2015 with Binghamton (including playoffs): 104 G, 387 PA, .260/.336/.332, 51 R, 21 2B, 2 3B, 23 RBI, 60 K: 37 BB (15.5 K%: 9.6 BB%), .314 BABIP, .072 ISO, 97 wRC+, 5-7 on Stolen Bases, 15 AB/XBH, 38.2 GB%: 31.4 FB%: 23 LD%: 7.4 PU%, 7.4 SwStr%, 17.2% Whiff/Swing, 3.64 P/PA
Although
L.J. Mazzilli was a feel-good draft-pick for those Mets fans who have fond
memories of his father Lee, it was considered more of a money saving safe pick
for those who follow the draft closely. The Mets knew he had little leverage as
a 22-year old college senior, and so they signed him for about 140K under slot,
which allowed them to go over slot elsewhere. Still, his game was expected to
at least get him to the upper levels of the minors, with Rob
Castellanos of Amazin’ Avenue saying, “I think there is a fair chance that
he eventually becomes a regular or semi-regular player in the big leagues.” Mazzilli
then went out and hit his way through all A-ball levels with little problems
during the 2013 and 2014 season. He was poised for a big year at Binghamton in
2015, but then a suspension for a ‘drug of abuse’ was handed down last
offseason, which meant he’d sit out the first half of the year.
When
his 2015 finally did start, I expected him to help the B-Mets offense but be
shaky on the defensive side. He then went out and provided about league average
offensive production (97 wRC+), while committing 13 errors in 83 games at 2B,
which fits that profile, but his defense was pretty consistent and looked
better than the error count, while his offensive production was nonexistent at
times because he was so streaky. He had five 4-hit games and two 3-hit games,
and those seven games account for ~30% of his hits with the B-Mets. As a
perfect example of his streakiness, he went 12-24 in the third week of July,
but then 3-25 the following week – or taking it a little further, he followed
that 12-24 stretch with a 14-78 stretch over his next 20 games, then went 9-13
over a 4-game stretch, followed by a 5-28 week. In late June, he had a 5-game
hit streak, went hitless over his next 4, and then put together a 7-game hit
streak. He was streaky during the 2014 season too, but the lows were not quite
so low. Still, he found other little ways to help the team win when the hits
weren’t falling, something even scouts who likely barely saw him noticed –
Baseball America said, “Mazzilli brings a hard-nosed style of play to the
diamond and is regarded by scouts as a classic overachiever type,” in their 2016 Prospect Guidebook. Although he
didn’t hit any homeruns with Binghamton (he hit one during a ‘rehab’ game with
St. Lucie), he showed an impressive ability to hit doubles, finishing top-30 in
the EL in just over half a season’s work – the EL doubles leader had 32. Also,
he hit 11 homeruns combined in 2014 while playing in some tough home parks for
homeruns (albeit against A-ball pitchers), so he’s shown the ability to knock
some out, it just didn’t happen last year. Below I take a look at some trends
from his 2015 splits with Binghamton, and then share a lot of hitting and
fielding GIF’s at the bottom. I tried to GIF as much of Mazzilli as possible
down the stretch since I had nothing on him from the first half.
Table 1 – L.J. Mazzilli 2015 EL Splits by Month
Month
|
PA
|
AB/XBH
|
BB%
|
K%
|
BABIP
|
wRC+
|
GB%
|
SwStr%
|
Wh/Sw
|
June
|
91
|
13.3
|
11
|
17.6
|
.312
|
99
|
34.4
|
8.5
|
19.2
|
July
|
135
|
15.5
|
7.4
|
12.6
|
.318
|
95
|
42.9
|
8.2
|
18.6
|
August
|
116
|
20.4
|
10.3
|
18.1
|
.329
|
96
|
37
|
6.2
|
15
|
September
|
45
|
10
|
11.1
|
13.3
|
.265
|
85
|
33.3
|
5.9
|
14.5
|
Table 2 – L.J. Mazzilli 2015 EL Splits by Pitcher Handedness
Throws
|
PA
|
AB/XBH
|
BB%
|
K%
|
BABIP
|
wRC+
|
GB%
|
SwStr%
|
Wh/Sw
|
L
|
104
|
18.6
|
10.6
|
15.4
|
.299
|
85
|
42.1
|
6.2
|
13.6
|
R
|
283
|
14.1
|
9.2
|
15.5
|
.319
|
99
|
36.7
|
7.8
|
18.6
|
I
noted his streakiness, but his production was actually pretty similar
month-to-month. Notice that his contact rate and groundball rate decreased as
the season went on, which suggests he was getting more comfortable against AA
pitching throughout the season, and perhaps starting to drive the ball more.
The spray charts suggest that he’s more of a pull hitter vs. lefties and an all
fields hitter vs. righties, but he hasn’t shown a big platoon advantage yet in
his minor league career.
Table 3 – L.J. Mazzilli 2015 EL Splits by Batted Ball Type
Batted Ball
|
PA
|
BABIP
|
EL BABIP
|
wOBA
|
EL wOBA
|
Fly Ball
|
89
|
.125
|
.200
|
.170
|
.367
|
Groundball
|
112
|
.277
|
.247
|
.267
|
.236
|
Line Drive
|
65
|
.723
|
.705
|
.742
|
.750
|
Table 4 – L.J. Mazzilli 2015 EL Splits by Batted Ball
Direction
Field
|
PA
|
%
|
AB/XBH
|
BABIP
|
EL BABIP*
|
wOBA
|
EL wOBA*
|
GB%
|
Center
|
82
|
28.7
|
16.4
|
.402
|
.355
|
.404
|
.376
|
30.5
|
Oppositeª
|
79
|
27.6
|
25.7
|
.114
|
.239
|
.121
|
.262
|
19.2
|
Pull
|
125
|
43.7
|
8.3
|
.384
|
.327
|
.404
|
.418
|
55.7
|
*RHB only
ªL.J. had a 19.2% Pop-up rate on balls hit to the opposite
field
Mazzilli
was particularly unlucky on fly balls and balls in play to the opposite field,
or specifically, on fly balls to RF – notice there are mostly orange boxes in
RF on his spray charts. It’s possible his fly balls just have a really high
average hang time – o, the limitations of minor league data – but that wasn’t
something that stood out to me in 2015, although I’ll definitely be looking out
for it this season. With that in mind, I’ve noticed that batters tend to have a
higher pop up rate on balls hit the other way, so it could make sense that they
would have a higher hang time on fly balls hit the other way. Either way, it
would be nicer to look at the hang time data, but given that Mazzilli has
always had an average or better BABIP on fly balls, it’s fair to assume it’ll
bounce back this year, which could really help him impress at the plate.
After
the 2014 season, I put Mazzilli in the category of potential impact bench
player, and I still stand by that. I’m not sure how his arm will play on the
left side - third base is probably an option but he’s not more than an emergency
shortstop option - but his any positional versatility will only help him earn that major league bench spot. The only question about his 2B defense is whether he can
improve his glove work, as BA currently ranks him as below average at 2B, “based
mostly on not having the softest hands.” And that’s an understandable stance,
as most of his errors were fielding errors, and I remember him using his body
to knock balls down more often than most second baseman (he already has the
third baseman’s mindset, but has played only 1 game as a pro at 3B). But at
least glove work (soft handedness?) is something Mazzilli can work on and
improve with enough dedicated practice, and everything else about his game is
good enough for 2B. Also, as a second baseman, he has more time to regain control of balls he doesn't handle cleanly and still make the out at 1B than any other position. At his best, I think he can be a fringe starter at 2B for a
second division team, but his most likely role will be as a bench player who
hits a lot of doubles and fills various roles for the team as they come up. I’d
guess he starts the year back at AA to get regular PA’s, as the Las Vegas
infield should be pretty crowded, but we’ll know for sure soon enough.
2015 Astromets Mind Coverage
7/16
– Single,
Starting
a double play, Just
missing the tag for a double play, Spin
with the infield in
7/26
– Single,
Starting
a double play with a backhand toss, Starting
a double play with a glove flip – second
angle
8/25
(1) – Single,
To
his right with a spin, In
the middle of a 6-4-3 double play, Starting
a 4-3 double play
Astronomers are using an Earth-based telescope to study the mysterious bright spots on Ceres https://t.co/TrNgzxSZgO pic.twitter.com/qhn4c4tTvI— Scientific American (@sciam) March 16, 2016
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