Some OPS stats so far relative to Steamer projections going into today's game:
Heyward .641 (.806 projected at the start of the season)
BJ .626 (.674)
Freeman .910 (.859)
Justin .992 (.829)
Gattis .855 (.766)
Johnson .592 (.725)
Uggla .549 (.684)
Simmons .742 (.721)
So far we have four underperformers and four overperformers, but the underperformers are underperforming by a larger margin. Now a projection is not a guarantee. But it is based upon a larger sample than five weeks worth of games, so I have some confidence that going forward the performances during the rest of the season will be closer to the projections that what we have seen so far.
Our offensive performance so far has also been hurt by the sequencing of our hits (of which batting with RISP is a good short hand).
So far this season we have an overall batting average of .236 and a batting average with RISP of .214. The RISP numbers are based on a fairly small sample. Over a full season they will tend to converge to the overall average. Last year for example the differential between overall batting average and batting average with RISP was .002.
For the most part we just have to be patient and wait for performances to converge to projection and hitting with RISP to converge to overall hitting.
However, there are some things we can do. One is to look at the players that have both low performance and low projected performance. The name that jumps out is Uggla. We have discussed this exhaustively in other threads. I don't have anything new to add. I will simply repeat that it makes sense to start giving more playing time to alternatives at second. And this would make sense whether or not the team was struggling offensively.
The other suggestion I would make would be to increase Gattis' playing time slightly.