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1994, So Taguchi (yes, that So Taguchi) was moved from shortstop (where he suffered from Knoblauch Arm) to the outfield. Since he had good speed, a shortstop's arm, and, well, a shortstop's bat, he was put in CF, and Ichiro, who was an offensive and defensive force with a cannon arm, was naturally put in RF.
As to what level Japanese baseball is, Clay Davenport addressed this years ago.
Japanese Baseball - How good is it?
Japanese Baseball Pt. 2
There are lots of good arguments to be made regarding the level of Japanese baseball. Anyone who points to Tuffy Rhodes as an indicator of a lack of quality gives up the high ground. You're better than that, Dial, or at least I'd like to think so.
Tuffy Rhodes hit a lot of home runs. It says something about the quality of the league. Even if it is just ballparks.
What you're missing here is that the league OBP is lower than the league SLG. Let's take a player with a league average OBP and a league average SLG - they have an OBP+ of 100 and an SLG+ of 100, exactly equal.
Or let's try Ichiro, using 2008 season-to-date stats. Let's figure OPS+ the way most people probably think its figured, OPS/lgOPS * 100:
.732/.736*100 = 99
By straight OPS (okay, so park-adjusted), Ichirio is a below-average hitter so far this season. Now, figured the way you list:
100 * ( .357/.328 + .375/.407 - 1) = 101
OPS+ is in fact weighting a point of OBP higher than a point of SLG. We could nitpick over whether OPS+ is using the correct weighting, but that's really the point where if you need that much precision, you should just be using linear weights or a dynamic run estimator instead.
And that's what I take issue with. Rhodes got jerked around by the Astros and Cubs, never got to play a full season, and went to Japan at age 27. Do you know how many home runs he hit over here his first year? 27. After that 22, then 22 again. He hit 40 in 1998, and then back down to 25, before finally taking off in 2001. So it's not like he just came over and started taking home run title after home run title. He got the chance to play everyday and improved as a player. No, I don't think he'd be a 40+ HR hitter in MLB, but he sure as well wouldn't be the same hitter he was before he went to Japan. Jesus, it's sample frickin' size. We have a small sample of MLB performance, and a big sample of NPB performance, but for some reason people looking to cut down NPB give them the same weight. Rhodes is a success story, and doesn't deserve that.
Well, in his defense, at the time Taguchi was a filled-out good-hitting college shortstop from one of the powerhouse baseball colleges, while Ichiro was a scrawny high school pitcher.
He didn't get to play the whole season, he played half a season. And he performed poorly at age 25, just like Edgar Martinez did in 1989 at age 26 - less at bats, but same principle.
Year AB/HR
1996 501/27
1997 511/22
1998 494/22
1999 491/40
2000 525/25
2001 550/55
2002 534/46
2003 508/51
2004 523/45
2005 379/27
And he performed poorly at age 25, just like Edgar Martinez did in 1989 at age 26 - less at bats, but same principle.
Hell, Edgar wasn't banging them out at ages 27-29 like he would from ages 33-38.
Here's my issue. Yeah, there's a power drop off coming from NPB to MLB. But Hideki Matsui, who was a 40+ hitter in CL bandboxes is still a 20+ hitter in MLB. But for some reason Tuffy Rhodes, playing mostly in larger parks than Matsui, would go from 40+ HR to 20- in MLB? Why the different standard for non-Japanese players?
If Tuffy Rhodes went from a MLB washout to star slugger of NPB (after 5 years of playing there), that says to me more towards Tuffy's improvement as a player than anything about the level of the league compared to MLB.
Um, is it your contention that the season was not shortened that year? Is it your contention that a 110 game season = a 162 game season? Is it your contention that 269 at-bats is equal to a full season?
Any thoughts on whether he is closer to the end, batting wise, than people have been predicting?
I sense we agree in principle but differ in degree. I believe that NPB ball is significantly enought higher than AAA that celebrating an achievement of a man who spent significant time in both NPB and MLB is reasonable. In other words, that NPB, while not part of the organization called Major League Baseball, is nonetheless a major league. You seem to believe that in as much as it is not MLB, it is equal in importance as AAA and less.
One man is not a league. What I really object to is the lazy thinking and the lazy arguing. Tuffy Rhodes performance is not objectively analyzed and held up to show the comparative difference between the leagues for any kind of helpful knowledge, he's snarkily referred to whenever someone wants to insult Japanese baseball, to portray it's level of baseball in a bad light. Your bringing him up in this conversation was exactly in that vein. "Seriously, Tuffy Rhodes?" I don't think it's fair to Rhodes, I don't think it's fair to Japanese baseball, and I think it's pretty much the "get your head out of the spreadsheets and go watch a game" of discussion about Japanese baseball.
An example of what? Of the level of Japanese baseball? No, I never said that. You'll have to show me where I did. I don't see the word "example" in any of my posts here. The only contention I've made regarding Rhodes was that he improved by playing everyday.
Predicting it out, his strikeouts are about in-line with his normal performance, and his walk rate means that he'll have about 10 more BB than an average season. Both are well within the line of normal variance. In terms of his average, he's ranged heavily between .303 (2005) and .372 (2004) over his career. To me, it just feels like some of the singles just aren't dropping in this year (Natural variation of BABIP FTW!), and he'll return to his normal .330 self next season.
He had a really bad April (his BABIP was pretty bad, too), but has been hitting .312 or better since then. It seems mostly the bad April, and maybe a bit of pressing as he closed in on 3,000. He started off July pretty torrid. He came in with a .295 average, got it up to .307 by July 20, and then it was 0-4, 0-4, 1-2, 1-6, 0-5, 1-5, 2-4, 1-4, 2-5.
Edit: His slugging's been down, too, even in the months when he's been hitting over .300. I suspect he's been focusing on placing hits to get his BA up, so he hasn't been hitting the ball so hard. His ISO was much higher in his floundering April than it's been since.
AL or NL?
No, I didn't use him as an example of such a player, or of that difference. I was talking about Tuffy as Tuffy. Surely you see the difference between a person guessing at Tuffy's MLB performance in a discussion about Tuffy Rhodes, and someone saying, "Look at Tuffy Rhodes!" in a discussion about the level of Japanese baseball, can't you?
Because doing so would be implicitly noting the fundamental unfairness of the reserve clause.
Does "Tuffy being Tuffy" translate well into Japanese?
All the evidence shows that power diminishes considerably for players moving from Japan to MLB, but much lower impacts on average. Since Ichiro's game isn't at all based on power, he's been less affected by changing leagues than anyone else who's done it. His own career provides the best possible MLEs for a player like him.
He played in over 96% of his team's games in Japan, and in even more here in the US. He slugged over .500 every year for Orix, but dropped into the .400s for the Mariners. His batting average dropped from .353 to .330, so maybe we should adjust his hits downward, but he's getting way more at bats here due to the longer seasons, so we'd have to adjust back up. If my quick arithmetic is right, in Japan he averaged 1.3 hits per game; in the US, 1.4. His high in hits in a Japanese season was 210; his low season total in the US was 206.
Maybe he wouldn't have come up to the big leagues quite as early if his name was Ichabod Smith and he was a native of Dayton, Ohio, but I have to believe he'd be right around 3000 career hits. All the evidence points to him as Lou Brock, only better, and he's still got his decline phase ahead of him.
I can understand not taking the Japanese stats at face value, but it seems willfully obtuse to call them meaningless.
Ah, I see. I was wrong to give you so much credit. Congratulations, sir, you "hooked" me. Having reeled in your fish, I trust you'll sleep soundly tonight.
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