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#1
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I guess my whole point behind this thread was that there appears to be some sort of bias by the voters...if Ohtani wins ROY in '18 with the abbreviated (but solid) stats he put up how in the world does Sanchez not win in '16 (over an 11-7 pitcher) with stats quite similar to Ohtani ? |
#2
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These are the OPS+ of the other hitters in the Angels every day line up, 71, 92, 95, 109, 62, 80. Their main reserves were all below 100. The Angels line up was pretty much garbage outside of Trout and Upton. Ohtani wasn't getting better pitches because of where he hit. Gregorious had an OPS+ of 120. 5 of the other 8 Yankees regulars had an OPS+ of 118 or above and 3 reserves were above 100. Andujar had much more protection in the Yankees line up no matter where he he than Ohtani did, even the few game that Upton hit behind him. Nice theory, but it doesn't hold water. A better theory is that Ohtani batted in 34 of the Angels first 85 games and 70 of their last 77 games. So when he became an every day player, he got in a rhythm and produced better numbers. The bottom line is that he was a much better hitter over the whole season, even though he was a part time hitter for more than half of the season. As far as 2016 AL ROY, Fulmer 5.2 WAR Sanchez 3.0 WAR. You may not like it, but we are in the era of advanced stats and voters are using them when voting for awards. Last edited by rats60; 11-13-2018 at 10:54 AM. |
#3
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Everyone is entitled to their own theory about why Ohtani started hitting(again) in August.... Through June he was batting .289, then slumped in July before getting back on track in Aug-Sept. Why does any rookie start off hitting well then begin to slump? ....pitchers didn't start off with sufficient scouting for Ohtani (in spring training he didn't hit well). Once there is sufficient scouting, the pitchers/fielders make their adjustments. From there is up to the batter to adjust again and/or the manager to get make line-up adjustments. If the theory is he got hot in August because of regular playing time, that is not exactly true as he played sporadically starting at DH in only 14 games and appeared as PH in 10. I'll stick with he saw better pitches later in the season than what he saw in July (post pitcher adjustments) because of moving up in the line-up and then having a 30 HR guy batting behind him later . Andujar had Didi for less than a month last season batting behind him. For a few weeks he had Torres behind him before Torres got hot and subsequently moved up in the order. Most of the season he had players like Tyler Austin, Torreyes, Romine, Bird, Etc batting behind him. Not exactly the league's strongest batters. Either way, IMO there is a bias for southern CA teams with voting for these awards. If Ohtani stays in the ML as a batter, I believe he will have a great career. |
#4
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The intangibles were massively in Ohtani's favor, even if you question the stats, and those weren't so clearly against him that you can really take issue with the vote IMO.
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#5
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#6
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Andujar's WAR is knocked for his defense, which Ohtani didn't play either. His oWAR was almost 2 points higher than Ohtani's.
Last edited by packs; 11-13-2018 at 03:45 PM. |
#7
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Unless I am mistaken, a 4.6 OFFENSIVE WAR is greater than a 2.7 Offensive WAR. If you insist upon using WAR to compare these two players, use the one measurement that is comparable for both players, offensive WAR. They are both good players...one had a great season with minimal hype, the other had great hype and a pretty decent season. If hype is enough to win a subjective award, then great. Again, the bias is obvious....a Yankee in 2016 had a similar partial season to Ohtani in 2018 yet loses the award to an 11-7 pitcher. In another day or two nobody will even care. |
#8
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How do you explain just ignoring the pitching? You act like it doesn't matter.
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#9
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Second, in just the 10 games he started, he was a pedestrian 4-2. He barely exceeded the 50 inning limit to no longer qualify for rookie status as a pitcher by throwing 51.2 innings . If he was a closer who threw around 50 innings but had 30+ saves and a low ERA, then great consider the pitching for this award, but he was a starter. Is it really fair to judge a starting pitcher on a mere 10 starts? Do I think the hype of him attempting to be a two-way player helped him with the votes for this award? ....... Absolutely If he sticks with hitting, instead of pitching, he will be a great hitter.....if he has a full season with the bat in his hands next year, there is no doubt in my mind he will be a better hitter than any of the other sophomores. |
#10
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Andujar had a decent season, Ohtani had a historic season. Ohtani had an ERA+ 126 and K/9 11. Of pitchers with 10 starts, that has been done 39 times in baseball history and only the 4th time a rookie has done that. His OPS+ of 152 is 21st all time for rookies with at least 350 PA. Of the 13 players that did it in the ROY award era, 9 won ROY and the other 4 2nd, including Rico Carty who finished 2nd to Dick Allen with OPS+ of 162 to 161. There is no bias other than that of Yankee fans who think that Sanchez and Andujar deserved ROY. Ohtani isn't remotely comparable to Sanchez. Ohtani played a full season, just neither as a full time pitcher or full time hitter, but as a combination of both and led AL rookies in WAR. Sanchez was a distant 2nd to Michael Fulmer in WAR. In both cases the player who had the higher WAR won ROY as they deserved. Claiming inferior players should have won just shows bias. |
#11
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We can debate, compare apples to oranges and disagree all day....nothing is going to change the fact that Andujar had a strong season but did not win this award (which no one will remember in a week anyway) due to the hype surrounding another player who had almost as good of a season. In addition, is Ohtani a real rookie anyway? FIVE years in the NPB? He maybe a MLB rookie by qualifications, but clearly no rookie at the top level. With five years already under his belt, Ohtani should have had a much better season than Andujar did with no top level experience. As far as comparing Sanchez and Ohtani and their partial seasons, they are quite similar, especially percentage wise. You can see how they compared to your previous example of McCovey winning in his shortened season. ..............g...ab...r..h..2b.HR.RBI.BA..OBP..SL G...OPS Sanchez 53 229 34 60 12 20 42 .299 .376 .657 1.032 Ohtani. 104 326 59 93 21 22 61 .285 .361 .564 .925 McCovey 52 192 32 68 9 13 38 .354 .429 .656 1.085 If you feel Andujar and Sanchez's rookie performances are inferior when compared to Ohtani and Fulmer's MLB "rookie" results respectively , you must be........ |
#12
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I don't agree with your assessment of Ohtani being a better hitter. Andujar had over 250 more official at bats and still finished with a significantly higher batting average. There is no way to project Ohtani slugging what he did over another 250 at bats, nor can you project batting average either. If Ohtani hit 30 homers and batted 260 I'd rather have the 297 hitter who got me 27 homers. Andujar had more doubles than Ohtani had homers and doubles combined. Then factor his home run power. He had the better season at the plate hands down. |
#13
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I knew Ohtani was going to win ROY as soon as the talking heads started talking about combining his pitching and hitting WAR.
I mean Andujar had more doubles then Ohtani had total extra base hits. Lack of walks was the biggest thing that hurt Andujar on his overall hitting metrics compared to Ohtani. Andujar got absolutely throttled by his defensive WAR unfortunately. Who knew how much things had changed. Back in 1978 Butch Hobson committed 43 errors and held an .899 FP and he got docked -1.00 on his defensive WAR. Andujar commits 15 errors with a .948 FP and he gets docked -2.2. Ohtani got docked 0 WAR points for playing absolutely no defense. I guess no defense is better then below average defense. I question how valuable a two way star is, when you have to find somebody to replace him in the lineup 60 games a year due to injuries, limitations on his schedule, lack of an actual position, and an inevitable Tommy John surgery. He's a hell of a talent, but having to constantly construct your team baseball strategy around his availability seems pretty silly to me. Ultimately however, ROY really doesn't mean a whole lot. It's just a title. Hell, Walt Weiss won the award once upon a time, simply on his defense. Barring injuries, Gleyber Torres likely becomes the most valuable player of the 3 guys in the AL running this year. |
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