The Z Files: Can the Drop in Flyball Distance Influence Roster Management?

The Z Files: Can the Drop in Flyball Distance Influence Roster Management?

This article is part of our The Z Files series.

It's been well documented that power is down because the ball is not traveling as far. Here is the data through April of each season since 2021.

SeasonHR/PAHR/FBFlyball Average Exit VelocityAverage FB Distance
20213.10%10.60%92.6319.2
20222.40%8.80%92.1312.9
20233.00%10.20%92315.3
20242.70%9.30%92313.2

Many are focusing on why the flyball average exit velocities over the past three seasons are nearly identical, yet the ball is traveling different distances. This has to do with the composition of the ball, with seam height, weight of the ball and coefficient of restitution all contributing factors.

While this is an intriguing scientific study, those playing fantasy baseball don't care why the ball's flight is hindered; we want to know the repercussions. Will the influence be the same for every hitter and every pitcher?

In 2021, the average flyball distance was 3.9 feet longer than 2023, resulting in a 0.4 percent increase in home runs per flyball (HR/FB). The average flyball distance was 2.4 feet more in 2023 as compared to 2022. However, even knowing this is 1.5 feet fewer than 2021 to 2023, the HR/FB increased by 1.4 percent.

The above suggests the HR/FB is not proportional to the average flyball distance. Identifying the inflection will help pinpoint the subset of hitters and pitchers most affected by the reduced ball flight.

The following was done to understand the relationship between HR/FB and average flyball distance. The number of homers per

It's been well documented that power is down because the ball is not traveling as far. Here is the data through April of each season since 2021.

SeasonHR/PAHR/FBFlyball Average Exit VelocityAverage FB Distance
20213.10%10.60%92.6319.2
20222.40%8.80%92.1312.9
20233.00%10.20%92315.3
20242.70%9.30%92313.2

Many are focusing on why the flyball average exit velocities over the past three seasons are nearly identical, yet the ball is traveling different distances. This has to do with the composition of the ball, with seam height, weight of the ball and coefficient of restitution all contributing factors.

While this is an intriguing scientific study, those playing fantasy baseball don't care why the ball's flight is hindered; we want to know the repercussions. Will the influence be the same for every hitter and every pitcher?

In 2021, the average flyball distance was 3.9 feet longer than 2023, resulting in a 0.4 percent increase in home runs per flyball (HR/FB). The average flyball distance was 2.4 feet more in 2023 as compared to 2022. However, even knowing this is 1.5 feet fewer than 2021 to 2023, the HR/FB increased by 1.4 percent.

The above suggests the HR/FB is not proportional to the average flyball distance. Identifying the inflection will help pinpoint the subset of hitters and pitchers most affected by the reduced ball flight.

The following was done to understand the relationship between HR/FB and average flyball distance. The number of homers per 200 flyballs was graphed against average flyball distance from last season. A batter needed to loft 50 flyballs in 2023 to be included. A rolling average was utilized to smooth variance. Here is the result:

Look at the steepness of the slope between around 311 and 316 feet. Batters will lose disproportionately more homers when their average flyball distance falls within this range. Percentagewise, a batter will lose more homers if their average flyball distance drops from 315 last season to 313 as it would if the distance dipped from 323 to 321. Pitchers with an average flyball distance around 315 last season will yield disproportionately fewer homers this season since the loss of two feet falls on the steep portion of the curve.

For what it's worth, triggered by 2019's happy fun ball, I have conducted this study every offseason since, with nearly identical results each time.

If this decreased ball flight was known heading into drafts, all batters would be subject to a projected homer decrease, but those with a 2023 average flyball distance between 313 and 316 feet would be most vulnerable since their two-foot loss lands in the steep part of the curve.

Unfortunately, things aren't that easy. Confining the pool to batters with the same team from 2021-2023, the normalized average flyball standard deviation was a bit below seven feet. Normalizing the averages accounts for the different league levels, while only using players with the same team removes the venue bias. The results indicate a player's average flyball distance can be plus or minus seven feet the following season just due to variance. This increases the target group to those with a 2023 average flyball distance between 313 and 323 feet.

Using an average flyball distance of 319, let's say the player drops four feet from variance and two feet from the reduced flight this season. Admittedly, these are selected to match the data in the first table, but it's a plausible scenario and we know the HR/FB for each.

Projected Home Runs

Flyballs319 Feet313 FeetDifference
505.34.40.9
10010.68.81.8
15015.913.22.7
20021.217.63.6

The cutoff where the projected drop is relevant is arbitrary, since total homers itself is subject to variance with a sudden wisp of wind keeping the ball in the yard or sending it over the fence. Deeming fewer than 2.5 homers lost as insignificant is more empirical than scientific, but that's what I'm going to do. Using the above table, this equates to around 15 projected homers.

Ninety-nine players lofted at least 50 flyballs with an average distance ranging from 313 to 323 feet last season. Adding the filter of at least 15 projected homers reduces the tracking group to a more practical 65 batters:

Player2023 Average Flyball Distance
Michael Conforto323.1
Manny Machado323
J.T. Realmuto322.8
Francisco Lindor322.4
Bryan Reynolds322.4
Jeimer Candelario322
Christian Walker321.9
Yandy Diaz321.9
Vladimir Guerrero321.8
Ke'Bryan Hayes321.7
CJ Abrams321.7
Eloy Jimenez321.6
Alex Kirilloff321.6
Brandon Nimmo321.5
Jordan Walker321.4
Ryan Noda321.3
Anthony Santander320.9
Mitch Garver320.4
Ian Happ320
Josh Bell319.8
Danny Jansen319.8
Jarred Kelenic319.7
Spencer Steer319.6
Gleyber Torres318.9
Tyler O'Neill318.9
Nick Castellanos318.8
Isaac Paredes318.6
Zach Neto318.3
Cal Raleigh318.2
Carlos Santana318.1
Willy Adames317.8
Carlos Correa317.8
Josh Naylor317.8
Eugenio Suarez317.7
Justin Turner317.7
Jose Abreu317.6
LaMonte Wade317.6
Bryan De La Cruz317.3
Cody Bellinger317.2
Luis Rengifo317.1
Ezequiel Tovar317.1
Nolan Arenado317
Jonathan India317
Jonah Heim317
Adley Rutschman316.9
Matt Chapman316.8
Austin Hays316.6
Seiya Suzuki316.2
Jorge Polanco316.2
Jeremy Pena316.2
James Outman316.1
Josh Lowe315.9
Taylor Ward315.8
Masataka Yoshida315.7
Anthony Rizzo315.6
Xander Bogaerts315.6
Will Smith314.9
Jose Ramirez314.8
Thairo Estrada314.7
Keibert Ruiz314.6
Hunter Renfroe313.8
George Springer313.2
Mike Yastrzemski313.2
Ketel Marte313.1
Alex Bregman313

By means of reminder, had I known the average flyball distance would be two feet shorter this season, I would have suggested the above 65 hitters would lose proportionately more homers than the rest of the field. There is so much more involved with respect to a flyball clearing the fence, so the advice would have been to use the information to break a tie, and not substantially alter rankings. 

Applying the methodology to pitchers with 100 projected innings and a flyball rate of at least 35 percent last season, here are the pitchers standing to benefit the most from the 2024 environment:

PitcherAverage Flyball Distance
Chris Sale323.3
Jesus Luzardo323
Kodai Senga322.6
Kevin Gausman322.4
Adrian Houser322.3
James Paxton321.6
Josiah Gray321.4
Logan Allen321.3
Cal Quantrill320.6
Jameson Taillon320.5
MacKenzie Gore320.1
Zack Littell320
Eury Perez319.6
Lance Lynn319.5
Luis Castillo319.5
Kenta Maeda318.9
Tyler Wells318.6
Justin Verlander318.5
Spencer Strider318.1
Michael Lorenzen317.9
Drew Smyly317.8
Jose Berrios317.8
Zack Greinke317.7
Taijuan Walker317.3
Carlos Rodon317.1
Aaron Nola317.1
Cristian Javier316.8
Chris Bassitt316.2
Joe Ryan316.2
Wade Miley316.1
Freddy Peralta316
Martin Perez315.8
Clarke Schmidt315.3
JP Sears314.6
Michael King314.5
Jose Quintana314.1
Hunter Greene314.1
Dylan Cease313.8
Andrew Abbott313.6
Kutter Crawford313.4
Dean Kremer313.4
Bailey Ober313.3
Jon Gray313.2
Andrew Heaney313.1
Eduardo Rodriguez313
Jordan Lyles313

As opposed to using the batting data to break a tie, moving these pitchers up the rankings a bit would have made sense, since the reward for identifying a better starting pitcher is greater than discovering a batter since their innings contribute more to your team performance, compared to the effect of a hitter's plate appearances.

Of course, the 2024 drafting season is (almost) over. The NFBC offers some "second chance" leagues and I'm sure there are a few others with leagues starting after the first month of the season. Even so, most are likely curious if some of the current performance level is disproportionately emanating from the deduced flight of the ball. 

Only six batters fit the criteria using data through April 30, with uncertain results:

Player2024 PA2024 Average Flyball Distance2024 HR2023 PA2023 Average Flyball Distance2023 HR
Corey Seager119313.7249320.31
Will Smith119313.7362318.93
Mark Canha1183135100315.12
Carlos Santana106314.84112322.72
Kyle Isbel88314.2385317.80
Hunter Renfroe87311.62120322.27

I mean, is the sole purpose of this entire study to show that Hunter Renfroe's power outage is due to the 2024 baseball? I sure hope not.

What about pitchers? Are there more encouraging results on that front?

Pitcher2024 Average Flyball Distance2023 Average Flyball Distance2024 HR/92023 HR/9
Grayson Rodriguez314.8323.31.11.2
Cole Irvin312.3322.30.61.3
Michael Lorenzen315.4321.51.11.2
Jesus Luzardo314319.71.71.1
Aaron Civale312.4317.91.70.9
Jose Suarez310.8317.71.72.7

More meh.

Longtime readers know this isn't the first time a seemingly elegant notion generated little actionable consequence. That said, I believe the concept is viable, especially since the sweet spot where homers decline disproportionately is consistent from year to year. It's just that the data is more descriptive than predictive, especially shoehorning one month's worth of numbers into the study. That said, I'll repeat the exercise in a couple months. Though if the conclusions aren't more enlightening, I'll keep them to myself.

One thing I know I'll do is use the season-ending data to help reverse-engineer home runs to better normalize the data before plugging it into my little black box, but that's a story for another day.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Todd Zola
Todd has been writing about fantasy baseball since 1997. He won NL Tout Wars and Mixed LABR in 2016 as well as a multi-time league winner in the National Fantasy Baseball Championship. Todd is now setting his sights even higher: The Rotowire Staff League. Lord Zola, as he's known in the industry, won the 2013 FSWA Fantasy Baseball Article of the Year award and was named the 2017 FSWA Fantasy Baseball Writer of the Year. Todd is a five-time FSWA awards finalist.
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