Giancarlo Stanton Gets Pitched Weirdly

“When you’re pitched away, take the ball to the opposite field.” It’s a training mantra that seemingly exists everywhere. I heard it in Little League. I hear it on major league broadcasts to this day. The data show that hitters do it, and it’s just a natural swing. I can think of few hitting sayings I believe more than this one.
Of course, just because you can hit the ball the other way doesn’t mean you have to. Over the last two years, the list of righty hitters who have pulled the ball most when they swing at away pitches (from right-handed pitchers, just to standardize the sample) probably matches your intuition:
Player | Away Pull% |
---|---|
Gary Sánchez | 51.4% |
Eugenio Suárez | 46.7% |
Patrick Wisdom | 45.8% |
Jonathan India | 44.9% |
Marcus Semien | 44.5% |
You basically understand the kinds of hitters on here. The guys ranked sixth and seventh are similar types: Salvador Perez and Mike Zunino. It’s big boppers who try to lift and pull the ball no matter where they’re pitched, as well as guys like Marcus Semien who sell out to pull in an attempt to juice their power. If you do the most damage on the pull side and accrue most of your offensive value through power, it’s a natural approach. You think anyone’s coming to the ballpark to see Patrick Wisdom slap a well-placed cutter the other way? They want dingers!
The list of the hitters who pull the ball least often when pitched away is mostly who you’d expect, and also not who you’d expect at all. Feast your eyes on the top five:
Player | Away Pull% |
---|---|
DJ LeMahieu | 5.2% |
Ke’Bryan Hayes | 5.4% |
Myles Straw | 7.1% |
Jean Segura | 9.1% |
Giancarlo Stanton | 11.8% |
The top four are contact-oriented hitters with elevated groundball rates… and the fifth might be the most powerful baseball player in history. Read the rest of this entry »