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  • The Twins Hitter Set to Benefit Most from Shift Ban Isn't Who You Think


    Ted Wiedmann

    A number of Twins’ hitters are likely to benefit from the rule change, but the hitter most impacted by the new shift ban might not be who you think it is.

    Image courtesy of Jordan Johnson-USA TODAY Sports

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    With the new shift ban coming into effect in 2023, several Minnesota Twins’ hitters could stand to benefit. Joey Gallo, perhaps the face of the new rule change, is certainly one player who could see increased production. Max Kepler is another very pull-heavy hitter who could potentially see his numbers increase with a now more open right side of the infield. A lot of the focus of the shift ban has been directed to left-handed hitters, and understandably so.

    The shift against left-handed hitters was quite apparent, as it often involved a second baseman in right field and sometimes four outfielders, making baseball traditionalists sick to their stomachs as none of the players were seemingly in the spots they were supposed to be. 

    There is one Twins hitter who might benefit most from the shift ban that I have rarely seen mentioned. He may not be an obvious shift victim candidate due to his physical profile and offensive production in the last couple of seasons, but he stands to gain more from the rule change more than players like Kepler and Gallo. That hitter is Byron Buxton.

    Believe it or not, Byron Buxton is not only the most pull-heavy hitter on the Twins but also the most pull-heavy player in all of baseball. According to Statcast, in 2022, out of hitters with 300 plate appearances, Buxton had the highest pull% in MLB at 54.2%. Gallo was eighth in pull% at 48.4%, and the league average pull% is 45.9%.

     

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    Teams noticed this pull-happy tendency from Buxton and adjusted their defenses accordingly. In 2022 among hitters with 250 plate appearances, Buxton was shifted 78.8% of the time, good for 34th most in MLB but second most among right-handed hitters, only trailing Eugenio Suarez of the Seattle Mariners. 

    The shift impacted Buxton dramatically. Contrary to standard thought, Buxton only hit .188 (13-for-69) on ground balls, despite his world-class speed. His shift and non-shift splits were jarring as well. In the 301 plate appearances against the shift, Buxton registered a .312 wOBA. When there was no shift, Buxton’s wOBA was .517 in only 81 plate appearances. The league average wOBA is .316, so a .517 wOBA in an 81 PA sample is astounding. His .205 difference in shift versus non-shift wOBA was the biggest in all of baseball among players who received at least 15 plate appearances against both the shift and no-shift.  

     

     

    While it is impossible that Buxton can sustain a .517 wOBA, it may have been understated how much he can benefit from the shift ban. While the strikeout rate may limit him from reaching the elite tier of hitters in MLB, Buxton makes as consistent and hard contact as anyone. He ranked in the 97th percentile in average exit velocity, 97th percentile in barrel%, and 93rd percentile in hard hit%. 

    His .224 batting average in 2022 may have disappointed some, but I would be shocked if it stays that low in 2023. Being able to hit ground balls again opens up new avenues for all hitters, particularly for ones like Byron Buxton, who runs like the wind. So while this new era of baseball defense may take some below-average hitters to average ones, it may also take the Twins’ superstar into a class of his own.  

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    With all this focus on the shift change and batters getting more singles than groundball or line outs, I'm betting we could christen this team the Single-Through-The-Hole Squad. Not quite the same ring as '19's Bomba Squad... but maybe there's a better name I'm not thinking of.

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    49 minutes ago, TCSquad said:

    With all this focus on the shift change and batters getting more singles than groundball or line outs, I'm betting we could christen this team the Single-Through-The-Hole Squad. Not quite the same ring as '19's Bomba Squad... but maybe there's a better name I'm not thinking of.

    Just don't call it the Single-Hits-Into-The-Shift Squad. It would too frequently be shortened with an acronym that would wouldn't work well. 

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    3 hours ago, rv78 said:

    His last 2 injuries were from sliding into 2nd base and getting hit on the hand with a pitch. Playing DH would have not prevented either one.

    True. Though one might argue that full-time DHing would have led to better recovery and/or fewer days off. Plus, that would have given us the bonus of providing one more reason for TD readers to rip on Rocco and the Front Office, and heaven knows we need more of those, right? (sarcasm alert)

    Hopefully it's a moot point this year. 😄

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    On 2/20/2023 at 9:41 AM, GKuehl said:

    Really interesting work, thanks! 100% agree — fielders will have to field his grounders on the move (if at all), forcing them to make more difficult, rushed plays to throw Buck out at 1st. 

    Except I cringe almost every time he tries to leg out an infield hit or slides into second with a double, expecting another pulled muscle, sprained ankle, concussion, or back trouble. 

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    1 hour ago, Cris E said:

    Has he always pulled this much, or was some of this related to his injuries,  an attempt to drive the ball more and not have to run as much with the bum leg?

    I don’t believe it has anything to do with injuries. Early in his career the coaching staff tried to have him hit ground balls and stay up the middle. It wasn’t working so he tried hitting his “own way” and I think once he has success with it he leaned further into it. 

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    What a surprise diagnosis that I never saw coming! Very interesting! I can absolutely see this making a difference for Buxton not simply due to his speed, but because he hits the ball so damn hard. So when he doesn't launch one, a grounder just might streak on through. 

    He's such a natural athlete in everything he does, and is a pretty smart ballplayer, I can see this helping. But despite being pull heavy, IMO, I'm willing to bet his knee injury last season affected his approach somewhat. I might be 100% wrong, but I wonder if his legs are healthy if he doesn't just spray the ball up the middle more, and knick a few more line drives to the right side, improving his numbers anyway. Again, I'm speculating only and don't have any proof. 

    And only because they've been mentioned, Gallo hits the ball hard enough I can see a more limited shift...there will still be shifting...working to his advantage somewhat. But I remain unconvinced it will do much for Kepler unless he can get back to barreling up on the ball with harder contact.

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    Great article Ted !  Just when a guy thinks he knows a little about baseball an article like yours comes out of nowhere and leaves many of us pondering how much we really know.  Thanks for this enlightening perspective.  We will just have to see what the new rule changes mean for how baseball is played this year. I'm hoping for more of the game I grew up with.  

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