Let me start with this, I like Haniger.
I know about the bashing AAA partial season. I know about the light-speed exit velocity. I know about the late improvement and promise. He's got all that. In spades. But it doesn't make him a 105 OF, and we need one of those, even with our glovey whippets in the OF. Playoff teams have one of 'em, you will remember.
And I like the kid. Really.
But there are concerns, you must admit. Exit velocity? Sure it was impressive (93.6 Avg. EV), but just above him on the list were Mac Williamson, Rickie Weeks and Josh Rutledge. Hardly a Murderes' Row, there. So it seems that exit velocity doesn't guarantee that Haniger is some sort of Giancarlo Stanton. Or a Nelson Cruz, who at #2 in AVG. Exit Velo was one better than Stanton and twenty-one spots better than Haniger.
Haniger's eye-popping AAA performance was driven by a June and July (he was promoted from AA in early June) when his BABIP was a gaudy .441. True Stuff! .441! Two months of that kind of luck will tend to make you look pretty good. Aaron Judge, Nelson Cruz, and Giancarlo Stanton, the top three in MLB Avg. Exit Velocity had BABIP's of .282, .328 and .290. Haniger finished the season AAA season at .384 BABIP, so he came back to earth a little bit. But even that "relatively" pedestrian number is dang glitzy. AOh, it's unsustainable, too. In the bigs, he fell to .256. That was, of course, in a fairly small sample size (77 AB's where he didn't K or HR). But that same line of reasoning can be used to chip away at his "impressive" rookie stint. 5 HR's in 109 AB's isn't bad but it doesn't make him any more than a bit of a longshot to get to 20+ HR's next year. Actually, I would look at his 236 AA PA's as a fairer MiLB place to begin any appraisal: .294-.407-.462 is a nice line. Especially with only 37 K's in those 236 PA's. That's just a 16% rate and he had 30 BB's to offset them. But he hit only 5 AA HR's. There's a fairer look, I think, as his .342 AA BABIP is more human-like.
I will give Haniger this: His MLB vR split line of .250-.322-.438 may likely be sustainable. If it is, then his OPS+ will be above his '16 number of 85, because last season he was only .172-.273-.310 vs. big league lefties, albeit in only 33 PA's. This after a blistering MiLB vL line of .425-.510-.700 (approx) vL. I'm not making that up, either!! However, that line only indicates how inflated his MiLB overall numbers were. Those are Barry Bonds numbers. And not the clean Bonds.
All in all, we've sort of rolled the dice, betting that Haniger can bring a real bat to the Seattle OF. Because if he doesn't, we're stuck at 85 OPS+, across the board, LF-RF. Well, unless Gamel hits like a International League MVP. The last six of those, counting backwards are Gamel, Matt Hague, Steven Souza, Chris Colabello, Mauro Gomez and Russ Canzler. Gamel hit 1 MLB HR last year, his only career tater. But that gives him one more Matt Hague, one less than Russ Canzler and just two less than Gomez. Colabello is either a guy with talent and power....or a guy about to bust, take your pick. I like Gamel. He's better than a bunch of those guys, I think. And I'm not any more optimistic that Gamel is the COF bat I would like to ahve than I am Haniger is. Some less, I suppose.
But I wouldn't mind having Steven Souza, and have said so for the past several years. Souza, as it turns out, isn't a bad place to begin sizing up what Haniget might look like. He has a gaudy AAA line of .346-428-.579, which is sort of Haniger-like. In the bigs he's been a 100 and 95 OPS+ guy the past two seasons, with 16 and 17 HR's. He's a RHB, of course, and was thought to be a + type glove in the corners, although his dWAR hasn't indicated that.
So there's sort of the bottom line that we hope Haniger is: 95-100 OPS with something in the 18-20 HR neighborhood. If he does that AND brings the CF glove to RF, then he's pretty nifty. Anything above 110 is gravy, the good kind that comes with chicken fried steak, mind you.
But all the same, Haniger would look much nicer, to my eyes, were he in CF (with the chops to play it), flanked by JD Martinez to his left. Now that's where his bat could really play.
dWAR is a neat thing, but there are legimate questions about whether our OF will bring some lumber to the plate. Haniger is one of those questions. Ditto Martin and Dyson and Heredia and Gamel. Where is a Buhner when you need him?
Carry on.
Keith