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Ian Happ might be the most confounding player on the Chicago Cubs.
Every season he seems to produce the same profile: around 20–25 home runs, a strong on-base percentage, and a wRC+ comfortably above league average. Over the last four seasons he’s also quietly accumulated more than 13 WAR while playing nearly every day in left field.
And yet, if you spend any time around Cubs Twitter or baseball message boards, you know the debate never really stops. Is Ian Happ actually a key piece of the lineup, or is he a player the Cubs should replace?
In this episode of CubsPS+, I take a deep dive into Ian Happ’s performance over the last four seasons and try to put his production into context across Major League Baseball.
I look at how Happ ranks among qualified MLB hitters, how he compares to other outfielders around the league, and where his offensive numbers stack up using metrics like wRC+, WAR, OPS, walk rate, and strikeout rate. I also dig into leverage splits and situational hitting to see whether the common criticism that Happ “isn’t clutch” actually holds up in the data.
Along the way, I explore what a 3-WAR player really means in today’s game, how much that level of production typically costs on the open market, and why players with Happ’s statistical profile tend to show up on winning teams more often than fans might realize.
I’m not arguing that Ian Happ is a superstar. He’s not. But when you zoom out and look at the consistency of his production, the numbers paint a much clearer picture of what he actually brings to the Cubs.
Sometimes the most interesting players in baseball aren’t the obvious stars or the struggling role players. Sometimes they’re the ones who quietly produce year after year while the conversation around them never quite settles.
That’s exactly what makes Ian Happ such a fascinating player to analyze.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
By Bleacher Bunch Network:4.4
5959 ratings
Ian Happ might be the most confounding player on the Chicago Cubs.
Every season he seems to produce the same profile: around 20–25 home runs, a strong on-base percentage, and a wRC+ comfortably above league average. Over the last four seasons he’s also quietly accumulated more than 13 WAR while playing nearly every day in left field.
And yet, if you spend any time around Cubs Twitter or baseball message boards, you know the debate never really stops. Is Ian Happ actually a key piece of the lineup, or is he a player the Cubs should replace?
In this episode of CubsPS+, I take a deep dive into Ian Happ’s performance over the last four seasons and try to put his production into context across Major League Baseball.
I look at how Happ ranks among qualified MLB hitters, how he compares to other outfielders around the league, and where his offensive numbers stack up using metrics like wRC+, WAR, OPS, walk rate, and strikeout rate. I also dig into leverage splits and situational hitting to see whether the common criticism that Happ “isn’t clutch” actually holds up in the data.
Along the way, I explore what a 3-WAR player really means in today’s game, how much that level of production typically costs on the open market, and why players with Happ’s statistical profile tend to show up on winning teams more often than fans might realize.
I’m not arguing that Ian Happ is a superstar. He’s not. But when you zoom out and look at the consistency of his production, the numbers paint a much clearer picture of what he actually brings to the Cubs.
Sometimes the most interesting players in baseball aren’t the obvious stars or the struggling role players. Sometimes they’re the ones who quietly produce year after year while the conversation around them never quite settles.
That’s exactly what makes Ian Happ such a fascinating player to analyze.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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