Austin
Well-known member
Unfair comparison.Sorry, this is still blowing my mind. How is it even possible that a player ended his age 21 season with a higher accumulated WAR than the ENTIRE career WAR of a guy who was a 5-time All-Star, had almost 400 HRs, 1,444 RBI, 231 SBs, almost 2,200 hits, 1,170 Runs and almost 4,000 Total Bases.
Career WAR
Mike Trout - before age 22, 1,490 Plate Appearances - 21.1 WAR
Joe Carter - 16 year career to age 38, 9,154 Plate Appearances - 17.1 WAR
Flaw in the WAR statistic, or Trout is simply that amazing?
You list all offensive numbers, but WAR also takes defense into account.
Carter was in the league's Top 5 in errors made among his position nine times in his career, and ranks 67th all-time in errors made.
Also, Carter's lifetime WAR number includes his final years in his late 30s, when he had a negative WAR in each of his four final seasons, lowering his total another three points.
WAR heavily takes into account defense.
For instance, in 1996, Carter hit .253 with 30 homers, 107 rbi, 35 doubles and 7 triples.
A good offensive year, but his WAR was -0.6 because his defense was so terrible.
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