We’ve gone over the fact that Joey Gallo is a baseball anomaly.
He provides a ton of value – he’s a two-time Gold Glover who can hit 30-plus home run in his sleep from the left side of the plate. But at the same time, he’s one of the most frustrating players in the game, especially for Yankees fans.
Already just a career .206 hitter entering this year, he’s hitting just .138 through his first 10 games. His on-base percentage, a strength of his, is .294 – 38 points lower than his career OBP. His slugging is the same as his batting average, as he does not have an extra-base hit, or an RBI, this year. His career SLG? .484.
He’s striking out at barely a higher clip than career average, but nearly not enough for such drastic changes to his numbers.
So we ask, why are the numbers this horrid?
Well, as easy it is to make fun of Aaron Boone, he’s right – Gallo has been very unlucky.
Boone said Gallo “has scorched some balls” and has “been a little bit unlucky” before Saturday’s win over the Baltimore Orioles.
He, in fact, has scorched some balls, despite the stat sheet not showing an extra-base hit.
Gallo currently ranks in the 77th percentile of hard-hit percentage (50 percent), and in the 95th percentile in barrels per batted ball (22.2 percent).
But this is where things get interesting, and where Boone furthermore makes his case.
Thanks to Baseball Savant, we can see “expected batting average,” which is a metric that combines a batted ball’s exit velo and launch angle, and people much smarter than us can calculate the likelihood of it being a hit.
Because Gallo has been hitting the ball hard, but just right to people, Gallo’s current xBA is .234. While .234 is not great BA (it's league average, actually), that’s 96 points higher than what his average is now. His -0.096 difference between his actual BA and his xBA makes him the 35th “unluckiest” hitter in baseball.