DirtDirtDirt
Well-Known Member
no im not
i look at OPS+ first
thats about as good as it gets
Of course, because Rollins has the better OPS
no im not
i look at OPS+ first
thats about as good as it gets
OPS+>>> OPSOf course, because Rollins has the better OPS
A 4 point difference in OPS while one player is a threat on the basepaths and playing 2nd as opposed to 1st? Not a strong argument. It would be completely relying on HRs and RBI.
OPS+>>> OPS
everyone knows that
wait, you mean .006 better?
Dude was insanely consistent that year. Only twice did he not reach base in back to back games. And he reached base in every game except 4 in the second half. And I'm not including reaching on an errordusty carried that team on his back the final 2 months dirt, and thats what won it for him.
he carried that team.
do you know how small .006" is?So the 4 point difference in OPS+ offsets every other advantage Rollins has
Dis-agree, pretty strongly
do you know how small .006" is?
i do.
OPS+ factors in a lot of other criteria than just adding 3 numbers.
ok. how about a 30 pt lead in BA and 16 more doubles?Sorry, OPS+, when nearly identical, is not the only deciding factor in who had a better season
And that shows up in other metrics that take more into account. So I don't feel the need to look too closely into home runs. If there is a gross difference in RBI but one player has a higher OPS, or close, then I'm going to investigate why.You could minimize HR's and RBI's if youd like, but it gets to the point where when there is such a gross difference between 2 players in those categories, it does matter
And Im not saying thats the case with Morneau, just in general, it is more than mere sidenote
ok. how about a 30 pt lead in BA and 16 more doubles?
you like old numbers like that.
And that shows up in other metrics that take more into account. So I don't feel the need to look too closely into home runs. If there is a gross difference in RBI but one player has a higher OPS, or close, then I'm going to investigate why.
Pedroia batted 2nd that year, Morneau batted clean up. Pedroia came to bat with 439 runners on base that year, Morneau came to bat with 558. It's not shocking that he had more RBI. The guy hitting in front of him had a .413 OBP. It's also not shocking that Pedroia has a large advantage in runs scored.
Well I know that isn't what he saidIt doesnt matter anymore, based on Rocks' only measurement for MVP, Justin Morneau demolished Dusty
ok, as long as you say you were wrong about him being the worst winner in "modern baseball".Sure, as long as you like all the edges I posted for Rollins, some very significant edges
we know thatWell I know that isn't what he said
OPS+
Mike Trout 187
Josh Donaldson 141
Mike Trout 173
Miggy 190
Miggy 164
Josh Hamilton 170
Joe Mauer 171
Dustin Pedroia 123
Arod 176
Justin Morneau 140
Arod 175
Vlad 151
Arod 147
Miguel Tejada 128
Ichiro 126 (Even Ichiro)
Shall I continue?
Well I know that isn't what he said
Well we can use adjusted stats, and you also only posted the NL. And was 2008 really the steroid era? Testing had begun and the HR rate was the lowest it had been since 1993.Worst offensive MVP in the "Steroid Era" may be a better way to say it
Hard to compare numbers from the 70's and 80's