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Orioles make an offer to Yasiel Puig. UPDATE: Puig to sign with Braves Tests POSITIVE for COVID 19


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1 hour ago, eddie83 said:

You covered it well here. 

Back then  a .290 hitter with a .315 OBP was the superior player to a .268 hitter with a .380 OBP who had the same power. 

All about BA, HR, RBI. 

Runs correlate with OBP.  Sport magazines used to tout runs produced which was runs + RBI’s - home runs.  While somewhat team dependent it is a good basic measure of how much you helped the team score runs,

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1 hour ago, gtown said:

OBP was definitely undervalued back then. Mickey Tettleton was traded after a "disappointing season."  He hit .223 in 1990, but with a .376 OBP and an OPS+ of 116.

Dumb trade by Roland Hemond! 
 

 

one of my favorite O’s at the time

 

 

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22 hours ago, Philip said:

 I’m sorry it wasn’t clear for you. Yes it means that a player with less raw ability compensates. After all would you rather have someone who is a genius when he tries hard but frequently doesn’t? Or someone who is average at best, but is always doing his best and is therefore always average?

Have you really never heard that before? “He gives "40% of 100%"”? Well, that’s what it means.

No, I have never heard of giving "40% of 100%." You pulled that silly crap out of yo ass! Nobody has heard of this ridiculousness:

 

Google
 
"40% of 100%"
 
 
No results found for "100% of 40%" sports.
 
Google also came up with Zero results for "100% of 40%."
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14 hours ago, ChosenOne21 said:

Well obviously it depends on what the 40% and 100% are, doesn't it? If we have a guy who's a 40 (scouting) runner, but always runs at 40 speed, that's less valuable than an 80 runner who sometimes runs like a 35 on routine groundouts.

"40% of 100%" has absolutely nothing to do with a "40" (scouting). "40% of 100%" is totally meaningless.

I'll give you an "A" for creativity.

But an "F" for real life meaning. When you tried to explain the unexplainable: "a 40 (scouting) runner, but always runs at 40 speed, that's less valuable than an 80 runner who sometimes runs like a 35 on routine groundouts," I just about crapped myself in laughter.

Meanwhile, I will be happy to the the talented speed demon (80) who dogs it once in a while and you can have the 40 runner who gets thrown out every time when trying really hard to take an extra base.

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7 hours ago, Enjoy Terror said:

Evidently it's a 2020 Braves move who just won 97 games, and have a young outfield of Acuna, Riley, and if not Nick Markakis then top prospect Cristian Pache. Oh and don't forget Inciarte and Ozuna.

But sure, keep telling me that Smith, Williams, and Wilkerson are suddenly in line for storied Orioles careers because we didn't sign Puig.

They aren't.  Puig makes sense for a competitor, trying to spend money and fill a stop gap in a good line up.  Its not that Puig is terrible, he just doesn't fit the narrative.  Smith, WIlliams, and Wilkerson may become anything, but Hays, Santander, Mountcastle, and Diaz will.  And Smith, Williams, and Wilkerson don't have to develop into stars to have future value.  Role players have value, but when role players become starters, they lose value bc they are vulnerable.  If Wilkerson can be Ryan Flaherty with speed, and Williams becomes a 4th OF for two more seasons with a .750 OPS off the bench, that's valuable if they aren't relied upon beyond that.  They might not become that, but 2020 is a great year to see if they do. 

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43 minutes ago, Beef Supreme said:

"40% of 100%" has absolutely nothing to do with a "40" (scouting). "40% of 100%" is totally meaningless.

I'll give you an "A" for creativity.

But an "F" for real life meaning. When you tried to explain the unexplainable: "a 40 (scouting) runner, but always runs at 40 speed, that's less valuable than an 80 runner who sometimes runs like a 35 on routine groundouts," I just about crapped myself in laughter.

Meanwhile, I will be happy to the the talented speed demon (80) who dogs it once in a while and you can have the 40 runner who gets thrown out every time when trying really hard to take an extra base.

I think @ChosenOne21 was agreeing with you that the more talented player is obviously more valuable.  Idk, i’m as confused as anyone by this conversation.  I don’t understand the fascination with terrible players who try really hard.  

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8 hours ago, ArtVanDelay said:

I think @ChosenOne21 was agreeing with you that the more talented player is obviously more valuable.  Idk, i’m as confused as anyone by this conversation.  I don’t understand the fascination with terrible players who try really hard.  

Brandon Fahey was a gamer! Got his uniform dirty! Hustled! 

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13 hours ago, Frobby said:

I realize I’m not the average fan, but OBP was a stat I was well aware of long before 1984.     And while it’s not exact, if you just calculated H+BB/AB+BB you’d be within 5 points of OBP more than 90% of the time.  

I wrote a paper in college (1979 graduate) that discussed how tesm BA, OBP and  SLG correlated with runs scored.    And I still remember the professor commented that there were people out there writing much more sophisticated analyses than the one I’d done.   Ouch!

It couldn't have been much more sophisticated.  That was the timeframe where Bill James would look through 1500 box scores on microfiche to try to approximate things like run support for starters, or opponent stolen base rates for catchers/pitchers.  Writing the annual Abstracts was a many, many month process, mainly because the data we can access in a three minute bb-ref query took weeks of research.

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12 hours ago, eddie83 said:

You covered it well here. 

Back then  a .290 hitter with a .315 OBP was the superior player to a .268 hitter with a .380 OBP who had the same power. 

All about BA, HR, RBI. 

Remember that as late as the mid-90s Juan Gonzalez won two MVP awards as an okay-fielding RF with an okay OBP and 150 RBI.  Neither of his MVP years were in the top 10 in the AL in rWAR.

The 1996 MVP voting is inexplicable.  ARod hit .358 with a 1.045 OPS as a SS, and they gave the award to the slow RFer with 144 RBI.  Gonzalez was 57th in the majors in OBP among qualifiers, he was about 90 points behind Frank Thomas in the AL.

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9 hours ago, ArtVanDelay said:

 I don’t understand the fascination with terrible players who try really hard.  

Everyone loves the underdog.  Well, everyone except Yanks and Patriots fans.  Who doesn't want to see the little guy who hustles and out-works everyone else do better than the QB of the high school team who dated the prom queen?  Every Oriole fan has a soft spot for the Rene Gonzaleses and Lenn Sakatas and Floyd Rayfords, the guys you could almost imagine yourself having similar talents and somehow willed and lucked and hustled their way into MLB careers.

Just don't let that enthusiasm convince you that David Eckstein is the MVP.

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49 minutes ago, DrungoHazewood said:

Everyone loves the underdog.  Well, everyone except Yanks and Patriots fans.  Who doesn't want to see the little guy who hustles and out-works everyone else do better than the QB of the high school team who dated the prom queen?  Every Oriole fan has a soft spot for the Rene Gonzaleses and Lenn Sakatas and Floyd Rayfords, the guys you could almost imagine yourself having similar talents and somehow willed and lucked and hustled their way into MLB careers.

Just don't let that enthusiasm convince you that David Eckstein is the MVP.

It’d be absurd to take those guys over an actual good player “with issues”, as Phillip was saying in his bizarre “100% of 40%” post. 

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