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  #1  
Old 10-01-2014, 06:40 PM
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Bill Gregory
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Perezfan,

Actually, yes, statistics can and do accurately portray what players did in clutch situations.

You gave the example of Rod Carew never getting a clutch hit when it mattered, just tons of meaningless singles in blowouts and lopsided games.

Here is a link to Rod Carew's career splits, courtesy of Baseball Reference .com.

Actually, Rod Carew was a fantastic hitter in the very situations you said he was so poor in. Statistical analysis disproves your statements about Carew. Maybe you can reexamine your stance on statistical analysis in general.

First, examine Carew's career numbers when he came to bat with runners in scoring position:



Carew was a career .339 hitter with runners in scoring position. Quite simply, when men were on base, Rod Carew was the man you wanted at the plate, either to move the runners up further, or to drive them in.

What about clutch stats, breaking down the various situations?



Again, Rod Carew was outstanding. When he came to the plate with two outs, and runners in scoring position, he was a .310 hitter. When he came to the plate in a tie game, he was a .323 hitter. He was a .344 hitter when his team was ahead, and a .318 hitter when his team was behind. Carew has a phenomenal hitter in pretty much any situation you could think of.

Finally, in terms of leverage, Carew was again, outstanding. What is leverage? It is a quantification of the plays within a game that have the greatest impact on win probability. Doing well in high leverage situations means you are helping your team to win.

How did Carew do in the most critical points in games for his entire career? spectacularly. He was a career .318 hitter in high leverage situations. In plain English, this means that when Carew came to the plate during the most critical moments in a game, he came threw.



Any way you look at it, Rod Carew was actually a highly successful clutch hitter. He was not by any stretch of the imagination just a singles hitter who padded his stats in meaningless games.

Quote:
Originally Posted by perezfan View Post
Numbers like this are great, and are fun to analyze. But the exercise doesn't really portray what these players did in clutch situations.... when the game was on the line, and it really mattered most.

Rod carew, for example, probably exhibits pretty favorable numbers (admittedly, I'm just guessing). But I can't ever recall that guy getting a clutch hit, when it truly mattered. Yes- tons of meaningless singles in blowouts and lopsided games. But watching the Angels play day in and day out, I just can't recall one situation where he really came through in a nail-biter. Plus, I don't believe he ever played for a pennant-winner (another key factor not captured by the metrics).

Didn't necessarily mean to pick on Carew... he was a great hitter. To me it's more about the player's contribution to the team when it truly mattered. And subsequently, the feelings that player elicited from us as fans. I know none of this makes Dunn a Hall-of-Famer... it probably knocks him down a peg or two lower, if anything

Just saying there's more to it than the numbers can convey.
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Last edited by the 'stache; 10-01-2014 at 08:16 PM.
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  #2  
Old 10-01-2014, 06:54 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RichardSimon View Post
You had to be a Mets fan in the 80's and watch 100+ games a year to appreciate Keith Hernandez. Nobody ever, before or since, could play first base the way he did. About 5 years ago I actually saw him on the subway and told him he was the best first baseman I ever saw. He smiled and profusely thanked me.
I think he should be in the Hall of Fame.
Finally, somebody who understands why I am so pro Keith Hernandez being in the Hall of Fame. He transformed the position. He was absolutely spectacular with a glove on.

We can draw comparisons between John Olerud and Keith Hernandez until we're blue in the face. But Olerud played at a time when offenses in general were much more productive than when Hernandez played. Don't believe me?

Major League Baseball offensive averages year by year

Keith Hernandez played from 1974 to 1990. John Olerud played from 1989 to 2005.

During Hernandez' career, the average runs per game ran between 4-4.50. During Olerud's career, that jumped up to about 4.50 to 5.0 +. It was a hitter's era.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Tabe View Post
Even more amazing is that they needed a miracle in game 6 of the NLCS to even get to the World Series (does anybody REALLY think they were beating Mike Scott in game 7? I think not.) and a whole lot of luck in games 6 & 7 of the World Series to win the one title they did get.

But, yeah, really that group should have won at least one more. Same way I feel about the Tigers teams of the 80s.
Agreed.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Tabe View Post
He is undoubtedly the best defensive 1B I've ever seen. Absolutely amazing player.

Question: If you could draft any 1B from the last 50 years, is he your #1 pick?
I don't know if he would be #1. When everything is considered, he's awfully close. He didn't bring the power. But he could do everything else.

http://www.baseball-reference.com/leagues/MLB/bat.shtml

Look at some of the things he did with the glove especially.
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  #3  
Old 10-01-2014, 08:16 PM
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"I don't know if he would be #1. When everything is considered, he's awfully close. He didn't bring the power. But he could do everything else. "

Awfully close to Albert Pujols? Come on.

I would also take Mattingly, Frank Thomas if you count him although he did DH as much or more as play first, and Bagwell, off the top of me head.
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Last edited by Peter_Spaeth; 10-01-2014 at 08:16 PM.
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Old 10-01-2014, 11:55 PM
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Bill...

On the Carew thing, I really appreciate the time and incredible effort you put into that analysis. Very impressive, and I'm sure he did better in clutch situations than I was giving him credit for. I really didn't witness much of his earlier career with Minnesota.

My friends/family/co-workers' observations all occurred during his time in Anaheim- and the futuility waiting for him to deliver a clutch game-winning hit was off the charts. It eventually escalated to the point that we could only laugh about it. Of course the next day, the score would be 9 - 1 (whether winning or losing), and Carew would be 4 for 4. We all lamented... where were those hits when we needed them?

I guess you just had to live through it to fully understand. Might have been an isolated period, and thus not showing up in his career stats. Anyway, your analytical skills are incredible and I will defer to your expertise

Last edited by perezfan; 10-01-2014 at 11:56 PM.
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  #5  
Old 10-02-2014, 01:18 AM
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edit: letting the guy retire in peace...

Last edited by chaddurbin; 10-02-2014 at 01:20 AM.
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  #6  
Old 10-09-2014, 11:43 AM
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Just received the SI this week and the last page is a article title "Dunn and Done" about Dunn's retirement with a quick comparison to Jeter.

From the article:
Quote:
Dunn, essentially, could do only three things: hit home runs, walk and strike out. Just under half of his 8,328 plate appearances ended with one of theat trio, a higher ratio than any other player in history with 4,000 plate appearances.
It is says just under half but the numbers are 4158 (462 HR, 1,317 Walks, 2,379 SO) to his 8,328 PA so that is 49.93%.

The article ended with:
Quote:
Two weeks ago SI devoted 12 pages to Jeter as he reached the final measures of his swan song. Dunn gets these 723 words. He'd tell you that they were 723 words too many.
I would agree, but this was an interesting case study and led to a great conversation about a single stat HOFers and what constitutes a HOFer.

Last edited by bn2cardz; 10-09-2014 at 11:44 AM.
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  #7  
Old 10-09-2014, 11:52 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bn2cardz View Post
It is says just under half but the numbers are 4158 (462 HR, 1,317 Walks, 2,379 SO) to his 8,328 PA so that is 49.93%.
What were they thinking?
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Old 10-09-2014, 12:13 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Runscott View Post
What were they thinking?
Who? The ones that paid him $113 million?

Or is this in reference to me putting the specific numbers? My point was that they said just under half. To me that could have been anywhere between 40%-50%. Yet it really was right about 50% and if they rounded to say 50% no one would have faulted them. I guess I just like specifics ,

What is even more interesting about that is that the SO is more than the other two stats combined (specifically 133.73% of the other combined totals, or 28.57% of his PA).
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