
That’s four times Bregman has ripped a ball that reasonably should be expected to be a basehit, only it went for an out. In summary, Bregman has gone 8-for-11 with a scorched sac fly.
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Beloved cyclist 'foreshadowed' his own death on Texas roads. Game 2’s sacrifice fly left the bat at 102.3 mph, Bregman’s second-hardest hit ball this postseason. Conversely, Bregman is 5-for-11 when his exit velocity is over 95 mph. Only five of those 19 have gone for hits. For Bregman, he has put 36 pitches in play this postseason with 19 of them leaving the bat at less than 89 mph. Thanks to Baseball Savant, we can see the Statcast data on the final pitch of every single at-bat. So what’s going on? This season, Bregman’s average exit velocity (the speed at which the ball comes off the bat) was 89 mph – right in line with where he’s been his entire career, give or take a few tenths, and a nudge higher than the 87.3 mph average exit velocity in his breakout 2017 season. In 26 plate appearances since Game 2 of the ALCS, he has put the ball in play 19 times, but is hitting just .111 in those at-bats. It appears as though Bregman has been extremely unlucky. From that point, however, Bregman has gone 3-for-22 with one extra-base hit - a home run in the Astros’ 9-2 win in Game 4 of the ALCS. After the first six games of this year's postseason - through Game 2 of the Red Sox series - Bregman had eight hits, seven of them singles.