Showing posts with label Uncle Griff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Uncle Griff. Show all posts

Wednesday, 16 April 2008

The Roundup


Before games kicked off in the Asian pool of the 2006 World Baseball Classic, Mariners all-world centre fielder Ichiro made some comments about neighbouring countries that seemed vaguely simliar to something one might've heard from a brigadier general in the rampaging Kwantung Army in the late 1930s.

Ichiro vowed of Taiwan, Korea and to a much lesser extent, China, that
"I will make them see that they won't beat Japan for the next 30 years." Eh oh!

Click on the above link for some classic Ichiro quotes. I like this one:

On his personal battles with Dice-K: "I hope he arouses the fire that's dormant in the innermost recesses of my soul. I plan to face him with the zeal of a challenger."

As much as I disagree with tenants of Japanese imperialism and the bushido warrior code, I still grudgingly admit that I've got nothing against laying a savage beating on a weaker opponent on the sporting field. Which brings us to last night's 11-3 Jays victory against the Orioles.

That's what we expected to see against Bal'mer all year long: repeated body blows and the occasional head shot whilst never letting one's guard down.

Uncle Griff takes a break from the usual douchebaggery to reflect on Jackie Robinson Day and issues of race. I've said it before, but I would have no problem with the guy whatsoever if he stuck to the feature pieces on players and baseball themes and left the game reporting to Cathal Kelly and Mark Zwolinski. In fact, I would probably even enjoy his work. Kelly, are you reading this?

If you're a sympathetic liberal interested in race stuff, MacLeod has a few ideas about how baseball can regain it's urban appeal. Chiefly, cut down on the length of games. Frankly, it's a pretty great youth strategy, period.

And then the floodgates open. Highlights from the mailbag:

* One questioner's Scutaro-bashing segues into Inglett-bashing. I understand you like J-Mac--many of us do--but maybe wait until Inglett's average dips under .400 before calling for J-Mac to be playing over him at third, mkay?

* Another dude asks if Griffin has even asked JP/Gibby why they don't use J-Mac as Doc's personal shortstop. They said they didn't want to because they always do the opposite of the "improvements" he suggests in his weekly mailbag column. Burn!

* Quoted verbatim:

Burnett is a career lunkhead as proved by his maxing out at 12 wins in his best season. Burnett is the Jeff George of baseball. This guy should have been chasing 20 wins at least a couple of times, but hasn’t.


So very fucking true on so many levels.

*
Griff "love[s] their offensive, in-game strategy this year", which means it's high time they stop recklessly attempting to steal bases and bunting like NL cowards or he won't have much to complain about next week. Wilner will go insane if it keeps up much longer.

I tire of this.

ELSEWHERE:


* Erik Bedard hits the DL. Again. Sigh.

* I just found this so unusual that it deserves mention. Here's a spirited defense of Jason Bay from Bob Smizik of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, a journo who gets two thumbs up for actually understanding and using stats to make his case.

Bay is heavily criticized by Bucco fans for being overpaid (!), underproductive (??? 3 HR and a 132 OPS+ so far ???), and aloof (well, wouldn't you be)... Bench him! Trade him!

Smizik preaches:

Let's look at his accomplishments, and to do so we will use the baseball statistic OPS, which is on-base percentage plus slugging percentage. It is widely considered to be the best statistic in evaluating a player's offensive ability...

In 2004, he was the National League Rookie of the Year, the first Pirates player to win the award. He hit 26 home runs, drove in 82 runs, had a .282 batting average and a .550 slugging percentage (anything over .500 is good).

In 2005, he built on that to the extent he could have been called the best offensive outfielder in the National League. His OPS was .961, second in Major League Baseball to Manny Ramirez of the Boston Red Sox. For those who prefer more conventional statistics, his 32 home runs and 101 RBIs tied for fourth and fifth among National League outfielders.

In 2006, his OPS was .928, third best in the National League, behind Carlos Beltran and Matt Holliday. Among outfielders, he was fourth in RBIs with 109, fifth in home runs with 35. He did this despite playing half of his games in a stadium not friendly to right-handed hitters.

In additional to those offensive accomplishments, he also showed himself to be an above-average outfielder, albeit with a below-average arm, and an excellent base runner.

Understandably, the Pirates signed him to a long-term contract before the 2007 season.

He regressed quite a bit in '07. His home run total fell to 21, his RBIs to 84 and his OPS dropped to .745. His once-keen batting eye, which had helped him accumulate 95 and 102 walks the previous two seasons, vanished. He walked only 59 times. Worse, his defense declined at an alarming rate.

It was one bad season after three exceptional ones, yet Bay has become a public whipping boy. A common criticism, heard much too often, is that Bay doesn't hit in the clutch.

His lifetime batting average is .281. His lifetime batting average with runners in scoring position is .288. His lifetime slugging percentage is .515. His lifetime slugging percentage with runners in scoring position is .536.

The statistics speak for themselves.

SSSSSSSnap! Take that, few remaining wrong-thinking fans of one the worst franchises in baseball.

-- Johnny Was




Wednesday, 27 February 2008

Clogging the Bases

There just aren't any positive connotations to the verb "to clog" outside the baseball world. Its association with clogged arteries and your clogged up commode makes people naturally recoil when they hear the word. Fair enough.

If you find yourself nodding in agreement to Uncle Griff's mailbag every Wednesday, odds are you've got a bee in your bonnet about "clogging the bases" (amongst other things). Here's a recent example from today's Star:

Q: I love the column Richard. I cannot understand why the Jays always talk about batting Lyle Overbay second. He hits a lot of doubles and gets on base, but with his power and lack of speed, I feel he is much better in an RBI spot than clogging the bases up top. Furthermore, not that the Jays usually play small ball, but I think it is a waste to take a potential double or homer away from Overbay in order to move the runner over...

Jason MacDonald, Amherst

A: The days of Overbay batting second are over. Last year, it was an early season plan because they wanted a lefthanded bat near the top of the order and believed that when the other team’s first baseman was holding a runner on, Lyle could shoot groundballs through the hole on the right...

Frank Thomas... has clogged more arteries on the basepaths than a diet of buttered bacon and poutine...

And so on. There's something like this every week. Like clockwork.

I really don't have the energy to take Griffin's mailbag apart piece by piece, but I would like to address the "clogging the bases" issue with some numbers. I'd also like to bring it to your attention that USA Today has a really excellent stat site that I had a bit of fun mucking about with this afternoon.

You're probably asking, "So, get down to it! Which teams were the worst offenders in 2007 when it came to "clogging the bases" as measured by Left on Base totals?

In the AL:

TEAM LOB RS
RS Rank





BOS 1291 867
3rd
OAK 1258 741
11th
NYY 1249 968
1st
CLE 1215 811
6th
TB 1166 782
8th
BAL 1152 756
9th
DET 1148 887
2nd
SEA 1128 794
7th
MIN 1121 718
12th
TOR 1112 753
10th
LAA 1100 822
4th
TEX 1092 816
5th
KCR 1089 706
13th
CHI 1074 693
14th





Ave. 1157 794


There really aren't any black and white answers that immediately jump out. Aside from the the worst base-clogging team in the league going on to win the World Series that is. And the worst offense by leaps and bounds also happening to have left the fewest number of men on base...

Dividing the AL into halves, the top seven base cloggers accounted for the first, second, third, sixth, eighth, nineth and eleventh best offenses in the league. The bottom seven base cleaners accounted for the fourth, fifth, seventh, tenth, twelvth, thirteenth, and fourteenth best offenses in the league.

There are abberations in each group, Oakland and Baltimore in the former, Los Angeles and Texas in the latter, but as a whole, the base cloggers stack up better than the base cleaners.

In the NL:

TEAM LOB RS
RS Rank





PHI 1295 892
1st
COL 1251 860
2nd
ATL 1205 810
3rd
LAD 1200 735
10th
NYM 1196 804
4th
FLA 1192 790
6th
CHI 1190 752
8th
HOU 1181 723
13th
CIN 1170 783
7th
STL 1167 725
11th
WSH 1163 673
16th
SD 1152 741
9th
SF 1141 683
15th
PIT 1119 724
12th
MIL 1117 801
5th
ARI 1090 712
14th





Ave 1177 763


The numbers over in the Senior Circuit are considerably more clear cut. Again, the division between good and bad offenses isn't perfectly defined, but base clogging teams as a whole again tend to be better than base clearers.

The base clogger group has the first, second, third, fourth, sixth, eighth, tenth, and thirteenth ranked offenses. The base clearer group has the fifth, seventh, nineth, eleventh, twelvth, fourteenth, fifteenth and sixteenth ranked offenses.

You get the picture...

Maybe Uncle Griff will considering enjoying a nice plate of buttered bacon and poutine with the crow he's eating for supper tonight.

-- Johnny Was