New Green book looks to be a diamond Dallas page turner.
Read More...It is a good, lively book and it mirrors Green’s good, lively 6 decades in the game. He rips only three people, Bobby Valentine, Art Mahaffey and Gene Mauch.
“Valentine is a phony and that’s what I call him in the book,” Green grumbles, choosing to skip details of the possible backstabbing while Dallas managed the Mets.
He reveals that in the minors Mahaffey cared only about his numbers. “He didn’t root for other guys to win, because ...
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1. Edmundo got dem ol' Kozma blues again mamaIs this Bizarro math or are my brain cells dead?
Quoting now from their writeup before his 2005 breakout season:
Before 2005:
Before 2007:
Before 2008:
As for the HOF, he's got the HOF peak, but, due to the late start and injuries, doesn't have enough outside of it. And only 1200 games. He's going to need another two or three good years here to get serious consideration, I think. Is an all-time great five-year peak enough? His WAR was 7-7-8-9-8 for that stretch. And outside of that he goes 6-4-3-2. It's an interesting case.
And if you adjust his 1972 to a 162-game schedule, that 9.3 goes to a 9.8!
maybe utley can bounce back. but boy he's fighting a lot of history between injury and second base and body type and the cumulative effect of all those hbp.
i wish him well and that he proves me wrong
being a brewer fan i have observed this up close with rickie weeks
i don't know what research has been done but i have come to strongly suspect that whatever equipment is used that being hit by pitches has a cumulaitve negative effect on a player.
anything out there?
Utley and Weeks are in rare company among high-frequency HBP batters. Of the top 10 through 10 seasons, 8 are middle infielders (C, 2B, SS) and 1 is a center fielder. Utley leads the pack in SLG.
From BR PI:
Spanning Multiple Seasons or entire Careers, From 1961 to 2012, From 1st season to 10th season, (requiring PA<40*HBP and At least 800 games), sorted by greatest Hit By Pitch
Seasons/Careers found: 10.
Note the distribution of batters by HBP frequency; it is quite concentrated.
Here is the HBP frequency for the top 10 listed above:
Player PA/HBP through first 10 seasons Ron Hunt 25 Jason LaRue 29 Jason Kendall 30 Fernando Vina 31 Reed Johnson 31 Chase Utley 34 Rickie Weeks 37 Mike Macfarlane 38 Aaron Rowand 38 David Eckstein 40Of the 10 listed above, 3 were active as of 2012. Of the remaining 7:
*Eckstein stopped playing after 10 seasons;
*4 played no more than 2 additional seasons before retired;
*The 2 who played 3 or more additional seasons were catchers;
*Jason Kendall's hitting fell off a figurative cliff and Aaron Rowand had run face first into a literal outfield wall; and,
*Only Hunt matched his prior OPS.
Spanning Multiple Seasons or entire Careers, From 1961 to 2012, For players in the saved report : (Cum, 1961 - 2012, 1st 10th season, (requiring PA<40*HBP and At least 800 games), sorted by greatest Hit By Pitch: Results), From 11th season to last season, sorted by greatest Games Played
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