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But the league levels jumped from .230/.297/.339 in 1968 to .246/.321/.369 in 1969. Assuming you didn't figure in any additional offensive contexts, if I take his ZIPS 1969, and add in the bumps from 1968, I get .301/.380/.561, which is a nice little Hall of Fame-type season. And all the other seasons moving forward would take a similar step up.
:-)
Seriously - he didn't peak as high as I'd have liked -- frankly I think the projection agrees with Steve more than it agrees with me, except for the 529 homers -- but it gets him into the Hall.
You have to remember that with an exercise like this, a peak is always going to look lower, simply because nobody hits their mean projection every year.
Luckily, I didn't have to project starting at age 19 since he actually played for a while!
Also don't buy it because this resembles no actual career in history: there has never been a player with this offensive profile who performed as consistently and durably and with as much longevity as this.
Well, obviously everyone's going to be more consistent than in real-life - there's no information available at age 23 as to when the ups and downs will be at age 30.
So you're saying you ignored his age-19 performance in the projection?
there's no information available at age 23 as to when the ups and downs will be at age 30.
Of course. No projection system can be expected to predict it. Yet it occurs in real life with great regularity. Which is another way of saying that projection systems are wonderful and valuable things, but shouldn't be relied upon as anyting close to the final word in predicting the long-term career of a young player.
And the fact remains, unaddressed by this (or any other) projection system, that there has never been a player with this offensive profile who performed as consistently and durably and with as much longevity as this. Players of this type, with these rates of HR / 2B + 3B and BABIP - HR and 3B + SB / G simply do not last this long with this kind of durability. They just don't.
It washes out pretty quickly. He was in his age 22 season when he got beaned. But the issue of young play is overblown. We actually have quite a lot of data on how 18 and 19 year olds age - time doesn't stand still in the minors.
So what though? ZIPS works pretty much as well as all the other available projections systems. Maybe Conigliaro would've fallen apart and ended up out of baseball by age 28 without the injury. Maybe he would have improved and gone on to hit 15,000 home runs. I don't know the likelihood of either of those happening, but ZIPS is certainly capable of estimating better than any human could. This is just ZIPS' best guess given what information it has. The fact that Conigliaro's statline is rarer than Todd Zeile's just means there's going to be more variance in the end. If Dan wanted to spend an absurd amount of time working it out, I would think he could do a career ODDIBE for Conigliaro.
To finish, if the reads like I'm talking down to you, that's certainly not my intention. I have nothing but respect for you, and I enjoy reading all the various things you've written. I just am having trouble understanding your qualms with this. This projection was a response to an article in the newsblog about some guy who claimed Conigliaro would have hit 800 home runs without the injury, and I think posting the ZIPS projection is a perfectly valid way to respond.
More an obnoxious amount of time than an absurd amount of time, so long as I'm doing individual components. If you want OPS+ career probabilities, I hope Andrey Kolmogorov rises from the dead and eats your brains.
You're always welcome to do your own projections, of course -- and it's certainly fair game to ask the other projections people to weigh in with their projections. Anyone want to write to baseballprospectus et al.?
Probably a minor quibble, but Tony C. was traded to the Angels in 1971, the season after he hit 36 home runs. I've always wondered about that trade; were the Red Sox aware that he was still having vision problems? Seems like the only justification to trade a 25 year old who just hit 36 home runs.
True, but I didn't want to automatically assume he was going to be traded if his career trajectory was different.
AB H DB TP HR BB SB CS BA OBP SLG
12026 3551 774 40 723 1617 237 91 0.295 0.379 0.547
The Conigliaros have always presented a united front before a world they have long construed as hostile. Tony's retirement triggered Billy's anti-Yaz diatribe. Things might have been different, Billy said, if the brothers had been allowed to play in the same outfield.
"Tony was traded because of one guy," Billy had said in the clubhouse before leaving for Nahant. He pointed to Yastrzemski. "Tony was the best clutch hitter we had, and yet he got traded. Why? Because Yastrzemski runs this team. Johnny Pesky [a former manager], Ken Harrelson [also retired] and Tony are all gone because of him. I know I'm next, but I don't care."
It also says that by the time he was traded to the Angels, Tony was blind in his left eye.
One, it validates to a large degree Steve's argument that Conigliaro was injury prone. Conigliaro says that he suffered from a string of non-eye related injuries, at least from 1969-1971. Snipping now:
But, second, it also seems highly unlikely that Conigliaro had good vision in 1969 and 1970 when he put up OPS+s of 103 and 117 after the injury. Steve said we don't know what his vision was in those years, but it seems obvious that his vision was at least poor in 1969 (see the underlined portion below, where Conigliaro says he lied about how good his vision was in order to make it back to the majors), and by 1970 had largely deteriorated (see the bold portions below). If Conigliaro is telling the truth, that means that he pretty much did put up the 117 OPS+ in 1970 on one eye:
Not a chance, buster!
Either you're being very picky about your definition of "consistent" or you've forgotten Hank Aaron and Stan Musial and a few other all-time greats. I'd be surprised you forgot Aaron and Musial so I'm guessing it's the former. :-)
If you have forgotten Aaron and Musial then, for god's sake Steve, it's time to lay off the Anchor Steam!
Odd factoid: Aaron's peak as a base-stealer was ages 26-34.
Are you kidding me? Neither Aaron nor Musial had anything remotely resembling Conigliaro's offensive profile, particularly as young players.
Except Adam Dunn.
Lynn was a bit more consistent though:
Lynn went 21-22-23-23-23-23-25 over six seasons.
Dunn has gone 46-40-40-40-40 over five seasons.
Conigliaro's offensive profile is a lot closer to Willie Stargell or Ernie Banks. Reggie Jackson is close too, although with a few more walks.
Ohhh...you mean among guys who hit, rouhgly, 270/340/500 with a 130ish OPS+.
Well, I doubt that has squa-doosh to do with durability. 270/340/500 ain't old man skills. So, let's see what PI turns up:
Eddie Murray: 284/345/475 OPS+ 132 through 22, 287/359/476 career, noticeably worse after 34.
Cal Ripken: 288/340/486 OPS+ 126 through age 22, 276/340/447 career, but noticeabley worse by OPS+ after age 30 but still putting up rate stats in that neighborhood.
Johnny Bench: 281/330/492 OPS+ 125 through age 22, 267/342/476 career, noticeably worse after age 33.
Using 260<=BA<=290, OBP<=360, SLG>=470 through age 22 with at least 1000 PA, I get only 7 non-Conigliaro players. 3 made the HoF. Obviously one as a SS but he still had a ton of games and Bench who managed over 2000 games even at C.
The others:
Boog Powell: 2042 games played, 264/345/488 through 22, 266/361/462 career
Bob Horner: consistent through age 28 then disappeared -- fits Steve's description
Jack Clark: 1994 games played, 278/339/471 through age 22, 267/379/476 career
Andruw Jones: less said the better but he's already to 1836 games
Now fair enough -- Dan "projects" Tony C to about 11,000 PA which is about 3,000 more than Powell/Clark (roughly the median players here) got and about 2000 less than Murray/Ripken. So that's not realistic. The ZiPS projection looks pretty good to me though through about 1979 (his age 34 season) -- basically Jack Clark with less OBP and more power. And of course that leaves him a littly shy of 500 HR, 1500 RBI and 1500 runs.
Now Steve, if what you meant was "I suspect that's pretty accurate through age 33-34 or so but after that, no way", that's not what I took you as saying. 2000 games, 15 year career, consistent is, to me, durable and consistent and 5 of the other 7 qualifiers did at least that.** If your gripe is just about the last 5-6 seasons, that's fair enough.
** that strikes me as an incredibly high success rate, even for the population of good, young players. The second fewest number of games played among those 7 is Jones at 1836 and counting.
How the Sox would have sorted out Yaz, Tony C, Rice, Evans, Scott, Cooper, etc. would have been interesting.
I do love how, although Tony C hadn't stolen a base since 1975, he was still out there giving it a go every year. :-)
No, I'd say it's pretty accurate (though still unrealistically consistent, but that's the nature of projections) through about the age of 30 or so, but after that, no way.
In the other thread I said that Conigliaro might have had a 500+ HR career, if everything worked out perfectly. That's the career presented in the projection above. Possible, yes, but the best-case scenario, highly unlikely. Far more likely is that he'd have encountered some difficulties along the way, and not aged nearly this well. Far more likely is that he'd have wound up with somewhere in the neighborhood of 400 HRs (with that stat, of course, being really his only strength), a highly respectable HOVG career, but not a great player.
Managerial change, I believe.
Probably kept Boggs in the minors for another 20-years...just in case.
Managerial change, I believe.
Yep. Aaron's getting the green light for once coincided with the departure of Fred Haney and the arrival of Chuck Dressen.
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