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Hall of Merit — A Look at Baseball's All-Time Best Tuesday, December 21, 2004Gavvy Cravath“Cactus Gavvy” gets his own page. Go to town, Phillybooster! John (You Can Call Me Grandma) Murphy
Posted: December 21, 2004 at 08:36 PM | 256 comment(s)
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"No, Minneapolis."
Like Satan, I come when my name is invoked.
Perhaps some weren't paying attention in 1925 when I began pushing the great Cravath juggernaut that now consists of me and three other voters:
Gavvy Cravath's Minor League Numbers
First, PCL stats. Remember that the PCL was a major "pitchers league." I have at my disposal currently team offensive stats (batting average) from every PCL team in 1905, which should give a taste for what 'league average' was. (Cravath played in L.A. from 1903-1907)
Seattle: .238
Los Angeles: .236
Portland: .232
San Francisco: .228
Tacoma: .226
Oakland: .215
1903 (age 22): Rookie 22 year old Cravath hits .274 in 209 games, with a team leading 7 home runs. Los Angeles wins the PCL pennant.
1904: No stats available (to me at least)
1905 (age 24): Cravath hits .259 (the team average is .236, see above). He had 33 doubles, 9 triples and 9 homers and 44 stolen bases. He was third on his team in BA. Just below him in BA is George van Haltren, who hit .255, two years removed from hitting .257 with the Giants. Angels win the pennant.
1906 (age 25): Cravath hits .270.
1907 (age 26): Cravath hits .303 with 10 homers and 50 stolen bases. Angels win the pennant. He is purchased by the Red Sox.
1908 (age 27): Cravath has a 136 OPS+ for the Red Sox. Great power player in a deadball period that didn't appreciate it.
1909 (age 28): Bizarrely sent to Chicago after a successful 1908. He drops off to a 108 OPS+, but in a very small sample size (70 plate appearances) and then is shipped off to Washington for 7 games and is released. He goes to play for the Minneapolis Miners in the AA. He hit .290 – second best on the team -- with 4 homers. This was significantly better than player/manager and HoMer Jimmy Collins (.273), who had just retired from Philadelphia.
1910 (age 29) – Cravath hits .326 with 14 homers for Minneapolis. Both of these numbers lead the league. Miners win the pennant.
1911 (age 30) – Cravath hits .363 with 29 homers for Minneapolis. Both of these numbers lead the league. Miners win the pennant.
1912 – 1920 (age 31-39) – the stats are readily available. He earned about 200 win shares in those 9 years, which included being the best hitter in the game from 1913-1915. There can be no doubt that his 3 year peak, or 5 or 7 year prime in these years is HoM-worthy.
The only issue is whether the preceding nine years is sufficient to provide the “career bulk” to this peak. I think it clearly does.
Come up with whatever bizarrely conservative translations you want. 10 Win Shares a year for being one of the stars of the PCL? 15 a year for being THE star of the AA?
I think those numbers are hideously low, but granting that, 5 PCL years plus 3 AA years give 95 extra win shares. Add that his 202 Major League win shares, and you've got 297. Any doubt that a player with 297 win shares and Cravath's major league peak (leaving aside that his actual peak included some AA years) would be a first ballot HoMer?
What realistic credit can you award to Gavvy and his five minor league pennants that could induce you to leave him off of your ballots? Inquiring voters want to know.
I think it's tough to give him credit pre-1908, though I could see giving him credit for 1907.
I think this additional credit is enough to have put him 5th or 6th (can't remember) on the most recent ballot. The man has a 150 OPS+, most of it from age 31 on. It's a Joe Start type of argument if you ask me.
Read that as at 130 or so OPS+, he had a 138 OPS+ in 1908.
I can't put him near Bill Terry, tho, for example. He had poorer rate stats by either Win Shares per 162 G, or EqA (plus Terry was a better fielder by FRAA). I also think he took unusual advantage of the Baker Bowl (1914, led the NL with 19 homers; all at home!), which knocks him a bit in my book. Still, a fine hitter. Close to Hack Wilson maybe?
Pardon my contradiction, but I think this is wrong.
Bill Terry: 278 Win Shares in 1721 Games = 26.2 WS/162.
Gavvy Cravath: 202 Win Shares in 1220 Games = 26.8 WS/162.
Further, it appears to me that -- unless I am missing some era adjustment that I shouldn't be -- Cravath had fewer Plate Appearances per Game (perhaps Cravath was used as a pinch hitter more?), and the difference between them expands in you look at WS/600 PA instead of 162 games.
Gavvy Cravath: 26.1 WS/600 PA
Bill Terry: 23.5 WS/600 PA
Cravath had the better rate by Win Shares.
EQA (from Baseball Prospectus Pages:
Gavvy Cravath: .312 (timeline adjusted to .303)
Bill Terry: .308 (timeline adjusted to .304)
I mark this "essentially identical".
The question is only whether Terry's 76 extra win shares (in the majors) make up for Cravath's better rates, and unrecorded 8 years in the PCL and AA (i.e., did he average at least 9-10 WS equivalents per season). I think the answer is clearly yes.
Both Cravath and Terry will be in my Top 10 this years, but Cravath will be higher.
Can someone smarter than I take
1) His fielding ratings from the majors
and
2) His recorded minor league numbers from those years
And give a Win Shares estimate for those 3 seasons?
James has him at 21.51 WS/162 in the NBJHA, so somebody is wrong here.
LOL.
Keep fighting the good fight, PhillyBooster.
James has him at 21.51 WS/162 in the NBJHA, so somebody is wrong here.
202 Win Shares is the Number listed in the BJHBA and in the 1926 discussion thread in this site.
The BJHBA lists 1221 games, and baseball reference lists 1220. So both Bill and I agree on the raw imputs.
202 divided by 1220, times 162 definitely equals 26.82295. So the problem is EITHER both of our inputs, or Bill James's output.
If I can reverse engineer Bill James's bug, 21.51 WS/162 over 1221 games would lead to a career total of . . . 162 Win Shares. I'd say either the book is wrong and Cravath REALLY earned 162 career win sharesm not 202, or -- mor likely -- somebody stuck the Games per Season figure into the "Career Win Shares" column on somebody's database.
While I an open to someone checking on the former, I would put money on the latter.
Phillybooster's deduction about the source of the error in Cravath's published rate sounds plausible to me.
I would, too. After seeing Christy Mathewson as a starting pitcher during the fifties and other errors, I wouldn't be surprised if they just screwed up on their end.
Therefore, for someone like Cravath, he should get credit for a few of his minor league seasons b/c/ he played MORE good seasons in the minors than anyone else, but you can't give him credit for all of them b/c/ 2 or 3 very good minor league seasons are assumed to be part of most players careers.
Incidentally, if a 24-year-old Cravath only outhit a 39-year-old Van Haltren by 4 points, doesn't George deserve some extra credit as well?
wow, good catch. I wonder if the presumed database error affected Bill's ranking of Cravath.
Okay, let's assume by WS that Cravath has a slight rate edge, which might go away if you timeline. By BP, we see their offense rate is eveen, but I still maintain that Terry was more valuable defensively. So it seems that Cravath's case over Terry boils down to making up the -40% career shortfall with assumed minor league time.
Yes, but when Cravath missed them, he was still playing high level professional baseball, and was among the best in his top-minors league each year.
I'm not planning to give Bo Jackson credit for his NFL Pro-Bowl seasons either.
And there was a depression during the 1890s so baseball was a very viable alternative. Fielder Jones actually went into baseball because he could not get a job with an engineering degree.
And it was not difficult for him to be scouted. One of his teammates on the semipro Norwood Maroons, Kid Elberfeld, made the majors as well.
In 1890, his age 18 baseball season, there were 3 major leagues. He was not wanted.
1891 - 2 major leagues - not wanted.
1892-1896 - one major league with some BAD teams and pitchers - he was not wanted.
He had to develop another pitch. If he was happy as a schoolteacher so he didn't take the time to develop a curve ball, why should he get credit for that? He had the opportunity to make a $1500-$3000 a year in the majors or several hundred for a half year's work in the minors OR he could make less.
From a quick scan of google - teacher salary 1890, 1895.
Sudbury MA - top schoolmistresses $13 a week. 1889
Sioux City - avg male schoolteacher $43 a month. 1890
Kansas City, KS - about $50 a month depending on how you tested. - 1890.
Since they worked 9 months a year - that is about 350-450 a year.
I'll post some 1895 figures later.
How about on the Vic Willis/Sam Leever thread?
There is no evidence I know of that Leever made any attempt to get an MLB job before he actually did so. He didn't try out, or anything.
I think he developed a reputation in the Sunday leagues in Ohio for having a great curveball and the Pirates took a chance on him and signed him.
Oh, salaries for schoolteachers in 1895:
In Wood County, Ohio, in 1890 a male high school teacher made $52 a month. In 1894, $60 a month.
In Kansas City, KS, schoolteachers were often not paid because of the financial condition of the city. Businesses were sponsoring schools so that teachers could get paid or would donate unused space in their buildings for schoolrooms. If they got paid, it was $40-$60 a month.
Maybe it's just me, but isn't the ability to take advantage of your home park above and beyond what others can do a reason for extra credit, rather than demerits?
No, in the discussion of the immortals, I think it merits demerits (say that really fast 3 times!).
Basically a unique ability to take advantage of a park shows that in most other times, in most other places the player wouldn't have been as valuable. Sure real wins result from that, and he gets credit, but I think a slight demerit is reasonable, because he probably wouldn't have been as good in other parks.
I'm not a big fan of adaptibility of skills in theory. I think skills are what they are, and some parks just suit some players better than others.
(with apologies to the Catholic Church, and Ulysses, Chapter 17.)
Part I
How should we approach Cravath's minor league career?
With an open mind.
Couldn't Cravath have just been a late bloomer?
It is not impossible.
You don't sound conviced.
I am not.
Why?
Because once he allegedly "bloomed", his career was historic.
Define historic.
Inner circle Hall of Fame historic.
Please explain.
Beginning at age 31 . . .
Wait. Aren't you concerned about multiple endpoints?
Age 31 isn't cherry picking. It is when he first became a regular with the Phillies. I will cherrypick later.
Okay.
From age 31 until the end of his career, Cravath had an OPS+ of 152 in 4241 plate appearances.
Is that good?
Yes.
Can you list every person in baseball history to ever have an OPS+ of greater than 152 from age 31 onward, with a minimum of 4000 plate appearances?
Barry Bonds, Babe Ruth, Ted Williams, Willie Stargell, Frank Robinson, Willie Mays, Hank Aaron.
Anyone else?
No.
Is Cravath helped by having a relatively short decline phase?
No. In each of Cravath's last two seasons, he was the oldest player in the National League (6th and 3rd oldest in all of the majors.)
Wow. And that's without cherry picking a start date?
Yes. Were I to cherry pick a start date, I would omit Cravath's age 31 season, where his OPS+ was only 119, lower than it was in his first abbreviated stint in the majors.
What happens then?
Cravath's OPS+ from age 32 onward is 157 in 3739 plate appearances.
Who had a higher OPS+ in more plate appearances from age 32 onward?
Babe Ruth, Barry Bonds, Ted Williams.
Anyone else?
No.
What if I lower the plate appearances threshold from age 32 on to 3000?
Throw in Mark McGwire.
So, you don't think Cravath was a late bloomer?
Cravath was almost certainly a late bloomer, if you define late blooming as a late career improvement. The question is really what base he improved from. When considering Cravath's pre-age-31 stats, it is important to have the right mindset of what his major league hitting level actually was. That way, one can view the reasonableness of whether he was below average, average, or above average in the years leading up to the period when he was one of the five to ten best age-adjusted hitters ever.
Sorry in advance for the formatting:
YR…AG…LG……G………AB……R……H……2B……3B…HR…SB…BB…BA…OBP…SLG03…22…PCL…209…804…108…220…51…13…7…34…xx…274…xxx…396
04…23…PCL…211…769…109…208…50…4…13…45…xx…270…xxx…397
05…24…PCL…204…703…81…182…32……9……9…45…xx…259…xxx…368
06…25…PCL…177…633…102…171…<b>39</b>…9…6…34…xx…270…xxx…387
07…26…PCL…182…614…106…186…<b>45</b>…5…10…50…xx…303…xxx…441
08…27…Maj……94…277…43……71…10…11……1……6…38…256…354…383
09…28…Maj……23……56……7……9……0……0………1……3…20…161…382…214
09…28……AA…125…xxx…xx…xxx…xx…xx……4…xx…xx…290…xxx…xxx
10…29……AA…164…xxx…xx…xxx…xx…xx…<b>14</b>…xx…xx…<b>326</b>…xxx…xxx
11…30……AA…167…xxx…xx…xxx…xx…xx…<b>29</b>…xx…xx…<b>363</b>…xxx…xxx
12…31…Maj…130…436…63…124…30……9…11…15…47…284…358…470
13…32…Maj…147…525…78…<b>179</b>…34…14…<b>19</b>…10…55…341…407…<b>568</b>
14…33…Maj…149…499…76…149…27……8…<b>19</b>…14…83…299…402…499
15…34…Maj…150…552…89…149…31……7…<b>24</b>…11…<b>86</b>…285…<b>393</b>…<b>510</b>
16…35…Maj…137…448…70…127…21……8…11……9…64…283…<b>379</b>…440
17…36…Maj…140…503…70…141…29…16…<b>12</b>……6…70…280…369…473
18…37…Maj…128…426…43…99……27…5……<b>8</b>………7…54…232…320…376
19…<b>38</b>…Maj…83……214…34…73……18…5……<b>12</b>……8…35…341…438…640
20…<b>39</b>…Maj…46……45……2……13……5……0……1………0…9……289…407…467
That would be awesome if that would happen, Matt.
Thanks for digging up the numbers!
YR…AG…LG……G………AB……R……H……2B……3B…HR…SB…BB…BA…OBP…SLG03…22…PCL…209…804…108…220…51…13…7…34…xx…274…xxx…396
04…23…PCL…211…769…109…208…50…4…13…45…xx…270…xxx…397
05…24…PCL…204…703…81…182…32……9……9…45…xx…259…xxx…368
06…25…PCL…177…633…102…171…[strong]39[/strong]…9…6…34…xx…270…xxx…387
07…26…PCL…182…614…106…186…[strong]45[/strong]…5…10…50…xx…303…xxx…441
08…27…Maj……94…277…43……71…10…11……1……6…38…256…354…383
09…28…Maj……23……56……7……9……0……0………1……3…20…161…382…214
09…28……AA…125…xxx…xx…xxx…xx…xx……4…xx…xx…290…xxx…xxx
10…29……AA…164…xxx…xx…xxx…xx…xx…[strong]14[/strong]…xx…xx…[strong]326[/strong]…xxx…xxx
11…30……AA…167…xxx…xx…xxx…xx…xx…[strong]29[/strong]…xx…xx…[strong]363[/strong]…xxx…xxx
12…31…Maj…130…436…63…124…30……9…11…15…47…284…358…470
13…32…Maj…147…525…78…[strong]179[/strong]…34…14…[strong]19[/strong]…10…55…341…407…[strong]568[/strong]
14…33…Maj…149…499…76…149…27……8…[strong]19[/strong]…14…83…299…402…499
15…34…Maj…150…552…89…149…31……7…[strong]24[/strong]…11…[strong]86[/strong]…285…[strong]393[/strong]…[strong]510[/strong]
16…35…Maj…137…448…70…127…21……8…11……9…64…283…[strong]379[/strong]…440
17…36…Maj…140…503…70…141…29…16…[strong]12[/strong]……6…70…280…369…473
18…37…Maj…128…426…43…99……27…5……[strong]8[/strong]………7…54…232…320…376
19…[strong]38[/strong]…Maj…83……214…34…73……18…5……[strong]12[/strong]……8…35…341…438…640
20…[strong]39[/strong]…Maj…46……45……2……13……5……0……1………0…9……289…407…467
Anyway, besides what you can get from bb-ref, he led the AA in homers and batting average in 1910 and 1911, and he led the PCL in doubles in 1906 and 1907. The other near-leads I mentioned above, except that he was also third in the PCL in stolen bases in 1907.
Thanks for digging up the numbers!
You're welcome. I actually now have every PCL stat available from 1903-1957. If you suspect any of your other favorite candidates have hidden PCL value, I'd be happy to look those up too.
Yr---G--AB---H--D--T-HR---R--AVE-SLG
09-125-413-120-23-07-04-060--290-409
10-164-612-200-41-13-14-106--326-505
11-167-608-221-53-13-29-147--363-637
(Walks are unfortunately not in the official stats.)
League averages:
Yr-AVE-SLG
09-237-300
10-243-310
11-268-357
Black Ink:
1910: hits, doubles, triples, home runs, AVE, probably SLG
1911: hits, doubles, home runs, AVE, probably SLG
He did play in a very good hitters' park.
I'd like to join PhillyBooster on the Gavvy Cravath discussion. I did some looking into players who generally played around the time of Cravath to see if we could place some expected results for his 3 missing years of 1909-1911. (I'm counting 1909 as missing since he played so little ML ball before finishing the year in Minneapolis) Cravath's age 27 and 31 seasons are at the bottom. Above him is a set of OFs who played fairly significant amounts of time for ages 27-31. The list is not exhaustive since I limited it to players with a minimum OPS+ of around 100 at the endpoints of age 27 and 31. Plus I missed some players I'm sure. It isn't intentional - sorry about that. The table displays OPS+:
Age
Name 27 28 29 30 31
Sam Crawford 159 159 153 130 163
Birdee Cree 137 151 140 100 140
George Stone 145 192 151 131 121
Johnny Bates 132 130 126 122 127
Mike Mitchell 122 89 152 125 120
John Titus 114 135 152 124 129
Sherry Magee 119 137 156 128 103
Chief Wilson 126 134 101 107 110
Bob Bescher 115 115 108 111 109
Dode Paskert 95 126 96 122 106
Frank Schulte 137 156 105 113 95
Jimmy Sheckard 114 113 102 110 114
Tommy Leach 92 107 136 125 112
Zach Wheat 107 150 134 130 124
Harry Hooper 103 114 116 142 112
Bobby Veach 142 136 159 121 158
George Burns 146 128 142 120 107
Jack Gravey 102 111 110 106 100
Burt Shotten 116 131 107 134 126
Jimmy Walsh 101 105 77 94 109
Red Murray 115 97 85 74 98
Max Carey 126 114 120 104 116
Rube Oldring 104 101 113 108 99
Gavvy Cravath 136 ??? ??? ??? 119
Median Values
Excluding Cravath 116 128 120 121 112
</pre>
The math is maybe a little rough but the general idea is we're talking a comparable player to the rest of the set. Was Cravath likely to be a 120 OPS+ hitter in those years? I think so. Three reasons:
1.He's above the median OPS+ values on the above list, a list including many players who didn't have a peak resembling Cravath's. Unless Gavvy was one of those few players who peaked ages 32-36 or learned to hit at that late age his expected level of performance was in that ballpark.
2.During his time with the Minneapolis Millers, especially 1910 and 1911, he played on a team of many players who performed in the majors. Otis Clymer, Dave Altizer, Claude Rossman, Hobe Ferris, Jimmy Williams are all on that team and had at least average major league seasons before going to the minors. In 1910 and 1911 Catcus led the team in both batting average and home runs above all these players.
3.He led the American Association in batting average and home runs in 1910 and 1911. Runs batted in were not kept for the league those years but its been written Cravath probably led the league both years. Would a two-time Triple Crown winner from a high minor league be overwhelmed at the major league level, especially after showing he was capable of hitting just a couple years prior? I lean toward no.
So what's it all mean? I'll probably keep him close to the bottom of the ballot. Man could hit the long ball at a time others could not. Had he been around a decade later his skills would have fit the environment better.
Here are team by team batting totals:
Team Games AtBats Runs Hits Avg. R/game
Sea 208 6851 681 1632 .238 3.27
LA 218 7089 766 1672 .236 3.51
Por 207 6676 667 1548 .232 3.22
SF 230 7290 838 1660 .228 3.64
Tac 219 7107 718 1604 .226 3.28
Oak 228 7337 687 1580 .215 3.01
Lg Avg: 218 7058 726 1616 .229 3.33
</pre>
The Guide lists extra base hits / stolen bases / sacrifices for all players in 15 or more games played so approx totals of extra base hits are possible (Seattle, SF, and Oak had a lot of players split teams so I’ll divide their totals in half by team. Best I can do without any games by team.) I’ll also give the approx at bat totals for those players and the official team total for runs.
Team ABs Hits 2B 3B HR SBs SAC Runs SLG
Sea 6634 1563 222 49 11 360 270 681 .289
LA 6890 1635 280 43 27 376 256 766 .302
Por 6497 1547 278 41 16 300 261 667 .301
SF 7187 1637 255 50 10 415 315 838 .281
Tac 7021 1599 290 36 36 326 290 718 .295
Oak 7290 1585 255 52 11 363 201 687 .271
</pre>
Oakland is not even that good. They shared 3 players with Seattle and I split them equally, but I think Seattle should get more of their stats, but I have no idea how to split them. But the idea is there.
Fielding Totals:
Team PO A E FPct.
Tac 5815 2842 384 .958
LA 5931 2996 439 .953
SF 6284 3066 473 .952
Por 5482 2734 466 .946
Oak 6144 3146 538 .945
Sea 5525 2476 467 .945
Lg Avg: 5864 2877 461 .950
</pre>
I don’t know if those are good defensive numbers or not. Only Tacoma had fewer than 2 errors per game.
Only two hitters played in more than half their teams games and hit over .300. Blinkenship of Sea in 106 games hit .311 and Brashear of LA hit .303 in 189 games.
Cravath:
Gms ABs Hit 2b 3b HR SB SH Avg. Slg.
204 703 182 33 09 09 44 44 .259 .370
Fielding:
Gms POs As Es Pct.
204 227 33 14 .957
He had the 8th best fielding percentage of an outfielder who played in at least half his team games in the outfield. I assume a corner spot from his PO totals compared to other full time outfielders (a few with 350-450).
Among players with at least 150 games, his average was 12th. He finished one spot ahead of Van Haltren, who played for Oakland.
Van Haltren
Gms ABs Hit 2b 3b HR SB SH Avg. Slg.
220 860 220 18 10 02 47 17 .255 .307
Cravath’s place in various totals:
Home runs: 2nd in league with 9 to Eagan of Tacoma who hit 21. Only 2 other players were over 5.
Triples: 7th with 9. League leaders were 2 with 11, Nealon and Hilderbrand for SF, then 4 with 10.
Doubles: 13th tied with 33. League leader was Nordyke with 57. Totals down to Cravath: 57, 50, 49, 49, 44, 41, 40, 39, 39, 39, 35, 35
Stolen Bases: 20th or 21st with 44.
Batting Average: 12th among players with 150 games played. If half of team games is sufficient, he finished 13th.
Slugging: I figured the slugging for hitters with BA over .250.
Player Team Gms Slug BA Isolated Power
Eagan Tac 210 .430 .278 .152
Nealon SF 207 .405 .287 .118
Brashear LA 189 .397 .303 .094
Blnknshp Sea 106 .394 .311 .083
Nordyke Tac 219 .381 .271 .110
Dunleavy Oak 227 .375 .264 .111
Cravath LA 204 .370 .259 .111
Hoshldr P/SF 210 .358 .267 .091
McLean Por 180 .355 .280 .075
Hildrbrnd SF 225 .345 .264 .081
Dillon LA 216 .340 .272 .068
Waldron SF 196 .332 .279 .053
VanHltrn Oak 220 .307 .255 .052
Irwin SF 226 .304 .266 .038
</pre>
Cravath was 6th or 7th depending on the minimum appearances. Only one person looks to have appreciably more power.
The classic "we-can-make-a-group argument". Tweak the cutoffs slightly, and you can make a similar argument for Ken Williams or Jack Fournier. A HoM case for Cravath begins by researching the full story of Cravath vs. K. Williams, Fournier and other true comparables, and not with the the notion that he was some uniquely overlooked inner-circle type.
Black Ink (average HoFer=27):
Williams: 11
Fornier: 10
Cravath: 46
And that's without giving any extra credit to Cravath. Actually, I don't really think you could create a group that included inner circlers, Cravath, Williams and Fournier. Honestly, if you expanded the group any, the first person you'd be likely to pick up who isn't a HoFer (yet, or maybe ever) is Edgar Martinez.
But, if you want, I will give you that Cravath's missing AA (age 28-30) years would have been exactly as good as the average of Fornier's 28 & 30 (he missed age 29) or Williams's 29 & 30 (he missed age 28). You don't have to assume that Cravath would have dominated in his missing years -- he's got he "peak" argument locked up with his time in Philadelphia. All he really needs from Minneapolis and Los Angeles is enough "bulk" to add on to his "grey ink" type credentials.
Oddly, in the PCL walks were recorded for pitchers, but not for hitters. It seems to me that, if you know how many walks there are to go around, you should be able to estimate how many walks each player had by comparing his at bats to games played (fewer ABs would likely mean more walks).
I'm not sure how to go about figuring that, though. Cravath was top 5 in walks every year from 1914-1918, so it seems like he wasn't a hacker. A reasonable estimate seems like it should help his case.
I recognize that adjustments need to be made, but they would be relatively small compared to, say, Negro leaguers since half of the stats were actually earned in the majors. Anyway, just for comparisons sake, I put a couple of other stats in parentheses.
G: 2666
AB: 9107
R: 1394
H: 2642
2B: 566 (Cobb was the active ML leader in 1920 with 429)
3B: 156
HR: 211 (Roger Connor held the ML only lead with 138)
SB: 297 (excluding AA)
BB: 551 (majors only)
AVG: .290
SLG: .456
Er, that's "thanks."
I melded the very most basic portions of Brent's and Chris Cobb's approaches, using Brent's conversion ratios for R, AVG, and SLG, then trying to locate season-by-season WS comps for Cravath among MLBs in each year I was MLEing.
I also made some small assumptions
1) That Cravath would play 85% of his team's games each season, so 131 games in a 154 schedule. During his MLB prime, Cravath played in about 90% of his teams' games, but I wanted to be conservative.
2) That his walk rate would be the same as his walk rate in the majors (about one walk for every 7 or so ABs).
3) That his AA parks (described as good hitting parks earlier in the thread) would have a PF of 105. This could be too low, surely, but 105 seemed like a good starting point.
I didn't do anything to contextualize him within his league's or team's run-scoring environment, nor do I have any idea of the PF for his PCL years, so take these with a grain of salt and for only what they are meant to be: a conservative, unshaped notion of what Cravath's PCL and AA stats might look like in translation:
YEAR_AGE_ABs_R___H___2B_3B_HR_BB_RC__AVG/OBP/SLG
1903_22__504_62__127_28_7__3__66_60__252/339/353
1904_23__477_62__119_27_1__7__63_57__249/337/354
1905_24__451_48__108_17_4__5__60_49__239/328/328
1906_25__468_69__116_23_5__4__61_54__248/335/344
1907_26__442_70__123_28_2__6__58_63__278/362/391
1909_28__433_57__113_20_6__3__56_53__261/345/356
1910_29__489_75__141_27_8__9__62_78__288/368/431
1911_30__477_103_155_34_8__19_61_105_325/401/549
TOTALS
AB__3742
R___547
H___1002
2B__204
3B__41
HR__56
BB__487
AVG_268
OBP_352
SLG_389
Notice that these MLE total rate stats look almost identical to Cravath's 1908 AL season line: 256/354/383.
In a moment, WS estimates.
So the following list is Cactus's estimated WS, plus the comps I looked at, including their Win Shares
YR___WS: COMPS(ws)
1903_15: McGann(12), J Farrell(16), Ganzell(18)
1904_18: Wallace(23), Hartsel(21), Browne(20), Odwell(19), Dolan(16), Ritchey(22), Beaumont(24), Smoot(19), J Delahanty(20)
1905_18: Dahlen(24), Ritchey(17), Courtney(17), F Jones(29), Mcintyre(20)
1906_18: Isbell(26), G Davis(29), Wallace(23), Mcintyre(19), Scheckard(25), Nealon(18), T Leach (19)
1907_22: F Clarke(29), T Leach(29), Titus(22), Seymour(20), J Delahanty(17)
1909_20: H Davis(19), H Lord(21), Engle(23), Demmit(18), T Leach (26), Chance(14), Hoffman (27), Lennox(15)
1910_23: Merkle(20), Doyle(25), Byrne(27), Bates(24), Knight(23), Cree(22)
1911_30: Doyle(28), Schulte(31), Crawford(32) [Really, no one in 1911 has a truly comparable line, so this is one is really just a rounded off guesstimate.]
Total: 164
Add 164 to his 202, and you've got someone in the Keeler/Goslin/By Williams range.
Again, I was trying to make commonsense, conservative judgements, so feel free to disagree with my assessments. It should be noted, however, that if you look at the comparable players by year, they lend credence to the notion that Cravath was a late bloomer. He starts off with solid veteran types like McGann, jumps up to the borderline star area (McIntyre), then into the occasional All-Star area (H Davis, F Jones, T Leach), then finally in 1911 hits paydirt and starts the run of outstanding seasons that would continue in the NL.
Also, the persistent presence of first McIntyre, then Leach, then Doyle suggests the kind of arc his career was taking.
OK, so this is my conservative, back-of-the-envelope look at him, I can't wait to see if Brent's translations agree and can provide a more specific sense of the shape of Cravath's career.
Fitting, Gavy Cravath and Chuck Klein on the agenda together
I am one of Gavvy's best friends, thanks for getting this back on the radar. I just don't see how he could have been that good from age 31 on and not be a HoMer. Worst case scenario is the McGwire comparison.
It's equally consistent with the conclustion that the National League during Cravath's peak was relatively weak and that his stats (as well as his black ink total) were especially inflated by his home park. Then his late peak is not out of context with the rest of his career.
Having said that, there is a case for Cravath as a HoMer. As I said above, however, for those making the case, it would be worthwhile to spend equal effort on the minor league years of Ken Williams and Fournier (and military service of Williams.
(1) I have significantly downgraded the other NL stars of his era for league quality reasons. (Doyle and Roush are off ballot and Carey was just off ballot when elected.)
(2) There are other A list hitters with lousy defense who are still in the pool but not in my top 25 (Browning, Tiernan, Fournier).
I need to be convinced that even giving Cravath credit for his minor league years (or an appropriate portion of them) that he is better than Roush and Doyle. I then need to be convinced that he is better than Browning, Tiernan, and Fournier. Neither task is impossible, but I'm not convinced yet.
It's equally consistent with the conclustion that the National League during Cravath's peak was relatively weak and that his stats (as well as his black ink total) were especially inflated by his home park. Then his late peak is not out of context with the rest of his career.
I don't think anyone is trying to argue that Cravath did not have a late peak. The object for reasonable disagreement, I think, is where he peaked from? If you think he was essentially a replacement level player before become one of the best players ever from age 31/32 on, then you won't give him any credit.
If you think, as I do, that he peaked from a base that was somewhat above average, then I don't see how you can possibly withhold credit from those "sub-peak", "abve average" years.
Seeing as how high his peak was, I just don't find a below-average pre-age-31 career reasonable. Besides, this isn't like Sam Leever, where we are debating what could have been. Cravath actually played the games in those years.
Dr. Chaleeko's rough estimate of 164 extra win shares is actually higher than I had been expecting. My uninformed estimate was 100-150 extra win shares, giving his 300-350 career. In my mind, 300+ Win Shares with a huge peak is an easy call. I'll be waiting expectantly for more complete MLEs, but I don't expect huge changes.
In short, saying he "peaked late" isn't enough, I don't think. It's where he peaked from that is more relevant, and is what the MLEs are starting to show.
I agree that it would be appropriate to get the minor league figures for Fournier and Williams, though I suspect their cases would rely somewhat less than Cravath's on their minor league records.
As for Cravath, himself... Andrew Siegel, how significant is your deadball-NL discount? While I think we all agree that the AL was a stronger league, the NL was still a stronger league than the PCL, AA, or IL. Are you talking 10%? 5%? 2.5? I too apply a discount, but it's more a mental note than anything else, a reason to rank a player lower than someone else who appears otherwise equal but played in the AL of the same period.
In terms of Tiernan, Fournier, Browning. If you give Cravath MLE credit only for his AA years (1909-1911), he's essentially a clone for Tiernan, and Fournier (with no MLE credit) is third. Browning I'm not sure about because it really depends on what level of difficulty you see the AA as having.
Thing is, however, I'm not convinced that only giving Cravath credit for his AA years is appropriate. My rough and less-scientifc-than-Brent estimates above suggest that Gavy was a solid regular (15-18 WS) from 1903 through 1906. I estimate he'd have broken 20 in 1907. In 1908, he posted 12 WS in 94 games in the AL as a 27-year-old, a 20-win-share pace for a 162 season, which is entirely consistent with the growth pattern he was already showing.
Therefore, I think it's not too wild to suggest that his 1907 season should also be credited to him. I would, myself, take it a little further however. He debuted in the PCL at age 22. He was performing at the level of an MLB regular that year and just a year later was Matty McIntyre. I don't think it's unreasonable to suggest, therefore that after two PCL seasons, he was a major-league-caliber player.
I think giving him credit for 1905-1907 (ages 24-26) does not seem unreasonable.
So now he looks like this if you add in the 1905-1911 MLEs, by age:
AGE___WS (prorated to 162)
24____19
25____19
26____22*
27____13 (94 g in AL)
28____23* (2 WS in AL)
29____24*
30____32*
31____16
32____30
33____29
34____37
35____27
36____27
37____12
38____17
39_____2
========
TOTAL_350
*estimated
BEST ANY 3: 99
BEST ANY 5: 155
BEST ANY 10: 270
BEST ANY 15: 345
Again, I have no idea what his PCL PFs were like, and I only used a 105 PF for his AA years based on something said in this thread that said he was in a good hitter's park. They are estimates.
But what I'm driving at here is that Cravath was clearly MLB-ready by age 24, and if we accept that premise and accord him MLE credit, he looks an awful lot like Goose Goslin or Willie Keeler or Billy Williams do, valuewise: Good career total, decent peak, good prime/extended prime.
The career certainly puts him over Tiernan. And it would put him over Browning too, but again, his peak is a matter of discount structure. Finally, I do agree that we need more a more systematic study of Fournier's MLEs to see if we've been overlooking him. Ditto Williams.
If we decide to give every player credit for all the seasons they were major league ready but playing in some other league, then the bar for what constitutes an average HoM career will go up. We need to compare Cravath, et al., to the new higher standard (say 350 or 360 WS) rather than the older standard (say 310 or 320 WS).
Other right fielders in the HoM (just running down the Bill James Top 100) -- Babe Ruth, Sam Crawford, Harry Heilmann, Elmer Flick, King Kelly, Willie Keeler, Sam Thompson.
Top 7 eligible candidates for RF(also BJ Ranking): Gavy Cravath, Sam Rice, Chuck Klein, Harry Hooper, Ross Youngs, Mike Tiernan, Wildfire Schulte.
Did any of these 14 (other than Cravath) have any substantial minor league service at major league quality? It is possible that one or two of them do -- but if so I haven't heard of it (and would like to!) Most played almost all of their assumedly prime years (say, 23-38) in the majors. For the few who didn't (e.g., Youngs, who died), I don't know of any high-minor league play. Perhaps, from that group, you could (maybe) point to one or two player who I missed who had an extra 40 MLE minor league win shares, but that's a far cry from a baseline that is 40 points higher.
It is my impression that when there is a credible case for minor league credit, someone brings it up.
Moreover, the bar gets raised for 2 reasons:
(1) You give credit for the additional WS earned by the guys already in the HoM.
(2) Guys like Cravath get a lot of credit and vault over other guys, knocking them to the other side of the in-out line.
My rationale for Averill is he played in a league that did not have to sell its players to the majors at set prices, so he could be held until a ML paid the right price. Also, Averill was playing at a consistent level over the 2nd and 3rd years in the PCL and continued at a similar level in the majors in his first year with Cleveland. This leads me to believe he was playing at a major league level the year before he got to the majors, he was just stuck in the PCL.
Cravath and Fournier get mid-career credit because they had established a certain level of better-than-average performance, but their teams did not recognize it. Then, they went to the minors and continued to perform at that level or better, returned to the majors and performed even better. They had not failed, their teams just failed to recognize their ability, which other teams later did. I don't know about pre-major league credit for either of them yet.
I don't know of any other players who were sent down after establishing (to our eyes, at least) that they were average or above average players who were released to the minors and returned to the majors.
Nichols went to pitch for his own minor league team (and didn't need the credit anyway.)
Vance was never healthy in his many trials.
Joe Jackson did not establish himself as a regular in 1908 with Phil.
That's all I can think of off the top of my head (I am at school now). I just don't remember any similar cases to Fournier and Cravath.
Whether or not you feel the bar is raised by offering war, minor league, NgL, or positional-bonus credit is really a personal call. I don't believe that's an accurate assessment, but I understand why we disagree.
But addressing your second point. Once you've determined someone was denied access to the majors or was of major-league quality, and once you determine the amount of MLE credit to give them, the whole point of it is, in fact, to see whether it makes a difference in how you assess the rankings that drive our balloting process. The very question being asked about Cravath is "Should he be getting more votes?" The discussion of MLE credits is a way to answer that question.
But let me also address one other point since you brought it up:
If you are giving credit for all seasons where the guy played somewhere and was good enough to play in the majors, just about every HoMer should get some credit, whether it be 6 months, a year-and-a-half, three years, or eight years.
I generally don't agree with this statement. For instance, no one is suggesting GVH should be getting any credit for his PCL seasons in the 20th century. When he retired as an MLB player, that's that, even though his PCL stats probably indicate he could have played on a couple more years.
What we're really dealing with here (and in most cases, except, say, Fournier or Charley Jones) is the start of a player's career, the ladder he climbs to reach the big leagues. Talent seems to have been more haphazardly dispersed among the minor leagues in Cravath's time, but there also seems to be a consenus that the AA and the PCL were probably the two highest-caliber leagues underneath the majors or among the top three. So just like when we examine pre-MLB service time time today, we should take dominance into account relative to age and the level of competition.
When we say that Averill or Cravath was posting major-league caliber numbers in the PCL, this is a far, far different thing than saying he was posting them in the (I'm making up a name here) Backwoods League.
So when at 24, in a typical growth year for a player, in his third year in the league, Cravath hits .259 and slugs .368, the league hits .229 and slugs .289(!!!), his average is 13% higher than the league average, his SLG is 27% higher than the league, and on his own team, he creates 18% of the runs that the RC formula can account for without knowing any walks totals, that's not really something to just overlook. That tells us a lot.
To post similar numbers in some lower-level league would not suggest major-league quality, doing it in the PCL very clearly does.
I don't believe Cravath should get full credit for every minor league season. I think it's appropriate to exclude his first two to err on the side of caution. But year three (1905) seems like a logical place to start administering credit because he repeated the level of dominance over the league he displayed in 1904 (i'm assuming 1905 was a particularly difficult one for hitters), suggesting he had matured as a player.
If the point of this exercise is to determine who the best baseball players were period, then it doesn't matter whether the guy was playing in the NL, the Negro Leagues, the PCL, the Backwoods League, or the Army. If he was good enough to play in the majors he should get credit. (Obviously you need to put up much better numbers in the Backwoods League to establish that you were major league quality than in the PCL, but we can account for that.)
I think it is fairly obvious that many superstar players had a couple of years where they could have played in the majors at either end of their career. What I assume people are doing is saying that those seasons even out and we don't need to worry about them, only about the EXTRA big league quality seasons some players have. I have no problem with that assumption, we just need to be careful that we apply those rules fairly across eras and leagues.
You've said very concisely one thing that I've been unable articulate very well. Cravath's first couple of years look like typical minor-league ladder-climbing. It's thereafter that I belive he should be given MLE credit for producing at a major-league level at the highest non-major classifications.
PCL league quality
When looking through PCL rosters during the seasons that Cravath spent there (1903-07), I noticed that compared to the 1920s, it seemed that fewer players went on the the majors and those who went generally seemed to have had less successful careers. This raised a concern that the league quality may not have been as high as in the 1920s.
I also noticed that the Guides during those years did not give the PCL the same prominence that was afforded to the Eastern League (as the International League was then known) and the American Association. (For example, in the table of contents to the 1906 Spalding Guide the Eastern League is the first minor league listed, followed by the American Association. The PCL appears much further down, between the Kansas State League and the Northwestern League.)
Logically, it certainly seemed possible that the quality of the league improved between the aughts and the twenties. The population of the major west coast cities other than San Francisco was still quite small in 1903, though they grew very rapidly during the next two decades. For example, from 1900 to 1920 the population of Los Angeles grew from 102 thousand to 577 thousand, while that of Seattle grew from 81 thousand to 315 thousand. Also, the league, which was founded in 1903, went through growing pains as it competed with other leagues (the "Pacific National League" and an "outlaw" California League that didn't honor the reserve clause). In 1907 the PCL contracted from six teams to four.
The clincher, however, came when I looked in the Reach Guides to try to find when the PCL was classified as one of the top 3 minor leagues (at that time known as the "Class AA" classification) along with the Eastern League and the American Association. It's an interesting story that is told in the 1909 Reach Guide, which began with a rebellion by the Eastern League and the American Association against the lower-ranked minor league teams, which however dominated their governing association, the National Association of Professional Base Ball Leagues. These two leagues withdrew from the National Association and attempted to get the major leagues to recognize them as a separate organization.
Eventually a deal was negotiated and the two teams were induced to rejoin the National Association, but one of the conditions was the formation of a "Class AA" classification that brought with it special priveleges. The Guide includes the following explanation of why the PCL also joined in the new classification:
The Pacific Coast League was granted the privelege of entering the new classification because of a promise made to it when it came into organized base ball that it would never be asked to accept a classification more than one point below the major leagues. When this was decided, Cal Ewing, the president of the Coast League, said of course he would go into the new organization because he wanted his league to advance as rapidly as possible, not because he wanted priveleges. He said he would not be doing his duty to his league unless he took everything that was handed him.
It appears that at the time of the agreement everyone involved, including the PCL, acknowledged that it was lower in quality than the Eastern League and the American Association, but the PCL expressed a commitment to raise its quality to a matching level.
Unfortunately, I don't really have any solid information on how much lower its quality was. Two possibilities are (a) that it was equivalent to a modern double-AA league, that is roughly twice as far from the majors as the triple-AAA level that I've used for 1920s and 30s PCL translations, or (b) that it was halfway between modern double-AA and triple-AAA in quality.
Does anyone have an opinion? It's hard to judge, since I don't have any solid information.
I'll also mention that the effects of this on Cravath's MLEs will be partly offset by the fact that the Los Angeles ballpark of that period was a pitchers' park. My other issue has to do with park effects and run environment, but it's late now so I'll wait to write that up tomorrow.
Batting record
To what PhillyBooster and Gary A posted in # 31 and 33, I’ve added two seasons at the end of his career—his 1921 season as player-manager for Salt Lake City in the PCL, and a brief encore season with Minneapolis in 1922. I’ve also filled in things like SH and HBP where available and rounded the averages using the computer, which sometimes changed them by .001. I believe these statistics represent his complete major and minor league batting record, unless there was another minor league season we may have missed (the NBJHBA reports that from 1899-1902 Cravath was a telegraph operator, playing semi-pro ball in his spare time):
Year Lg G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BB SO AVG OBA SLG TB SH HBP
1903 PCL 209 804 108 220 51 13 7 -- 34 -- -- -- .274 -- .396 318 -- --
1904 PCL 211 771 107 207 39 4 13 -- 45 -- -- -- .268 -- 380 293 22 --
1905 PCL 204 703 81 182 32 9 9 -- 45 -- -- -- .259 -- .368 259 20 --
1906 PCL 177 633 102 171 39 9 6 -- 34 -- -- -- .270 -- .389 246 -- --
1907 PCL 182 614 106 186 45 5 10 -- 50 -- -- -- .303 -- .441 271 27 --
1908 AL 94 277 43 71 10 11 1 34 6 -- 38 -- .256 .354 .383 106 8 4
1909 AL 23 56 7 9 0 0 1 9 3 -- 20 -- .161 .382 .214 12 1 0
1909 AA 125 413 60 120 23 7 4 -- 21 -- -- -- .291 -- .409 169 16 --
1910 AA 164 612 106 200 41 13 14 -- 25 -- -- -- .327 -- .505 309 41 --
1911 AA 167 608 147 221 53 13 29 -- 33 -- -- -- .363 -- .637 387 29 --
1912 NL 130 436 63 124 30 9 11 70 15 -- 47 77 .284 .358 .470 205 16 3
1913 NL 147 525 78 179 34 14 19 128 10 -- 55 63 .341 .407 .568 298 11 3
1914 NL 149 499 76 149 27 8 19 100 14 -- 83 72 .299 .402 .499 249 19 3
1915 NL 150 522 89 149 31 7 24 115 11 9 86 77 .285 .393 .510 266 7 6
1916 NL 137 448 70 127 21 8 11 70 9 -- 64 89 .283 .379 .440 197 15 5
1917 NL 140 503 70 141 29 16 12 83 6 -- 70 57 .280 .369 .473 238 16 1
1918 NL 121 426 43 99 27 5 8 54 7 -- 54 46 .232 .320 .376 160 8 1
1919 NL 83 214 34 73 18 5 12 45 8 -- 35 21 .341 .438 .640 137 4 2
1920 NL 46 45 2 13 5 0 1 11 0 0 9 12 .289 .407 .467 21 0 0
1921 PCL 112 341 62 111 22 0 18 -- 3 -- -- -- .326 -- .548 187 7 --
1922 AA 52 90 14 25 3 0 4 19 1 0 10 14 .278 .363 .444 40 2 2
</pre>
If there are any errors or omissions in these statistics, I welcome your input.
Run environment
The Angels played in Chutes Park, which appears to have been a pitchers’ park. As I’ve done with other PCL teams, I calculate the run environment based on the team’s offensive R/G, then use their W-L record and the Pythagorean formula to derive an estimate of opponents’ runs per game (OR/G). Note that the run environment is not the same as the park factor, which would need to be calculated from data on runs scored and allowed in home and away games (unavailable for these leagues). The run environment as I’ve calculated it is affected by the team’s offensive and defensive performance and by deviations from the team’s Pythagorean projection; however, I believe that most of the variation is attributable to ballpark characteristics.
Unfortunately, the Guides did not provide data on team runs for some seasons; I have data for 1904 from the 1905 Reach Guide and for 1905 from the 1906 Spalding Guide. For 1903 I have data for the Angels only from an article on minorleaguebaseball.com, but my microfilm was missing the 1907 volume of the Reach Guide that would have carried the 1906 stats, and the 1908 volume did not include PCL team batting data for 1907, though it did include the individual stats. So for 1906-07 I will use the average of the Angel’s major league factors for the prior 3 years.
For the 1909-11 American Association and the 1921 PCL, I used the same method described above; for the 1922 American Association I am able to use the actual data on opponents’ runs. (These data come from the relevant Reach Guides.) The Minneapolis Millers played in Nicollet Park, which was generally known as a hitters’ park, and Salt Lake City appears to have had a Coors Field-type phenomenon going on.
In the next table the run environment is calculated as (1/2)*((R+OR)/G), which is followed by its ratio (times 100) to the minor league and major league average run environments for the same season, which I call the minor league and major league (run environment) factors:
Year Lg Team REnv MinLFct MLBFct
1903 PCL LA 4.35 -- 97.9
1904 PCL LA 3.60 90.0 96.7
1905 PCL LA 3.31 99.6 85.0
1906 PCL LA -- -- 93.2*
1907 PCL LA -- -- 93.2*
1909 AA Min 3.18 96.2 89.7
1910 AA Min 4.21 112.5 109.9
1911 AA Min 5.27 113.9 116.8
1921 PCL SLC 6.32 128.1 130.1
1922 AA Min 5.82 110.1 119.4
* = assumed
</pre>
As you can see, the Millers’ run environment factors for 1909 are notably low compared to the other Minneapolis seasons. My question is whether I should smooth out these factors by taking an average across the 3 seasons 1909-11 (MLBFct = 105.5, which is essentially what Dr. Chaleeko used), or alternatively, I should just use the values for each season. Because the average is close to Dr. Chaleeko’s, resolving this question is likely to affect the distribution of Cravath’s estimated MLE performance across those 3 seasons, but not his overall MLE for the 3-year period.
Arguments for using an average:
- For calculating park factors for the modern era, the consensus among the sabermetrics community is to take averages over 3 to 5 seasons to eliminate some of the year-to-year noise.
- Chris Cobb’s park factors for the Negro Leagues are based on several years data when available (though those park factors are based on much smaller samples).
Arguments for using each year’s factor:
- Bill James and Stats, Inc. used one-year park factors for early years when little information was available about changes in ballpark conditions.
- The introduction of the cork-centered ball in 1910-11 may have changed the run environment of Nicollet Park relative to other parks in the league.
I’m leaning toward using the factors for the individual seasons, which is what I’ve done for my other minor league MLEs. Any comments or opinions?
It appears that at the time of the agreement everyone involved, including the PCL, acknowledged that it was lower in quality than the Eastern League and the American Association, but the PCL expressed a commitment to raise its quality to a matching level.
Do you now mean the 1909 agreement rather than the earlier agreement between PCL and Organized BB?
--
The very low rank of the PCL in the table of contents to the 1906 Spalding Guide probably reflects publisher interest and perceived reader interest rather than perceived quality. The New England, Connecticut, and New York State Leagues are covered more thoroughly than the PCL in Sporting Life 1905-1913, and there may be others below class A that received more coverage --including the "outlaw" Tri-State League in 1909. But I doubt anyone considered the PCL weaker than fifth in player quality below the other As (American, Eastern, Southern, Western).
Have you looked at tables of contents much later than 1906?
--
By the way, what is your source for the Guides?
Are there multiple microfilm editions?
(Example of what can happen: The Library of Congress edition of Baseball Magazine is missing #1.1, although it includes the December 1907 prospectus that preceded #1.1.)
Most every HOM quality player had a season or so of Major League quality in the minors prior to their career. This is what attracted the scouts attention. I dont' think any credit should be given for this simply because it is a lot of work for no result since it is evely dispersed. The only people we should be looking at are those who spent 3-4 years as an MLB caliber player in the minors.
andrew siegel #57 and Dr. Chaleeko #59 evidently agree.
But I'm doubtful, with Matt Philly #52.
Yes, I am interpreting the PCL paragraph from the article on the 1909 agreement as saying that the PCL was then generally considered to be somewhat inferior to the Eastern League and the American Association.
The very low rank of the PCL in the table of contents to the 1906 Spalding Guide probably reflects publisher interest and perceived reader interest rather than perceived quality.
Ok. I guess those illiterate westerners didn't read the guides. :-)
In later guides the PCL starts appearing with the International League and the American Association, though I can't tell you exactly when the transition takes place. (I've generally just photocopied the pages I was interested in.)
I'm using the Library of Congress microfilm edition of the Reach Guide. I'm new historical research, so I'm not really familiar with other editions that might be available.
Are the numbers above MLE's or Cravath actual numbers? Right now I think that 1907 is the only PCL year that he would be deserving aof any credit, and of course the years in Minny should give him some credit.
The numbers above are Cravath's actual numbers. (Sorry if I wasn't clear about that.) I'm planning to finish the MLEs soon, but I expect them to look fairly similar to those Dr. Chaleeko posted in # 43 and 44.
For 1903 I have data for the Angels only from an article on minorleaguebaseball.com, but my microfilm was missing the 1907 volume of the Reach Guide that would have carried the 1906 stats, and the 1908 volume did not include PCL team batting data for 1907, though it did include the individual stats. So for 1906-07 I will use the average of the Angel’s major league factors for the prior 3 years.
What would be useful for this project? --Cravath project?
PCL team batting data 1903 06 07 21?
AA team batting data 1909 10 11?
Is there league-season for which individual batting stats would be useful?
I would say be specific by email, Brent, since I will need your email address if not street address in order to send anything.
But someone else in this forum may be able to photocopy and mail crucial batting tables from the PCL book by Carlos Bauer(?) or the AA book by Marshall Wright(?). I have Wright's Texas League, which does include a team batting table for every season. (For pitching, only individuals grouped by team, only earned runs and that by inference from innings and ERA.)
Brent #65:
I'm using the Library of Congress microfilm edition of the Reach Guide. I'm new historical research, so I'm not really familiar with other editions that might be available.
The knowledge is specific to each publication that has been microfilmed. I don't know that info about any publ's has been coordinated. SABR should do that.
As a start, I now have from Brent: 1907 missing from LOC edition of Reach Guides. (Many years on one reel, I presume. Do you know the scope of the reel, Brent?)
and from my own research yesterday: 1908 May #1.1 missing from LOC edition of Baseball Magazine. (Vols 1-11 otherwise complete, ie thru 1913 Oct.)
Back to the substance of your research,
I misunderstood your post, too. Cravath will have to wait to be reevaluated.
What would be useful for this project? --Cravath project?
The main gap right now is PCL team batting data for 1906-07 (especially team runs scored). Maybe PhillyBooster has them. (