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How many crappy games are acceptable for a player?


Texsox

  

9 members have voted

  1. 1. How many games can a player really suck and still be acceptable?

    • <=5%
      0
    • 10%
      3
    • 15%
      0
    • 20%
      1
    • 25%
      3
    • >25%
      2


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I am trying to keep pitchers into the discussion. Taking 150 games for a starter, can they have 15 bad games? 30? For a starting pitcher 3 outings where they are out by the fourth? Six?

 

Clearly Dunn surpassed any number last season, but what are fair expectations?

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QUOTE (Tex @ Apr 17, 2012 -> 06:50 PM)
I am trying to keep pitchers into the discussion. Taking 150 games for a starter, can they have 15 bad games? 30? For a starting pitcher 3 outings where they are out by the fourth? Six?

 

Clearly Dunn surpassed any number last season, but what are fair expectations?

 

If your name is Juan Pierre ... two bad games make you a failure.

Edited by greg775
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QUOTE (greg775 @ Apr 17, 2012 -> 02:13 PM)
If your name is Juan Pierre ... two bad games make you a failure.

Apparently 1,290 at bats of a .656 OPS was not enough, either. The precipitous decline in base-running and fielding abilities apparently also mattered not.

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QUOTE (Steve9347 @ Apr 17, 2012 -> 02:36 PM)
Apparently 1,290 at bats of a .656 OPS was not enough, either. The precipitous decline in base-running and fielding abilities apparently also mattered not.

 

I still don't understand how OPS is a particularly relevant statistic for a lead-off hitter who doesn't hit home runs.

 

Wouldn't Runs Created be more relevant?

 

Anyway, I wouldn't argue that Pierre was in decline, but OPS seems like exactly the wrong metric to use to describe his output - at any point in his career.

Edited by Greg Hibbard
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What's their job on a team?

 

If a guy is getting paid $25 million to carry an offense/pitching staff on a contending team, there's not a lot of leeway, the guy better be Halladaying it.

 

If a guy is a 25 year old on a rebuilding team, then my answer is completely different.

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QUOTE (Balta1701 @ Apr 17, 2012 -> 04:00 PM)
What's their job on a team?

 

If a guy is getting paid $25 million to carry an offense/pitching staff on a contending team, there's not a lot of leeway, the guy better be Halladaying it.

 

If a guy is a 25 year old on a rebuilding team, then my answer is completely different.

 

Ding ding ding, we have a winner.

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QUOTE (Balta1701 @ Apr 17, 2012 -> 04:00 PM)
What's their job on a team?

 

If a guy is getting paid $25 million to carry an offense/pitching staff on a contending team, there's not a lot of leeway, the guy better be Halladaying it.

 

If a guy is a 25 year old on a rebuilding team, then my answer is completely different.

 

Of course but wouldn't "bad day" be relative for each of those players?

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QUOTE (Balta1701 @ Apr 17, 2012 -> 07:03 PM)
0/5 with 4ks is pretty much the same no matter how much you're getting paid.

 

But the difference between the expectation and that is different. The 25 mil franchise player has a different expectation than the utility player, as you rightfully pointed out. So while we would consider .250 a solid season for a player developing, we wouldn't find that acceptable for the $25mil player. In other words a "bad day" for Konerko should be better than a bad day for (insert league min development project player). At some point yes, it's a bad day for either one. 1-4 leaving three runners stranded may be a bad day for Pujols, but an acceptable day for (fill in here) is my point.

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QUOTE (Greg Hibbard @ Apr 17, 2012 -> 03:50 PM)
I still don't understand how OPS is a particularly relevant statistic for a lead-off hitter who doesn't hit home runs.

 

Wouldn't Runs Created be more relevant?

 

Anyway, I wouldn't argue that Pierre was in decline, but OPS seems like exactly the wrong metric to use to describe his output - at any point in his career.

 

He never got on base enough for a leadoff hitter. Add on the fact that he hit almost nothing but singles...well you have yourself a crappy offensive player.

Edited by chw42
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