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Luis Robert, closing in on one full season statistically


caulfield12

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https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/r/roberlu01.shtml
 

Some pretty eye popping numbers, other than RBI’s…which is due as much as anything due to his spot in the order.

Looking at 25-35 homers per season, probably not the huge stolen base numbers (for injury reasons alone) but roughly 15-25 could reasonably be expected.

Mid 800’s OPS.

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My big criticism of Luis last year was how bad the strikeouts were and until he fixed it, we really needed to dampen expectations. With 40 more plate appearances, he's actually struck out 20 less times. That's pretty good improvement and consequently all of his numbers have improved along with it. His approach is better and hopefully he keeps improving from this point on. 

You know, one day, these bats we have we all actually click at the same time. I just hope that happens in the Houston series. It seems as though no one is hot together. Just one guy and then cools off, then someone else. Can we get these guys to hit at the same time? That would be convenient. 

 

 

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3 hours ago, hi8is said:

Considering his improved approach and tool to grow - It seems those numbers may be on the lower end of his scale.

Wouldn't that be wonderful if how he has performed since coming back from injury is the player he is going to be ? Can you imagine if this just isn't some sort of hot streak and he's going to be a .350 hitter with 40 HR's ?  He isn't even 100% yet judging by his comments about still feeling pain some times and he slows himself down then.

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Hopefully he’ll be able to play a full season next year.

Luis and Grandal are fresh at this point (Eloy is as well, but still hasn’t found his timing / the right approach), so hopefully they can remain hot in October. The extended rest seemed to rejuvenate Tim’s bat as well.

Luis just turned 24, and has minimal exposure to pitchers, so he should continue to improve and learn with more at bats.

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Robert’s improvement on Ks from 32% to 20% has been a pleasant surprise but everyone needs to slow down on talk about hitting .350. If he had enough plate appearances to qualify his .422 babip would be the highest of single season babip of any player post-WWII. For comparison Rod Carew holds the record with a babip of .408 in 1977.

Interestingly, one of the keys of consistently hitting for elite batting average is walking. If you’re walking it decreases the total number of balls in play over a season and keeps regression from kicking in. Robert is walking half as much this season as last (8% to 4%) so I wouldn’t start projecting historic seasons until he shows he can create an elite approach to hitting.

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4 hours ago, Soxfest said:

Before it's all said and done Robert will put up better numbers than Eloy yearly.

I'm just hoping Eloy, Robert and Vaughn are in a dead heat for best Sox hitter in the coming years...that'll be a very good thing for our team...and that's not even taking TA into consideration, haha!

Edited by MexSoxFan#1
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3 hours ago, MackowiakYakYak said:

Robert’s improvement on Ks from 32% to 20% has been a pleasant surprise but everyone needs to slow down on talk about hitting .350. If he had enough plate appearances to qualify his .422 babip would be the highest of single season babip of any player post-WWII. For comparison Rod Carew holds the record with a babip of .408 in 1977.

Interestingly, one of the keys of consistently hitting for elite batting average is walking. If you’re walking it decreases the total number of balls in play over a season and keeps regression from kicking in. Robert is walking half as much this season as last (8% to 4%) so I wouldn’t start projecting historic seasons until he shows he can create an elite approach to hitting.

This just isn't true. Correlation does not equal causation here. People with better plate discipline may be better hitters on average but walking more doesn't signify a higher batting average.

High BABIPs have a lot of impacting factors; speed, going the other way, hard hit rate and etc. Those are all things Robert has become elite at. Will he hit 355 next year? Probably not, but if he hits a few more home runs and maintains a similar approach his average should be much better than people expected.

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1 hour ago, Look at Ray Ray Run said:

This just isn't true. Correlation does not equal causation here. People with better plate discipline may be better hitters on average but walking more doesn't signify a higher batting average.

High BABIPs have a lot of impacting factors; speed, going the other way, hard hit rate and etc. Those are all things Robert has become elite at. Will he hit 355 next year? Probably not, but if he hits a few more home runs and maintains a similar approach his average should be much better than people expected.

I don’t disagree except that to maintain an outlier babip it helps to have fewer balls being put in play. People were throwing around him hitting .350 so I wanted to talk about what it might take for him to produce a .350 season. Completely agree that creating more walks often leads to more strikeouts and therefore a lower average

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6 hours ago, MexSoxFan#1 said:

I'm just hoping Eloy, Robert and Vaughn are in a dead heat for best Sox hitter in the coming years...that'll be a very good thing for our team...and that's not even taking TA into consideration, haha!

Or Moncada to be honest.  There is a lot of (frankly, justified) disappointment in him as a hitter this season, but let's not ignore the fact that he does something that is very important to those who bat behind him.  He gets on base.

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5 hours ago, Look at Ray Ray Run said:

This just isn't true. Correlation does not equal causation here. People with better plate discipline may be better hitters on average but walking more doesn't signify a higher batting average.

Yep.

Exhibit A

8b0ef2c7_mlbam.jpg

  • 2021 .305 BA / 20 BB
  • 2020 .322 / 10
  • 2019 .335 / 15

 

 

 

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