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The Numbers Behind Jose Miranda's Slump


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Jose Miranda has struggled in his first month in the majors, why? What are the numbers behind his struggles? What can he do to turn it around?

 

Who cares about 46 plate appearances? Not me. Neither, globally speaking, should you. 46 plate appearances, however, is all we have to judge Jose Miranda on so far in the big leagues, and it hasn't been pretty.

After putting together a MiLB season for the ages in 2021 in which he hit 30 HR and a combined 159 wRC+ between AA and AAA, Miranda has struggled in his opening month with the Twins. Over 11 games, he’s put up an 8 wRC+ and has been worth -0.5 fWAR. Obviously not great. What do the numbers say about Miranda? How might he turn his slow start around?

Miranda’s 2021 MiLB breakthrough came from the ability to drive the ball well. In 2021, his Line Drive Percentage (LD%) was 24.3% at AA and AAA. For a point of reference, Jorge Polanco, who put up 4.1 fWAR for the Twins, was at 23.1%. Obviously, a different level of competition, but a useful reference point. Fast forward to 2022 and Miranda’s LD% has plummeted to just 2.7%. Essentially, everything he’s hitting is into the ground, or straight up in the air. What gives?

The clues come in the form of Miranda’s plate discipline numbers. He doesn’t walk often 4.3% BB%. He also doesn’t strike out very often, something we might expect for someone struggling so mightily at the plate (15.2% K%). Miranda’s low walk and low strikeout totals warrant further investigation, for that, it’s useful to look at his swing and contact rates. 

Miranda has an O-Swing% of 29.9%, meaning he swings at 29.9% of pitches thrown outside the strike zone. This isn’t an alarming number (Polanco, our contextual comparison for this piece, is at 28.8% here). Miranda, however, swings significantly more in the zone than other hitters (70.2% so far in 2022 to Polanco’s 61.5%). We know that Miranda can crush the ball, no one who hits 30 HR in a season can’t. However, his average exit velocity is 88.2 mph, right at league average with a Barrel% of just 5.4%.

If we put these two data points together, here’s what we can glean; Miranda has a tendency to swing at pitches in the strike zone, which is fine. Currently, his swings in the zone are not selective enough, causing him to ground out and pop out frequently. His tendencies are a much scaled-back version of the challenges Willians Astudillo faced in Minnesota, where his ability to put bat-to-ball was negated by the poor quality of contact he produced.

I’ll finish with this; who cares? Hitting in the majors is a game of reactivity and constraint adjustments. Whether Miranda continues to work through his struggles in Minneapolis or St. Paul, I remain extremely confident in his ability to hit at the big league level. If he wants to maximize his success, however, he needs to once again hunt for pitches he can drive.

 

 


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Thanks, this is a good explanation of Miranda's troubles. This might be as simple as him being over eager in his first trip up to the MLB level.  Unfortunately, it looks like he needs a little more time at the AAA level. I expect him to go back down when Correa or Larnach is ready to play. Good first look, but just not ready yet.  

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I'd like for the Twins to bring up Miranda when he's red hot, so I'd prefer him being brought up at the end of last season and waited a little longer this season. Nevertheless he's got his 1st taste of MLB so when he does go down he'll be that much hungrier and wiser to return.

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Most guys benefit from getting some time in the bigs and getting sent back down.  He knows what he should work on and should learn from the experience.  As hard as it was to watch Celestino last year, I think that experience paid dividends over the winter and into this season.  Hopefully Miranda can do something similar whether he gets sent back down or not.

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I am not concerned long term.  I think this is a good learning experience for Miranda and he should be able to learn from it.  This is his first taste of MLB pitching.  Much like a lot of young guys who struggle they need time to learn how the best of the best will pitch them.  He made adjustments last year to become the prospect he did.  I bet he works on this over the year.  Not sure when he gets sent back, but he will at some point.  Some guys take much longer to adjust to MLB level.  

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1 hour ago, LA VIkes Fan said:

Thanks, this is a good explanation of Miranda's troubles. This might be as simple as him being over eager in his first trip up to the MLB level.  Unfortunately, it looks like he needs a little more time at the AAA level. I expect him to go back down when Correa or Larnach is ready to play. Good first look, but just not ready yet.  

Or it could be like Refsnyder, this is about as good as it gets.

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If I remember, this was the book on Miranda before last year. Great ball-to-bat skills, but wasn't doing enough about it. Last year, he reportedly got more selective with his approach. It's seemed to me like he just needs to get back to that. We've seen (and hopefully he has seen) that he can hit pitches at a major league level. Now he needs to start choosing which ones to hit and which ones to ignore.

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50 minutes ago, Trov said:

I am not concerned long term.  I think this is a good learning experience for Miranda and he should be able to learn from it.  This is his first taste of MLB pitching.  Much like a lot of young guys who struggle they need time to learn how the best of the best will pitch them.  He made adjustments last year to become the prospect he did.  I bet he works on this over the year.  Not sure when he gets sent back, but he will at some point.  Some guys take much longer to adjust to MLB level.  

I agree.  He'll either figure it out soon, or be sent down to figure it out.  But, I think he'll figure it out and be a good MLBer.

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5 hours ago, RpR said:

Or it could be like Refsnyder, this is about as good as it gets.

Perhaps, but Larnach and Celestino have been examples of guys who really struggle their first times up, and then the second time (the next season), something clicked. This might be the case for Miranda too, or maybe 2021 was all a fluke. Who knows, but I'll err on the side of patience.

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I think Miranda is going to be just fine. He just may not be quite ready yet. And that's OK. The learning curve is different for everyone. He's got all the ability and potential you could hope for. He was a high pick who Twins scouts and FO personal have been quietly saying for the past few years, from various reports; "just wait...just wait". Well, he started to figure it out in 2021.

My opinion? He's pressing. He got off to a poor start with St Paul and was getting hot when promoted. And he wants to do so well he's almost forgotten all the adjustments he made last year. He's suddenly reverted back to just making contact vs the good contact he figured out. And he could suddenly "click" any day! I hope like crazy that happens! But I think he needs to go back down when the roster gets healthy and take what he's learned and get himself right again.

I DO THINK the Twins did themselves, and Miranda, a HUGE disservice by not brining him up late in 2021 to get his feet wet then. He might be more ready now, regardless of any success he might have had.

 

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18 hours ago, Alex Schieferdecker said:

If I remember, this was the book on Miranda before last year. Great ball-to-bat skills, but wasn't doing enough about it. Last year, he reportedly got more selective with his approach. It's seemed to me like he just needs to get back to that. We've seen (and hopefully he has seen) that he can hit pitches at a major league level. Now he needs to start choosing which ones to hit and which ones to ignore.

Exactly. now when he needs to get back to that. Either the Twins hitting coaches or those back at St. Paul need to get him back in that groove.

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I think getting his feet wet this year, rather than last year, is fine. The team vibe is more positive, they are winning. Also, roster additions like Correa, Ursela and Sanchez bring preparation routines and playoff experience. This all makes for an ideal learning environment for Miranda. I'm not sure how it would have been for him last September on a disappointing team.

He will likely need more seasoning in St Paul when injured players return. But he'll be back.

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The problem right now with sending Miranda down, who plays first? Arraez some times, but who would back him up?  So I think Miranda has to stay and work through his batting issues.

Correa and Larnach are soon off the IL, but neither plays first. 

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