Adamsince1981
New member
- Aug 7, 2008
- 4,745
- 1
It isnt a good idea to use small sample sizes, especially when comparing rookie seasons, when discussing baseball. That was my point.
It got weird when you said you didn't compare Stanton to a veteran and didn't make a projection. I should have let it go....curiosity killed the cat I suppose.
It got weird when you said you didn't compare Stanton to a veteran and didn't make a projection. I should have let it go....curiosity killed the cat I suppose.
sportscardtheory said:Adamsince1981 said:You compared their rookie seasons because Fielder hit 50 HRs in his second full season.
You then went on to make a personal estimate of something in the future(the possibility of Stanton hitting 50 hrs), based on present data(Stanton's 396 AB's). That's called a projection.
No big deal, you just used a small sample size to make a flawed comparison and a realistic projection of Stanton's future.
How is comparing two power hitters' rookie seasons "flawed". lol I didn't say that Stanton would have the same career as Fielder, I simply pointed out the FACT that he hits more HRs per-PA at age 20 than Fielder did at age 22. The fact that it was in less PAs is meaningless. It just means that Stanton COULD have had more HRs in the same amount of PAs. If you really think pointing out that a player hits HRs at a faster pace than another player is meaningless, then more power to you. You seem like you just want to argue. You can't argue against facts. But be my guest to keep trying. ~It makes you seem very smart~