Mattingly at that time was the best player in baseball and his numbers were staggering.
It's not a far fetch to want to put the two stats side by side.
Take a look at Pujols and Trout stats side by side. Everyone seems to forget just how amazing Pujols was as do they forget about how great Mattingly was for the first 9 years of his carer.
That was my point. People here are including the final 5 years of Mattingly's with what Trout will most likely accomplish in the next 5-10 years.
Those are the kinds of names to compare Trout's first 7 or 8 years too
That's different. Those are guys who played 20+ years. And retired in their late 30s early 40s Mattingly retired at 34. Played 14 seasons (12 full seasons) Which proves my point that you're including Mattingly's final years. I was saying for the first 9 years or similar amount of games. The numbers were not that far from each other. And that 9th year I included he missed 50 games. So I could've chosen the 92 or 93 season to make it look better. Using the race analogy. If both runners are neck and neck. Maybe one guy is ahead a half second. And the other guy gets hurt half way. That doesn't mean the guy who couldn't finish the race wasn't up to that point a top runner.
THE ARTICLE IS COMPARING THEIR FIRST 1000 GAMES......just like the stats you provided comparing Trout and Mattingly's first however many years in the league.
j
I know. But they're still comparing to guys who played a long time. And were able to have full career. They're not going to put Mattingly on that list because the final 6 were not as great. They were still good considering. And if he played another 5 or 6 years. His numbers would have filled out nicely.
If ESPN did the same article in 89. They would be doing the same for Mattingly. Keep in mind Mattingly wasn't thought of as a homerun hitter. They're not going to say "Well in 5 years he won't be the same player because of a bad back. So we can't compare him to guys who played over 20 years."
The same thing could happen to Trout next week and he might not be the same player. (Although he's buitl differently so he might overcome it a little more). It doesn't mean what he did before wasn't great or comparable to previous greats.
----- The. Stats. You. Provided. Disprove. Your. Own. Argument. ----- I don't know how to be more blunt.
Now you're saying "keep in mind he wasn't thought of as a home run hitter" so should we disregard the fact that Trout has hit about 15 more hr's per year than Don did the same way you suggested we should discount the fact that Trout has almost 200 more stolen bases?
Much higher OBP, way more home runs, much higher slugging, way higher OPS, way higher OPS+, way more walks, way more stolen bases, way more runs scores. These are all areas where Trout has been SIGNIFICANTLY better than Mattingly over his first nine season. The ONLY area in which Mattingly was significantly better than Trout in was the fact that he hardly ever struck out. That's it. He's got him slightly in avg, doubles, and hits, but those are relatively all close. Trout trounces him in everything else.
I'm obviously not the biggest sabermetrics guy in the world, but I recognize their importance in evaluating things like this. When it comes to WAR, Trout's first nine seasons essentially DOUBLES Mattingly's: 69.5 to 35.
Mattingly was great for a four or five year run. I was a fan of his when I was a kdi. But Trout's literally been one of the best players to ever play the game for his first nine years. Big difference!
Mattingly at that time was the best player in baseball and his numbers were staggering.
It's not a far fetch to want to put the two stats side by side.
Take a look at Pujols and Trout stats side by side. Everyone seems to forget just how amazing Pujols was as do they forget about how great Mattingly was for the first 9 years of his carer.
That was my point. People here are including the final 5 years of Mattingly's with what Trout will most likely accomplish in the next 5-10 years.
Those are the kinds of names to compare Trout's first 7 or 8 years too
That's different. Those are guys who played 20+ years. And retired in their late 30s early 40s Mattingly retired at 34. Played 14 seasons (12 full seasons) Which proves my point that you're including Mattingly's final years. I was saying for the first 9 years or similar amount of games. The numbers were not that far from each other. And that 9th year I included he missed 50 games. So I could've chosen the 92 or 93 season to make it look better. Using the race analogy. If both runners are neck and neck. Maybe one guy is ahead a half second. And the other guy gets hurt half way. That doesn't mean the guy who couldn't finish the race wasn't up to that point a top runner.
THE ARTICLE IS COMPARING THEIR FIRST 1000 GAMES......just like the stats you provided comparing Trout and Mattingly's first however many years in the league.
j
I know. But they're still comparing to guys who played a long time. And were able to have full career. They're not going to put Mattingly on that list because the final 6 were not as great. They were still good considering. And if he played another 5 or 6 years. His numbers would have filled out nicely.
If ESPN did the same article in 89. They would be doing the same for Mattingly. Keep in mind Mattingly wasn't thought of as a homerun hitter. They're not going to say "Well in 5 years he won't be the same player because of a bad back. So we can't compare him to guys who played over 20 years."
The same thing could happen to Trout next week and he might not be the same player. (Although he's buitl differently so he might overcome it a little more). It doesn't mean what he did before wasn't great or comparable to previous greats.
----- The. Stats. You. Provided. Disprove. Your. Own. Argument. ----- I don't know how to be more blunt.
Now you're saying "keep in mind he wasn't thought of as a home run hitter" so should we disregard the fact that Trout has hit about 15 more hr's per year than Don did the same way you suggested we should discount the fact that Trout has almost 200 more stolen bases?
Much higher OBP, way more home runs, much higher slugging, way higher OPS, way higher OPS+, way more walks, way more stolen bases, way more runs scores. These are all areas where Trout has been SIGNIFICANTLY better than Mattingly over his first nine season. The ONLY area in which Mattingly was significantly better than Trout in was the fact that he hardly ever struck out. That's it. He's got him slightly in avg, doubles, and hits, but those are relatively all close. Trout trounces him in everything else.
I'm obviously not the biggest sabermetrics guy in the world, but I recognize their importance in evaluating things like this. When it comes to WAR, Trout's first nine seasons essentially DOUBLES Mattingly's: 69.5 to 35.
Mattingly was great for a four or five year run. I was a fan of his when I was a kdi. But Trout's literally been one of the best players to ever play the game for his first nine years. Big difference!
You mention Trout's WAR.
Have you ever seen who he's better than already? It's incredible to look at the list. Even more incredible that Mookie Betts had a higher season WAR last year as Trout has dominated that category for a few years.
Mattingly at that time was the best player in baseball and his numbers were staggering.
It's not a far fetch to want to put the two stats side by side.
Take a look at Pujols and Trout stats side by side. Everyone seems to forget just how amazing Pujols was as do they forget about how great Mattingly was for the first 9 years of his carer.
That was my point. People here are including the final 5 years of Mattingly's with what Trout will most likely accomplish in the next 5-10 years.
Those are the kinds of names to compare Trout's first 7 or 8 years too
I'll throw this in the mix.
Can you name another player other than Mattingly, that had a great burst his first few years then fizzled out and isn't in the hall?
Soriano, Helton, Larry Walker? Anybody else?
I would compare his numbers to another HOF'er in Kirby Puckett. I still don't understand how he got in but he is in.
There numbers are really, really close.
Wow, they are crazy similar. But look at the trajectory. Puckett could’ve easily played a few more seasons and likely reached 3k hits, without the injury. Seems a little unfair but it’s certainly more reasonable to assume some numbers with Puckett vs boosting a half a career with Mattingly. Assuming a slight decline over a few more seasons and 2 rings gives Puckett the better resume.
Mattingly at that time was the best player in baseball and his numbers were staggering.
It's not a far fetch to want to put the two stats side by side.
Take a look at Pujols and Trout stats side by side. Everyone seems to forget just how amazing Pujols was as do they forget about how great Mattingly was for the first 9 years of his carer.
That was my point. People here are including the final 5 years of Mattingly's with what Trout will most likely accomplish in the next 5-10 years.
Those are the kinds of names to compare Trout's first 7 or 8 years too
I'll throw this in the mix.
Can you name another player other than Mattingly, that had a great burst his first few years then fizzled out and isn't in the hall?
Soriano, Helton, Larry Walker? Anybody else?
I would compare his numbers to another HOF'er in Kirby Puckett. I still don't understand how he got in but he is in.
There numbers are really, really close.
Wow, they are crazy similar. But look at the trajectory. Puckett could’ve easily played a few more seasons and likely reached 3k hits, without the injury. Seems a little unfair but it’s certainly more reasonable to assume some numbers with Puckett vs boosting a half a career with Mattingly. Assuming a slight decline over a few more seasons and 2 rings gives Puckett the better resume.
Puckett had 200 more hits and 5 more full seasons.
Just think what Mattingly could have done w a good back?
Mattingly at that time was the best player in baseball and his numbers were staggering.
It's not a far fetch to want to put the two stats side by side.
Take a look at Pujols and Trout stats side by side. Everyone seems to forget just how amazing Pujols was as do they forget about how great Mattingly was for the first 9 years of his carer.
That was my point. People here are including the final 5 years of Mattingly's with what Trout will most likely accomplish in the next 5-10 years.
Those are the kinds of names to compare Trout's first 7 or 8 years too
That's different. Those are guys who played 20+ years. And retired in their late 30s early 40s Mattingly retired at 34. Played 14 seasons (12 full seasons) Which proves my point that you're including Mattingly's final years. I was saying for the first 9 years or similar amount of games. The numbers were not that far from each other. And that 9th year I included he missed 50 games. So I could've chosen the 92 or 93 season to make it look better. Using the race analogy. If both runners are neck and neck. Maybe one guy is ahead a half second. And the other guy gets hurt half way. That doesn't mean the guy who couldn't finish the race wasn't up to that point a top runner.
THE ARTICLE IS COMPARING THEIR FIRST 1000 GAMES......just like the stats you provided comparing Trout and Mattingly's first however many years in the league.
j
I know. But they're still comparing to guys who played a long time. And were able to have full career. They're not going to put Mattingly on that list because the final 6 were not as great. They were still good considering. And if he played another 5 or 6 years. His numbers would have filled out nicely.
If ESPN did the same article in 89. They would be doing the same for Mattingly. Keep in mind Mattingly wasn't thought of as a homerun hitter. They're not going to say "Well in 5 years he won't be the same player because of a bad back. So we can't compare him to guys who played over 20 years."
The same thing could happen to Trout next week and he might not be the same player. (Although he's buitl differently so he might overcome it a little more). It doesn't mean what he did before wasn't great or comparable to previous greats.
----- The. Stats. You. Provided. Disprove. Your. Own. Argument. ----- I don't know how to be more blunt.
Now you're saying "keep in mind he wasn't thought of as a home run hitter" so should we disregard the fact that Trout has hit about 15 more hr's per year than Don did the same way you suggested we should discount the fact that Trout has almost 200 more stolen bases?
Much higher OBP, way more home runs, much higher slugging, way higher OPS, way higher OPS+, way more walks, way more stolen bases, way more runs scores. These are all areas where Trout has been SIGNIFICANTLY better than Mattingly over his first nine season. The ONLY area in which Mattingly was significantly better than Trout in was the fact that he hardly ever struck out. That's it. He's got him slightly in avg, doubles, and hits, but those are relatively all close. Trout trounces him in everything else.
I'm obviously not the biggest sabermetrics guy in the world, but I recognize their importance in evaluating things like this. When it comes to WAR, Trout's first nine seasons essentially DOUBLES Mattingly's: 69.5 to 35.
Mattingly was great for a four or five year run. I was a fan of his when I was a kdi. But Trout's literally been one of the best players to ever play the game for his first nine years. Big difference!
The homerun thing means the fact Mattingly hitting all those homeruns was unexpected. So the factl that they were close is a good thing for Donnie. And Mattingly also had way more hits. Their total bases were very close. Mattingly had over 150 plate apperances less. And you're still not getting it. I'm not staying one is better than the other. Just that their numbers are close for the first 9 years. 3 of which includes Mattingly's injury seasons. There are also 2 seasons in which he barely started. So that takes a few WAR points off the board.
I've always felt a little bad for Mattingly. He's probably the most legendary Yankee to have no team success. What back luck, for your tenure with the greatest team in American sports history to coincide with that team's worst stretch (not counting their pre-Babe Ruth years). And after a distinguished 13-year career, the moment Mattingly retires, they win the World Series the very next year. Then the poor bastard returns to as a coach for the Yankees in 2004 when they should have beaten the Red Sox to advance to the World Series, and he leaves in 2007 two years before they beat the Phillies in the World Series.
Mattingly at that time was the best player in baseball and his numbers were staggering.
It's not a far fetch to want to put the two stats side by side.
Take a look at Pujols and Trout stats side by side. Everyone seems to forget just how amazing Pujols was as do they forget about how great Mattingly was for the first 9 years of his carer.
That was my point. People here are including the final 5 years of Mattingly's with what Trout will most likely accomplish in the next 5-10 years.
Those are the kinds of names to compare Trout's first 7 or 8 years too
I'll throw this in the mix.
Can you name another player other than Mattingly, that had a great burst his first few years then fizzled out and isn't in the hall?
Soriano, Helton, Larry Walker? Anybody else?
I would compare his numbers to another HOF'er in Kirby Puckett. I still don't understand how he got in but he is in.
There numbers are really, really close.
I could that. And the Kirby comparison has already been done. But those are different things. I just wanted to see how my favorite player's best years stacked up against someone who great now. It's what people don't get.
Mattingly at that time was the best player in baseball and his numbers were staggering.
It's not a far fetch to want to put the two stats side by side.
Take a look at Pujols and Trout stats side by side. Everyone seems to forget just how amazing Pujols was as do they forget about how great Mattingly was for the first 9 years of his carer.
That was my point. People here are including the final 5 years of Mattingly's with what Trout will most likely accomplish in the next 5-10 years.
Those are the kinds of names to compare Trout's first 7 or 8 years too
I'll throw this in the mix.
Can you name another player other than Mattingly, that had a great burst his first few years then fizzled out and isn't in the hall?
Soriano, Helton, Larry Walker? Anybody else?
I would compare his numbers to another HOF'er in Kirby Puckett. I still don't understand how he got in but he is in.
There numbers are really, really close.
I could that. And the Kirby comparison has already been done. But those are different things. I just wanted to see how my favorite player's best years stacked up against someone who great now. It's what people don't get.
Pretty sure we all got it and you don’t like the simple fact that they just don’t stack up.
I've always felt a little bad for Mattingly. He's probably the most legendary Yankee to have no team success. What back luck, for your tenure with the greatest team in American sports history to coincide with that team's worst stretch (not counting their pre-Babe Ruth years). And after a distinguished 13-year career, the moment Mattingly retires, they win the World Series the very next year. Then the poor bastard returns to as a coach for the Yankees in 2004 when they should have beaten the Red Sox to advance to the World Series, and he leaves in 2007 two years before they beat the Phillies in the World Series.
He was all but a lock to be the new manager until Cashman convinced George otherwise.
I've always felt a little bad for Mattingly. He's probably the most legendary Yankee to have no team success. What back luck, for your tenure with the greatest team in American sports history to coincide with that team's worst stretch (not counting their pre-Babe Ruth years). And after a distinguished 13-year career, the moment Mattingly retires, they win the World Series the very next year. Then the poor bastard returns to as a coach for the Yankees in 2004 when they should have beaten the Red Sox to advance to the World Series, and he leaves in 2007 two years before they beat the Phillies in the World Series.
He was all but a lock to be the new manager until Cashman convinced George otherwise.
And for a moment it seemed like Cashman fucked up royally as the Yankees missed the playoffs in 2008 for the first time since (I believe) 1995. I suspected Cashman and Girardi would be found dead in the Hudson River after that. But they won it all in 2009, so they both got to go on to continue living.
I've always felt a little bad for Mattingly. He's probably the most legendary Yankee to have no team success. What back luck, for your tenure with the greatest team in American sports history to coincide with that team's worst stretch (not counting their pre-Babe Ruth years). And after a distinguished 13-year career, the moment Mattingly retires, they win the World Series the very next year. Then the poor bastard returns to as a coach for the Yankees in 2004 when they should have beaten the Red Sox to advance to the World Series, and he leaves in 2007 two years before they beat the Phillies in the World Series.
He was all but a lock to be the new manager until Cashman convinced George otherwise.
And for a moment it seemed like Cashman fucked up royally as the Yankees missed the playoffs in 2008 for the first time since (I believe) 1995. I suspected Cashman and Girardi would be found dead in the Hudson River after that. But they won it all in 2009, so they both got to go on to continue living.
Yea and it took a lot to happen. ARod carrying us through the playoffs.(His overall playoff career is good no matter what people say) CC still being great. Having Mo. Pettitte being back. Tex before he broke down.
Mattingly at that time was the best player in baseball and his numbers were staggering.
It's not a far fetch to want to put the two stats side by side.
Take a look at Pujols and Trout stats side by side. Everyone seems to forget just how amazing Pujols was as do they forget about how great Mattingly was for the first 9 years of his carer.
That was my point. People here are including the final 5 years of Mattingly's with what Trout will most likely accomplish in the next 5-10 years.
Those are the kinds of names to compare Trout's first 7 or 8 years too
That's different. Those are guys who played 20+ years. And retired in their late 30s early 40s Mattingly retired at 34. Played 14 seasons (12 full seasons) Which proves my point that you're including Mattingly's final years. I was saying for the first 9 years or similar amount of games. The numbers were not that far from each other. And that 9th year I included he missed 50 games. So I could've chosen the 92 or 93 season to make it look better. Using the race analogy. If both runners are neck and neck. Maybe one guy is ahead a half second. And the other guy gets hurt half way. That doesn't mean the guy who couldn't finish the race wasn't up to that point a top runner.
THE ARTICLE IS COMPARING THEIR FIRST 1000 GAMES......just like the stats you provided comparing Trout and Mattingly's first however many years in the league.
j
I know. But they're still comparing to guys who played a long time. And were able to have full career. They're not going to put Mattingly on that list because the final 6 were not as great. They were still good considering. And if he played another 5 or 6 years. His numbers would have filled out nicely.
If ESPN did the same article in 89. They would be doing the same for Mattingly. Keep in mind Mattingly wasn't thought of as a homerun hitter. They're not going to say "Well in 5 years he won't be the same player because of a bad back. So we can't compare him to guys who played over 20 years."
The same thing could happen to Trout next week and he might not be the same player. (Although he's buitl differently so he might overcome it a little more). It doesn't mean what he did before wasn't great or comparable to previous greats.
----- The. Stats. You. Provided. Disprove. Your. Own. Argument. ----- I don't know how to be more blunt.
Now you're saying "keep in mind he wasn't thought of as a home run hitter" so should we disregard the fact that Trout has hit about 15 more hr's per year than Don did the same way you suggested we should discount the fact that Trout has almost 200 more stolen bases?
Much higher OBP, way more home runs, much higher slugging, way higher OPS, way higher OPS+, way more walks, way more stolen bases, way more runs scores. These are all areas where Trout has been SIGNIFICANTLY better than Mattingly over his first nine season. The ONLY area in which Mattingly was significantly better than Trout in was the fact that he hardly ever struck out. That's it. He's got him slightly in avg, doubles, and hits, but those are relatively all close. Trout trounces him in everything else.
I'm obviously not the biggest sabermetrics guy in the world, but I recognize their importance in evaluating things like this. When it comes to WAR, Trout's first nine seasons essentially DOUBLES Mattingly's: 69.5 to 35.
Mattingly was great for a four or five year run. I was a fan of his when I was a kdi. But Trout's literally been one of the best players to ever play the game for his first nine years. Big difference!
The homerun thing means the fact Mattingly hitting all those homeruns was unexpected. So the factl that they were close is a good thing for Donnie. And Mattingly also had way more hits. Their total bases were very close. Mattingly had over 150 plate apperances less. And you're still not getting it. I'm not staying one is better than the other. Just that their numbers are close for the first 9 years. 3 of which includes Mattingly's injury seasons. There are also 2 seasons in which he barely started. So that takes a few WAR points off the board.
How is about 100 more home runs considered "close" to you? It's not. Its a wide margin. Mattingly averaged 14 more hits per year. That's not "way" more, THAT'S considered close. But averaging more than 10 homers per year is not considered close.
Much higher OBP, Way more home runs, Much higher slugging, Way higher OPS, Way higher OPS+, Way more walks, Way more stolen bases, Way more runs scores. 69.5 war to 35
Their overall numbers are not close...in a few categories they are. But you can say that about a lot of players. Overall? Not remotely close.
Mattingly at that time was the best player in baseball and his numbers were staggering.
It's not a far fetch to want to put the two stats side by side.
Take a look at Pujols and Trout stats side by side. Everyone seems to forget just how amazing Pujols was as do they forget about how great Mattingly was for the first 9 years of his carer.
That was my point. People here are including the final 5 years of Mattingly's with what Trout will most likely accomplish in the next 5-10 years.
Those are the kinds of names to compare Trout's first 7 or 8 years too
That's different. Those are guys who played 20+ years. And retired in their late 30s early 40s Mattingly retired at 34. Played 14 seasons (12 full seasons) Which proves my point that you're including Mattingly's final years. I was saying for the first 9 years or similar amount of games. The numbers were not that far from each other. And that 9th year I included he missed 50 games. So I could've chosen the 92 or 93 season to make it look better. Using the race analogy. If both runners are neck and neck. Maybe one guy is ahead a half second. And the other guy gets hurt half way. That doesn't mean the guy who couldn't finish the race wasn't up to that point a top runner.
THE ARTICLE IS COMPARING THEIR FIRST 1000 GAMES......just like the stats you provided comparing Trout and Mattingly's first however many years in the league.
j
I know. But they're still comparing to guys who played a long time. And were able to have full career. They're not going to put Mattingly on that list because the final 6 were not as great. They were still good considering. And if he played another 5 or 6 years. His numbers would have filled out nicely.
If ESPN did the same article in 89. They would be doing the same for Mattingly. Keep in mind Mattingly wasn't thought of as a homerun hitter. They're not going to say "Well in 5 years he won't be the same player because of a bad back. So we can't compare him to guys who played over 20 years."
The same thing could happen to Trout next week and he might not be the same player. (Although he's buitl differently so he might overcome it a little more). It doesn't mean what he did before wasn't great or comparable to previous greats.
----- The. Stats. You. Provided. Disprove. Your. Own. Argument. ----- I don't know how to be more blunt.
Now you're saying "keep in mind he wasn't thought of as a home run hitter" so should we disregard the fact that Trout has hit about 15 more hr's per year than Don did the same way you suggested we should discount the fact that Trout has almost 200 more stolen bases?
Much higher OBP, way more home runs, much higher slugging, way higher OPS, way higher OPS+, way more walks, way more stolen bases, way more runs scores. These are all areas where Trout has been SIGNIFICANTLY better than Mattingly over his first nine season. The ONLY area in which Mattingly was significantly better than Trout in was the fact that he hardly ever struck out. That's it. He's got him slightly in avg, doubles, and hits, but those are relatively all close. Trout trounces him in everything else.
I'm obviously not the biggest sabermetrics guy in the world, but I recognize their importance in evaluating things like this. When it comes to WAR, Trout's first nine seasons essentially DOUBLES Mattingly's: 69.5 to 35.
Mattingly was great for a four or five year run. I was a fan of his when I was a kdi. But Trout's literally been one of the best players to ever play the game for his first nine years. Big difference!
The homerun thing means the fact Mattingly hitting all those homeruns was unexpected. So the factl that they were close is a good thing for Donnie. And Mattingly also had way more hits. Their total bases were very close. Mattingly had over 150 plate apperances less. And you're still not getting it. I'm not staying one is better than the other. Just that their numbers are close for the first 9 years. 3 of which includes Mattingly's injury seasons. There are also 2 seasons in which he barely started. So that takes a few WAR points off the board.
How is about 100 more home runs considered "close" to you? It's not. Its a wide margin. Mattingly averaged 14 more hits per year. That's not "way" more, THAT'S considered close. But averaging more than 10 homers per year is not considered close.
Much higher OBP, Way more home runs, Much higher slugging, Way higher OPS, Way higher OPS+, Way more walks, Way more stolen bases, Way more runs scores. 69.5 war to 35
Their overall numbers are not close...in a few categories they are. But you can say that about a lot of players. Overall? Not remotely close.
More walks and homeruns and their total bases were within 100+. Mattingly could have walked more but he was able to put the bat to the ball more. We're including 3 years where Mattingly lost his power hence the home runs were down. He was also not trying to hit homeruns like players are now. He entered the homerun derby and didn't do well. So basically the majority of those numbers came in 5 years. Stolen bases like I said earlier if he had the speed he'd have more. They were born with different genes. Also averaging 14 more hits is a big deal. I would rather that than 14 more walks. Especially when you don't have a Pujols to drive you in. We're arguing 2 different things
Mattingly at that time was the best player in baseball and his numbers were staggering.
It's not a far fetch to want to put the two stats side by side.
Take a look at Pujols and Trout stats side by side. Everyone seems to forget just how amazing Pujols was as do they forget about how great Mattingly was for the first 9 years of his carer.
That was my point. People here are including the final 5 years of Mattingly's with what Trout will most likely accomplish in the next 5-10 years.
Those are the kinds of names to compare Trout's first 7 or 8 years too
That's different. Those are guys who played 20+ years. And retired in their late 30s early 40s Mattingly retired at 34. Played 14 seasons (12 full seasons) Which proves my point that you're including Mattingly's final years. I was saying for the first 9 years or similar amount of games. The numbers were not that far from each other. And that 9th year I included he missed 50 games. So I could've chosen the 92 or 93 season to make it look better. Using the race analogy. If both runners are neck and neck. Maybe one guy is ahead a half second. And the other guy gets hurt half way. That doesn't mean the guy who couldn't finish the race wasn't up to that point a top runner.
THE ARTICLE IS COMPARING THEIR FIRST 1000 GAMES......just like the stats you provided comparing Trout and Mattingly's first however many years in the league.
j
I know. But they're still comparing to guys who played a long time. And were able to have full career. They're not going to put Mattingly on that list because the final 6 were not as great. They were still good considering. And if he played another 5 or 6 years. His numbers would have filled out nicely.
If ESPN did the same article in 89. They would be doing the same for Mattingly. Keep in mind Mattingly wasn't thought of as a homerun hitter. They're not going to say "Well in 5 years he won't be the same player because of a bad back. So we can't compare him to guys who played over 20 years."
The same thing could happen to Trout next week and he might not be the same player. (Although he's buitl differently so he might overcome it a little more). It doesn't mean what he did before wasn't great or comparable to previous greats.
----- The. Stats. You. Provided. Disprove. Your. Own. Argument. ----- I don't know how to be more blunt.
Now you're saying "keep in mind he wasn't thought of as a home run hitter" so should we disregard the fact that Trout has hit about 15 more hr's per year than Don did the same way you suggested we should discount the fact that Trout has almost 200 more stolen bases?
Much higher OBP, way more home runs, much higher slugging, way higher OPS, way higher OPS+, way more walks, way more stolen bases, way more runs scores. These are all areas where Trout has been SIGNIFICANTLY better than Mattingly over his first nine season. The ONLY area in which Mattingly was significantly better than Trout in was the fact that he hardly ever struck out. That's it. He's got him slightly in avg, doubles, and hits, but those are relatively all close. Trout trounces him in everything else.
I'm obviously not the biggest sabermetrics guy in the world, but I recognize their importance in evaluating things like this. When it comes to WAR, Trout's first nine seasons essentially DOUBLES Mattingly's: 69.5 to 35.
Mattingly was great for a four or five year run. I was a fan of his when I was a kdi. But Trout's literally been one of the best players to ever play the game for his first nine years. Big difference!
The homerun thing means the fact Mattingly hitting all those homeruns was unexpected. So the factl that they were close is a good thing for Donnie. And Mattingly also had way more hits. Their total bases were very close. Mattingly had over 150 plate apperances less. And you're still not getting it. I'm not staying one is better than the other. Just that their numbers are close for the first 9 years. 3 of which includes Mattingly's injury seasons. There are also 2 seasons in which he barely started. So that takes a few WAR points off the board.
How is about 100 more home runs considered "close" to you? It's not. Its a wide margin. Mattingly averaged 14 more hits per year. That's not "way" more, THAT'S considered close. But averaging more than 10 homers per year is not considered close.
Much higher OBP, Way more home runs, Much higher slugging, Way higher OPS, Way higher OPS+, Way more walks, Way more stolen bases, Way more runs scores. 69.5 war to 35
Their overall numbers are not close...in a few categories they are. But you can say that about a lot of players. Overall? Not remotely close.
More walks and homeruns and their total bases were within 100+. Mattingly could have walked more but he was able to put the bat to the ball more. We're including 3 years where Mattingly lost his power hence the home runs were down. He was also not trying to hit homeruns like players are now. He entered the homerun derby and didn't do well. So basically the majority of those numbers came in 5 years. Stolen bases like I said earlier if he had the speed he'd have more. They were born with different genes. Also averaging 14 more hits is a big deal. I would rather that than 14 more walks. Especially when you don't have a Pujols to drive you in. We're arguing 2 different things
I don't know man. It seems like you're saying their numbers are similar except for this and this and this and this....and then you're giving a bunch of excuses for why other numbers are not similar. Its like saying Eli would be the greatest qb of all time if only his receivers didn't drop so many passes...
The bottom line is if their overall numbers were similar there would not be such a wide discrepancy between all of these major stats: OBP, Home runs Slugging OPS OPS+ Walks Stolen bases Runs scored 69.5 war to 35
Also, saying you'd rather 14 hits than walks doesn't add up when Trout averages almost 50 more per year than Donnie did. That's why his on base percentage is so higher. This what I'm talking about it. Some numbers are close like hits and you'd expect that because Mattingly was a really good/great player for much of the 80's. But then you have Trout completely trouncing Mattingly in so many other categories---and then you see why one is considered one of the best to ever play while the other is a borderline hall of famer.
Mattingly's RBI and Trout's runs scored you can say cancel each other out. It's easy to walk when you can pass it on to Pujols when he was still a threat. Adam Dunn also walked a lot. But I wasn't trying to find Trout's equal. I was just trying to compare where they were up to this point. You took it where it didn't need to go.
Does Mike Trout have an iconic mustache??? Case closed. Mattingly = GOAT
plus Mattingly was on The Simpsons
8/28/98- Camden, NJ
10/31/09- Philly
5/21/10- NYC
9/2/12- Philly, PA
7/19/13- Wrigley
10/19/13- Brooklyn, NY
10/21/13- Philly, PA
10/22/13- Philly, PA
10/27/13- Baltimore, MD
4/28/16- Philly, PA
4/29/16- Philly, PA
5/1/16- NYC
5/2/16- NYC
9/2/18- Boston, MA
9/4/18- Boston, MA
9/14/22- Camden, NJ
9/7/24- Philly, PA
9/9/24- Philly, PA
Tres Mts.- 3/23/11- Philly. PA
Eddie Vedder- 6/25/11- Philly, PA
RNDM- 3/9/16- Philly, PA
Mattingly's RBI and Trout's runs scored you can say cancel each other out. It's easy to walk when you can pass it on to Pujols when he was still a threat. Adam Dunn also walked a lot. But I wasn't trying to find Trout's equal. I was just trying to compare where they were up to this point. You took it where it didn't need to go.
Why would you choose those to cancel those two out? One is close (rbi) and the other Trout has 200 more of.
And it’s not “easy to walk” when you have a good hitter behind you. If there was a worse hitter behind him, pitchers would be more willing to stay away from the plate because they know they’d have an easier out up next. Even your excuses don’t make sense!
Mattingly's RBI and Trout's runs scored you can say cancel each other out. It's easy to walk when you can pass it on to Pujols when he was still a threat. Adam Dunn also walked a lot. But I wasn't trying to find Trout's equal. I was just trying to compare where they were up to this point. You took it where it didn't need to go.
Why would you choose those to cancel those two out? One is close (rbi) and the other Trout has 200 more of.
And it’s not “easy to walk” when you have a good hitter behind you. If there was a worse hitter behind him, pitchers would be more willing to stay away from the plate because they know they’d have an easier out up next. Even your excuses don’t make sense!
I was confusing it with the hits. But you're still more in control of driving in runs than someone driving you in. Trout has 183 more plate appearances so you can probably add 20 more RBI to Mattingly's total. Mattingly also had more sac hits and sacrifice fly than Trout. 79 to 46. They can still pitch careful to you. They used to do that with Mattingly at times. But yeah you're right. Just let it go because you're not getting what I'm trying to do here.
Mattingly's RBI and Trout's runs scored you can say cancel each other out. It's easy to walk when you can pass it on to Pujols when he was still a threat. Adam Dunn also walked a lot. But I wasn't trying to find Trout's equal. I was just trying to compare where they were up to this point. You took it where it didn't need to go.
Why would you choose those to cancel those two out? One is close (rbi) and the other Trout has 200 more of.
And it’s not “easy to walk” when you have a good hitter behind you. If there was a worse hitter behind him, pitchers would be more willing to stay away from the plate because they know they’d have an easier out up next. Even your excuses don’t make sense!
I was confusing it with the hits. But you're still more in control of driving in runs than someone driving you in. Trout has 183 more plate appearances so you can probably add 20 more RBI to Mattingly's total. Mattingly also had more sac hits and sacrifice fly than Trout. 79 to 46. They can still pitch careful to you. They used to do that with Mattingly at times. But yeah you're right. Just let it go because you're not getting what I'm trying to do here.
Spin the numbers all you want, it’s not even close...
Mattingly's RBI and Trout's runs scored you can say cancel each other out. It's easy to walk when you can pass it on to Pujols when he was still a threat. Adam Dunn also walked a lot. But I wasn't trying to find Trout's equal. I was just trying to compare where they were up to this point. You took it where it didn't need to go.
Why would you choose those to cancel those two out? One is close (rbi) and the other Trout has 200 more of.
And it’s not “easy to walk” when you have a good hitter behind you. If there was a worse hitter behind him, pitchers would be more willing to stay away from the plate because they know they’d have an easier out up next. Even your excuses don’t make sense!
I was confusing it with the hits. But you're still more in control of driving in runs than someone driving you in. Trout has 183 more plate appearances so you can probably add 20 more RBI to Mattingly's total. Mattingly also had more sac hits and sacrifice fly than Trout. 79 to 46. They can still pitch careful to you. They used to do that with Mattingly at times. But yeah you're right. Just let it go because you're not getting what I'm trying to do here.
Spin the numbers all you want, it’s not even close...
Mattingly's RBI and Trout's runs scored you can say cancel each other out. It's easy to walk when you can pass it on to Pujols when he was still a threat. Adam Dunn also walked a lot. But I wasn't trying to find Trout's equal. I was just trying to compare where they were up to this point. You took it where it didn't need to go.
Why would you choose those to cancel those two out? One is close (rbi) and the other Trout has 200 more of.
And it’s not “easy to walk” when you have a good hitter behind you. If there was a worse hitter behind him, pitchers would be more willing to stay away from the plate because they know they’d have an easier out up next. Even your excuses don’t make sense!
I was confusing it with the hits. But you're still more in control of driving in runs than someone driving you in. Trout has 183 more plate appearances so you can probably add 20 more RBI to Mattingly's total. Mattingly also had more sac hits and sacrifice fly than Trout. 79 to 46. They can still pitch careful to you. They used to do that with Mattingly at times. But yeah you're right. Just let it go because you're not getting what I'm trying to do here.
Spin the numbers all you want, it’s not even close...
It's not a competition. Your boy is great
He’s not even my boy. I probably liked Donnie Baseball more as a kid than I do Trout as an adult. My only point is those numbers don’t show them as being comparable.
Does anyone care what the Mets players have been doing?
Alonso and McNeil? Anyone know about them? Do you even care? ROY and MVP possibly on one of the worst teams?
Underachieving, big time. Those two players are fun but with all of the smack talking in the offseason, and with that staff -- how in the hell are they so bad? It appears the only reason the manager keeps his job is because he is a robot for the GM.
Barring injury or total fluke, Alonso is gonna annihilate the rookie HR record.
For any player playing in the current era, should we put asterisks beside everyone's names and blackball them from the HOF since the baseballs are manufactured to travel farther now? There are fuckin dude's hitting shit out of the park on damn near check swings these days. The minor leagues (maybe just Triple-A) switched to using MLB balls this year and home runs are pretty much double what they were a year ago this time.
If we're going to act like steroids was such a big fluke and ruined the integrity of the game, how is this any different?
Comments
I don't know how to be more blunt.
Now you're saying "keep in mind he wasn't thought of as a home run hitter" so should we disregard the fact that Trout has hit about 15 more hr's per year than Don did the same way you suggested we should discount the fact that Trout has almost 200 more stolen bases?
Much higher OBP, way more home runs, much higher slugging, way higher OPS, way higher OPS+, way more walks, way more stolen bases, way more runs scores. These are all areas where Trout has been SIGNIFICANTLY better than Mattingly over his first nine season.
The ONLY area in which Mattingly was significantly better than Trout in was the fact that he hardly ever struck out. That's it. He's got him slightly in avg, doubles, and hits, but those are relatively all close. Trout trounces him in everything else.
I'm obviously not the biggest sabermetrics guy in the world, but I recognize their importance in evaluating things like this. When it comes to WAR, Trout's first nine seasons essentially DOUBLES Mattingly's: 69.5 to 35.
Mattingly was great for a four or five year run. I was a fan of his when I was a kdi. But Trout's literally been one of the best players to ever play the game for his first nine years. Big difference!
Have you ever seen who he's better than already? It's incredible to look at the list. Even more incredible that Mookie Betts had a higher season WAR last year as Trout has dominated that category for a few years.
Just think what Mattingly could have done w a good back?
Pearl Jam bootlegs:
http://wegotshit.blogspot.com
Pretty sure we all got it and you don’t like the simple fact that they just don’t stack up.
Pearl Jam bootlegs:
http://wegotshit.blogspot.com
Much higher OBP,
Way more home runs,
Much higher slugging,
Way higher OPS,
Way higher OPS+,
Way more walks,
Way more stolen bases,
Way more runs scores.
69.5 war to 35
Their overall numbers are not close...in a few categories they are. But you can say that about a lot of players. Overall? Not remotely close.
The bottom line is if their overall numbers were similar there would not be such a wide discrepancy between all of these major stats:
OBP,
Home runs
Slugging
OPS
OPS+
Walks
Stolen bases
Runs scored
69.5 war to 35
Also, saying you'd rather 14 hits than walks doesn't add up when Trout averages almost 50 more per year than Donnie did. That's why his on base percentage is so higher. This what I'm talking about it. Some numbers are close like hits and you'd expect that because Mattingly was a really good/great player for much of the 80's. But then you have Trout completely trouncing Mattingly in so many other categories---and then you see why one is considered one of the best to ever play while the other is a borderline hall of famer.
10/31/09- Philly
5/21/10- NYC
9/2/12- Philly, PA
7/19/13- Wrigley
10/19/13- Brooklyn, NY
10/21/13- Philly, PA
10/22/13- Philly, PA
10/27/13- Baltimore, MD
4/28/16- Philly, PA
4/29/16- Philly, PA
5/1/16- NYC
5/2/16- NYC
9/2/18- Boston, MA
9/4/18- Boston, MA
9/14/22- Camden, NJ
9/7/24- Philly, PA
9/9/24- Philly, PA
Eddie Vedder- 6/25/11- Philly, PA
RNDM- 3/9/16- Philly, PA
And it’s not “easy to walk” when you have a good hitter behind you. If there was a worse hitter behind him, pitchers would be more willing to stay away from the plate because they know they’d have an easier out up next. Even your excuses don’t make sense!
Trainers, MLB Teams Unhappy With Current International Signing System
https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/trainers-mlb-teams-unhappy-with-current-international-signing-system/
Alonso and McNeil? Anyone know about them? Do you even care? ROY and MVP possibly on one of the worst teams?
- Jake Marisnick
For any player playing in the current era, should we put asterisks beside everyone's names and blackball them from the HOF since the baseballs are manufactured to travel farther now? There are fuckin dude's hitting shit out of the park on damn near check swings these days. The minor leagues (maybe just Triple-A) switched to using MLB balls this year and home runs are pretty much double what they were a year ago this time.
If we're going to act like steroids was such a big fluke and ruined the integrity of the game, how is this any different?
I think the fact that roiders took an advantage by cheating differs from the game changing due to a manipulation from the top.
Your observations are right about the impact of the ball, I think. Tough to be a pitcher now.