This is pretty much what he did with the Twins so maybe this is more typical. Maybe the last couple of years were a fluke.
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I would kind of disagree with that. Especially after seeing my Mets lose 2 of the first 5 games of the season due to their new left fielder, who is inept in the field. Over the course of a season, I would guess that the outfield can cost teams 5-10 games. Many times, in close games, missing the cutoff man or a fielding error loses a game. They do in the infield, too, but errors in the outfield are magnified, as they are less common.
You do hope that bad fielders are a net positive when factoring in their hitting, though. And I agree that Manny is a huge net gain, despite his outfield adventures.
Well that sucked. I tried to post the stats with better formatting but it will not let me. Sorry for the garbage thread!
Steroids don't, but there is still question in the scientific community as to whether HGH does and wide-spread reporting indicates it may very well. be interesting to see if it is ever proven to actually do it.
Ok, so a bad defensive outfielder can cost 5-10 wins... How many would an average outfielder cost a team? 2-5? I've seen Ichiro and Torii Hunter make mistakes in the field; no one is perfect.
How many games does Manny help you win at the plate? Probably more than 5-10. This is why I can't stand people ******** about this.
Last year, his runs created for the team was 145. A lineup of 9 Mannys would give you 10 runs per game.
Who did Manny replace last year as on everyday OF? Juan Pierre? Juan Pierre's runs created for the team was 44.
I'd sacrifice some defense to get an extra 100 runs for my team. Wouldn't you? You couldn't say Manny's defense is costing the team more than 100 runs per season.
What I don't agree with is saying that the same "net gain" criteria can be applied to all outfielders. A great hitter may make his mistakes in the field more than even out. That factor diminishes with the productivity of the hitter.
In my example of Daniel Murphy, he's may not win as many games with his bat that he loses with his glove.
That paragraph makes so sense to me at all.
Daniel Murphy is not a productive MLB baseball player. Daniel Murphy has a VORP of -1.2. He's probably the worst every day position player on the Mets at the plate. So of course if he stinks it up in the Outfield it's going to cost the team. He costs the team both at the plate and in the field.
Sigh. I'll try and spell it out for you.
You said this: I don't think most of you realize how little effect outfield defense has on wins and losses.
I said that it depends on the outfielder. Manny makes up for his deficiencies, others do not.
If you noticed, I pretty much agreed with you concerning Manny.
What I don't agree with is saying that the same "net gain" criteria can be applied to all outfielders. A great hitter may make his mistakes in the field more than even out. That factor diminishes with the productivity of the hitter.
In my example of Daniel Murphy, he's may not win as many games with his bat that he loses with his glove.
Sigh. I'll try and spell it out for you.
You said this: I don't think most of you realize how little effect outfield defense has on wins and losses.
I said that it depends on the outfielder. Manny makes up for his deficiencies, others do not.
It does if they really suck. As a White Sox fan who's had to watch such fun experiments as Rob Mackowiak and Jose Valentin in CF - if they blow, they can really hurt you. Especially when we've had Rowand and Anderson in CF - two gold glove caliber defenders. If you have crappy OF defense, especially in CF, it can lead to quite a few runs.
Speaking as a fan that witnessed both Torii Hunter (with his amazing range and his reckless disregard for collisions with the outfield wall) and Michael Cuddyer (with his cannon of an arm) save countless runs with their outfield defense, we'll just have to agree to disagree on this one... :smile:
No, no, no! I didn't say that defensive outfielders don't make a difference! Mpls did! I rebutted that, and he couldn't understand it, so I clarified.
Good outfielders make a huge difference, IMO.