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1. retro-shiite Posted: March 14, 2008 at 01:11 PM (#2712598)Sox fan coworker of mine was telling me he heard noise about The Riot batting leadoff; he seemed impressed by the idea for all the usual dumb reasons (he's scrappy, he has good speed).
Does anyone know if there is a calculation as to how many hypothetical walks a player needs to achieve to actually produce the same hypothetical run a home run achieves? In other words, if the prototypical leadoff hitter has a .357 OBP with 13 homers while Soriano was .337 with 33 homers does the 20 additional points in OBP that MAY lead to more runs hypothetically exceed the 20 runs the additional homers (assuming all solo homers) do produce?
Obviously four walks in a row produce a run so, in this case, would the prototypical lead off hitter have to walk 111 times to just match the 20 homer advantage Soriano has? If so, there were only 5 NL batters who exceeded 100 BBs last season (Dunn, Howard, Burrell, Helton and Bonds) and none of them would be considered a lead off hitter.
Linear Weights (and Super Linear Weights) are based off the context neutral run values of events like these.
Of course, we're talking about a leadoff hitter so context is going to be important here.
Look--I don't pretend to think Soriano's an ideal leadoff man, but he's hardly a drain on the offense hitting leadoff--he just provides his offense in a different form than the "typical" leadoff hitter. I'm inclined to think his skill set's more suited to hitting behind a big on-base guy to take advantage of his power, but as I mentioned, hitting lower in the order has never worked out that well for him, for whatever reason, and the Cubs have other guys with power to fill that middle-order role.
Now, putting Theriot leadoff would irritate the hell out of me. He gets on base as little as Soriano (or less), and has NO power.
If the Cubs stick him in the leadoff or 2 slot, it won't be his fault, but it won't make continuing to like him that easy.
I looked at linear weights and the formula includes the segment ".33 x (BB + HBP)". If we can assume zero HBP for this example on both parts, the prototypical lead off hitter would need just over 3 walks to produce a run that a home run would do. This would mean a total of 91 walks to make up the difference of 20 homers. This means we could add Fielder, Wright, Berkman and Pujols to the previous list and still not find another lead off hitter. Soriano is looking better and better as a lead off hitter.
Unfortunately, the site I checked also stated -
"In game 2 of the World Series, Alfonso Soriano went 1 for 3 (HR) with a walk and a CS. By linear weights, he created 1.40 + .33 - 2 \times .25 - .60 = .63 runs."
It's that sort of post that would drive Lou to madness.
Don't forget that a home run will have a value greater than 1 because it drives in others.
I don't think Theriot is going to stay in that role, and this is Lou's way of getting Soriano some more to get comfortable elsewhere.
And I agree with Dandy Little Glove man, this isn't about hwo good a hitter Soriano is (he is really good) but instead about whether he is best suited to the leadoff role. The cubs would most likely be better off even with someone like Fukudome (who apparently has some OBP chops) hitting leadoff and letting Soriano smack him bombs while he is on base instead of the other way around. It is not whether a play is good or not but instead whether the manager is using his lineup to maximize its production.
Finally, if it is true that Soriano doesn't hit well outside of the leadoff spot (where did he hit for Washington?) then it may be best to keep him there. However, I doubt taht this is true and somehow think that his 'manhood' won't be hurt too much if he hit say, 4th in the lineup.
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