Jason Heyward had a pretty disappointing regular season in 2016 after signing a contract worth nearly $200 million the previous offseason. Heyward altered his swing in the spring, as he has frequently throughout his career, then hurt his wrist at the very beginning of the season. How much either or both deserves blame isn’t clear, but what we do know is the results were disastrous. In the last 100 years, there have been 4,578 outfielders to qualify for the batting title. Heyward’s 72 wRC+ ranks 4,511th among that group. In other words, we’re dealing with a pretty rare situation. To find out how rare — and what the implications of it might be — I went out searching for the most Heyward-like seasons in history.
To look for players like Heyward, we don’t have to understand his precise approach to the game, we merely have to run some stats over on our leaderboards. I started by looking at qualified outfielders from the last 100 years who’d recorded a single-season wRC+ below 80. I eliminated strike years and players with less than a full season of experience prior to the poor-hitting year. Because Jason Hyeward is a good defender, I looked only at players who were worth at least 10 runs above average on defense and whose offense wasn’t so bad as to render them worth less than a win overall. To keep things in the same ballpark age-wise, I looked at player seasons between the ages of 25 and 29. (Heyward just finished his age-26 season.)
I found five Heywards.
The Most Jason Heyward-Like Player Seasons
|
Year |
BA |
OBP |
SLG |
wRC+ |
DEF |
WAR |
Darin Erstad |
1999 |
.253 |
.308 |
.374 |
70 |
22.5 |
2.0 |
Willie Davis |
1965 |
.238 |
.263 |
.346 |
77 |
16.0 |
2.1 |
Omar Moreno |
1980 |
.249 |
.306 |
.325 |
70 |
11.0 |
1.5 |
Bill Virdon |
1957 |
.251 |
.291 |
.383 |
79 |
12.1 |
1.5 |
Brian Hunter |
1998 |
.254 |
.298 |
.333 |
64 |
19.1 |
1.4 |
AVERAGE |
|
.249 |
.293 |
.352 |
72 |
16.1 |
1.7 |
Jason Heyward |
2016 |
.230 |
.306 |
.325 |
72 |
15.4 |
1.6 |
So these are some of the more bizarre player seasons in history. For a player to be this bad, he needs to be good enough to earn the confidence of the manager and organization. He also needs to be very poor on offense, sufficiently good defense to make up for the terrible offense, and to do it in the outfield, where the positional adjustment is either negative (like in the corners) or just slightly positive (like in center field). It’s easier to do this as a catcher or shortstop, where the positional adjustment gives you a bunch of runs right off the bat, but more difficult in the outfield.
Read the rest of this entry »