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View Poll Results: What old baseball stat do you find the most overrated? | |||
Pitchers Wins | 27 | 40.91% | |
Batting avg | 3 | 4.55% | |
RBI's | 2 | 3.03% | |
Saves | 28 | 42.42% | |
Hits | 0 | 0% | |
other (please explain the one and why) | 6 | 9.09% | |
Voters: 66. You may not vote on this poll |
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#1
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Most overrated baseball stats????
Many stats that we grew up with have later been found to be fairly bad at describing a player's value. Which stat do YOU think is overrated in this day and age?
Hits? avg? wins? saves? RBI's maybe? I will run a two week poll and hopefully we can have a lively (yet friendly) discussion!
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#2
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my vote goes to pitcher wins because so much of it is out of their hands.
Pitcher A can go 8 give up zero runs and leave with a 1-0 lead, the closer comes in, blows the save and a walk-ff homer gives them the vultured win! (not to mention how much wins are contingent on offense)
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"The large print giveth and the small print taketh away."- Tom Waits |
#3
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The sacrifice fly. Why should a fly ball that scores a run not count as an official AB when a run scoring ground ball does? Saves/blown saves are overrated as well because of how the deck is stacked against middle relievers.
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#4
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You could have 30-40 saves and an ERA of 4.00 or 5.00. That says a lot.
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#5
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I voted wins, but for those who think WAR is a stat id say war is most overrated
http://metsmerizedonline.com/2014/01...hen-drew.html/
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#6
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this is a good point. sac bunt isn't an at bat, sac fly isn't, yet a ground ball that does the same thing is. IMO, it is bad for the hitter to give up an out for a base except when it is very late in the game. I think they should all count towards plate appearances and AB's myself. (In a similar fashion the idea that "you can't assume the double play" is also flawed, it's not like the games are played with blindfolds on, official scorers have lots of tools available to tell whether or not the double play could be assumed. )
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"The large print giveth and the small print taketh away."- Tom Waits |
#7
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I'd love to see a stat for relievers that tracks inherited runners allowed to score.
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#8
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I think, and don't quote me now, that Baseball prospectus tracks this. Fangraphs may too but I have never looked.
__________________
"The large print giveth and the small print taketh away."- Tom Waits |
#9
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I agree that war is the most overrated stat. It is random, fwar and bwar are calculated differently and the formula for bwar was completely changed a couple years ago. For comparing players at different positions, it is completely worthless. |
#10
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It's a formula, even if you aren't a fan of the defensive part of it (and I can see the argument for that) every single player is run through the same formula so the ratios are at least close. (and that's the purpose of WAR, it's there to give a quick thumbnail number to compare. It's not like there is a major difference between a 5WAR season and a 4.8 WAR season, they are pretty much even) Now some people may USE WAR in a wrong manner, but the number itself does exactly what it's designed to do. It's still far better than something like batting avg which tells us pretty much nothing.
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#11
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#12
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BUT, if you look at Blyleven and Bench in particular, Bench played in 2132 games over 16 years (or 133 a year avg) and his 12 years of top production were 69.7 WAR (fWAR) whereas Blyleven has 685 starts over 22 years for his fWAR. So he had 6 more years to earn wins over bench (and ,unlike catchers, he mostly made all of his starts where Bench missed 30 games a year on avg due to being a catcher) One thing to remember is that WAR is a cumulative statistic.If you put up 8 7 WAR seasons for 56 then play 6 more years and only earn 12 total, your career WAR of 68 will end up less than a guy who played 20 years and averaged 3.5 WAR per season. The former player was the better player at their peaks, but they ended up having similar value over their careers.
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"The large print giveth and the small print taketh away."- Tom Waits |
#13
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wow, after a few days it's a dead heat between Wins and Saves! I thought Batting Avg might win the day, but I guess it's a little too ingrained in our minds .
__________________
"The large print giveth and the small print taketh away."- Tom Waits |
#14
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I voted for saves, because all the closer has to do is pitch one inning with his team ahead, the bases empty, and the other team's big guns all pulled for pinch hitters. Back in the day, when closers had to come in with the bases loaded and get out of that jam, then pitch the next couple innings as well, then maybe, but not today.
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#15
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WAR is the best we've got for what it does. It provides a (mostly) context-neutral way of comparing how many extra wins you should expect a player to have produced were he added to a random team. The values it assigns to events (singles, stolen bases, etc.) are based on the linear weight values of those events: basically, how many runs these events have historically generated, on average. (I don't know how far back the current weights go; Tango used, IIRC, five years when calculating wOBA in his book.)
You can quibble with parts of it. My biggest gripe is that it weights pitcher performance by the leverage index of the situation - basically it gives more weight to performance in close and late games than to things that pitchers do in the first inning. Consequently, IMHO, it overrates relief pitchers. And you can (and lots of people do) complain about how it handles defensive statistics (especially since it uses different measures of defense for early players than for more recent ones). But these are quibbles, not objections to the WAR framework. fWAR and bWAR are different stats which measure (slightly) different things. To object to WAR as such because there are two versions is like objecting to batting average because on-base percentage measures a lot of the same things, i.e., it's a criticism that doesn't make a lot of sense. (Although batting average is objectionable on other grounds.) As with any statistic, the important thing is to not misuse it. That Barry Larkin was worth 6.1 WAR in 1991 (which is very good, all-star quality play) doesn't mean that the Orioles should have traded for him, since the Orioles already had a pretty good SS themselves. So that would be a way of misusing it. The problematic stats, like saves and pitcher wins, are problematic because either there are very few situations in which they're useful, or because they're so consistently misused. There's a time and a place for citing wins. For example, if you've managed to win 300 games, you're going to be a pretty good pitcher. Not because wins are a good way of measuring pitcher quality (they're not), but because bad pitchers don't stick around long enough to win 300 games. So if you didn't know anything else about Early Wynn, pointing out that he won 300 games is a good way of pointing out that he was a really good pitcher. But they're not useful for much beyond that. (Because a pitcher's team mates make such a big difference to whether or not he's going to win any particular game.) |
#16
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I picked wins, even over saves. If a pitcher comes in to close a game out, they can only earn a save if the other team is within a couple of runs, or get into a position to tie while the reliever is still on the mound. A pitcher coming in with a six run lead in the ninth won't get a save unless they completely implode, yet still close the game out.
A win is dependent on too many things. A starter can throw 8 innings of ball, surrender a lone run, and get a no decision if they get no run support (as The Big Bang Theory might refer to it, "The Clayton Kershaw conundrum"). Yet another starter throwing seven innings could give up six runs, and still get the win if his team scored ten runs in support. Even though the first pitcher clearly outperforms the second, the second would get the win. That's just ridiculous, in my opinion.
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#17
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just to get back to the war argument
heres a link to the all time war stats: http://www.baseball-reference.com/le...R_career.shtml according to WAR: 1 - Rickey Henderson (who was great) - is better than Mickey Mantle 2 - Phil Niekro - better than pedro martinez? nolan ryan? bob gibson? 3 - Carl Yastrzemski was better than Ken griffey jr??? i can go on and on but i just took a few from the top 70 on the list there. Its a flawed stat, if you even call it a stat, as there are 2 Different WARS made by 2 different places both calculated differently
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#18
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+1 Steve.
I guess I'm just too old school. I look at the basics, and can usually tell if a player is/was good or not. No need to micromanage stats.
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#19
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WAR is a framework that can be developed in many different ways. Baseball-Reference and Fangraphs have the two that are best-known (bWAR and fWAR, respectively). If you want to object to it you can do so in two ways: you can object to the framework as such, or to a specific implementation of it.
If you are going to object to the framework as such you need to argue that there isn't a way to do what it's trying to do, namely, determine how many more wins a player would produce for a random team, beyond what a scrub from AAA could produce. I wouldn't recommend this kind of objection. On the other hand, if you are concerned with specific implementations, the thing to do is to figure out what it is that B-R or Fangraphs (or whomever) does wrong. Consider this. From 2010-2015 on average a team scored 0.481 runs from the start of an inning. If the lead off hitter singles, on average they scored 0.859 runs. (Data from Fangraphs.) So the expected value of a zero-out single is 0.859-0.481 runs. (=0.378 runs) You do a similar calculation for one outs and two outs, runner on first, runner on second, etc., and every possible combination of those. Take the average, and you have the 2010-2015 "linear weight value" of a single. These values are the building-blocks of WAR. So Pete Rose gets credit for (3215 * linear weight value of a single) when calculating his WAR. (Although obviously you don't use 2010-2015 data for Rose.) So if you want to criticize a particular implementation of WAR you can argue that it's got the linear weights wrong - maybe something beyond the event (single, in this case), number of outs, and position of base runners, matters to how many wins a player would generate above a AAA scrub. Or, Baseball-Reference assumes that a team of replacement players would have a .294 winning percentage (= about 47 wins over a 162 game season). You could argue that this is too high or too low. Replacement level players are the kind of guys who play in AAA, but sometimes get called up to the big leagues, but then get sent back down again. Not the top prospects in AAA, but the guys who are just a bit too good for the minor leagues but not quite good enough for the majors. You could criticize setting replacement level at .294 if you could show that these guys actually play at a level above that. Maybe if you took all of the last-guys-on-the-bench and made a team out of them they would win more than 47 games. That's all fair game, although of course you need to have a reason for thinking that they've got something wrong. I happen to think that they do: whether a run is scored in the first inning or the ninth inning doesn't matter to the outcome of a game, but when calculating WAR for pitchers, we weight the ninth inning run more heavily (all else being equal) than the first inning run. That's something that we do when calculating WAR, and a reason to think that we shouldn't do it. So, if you think that there's something wrong with WAR: what's wrong with it? Answering this question will require digging through the formulas used to calculate it, but that's what's required to pose a serious objection to it. (And they're pretty interesting anyway.) Last thing, on player comparisons: Henderson and Mantle. Rickey had about 3400 more plate appearances than Mantle - a much longer career. That's what accounts for the difference. Their WAR totals are almost identical. If they had basically the same WAR, but Rickey's career was much longer, it means that Mantle was a much more talented player. WAR is a counting stat, so it's saying that Rickey produced more wins (above a AAA/25th man player) than Mantle did over the course of his career. But, for each game that they played, Mantle did more to help his team win than Rickey did. Basically the same thing is going on with Yaz and Griffey. Yaz had more than 14000 plate appearances. About 3000 more than Griffey. That's, like, four extra seasons of full-time play. (Remember, Griffey got hurt a LOT.) Yaz has a lead of about 13 WAR over Griffey. 13/4=3.25. A player who produces 3 WAR in a season is above average, but not, like, a star. Since Yaz played the equivalent of four more seasons than Griffey, as long as you think that Yaz could produce at a level that's above average but not really a star, the difference between Yaz and Griffey is reasonable. Niekro. Same deal. The man pitched 5400 innings. If you are any good at all and pitch 5400 innings you are going to win a lot of games for your teams. Gibson pitched only about 70% of the innings that Niekro did. But he has more than 90% of Niekro's WAR. What it's saying is that Gibson was a better pitcher than Niekro, but Niekro won more games for his teams because he pitched so many more innings. Ditto with Martinez. Ryan is a different story. He pitched almost exactly the same number of innings as Niekro. Now, Niekro really was slightly better at preventing runs from scoring (once we account for the parks that the two guys played in). And remember that, while Ryan struck out lots of guys, he also walked everybody and their brother. That makes a difference. |
#20
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Ok just one more example:
Tris speaker better than A Rod? Speaker - 10,195 ab, 117 hr, 1531 rbi, 345 ba, 428 obp, 500 slg A rod - 10,556 ab, 696 hr, 2086 rbi, 295 ba, 380 obp, 550 slg
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#21
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See, I think you are misunderstanding the stat here. "better?" Not necessarily, you have to put it in context. Rickey had more WAR than Mickey mostly because of career longevity. (but also because of defense and baserunning, which are important) Rickey wasn't as good of a hitter as the Mick, but he might have been a more complete player over his entire career. Yaz and Neikro both had very long careers and neither were hampered by injuries the way Griffey was...etc Remember, WAR is a cumulative stat, so good players with long careers will have more WAR than better players with shorter careers often. That doesn't mean they were "better" just good for longer.
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#22
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Speaker wRC+ career= 157, fWAR 130.6 Arod wRC+ career= 141 fWAR 113.0 It's not some huge margin, they both played around 20 years so it's less than a win a season avg, but Speaker was the better hitter. (his .428 career OBP being the difference)
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#23
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I will honestly say I do not understand WAR. I will say stats can be used to make any case you want. The baseball-reference page linked to earlier shows Ted Williams at 14. Anything that does not show Mr Williams as the best ever is flawed IMHO.
EDIT: To add I think saves is the most over rated stat. Last edited by bnorth; 08-24-2016 at 11:45 AM. |
#24
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Here is a link to fangraphs where they explain how they formulate their version of WAR and all the stats that are included : http://www.fangraphs.com/library/misc/war/ ETA: older players may not be getting the full credit (or discredit) for their defense as the stats available back then are not nearly as good as the newer, more accurate one's, so take that into consideration as well.
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"The large print giveth and the small print taketh away."- Tom Waits Last edited by bravos4evr; 08-24-2016 at 01:13 PM. |
#25
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So, what bravos said, and:
WAR measures all aspects of a player's game, not just hitting. Ted was a god of a hitter, but an indifferent to poor fielder. Lots of the guys above him on the WAR list were good fielders, which means that Ted may have been a better hitter than they were, even if he wasn't as good all around. FWIW, Ted is second all-time in wOBA. It's a very different stat than WAR, but if you want an answer to the question "who was the greatest hitter of all time", it's better to look at wOBA than at WAR. wOBA only measures offense, and it's a rate stat, so your wOBA won't go up just because you played a long time. (In both of these respects it is different than WAR.) The only batter in front of Ted in wOBA is Ruth. And while I'm open to the suggestion that Ted was the greatest pure hitter of all time, that it's actually Babe Ruth is a pretty reasonable position to take. |
#26
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__________________
"The large print giveth and the small print taketh away."- Tom Waits |
#27
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#28
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Other. Strikeouts. Pitchers strikeouts mean nothing, outs regardless of how they are gotten are important. I'd take a groundout pitcher over a fly ball pitcher or strike out pitcher any day. 1 pitch 1 out is better than 3 pitches for an out.
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#29
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Batting average is overrated.
Can vastly overstate worth of guys who hit high but not for power and/or who don't get on base via walks, and the opposite.
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#30
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Disagree. Nobody moves up on a strikeout, runners advance all the time on groundouts and of course can score on a sac fly. The flip side I guess is that strikeouts don't result in double plays but I would bet that runners advancing outweighs that. There is a reason the great strikeout pitchers are almost always great pitchers.
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#31
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I agree Pete. Give me a great arm any day on the mound.
That said, great pitching will always put a team in a position to win a game. Pitching is what controls the game. Great pitching can win on any team, however bad pitching will never win regardless of the team the pitcher is on.
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#32
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a K is the best result a pitcher can generate in and of himself, any other out is contingent on BABIP and the quality of his defense.
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#33
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OBP is the most misused stat. If you are arguing for a lead off guy like Tim Raines, I think it is a good metric. However, throwing it out for Ted Williams, to me that is a huge negative. Williams career with RISP BA .333 OBP .518, almost a 200 point gap. As the "best player" on his team, his job is to drive in runs, not get on base. Maybe I am being harsh, but maybe if Williams had sacrificed for his team by expanding his strike zone instead of enhancing his personal stats, he would have more than ZERO World Series rings. |
#34
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Ted Williams's job was to create runs whether he scored them, drove them in or arvanced a runner who eventually scored.
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#35
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Some of that OBP is intentional walks, some of it essentially undeclared intentional walks where the pitcher throws a bunch of poor pitches and takes a chance on the umpire rather than the hitter. Some of it is probably also walks either leading off or with the bases empty which are genuinely just as good as a hit. If he'd expanded his strike zone and swung at a lot of bad pitches, a few things would have happened. He might have a few more hits, but would also hit into a few more doubleplays, fielders choices etc. Whether we like it or not, a players reputation has some effect on the strike calling, if a player is known to swing at nearly anything he doesn't get that little benefit of the doubt on a close pitch. Someone with a good eye and discipline often does. So still fewer walks. And with all that, perhaps he doesn't even get a chance at a WS. As far as I know there's no stat that looks at things more broadly. Most try to isolate performance, but nothing in the game happens in a vacuum. Williams faced "better" pitching than Ruth. But I'd have to ask if that pitching was better on its own, or was better because it didn't have to pitch against a better group of hitters. (Just read an article about how the Pats play in a weak AFC east. Perhaps, or are the teams weak because they have to play the pats twice a year? Just like one point during the early 2000s when the AL east was called weak, but the teams got to play the Yankees and Red Sox more than other teams. ) Steve B |
#36
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WAR is a counting stat. It is the number of wins above the "replacement player" you contribute in a season. WAR is incorrectly used as a rate stat: Al Kaline has a career WAR of 92.5 (meaning he single handedly generated 92.5 extra wins for his team), Wade Boggs has a career WAR of 91.1. Some people would claim Boggs contributed less than Kaline, however Boggs was able to generate 91.1 WAR with 856 fewer plate appearances. I would venture to guess Wade Boggs would have been able to generate 1.4 WAR with an extra856 plate appearances (more than one full season).
Here are the WAR/100PA leaders (at least 8,000 PA) (obviously offensive only): Babe Ruth: 1.535 Mike Trout: 1.343 (added for reference ) Rogers Hornsby: 1.340 Barry Bonds: 1.288 Mike Schmidt: 1.275 Ted Williams: 1.259 Willie Mays: 1.250 Lou Gehrig: 1.163 Ty Cobb: 1.155 Honus Wagner: 1.115 Tris Speaker: 1.115 Mickey Mantle: 1.107 Eddie Collins: 1.029 Hank Aaron: 1.023 Stan Musial: 1.007 Jimmie Foxx: 1.007 Albert Pujols: .965 Alex Rodriguez: .964 Eddie Mathews: .954 Roberto Clemente: .925 Joe Morgan: .885 Wade Boggs: .848 Rickey Henderson: .830 Cap Anson: .828 Al Kaline: .798 Adrian Beltre: .790 Cal Ripken Jr.: .741 Carl Yastrzemski: .687 Additionally, WAR cannot be used to compare players over multiple eras. There is no stat that does this. An example: In 1920, when Babe Ruth played, there were 18.25 million white men between the age of 20-44 and 208 pitchers in the league; so Babe Ruth faced (on average) the best pitcher in a pool of 87,786 people. In 2010, when Alex Rodriguez played, there were approximately 88.62 million men between the age of 20-44 between the US, Japan, DR, Puerto Rico and Venezuela. There were 635 pitchers in the league; so Alex Rodriguez faced (on average) the best pitcher in a pool of 139,558 people. If we use 2010 as the point of reference (to compare older players to the players of today) then every stat, including WAR would need to be adjusted 62.9%. So Babe Ruth's 11.9 WAR for 1920, would be adjusted to 7.5 in 2010, which would be tied for 6th with Albert Pujols. Edited to add: Wins is the most overrated stat. No one really pays attention to saves, the all time career saves leader has never been inducted into the Hall of Fame while holding the title. So, I don't think anyone over rates it. Last edited by jhs5120; 08-25-2016 at 03:21 PM. |
#37
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OBP has been PROVEN to relate directly to wins more than any other single stat. The object of a batter is to not make an out and generate bases. A single and a walk are worth nearly the same as the majority of plate appearances take place with nobody on base. Stuff like RISP is worthless because there is no skill of "clutch" it's just confirmation bias. Good hitters tend to hit good and bad hitters tend to hit bad (and not every RISP situation has the same amount of leverage). Seriously, go look from year to year at RISP numbers for players, they vary wildly. A .300 avg hitter might have a RISP of one year of .360 then the next of .240 then .430 .....etc Generally the larger the sample size the more it will move toward the mean of their career numbers in all situations, but no evidence exists to show that it is a repeatable skill. The job of Ted Williams was to hit the ball hard. That's it. He was there to get on base, (home plate if that was possible with one swing) and not make outs. He has no control over any baserunners that may or may not have gotten on in front of him,(which is why RBI's is such a silly stat for an individual) All he can do is get on base and hit for power. These are the things he can control. Would you really rather have Ben Revere, who in his best years hit .300 with a .335 OBP and .340 slugging, over Jim Thome ,who in his best years hit .270 with a .402 OBP and .580 slugging? defense and base running aside, a team of Thomes blows a team of Reveres out of the water. They get on base more, and they hit for more power these are the two fundamental virtues of a quality hitter. average? it is irrelevant. It's major use is as a describing stat for HOW player accomplished their OBP (along with BB%)
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#38
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#39
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Apart from those three years, the Red Sox finished at least 10 games out every year. Maybe Williams could have gotten them a tad closer, but he couldn't have made up 10+ games in one season.
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#40
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Bill James in his 2003 book ran a computer model that, if I recall the details, put Babe Ruth from 1927 on one of the KC Royals teams, then put a guy who just drew a walk every at bat, and the team with the guy who walked did better.
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Pitching victories are the most overrated stat by far. King Felix had 13 wins a couple years back an a 2.23 era while last year Colby Lewis had 17 wins with a 4.46 era. Wins are dependent on so many things (quality of their offense, opposing pitcher, bullpen, defense, weather, etc).
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#42
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Yup.
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Normally, I'd vote for pitcher wins, but since it's, to me, common sense, that it is vastly overrated, I voted for RBIs, and I'm quite surprised I'm the only one who has said so, to this point.
RBI are entirely dependent on who hits in front of you, so it's a meaningless stat to use to compare hitters. There are other stats that tell better which slugger is better than RBI. |
#44
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Sure, other factors come into play, but it all comes down to the ability of the one on the mound.
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Pitching wins
A lot of folks pick Pitching wins as overrated. Nolan Ryan played on a sub-.500 team most of his career - especially with the Angels in the 1970's. How many more wins would he have had if he played on the Orioles like Palmer, the A's like Catfish, or on the Big Red Machine? His wins totals would be a heckuva lot better, way way better!
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#46
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You can use WAR to compare players between eras. Now, it won't tell you how Babe Ruth would do in today's game. You'd need a time machine to answer that question. But given what it took to win games in Ruth's time, it'll tell you how many victories above a replacement player he added to his teams. And given what it took to win games in today's game, it'll tell you how many wins above replacement ARod contributed to his teams, and those two figures can be compared.
And it's meaningful to compare them. Wins have value in the context in which they're produced - in particular, in the particular seasons in which they are produced. So WAR can help you figure out how much value Ruth produced for his teams, and how much value ARod produced for his. (N.B.: WAR doesn't actually measure value, but it can help with figuring it out.) Even if it's the case that if you put Ruth in a time machine he would only put up 7.5 WAR seasons in today's game, he still generated more value for his teams than ARod did for his. And yeah, Trout is really really good. |
#47
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I agree with this to an extent. The one issue just comes down to defensive production and our ability to quantify it has improved a ton over the last 10 years. The more back in time you go the less reliable defensive numbers are, so we might not have a very accurate picture of the value of some of these old timers. That being said, WAR is still a great "thimbnail" number to use to compare players. It's not perfect, but few things are. It does a well enough job for casual comparison.
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WAR/plate appearance
I like Mike Trout, but it is very very very hard for me to believe that on a per plate appearance basis he is at this point the second best hitter of all time or anywhere close. What is driving his WAR to be so high, he has some nice counting numbers but they don't seem particularly overwhelming? Maybe a small part of it is that he hasn't yet obviously had the usual end of career decline, but that doesn't seem enough to explain it.
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"Maybe a small part of it is that he hasn't yet obviously had the usual end of career decline,"
That's a lot of it. It also helps that Trout is good at everything. He's a great hitter, a great base runner, and, well, an average-ish fielder. Trout has been in the big league for four full seasons. Year All-time WAR rank (position players only) 2012 22nd 2013 100th 2014 292nd 2015 87th 2016 212th (so far) If he keeps up his current pace his 2016 season will be worth 9.8 WAR, tied with Ty Cobb (1909), Nap Lajoie (1910), Ron Santo (1967), Larry Walker 1997), and George Sisler (1920), for 63rd best position player season of all time. That's really, really impressive. This will be fun. Some hall of famers and where their best season ranks all-time among position players: Ruth 1 Yastrzemski 3 Hornsby 5 Gehrig 7 Ripken 11 (tie) Wagner 11 (tie) Cobb 14 (tie) Mantle 14 (tie) Mays 16 Musial 18 Morgan 19 Williams 21 That's all of the hall of fame position players who have had a season better than Trout's best. The only non-HOF player with a season better than Trout is Bonds. Let's keep the list going a bit (and add non-HOF players). Collins 30 Foxx 30 Yount 30 Boudreau 37 ARod 37 Sosa 41 Banks 44 Rosen 48 Speaker 48 Petrocelli 52 Harper 56 Henderson 56 Trout's best season is better than any season Jimmie Foxx, or anybody else on this list, ever put up. Let's skip down a few spots. Carew 68 Griffey 68 Pujols 68 J. Robinson 68 Schmidt 68 Jackson 76 Beltre 82 If Trout keeps up his current pace for the rest of the year he'll have two seasons worth more WAR than these guys. Aaron 87 Biggio 87 Brett 87 Turner 87 As it stands he's already got two seasons better than any season these guys put together. It'll be three if keeps up his present pace for the rest of the year. Baker 100 Heilmann 100 Snider 100 Cash 107 Frisch 107 Giambi 107 Rolen 107 Vaughn 107 He's already got three seasons as good or better than these guys' best. It'll be four if he keeps up his present pace. And remember after this season he'll only have five full years in the big leagues. And that one season from Trout that's not turning up on these lists? That's the year that he won the MVP award. He hasn't had his decline phase yet, and that will pull his rates down. But Trout is really super historically good. He is often compared to Mantle, but by WAR Trout leads Mantle in age 20, 21, and 22. They were basically tied at age 23. It's not until Mantle's age 24 season that he posted a WAR more than marginally higher than Trout will at the same age (this is Trout's age 24 season). |
#50
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