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lol .060 ISO. these are his "hot" streaks now.
More than double .026
lol .060 ISO. these are his "hot" streaks now.
Where did his power go though? It's very odd. He's still only 25 and has shown plenty in the past. But he just isn't really hitting for any.
More than double .026
Its amazing to me that people that are huge baseball fans refuse to take a cursory look at why players have certain stats. When people mentioned Teheran was a bit lucky last year, you refused to believe it. Teheran will be fine, but he hasn't shown peripherals to support a low 3 era.
Alex Wood is the best starter for us, imo. While, he's been lucky in not giving up homers, he's had terrible luck in BABIP and LOB%; they will stabilize and he will show hes the best starter on the roster.
Shelby Miller hasn't done anything this year that's an improvement on his career. He's striking out less guys. He has an absurd .206 BABIP, that will rise significantly.
Legit question here...how does he get that done? What is he doing wrong currently?
I think there is something to be said for getting smashed in the face. He hasn't hit for the same power since.
I'm not comparing Heyward to Markakis. And if Heyward would take a 4 year, $44 mil deal, sign me up.
Hard to find swings from Heyward as a Cardinal. But, seems to me, his swing is jumpy. WHen he was going go for the Braves, he sat back and let the ball travel in and had a nice level to slightly upward swing plane. He created a ton of torque with his front side.
Now, he's jumping at the ball and by doing so is off balance and not creating the torque on the front side. Unless you have a severe uppercut in your swing, it's hard to create that lift when you are as off balance as Heyward is. Here is a swing from the 7th, which didn't fool him and was a good pitch to hit:
http://m.mlb.com/video/v105316283/chcstl-heyward-singles-in-reynolds-for-the-lead/?c_id=mlb
Pause it at the 5 second mark of each and compare his alignment/spine
Shelby isn't doing this by smoke and mirrors. His homerun rate is basically what it's always been, his walks are the same, and his strike outs are the same. He will regress because he's stranding an unsustainable amount, but I don't think he will regress back to his career averages (which are actually okay fwiw).
Although his line drive rate is about what it's always been, he is generating a significant higher amount of weaker contact. Looking at Fangraphs hard hit ball rates it looks like the groundball pitcher thing is sustainable. I have no issue with him becoming a higher ceiling Justin Masterson.
Also, whomever said his cutter/two seamer hasnt been an out pitch needs to check the data. Fangraphs has it as his best pitch by a wide margin.
a cutter and a 2-seamer are different pitches. a 2 seamer sinks and sometimes moves in on rightes (from a Righty). A cutter moves away from righties (from righty). A cutter is essentially a mix of slider/fastball where a 2 seamer is essentially a sinker.
Here are MIller's "pitchfx values:"
4 seam FB- 3.7
2 seam FB- -0.5
cutter- 5.0
Curve- 1.6
Change- -0.8
The point is he added a pitch to his repertoire that is different from years previous. He's alway "had" a cutter, but this is the first time, ever, where he's actually been using it substantially (5% to 20%). Sure, his two seamer this year has reflected to be slightly below average, but last year it was plus pitch after he started using it come August. There is mountain's of evidence that he's maded significant changes for the better, and the best part is the improvement have occurred in ways that are predictable.
And his increase in soft hit rate can be attributed to both a decline in medium AND hard hit rate (about 3.5% for one and 1.5% for the other). 1.5% comes out to be a little more than one less hard hit ball per game (extra base hits) and the drop in medium is 3 less medium hits per game (singles).
I agree with you on most of what you are saying. I'm stating that the level of improvement doesn't match his current ERA. (obviously) He's not going to have a BABIP in the low 200s and he's not going to strand 89% of all runners.
But, obviously there are improvements (career FIP of 4.00 that is 3.66 this year); (career xFIP of 4.05 that is 3.71 this year).
Plus, we are only talking about 6 starts here so all this talk could become moot. He will face a stiffer level of competition and we will see what he's got. (Philly x2, Mia x2, Tor, Cincy)
Hard to find swings from Heyward as a Cardinal. But, seems to me, his swing is jumpy. WHen he was going go for the Braves, he sat back and let the ball travel in and had a nice level to slightly upward swing plane. He created a ton of torque with his front side.
Now, he's jumping at the ball and by doing so is off balance and not creating the torque on the front side. Unless you have a severe uppercut in your swing, it's hard to create that lift when you are as off balance as Heyward is. Here is a swing from the 7th, which didn't fool him and was a good pitch to hit:
http://m.mlb.com/video/v105316283/chcstl-heyward-singles-in-reynolds-for-the-lead/?c_id=mlb
Pause it at the 5 second mark of each and compare his alignment/spine
Just another observation looking at the tape, does his front leg seem firm enough? Doesn't seem to get that classic straight leg plant.