In all, it was another solid year for Harrison. The jack-of-all-trades for the Pittsburgh Pirates dipped in production every so slightly (.283/.311/.388 in 2016 versus .287/.327/.390 in 2015), which marked the second-straight season he has fallen in each of the slash line categories. However, I’d imagine if you asked most GMs if they’d take a utility player with speed and solid defense who can hit .280, they’d take it.
However, a deeper dive might point those GMs in another direction. Depending on what metric you put the most weight, Harrison actually had a bad year. He only had a wRC+ of 87 (100 is league average) but if you are more of a wins above replacement guy, he actually was worth more in 2016 (1.