
MLB strikeouts are down as teams adjust in baseball's new era, stats
Yet even then, he knew something had to change.
"I hit a lot of home runs," Torres, now a Detroit Tiger, tells USA TODAY Sports, "but I struck out a lot. From my first year in the big leagues, I had a lot of conversations with the hitting coaches there. They always tell me, 'Strike two, put the ball in play.' I worked on my (two-strike approach) every year.
"Last year, in the second half, I had a really good approach, saw the ball very well. I really believe in my eyes to control the strike zone. I know how important it is some days to walk and put myself on base for the guy behind me.
"So far, I really, really believe in my plan and go to home plate and do what I can do."
He's not the only one.
While strikeouts remain a scourge to the old school eye, it may be safe to declare that the era of bottomless whiffs is over. Major league teams are striking out 8.26 times per game, the lowest rate since 2017 and a 6% decrease from 2019.
That season featured the highest K rate of all time (8.61 per team game) accompanied by the most home runs - 6,776 - in major league history.
The offensive environment was an outlier for many reasons - including a juiced baseball - but it also marks the symbolic apex of the game's "three true outcomes" era, when a home run, walk or strikeout ruled the sport, with three punchouts deemed the cost of doing business for one jog around the bases.
Six years later, are we in the middle of a course correction?
"It's in the process of swinging back," says Chicago Cubs manager Craig Counsell. "I think we've given pitchers a ton of credit for improving. It was a conversation four or five years ago that (pitchers') velocity has improved. I think hitters now have calibrated themselves to that.
"And training them better. That's improved contact. And probably stopped giving at-bats to people who can't make contact. So, decision-makers had to adjust a little bit, too."
There's endless examples of both player and franchise realizing that selling out for power isn't necessarily in their best interests.
Gleyber Torres stats on the rise: 'I want to put the ball in play'
Torres is a prime case: In 2018 and 2019, his first two seasons, he hit 24 and 38 home runs, with strikeout rates of 25.2 and 21.4%. By 2024, he was 27, about to hit the free agent market and struggling at the halfway point, with a .215/.294/.333 slash line and a 24% strikeout rate.
Yet he managed to make myriad mid-season adjustments, all of which trimmed his K rate down to 17.2% and the results followed: A .298/.365/.421 second half and a stellar postseason, resulting in a one-year, $15 million deal with the Tigers.
Come spring training, he continued tweaking his approach and embraced a greater dedication to game-planning, heeding the counsel of Tigers hitting coaches Michael Brdar, Lance Zawadski, and Keith Beauregard and, as Torres put it, "go to the plate with my plan and try to put a little more focus on whatever I do before the game."
The approach has paid off: Torres has just 40 strikeouts in 311 plate appearances, a 12.9% strikeout rate well below the league average of 21.9%, and nearly half his whiff rate in his rookie season.
And his offensive profile has never looked healthier: Torres is on track for 17 homers, two more than he hit his final season in New York, but he's headed toward career highs in OBP - his .386 mark is 39 points better than his previous best - and adjusted OPS (134).
While Torres was a vaunted prospect and instant All-Star, curbing whiffs can be a matter of survival for others.
"I hate striking out. Don't like striking out. I want to put the ball in play," says Baltimore Orioles slugger Ryan O'Hearn, who went from waiver claim to potential All-Star. "I want to make things happen. I want to make the other team make plays. I know what it's like to play against teams that don't strike out a whole lot, and it puts stress on the infielders.
"Can't get any hits unless you put the ball in play, right?"
Nor can you get off the bench. O'Hearn, 31, only once played more than 100 games in five seasons with Kansas City, striking out 99 times in 105 games in 2019.
In December 2022, the Royals designated him for assignment, with a .293 career OBP and annual strikeout rates that ranged from 24.1% to 28%.
The Orioles gave him new life, unlocking several mechanical cleanups that, he said, "helped me make contact more consistently. Less swing and miss in the zone.
"Once I realized I could put in play a lot more consistently, it definitely became a conscious thing and I didn't want to strike out a lot."
The results have been startling: O'Hearn hacked his K rate exactly in half from 28% in 2021 to 2023's 14%. This year, he's struck out just 46 times in 71 games and should win the All-Star Game fan balloting at designated hitter. It's well-deserved: O'Hearn is batting .295 with an .854 OPS (144 adjusted) and 11 homers.
His newfound aversion to Ks is a big reason why.
"Mentally, it's definitely changed a lot for me the past few years," he says. "I know it's a big league defense and there's really good defenders out there. But if you strike out, it's a lot easier to kill an inning, for a pitcher stroll through a game when a team strikes out a lot. Low stress on the defenders.
"I don't want that. Even if it's 0-2, weak contact, I don't care. You might get a hit. You might get lucky."
The perfect offense
Power pays, and that will always be the case in the big leagues.
The Los Angeles Dodgers and New York Yankees are 1-2 in both home runs and OPS, befitting the coastal behemoths who handsomely compensate Shohei Ohtani and Aaron Judge, respectively.
Yet the Yankees are fourth in strikeouts and the Dodgers rank 17th, a moderate vulnerability that can be greater exposed in a postseason environment.
How, then, does a club generate an ideal concoction of power, patience and putting the ball in play?
Ask the Arizona Diamondbacks.
They are lurking just behind the Dodgers and Yankees with a .776 team OPS, and trail only the Dodgers and Chicago Cubs in runs scored. And they're fifth in home runs.
But strikeouts? Just three teams whiff less often than Arizona, which has a 20.1% K rate; the Yankees rank 23rd at 23.1%. And the Diamondbacks hardly give up pop to get the ball in play: They rank eighth in hard-hit rate, with 42.3% of their balls at least 95 mph off the bat.
It's no accident.
Arizona manager Torey Lovullo says he and hitting coach Joe Mather are in alignment on their core offensive values: Putting the ball in play hard up the middle. Mather, Lovullo says, even keeps a running tab on how many balls reach their personal baseline of effectiveness: At least 90 mph on a line, with a launch angle between five and 25 degrees, equals success.
"I'm tired of people just going out there and striking out," says Lovullo. "It turned into a home run or strikeout league. I feel like if we get ahead of that and have an approach like the [David] Fletcher kid when he was in Anaheim, we'll be good.
"Fletcher got no love in this game, and I'm like, every team needs three or four of those guys. If we can have three or four of those guys with some slug, we're going to put up some runs."
Fletcher's career K rate was 9.5%, though he never managed to produce a league-average OPS over a full season. These D-backs don't have that problem.
All-Star shortstop Geraldo Perdomo's strikeout rate has been vanishing a little more every year, now down to 11.7%. He pairs that with a .357 OBP and 115 adjusted OPS, along with such a strong situational feel that Lovullo says he can tell Perdomo, "I need at least a five-pitch at-bat here," and he will execute.
"I've always had really good eyes and make contact with no power," says Perdomo. "As I get older, I think it's a reason I'm hitting the ball harder. I feel proud. I don't want to strike out, and the most important thing I can do is putting the ball in play, and now that I'm getting some power, I feel like I can just drive the ball with more intensity.
"I'm not looking for a certain pitch, but if there's a good pitch that's close to me, I just try to drive the ball.''
While Arizona's pitching has dragged the club back toward the .500 mark, almost every contender has a contact fiend that tenderizes the opposing pitcher while also doing damage.
For the Cubs, it is Nico Hoerner, who has just 22 strikeouts this season - a beyond elite 6.7% K percentage - while managing a .721 OPS despite just three home runs. He plays his role perfectly in the Cubs offense, haunting pitchers and defenses while enabling the lineup's aircraft carriers - Kyle Tucker, Seiya Suzuki and Michael Busch - to take their wallops.
"He's got the perfect approach with runners in scoring position: There's gonna be contact," Counsell says of Hoerner, who's already amassed 3.3 WAR this season. "It's really hard to strike him out. It's his elite skill.
"The ability to make contact is not an exciting trait as a hitter, but it's a valuable trait. It leads to runs getting scored."
And while the Tampa Bay Rays have shaved just 2% off their team K rate year-over-year, the addition of rookies Jake Mangum (13.4%) and speed merchant Chandler Simpson (9.6%) have given them a dynamic offensive attack.
It's a decidedly postmodern look, one that might've seemed out of place in a pre-pandemic baseball world. And heck, it's not like the home run has vanished across the majors - the rate of 1.11 per team game is still 11th all-time.
Perhaps what we're seeing is a generation of players realizing it's OK not to get too big at the plate, especially in an era where pitchers throw harder and nastier stuff with each subsequent season.
And that the occasional shelving of the A swing can promote good habits and A+ outcomes for the team.
"It's understanding who you are as a hitter and fortunately for us, I feel like we have a bunch of guys who understand their strengths when they walk up to the plate," says Ryas manager Kevin Cash. "And right now, they're doing a good job putting that to use.
"Today's pitchers and today's hitters are very special, very talented. And what they do to counter each other year-to-year, game-to-game, at-bat to at-bat - you're seeing a really good product on the field."
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The Herald Scotland
20 hours ago
- The Herald Scotland
MLB strikeouts are down as teams adjust in baseball's new era, stats
In his first full season in the big leagues, Torres ripped 38 home runs in 138 games, a power output accompanied by 129 strikeouts. Never mind that Torres struck out 21.4% of the time: He was a two-time All-Star at 22, an MVP vote recipient, about to become shortstop of the New York Yankees and headed, by all appearances, toward superstardom. Yet even then, he knew something had to change. "I hit a lot of home runs," Torres, now a Detroit Tiger, tells USA TODAY Sports, "but I struck out a lot. From my first year in the big leagues, I had a lot of conversations with the hitting coaches there. They always tell me, 'Strike two, put the ball in play.' I worked on my (two-strike approach) every year. "Last year, in the second half, I had a really good approach, saw the ball very well. I really believe in my eyes to control the strike zone. I know how important it is some days to walk and put myself on base for the guy behind me. "So far, I really, really believe in my plan and go to home plate and do what I can do." He's not the only one. While strikeouts remain a scourge to the old school eye, it may be safe to declare that the era of bottomless whiffs is over. Major league teams are striking out 8.26 times per game, the lowest rate since 2017 and a 6% decrease from 2019. That season featured the highest K rate of all time (8.61 per team game) accompanied by the most home runs - 6,776 - in major league history. The offensive environment was an outlier for many reasons - including a juiced baseball - but it also marks the symbolic apex of the game's "three true outcomes" era, when a home run, walk or strikeout ruled the sport, with three punchouts deemed the cost of doing business for one jog around the bases. Six years later, are we in the middle of a course correction? "It's in the process of swinging back," says Chicago Cubs manager Craig Counsell. "I think we've given pitchers a ton of credit for improving. It was a conversation four or five years ago that (pitchers') velocity has improved. I think hitters now have calibrated themselves to that. "And training them better. That's improved contact. And probably stopped giving at-bats to people who can't make contact. So, decision-makers had to adjust a little bit, too." There's endless examples of both player and franchise realizing that selling out for power isn't necessarily in their best interests. Gleyber Torres stats on the rise: 'I want to put the ball in play' Torres is a prime case: In 2018 and 2019, his first two seasons, he hit 24 and 38 home runs, with strikeout rates of 25.2 and 21.4%. By 2024, he was 27, about to hit the free agent market and struggling at the halfway point, with a .215/.294/.333 slash line and a 24% strikeout rate. Yet he managed to make myriad mid-season adjustments, all of which trimmed his K rate down to 17.2% and the results followed: A .298/.365/.421 second half and a stellar postseason, resulting in a one-year, $15 million deal with the Tigers. Come spring training, he continued tweaking his approach and embraced a greater dedication to game-planning, heeding the counsel of Tigers hitting coaches Michael Brdar, Lance Zawadski, and Keith Beauregard and, as Torres put it, "go to the plate with my plan and try to put a little more focus on whatever I do before the game." The approach has paid off: Torres has just 40 strikeouts in 311 plate appearances, a 12.9% strikeout rate well below the league average of 21.9%, and nearly half his whiff rate in his rookie season. And his offensive profile has never looked healthier: Torres is on track for 17 homers, two more than he hit his final season in New York, but he's headed toward career highs in OBP - his .386 mark is 39 points better than his previous best - and adjusted OPS (134). While Torres was a vaunted prospect and instant All-Star, curbing whiffs can be a matter of survival for others. "I hate striking out. Don't like striking out. I want to put the ball in play," says Baltimore Orioles slugger Ryan O'Hearn, who went from waiver claim to potential All-Star. "I want to make things happen. I want to make the other team make plays. I know what it's like to play against teams that don't strike out a whole lot, and it puts stress on the infielders. "Can't get any hits unless you put the ball in play, right?" Nor can you get off the bench. O'Hearn, 31, only once played more than 100 games in five seasons with Kansas City, striking out 99 times in 105 games in 2019. In December 2022, the Royals designated him for assignment, with a .293 career OBP and annual strikeout rates that ranged from 24.1% to 28%. The Orioles gave him new life, unlocking several mechanical cleanups that, he said, "helped me make contact more consistently. Less swing and miss in the zone. "Once I realized I could put in play a lot more consistently, it definitely became a conscious thing and I didn't want to strike out a lot." The results have been startling: O'Hearn hacked his K rate exactly in half from 28% in 2021 to 2023's 14%. This year, he's struck out just 46 times in 71 games and should win the All-Star Game fan balloting at designated hitter. It's well-deserved: O'Hearn is batting .295 with an .854 OPS (144 adjusted) and 11 homers. His newfound aversion to Ks is a big reason why. "Mentally, it's definitely changed a lot for me the past few years," he says. "I know it's a big league defense and there's really good defenders out there. But if you strike out, it's a lot easier to kill an inning, for a pitcher stroll through a game when a team strikes out a lot. Low stress on the defenders. "I don't want that. Even if it's 0-2, weak contact, I don't care. You might get a hit. You might get lucky." The perfect offense Power pays, and that will always be the case in the big leagues. The Los Angeles Dodgers and New York Yankees are 1-2 in both home runs and OPS, befitting the coastal behemoths who handsomely compensate Shohei Ohtani and Aaron Judge, respectively. Yet the Yankees are fourth in strikeouts and the Dodgers rank 17th, a moderate vulnerability that can be greater exposed in a postseason environment. How, then, does a club generate an ideal concoction of power, patience and putting the ball in play? Ask the Arizona Diamondbacks. They are lurking just behind the Dodgers and Yankees with a .776 team OPS, and trail only the Dodgers and Chicago Cubs in runs scored. And they're fifth in home runs. But strikeouts? Just three teams whiff less often than Arizona, which has a 20.1% K rate; the Yankees rank 23rd at 23.1%. And the Diamondbacks hardly give up pop to get the ball in play: They rank eighth in hard-hit rate, with 42.3% of their balls at least 95 mph off the bat. It's no accident. Arizona manager Torey Lovullo says he and hitting coach Joe Mather are in alignment on their core offensive values: Putting the ball in play hard up the middle. Mather, Lovullo says, even keeps a running tab on how many balls reach their personal baseline of effectiveness: At least 90 mph on a line, with a launch angle between five and 25 degrees, equals success. "I'm tired of people just going out there and striking out," says Lovullo. "It turned into a home run or strikeout league. I feel like if we get ahead of that and have an approach like the [David] Fletcher kid when he was in Anaheim, we'll be good. "Fletcher got no love in this game, and I'm like, every team needs three or four of those guys. If we can have three or four of those guys with some slug, we're going to put up some runs." Fletcher's career K rate was 9.5%, though he never managed to produce a league-average OPS over a full season. These D-backs don't have that problem. All-Star shortstop Geraldo Perdomo's strikeout rate has been vanishing a little more every year, now down to 11.7%. He pairs that with a .357 OBP and 115 adjusted OPS, along with such a strong situational feel that Lovullo says he can tell Perdomo, "I need at least a five-pitch at-bat here," and he will execute. "I've always had really good eyes and make contact with no power," says Perdomo. "As I get older, I think it's a reason I'm hitting the ball harder. I feel proud. I don't want to strike out, and the most important thing I can do is putting the ball in play, and now that I'm getting some power, I feel like I can just drive the ball with more intensity. "I'm not looking for a certain pitch, but if there's a good pitch that's close to me, I just try to drive the ball.'' While Arizona's pitching has dragged the club back toward the .500 mark, almost every contender has a contact fiend that tenderizes the opposing pitcher while also doing damage. For the Cubs, it is Nico Hoerner, who has just 22 strikeouts this season - a beyond elite 6.7% K percentage - while managing a .721 OPS despite just three home runs. He plays his role perfectly in the Cubs offense, haunting pitchers and defenses while enabling the lineup's aircraft carriers - Kyle Tucker, Seiya Suzuki and Michael Busch - to take their wallops. "He's got the perfect approach with runners in scoring position: There's gonna be contact," Counsell says of Hoerner, who's already amassed 3.3 WAR this season. "It's really hard to strike him out. It's his elite skill. "The ability to make contact is not an exciting trait as a hitter, but it's a valuable trait. It leads to runs getting scored." And while the Tampa Bay Rays have shaved just 2% off their team K rate year-over-year, the addition of rookies Jake Mangum (13.4%) and speed merchant Chandler Simpson (9.6%) have given them a dynamic offensive attack. It's a decidedly postmodern look, one that might've seemed out of place in a pre-pandemic baseball world. And heck, it's not like the home run has vanished across the majors - the rate of 1.11 per team game is still 11th all-time. Perhaps what we're seeing is a generation of players realizing it's OK not to get too big at the plate, especially in an era where pitchers throw harder and nastier stuff with each subsequent season. And that the occasional shelving of the A swing can promote good habits and A+ outcomes for the team. "It's understanding who you are as a hitter and fortunately for us, I feel like we have a bunch of guys who understand their strengths when they walk up to the plate," says Ryas manager Kevin Cash. "And right now, they're doing a good job putting that to use. "Today's pitchers and today's hitters are very special, very talented. And what they do to counter each other year-to-year, game-to-game, at-bat to at-bat - you're seeing a really good product on the field." The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news -- fast. Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.


The Herald Scotland
2 days ago
- The Herald Scotland
What is Bobby Bonilla Day? Contract earned itself an MLB holiday
Looking to dump Bonilla after the 1999 season, the Mets opted to defer his payment - with 8% interest - giving him $1,193,248.20 annually on July 1 from 2011-2035 - adding up to nearly $30 million. "It's bigger than my birthday," Bonilla told USA TODAY Sports. "When that day comes, I get texts all day long, and couple of days after and maybe a day or two before. Everybody just seems to love that day and have fun with it. It's become a pretty big thing." Contract deferrals weren't new in baseball at the time and have been deployed heavily in the 25 years since Bonilla left the Mets, but the fact that he will be getting seven-figure checks until he's 72 years old is what most captivates the baseball world. "There'll be plenty of other deferred contracts," Bonilla's former agent Dennis Gilbert told USA TODAY Sports in 2023, "but for a guy to be paid that long into his life, into his 70s, I don't think we'll ever see that again. "That's why Bobby Bonilla Day should be celebrated." Bobby Bonilla Day contract Bonilla signed a four-year, $23.3 million contract with the Marlins prior to the 1997 season and helped the team win its first World Series that year, but was traded to the Dodgers in 1998 as part of the club's infamous fire sale. Before the 1999 season, the Dodgers traded Bonilla to the Mets, who were looking for a new right fielder at the time - with New York assuming the remaining two years and $11.65 million on Bonilla's contract. Then 36 years old, Bonilla played just 60 regular season games for the Mets in 1999, batting .160. He was constantly booed by fans and clashed with manager Bobby Valentine over his playing time and was relegated to the bench for the team's postseason run. The Mets released Bonilla after the 1999 season but still owed him $5.9 million for 2000. The team worked with Bonilla's agent (Gilbert) to defer the $5.9 million - with 8% interest - to annual payments of $1,193,248.20 on July 1 from 2011 to 2035. "It's funny how the Bobby Bonilla thing has blown up," agent Nez Balelo told USA TODAY Sports in 2023, months before negotiating Shohei Ohtani's historic $700 million deal with $680 million deferred. "I just think it's because someone has been out of the game for so long, making that much money every year, it fascinates people." When does Bobby Bonilla Day end? The Mets' final "Bobby Bonilla Day" payment is set for 2035, when the six-time All-Star will be 72 years old. Though Bobby Bonilla Day remains something of a punchline and opportunity to laugh at the Mets, the team has embraced the situation since Steve Cohen bought the team. New York's new owner immediately joked about holding a Bobby Bonilla Day celebration at Citi Field, complete with an oversized check. Bobby Bonilla stats Bonilla played 2,113 career games in 16 seasons from 1986 to 2001, finishing with 287 home runs, a .279 average and an .829 OPS. Bonilla's best years came with the Pirates from 1987-1991, averaging 23 home runs and 97 RBIs per season. He was an All-Star four years in a row, winning three Silver Slugger awards, and was the 1990 NL MVP runner-up and finished third in MVP voting in 1991, his final year in Pittsburgh. He was also named an All-Star in 1993 and 1995 during his first tenure with the Mets.


The Herald Scotland
2 days ago
- The Herald Scotland
SGA contract extension: NBA MVP agrees to record deal
The 26-year-old Gilgeous-Alexander had a season for the ages, leading the Thunder to their first NBA championship with a seven-game victory over the Indiana Pacers, where he was named the Finals MVP. Gilgeous-Alexander averaged 32.1 points per game, including a streak in which he scored 20 or more points in 72 consecutive games. He also averaged five rebounds and a career-high 6.4 assists. His value was not only on the offensive end but defensively as well, as Oklahoma City was first in defensive rating and third in offensive rating. He also won the regular-season MVP and led the league in scoring, becoming only the fourth player to achieve those feats, joining the ranks of Shaquille O'Neal, Michael Jordan, and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. A three-time first-team All-NBA performer, Gilgeous-Alexander is scheduled to take home $38.3 million and $40.8 million in the final two years of his current contract, which he signed in 2021.