Are Hitters Hitting It Where It’s Being Pitched?
If you watch baseball games, which you probably do if you find yourself reading this, you’re likely familiar with announcers employing phrases like “he just went with it” or “hit it where it was pitched”. These phrases suggest hitters have made contact with the baseball such that outside pitches are hit to the opposite field and pitches on the inner half are put in play to the hitter’s pull side.
These comments beg the question: are hitters “going with” the pitches they are thrown with any discernible frequency? In today’s game, wherein the value of tapping into pull power and raising average launch angles has been well established, are hitters still hitting it where it’s pitched? To what extent do team’s defensive alignments correspond to how their pitchers will approach any given hitter should that hitter go with pitches? Given that pitchers who throw higher in the zone more often allow fly ball contact and those who throw lower induce more groundballs, does something similar apply for hitters given how they are pitched on a horizontal plane, i.e. inside and outside?
Here I aim simply to scratch the surface of these questions. In order to do so, Statcast data from Baseball Savant has been drawn upon. Specifically, data for all balls put into play (in play, out(s), in play, no out(s), in play, run(s) by left-handed hitters with >500 PAs in 2021.
I selected only left-handed hitters so that the horizontal strike zone (inside versus outside) as well as field (pulled versus hit the opposite way) is uniform across all hitters. Alternatively, absolute values could have been used to accommodate both right- and left-handed hitters, but quite honestly that only occurred to me as I typed this.
In all, 39 left-handed hitters had 500+ PAs in 2021 and across those hitters, 15,754 balls were put into play. Each player had anywhere from 280+ to 500+ qualifying batted balls (you’ll be shocked to hear Joey Gallo had the fewest). Keeping things very basic, I have simply juxtaposed the field location of all batted balls and the zone locations of the pitches that corresponded to those hits.
Of all the batted balls, there appears to be a fairly weak positive association between horizontal pitch location and batted ball location. The scatterplot below illustrates that relationship.
The 0 on the X axis indicates pitches thrown right down the middle. Given these data reflect the catcher’s perspective, all pitches >0 were thrown inside to left-handed hitters. The 0 on the Y axis, meanwhile, indicates batted balls that landed/were caught directly up the middle. All batted balls with a measure >0 were hit to the right side of second base, i.e. were pulled by a LHH. Thus, the especially dark stripe just above 0 on the y-axis indicates a heightened concentration of pulled baseballs.
The correlation between horizontal pitch location and batted ball location is .220, thus reaffirming a mild, but positive, association between the two values. Of course, such a correlation says nothing about causality; inside pitches do not necessarily cause batted balls to be pulled and pitches thrown outside aren’t the explicit reason they are hit the opposite way. Still, there is some light association between these two metrics.
This is all well and good across all left-handed hitters, but to dig a bit deeper, correlations between these two metrics have been grouped by each of the 39 qualifying hitters. The table below lists those players and sorts them by individuals with the highest pitch location/batted ball location correlation.
Topping the list is Tommy Edman, whose batted ball locations most positively corresponded to where he was pitched. On the other end of the spectrum was none other than Shohei Ohtani, whose batted ball direction has essentially no relationship to the horizontal location of the balls he put into play.
For those wondering about the relationship between this correlation and offensive production, as given by wRC+, there is none. That said, this 39 hitter list is a tiny sample, which also features sampling bias certainly as it often takes a highly proficient hitter to earn 500+ PAs (the average wRC+ of this group is nearly 118). Still, there are exceptional players on either end of the spectrum with the list sorted as such: players like Kyle Tucker, Yordan Álvarez, Shohei Ohtani, and Rafael Devers all sit in the bottom quartile of this list and were all exceptional 130+ wRC+ hitters. Meanwhile Bryce Harper and Joey Votto occupy the top quartile for correlation and are exceptional in their own right.
It should also be noted that not a single player listed above has a negative correlation on these two metrics. It seems as though hitters aren’t, on the whole, hitting in directions that particularly contradict the horizontal (east/west) locations they are being pitched.
To illustrate the variations in those correlations cases above, the following scatterplots depict the relationship between pitch locations and batted ball directions for the two most “extreme” LHHs in 2021: Shohei Ohtani and Tommy Edman.
For Ohtani, there is very simply no relationship between the horizontal location of the pitches he put into play in 2021 and the direction he struck them. Anecdotally and without any evidence, it seems reasonable that Ohtani’s long levers enable him to get around pitches outside and pull them regardless of those east-west locations, but I can only speculate. There appear to be more points north of the 0 on the y-axis in any event, indicating that Ohtani is one to pull the ball more often than not (FanGraphs confirms this with a 48% pull% for Ohtani in 2021).
As for Edman, there does appear to be a clear relationship between pitch location and batted ball direction, although it is a rather weak relationship rife with instances where that wasn’t the case. Considering he was the most likely LHH to “go with the pitch” in 2021, this relationship isn’t particularly overwhelming by any means.
All in all, there does appear to be evidence that left-handed hitters in 2021 “hit the ball where it’s pitched”, but only in the most general way. Those correlations do not seem strong enough, for instance, to justify altering a shift to a batter depending on where specifically a batter might be pitched (which would show a defense’s hand anyway). More clear is the fact that, on average, hitters aren’t contradicting east-west pitch locations with their batted ball direction.
Recent Comments