Right. But if the debate is to bring Canario up to be someone who comes off the bench, we know that BP arms stuff+ goes up especially as the game goes along and you're in tight situations you'll be facing better and better stuff. Realistically, how many starts is Alexander Canario going to get over Ian Happ, Seiya Suzuki, Cody Bellinger, Mike Tauchman and Pete Crow-Armstrong in the OF? Is he going to jump Christopher Morel/Patrick Wisdom as well at DH? The premise of a lot of this is that he'd be a power bat on the bench. His swing and miss is already atrocious in AAA, even when he's playing well. Add in that bat to ball skills matter more and more when we look at stuff increasing and I just don'tthink there's a good scenario for Canario, personally, to see him succeed. Not yet, anyways. None of this is to suggest he's an incapable prospect, but his swing and miss right now is such a red flag that I cannot see much of a reason to think he's going to be anything productive as a guy you'd trust in those kinds of situations off the bench. The overall point isn't that bat to ball is the end all be all, but I think Canario's bat to ball right now is so poor that his bat speed wouldn't make up for the situations he'd be asked to hit in.
If Canario's swing decisions and contact rate from last year were translating, even in his strong run as of today, I'd sing a different tune. And I don't think it's impossible to see Canario get back to that down the road. But as of now, I have little confidence that he'd come up and be anything more than a strikeout machine printing K's. There's some real rust there and even when he's hitting for power, he's striking out. He's got 23 strikeouts over his last 61 PA's and the last time he didn't strike out at least once in a game was August 3rd, while striking out at least twice in half of those games.