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Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Tuesday, February 26, 2008
If Giambi is playing first, all of the other infielders darn well better learn how to aim real good.
Srul Itza
Posted: February 26, 2008 at 11:31 PM | 22 comment(s)
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That's still an above league average OPS for a DH.
2002 1B - 1.135, DH - 0.886
2003 1B - 1.033, DH - 0.829
2004 1B - 0.688, DH - 0.765
2005 1B - 1.135, DH - 0.771
2006 1B - 1.051, DH - 0.904
2007 1B*- 0.762, DH - 0.790
*Only 60 PAs.
It's clear the split is real, not a time-based illusion. Personally I subscribe to Danny's theory in #3, but who knows, maybe it's become a psychological thing?
Didn't MGL and Tango find that there's no special pinch hitting ability, and that everyone suffers the same large penalty?
Lowe has a 2.95 ERA in 381 IP as a reliever. Lieber has a 3.78 ERA in 66 innings as a reliever, compared to 4.29 as a SP.
But I agree that some pitchers gain more from moving to the bullpen than others.
Sure, but should we assume that any split is real and predictive? Players get moved to DH when they're at less than full health. Isn't that the likeliest answer?
I knew that. But my way was funnier.
I agree, in the sense that he catches the ball if it's thrown right to him (not a knock, so much; really bad 1Bs can't catch a damn thing).
I see very little reason to draw from the fact that pinch-hitting statistics have very little underlying unity the positive conclusion that all pinch-hitters are the same. That seems extremely unlikely. What we learn, rather, is that we can't use statistics to measure pinch-hitting ability, most likely due to sampling issues.
Now, now...there's no reason to bring up Ronnie Blomberg here.
In fact, now that I think of it, I bet the DH is what gave him cancer in the first place.
The finding really is interesting. What is says is that the statistical measures of how well a random major league right-handed batter hits against right- and left-handed pitchers are basically useless for determining what his platoon split will look like in the future.
This, again, doesn't mean that Jonny Gomes and Manny Ramirez have the same expected platoon split - they might, though I doubt it - but that we can't use their statistics to determine what the expected difference between their platoon splits will be. It means we need other evidence, typically observational, to make such judgments. (Batter/pitcher splits are another great example - anyone who's played baseball knows that individual matchups vary widely, but the statistics are compiled too haphazardly and over too small a sample for them to measure a very real aspect of baseball.)
EDIT: clarity
a) Giambi can play anything close to a competent first base and
b) that he can stay healthy enough to even play there regularly.
Normally, a first baseman's defense is something I'd be able to excuse, but Giambi is absolutely brutal there. He combines Steve Garvey's arm with Dick Stuart's agility. His hands are OK, but that's negated by his inability to stretch on throws that are a little off. And, to think, he was once a third baseman.
Even a platoon of Duncan and Betemit, or Ensberg and Betemit, would be a big improvement over what they had there last year.
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