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#1
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He got you there, Bill...5 AM again? Get some sleep, sir!
__________________
. "A life is not important except in the impact it has on others lives" - Jackie Robinson “If you have a chance to make life better for others and fail to do so, you are wasting your time on this earth.”- Roberto Clemente |
#2
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Yeah, I'm not sure what I was thinking when I typed that. Just a brain fart. Sometimes the numbers run together.
Oh hell, it's 5 am again, lol.
__________________
Building these sets: T206, 1953 Bowman Color, 1975 Topps. Great transactions with: piedmont150, Cardboard Junkie, z28jd, t206blogcom, tinkertoeverstochance, trobba, Texxxx, marcdelpercio, t206hound, zachs, tolstoi, IronHorse 2130, AndyG09, BBT206, jtschantz, lug-nut, leaflover, Abravefan11, mpemulis, btcarfagno, BlueSky, and Frankbmd. |
#3
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Yes I think all of those guys should be in with perhaps the exception of Brown due to his appearing on the Mitchell list.
It's a crime Mussina wasn't a first ballot guy as he should have been. and yes for their careers Murray and Kaat provided very similar value, overall. I don't get why you have such a hard time with this. If you play ten years and put up 72 WAR you were a better player than a guy who put up 72 WAR over 20 years, but FOR YOUR CAREER, you provided exactly the same amount of wins above a replacement player. do you think that 2000 pounds of dirt piled slowly is less a ton than 2000 pounds of dirt piled quickly? Kaat was a reliever for 4 of the final 5 years of his career, thus providing very little value on a WAR basis. Kaat 19 seasons of positive WAR contribution - total fWAR 70.9 Eddie Murray 18 seasons of positive WAR contribution- total fWAR 72.0 and like I said, Kaat's peak production period of 1961-1975 he was the 3rd best pitcher behind only Gibson and Gaylord Perry. Eddie Murray's peak production period from 1977-1990 he was 4th best position player behind Schmidt, Henderson and Brett. I think both compare pretty well, they are within 1 WAR for their careers had similar rankings against their peers in their prime and both had similar total years of positive WAR contribution.
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"The large print giveth and the small print taketh away."- Tom Waits |
#4
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Quote:
Last edited by CMIZ5290; 08-11-2016 at 07:40 PM. |
#5
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Quote:
ERA is not a very good stat, it's better than using win and losses, but it doesn't do as good a job at describing pitching performance as we have been lead to believe over the years. FIP and peripherals are better. WAR is the best stat at comparing players across eras in one easy number. It's not perfect, but it's a heckuva lot better than using the old counting stats everyone seems so addicted to. I do think 3000 hits is a milestone for the player's career, but it IS NOT an indicator for a good hitter. Too many fans are hung up on the old ways of judging players, we have found those ways are mostly incorrect. Time to evolve or get left behind, this is the way of things.
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"The large print giveth and the small print taketh away."- Tom Waits |
#6
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Forget it, Kevin, his mind is made up, and logic doesn't seem to apply when his mind's made up. He's like a little kid sticking his fingers in his ears, screaming "lalalalalala" 70.9 and 72.0 are the same thing. Never mind that one player played 20% longer. They clearly provided the same value to their teams.
2,000 pounds of dirt is 2,000 pounds of dirt....really? LOL 3.75 more years played is 3.75 more years played, and stating that "Kaat was a reliever the last four years" is irrelevant. When he was a reliever, he obviously got fewer innings per season. That was factored in by averaging innings pitched per 162 team games played. Murray was an elite player, and was a first ballot Hall of Famer. Kaat was on the ballot for fifteen years, and never even broke 30% of the vote. 75% is required to get into Cooperstown, and Kaat couldn't even get 40% of what was required. Quote:
__________________
Building these sets: T206, 1953 Bowman Color, 1975 Topps. Great transactions with: piedmont150, Cardboard Junkie, z28jd, t206blogcom, tinkertoeverstochance, trobba, Texxxx, marcdelpercio, t206hound, zachs, tolstoi, IronHorse 2130, AndyG09, BBT206, jtschantz, lug-nut, leaflover, Abravefan11, mpemulis, btcarfagno, BlueSky, and Frankbmd. |
#7
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The problem with simply comparing WAR totals for HOF discussions is that WAR doesn't measure value. It measures wins above replacement. Wins are the basic building blocks of value, but value isn't just their sum. How they are distributed matters also.
Look at it this way. An average player will post about 2 WAR in a season. An average team will win 81 games (give or take; more precisely, on average, a team will win 81 games). Say that it takes 90 wins to get into the post season (number for illustration purposes only). There is, therefore, a lot more value to a team to getting to 90 wins than there is to sitting at 81. A lot more value, over and above the extra 9 wins. For example, it's more important to get from 81 to 90 than it is to get from 72 to 81. So a 4 WAR season is more than twice as valuable than a 2 WAR season. And that's the reason that not all 70 WAR careers are of equal value. It's more valuable to have that production concentrated than it is to have it spread out. It's why Sandy Koufax is a reasonably good hall of fame choice, and not a pretty bad one. |
#8
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So a thread about Clayton Kershaw has devolved into a discussion about Jim Kaat?
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#9
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Quote:
Murray-18 seasons of positive WAR, 65.4 WAR in 14 seasons seems like both guys had about the same amount of productive years
__________________
"The large print giveth and the small print taketh away."- Tom Waits |
#10
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Quote:
A- 20% longer is inaccurate when measuring pitcher versus hitter B- you seem to ignore the part where I showed you Eddie Murray was not an elite player (and provided evidence to this FACT) C- you get snarky about my example of value but don't have an argument against it. D- you keep ignoring the part where I showed you Kaat is a top 30 pitcher all time and top 22 since the live ball era. why the omission?
__________________
"The large print giveth and the small print taketh away."- Tom Waits |
#11
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In one thread you argue that Ichiro was more or less an average player and now in this thread you're arguing that Jim Kaat is one of the all time best pitchers.
I will use your own methods against you to demonstrate why it doesn't make sense to view baseball players the way you do. You said Ichiro was only 5 percent better than an average player based on RC+. Well, Jim Kaat's ERA+ is only 108, that makes him just 8 percent better than a league average pitcher. |
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