Thread: Baseball stats
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Old 07-03-2022, 11:39 AM
BobC BobC is offline
Bob C.
 
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Ohio
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Quote:
Originally Posted by familytoad View Post
With all the WAR , wRC+, WOBA and other barely discernible stats from today’s modern game, I ask : Do runs scored matter?

Did they ever?

For hitters it used to be all about AVG/HR/RBI.
Now we have have been informed that AVG means nothing and RBI means even less. People like HR still (especially chicks?) but only when they boost your slash ratios��. And if they are a result of optimal exit velocity and launch angle.

But dang it… you only win a baseball game by scoring more runs than your opponent.
Is there an advanced stat about a player’s propensity to score runs?
Maybe the modern math whiz thinks (like RBI) that the stat is meaningless or simply opportunity-based. So we can disregard runs scored ?!?

Not me. I think it’s an important stat. It’s never been highlighted on a baseball card league leaders (as far as I recall).

Scoring runs means getting on base and then helping a team towards wins.
Prevention of runs by a pitcher still seems relevant as there are a half dozen ERA variations for the modern math crowd.

Where’s the love for crossing home plate?
Same goes for starting pitchers and wins. I understand that in today's game it is rare for a starting pitcher to ever complete a game, and how now every manager worries about the number of pitches thrown by their starters, how many innings they're throwing, and to keep them from possibly harming themselves in any way so that when they do perform they can throw at maximum speed and effectiveness. And while pitching, as soon as they start to show the smallest amount of drop-off in their speed and effectiveness during a game, managers tend to get them out of there ASAP.

So now they say Wins as a stat for pitchers are fairly meaningless, and have very little to do with how good they actually are. Yet, isn't Wins the sole, main reason that people actually pay to go to ballgames, or watch/listen to them on TV/radio? Fans follow their respective teams to hopefully see them Win, period! So what if you have a pitcher that can go 3-4 innings every fourth or fifth day, and throw 100 MPH on average during those pitching performances? If after they get pulled early in those games they do start, their team mostly ends up losing because the rest of their pitching staff can't perform at the same level, what use are they really if they keep losing? Sure, some fans will come out just to see that starter perform at a very high level for a few innings every game they're in, but how long will that continue if the team still ends up losing most of those games because that stud starter couldn't go long enough to help insure his team's victory?

It used to be that starting pitchers were expected to pitch an entire game, and get their team the win. As expansion in MLB began, about the same time the use of relievers started becoming more prevalent as well, and the idea and concept of a Closer starter to emerge. In this new, evolving style of pitcher usage, middle and long relievers are actually key to a team's performance and ability to win. Yet, it is the Closer position that seems to get all the attention and adoration from the fans. Why? They only pitch in one inning usually of a nine inning game? Any intelligent, logical person would realize that the Closer likely has much less impact and importance in a game than those that pitched in more innings earlier in the game before him, or that came in during a time in the game when the opposing team was on the verge of scoring and taking control of a game. Yet the supposedly successful Closers seem to get the bulk of the love and attention from the fans. Could it really be because the Closer is the one the fans normally see who actually finishes out the game and is on the mound when their team secures the win, and thus endears themselves to the fans by being the one the fans associate most closely to their teams' victory?

There is an old sports related saying that the best ability, is availability. The fact that old time, successful pitchers would tend to complete games and pitch way more innings than pitchers today, and not suffer injuries and complications from having pitched so much, was likely a big reason why their fans adored them. How anyone in their right mind could ever suggest that someone like Hyun-jin Ryu is a better pitcher than Warren Spahn defies all logic to me. Players are hired and paid to WIN! Fans buy tickets and listen/watch games to see/hear their team WIN! Are the younger generations that seem to have supplanted awards for performance over awards for winning actually changing the overall thinking of the modern fans? I don't think so, and certainly hope not. All the statistics in the world can't always predict who will actually end up winning. It is those unpredictable, intangible traits, that often separate the winners from losers that really excites and endears most sports heroes to their fans. People can create and use all the statistics they want to try and measure, compare, and determine who they think is better than whom, but really, at the end of the day in regards to starting pitchers, isn't the only statistic that truly matters who got the WIN?

Sorry, wasn't trying to hijack the thread. Just seems a lot of people end up forgetting that as the OP said, wins are what ultimately matters. And whoever tends to score the most runs, or prevents the most runs scoring, usually ends up winning.

Last edited by BobC; 07-03-2022 at 11:44 AM.
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