Brewers Video
It's been a joy to watch Brice Turang play second base for the Brewers. He's showed the ability to throw accurately and strongly on the run. He's demonstrated good body control and a nose for the lead runner. He's part of the team's fielding phalanx. Offensively, though, Turang has been a mess.
In 84 plate appearances, Turang has struck out at an alarming rate, north of 30 percent of the time. He's walked just five times all season. That's not fully disqualifying, of course. Rookies nearly always struggle to control the strike zone. Turang's iffy approach doesn't wash away the value of his glove, nor of his baserunning.
To the problem of all those strikeouts and so few walks, though, Turang adds the compounding one of not driving the ball when he does make contact. His Hard Hit Rate this year is around 33 percent, lower than three-quarters of qualifying hitters. Over 43 percent of his batted balls are poorly-hit grounders, the 14th-highest figure for any hitter with at least 50 batted balls this year. He's not lifting the ball or hitting it hard, and even his left-handedness and his good speed haven't been redeemable for enough singles to make up for those shortcomings.
The team has done everything it can to shield Turang from bad matchups. Not counting switch-hitters, only Jesse Winker has taken a larger share of his plate appearances against opposite-handed pitching so far. That Turang's overall line (.228/.274/.329, 72 DRC+ according to Baseball Prospectus) has been amassed under the most favorable set of conditions the team could muster only reinforces how badly things have gone for Turang at the plate.
If Luis Urias were healthy, Turang would probably already be in Nashville. As it is, his defense and the team's need for it have kept him around. It was worth giving him a chance to work through adversity, too. If he hasn't busted out by the end of this Western sojourn, though, the team should swap him out with Abraham Toro and see how the more veteran infielder handles some chances. Toro is a switch-hitter, capable of playing both second and third base. Mike Brosseau and Owen Miller can handle second base, too. All three have, right now, more viable big-league bats than Turang's. Brian Anderson can hold down third base and obviate any need to feel thin at the hot corner due to needing those guys at second more often, especially now that Tyrone Taylor is back from the injured list.
By no means is it too late for Turang to discover something that works and emerge as an important, everyday player for Milwaukee for years to come. Undeniably, though, his first taste of MLB pitching has left him looking overmatched, and the team shouldn't wait around long for him to turn things around. Their alternative options are too good; their lineup is not quite deep enough; and the need to win games is too urgent for that.







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