User Comments, Suggestions, or Complaints | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Advertising
Buy MLB playoff tickets, plus 2011 World Series, 2011 ALCS tickets and NLCS game tickets. We also have Texas Rangers playoff schedule, tickets to Red Sox games and Yankees game tickets. Plus, buy Phillies baseball tickets, Tigers playoff tickets and the biggies like ALDS baseball tickets and 2011 NLDS tickets. |
Demarini, Easton and TPX Baseball Bats
|
AllianceTickets.com has cheap MLB Tickets. Get all your Colorado Rockies Tickets, Seattle Mariners Tickets, San Francisco Giants Tickets and all your favorite baseball tickets here. We also carry cheap Denver Broncos Tickets, Seattle Seahawks Tickets and Denver Nuggets Tickets. |
Page rendered in 0.2267 seconds
55 querie(s) executed

Reader Comments and Retorts
Go to end of page
Statements posted here are those of our readers and do not represent the BaseballThinkFactory. Names are provided by the poster and are not verified. We ask that posters follow our submission policy. Please report any inappropriate comments.
1. CFBF Hates Hyphens Posted: June 18, 2007 at 06:14 PM (#2408150)I think the that's part of it. And I think the Hooters waitress thing was an unnecessary swipe, but I'll hold judgment to see what they say about A-Rod's chick next time he's mentioned. Other comment of note:
Granted, Nate here is channeling suspected MSM reasoning -- Chipper wasn't a juicer -- but I think this example (which I've heard elsewhere) is indicative of just how damn hard it is going to be to discuss steroids in this era intelligently. Maybe I watch too many Braves games, but surely I'm not the only one who noticed just how beefier Chipper was from the late 90s until 2003 or 2004, am I? In the past couple of years he's been much thinner.
Does that mean anything? No, but not much more than that has been used to accuse others of steroid use. I love the Braves and Chipper Jones, but I always have wondered why he (and others) have gotten a free pass.
Yep, Jones had an OPS+ of 175 in '99, a number that Mike Schmidt only bested once in his career (1981, 199)
And Schmidt's came in a strike season. Chipper in 1999 had the seventh-highest OPS+ ever by a third baseman with at least 502 PAs, and most runs created ever by a 3B.
George Brett bested it twice: 202 in 1980, 178 in 1985, and was clearly a better third baseman than Schmidt.
;)
I wonder if he would say the same thing about A-rod in 05. Because A-rod's defense was pretty bad in 05, and I doubt Chipper's was much worse. And Chipper out hit A-rod.
Jones was the offensive anchor for one of the best teams in baseball for over a decade. He's going to the Hall of Fame.
I would assume that, based on results, ESPN's Defensive Ratings are the best ever? They do seem to mesh quite well with how scouts, players, managers, and legions of baseball fans feel about the relative defensive merits of players.
That's about as accurate a description of Chipper's defense as possible.
What's interesting just from personal observation is that Chipper doesn't seem to have degraded much defensively. He's essentially the same defensive player he was in 1999. He spent two and a half years in left field, moved back to third base in 2004 and basically just picked up where he left off.
Schmidt 147
ARod 146
Chipper 143
Mathews 143
Brett 135
Boggs 130
Rolen 128
Kell 111
Lindstrom 110
Traynor 107
B Robinson 104
And the BP defensive metrics have been debunked by many...especially in regards to Chipper (who is unfairly penalized by BP for playing behind the Braves' staff). Chipper has never been Rolen, but he's not Bonilla either. He's Hall-worthy, easy. My main concern is the writers won't understand how valuable Chipper's .400ish OBP% is...
I just went to BB-Ref to look it up, to make sure my memories of that year are accurate, and not a product of PTSD. Over the 12 games against the Mets, Chipper batted .400, with a .510 OBP and a 1.000 SLG. In those 12 games, he hit 7 HRs, drove in 16 runs, and scored 14.
The Braves went 9-3 against the Mets that year, and won the division by 6.5 games.
I am sure. It made an even bigger impression on Met Fans at the time.
The defensive metrics from BIS, ZR, and the revised UZR are good metrics. Not being as good as offensive stats doesn't mean bad.
BPro's aren't good at all, nor is DSG's "Range", but BIP/vchance based stats are good.
And Chipper, IMO is slightly above average. BPro misjudges Chipper's career defense by - what - 200 runs? It's stunningly poor analysis.
Moreover, Ron Santo can't hold Chipper's jock. What nonsense.
Y'know, I was gonna rag on Silver's comment that Santo was better but this is far bigger BS.
Santo played 2243 games, 2130 of them at 3B. Jones is at 1808 and 1350. 2.5 seasons of games and 5 seasons of 3B counts for a lot in my book. And Jones may be average as a 3B but it's highly unlikely he was as good as Santo.
There's no doubt Chipper's the better hitter for his career. But their peaks were pretty close (best 5 seasons, 500+ PA, OPS+ and EQA):
Jones 175, 162, 155, 146, 142
Santo 164, 161, 153, 146, 138
Jones 346, 334, 333, 322, 315
Santo 334, 333, 324, 317, 307
Add defense and Santo was quite possibly better in those years.
So it comes down to this:
1. Chipper's the better hitter
2. Santo had the longer career (to date), especially at 3B
3. Santo was almost certainly the better defender but we have little/no good idea by how much
There's a good chance that Santo's career value is greater than Chipper's right now. When we discussed this last year, using your numbers from the last decade plus, Santo needed to be the defensive equivalent of Matt Williams to best Chipper on career value (even using your numbers for Chipper's defense). Chipper's the more talented player, he probably wins a 10-year (or, say, 6-7,000 PA) comparison reasonably handily (assuming we don't use BPro's numbers). If he plays reasonably well for another three years, he'll pass Santo easily in career value. If he retired now, I'd probably put him in ahead of Santo.
But to say Santo can't hold his jock -- utter ########.
To be fair, I'm pretty sure that that was overstatement for effect.
Looking at the numbers though, what jumps out is that Santo was retired by the age that Chipper is now (35). Those extra years for Santo came at the beginning of his career, when he was a below average hitter (overall- he had one nice year among the 3). Not that I am giving Santo demerits for that.
I hate to be nit-picky about this, but Chipper's 1999 season wasn't "fine." It was spectacular. Aside from the 175 OPS+, he also stole 25 bases and was caught only thrice. Chipper deserved to win that MVP even if he hadn't eviscerated the Mets in that September series. That was just a huge, wonderful, extraordinary bonus.
That might have been the year he had utterly horrendous defensive stats. Maybe it was 2000.
You must be Registered and Logged In to post comments.
<< Back to main