Frobby
08-06-2009, 07:31 PM
I consider 1979-83 to be one of the true Golden Eras of Orioles baseball. And Eddie Murray was its centerpiece. Take a look at how Eddie performed in "close & late" situations in that period:
1979: .357/.439/.694, 9 HR, 27 RBI (115 PA, 98 AB, 35 H, 15 BB)
1980: .295/.346/.484, 4 HR, 10 RBI (104 PA, 95 AB, 28 H, 7 BB)
1981: .296/.400/.500, 3 HR, 12 RBI (65 PA, 54 AB, 16 H, 10 BB)
1982: .338/.459/.545, 4 HR, 19 RBI (98 PA, 77 AB, 26 H, 19 BB)
1983: .342/.451/.618, 5 HR, 19 RBI (91 PA, 76 AB, 26 H, 15 BB)
Totals: .338/.423/.575, 25 HR, 87 RBI (473 PA, 400 AB, 131 H, 66 BB)
By the way, I didn't include 1978, 1984 and 1985 because the O's weren't really in the pennant race those years. But look at this!
1978: .307/.381/.574, 8 HR, 22 RBI (119 PA, 101 AB, 31 H, 14 BB)
1984: .374/.500/.736, 9 HR, 34 RBI (116 PA, 91 AB, 34 H, 24 BB
1985: .380/.427/.747, 7 HR, 27 RBI (89 PA, 79 AB, 30 H, 8 BB)
Add those in, and you'd have an 8 year span of:
.337/.428/.617, 49 HR, 170 RBI (797 PA, 671 AB, 226 H, 112 BB)
Considering that a normal season for Eddie was about 680 PA, that would be the equivalent of about 42 HR, 145 RBI in a season's worth of close & late ABs.
And that is one of the many reasons why, nobody will ever tell me that there is no such thing as a clutch hitter. They are very, very rare, but they exist.
1979: .357/.439/.694, 9 HR, 27 RBI (115 PA, 98 AB, 35 H, 15 BB)
1980: .295/.346/.484, 4 HR, 10 RBI (104 PA, 95 AB, 28 H, 7 BB)
1981: .296/.400/.500, 3 HR, 12 RBI (65 PA, 54 AB, 16 H, 10 BB)
1982: .338/.459/.545, 4 HR, 19 RBI (98 PA, 77 AB, 26 H, 19 BB)
1983: .342/.451/.618, 5 HR, 19 RBI (91 PA, 76 AB, 26 H, 15 BB)
Totals: .338/.423/.575, 25 HR, 87 RBI (473 PA, 400 AB, 131 H, 66 BB)
By the way, I didn't include 1978, 1984 and 1985 because the O's weren't really in the pennant race those years. But look at this!
1978: .307/.381/.574, 8 HR, 22 RBI (119 PA, 101 AB, 31 H, 14 BB)
1984: .374/.500/.736, 9 HR, 34 RBI (116 PA, 91 AB, 34 H, 24 BB
1985: .380/.427/.747, 7 HR, 27 RBI (89 PA, 79 AB, 30 H, 8 BB)
Add those in, and you'd have an 8 year span of:
.337/.428/.617, 49 HR, 170 RBI (797 PA, 671 AB, 226 H, 112 BB)
Considering that a normal season for Eddie was about 680 PA, that would be the equivalent of about 42 HR, 145 RBI in a season's worth of close & late ABs.
And that is one of the many reasons why, nobody will ever tell me that there is no such thing as a clutch hitter. They are very, very rare, but they exist.