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thefasterblade
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- Aug 8, 2008
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Curtis is going to win it. Brace yourselves, doubters.
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RL24 said:I've been watching his BA creep up, but that 0-3 yesterday hurt.
And... embrace themselves? What do you mean? Maybe... brace themselves? Or you want them to give themselves a hug or something? Accept themselves for what they are? I'm totally lost...
:lol:
AndruwHRJones said:thefasterblade said:On pace for 149 Runs, 45 Home Runs, 132 RBI and 31 SBs.
I understand he doesn't have an insane average, but this isn't Carlos Pena here. A .275 average is very respectable.
The AL MVP has only gone to a player who hit under .300 (14) times if my count was correct since 1911.
Additionally, only 4 players have had an avg under .283 and won the AL award. Two of the four were HOF's (Killabrew and Berra) and another was Maris and his 61 HR's.
I didn't bother looking at the NL MVP award winners, but the evidence seems pretty clear to me that unless his other stats are ridiculously overwhelming, his batting average is going to have to come up very significantly if he stands a chance to win.
Ah, sure, with runners in scoring position he's got an edge, but how about ANY runners on base (not including solo HR)?AndruwHRJones said:vwnut13 said:Wes said:The "something is up" is that those are three of the best players in baseball. No mystery there.
Unless Granderson is stealing home at an alarming rate his teammates are driving him in. Granderson is a top candidate, but is 5th out of the 5 discussed in the past few posts by all measures of individual effectiveness. RBI and Runs scored are no better a measure of a hitter's performance than Wins and Losses are of a pitcher's.
Why is it that Granderson has driven in more runs than Gonzalez?
Gardner's OBP is 0.357 and Jeter's is 0.350.
Ellsbury's OBP is 0.370 and Pedroia's is 0.399.
It would seem that Gonzalez has more opportunities to drive in runs considering the players in front of him get on more often. And let's not forget that Granderson has driven in more runs with a .059 disadvantage in batting average.
With two of the top 4 MVP candidates behind Ellsbury why hasnt he scored a ton more runs?
You actually make the point for Gonzalez here, not Granderson. If you dig a little deeper into the actual stats, you will notice this:
With runners in scoring position:
Granderson = 128 at bats, .250 avg, 57 RBI
Gonzalez = 148 at bats, .345 avg, 70 RBI
So while Gonzalez has had more at bats, he is taking advantage of the opportunities probably as best as you can ask a player to do with a .345 avg. While Granderson is batting .250. So instead of asking why Granderson has more RBI's than Gonzalez, you should be asking yourself why Granderson doesn't have more than he has?
As for Ellsbury, he has scored 89 runs, 3rd best in the majors this year. While Granderson has a decent amount more, not sure how being 3rd in the majors is a negative?
D-Lite said:Ah, sure, with runners in scoring position he's got an edge, but how about ANY runners on base (not including solo HR)?AndruwHRJones said:vwnut13 said:Wes said:The "something is up" is that those are three of the best players in baseball. No mystery there.
Unless Granderson is stealing home at an alarming rate his teammates are driving him in. Granderson is a top candidate, but is 5th out of the 5 discussed in the past few posts by all measures of individual effectiveness. RBI and Runs scored are no better a measure of a hitter's performance than Wins and Losses are of a pitcher's.
Why is it that Granderson has driven in more runs than Gonzalez?
Gardner's OBP is 0.357 and Jeter's is 0.350.
Ellsbury's OBP is 0.370 and Pedroia's is 0.399.
It would seem that Gonzalez has more opportunities to drive in runs considering the players in front of him get on more often. And let's not forget that Granderson has driven in more runs with a .059 disadvantage in batting average.
With two of the top 4 MVP candidates behind Ellsbury why hasnt he scored a ton more runs?
You actually make the point for Gonzalez here, not Granderson. If you dig a little deeper into the actual stats, you will notice this:
With runners in scoring position:
Granderson = 128 at bats, .250 avg, 57 RBI
Gonzalez = 148 at bats, .345 avg, 70 RBI
So while Gonzalez has had more at bats, he is taking advantage of the opportunities probably as best as you can ask a player to do with a .345 avg. While Granderson is batting .250. So instead of asking why Granderson has more RBI's than Gonzalez, you should be asking yourself why Granderson doesn't have more than he has?
As for Ellsbury, he has scored 89 runs, 3rd best in the majors this year. While Granderson has a decent amount more, not sure how being 3rd in the majors is a negative?
Granderson: 304 runners on any base(s), 227 AB, 78 RBI = 25.7% of runners driven in
Gonzalez: 355 runners on any base(s), 262 AB, 83 RBI = 23.4% of runners driven in
It's probably better to drive in any runner, not just in scoring position, yes/no? Or should we just continue with the selection bias in evaluating the players?
wolfmanalfredo said:AndruwHRJones said:thefasterblade said:On pace for 149 Runs, 45 Home Runs, 132 RBI and 31 SBs.
I understand he doesn't have an insane average, but this isn't Carlos Pena here. A .275 average is very respectable.
The AL MVP has only gone to a player who hit under .300 (14) times if my count was correct since 1911.
Additionally, only 4 players have had an avg under .283 and won the AL award. Two of the four were HOF's (Killabrew and Berra) and another was Maris and his 61 HR's.
I didn't bother looking at the NL MVP award winners, but the evidence seems pretty clear to me that unless his other stats are ridiculously overwhelming, his batting average is going to have to come up very significantly if he stands a chance to win.
Its Killebrew, not Killabrew.
He's a yankee, so just give it to him