Preach those numbers, brother.
Chipper Jones' first 602 MLB PAs and 524 ABs saw him put up a .265/.353/.450 line. Is that close to that .255/.335/.455 line you've adjusted Bradley's numbers to reflect? Apparently I don't know, so you tell me.
Obviously I'm not trying to draw comparisons between Chipper and Bradley, so before you (or everyone else) tweaks your spreadsheets to prove why they're not on the same trajectory, save it.
I love the additional clarity much of the new metrics provide for insight, but until you can hand me a printout that guarantees me that Jackie Bradley doesn't have a chance to turn into a really good player based on the numbers your computer spit out for you this early in his career, I'm still going to put a little weight on what my eyes tell me since I watch him play somewhat regularly. Many of you screamed at the top of your lungs about the fact that Maybin couldn't possibly do what he's done this year, so forgive me if I'm just a tad skeptical.
When someone's able to provide THAT kind of certainty (backed up by huge sample sizes of data of course), teams will stop hiring scouts IMO.