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2016 Average Exit Velocity Leaders, Hard-Hit Leaders From the Last Month and More!

Welcome to this little discussion on batters who are smoking the ball. I wrote a similar column a few weeks ago, and thought it would be fun to make this a regular column throughout the season. When analyzing hitters, we love seeing that they’re making solid contact and really putting a charge into the ball. There are several different ways you can go about seeking out this data, and there is plenty of context needed aside from simply “Kronk hit ball hard, ball go far, Kronk good player.” We’re not barbarians here!

The goal here was to use Statcast to check in on the average exit velocity leaders for the entire season, and then also use that data to view those who have hit the most 100+ MPH balls at a launch angle greater than 10 degrees to weed out the grounders (not that they don’t have their place, but we want the power shots). Then you’ll find the hard-hit leaders according to Fangraphs for the past 30 days if you want to see whose name repeats, as well as a few surges from the past 14 days at the end.

Without further ado, here’s that sweet data (numbers as of May 20).

 

2016 Average Exit Velocity Leaders

Player Name Average Exit Velo (in MPH) Average Distance (feet) Average Launch Angle (degrees) Average Height (feet) Number of Hits Tracked
Cameron Rupp 96.0 211.7 9.5 35.4 54
Nelson Cruz 95.5 228.3 10.7 43.7 95
Christian Yelich 95.0 203.6 2.6 23.7 103
Mark Trumbo 95.0 249.5 18.5 54.1 95
Giancarlo Stanton 94.9 237.0 10.9 47.3 74
Domingo Santana 94.8 206.0 4.7 18.7 60
Joc Pederson 94.8 236.3 18.3 53.4 64
Miguel Sano 94.8 261.1 19.6 58.6 82
Ryan Zimmerman 94.8 212.8 6.0 31.5 95
Yasmani Grandal 94.8 212.7 5.4 29.4 57
David Ortiz 94.8 248.7 13.5 48.3 109
Eric Hosmer 94.4 216.3 6.4 30.1 103
Tyler Flowers 94.3 205.7 7.1 26.0 41
Justin Bour 94.2 230.4 12.9 43.6 78
Chris Carter 94.2 237.7 14.0 50.7 87
Danny Valencia 94.1 248.3 13.6 39.6 66
Josh Donaldson 93.9 239.2 16.5 50.3 111
Khris Davis 93.8 239.7 16.8 55.1 98
David Wright 93.8 261.4 19.4 49.4 60
J.J. Hardy 93.8 211.7 14.4 42.9 63
Nick Markakis 93.8 223.4 10.9 34.2 107
Ryan Howard 93.7 245.7 19.0 55.9 74
Matt Holliday 93.7 229.4 10.4 38.5 95
Jayson Werth 93.5 253.1 17.7 47.2 81
Jarrod Saltalamacchia 93.5 271.3 26.5 68.9 46

Plenty of power bats populate the list, with hard-hitting grounder specialist Christian Yelich nearly at the top of the list. Cameron Rupp can smash a baseball, but this is why we don’t blindly follow any one stat as we know that he isn’t good for much else (ditto Tyler Flowers). This isn’t accounting for overall contact rates of course, with the presence of many batters who can launch dingers but kill your average.

What this can do is allow you to validate certain hot streaks when it comes to power, as it’s what I personally banked on to hold with Danny Valencia before his torrid past week. That’s not meant to be a promise that it always translates, but perhaps some are thinking that Eric Hosmer is getting lucky since he hasn’t really performed this well before. Not so fast, as hitting the ball this well and this fast correlates with better batted-ball luck. Create that good fortune!

 

Most 100+ MPH Exit Velocities With >10 Degree Launch Angle

Over the Past 30 Days

Amount of Events Players Notes
27 Khris Davis He’s been mashing, so this isn’t surprising.
24 David Ortiz This retirement party is the place to be.
22 Matt Kemp Career May OPS: .683, Sept. next worst month: .825
21 Freddie Freeman, Miguel Cabrera Neither is lost at the dish, can still bring it.
20 Josh Donaldson, Chris Carter, Evan Longoria, Manny Machado All noted strong swingers. Longoria may surprise, but he’s selling out some plate discipline for pop gains thus far.
19 Edwin Encarnacion Slow starter, but the pop is all too real.
18 George Springer A healthy Springer is a slugging Springer.
17 Ian Desmond, Corey Seager, Andrew McCutchen, Robinson Cano, Yoenis Cespedes, J.D. Martinez The shortstops might surprise you, but don’t take them lightly.
16 Nick Castellanos, Gregory Polanco, Wil Myers All three are “breakout” types continuing to charge the ball.
15 Nelson Cruz, Mike Trout, Adam Jones, Hunter Pence, Maikel Franco, Mike Napoli, Mark Trumbo, Todd Frazier, Kyle Seager Strong bats up-and-down, nothing too wild.

 

Last 30 Days Hard-Hit Rate Leaders

Before we begin, the first name that will appear, Joey Votto (51.0%) deserves some discussion. He is definitely making hard contact, but as his owners know, the results are not coming in. Is this simply bad luck?

He’s batting .226 in the past 30 days to go with this league-leading hard-hit rate. Well, his OBP and SLG have risen in May while his average has fallen, which aligns with his increased fly ball rate in May (while grounders have held steady). I believe in him, as his May splits have his pull rate falling from 45.3% to 30.0%, meaning he’s finally starting to spray the ball a bit more. This points to his natural swing more so than a crazy pull hitter who is getting pounded inside, which created many struggles. This isn’t the place to drone on about him, but this sounds like a good idea for when May ends.

Player Name Hard-Hit Rate Notes
Joey Votto 51.0% See above
David Ortiz 49.4% Yup.
Corey Seager 48.8% Young buck is really buckin’
Mike Trout 48.8% Hi Mike.
Mike Napoli 47.3% Healthy, can bring the power.
Jackie Bradley Jr. 46.3% He’s good, but he’s not this good.
Victor Martinez 46.2% Will be interesting how body holds up, but many rates aligning with his amazing 2014 season.
Evan Longoria 45.3% Harder swing means harder hits, but more Ks also.
Justin Smoak 44.6% Manufacturing some of that lofty .418 BABIP.
Michael Conforto 44.3% Hard-hit rate leader vs. RHP (52.0%), still LHP struggles (22.7%, albeit in only 28 PAs).
Josh Donaldson 43.9% Bringer of hard hits.
David Wright 43.9% Batting .189 in the past 30 days to go with this.
Curtis Granderson 43.5% A .158 BABIP in May, with a 32.4 K% despite an 8.0% swinging strike rate, should bounce back.
Brandon Drury 43.0% Locked in, enjoy.
Albert Pujols 43.0% Early bad luck stabilizing, .304 BABIP in May.
Giancarlo Stanton 42.9% Shocker.
Kris Bryant 42.7% Shocker x2.
Miguel Sano 42.6% This year’s average not buoyed by last year’s .396 BABIP (.317 this season), but power is real.
J.D. Martinez 42.1% Buy low window: closed.
Jake Lamb 41.8% Still a RHP platoon, but doing quite well in that capacity.
Mark Trumbo 41.7% Enjoying his new digs.
Charlie Blackmon 41.5% Back to normal after unlucky start + injury.
Carlos Santana 41.5% He’ll never have a high average, but has powerful swing.
Yasmany Tomas 41.4% Coming around in Year 2, walk rate up with modest fly ball rate gains.
Joc Pederson 41.2% Streaky as heck, but makes very strong contact.
Brandon Belt 41.2% As long as his health stays, so will the production.
Matt Carpenter 41.0% Continuing to give some contact for some power, and it’s working.
Trevor Story 40.9% He’s legitimate, accept it.
David Freese 40.8% Ignore.
Daniel Murphy 40.8% He’ll regress a bit of course, but his ground ball rate is down a whopping 16% thus far, meaning more hard-hit balls are liners and fly balls, leading to the notable stats.

 

Notable Names - Last 14 Days Hard-Hit Leaderboard

Just a few guys who are towards the top in the last 14 days.

Jung Ho Kang: 46.4% - He’s come back on the scene with authority, owners should be encouraged.

Yan Gomes: 46.4% - His batting average in his last 30, and last 14, games is exactly .154. That seems odd. His BABIP was .227 in April, and it’s a laughable .143 through May thus far. So his increase in hard hits has come with a further drop in batted ball luck. Yes, hitting many fly balls and striking out a lot can hurt your luck profile, but not like this…not like this.

Adam Jones: 46.3% - Hopefully you didn’t cut ties with him.

 

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