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Stolen base efficiency - Orioles edition


Frobby

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There are 14 Orioles who have attempted at least 100 steals in their Orioles career.    In order of efficiency:

Corey Patterson 102/125 = 82.4%
Brian Roberts 278/347 = 80.1%
Luis Aparicio 166/212 = 78.3%
Brady Anderson 307/405 = 75.8%
Don Baylor 118/159 = 74.2%
Adam Jones 90/122 = 73.8%
Al Bumbry 252/344 = 73.2%

Jerry Hairston Jr. 94/133 = 70.7%
Mark Belanger 166/241= 68.9%
Paul Blair 167/257 = 65.0%
Bobby Grich 77/120 = 64.2%
Don Buford 85/133 = 63.9%
Melvin Mora 82/131 = 62.6%
Mike Devereaux 73/120 = 60.8%

The gap on the list isn’t intentional (phone formatting thing), but it so happens that 71% is usually about the break even point on the success rate you need in order for it to be worthwhile to attempt a steal.   The break even point moves a little depending on the offensive environment of the time (more offense => higher success rate to break even).  

Luis Matos barely missed the cut at 96 attempts, and he succeeded a healthy 75.0% of the time.    Jonathan Villar wasn’t here long enough to come close to 100 attempts, but he succeeded on 83.6% of his 73 attempts, higher than anyone on the list above.    He’s topped by Nate McLouth, who had an 84.0% success rate in 50 attempts.

The player who had the highest number of attempts with less than a 50% success rate was none other than Cal Ripken Jr., who succeeded on only 36 of 75 tries (48%).    

The 2006/2007 teams that featured BRob and CPat were fun to watch: 121/153 (79.1%) in ‘06 and 144/186 (77.4%) in ‘07.   Earl uncharacteristically let his teams run wild in 1973-74, but they weren’t quite as efficient: 146/210 (69.5%) in ‘73 and 145/203 (71.4%) in ‘74.    

It’s not always the most efficient strategy, but it is fun to watch a team that likes to steal.   

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21 hours ago, Frobby said:

Luis Matos barely missed the cut at 96 attempts, and he succeeded a healthy 75.0% of the time.  

He should be on the list, IMO, since he would have been at 71% had he failed in all four additional attempts needed in order to reach 100.  Isn't that what they do in determining batting championships - calculate the BA assuming an out in each of the additional times at bat needed to qualify?   Maybe that's why your phone left that empty space - it knew that Matos belonged right there!  ?

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