He was also injured in 2013.
Through August 26th (123 games) Cabrera was hitting .359/.450/.688 with 43 HRs and 130 RBIs. He reaggravated an abdominal injury that game.
From then until the end of the season (25 games) he hit .284/.396/.333 with 1 HR and 7 RBI.
And in the playoffs he only hit .262/.311/.405.
He went from challenging for the greatest RHH season in MLB history to a replacement level player.
My bally sports app does something really cool where when I try to stream it on my TV through the fire stick it puts me on the national network and says Detroit isn't part of my TV package for some reason, so I can't watch Tigers games. When I use the same cable login on the same wifi on my laptop it lets me watch Detroit games though.
Yes, so much of the fangraphs trade analysis is just which team maximized the salary/WAR ratio.
How'd that work out for the Cubs when they traded for Quintana instead of Verlander?
That was Mize who threw the no-hitter in his first start in AA. Faedo basically came in overweight and his stuff and declined in his first season. He survived a in A+ but with concerns about his K rate and velocity, and he got rocked as soon as he got to AA. He was dropped way down on most top Tigers prospects lists after his first season. His Velo actually bounced back a bit in his second season and he performed solidly in AA.
Im saying it's unlikely he's striking out so much because he's too aggressive at the plate.
Players who have plus walk rates are almost never over aggressive chasing pitches out of the strike zone.
His walk is 11%, so his strikeout rate being high isn't because he's being too aggressive.
He's either not aggressive enough and takes too many strikes, or he is swinging and missing a bit much, or some combo of the both.