And it sounds crazy, but I wouldn't be surprised if a .310 BABIP is a little low for him. Yeah, especially with him changing his swing plane in order to get launch angles more conducive to hitting line drives -- which, he is hitting more line drives. A .378 BABIP was probably a bit of an aberration last year, considering how many fly balls he hit. I was expecting the following to happen, just based on his profile: BABIP goes down while HR/FB goes up. But, with the change in his swing, he might be able to maintain a .330+ BABIP, with how hard he hits it combined with his speed. His infield-hit% of 14.4% led the majors last year. A lot of people thought it was a little fluky and would come down. It's at 14.6% this year. Granted, small sample sizes and all. But he would appear to be one of those freaks that can maintain a high BABIP, because he does a lot of things really well when it comes to hitting.