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Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Friday, May 09, 2008
But it’s more fun to take him out of context.
Highest Career OPS (min 75 PA):
Babe Ruth 1.164
Ted Williams 1.116
Lou Gehrig 1.079
Micah Owings 1.056
Barry Bonds 1.051
Albert Pujols 1.041
While this isn’t necessarily a candidate for inclusion in the next edition of How to Lie With Statistics, setting the bar at 75 PA is just the tiniest bit misleading. Still, that’s pretty heady company, and there’s no denying that Owings is an excellent hitting pitcher. With the help of the amazing BaseballReference.com Play Index, I pulled up a couple of other charts that put Owings’ accomplishments in a bit more context:
Transmission
Posted: May 09, 2008 at 11:45 AM | 29 comment(s)
Related News: General, History, Arizona
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As much fun as it is to talk about his hitting, it's far more important that he has a Career 108 ERA+ in his first 196.3 IP.
He's been a bit lucky of course, (career .274 BABIP against). He's still only throwing his changeup 10% of the time, and his slider is still just so-so.
I'm not sure if Owings will be able to remain in the rotation past this year. We'll just have to see how the season plays out. Maybe he will end up being the ultimate bench player. They can have him pinch hit, use him as a reliever, and leave him in the game and put him at a position, such as LF or 1b when he's done pitching to keep his bat in the order. He would also be a great guy to bring in to relieve in the middle innings when the pitchers spot is coming up in the order , where a struggling starter might be left in too long so as not to burn a reliever. I wouldn't be surprised to see him evlolve into such a player that is used very creatively and in a very versatile manner like that. He will be a great weapon, however they use him.
Another pitcher who's a very good hitter is Greg Smith, former Dback and current A. The kid can rake, it's a shame he won't be getting many opportunities now.
And sign me up as being a very happy camper the Dbacks kept Micah and sent Ohlendorf and Jackson to the Yankees for Unito Grande, even if Ohlendorf becomes a solid reliever.
Owings is a flyball pitcher; fewer than 40% of his BIP are on the ground. You would expect him to have a relatively low in-play BA - and he does.
-- MWE
2007 Win Shares
Randy Johnson: 4
Alberto Gonzalez: 0
Luis Vizcaino: 6
Ross Ohlendorf: 0
2008 Win Shares
Randy Johnson: 0
Alberto Gonzalez: 1
Ross Ohlendorf: 0
Total
Yankees: 7 (plus a comp pick for The Viz)
Arizona: 4
Be sure to tune in again soon for another round of Who Won That Second Yankee-D-Back Randy Johnson Trade? because things could literally change at any time.
And, it's true - he could never match Tyler Clippard's strikeout rate...
I hope to God that wasn't me.
They already have. John Maine pitched him VERY carefully, walking him twice. The 2nd at bat was a 12 pitch at bat!
Ohlendorf may do funny things on the mound, Mr. RB, but he's not a comedian.
I agree MWE. This entire BABIP suject was introduced inproperly to the baseball community. Now you have fans and fantasy baseball writers (whatever that means) citing BABIP as luck anytime it is above or below .300.
Enough.
You're right of course, your post just honestly brought that to my mind, because I'm geniunely curious about who will emerge with the better end of that deal, it's pretty clearly a trade that can go either way.
Or just win 1 decisive playoff game.
Through his first 79 MLB ABs, Kevin Maas had a .398 OBP and .694 SLG (1.082 OPS).
The self important, condescending tone of these comments you've been making Beano is stunning, even for this site.
"Enough" ????? Are you a moderator here?
Furthermore, your generalization and categorizing of my comments as "citing BABIP as luck anytime it is above or below .300." is a strawman and intellectually dishonest. Thats certainly not what I am saying. I'm talking about Micah Owings, not any other pitcher. I've watched every inning he's pitched in the majors. I think he's been a bit lucky to have a 108 ERA+. I cited one piece of data that would support that, even if not ultimately prove it. If you want to then jump on some kind of crusade, thats your business.......but you are trying to portray something that isn't.
I don't think a little over or under .300 constitutes luck. But I do look at the extremes.
This all started when MWE started in with me for "not understanding" BABIP because I put forth the idea that Mark Reynolds .378 BABIP last year was not sustainable. Never mind that there are only 3 hitters in all of baseball that have managed 2 or more straight seasons over .345 BABIP for any of the last 3 seasons, (Miguel Cabrera, Derek Jeter, and Michael Young). But I'm the jackass that has no clue. Right.
Never mind that 5 of the top 10, and 12 of the top 20 pitchers in MLB in DER have GB rates over 40% so far in 2008.
Or for 2007, 11 of the top 20 in DER had GB Rates over 40% .
Because MWE has now told me that since Owings doesn't have a 40% GB rate I have to expect him to have a higher than avg DER.
Seriously....you guys do not have a monopoly on baseball understanding, so stop the condescending crap, and don't tell me when it's "enough".
Through his first 79 MLB ABs, Kevin Maas had a .398 OBP and .694 SLG (1.082 OPS).
Bah, Shane Spencer had an 1.310 OPS through his first 75 ABs.
If you hold the line drive rate constant at 20%, and apply the league average for each hit type to a pitcher's mix of hit types allowed, I get:
GB% BABIP
70 .330
60 .320
50 .309
45 .304 (about average)
40 .299
35 .293
30 .288
20 .278
15 .272
So if Owings is getting 15% groundouts to 65% flyballs, his BABIP is in line. But I don't think I'd recommend that considering where he pitches.
Jose Oliva had a .373 OBP and .731 SLG (1.105 OPS) through his first 75 plate appearances.
I doubt there are many serious fans that really feel that Owings current rate stats are a reflection of his true talent level as a hitter. But it's fun to talk about while the numbers are still up there.
Once Yovani is healthy they should have a hitting/pitch-off.
Check out the splits by month.
Not to say Ohlendorf is better than Owings, he's not, but he's pitched much better than his ERA suggests and he's probably going to turn into a pretty good setup man for the Yanks. Gonz's glove looks legit too. I'm pretty happy with the guys we got in that trade, even if Owings would have been better.
Also, they got TWO draft picks when some team signed Vizcaino for some reason this off-season!
Well, he has a career 37% GB Rate, and 43 % FB rate....so according to your data, the over/under on BABIP would be somewhere between .293-.299?
Eh...he has a really fast outfield....so he is going to benefit from that. But even taking that into account......274 is lower than expected. BTW, for this year so far, it's only .252
Really this just helps to illustrate my point. I've talked about a couple of guys that are at EXTREMES when it comes to their balls in play profiles, and get hammered as if I were splitting hairs over just above or below .300. If it weren't coming from people that I have a lot of respect for, I wouldn't give it two thoughts.
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