The pick is in, and the Washington Nationals selected infielder Chris Hacopian from Texas A&M. Hacopian is one of the best pure hitters in the draft with a rare blend of contact skills, power and plate discipline. He is also a local product, who went to Winston Churchill High School and the University of Maryland before transferring.
This selection is all about the bat. That is where Hacopian is going to be providing his value. There is a chance that Hacopian can
stick at second base, but he is not much of a fielder or a runner. However, the kid can mash, and at the end of the day, that is the thing you are most looking for.
Between college and a number of summer leagues, Hacopian has just over 1,000 plate appearances recorded on Baseball Reference. In those plate appearances, he has 128 walks and 83 strikeouts. He has never struck out more than he has walked in his life. Hacopian just has rare contact skills, and never misses a fastball.
When you look at his underlying data from this season, it is very impressive. Hacopian’s exit velocities and plate discipline numbers are good, but the contact skills are where he really shines. His zone contact rate of 92.7% is rare. Most guys who make that much contact are slappy hitters like Luis Arraez, but Hacopian packs a punch as well.
This season Hacopian played through some injuries at Texas A&M. He still hit .319 with a .983 OPS while walking more than he struck out though. However, he was not quite as dominant against SEC competition as he was in the Big 10 at Maryland though. The injury and some bad batted ball luck could explain that.
If you could poke one hole in his offensive game, it would be that Hacopian hits more ground balls than you would like. However, the Nats have done a good job at getting hitters to elevate more consistently. They have done it with James Wood, Luis Garcia Jr. and Jacob Young.
Honestly, Hacopian has some similarities to Garcia, though he has better plate discipline. Yesterday, I wrote about how rare Garcia’s hit/power combination is, and Hacopian has a similar thing. Like Garcia though, there is a chance that Hacopian might have to move to first base at some point.
The hope is that Hacopian will tap into a little bit more power. He is already an awesome hitter, but that would make him even better. If he can do that, the bat will play at first base easily. This is just a guy who rolls out of bed and rakes.
As we mentioned at the top, the local connection is very fun as well. Hacopian went to high school in the DMV and played with his brother at Maryland for his first two years. We already have a local star in James Wood, and hopefully Hacopian can be another.
Hacopian was heavily linked to the Nats by Keith Law, who has been on this for a while. We wrote about Hacopian as a potential option all the way back in December. This is a 60 grade hitter who has a chance to have at least average, if not better power. The defense and speed are not there, but clearly Paul Toboni and the draft room just fell in love with the bat. Welcome home Chris Hacopian.













