year, he was displaying elite power if memory serves
Henry Aaron himself said that Komminsk was better than he was. You can't get much more hype than that.I don't remember the Aaron level comparison but I do remember the idea of a 2nd Murph on the other outfield corner with him. And yes, he was a bust.
You'll always be Marte future to meI love the more active Mrs Meta
Yup.My memory was that Heyward came up and set the world on fire... and was pacing 30+ homers in April and early May. I believe he won rookie of the month for both months - definitely April. Then he suffered a sprained thumb in mid May and never came back the same
Now that's before the league had a book on him, etc. But for the first quarter of the season his rookie year, he was displaying elite power if memory serves
Someday, someone is going to develop an AI algorithm to study video of old games and get rough statcast data from it.
Yeah so he got hurt around May 23. He was miserable in June (.245 slugging). Was put on the DL at end June. Came back in Mid July and was pretty solid again, slugging .458 in 15 games, before .536 in a full August... then had a weak September to close it out (.385 - probably rookie wall)Just to throw some hard numbers on it, in Heyward's rookie year he slugged .520 in April* and .628 in May with ISOs of around .300 in both months. He hit 10 home runs in those two months. I don't think that tells us much about Heyward's "true talent" or what he would have been without injuries, just tossing out the numbers.
Two things can be -- and are -- true. First, Heyward had a damn fine MLB career and has nothing to be ashamed of -- he was a winning ball player who consistently did things on the field to help his teams win games. And second, he didn't live up to the hype around him when he was coming up. Which says more about the hype than it does about Heyward.
*Technically March/April, but get off my back.