Jump to content
Brewer Fanatic

Christian Yelich: The Deep Dive


Jake McKibbin

2,172 views

 Share

Brewers Video

As I am sure few would argue, Christian Yelich has demonstrated one of the highest ceilings in franchise history. However, despite the disappointment of the last few years, it's important to pick out why he's been struggling.

First off, let's dive into what the stats say has changed for Yelich since that infamous knee injury, first looking at the 2020 season, why it wasn't as bad as we thought, and then the following years where the back has possibly played up a little more.

2020

In 2020, he had a career-high average exit velocity of 94.0 mph, a hard hit rate of 55.6%, and a walk rate of 18.6%, which doesn't scream the "declining peripherals" of someone whose knee injury has demolished him. His launch angle on average was 7.1 degrees, which, to give context for him personally, his average launch angle was just 5 degrees in his 2018 MVP year.

So why did 2020 feel like a down year for Yelich? Well, there's a straightforward answer: he started to whiff on fastballs, but with secondary pitches too. In 2018 and 2019, Yelich had no weaknesses for any pitch, hitting well across all areas of the strike zone. Yet in 2020, he couldn't hit anything other than a four-seam fastball and a slider. Every other pitch had a batting average below the Mendoza line and a slugging % below .370. Even with his better pitches, his whiff rate increased massively; in 2018, Yelich's whiff rates on fastballs and sinkers were 12.6% and 11.2%, respectively; in 2020, this increased to 26.9% and 22.2%.

2021

In 2021, Yelich had some back issues during the season, but his swing started to regain some control over fastballs again, dropping to a whiff rate of 18.8% and 10.6%, respectively, for four-seam fastballs and sinkers. However, the power wasn't there, particularly against breaking balls hitting .228/.246 in PAs finishing on the slider and hitting .105/.158 in PAs that finished with a curve. At times, it's looked as though his timing could have been better, able to foul off the fastballs but not barrelling them up. To back up the eye test, his most considerable power output has come against the change-up in the last two seasons, hitting to the tune of .274/.581 against it in 2021.

 

r/Brewers - Is Yeli gonna Yeli

2021/2022 Pitch Breakdown

2022

In 2022, his whiff rate stayed below 20% on both four-seam and two-seam fastballs, but he increased his batting average and xBA by over .030 points, recording a .307/.469 against the four-seam version and a +12 run differential. He also took a big step forward against the slider, hitting .250/.398 but struggled with the curveball at .125/.188 and took a step back against the changeup, albeit with power as he hit .224/.466 against the pitch. His ground ball rate was 59.1% and had been increasing each of the last two years, with a particular propensity for contact classified as "weak" or "topped," a lot of which have come against breaking balls (backed up by his 2021 xBA against them of .210, xSLG of .211). However, in 2022 he did take a step forward in launch angle against breaking balls, allowing him to create a bit of power when he did make quality contact against them. 

To look deeper into the curveball issues, from watching the past few years, he has an issue picking up the curve when it's thrown to him, regularly chasing it as it drops well below the strike zone. It's an area pitchers are targeting, with 31.8% of a pitcher being thrown at him outside the zone in the lower half. He creates a lot of line drives and hard contact, with five of the nine zones producing average exit velocities over 95mph, and in the middle/upper half of the strike zone, he creates a high number of line drives. The issue is pitching in the bottom third or below, where his highest line drive percentage is 15%, yet contrast this with a few inches above that, where he manages 36% line drives. Below the zone, he whiffs 71% & 61% of the time vs. his ability to foul off pitches above the zone, to whiff rates at 36% and 25%, and a pattern begins to emerge. A vast, glaring weakness that he's facing, and one the curveball perfectly exploits, also is a leading cause in his ground ball rate. On pitches down and middle or down and away (In zone), the launch angle averages at -5 degrees, and this only worsens as the pitches drop out of the strike zone.

 

r/Brewers - Is Yeli gonna Yeli

2022 K%/Whiff %

He has the same swing that could cover every pitch, so it's possible that either through overthinking his approach, or the back injury in 2021, he's gone back to an approach that's been more engrained in him from his days with the Marlins. One big difference is in the 2019 vs. 2022 comparison; his whiff rate on curveballs (45.6% vs. 37.6%), sliders (46.6% vs. 32.7%), and changeups (39.1% vs. 33.9%) tell us that Yelich is potentially swinging more conservatively and taking less of a cut at pitches to maintain maybe a longer/higher quality AB, and would go a way to explain his decrease in average exit velocity from 94 mph to 91mph. However, for comparison's sake, it's also important to note that O'Neil Cruz had a similar average exit velocity at 91.9mph last season.

In terms of his "run value" from his swing/take decisions, specifically focusing on the heart of the plate, look at the comparison between 2018/19 vs 2020-2022. A more aggressive approach in terms of what he swings at seems to pay massive dividends in results for him:

 

r/Brewers - Is Yeli gonna Yeli

His line drive rate in the lower part of the zone appears to be an area of weakness that has only sometimes been there, and it may be a timing issue rather than back-related. However, back injuries can have an impact in a variety of ways. If he can get a handle on even picking and laying off those low curveballs and pitches below the zone, we could see a dramatic improvement in his production this year.

It's important to stress that it's a small area, targeted heavily, having the most significant impact on Yelich's performance, and it's not an all-encompassing weakness across the board. His ground ball rate is a product of pitchers targeting the weakness down in the zone, and the question for 2023 is - can he neutralize them? 

Should Yelich embrace a bit of swing and miss to utilize his power more often? 

image.png

image.png

 Share

8 Comments


Recommended Comments

2 hours ago, Dpwangerin said:

I’d like to know the details of the pitch that Yelich hit 499 feet.  Obviously he still has power.

Welcome to Brewer Fanatic!

Link to comment
11 hours ago, Dpwangerin said:

I’d like to know the details of the pitch that Yelich hit 499 feet.  Obviously he still has power.

So the pitch was an 88mph changeup that couldn't have been more middle-middle if you placed it on a tee

Yelich hit it 109.9 mph, which isn't a mind boggling exit velocity by any means, and he's hit balls much harder this year, more than likely a perfect combination of back-spin + the Colorado air took it that extra distance.

There's no doubting Yelich still has power, with big time average exit velocity in 2022, it's just making the most of that power and getting it in the air.

 

  • Like 2
Link to comment
1 hour ago, Portage Plumber said:

Harder to hit pitches when you dont know what is coming.

If there were some kind of shenanigans going on how come only Yelich saw his production skyrocket?

  • Like 1
Link to comment
14 hours ago, Portage Plumber said:

Harder to hit pitches when you dont know what is coming.

Let's humour this thought for a second (given there were rumours the Brewers were sign stealing in 2017/18).

 

The Astros were proven stealing in 2017;

- Altuve 2017 had a WRC+ of 160, in 2022 a WRC+ of 160

- Bregman 2017 had a WRC+ of 125, 2018 of 152, 2019 of 162

- Springer 2017 had a WRC+ of 141, 2019 of 150 and hit 141 in both 2020 & 2021 again

- Carlos Correa is the only player producing his career high WRC+ in 2017, and even then had nowhere near the falloff that Yelich has

In 2019 in particular the sign stealing scandals were generally considered stopped, and Yelich had arguably the best year of his career. So I think it's highly unlikely this played a part in his recent demise

  • Like 1
Link to comment

Yelich's problem is more likely mental. I sit behind the Brewers dugout at home games so I have a vantage point of being able to see his swing. I also sit behind home plate on other occasions. By no means, am I an expert on his swing but I have watched Yelich's swing closely as my son is learning to bat left-handed. (I also have him watch other left-handed batters too.) One of the things I have noticed is the path of his swing has changed over the course of the last few years. He's coming over the top a lot more than he used to. It seems like he is trying to crush the ball all the time instead of letting his natural swing take over, which is what you see in 2018, 2019. I have no clue why it's changed., It doesn't look like the knee is an issue and perhaps the back is related to him overcompensating for the loss of the natural swing. (Not the back being the cause of the lack of power or whatever, but perhaps the swing caused the back issues? EMT here.) He's pushing it. His swing from 2018-19 is easy, almost too easy, doesn't seem to be trying too hard. 

  • Like 2
Link to comment
2 minutes ago, Amy Trampf said:

Yelich's problem is more likely mental. I sit behind the Brewers dugout at home games so I have a vantage point of being able to see his swing. I also sit behind home plate on other occasions. By no means, am I an expert on his swing but I have watched Yelich's swing closely as my son is learning to bat left-handed. (I also have him watch other left-handed batters too.) One of the things I have noticed is the path of his swing has changed over the course of the last few years. He's coming over the top a lot more than he used to. It seems like he is trying to crush the ball all the time instead of letting his natural swing take over, which is what you see in 2018, 2019. I have no clue why it's changed., It doesn't look like the knee is an issue and perhaps the back is related to him overcompensating for the loss of the natural swing. (Not the back being the cause of the lack of power or whatever, but perhaps the swing caused the back issues? EMT here.) He's pushing it. His swing from 2018-19 is easy, almost too easy, doesn't seem to be trying too hard. 

Welcome to the site and great comment!

Link to comment
Guest
Add a comment...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...