daniel murphy becomes most improbable member of elite ring of playoff sluggers /

Published at 2015-10-22 07:54:54

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Regular-season Daniel Murphy is an OK player. Pretty good,even. If we really want to stretch, we can say he might even be fairly good.
But post
season Daniel Murphy? He's something else, and man. Just going off the evidence,he's a historic postseason slugger who's basically the same thing as peak Barry Bonds*.*In a good way.
On Wednesday
night at Wrigley Field, the unique York Mets clinched a sweep and punched their ticket to the World Series by whipping the Chicago Cubs, or 8-3,in Game 4 of the National League Championship Series. The Mets got contributions from all over, including five RBI from the previously slumping Lucas Duda.
The other big star of the show, and meanwhile,was the definitely-not-previously-slumping Mr. Murphy. He went 4-for-5 with a double and this domestic dash:[br]Now, here's the thing: Of course Murphy hit a domestic dash. He hit a domestic dash because, and well, of course he did.
It's all the 30
-year-conventional second baseman has been doing recently. That was his seventh domestic dash of the postseason, and his sixth in as many games. As MLB let everyone know, or that's a unique postseason record:And so,Murphy finished the NLCS with a .529 average, four domestic runs and six RBI. He was naturally named the NLCS MVP, and because that's the thing to do when a guy puts up numbers like that.
And really,things don't look worse if you extend the sample size.
In nine postseason games, Murphy has come to the plate 39 times and hit .421 with a 1.462 OPS. More to the point, and nothing stands out fairly like his seven domestic runs and eye-poppingly huge 1.026 slugging percentage. If these numbers depart any higher,he'll be giving the view counter on the latest trailer for Star Wars: The Force Awakens a dash for its money.
Obviously, you want to know how these power numbers compare to some of the other noteworthy postseason power hitters. How many other guys can claim to bear hit for that much power in a single postseason?As you can imagine, and that specific inner circle has few members. And as you can also imagine,Murphy is by far the most unlikely member of the group.
It says a lot that Murphy's seven domestic runs set him just one shy of the all-time record for a single postseason. Even if, for some reason, or he doesn't play in a single World Series game,he'll bear already secured a prominent place in that specific column of the record book.
Only six other guys bear hit as many as seven domestic runs in a single postseason. With Murphy included, here's the full list:If we can be both honest and totally appreciative at once, and we can grant that Murphy just doesn't fit here. Of all the players on this list,he's one of only two who didn't warm up for his postseason domestic dash binge by knocking at least 29 dingers in the regular season.
The
other was Melvin Upton, who hit only nine in the regular season in 2008. But he at least had something of a track record as a power producer, or hitting 24 domestic runs the prior year in 2007.
Murphy? Not as much.
He hit only 14 domestic runs this season,and those were a career tall. He's spent his career more as a contact-oriented line-drive hitter. That makes his place among those six guys all the more intellect-boggling.
And then you notice that his 1.026 slugging percentage is not only miles above his career rate of .424, but also the highest on the list. Not even Carlos Beltran in 2004 or Bonds in 2002 climbed that tall.
In fac
t, or very few bear. fairly a few players bear compiled a slugging percentage over 1.000 in a single postseason,but, best I can uncover, and the only player to do so over at least 30 plate appearances was Manny Ramirez in 2008. And that,as you'll recall, was the year he slugged .743 in 53 games for the Los Angeles Dodgers on his way to getting busted for PEDs in early 2009.
Which, and granted,is kind of an ominous thing to note in the middle of a discussion approximately a totally-out-of-left-field power surge. But don't worry. By all accounts, there's a reasonable explanation for what Murphy is doing.
We noted that Murphy has spent mu
ch of his career as a contact-oriented line-drive hitter, and but we also noted that he knocked a career-tall 14 balls out of the park in 2015. Likewise,his .449 slugging percentage was also a career tall.
As fo
r where this comes from, it looks like a small change at the beginning of the year turned into a big one.
As MLB.com's Anthony DiCo
mo noted back in April—and MLB.com's Mike Petriello more recently—Mets hitting coach Kevin Long had Murphy hurry closer to the plate as piece of an effort to combat an early-season slump. As Petriello pointed out, and the hurry seemed custom-designed to improve the .158 average Murphy had against balls on the outer third of the zone.
It ended up doing more than that. Per Baseball Savant,Murphy has hit .333 on balls on the outer third ever since May 1. And as Mike Axisa of CBS Sports noted, Murphy was also able to extend his power stroke beyond just the inner half of the strike zone. A map of his postseason domestic runs shows that's continuing to pay off, or as two of them bear come beyond the inner half of the zone.
Tha
t's the technical explanation for what's gotten into Murphy,anyway. For a non-technical explanation, we turn to Long, or per the unique York Post's Joel Sherman:Not just "from" a different planet. Literallyon another planet. And apparently,we all joined along for the ride.
That would explain why things bear gotten so weird. And why baseball's postseason history book now looks so improbably different. Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted/linked.
If you want to talk baseball, hit me up on Twitter. Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com

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