Millwood1Hitter
Anytime Now Frankie...
The record is 40+.
Yeah, that was a domesticated animal, though and Gattis is the farthest thing from that.
The record is 40+.
This is from DOB's blog today regarding Gattis:
He recently made some changes designed to get him standing up a little straighter and eliminate some “side-to-side” movement in his swing, as he puts it.
“Not only mechanically, physically being tall at the plate, but approach-wise,” Walker said of the adjustments. “The other day against a lefty he hit a changeup, he hit two sliders. And that’s kind of been his weakness, off-speed stuff. But with his new approach – and I don’t want to talk about it much – his thought process has made him cover more off-speed pitches.
I'm not seeing a .900 OPS guy unless he can slug well over .600.
Nelson Cruz
David Ortiz
Victor Martinez
Adam Dunn
Chris Carter
Brandon Moss
Ridiculous. That would, of course, assume he would have an OBP of less than .300. That won't happen. If you're paying attention, he's taking a lot of pitches he was getting out on. He's walking more. You're stuck on his transition time to MLB, when he was figuring it out. He may not be a .370-.380 guy, but I'd be comfortable projecting .340-.350.
He's a thinker. He figures things out, gets better.
The man's a stud, flat out. I expect .850 for the next half decade, and .900 is not out of the question.
Now, you convinced me. Forget the data, Gattis is a thinker.
I wouldn't extend him. I still have questions about his durability. He was banged up quite a bit in the minors and he seems to get nicked a lot (I understand that happens to catchers). He wore down terribly last year and while some of his performance problems last year were injury-related, the jury is out for me on his long term outlook.
Don't get me wrong. I think he's a key cog for us at the moment. I hope Bethancourt's bat gets to where it needs to be so that he and Gattis can be a decent tag-team behind the plate. I still see Gattis being most effective as a 350 to 400 AB guy, but I could be wrong. He was horrible at 1B last season in his brief appearances there, but I thought he did alright in LF. He's no gazelle, but for a guy with no experience in the OF (probably ever), he looked like he knew what he was doing (I know I'm overlooking that horrible diving catch attempt in the playoffs).
I wouldn't extend him. I still have questions about his durability. He was banged up quite a bit in the minors and he seems to get nicked a lot (I understand that happens to catchers). He wore down terribly last year and while some of his performance problems last year were injury-related, the jury is out for me on his long term outlook.
Don't get me wrong. I think he's a key cog for us at the moment. I hope Bethancourt's bat gets to where it needs to be so that he and Gattis can be a decent tag-team behind the plate. I still see Gattis being most effective as a 350 to 400 AB guy, but I could be wrong. He was horrible at 1B last season in his brief appearances there, but I thought he did alright in LF. He's no gazelle, but for a guy with no experience in the OF (probably ever), he looked like he knew what he was doing (I know I'm overlooking that horrible diving catch attempt in the playoffs).
Be a slave to your data, because past performance is a guarantee of future results.
Data is all we have to go on. Hunches and guts are fine and dandy, but they don't produce results. Data that tracks what a player does is important.
Of our 7 regularly starters. Gattis swings at the second most pitches out of the zone after BABIP, the second least balls in the zone after Heyward, which leads to the second highest swing rate on the team, and most of the stuff that's hittable he's not swinging at. That's not a good trend for taking a lot of pitches he was getting out on as that largely implies he's taking more pitches. Maybe he's recognized he hits some pitches better than others so lays off. Maybe he's pickin up pitches better. I'm unsure. I do know that he still hasn't mustered a 6% BB% yet, and since 2000, the 27 hitters who qualified with a .900+ OPS year in and year out only 4 had/have a BB% under 10% and none under 8. If you alter your expectation to .850 you have a better shot as you're massively expanding your base to 71 players and and 16 of them had a BB% under 10% and 5 were between 6% and 8% That being said, those 5 were Nomar who K'd 9% of the time Aramis Ramirez who's K'd 13.3% of the time, Robinson Cano who's K'd 11.9% of the time, Juan Gonzalez who's Gattis's best comp and played in a way more offensive friendly era and was a juicer, and Cargo who plays in Coors.
I wouldn't bet on Gattis being consistently a .850 OPS guy. I think he'll post seasons that strong but I think there are 2 important factors that you're missing with that guesstimate. First is that generally the best hitters in baseball walk much mroe than Gattis and K less. So until Gattis shows a significant improvement in one or the other he's not gonna be one of the best hitters in baseball, and since the new pitching era we've been in lately, only 23 players have an average OPS over .850, and I don't think Gattis is a superior hitter to Justin Upton, Carlos Beltran, or Carlos QUentin who haven't been over .850 average since the new pitching trends started. Maybe he proves me wrong, but I'm not betting on it.
Do you guys not believe that Gattis can improve his pitch recognition?
He's no worse than Josh Willingham in LF.
He can, but it won't be easy. The list of players in the majors who've significantly improved their patience is somewhere between slim and none. Sure there are peaks and valleys and what not but usually. I don't feel like running a massive study.
But again, Gattis is a unique case that could be seen as an outlier. He had very limited professional experience. There is no way that the past can accurately predict whta Gattis will do in the future. The way a 24 year old improved or didn't improve his pitch recognition after 6-8 years of professional experience tells us little about if Gattis can do the same.