Jump to content
Twins Daily
  • Create Account
  • Twins News & Analysis

    Is This Unimpressive Byron Buxton the Permanent Version at the Plate?


    Cody Pirkl

    Byron Buxton has earned the reputation of a two-way superstar capable of taking over games both offensively and defensively. As we look over the last two seasons of Buxton’s career, is it time to revise that assessment?

    Image courtesy of Kamil Krzaczynski-USA TODAY Sports

    Twins Video

    Byron Buxton remains one of the most dynamic players in a Twins uniform when he’s on the field, but it’s been some time since we’ve seen the offensive highlight-reel player he’s shown he can be (or, ahem, could be). Age, injuries, and his offensive approach are all worth considering when we evaluate the offensive player he currently is. Should we be looking at Buxton differently?

    Buxton has not been a consistent offensive contributor since the beginning of 2023.

    He’s still capable of a big hit now and then, but we haven’t seen a sustained period of Buxton being one of the Twins' best hitters in a very long time. At 30 years old, a few factors should leave many wondering whether we will see another elite offensive season from the Twins center fielder.

    Unfortunately, Buxton is as well-known for his time spent off the field as he is for the highlight-reel plays he’s involved in when healthy and playing. His list of past injuries includes his groin, foot, hamstring, hip, and, more recently, chronic knee issues. It’s difficult to imagine such a lengthy list of previous injuries not having a long-term effect on him. As Buxton’s power, quality of contact, and contact rate decline, you have to wonder if his body's wear and tear is the culprit.

    Buxton is also a different hitter than we saw at his peak. It was always unfair to expect Buxton to repeat his 2021 season, in which he posted a 1.005 OPS in 61 games, but he completely transformed as a hitter over the last few years, and not in a way that one would expect much long-term success from.

    After the 2021 season, Buxton appeared to make some changes to his approach, either because of injury or in search of some more sustainable way to achieve the same gaudy numbers he put up that year. His flyball rate skyrocketed from 38.4% to 51.1%, which would increase again in 2023. His pull rate increased from 53.8% to 58.2%. His plate approach became based on hunting for home runs, and ironically, his isolated slugging has dropped off precipitously every season since. Some of his flyball and pull rate tendencies aren’t quite as extreme this year, but he’s still in this mold of hitter.

    Buxton has compiled nearly 500 plate appearances over the last two seasons and posted a .713 OPS. His on-base percentage is below .300, which isn’t surprising, considering he has an 8.5% walk rate and 31.4% strikeout rate during that time. Not even the slugging percentage, which is the entire goal of his plate approach, has been impressive during the last two seasons. His slugging is below .400 in 2024, as he continues a trend of three consecutive seasons of this number declining.

    If he were still hitting the ball as hard at the best of times, or lifting it with authority at anywhere near the same frequency, we could confidently project that Buxton's power would rebound. It's just not there. Buxton's average exit velocity on batted balls was 92.9 MPH in 2022. It fell to 91.5 MPH in 2023, and so far this year, it's just 89.5. His 90th-percentile exit velocities have trended down, from 109.2 MPH in 2021 to 106.4 this season. Managing editor Matthew Trueblood created weighted sweet-spot exit velocity (wSSEV) to balance a hitter's ability to hit line drives and fly balls with their exit velocity on those batted balls, and Buxton's has utterly cratered since 2021, stepping down from 92.3 that year to the upper 80s the last two years, to 85.6 in 2024. He's gone from near-elite to below-average, in overall production and in underlying indices like this one.

    This year, though his exit velocity on balls that result in outs have held pretty steady, those measurements taken on balls that ended up as hits show a marked decline from previous years.

    image.png

    This isn’t to say Buxton is no longer valuable; his defense alone makes him one of the Twins' better players. It is approaching time to accept that the days of Buxton carrying the lineup could be behind him. His free-swinging approach was never one that would age well, and it looks a lot like injuries have sped up his slide down the aging curve. 

    Selling out for pulled fly balls will still work occasionally, but that’s typically only a long-term success when accompanied by elite plate discipline. As Buxton relies on taking pitches out of the park, opposing pitchers have no reason to throw him anything he’s looking for, and there’s a real chance that his ability to punish these pitches has declined due to age and injury. 

    Whether injuries or an active choice forced it, Byron Buxton’s change at the plate has made him a boom-or-bust hitter. As we’ve seen him reach 30 years of age, the boom hasn’t been there enough, as we now have a lengthy sample size of him being a below-league-average hitter. Is this the new norm for Byron Buxton?

    Follow Twins Daily For Minnesota Twins News & Analysis

    Recent Twins Articles

    Recent Twins Videos

    Twins Top Prospects

    Marek Houston

    Cedar Rapids Kernels - A+, SS
    The 22-year-old went 2-for-5 on Friday night, his fourth straight multi-hit game. Heading into the week, he was hitting .246/.328/.404 (.732). Four games later, he is hitting .303/.361/.447 (.808).

    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    Featured Comments

    5 hours ago, bean5302 said:

    Buxton pulling the ball is a good thing right now. It means he's ahead of the pitch, where he needs to adjust his timing to catch up on the fastball, and I expect he'll get there.

    I don’t think it is that simple, Buxton could be pulling the ball because he is anticipating (i.e., guessing) fastball and starts his swing earlier thereby making him very susceptible to sliders and other off speed pitches.

    https://www.fangraphs.com/players/byron-buxton/14161/heat-maps?position=OF&ss=2024-03-28&se=2024-06-05&type=0&hand=all&count=a,2&blur=1&grid=10&view=bat&pitch=&season=all&data=
     

    If I have done this correctly this should display Buxton’s 2 strike heat map. But I don’t know how to fully interpret the heat map other than to indicate that he is being pitched down and away. I couldn’t find a legend and don’t understand the meaning behind the different shades of red and blue. 

    22 hours ago, bean5302 said:

    I think Buxton will finish up the year at a wRC+ of around 120,

    That would be well over his career average…he gives no indication of this.

    Won’t come close to that without a sustained hot period (with HR’s in bunches)…the likes of which we haven’t seen from him for a long time.

    8 hours ago, DJL44 said:

    I like the unimpressive version of Buxton more than the unavailable version of Buxton. He's still performing about league average at the plate with above average defense which means he's worth every penny of his modest $15M salary.

    Sitting at wRC+ of 83.

    Not really that close to average.

    22 hours ago, DJL44 said:

     He's still performing about league average at the plate with above average defense. which means he's worth every penny of his modest $15M salary.

    No. No it doesn't. 

    It's not real difficult to find good CF defense.

    He's a problem, and it appears to be getting worse.

    For the record, his "modest" $15m salary is more than 10% of the budget.

    21 hours ago, bean5302 said:

    Fangraphs has Byron Buxton at #45 of 315 batters with 100+ PA with a 47.9% pull rate with some hacks like Jose Altuve, Rhys Hoskins, Trea Turner, and Christian Yelich well above Buxton. The biggest problem Buxton's had this year is the fastball, and catching up to the fastball in specific. There's an article about it from a few weeks ago around here somewhere... where is it.... here, I found it.

    Buxton pulling the ball is a good thing right now. It means he's ahead of the pitch, where he needs to adjust his timing to catch up on the fastball, and I expect he'll get there.

    In general, pulling the ball can be a good thing, especially in the air. Selling out to try to do only that, while also having extremely poor plate discipline is not a good thing. Yes, Buxton has other issues like not catching up to fastballs this season, but his approach is very bad.

    Why would anyone give him something to pull over the fence when he's swinging whether the pitch is in the zone or not? His approach also relies on his hands remaining lightning quick to turn on pitches, which by the way, may already be waning on him at age 30 as evidenced by his inability to hit fastballs.

    Whether it was for injury reasons or to chase homers, he's made himself a one trick pony offensively in a way that's almost guaranteed to decline with age. It's very sad to see.

    22 hours ago, bighat said:

    Buxton wouldn't start on 3/4 of the MLB outfields today. It's a far cry from a few years ago where he was an elite option. His star shined bright, faded quickly, and is now fizzling out. 

    I know injuries have been his main Achilles heel but he also has a record of streaks of horrific plate appearances even when perfectly healthy. Even without the injuries I think his career would be sidetracked - though perhaps not this severely.

    His trade value is as low as it's ever been, no team wants him, if the Twins somehow managed to offload him we'd be paying a heavy price for someone to take on Bux and his contract. 

    Great guy, elite fielder in his prime, and will always be one of the names that comes up frequently when old timers talk Twins baseball over while trolling for walleye in 20 years. 

    He'll always be The Greatest that Never Was. 

    I agree with everything except the great guy part.  

    17 hours ago, bighat said:

    Really? I haven't heard anything negative ever said about his character or clubhouse personality. Have you experienced or heard differently? 

    There are three things I can site.  These are MY reasons and you may not feel they are valid reasons and that is your right. Everyone would have to remember these three things,, but I will go through it anyway.....

    The first time I saw Buxton act out was when he was not called up in September of 2018.  He stormed off, left Rochester and didn't take calls for a while.  When he came Gillette Children's Hospital in December he still harped on it and was saying "I ain't sugarcoating nothing".  Oh really?  He had a horrible 2018 and didn't do well in Rochester until just before callups when he had a couple of multiple hit games.  He'd barely played all year and he hit terribly when he did.  THere was a laundry list of ailments he went though and it made no sense to have him play meaningless games in September after a year like that.   Who is he to storm off from his teammates in Rochester, go radio silent for a few months and then come back to criticize his bosses at an event at a children's hospital?  Many here thought he was mistreated and screwed over, so I am guessing you felt that way as well.  Whether he was or wasn't his crybaby routine didn't go over well with me.  Not after that horrendous 2018 season which occurred right after I thought he figured it out.  He clearly had not.

    Buxton says lack of September call-up 'didn't go over well'; Twins say he's starter in center field (startribune.com)

     

    The we have the batting practice banter from him.  Buxton was the one who said:

    Quote

    "I haven't taken batting practice on the field in probably two years,"

    Why make such a proclamation? I do not care that he hits in the cage indoors.  Whatever he is doing it isn't working.  He cannot seem to settle on any kind of sound and repeatable mechanics.   His career lifetime OBP is .298 and he isn't a good hitter major league hitter by any standard and he has to say that?  He has horrible hitting mechanics and has for his whole career.  

    Twins' Byron Buxton hasn't taken outdoor batting practice 'in probably two years' (startribune.com)

    From this article above:

    Quote

    In a sense, Buxton is a self-made hitter, Baldelli agreed. Early in his professional career, and especially during slumps and stretches of strikeouts, he soaked up advice from many sources. Too many, he finally decided, until vowing four years ago to "go back to what got me here and just keep it simple."

    He eventually developed a method that works for him, Buxton said, and "my routine stays the same now. I trust it." Hitting coaches Edgar Varela and Rudy Hernandez watch to "let me know if they see something wrong," he said, "but you get to the point where you've got to start figuring out things for yourself, things to help you feel good and get comfortable in the box."

    He seems to have autonomy to do what he wants.  I do not like that for any player who isn't even a lifetime .240

     

    Finally, there was that absurd Twitter exchange he had with fans last year after someone made a joke about him being careful to not get injured at the uniform reveal last winter.  He had "rabbit ears" on social media with fans calling them "clowns".   THAT is a clown move by a professional athlete.   I am not for social media. This is the extent of my "social media" and I think it is a clown move for a pro athlete to engage with and get mad at internet trolls.  Whether the trolls are clowns or not, a pro athlete has to be smarter than that.  I am guessing you probably do not feel that way, but I do.

     

    I have a pretty high profile public job and I do not engage my critics online like he did because it is stupid to me.  It achieves nothing and it shows that he might not have the temperament to hold up to the rigors are life in the majors.

     

    So, these are three examples where i think work ethic, mindset and commitment to the craft are questionable.

    On 6/5/2024 at 9:39 PM, tony&rodney said:

    I said several times in the offseason that Buxton needs to rework his swing. He is too much all or nothing and I would never fear pitching to a guy with that severe cut. Buck has a long term contract and the Twins need to insist that Byron move towards a different approach or a .700 OPS is his ceiling.

    Does anyone believe that Buck is a threat in the batter's box at this time?

    Buxton was much more fun to watch while in the minors at Chattanooga when he hit the ball allover the field and used his speed. Since he has pretty much become an all or nothing hitter (similar to what Sano became) he is not using his natural talents. His strikeout % should be about 1/2 of what it is.

    This has always been Buxton at the plate.  He has always been unimpressive.  Twins fans all thought he would figure it out.  All you had to do was looks at his career stats and realize he is just a bad MLB hitter.  

    But some of you thought we HAD to sign him.  At the time we resigned him he had been a 1x all star with a career BA around .230 and had no track record of staying healthy.  Why did we NEED to sign the guy?

    21 hours ago, SoDakTwinsFan said:

    This has always been Buxton at the plate.  He has always been unimpressive.  Twins fans all thought he would figure it out.  All you had to do was looks at his career stats and realize he is just a bad MLB hitter.  

    But some of you thought we HAD to sign him.  At the time we resigned him he had been a 1x all star with a career BA around .230 and had no track record of staying healthy.  Why did we NEED to sign the guy?

    This isn’t hindsight.  I felt the same way ESPECIALLY after his tantrum at the end of 2018 when he wasn’t a September call up.

     

    He hit .156 and had a variety of ailments that kept him out of the lineup.  In Rochester he was hitting around .230/.240 until he had a couple of multi hit games just before September call ups.  I think his reaction was unacceptable and at the point we should have known better than to give him that incentive loaded contract.  




    Create an account or sign in to comment

    You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

    Create an account

    Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

    Register a new account

    Sign in

    Already have an account? Sign in here.

    Sign In Now

×
×
  • Create New...