bigpapiMA32
New member
Hey guys,
I find RBIs to be a horrendous tool to judge a player's value (some players simply get more opportunities). So here is a stat I use to measure RBIs. I go here: http://www.baseballprospectus.com/sorta ... id=1013928
This shows the percentage of runners on base that a given player drives in. But unfortunately it doesn't account for home runs, when a player drives himself in. So if you edit the stats to count a given player as a runner on base each time he hits a homer, you can find a truer RBI value.
For example:
Gonzalez, Adrian 92 RBI / (382+18) ROB = 23
Granderson, Curtis 94 / (333+33) = 25.7
Bautista, Jose 77 / (297+35) = 23.2
Ellsbury, Jacoby 78 / (288+22) = 25.2
Just something to think about, and remember that it only covers one aspect of the game.
I find RBIs to be a horrendous tool to judge a player's value (some players simply get more opportunities). So here is a stat I use to measure RBIs. I go here: http://www.baseballprospectus.com/sorta ... id=1013928
This shows the percentage of runners on base that a given player drives in. But unfortunately it doesn't account for home runs, when a player drives himself in. So if you edit the stats to count a given player as a runner on base each time he hits a homer, you can find a truer RBI value.
For example:
Gonzalez, Adrian 92 RBI / (382+18) ROB = 23
Granderson, Curtis 94 / (333+33) = 25.7
Bautista, Jose 77 / (297+35) = 23.2
Ellsbury, Jacoby 78 / (288+22) = 25.2
Just something to think about, and remember that it only covers one aspect of the game.