TheAngelFlight said:
Quote:
Every player would benefit from taking more walks and striking out less.
But as Danny pointed out, the difference between Odor last year and Odor this year is the shift. That isn't going to be fixed by walking more, it's fixed by more often trying to hit opposite field. Trying to go opposite field more can have a very significant negative impact on players that have a pull power stroke, which is why it is something that is typically addressed in an off-season unless you are a prospect that can be sent back down to the minors to work on things mid-season (which Odor is not).
I did not say anything about needing to walk more.
Nor did I say you did. But as posted above, trying to get a young dead-pull power hitter to start going opposite field in the middle of a major league season against major league pitching is a recipe for disaster.
Hitting opposite field is really, really hard. Probably the hardest skill any major league player has to learn.
You work on those large adjustments in the off-season, not in the middle of a potential playoff chase that could result in your power stroke suffering. Odor has the potential to be great, but make no mistake his value comes from his homerun power.