Manny Machado is the best player the Orioles have had in quite some time. He's so good that not only has he been able to improve some part of his game each season, but he's young enough at 24 to leave you wanting, and even expecting, more. That'll stop at some point, but we're not there yet.
Despite knee injuries that ended his 2013 and 2014 seasons, Machado was still able to increase his production at the plate in each of his first four major league seasons:
2012: 97 wRC+
2013: 102 wRC+
2014: 111 wRC+
2015: 134 wRC+
In 2016, Machado was well on his way to increasing his offensive production for the fifth straight year. In the first half of the season, he posted a wRC+ of 147 and was tied for fourth in position player wins above replacement with Jose Altuve (4.3).
But Machado fell off in the season's second half. He posted a 108 wRC+ in that span, which isn't terrible, but not what's expected of someone with Machado's talent. And although he wasn't alone in his second-half struggles (and many teammates performed far worse), his dip in production did drop his overall wRC+ to 129 and ended his extended stretch of improvement
So what happened? First, he didn't walk as much in the second half. Last year, Machado walked nearly 10% of the time. That was far and away the best of his career, and it also coincided with him transforming into a power hitter. His 35 home runs in 2015 were 23 more than the previous year. But in the first half of 2016, he walked 8% of the time, and that dropped to 5.6% in the second half. That's also factoring in nine intentional walks in 2016. In 2014 and 2015 combined, Machado was intentionally walked four times.
Machado also wasn't nearly as fortunate on batted balls in play in the second half. After posting a BABIP of .346 in the first half, that mark plummeted to .268 in the second half. He ended the year with a .309 BABIP, which is nearly identical to his career BABIP of .310.
Let's get back to plate discipline. Oddly enough, while Machado walked less, his strikeout percentage was nearly identical: 17.3% in the first half; 17.2% in the second half. Diving into some Brooks Baseball data, Machado actually swung less in the second half. He offered at about the same number of hard pitches (about 50%), but he swung about 3% and 4% less, respectively, against breaking and off-speed pitches. His whiff percentages were about the same for hard and breaking pitches, but he cut them almost in half against off-speed pitches.
Overall, Machado's plate discipline numbers look more like his 2014 numbers than his 2015 ones. In 2014 and 2016, he swung about half the time. In 2015, that number was at 43%. That year, he also chased fewer pitches but still made better contact on the ones he offered at outside the zone (inside as well).
Weird things happen over entire seasons, let alone parts of a single season. I wouldn't say there's anything that's cause for concern. Posting a wRC+ around 130, when combined with the value that Machado's outstanding defense at third base provides, might not make you the best player in baseball. But it gets you extremely close to the top. Besides, Machado may indeed have the skills to climb that next step.
I think the failure in other key parts of the lineup played a big role. Trumbo crumbled into a HR or bust hitter (busting far more often then he homered), Davis went into the abyss, and Jonathan Schoop slumped. The only consistent player on offense the 2nd half was Jones. Manny may have been pressing at the plate.
ReplyDeleteThe lineup really struggled in the second half, you're right. They may all have been pressing to some extent, and fatigue may have been a factor for a few players.
ReplyDeleteJones, however, wasn't very good in the second half. He posted a wRC+ of just 85 in that half, which helped contribute to one of his worst offensive seasons in Baltimore. Only four O's posted a wRC+ over 100 in the second half: Alvarez, Bourn, Machado, and Kim. So while I singled Machado out in this post because he's the best player on the team, he was still one of the best. Guys like Jones, Schoop, and Davis really let the O's down in the second half.
I think he, like the rest of the team, became home run happy. Trying too hard to hit it out, they declined in other ways. Manny needs to concentrate on being all-around good because the homers will come anyway.
ReplyDeleteone can only hope that this team can convince AJ to move to right field and the Orioles manage to get a decent Centerfielder. then maybe moving Kim to leadoff against right-handed pitching and Jones there against lefties. then hope that Davis is healthy AND starts using the whole field. take a freaking bunt once in a while, ANYTHING to ease the shift. those might be a start for higher OBP for the team. or I'm completely wrong. LOL.
ReplyDeleteAdam Jones isn't moving to right field... yet, at least. I'm also not sure why he would still be considered any kind of leadoff option. He's not a high OBP hitter, and he hits worse against left-handed pitching (career 112 wRC+ vs. RHP vs. 95 wRC+ vs. LHP). He needs to hit lower in the order.
ReplyDeleteI'm far from the biggest Joey Rickard supporter, but based on how he hit lefties last season, I'd consider him a better option to hit leadoff against southpaws.