As strikeout totals have climbed in MLB in recent years, two competing thoughts have come along with them: the notion, often espoused by purists or traditionalists, that strikeouts are bad … and the notion, often espoused by newer thinkers, that strikeouts are a natural by-product of a more efficient, better way of hitting.
If you don't land on either extreme, you're left to wonder where on the scale strikeouts really land. This almost comes down to a "guilty until proven innocent vs. innocent until proven guilty" type of argument. That is to say: does striking out matter until it doesn't or does it not matter until it does.
And watching these young Twins hitters — specifically Miguel Sano, but others as well — we have a great test case.
Sano, as La Velle E. Neal III wrote recently, had the most strikeouts in MLB history of any player in his first 150 games — 221, to be exact. He crushed Bo Jackson's record of 204. It's not a record anyone wants to have — Sano wouldn't snap bats over his knee if he liked whiffing — but again we're here to ask: how much does it really matter?
With Sano, as it is with so many young hitters these days, the answer is complicated.
In addition to all those strikeouts, Sano has 62 extra-base hits (including 33 homers) in his first 150 games. He has a robust .363 on-base percentage for his career, a by-product of taking a lot of walks — some of which come from his willingness to take close pitches, which sometimes are called against him for strike three instead of ball four. So you can logically conclude Sano might not be as powerful or get on base as much if he wasn't so willing to strike out.
The counter argument is that strikeouts, on their own, have no chance of being productive outs. Whereas putting the ball in play puts pressure on a defense and might advance runners depending on the situation, strikeouts — in the context of a specific at-bat — achieve nothing.
The Twins seem to be working on getting that message out to Sano, with hitting coach Tom Brunansky urging Sano to be like Miguel Cabrera and take free RBIs when "the infield is back, they are giving it to you. All you have to do is put the ball in play over on the right side."