I don't see how it's possible. This is a game played everyday for 6 months. You accumulate over 550 AB's. If you hit 330 you must be doing something right. To suggest it's nothing but luck discredits the performance of the player and is a thought process I'll never understand. Once again you guys are making me glad I don't get bogged down with numbers. I couldn't enjoy Chris Johnson's play if I thought it was nothing but luck. There has to be some skill involved to perform as well as he has.
Why can't you enjoy a player if you believe he is lucky?
Just some examples:
Dexter Fowler hit .300 last year due to his league leading .390 BABIP. His BABIP has dropped to .320 this year. (.267 BA)
Buster Posey BABIP last 3 years: .326, .368, .316
Montero .317, .362, .272
Bonafacio .372, .325, .280
Avila .366, .313, .255
And the list goes on and on and on. Players have seasons where the balls just drop. Chris Johnson the last 3 years: .317, .354, .410. People don't realize the small difference there is in hitting .280 and hitting .300. Johnson is hitting .335 this year. Take away just 1 bloop hit per week and he's hitting .280. This is the reason batting average is so volatile and in short samples is a terrible gauge. It's not difficult to appreciate a players performance while realizing that he's been pretty lucky for the year.
http://www.fangraphs.com/blogs/chris-johnson-and-great-players/
The issue with Johnson is that he's really a 1 skill type of player. He's skill (which is he good at) is hitting line drives. Defense, power, speed, patience, contact rate are all below average. So if he has a season with a BABIP in the low .300s, it's going to be an awful season. And to be clear, hitting line drives doesn't neccessarily mean you will always have a high batting average. See the top 15 for 2013:
# Name Team BABIP LD% BA
1 James Loney Rays 0.337 29.30% 0.310
2 Joey Votto Reds 0.375 28.20% 0.316
3 Freddie Freeman Braves 0.366 27.70% 0.309
4 Chris Johnson Braves 0.41 27.50% 0.335
5 Joe Mauer Twins 0.381 27.30% 0.322
6 Matt Carpenter Cardinals 0.347 26.80% 0.312
7 Howie Kendrick Angels 0.344 26.80% 0.301
8 Allen Craig Cardinals 0.361 26.40% 0.310
9 Austin Jackson Tigers 0.32 26.20% 0 261
10 Jhonny Peralta Tigers 0.379 25.90% 0.305
11 Jason Castro Astros 0.341 25.90% 0.267
12 Paul Konerko White Sox 0.26 25.90% 0.240
13 Gregor Blanco Giants 0.312 25.70% 0.254
14 Jay Bruce Reds 0.334 25.70% 0.270
15 Nate McLouth Orioles 0.306 25.50% 0.272
Average 0.345 26.7% 0.292
As a little exercise:
Take away 5 hits from Johnson, here are his numbers: .322/.360/.460
10- .309/.348/.447
15- .296/.336/.434
20- .283/.324/.421