Michael Harris II Is On Fire

At the All-Star break, Michael Harris II was heading for his worst season as a professional. His solid defensive skills couldn’t make up for his woeful 47 wRC+, a .210/.234/.317 batting line that had neither on-base skills nor power. Between a league-low walk rate and only six homers, Harris had “accumulated” -0.8 WAR, a shockingly low number for the Braves standout.

Only two Rockies, Brenton Doyle and Michael Toglia, had worse numbers. Since the All-Star break, Michael Harris II has been one of the best hitters in baseball. In a mere 30 games, he’s racked up 2.2 WAR thanks almost entirely to his offensive prowess. He’s hitting a bruising .398/.413/.732, good for a 217 wRC+. That power outage? Forgotten.

Harris has more home runs since the break (nine) than before it. Only two players in baseball – Nick Kurtz and Shea Langeliers – have a better wRC+ over that time span, or more WAR. It can be hard to hold two opposing ideas in your head, particularly when those two ideas are “Michael Harris can’t hit” and “Michael Harris is one of the best hitters in baseball.”

One purposefully silly way of saying it: Harris has accumulated 158% of his 2025 WAR in the second half of the season. Another wild thing about this ridiculous tear: Between when I filed this piece on Monday afternoon and when it was published on Tuesday, Harris went 4-for-4 with a home run and gained 16 points of wRC+ and 0.3 WAR.

For the rest of this article, the numbers I use are updated through the end of play on Sunday. It’s unquestionably true that almost anything can happen for 100 plate appearances, but this is stretching the limits of “almost anything.” You don’t run a 200 wRC+ for a month on accident. You don’t run a 47 wRC+ for half a season on accident either.

I had to investigate. The greatest weakness in Harris’ game happens to be one that I’ve spent a bunch of time thinking about, in a broad sense, this year: He chases a ton of pitches. When he broke onto the scene in 2022 by winning Rookie of the Year, he walked only 4.8% of the time and posted a 137 wRC+ anyway.

When he backed that season with 3.9 WAR in 2023, he walked only 4.6% of the time and still managed a 116 wRC+. In each of those years, he chased nearly as much as anyone in baseball as part of a swing-happy approach. It might have kept his walks down, but you can understand why Harris wanted to swing so much; when he made contact, good things were happening.

By 2024, the trade-off didn’t seem to be working as much. He still walked only 4.9% of the time and still chased around 40% of pitches outside the strike zone, but the excellent results on contact fell off a bit; less power, lower BABIP, and a below-average offensive line for the first time in his career.

That brings us to this year: more chase, fewer walks, and a power collapse leading to unplayable offense at the break. It’s an easy story to tell in your head. Harris’ swing-first tendencies lead to worse swings and declining damage on contact, but he leans into the slump by swinging even more to try to pull out of it.

More swings means worse swings, worse swings means worse contact, and the two effects keep feeding on each other in a vicious downward spiral. So Harris dialed back his aggression to career norms and started to succeed again, right? Wrong: Oh, so he’s just getting lucky with some batted balls falling, flattering his wOBACON, right? Wrong again:

Yes, he’s beating his expected stats by a smidgen, but that’s not the big story here. He’s hitting the ball much harder and getting it in the air more often, leading to meaningfully more valuable batted balls. Sure, this is small sample theater, but the movie playing in that theater is a summer blockbuster, full of huge explosions and crowd-pleasing action.

What has Harris changed? It’s actually fairly simple – he’s attacking in good attacking situations more often. We think of all swings for a given player as roughly equal, but that isn’t the case. Where the ball crosses home plate is incredibly important. When a batter swings at a pitch that’s three inches outside, the odds of success even on contact are low. When they swing at one right down the middle, the chance of contact goes up, but the increase in expected production on contact is far more important.

Separate the hitting zone up into four concentric quadrants: heart of the plate, shadow of the plate, chase zone, and waste pitch zone. Swings that make contact in the heart zone produce a .403 wOBA and 27 home runs per season. Swings that make contact in the shadow of the plate have a .373 wOBA and 12 home runs per season.

The chase zone, on the other hand, has an .312 wOBA and only 3 home runs per season for players who hit those swings into play. Swinging at pitches in this zone can be a recipe for disaster, especially when you consider that Harris is doing it frequently. He’s hitting .293 with a .411 slugging percentage on chase zone swings.

Swinging at pitches out of the zone has an .181 wOBA and only 1 home run per season. Swinging at pitches in this zone can be a great way to make contact, but Harris isn’t doing it enough to take advantage of this strategy.

I looked into Michael Harris II expecting to find some universal truth of aggressive hitters. Instead, I found chaos and impermanence, similar approaches feeding different outcomes. I think that’s just how baseball is; if you try to fit it to a strict blueprint, you’ll be disappointed.

Sometimes you just have to look at a guy going from completely lost to utterly unstoppable and say, “OK, fine, that’s just the breaks of the game.”

In order to see what happens when more aggressive hitters become successful again, I devised a simple test. I took the 2024 season and sliced it in half at the 81-game mark.

For every hitter with 200 plate appearances in each half, I noted the difference between their first- and second-half performance as well as their chase rate.

I also looked for any correlation between swing rate and wRC+ variation. The only problem is that I couldn’t find any. Oh, you want more specifics? There was a .001 r-squared between chase rate and the absolute value of wRC+ change.

There was a .002 r-squared between total swing rate and the absolute value of wRC+ change. The 25% of batters who chased most often had an average change of 27.3 points of wRC+ from one half of the season to the next.

The 25% of batters who chased least? They had an average change of 27.1 points of wRC+ between halves. In other words, there’s no evidence that a swing-happy approach makes your output meaningfully more volatile.

My theory is that there are two countervailing effects. Batted ball results are inherently extremely random; this we know. Naturally, then, if more of your output is made up of those, each individual event is going to be more random and variable, particularly in small samples.

But that “in small samples” is kind of the key. Players who rarely strike out or walk have more batted balls. The law of large numbers comes into play here; it’s easier to have an outlier BABIP or wOBACON if you put 25 balls in play than if you put 100 in play.

The contact-happy hitters might have more balls in play, more chances for the BABIP gods to decree fortunate or unfortunate outcomes – but pray to those gods enough, and their blessings will converge on the mean.

What does this mean for Harris in particular? It means that you shouldn’t read too much into half a season of even awful performance. The actual outputs, the results on contact? They’re wildly noisy, but the constituent parts of Harris’ 2025 season are going to end up looking a lot like his previous years.

Similar swing decisions, similar chase rates, similar walk and strikeout numbers. Honestly, his batting line is probably going to end up looking a lot like his previous years, just with a very strange path to getting there; he has a career 109 wRC+, and we’re projecting him to hit at about that level for the remainder of the year, finishing with a 92 wRC+ and around 20 homers.

Standard stats, wild path. Figuring out what will happen next is hard! You might think that a hitter who is one of the worst everyday regulars in baseball for months will keep doing that. You might think that the sweet-hitting Rookie of the Year from 2022 will keep hitting.

You might think that someone with a 200 wRC+ for a whole freaking month must be a great hitter. All of these things are mostly true. And yet none of them are completely true, because baseball is always complex and never predictable.

Will Harris’ newfound in-zone aggression keep working? Sure, when he’s going well, it’ll often be because he’s jumping on great pitches to hit early. But sometimes he’ll go poorly, and the opposite will happen.

You can’t be as aggressive as Harris is on pitches in the zone without plenty of flailing swings, and getting behind in the count is particularly likely for free swingers like him. On the other hand, that free swinging unlocks some awesome results; the best time to hit is often early in the count — before pitchers can break out their lab-honed secondaries in strikeout situations — and Harris does that quite frequently.

The only real constant is change. I looked into Michael Harris II expecting to find some universal truth of aggressive hitters. Instead, I found chaos and impermanence, similar approaches feeding different outcomes.