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Dan Uggla, Miguel Olivo, and sluggers with the worst slugging percentage

Posted by Andy on July 22, 2011

Check out the lowest slugging percentages for guys qualified for the batting title who homered in at least 4% of their plate appearances:

Rk Player SLG HR PA Year Tm G AB R H 2B 3B RBI BB SO BA OBP OPS Pos
1 Dan Uggla .380 17 400 2011 ATL 98 363 48 70 15 1 38 34 88 .193 .265 .645 *4
2 Darrell Evans .380 22 522 1988 DET 144 437 48 91 9 0 64 84 89 .208 .337 .717 *D3
3 Miguel Olivo .381 13 314 2011 SEA 80 291 35 63 9 0 44 17 87 .216 .256 .637 *2/D
4 Rob Deer .386 25 539 1991 DET 134 448 64 80 14 2 64 89 175 .179 .314 .700 *9/D
5 Aaron Hill .394 26 580 2010 TOR 138 528 70 108 22 0 68 41 85 .205 .271 .665 *4/D
6 Frank Thomas .399 21 509 1960 CHC 135 479 54 114 12 1 64 28 74 .238 .280 .678 375/9
7 Graig Nettles .404 26 633 1970 CLE 157 549 81 129 13 1 62 81 77 .235 .336 .741 *5/7
8 Brandon Inge .406 27 637 2009 DET 161 562 71 129 16 1 84 54 170 .230 .314 .720 *5
9 Reggie Jackson .406 25 584 1984 CAL 143 525 67 117 17 2 81 55 141 .223 .300 .706 *D/9
10 Carlos Pena .407 28 582 2010 TBR 144 484 64 95 18 0 84 87 158 .196 .325 .732 *3/D
11 Andre Thornton .408 22 514 1985 CLE 124 461 49 109 13 0 88 47 75 .236 .304 .711 *D
12 Greg Vaughn .409 23 573 1992 MIL 141 501 77 114 18 2 78 60 123 .228 .313 .723 *7/D9
13 Jeff Burroughs .409 29 672 1975 TEX 152 585 81 132 20 0 94 79 155 .226 .315 .724 *9/D
14 Charlie Spikes .409 23 561 1973 CLE 140 506 68 120 12 3 73 45 103 .237 .303 .712 *7D9
15 Nick Swisher .410 24 588 2008 CHW 153 497 86 109 21 1 69 82 135 .219 .332 .743 3879/D
16 Gene Tenace .411 26 612 1974 OAK 158 484 71 102 17 1 73 110 105 .211 .367 .778 *3*2/4
17 Lee May .414 25 590 1978 BAL 148 556 56 137 16 1 80 31 110 .246 .286 .700 *D/3
18 Jack Cust .417 25 612 2009 OAK 149 513 88 123 16 0 70 93 185 .240 .356 .773 *D9
19 Dave Kingman .417 30 666 1985 OAK 158 592 66 141 16 0 91 62 114 .238 .309 .726 *D/3
20 Dwayne Murphy .418 27 660 1982 OAK 151 543 84 129 15 1 94 94 122 .238 .349 .767 *8/6D
21 Joe Pepitone .418 28 647 1964 NYY 160 613 71 154 12 3 100 24 63 .251 .281 .698 *38/9
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 7/22/2011.

Dan Uggla and Miguel Olivo are both near the top, although it's not unusual to see guys high on lists like this in the middle of a season. Should Uggla and Olivo improve a little in the last couple of months, they may very well fall off this list. It's fairly hard to maintain such outlying stats over an entire season.

25 Responses to “Dan Uggla, Miguel Olivo, and sluggers with the worst slugging percentage”

  1. Neil L. Says:

    JP Arencibia (0.404) and Vernon Wells (0.388) don't miss by much this year. About 15 PA short of making Andy's list.

  2. Dan Says:

    No one between 1993 and 2007 cracks this list?

  3. John Autin Says:

    @2, Dan -- Batting averages were relatively high in that period.

  4. John Autin Says:

    Interesting stuff, Andy.

    I do think it's worth noting that the chosen minimum HR rate of 4% is also very near the maximum for the seasons shown. All 21 of those seasons fall between 4.00% and 4.83%.

    Raise the minimum HR% to 5%, and the lowest qualifying SLG is .431 by Dave Kingman in his final year. Kong would also get the #3 spot and two more in the top 25.

  5. spike Says:

    I will be shocked if Uggla is still on this list by year end, given his recent surge and unbelievable BaBIP for the first 3 months - but the fact that he still is at 99 games is pretty disheartening.

  6. J. B. Rainsberger Says:

    Oliva? Plz fix.

  7. Andy Says:

    Fixed, thanks. Don't know how I made that mistake.

  8. buddy Says:

    I think the easiest way to get off of this list is not to start hitting better, but to stop hitting so many fluke home runs.

  9. Neil L. Says:

    @8
    Buddy, what is a fluke home run? When players hit 4 homers in every 100 PA, their dingers probably aren't considered flukes.

    There are two diametrically opposite ways to get off this list: hit more home runs to raise SLG or hit less home runs to get under the 4% mark.

    I'm still trying to wrap my head around a one-sentence description, in words, of what kind of hitters this list represents!

  10. Andy Says:

    "I'm still trying to wrap my head around a one-sentence description, in words, of what kind of hitters this list represents!"

    I'm taking this as a compliment.

  11. Neil L. Says:

    Andy, please do. It is an intriguing, thought-provoking list.

    I invite others to comment on what it means to them

  12. Zachary Says:

    I love seeing Fake Frank Thomas and Gene Tenace. Thomas had a really nice career, and Tenace has an argument as the all-time best offensive catcher not named Mike Piazza.

    Like Piazza, he may have been crummy behind the plate, but he made up for it by hitting like an All-Star first baseman. Ol' Fiore Gino Tennaci has just been greatly underappreciated. The year he shows up on this list? He had an OPS+ of 130 and played 160 games for the World Series champions. Not bad.

  13. Andy Says:

    "Fake" Frank Thomas would probably like to remind you that he was an All-Star before "Real" Frank Thomas was born.

  14. Mike L Says:

    How about players who qualified for the batting title with more than 3% home runs, and at least 100 RBI's, and a slugging percentage below .400.

  15. Jimbo Says:

    Adam Dunn is having such a bad season he can't even be on this list!

  16. Rich Says:

    "Real" Frank Thomas is 1000 times better than the older one tho

  17. Doug Says:

    @10.

    "What kind of hitters does this list represent?"

    I'd say guys with a bit of power (not too much) and a low BA. Striking out a lot will also help get in with this group.

    Older sluggers whose bat speed has slowed down (Evans, Jackson, Kingman, Deer) fit this description - they're still swinging for the fences and hitting some dingers, but generally making a less solid contact than when they were younger. Younger sluggers having off years (Uggla, Burroughs, Murphy) are also a match. Then, there's guys for which this is just their thing - damn the strikeouts, and keep swinging away (Vaughn, Pena, Deer).

    To look at it a bit differently, I ran a query of guys who qualified for the batting title, and had HR > 50% of XBH. Lots of the same guys, but some new ones too (Graig Nettles, in particular). Here are the low sluggers in that group.

    PLAYER...SLG...HR...XBH...YEAR...TEAM
    Cory Snyder... .360... 18... 35... 1989 CLE
    Jeromy Burnitz... .365 19 34 2002 NYM
    Dan Uggla... .380... 17... 33... 2011 ATL
    Darrell Evans... .380... 22... 31... 1988 DET
    Miguel Olivo... .381... 13... 22... 2011 SEA
    Clete Boyer... .381... 16... 31... 1970 ATL
    Rob Deer... .386... 21... 39... 1993 TOT
    Rob Deer... .386... 25... 41... 1991 DET
    Graig Nettles... .386... 22... 40... 1973 NYY
    Tony Batista... .393... 26... 47... 2003 BAL
    Aaron Hill... .394... 26... 48... 2010 TOR
    Graig Nettles... .398... 15... 23... 1981 NYY
    Frank Thomas... .399... 21... 34... 1960 CHC
    Deron Johnson... .400... 20... 38... 1973 TOT
    Graig Nettles... .401... 20... 36... 1979 NYY
    Gary Gaetti... .404... 19... 34... 1989 MIN
    Graig Nettles... .404... 26... 40... 1970 CLE
    Brandon Inge... .406... 27... 44... 2009 DET
    Reggie Jackson... .406... 25... 44... 1984 CAL
    Carlos Pena... .407... 28... 46... 2010 TBR
    Reggie Jackson... .408... 18... 32... 1986 CAL
    Andre Thornton... .408... 22... 35... 1985 CLE
    Ron Cey... .408... 22... 42... 1985 CHC
    Dwayne Murphy... .408... 15... 28... 1981 OAK
    John Milner... .408... 20... 39... 1974 NYM

  18. Neil L. Says:

    @17
    Doug, thanks for the information. I wish you had table-posting privileges in here to make the data a little easier, visually, to absorb.

    In your second paragraph, the division of the players on Andy's list into three groups is really helpful.

    Gary Gaetti shows up on your list, but wasn't Graig Nettles on the original one.

    Setting the filter at HR > 50% of XBH is a creative way of shedding light on the list from the opposite direction.

    Any way you slice and dice it, being on this list is baaaad, agreed? No one on Andy's list has more than one season being so offensively unproductive.

    Doug, your search catches Graig Nettles three times, Reggie Jackson twice (!) and Rob Deer twice. Ah, the allure of the home run or past, post-season play to a GM.

  19. Doug Says:

    You're right Neil - didn't notice Nettles on Andy's list. Actually, Nettles shows up 4 times on the second list.

    Besides Gaetti, Synder, Burnitz, Cey and Deron Johnson are notable new guys on the second list.

    BTW, Neil - I found a juicy little tidbit about AJ. It's on the CC blog.

  20. Neil L. Says:

    @19
    Doug, I read your comment in the Sabathia blog.

    Don't tempt John Autin to unload on A.J. He was actually a decent warrior for our team.

  21. mccombe35 Says:

    love that you guys call the 1st Thomas the "fake" Frank Thomas!

    Awesome

  22. Steven Page Says:

    Two things I notice on the list are that there are very few triples, and that not one player on the list has as many doubles as homers. Some older guys slowing down and some younger guys who were never fast to begin with. The one that catches my eye is Pepitone, with twelve doubles in 613 AB, despite a .251 average.

  23. Doug Says:

    Despite Olivo's prominence on this list, I'm sure the Mariners aren't complaining.

    Olivo's the team leader in HR with 13. Right behind him is Justin Smoak with 12 HR and a team-leading .399 SLG. The Giants and As also have no qualifying batters this year who are slugging 0.400.

    If the Mariners keep this up, they will become the first team since 1968 to have back-to-back seasons with no qualifying batters slugging 0.400. The Dodgers and White Sox managed that dubious feat in '67 and '68.

  24. Neil L. Says:

    @23
    Welcome to the Brave New World of low-offense.

  25. Erik Says:

    12 days later and because of his great hitting/homer streak, Dan Uggla is already at .425 and a few percentage points off the chart...