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1. GEB4000 Posted: December 02, 2008 at 12:54 AM (#3018390)Me too. That one was un-freaking-believable.
Both second basemen...similar fielding stats...same doubles and homers...slight edge for Morgan on batting average...slight edge for Morgan on power...big edge for Morgan on speed (steals, triples). And he always batted 1st or 2nd, Lefebvre
But the Dodgers won 97 games. The Astros lost 97 games. And Lefebvre was probably a more exciting story, the writers weren't as familiar with him and he was on the best team in the league.
I understand it. Not to say that I agree with it, mind you, but I do understand it. It's as simple as being in a pennant race vs. performing for a ninth-place team about which the biggest story was the ballpark.
-- MWE
And Frank Linzy, also a rookie who finished third in the ROY vote, got more MVP votes than both of them.
-- MWE
It's not totally inexplicable. It's not like they voted for Gary Kroll or Phil Gagliano.
- ah, Mike Emeigh said this too.
Danny Jackson's 1988, Mario Soto's 1982-83, Tom Seaver's 1978 and Bronson Arroyo's 2006 could also make the list.
But they weren't even paying attention to the normal wrong things. Even by the traditional "triple crown" stats that they look at Morgan hit .271/14/40 to .250/12/69. Morgan also had 20 steals (to 3) only 3 years after Wills won the MVP.
Only 21 points of average in Morgan's favor, versus almost twice as many RBIs for Lefebvre? Looks like they made a good choice, going by the traditional wrong things.
Oh, you're right, I just scanned through it quickly and missed that. Also John Franco was on there once.
The list was straight Win Shares Above Bench.
I had never heard of that metric before today, and just looked it up. I've never been a big fan of Win Shares-related stats for various reasons (for example, I had a strong feeling that Sean Casey season was one in which the Reds vastly exceeded their Pythagorean Wins, and I was right). But is there somewhere that posts historical WSAB?
Or if not, does anyone have the WSAB for the seasons I mentioned above, particularly the Rijo season? I really have a hard time believing that a 136 OPS+ from a first baseman could be more valuable than a 163 ERA+ from a starting pitcher.
I assumed from that expression that there was just a Johnny-derived baseline that all great Reds seasons were measured against.
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