Baseball Hall Of Fame.....

1910111214

Comments

  • igotid88
    igotid88 Posts: 28,636
    mcgruff10 said:

    I played baseball into college (D3) until my shoulder gave out and have coached for 12 years. One thing I still don't understand is slugging percentage! What the hell is it? Someone please explain it me.

    A single is 1.000. a double is 2.000 triple 3 hr 4
    I miss igotid88
  • Cliffy6745
    Cliffy6745 Posts: 34,026
    Total bases divided by at bats. The more bases you have per at bat the more power you have.
  • Total bases divided by at bats. The more bases you have per at bat the more power you have.

    Rod Carew high batting average. Not fantastic slugging.

    A homerun and a single count the same in batting average. Not the same in slugging.
    "My brain's a good brain!"
  • Cliffy6745
    Cliffy6745 Posts: 34,026
    edited January 2017

    Total bases divided by at bats. The more bases you have per at bat the more power you have.

    Rod Carew high batting average. Not fantastic slugging.

    A homerun and a single count the same in batting average. Not the same in slugging.
    Exactly. High OBP too. Great hitter, not a ton of power.
  • igotid88
    igotid88 Posts: 28,636
    But if you're a speedster you can stretch singles into doubles and doubles into triples. And even get more infield singles. Thus making it seem you're hitting for power more than someone
    I miss igotid88
  • HesCalledDyer
    HesCalledDyer Maryland Posts: 16,491

    Question: If you were to start a brand new Baseball Hall of Fame, who would you elect as the first member?

    Me: I'd probably have to go with Al Spalding.

    Ricky Henderson on a good team by far the most effective player in history.
    MOST effective
    By FAR
    In HISTORY

    I don't know about all that, but he was damn good & exciting to watch and definitely Hall worthy.
    What's his WAR?!? lol
    :rofl:
  • mcgruff10
    mcgruff10 New Jersey Posts: 29,117
    igotid88 said:

    But if you're a speedster you can stretch singles into doubles and doubles into triples. And even get more infield singles. Thus making it seem you're hitting for power more than someone

    Great point right there.
    I'll ride the wave where it takes me......
  • HesCalledDyer
    HesCalledDyer Maryland Posts: 16,491
    Not a big fan of slugging pct as a measure of power for the very reason igotid88 stated. And conversely, if you're a big guy that can't run as well, many a would-be double will still have you standing on 1B.

    Better than fucking WAR, though..
  • Not a big fan of slugging pct as a measure of power for the very reason igotid88 stated. And conversely, if you're a big guy that can't run as well, many a would-be double will still have you standing on 1B.

    Better than fucking WAR, though..

    WAR! Good god! What is it good for? Absolutely nothing, I'll say it again now!
  • Cliffy6745
    Cliffy6745 Posts: 34,026
    edited January 2017
    igotid88 said:

    But if you're a speedster you can stretch singles into doubles and doubles into triples. And even get more infield singles. Thus making it seem you're hitting for power more than someone

    That is not sustainable over a career. A half a dozen singles stretched into doubles a season is not going to have that much of an impact on slugging percentage. A base here or there does not really impact slugging, that's kind of the point of it
  • Cliffy6745
    Cliffy6745 Posts: 34,026

    Not a big fan of slugging pct as a measure of power for the very reason igotid88 stated. And conversely, if you're a big guy that can't run as well, many a would-be double will still have you standing on 1B.

    Better than fucking WAR, though..

    Jason giambi had a career slugging percentage of .516 and he is slower than my 10 year old niece
  • Cliffy6745
    Cliffy6745 Posts: 34,026
    edited January 2017
    I like war a lot in general. You should hope all of your teams give out contracts based on it.

    That said, casual fans should be able to look at the triple slash line and tell exactly what a hitter is
  • igotid88 said:

    But if you're a speedster you can stretch singles into doubles and doubles into triples. And even get more infield singles. Thus making it seem you're hitting for power more than someone

    Who cares how the extra bases are earned? Slugging percentage isn't necessarily used to measure the stereotypical big hitter... it's used to measure production. Whether Henderson stretches a gap single into a double... or Luzinski smashes a double off the center field wall... it's all the same with regards to the scorecard.
    "My brain's a good brain!"
  • Cliffy6745
    Cliffy6745 Posts: 34,026
    edited January 2017

    igotid88 said:

    But if you're a speedster you can stretch singles into doubles and doubles into triples. And even get more infield singles. Thus making it seem you're hitting for power more than someone

    Who cares how the extra bases are earned? Slugging percentage isn't necessarily used to measure the stereotypical big hitter... it's used to measure production. Whether Henderson stretches a gap single into a double... or Luzinski smashes a double off the center field wall... it's all the same with regards to the scorecard.
    Henderson is another perfect example of how stretching bases doesn't impact slugging. Career .419.

    That double off the wall is going to happen a lot more than the single being stretched to a double. Also that double off the wall is a lot more likely to turn into a home run for the big hitter over the singles hitter.

    Post edited by Cliffy6745 on
  • HesCalledDyer
    HesCalledDyer Maryland Posts: 16,491

    igotid88 said:

    But if you're a speedster you can stretch singles into doubles and doubles into triples. And even get more infield singles. Thus making it seem you're hitting for power more than someone

    Who cares how the extra bases are earned? Slugging percentage isn't necessarily used to measure the stereotypical big hitter... it's used to measure production. Whether Henderson stretches a gap single into a double... or Luzinski smashes a double off the center field wall... it's all the same with regards to the scorecard.
    Henderson is another perfect example of how stretching bases doesn't impact slugging. Career .419.

    That double off the wall is going to happen a lot more than the single being stretched to a double. Also that double off the wall is a lot more likely to turn into a home run for the big hitter over the singles hitter.

    All good points, really.
  • I like war a lot in general. You should hope all of your teams give out contracts based on it.

    That said, casual fans should be able to look at the triple slash line and tell exactly what a hitter is

    I've always been a fan of runs, walks and SB's. That person that gets on before the big hitter is a HUGE part of him getting those numbers.
  • HesCalledDyer
    HesCalledDyer Maryland Posts: 16,491

    I like war a lot in general. You should hope all of your teams give out contracts based on it.

    That said, casual fans should be able to look at the triple slash line and tell exactly what a hitter is

    WAR is only a theory, not a statistic. It's not even a unified theory as different sources use different methods of calculation. I have no problem using it to scout players and make decisions on signing them, but to base their contract from it alone is silly. To give awards and have it be the only metric you use is silly (see: any Jeff Passan article about Mike Trout).

    Simply put, there is NO WAY you can measure a player and say "if we replaced Kris Bryant with Miguel Sano, the Cubs would lose 7 more games." You CAN'T do it.
  • I like war a lot in general. You should hope all of your teams give out contracts based on it.

    That said, casual fans should be able to look at the triple slash line and tell exactly what a hitter is

    WAR is only a theory, not a statistic. It's not even a unified theory as different sources use different methods of calculation. I have no problem using it to scout players and make decisions on signing them, but to base their contract from it alone is silly. To give awards and have it be the only metric you use is silly (see: any Jeff Passan article about Mike Trout).

    Simply put, there is NO WAY you can measure a player and say "if we replaced Kris Bryant with Miguel Sano, the Cubs would lose 7 more games." You CAN'T do it.
    Despite not fully understanding the 'formula' to generate the statistic... I'm very skeptical of it as well. There are so many variables that are unaccounted for.
    "My brain's a good brain!"
  • I like war a lot in general. You should hope all of your teams give out contracts based on it.

    That said, casual fans should be able to look at the triple slash line and tell exactly what a hitter is

    WAR is only a theory, not a statistic. It's not even a unified theory as different sources use different methods of calculation. I have no problem using it to scout players and make decisions on signing them, but to base their contract from it alone is silly. To give awards and have it be the only metric you use is silly (see: any Jeff Passan article about Mike Trout).

    Simply put, there is NO WAY you can measure a player and say "if we replaced Kris Bryant with Miguel Sano, the Cubs would lose 7 more games." You CAN'T do it.
    It IS a formula that has been working. Watch Money Ball. Redsox, A's and Cubs have been models of this so far.
  • HesCalledDyer
    HesCalledDyer Maryland Posts: 16,491

    I like war a lot in general. You should hope all of your teams give out contracts based on it.

    That said, casual fans should be able to look at the triple slash line and tell exactly what a hitter is

    WAR is only a theory, not a statistic. It's not even a unified theory as different sources use different methods of calculation. I have no problem using it to scout players and make decisions on signing them, but to base their contract from it alone is silly. To give awards and have it be the only metric you use is silly (see: any Jeff Passan article about Mike Trout).

    Simply put, there is NO WAY you can measure a player and say "if we replaced Kris Bryant with Miguel Sano, the Cubs would lose 7 more games." You CAN'T do it.
    It IS a formula that has been working. Watch Money Ball. Redsox, A's and Cubs have been models of this so far.
    Oh yeah, like I mentioned, I don't mind it being used as a tool for scouting. But that's A tool, not THE tool. Plenty more has gone into what the Red Sox and Cubs have done than just WAR alone. Too many just think it's the end all, be all on how a player should be awarded/rewarded. WAR can't measure a player's attitude, teamsmanship, and work ethic.