Do we actually know that this whole ball thing hurt the Cubs offense more than other teams? I know the general theory, that guys like Schwarber, Bryant, Baez hit longer home runs than the average player, but I'm wondering if that's a team wide thing, and if it's more selective memory (people remember the bombs and think every HR they hit is 440, while filtering out all the basket shots). It'd be nice if it was true, but seems...hopeful. I don't know where to find FB distance distribution by player, but it does show up in HR/FB rates: Here are league-wide HR/FB rates, with the percent increase over 2014 in parentheses 2014: 9.5% 2015: 11.4% (20% increase) 2016: 12.8% (35%) 2017: 13.7% (44%) 2018: 12.7% (34%) 2019: 15.3% (61%) Now here's where a few of our guys are since 2015: KB - 15.8, 18.8, 16.0, 11.2 (injury), 18.0 Schwarber - 24.2, 0 (injury), 24.0, 24.5, 24.1 Rizzo - 14.6, 16.2, 16.9, 13.6, 19.9 Javy - 6.3 (only 80 PAs), 12.7, 19.7, 24.3, 24.4 Willson - N/A (Minors), 23.5, 25.9, 9.3, 27.3 It really looks like it may have helped Rizzo, but those other guys just kept doing what they do. I think it makes intuitive sense too. A FB that would go 350 ft in normal conditions gains a substantial amount of HR probability with a 10% bouncier ball. But a ball that would normally go 400 ft gains very little (basically only balls hit to straightaway CF).