Leaderboard of the Week: Fastball Swinging Strike Rate

This week's leaderboard takes a look at fastball swinging strike rate and the rare hitters who manage to overcome an elevated number in that category such as Kyle Stowers.
Leaderboard of the Week: Fastball Swinging Strike Rate
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A note on swinging strike rate (pitches swung and missed/total pitches): I prefer to use swinging strike rate (SwStr%) over other per-pitch metrics because it shows both the intent to swing and whether contact is made. For hitters, two things could be happening: they do not have the bat speed to make contact on high-velocity pitches, or they have the bat speed but can't determine the pitch type and location. Most times, it's a combination of the pair.

With fastballs getting faster and faster over the past two decades, batters who can't hit them usually find themselves out of the league unless they have another elite skill such as defense or power. I'm going to look back at the beginning of the 2025 season to see how hitters who swung and missed against fastballs in that first month performed over the entire season. 

This article has been through several iterations. During the season, I noticed several hitters who were struggling with fastballs. When looking at the list of players, the season-long results weren't actionable. It was more like "Here are some hitters who struggled with fastballs, and most got demoted."

Instead, I limited the sample of those struggling against fastballs and looked at their future results, and a simple action emerged. Has the player been good in previous seasons? If so, hold. If not, move on. A simple and obvious solution, but sometimes simple and obvious works.

In all, I have a sample size of 402 hitters. For each of

A note on swinging strike rate (pitches swung and missed/total pitches): I prefer to use swinging strike rate (SwStr%) over other per-pitch metrics because it shows both the intent to swing and whether contact is made. For hitters, two things could be happening: they do not have the bat speed to make contact on high-velocity pitches, or they have the bat speed but can't determine the pitch type and location. Most times, it's a combination of the pair.

With fastballs getting faster and faster over the past two decades, batters who can't hit them usually find themselves out of the league unless they have another elite skill such as defense or power. I'm going to look back at the beginning of the 2025 season to see how hitters who swung and missed against fastballs in that first month performed over the entire season. 

This article has been through several iterations. During the season, I noticed several hitters who were struggling with fastballs. When looking at the list of players, the season-long results weren't actionable. It was more like "Here are some hitters who struggled with fastballs, and most got demoted."

Instead, I limited the sample of those struggling against fastballs and looked at their future results, and a simple action emerged. Has the player been good in previous seasons? If so, hold. If not, move on. A simple and obvious solution, but sometimes simple and obvious works.

In all, I have a sample size of 402 hitters. For each of them, I found the average of their swinging-strike rates (SwStr%) against four-seam and sinking fastballs over the first month.

First, I grouped the hitters by their April swinging strike rate and then found their season-long stats.

April FB SwStr%

Full-season K%

Full-season AVG

Full-season OPS

18% or more

34.3%

.192

.586

16-18%

30.0%

.220

.629

14-16%

30.9%

.202

.599

12-14%

28.2%

.213

.650

10-12%

26.0%

.225

.665

8-10%

24.5%

.236

.694

6-8%

23.5%

.236

.691

4-6%

20.3%

.241

.697

0-4%

17.9%

.247

.692

The batting average and OPS don't start improving to respectable levels until a hitter's swinging strike rate against fastballs gets under 14 percent. They don't stabilize until the batters get below the 10 percent threshold.

Here are the batters in the first grouping for hitters with a greater than 18 percent swinging strike rate:

Name

PA

FF SwStr%

SI SwStr%

Avg SwStr%

Max SwStr%

K%

AVG

OPS

Jarred Kelenic

65

25.0%

35.7%

30.4%

35.7%

35.4%

.167

.531

Zac Veen

37

34.4%

20.7%

27.5%

34.4%

37.8%

.118

.424

Ryan Kreidler

44

15.1%

26.3%

20.7%

26.3%

43.2%

.105

.296

Michael Taylor

325

17.1%

23.8%

20.4%

23.8%

33.8%

.200

.625

Francisco Alvarez

277

29.6%

8.3%

19.0%

29.6%

26.4%

.256

.787

Hayden Senger

78

16.7%

20.8%

18.8%

20.8%

28.2%

.181

.415

Gabriel Arias

471

20.0%

16.9%

18.5%

20.0%

34.4%

.220

.638

Kyle Stowers

457

22.4%

14.0%

18.2%

22.4%

27.4%

.288

.912

Kyren Paris

140

18.9%

17.4%

18.1%

18.9%

42.1%

.190

.647

Two names stick out as being productive: Francisco Alvarez and Kyle Stowers. Both got by with career-high BABIPs (.321 and .356) and decent power (.199 and .256 ISO).  

On the other end of the spectrum, Paris started on fire, hitting .440/.533/1.120 with five homers over his first 10 games. Over the rest of the season (110 PA), he hit just one home run while batting .129/.193/.198.

And now the next grouping of hitters with a swinging strike rate against fastballs between 16 and 18 percent:

Name

PA

FF SwStr%

SI SwStr%

Avg SwStr%

Max SwStr%

K%

AVG

OPS

Bryan De La Cruz

50

13.5%

21.1%

17.3%

21.1%

36.0%

.191

.453

Rob Refsnyder

209

19.4%

13.6%

16.5%

19.4%

25.8%

.269

.838

Ryan Bliss

39

22.2%

10.3%

16.3%

22.2%

28.2%

.200

.596

Only three names, and the one with the most plate appearances was a weak-side platoon bat.

On to the next group, the hitters between 14 and 16 percent:

Name

PA

FF SwStr%

SI SwStr%

Avg SwStr%

Max SwStr%

K%

AVG

OPS

Rafael Devers

729

17.8%

12.9%

15.4%

17.8%

26.3%

.252

.851

Derek Hill

149

16.7%

13.6%

15.2%

16.7%

32.2%

.216

.609

Christian Koss

191

12.9%

16.7%

14.8%

16.7%

23.6%

.264

.676

Riley Adams

286

11.1%

18.2%

14.6%

18.2%

38.5%

.186

.560

Davis Schneider

227

15.0%

14.3%

14.6%

15.0%

26.4%

.234

.797

Jose Siri

36

20.8%

8.3%

14.6%

20.8%

47.2%

.063

.292

Oscar Gonzalez

61

18.6%

10.5%

14.6%

18.6%

21.3%

.220

.483

Christopher Morel

305

15.0%

13.6%

14.3%

15.0%

35.7%

.219

.684

Drew Waters

219

22.5%

5.9%

14.2%

22.5%

27.4%

.243

.603

Dansby Swanson

645

18.8%

9.4%

14.1%

18.8%

26.0%

.244

.717

MJ Melendez

65

17.0%

11.1%

14.1%

17.0%

35.4%

.083

.321

Devers immediately sticks out, but he's always struggled with four-seam fastballs, with a career 16 percent swinging strike rate against them. Like Alvarez and Stowers, he has enough power to be a positive contributor.

Two other guys who contributed were Dansby Swanson and Davis Schneider. In Swanson's age-31 season, he struggled against four-seamers, with a career-high 16.7 percent swinging strike rate (up from 11 percent in 2024). Teams didn't take advantage of the weakness, but Swanson could be in trouble if the trend continues. 

For Schneider, the early struggles cost him his job. When he got demoted in April, he was hitting just .067/.333/.067. He must have worked on some changes in AAA. When he returned, he hit .249/.364/.468. 

There was some hope for some of these hitters to be productive (e.g. Morel and Siri), but only the established batters powered their way through.  

Now onto the 12-to-14 percent swinging strike rate group:

Name

PA

FF SwStr%

SI SwStr%

Avg SwStr%

Max SwStr%

K%

AVG

OPS

Austin Riley

447

10.9%

16.7%

13.8%

16.7%

28.6%

.260

.737

Nick Maton

63

9.9%

17.4%

13.6%

17.4%

30.2%

.167

.601

Brandon Lowe

553

15.9%

11.3%

13.6%

15.9%

26.9%

.256

.785

Paul DeJong

208

17.5%

9.7%

13.6%

17.5%

33.7%

.228

.642

Matt Mervis

134

21.4%

5.6%

13.5%

21.4%

37.3%

.175

.637

Julio Rodriguez

710

20.0%

6.9%

13.4%

20.0%

21.4%

.267

.798

Donovan Solano

179

21.9%

5.0%

13.4%

21.9%

22.3%

.247

.628

Luke Raley

219

17.4%

8.2%

12.8%

17.4%

29.2%

.202

.631

Christian Encarnacion-Strand

137

15.9%

9.6%

12.7%

15.9%

23.4%

.208

.610

Matt Wallner

392

17.5%

8.0%

12.7%

17.5%

29.1%

.202

.776

Max Muncy

220

20.7%

4.7%

12.7%

20.7%

30.9%

.214

.638

Heston Kjerstad

167

7.0%

17.9%

12.4%

17.9%

26.9%

.192

.566

Tyler O'Neill

209

15.8%

8.9%

12.4%

15.8%

24.4%

.199

.684

Oliver Dunn

41

18.6%

5.6%

12.1%

18.6%

26.8%

.167

.427

Jordan Walker

396

15.6%

8.5%

12.0%

15.6%

31.8%

.215

.584

Thomas Saggese

295

13.6%

10.3%

12.0%

13.6%

28.1%

.258

.641

Byron Buxton

542

13.8%

10.1%

12.0%

13.8%

27.3%

.264

.878

Dane Myers

333

18.7%

5.3%

12.0%

18.7%

23.1%

.235

.617

The biggest thing this group has going for it is that their average strikeout rate is under 30 percent. We know some hitters can be useful in this strikeout range but they need to be elite elsewhere (see Buxton). 

Austin Riley has his worst overall season since 2020. He was barely better league average with a .737 OPS. It's the fourth year in a row he's seen his OPS drop (from .898 to .878 to .861 to .783 to .737). The 28-year-old might have peaked sooner than the average batter. 

Yet again, Julio Rodriguez wasn't ready for the season to start. He posted a .676 OPS in April but was able to raise it to a .798 OPS by season's end. His end-of-season stats are always around a 30/30/.275 bat, but it's slow getting there. 

Conclusion

After examining the players who can overcome a high swing-and-miss rate against fastballs, they are established, good major leaguers. The reason might be because their team knows they will eventually work out the funk, while a new guy struggling with the same issue will get sent to AAA to figure it out. Or perhaps it's because these players have other skills (mainly power) that keep them in the lineup.  

Now, some non-established regulars got a long run (e.g. Wallner, Walker, Arias) and never really pulled it together, even though their team gave them every opportunity.

When next season starts, keep an eye on anyone not keeping up with fastballs. If they aren't a regular, it might be time to move on.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Jeff writes analytics-focused baseball articles for RotoWire. He is a three-time FSWA award winner, including the Football Writer of the Year and Best Football Print Article awards in 2016. The 2017 Tout Wars Mixed Auction champion and 2016 Tout Wars Head-to-Head champ, Zimmerman also contributes to FanGraphs.com, BaseballHQ and Baseball America.
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