Madison Bumgarner’s Offensive Plan
Madison Bumgarner hit another home run. Sure, it was against Aaron Blair, and sure, this just keeps Bumgarner tied with Jason Heyward, but, Aaron Blair is a quality prospect in the major leagues, and this keeps Bumgarner tied with Jason Heyward. Bumgarner apparently figured out hitting in 2014. Maybe he got bored because he’d already mastered pitching. Since then, over just shy of 200 trips to the plate, Bumgarner has batted .234/.265/.451, good for a 101 wRC+. The next-best offensive pitcher has been Zack Greinke, with a wRC+ of 65. On the mound, Madison Bumgarner is Madison Bumgarner, and at the plate, Madison Bumgarner is Jonathan Schoop. The Giants’ advantage is that no other pitcher hits like a powerful second baseman.
This table is funny to me:
Batter | HR | Batted | HR/Batted% |
Giancarlo Stanton | 76 | 653 | 11.6% |
Franklin Gutierrez | 20 | 172 | 11.6% |
Chris Davis | 83 | 764 | 10.9% |
Trevor Story | 14 | 131 | 10.7% |
Miguel Sano | 29 | 272 | 10.7% |
Zach Walters | 10 | 94 | 10.6% |
Chris Carter | 74 | 699 | 10.6% |
Gregory Bird | 11 | 105 | 10.5% |
Adam Duvall | 21 | 204 | 10.3% |
Madison Bumgarner | 11 | 108 | 10.2% |
The name right after Bumgarner is Kyle Schwarber. When Bumgarner has hit a ball between the lines, he’s had basically the same rate of home runs as Kyle Schwarber. You know the image you have of Kyle Schwarber. Bumgarner has made that kind of contact.