Jump to content

Can we please stop batting Gunnar at lead-off?


baltfan

Recommended Posts

9 hours ago, baltfan said:

No you bat your best hitter second.  That is what all the analytics say.  And I would love to see him hit second. 

Actually, the analytics say that the difference (over an entire season) between the most and least logical batting lineups is on the order of one or two dozen runs. So the gains from switching between any halfway reasonable lineups are too small to measure.

Literally all of the hand-wringing about lineup construction is much to do about nothing.

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, DrungoHazewood said:

Actually, the analytics say that the difference (over an entire season) between the most and least logical batting lineups is on the order of one or two dozen runs. So the gains from switching between any halfway reasonable lineups are too small to measure.

Literally all of the hand-wringing about lineup construction is much to do about nothing.

I agree this is in general the case.  However, it is undeniable that some players do better in some spots than others.  It's possible that what we are seeing with Gunnar is sample size related, but he especially leading off the game does not appear generally very comfortable.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

19 minutes ago, baltfan said:

I agree this is in general the case.  However, it is undeniable that some players do better in some spots than others.  It's possible that what we are seeing with Gunnar is sample size related, but he especially leading off the game does not appear generally very comfortable.  

I agree that it's easy for fans and announcers to come up with narratives that, after the fact, describe outcomes as being a result of comfort or mental state or belief in a higher deity or any number of things that are probably just random variation.

But, on the off chance that all this stuff isn't completely made up post facto rationalizations, Gunnar has a career OPS of 1.249 when batting 8th. So just to be safe Hyde should bat him 8th for the next 3-4 years to see how it plays out.

  • Upvote 1
  • Haha 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

52 minutes ago, DrungoHazewood said:

I agree that it's easy for fans and announcers to come up with narratives that, after the fact, describe outcomes as being a result of comfort or mental state or belief in a higher deity or any number of things that are probably just random variation.

But, on the off chance that all this stuff isn't completely made up post facto rationalizations, Gunnar has a career OPS of 1.249 when batting 8th. So just to be safe Hyde should bat him 8th for the next 3-4 years to see how it plays out.

Let me be clear.  If Gunnar says he is comfortable leading off, I have no problem leaving him there longer to see if things change a bit.  I am a bit concerned though that he is not there by choice but by default. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Snutchy changed the title to Can we please stop batting Gunnar at lead-off?

I'm old enough to remember when pretty much every team followed the same philosophy in developing a batting order. 

The leadoff guy was one of the fastest on the team with a high OBP and usually little power.  He was also the best bass stealer, typically. 

Number 2 hitter was a guy with good bat control,  didn't sing and miss a lot,  and could bunt.

Number 3 was the best hitter on the team with a combination of power and average. 

Numbers 4 and 5 were the boppers.  They were the power hitters and usually the home run leaders on the team.

The rest were filled in depending on the situation with the #9 hitter (in the AL) usually the weakest hitter, but with speed. 

The game has changed. 

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, Yossarian said:

I'm old enough to remember when pretty much every team followed the same philosophy in developing a batting order. 

The leadoff guy was one of the fastest on the team with a high OBP and usually little power.  He was also the best bass stealer, typically. 

Number 2 hitter was a guy with good bat control,  didn't sing and miss a lot,  and could bunt.

Number 3 was the best hitter on the team with a combination of power and average. 

Numbers 4 and 5 were the boppers.  They were the power hitters and usually the home run leaders on the team.

The rest were filled in depending on the situation with the #9 hitter (in the AL) usually the weakest hitter, but with speed. 

The game has changed. 

I apologize for the misspellings - I should have proof read before posting.   My phone doesn't always agree with the words I think I'm trying to write.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

18 hours ago, baltfan said:

https://www.baseball-reference.com/tools/share.fcgi?id=9vlmP
See above for his first at bat when he is the first batter in the game. I don’t like him being the first batter of the game.  He seems like a guy that benefits from seeing guys hit in front of him. Per your own chart he is better batting second or third.  It’s undeniable that when he leads off the game he is generally worse than normal.  

Could you at least post what the league averages are for comparison sake? 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

42 minutes ago, Yossarian said:

I'm old enough to remember when pretty much every team followed the same philosophy in developing a batting order. 

The leadoff guy was one of the fastest on the team with a high OBP and usually little power.  He was also the best bass stealer, typically. 

Number 2 hitter was a guy with bat control,  didn't sing and miss a lot,  and could bunt.

Number 3 was the best hitter on the team with a combination of power and average. 

Numbers 4 and 5 were the boppers.  They were the power hitters and usually the home run leaders on the team.

The rest were filled in depending on the situation with the #9 hitter (in the AL) usually the weakest hitter, but with speed. 

The game has changed. 

I dont think teams are doing it wrong if they went back to this philosophy. You want your best hitters at the top of the lineup and I doubt many managers would bat their best power hitter 2nd or 3rd. They want guys on base in front of them.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 minutes ago, jabba72 said:

I dont think teams are doing it wrong if they went back to this philosophy. You want your best hitters at the top of the lineup and I doubt many managers would bat their best power hitter 2nd or 3rd. They want guys on base in front of them.

But your classic #2 hitter isn't one of your best hitters.  He's a guy that can waste an out bunting your leadoff hitter over.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On teams that maybe didnt have 4 good hitters you might put a #2 like that in there. Any manager who was thinking about sacrificing when his high OBP leadoff hitter got on base wasn't doing it right, I agree.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

35 minutes ago, jabba72 said:

I dont think teams are doing it wrong if they went back to this philosophy. You want your best hitters at the top of the lineup and I doubt many managers would bat their best power hitter 2nd or 3rd. They want guys on base in front of them.

The philosophy of the classic #2 has changed,  as Can of Corn pointed out.  It has gone from a light hitting bat control guy that can bunt and hit-and-run with to today's #2 hitters like Judge, Ohtani, Harper, Trout, etc.  Teams are batting their best hitter at #2, not #3.

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, dzorange said:

Could you at least post what the league averages are for comparison sake? 

The issue is what is best for Gunnar, not how he compares to the rest of the league.  However, I am reasonably sure that his .530 OPS leading off games isn’t among the league leaders. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


  • Posts

    • If you feel comfortable putting Aiken and Baker (or even Tate) in during an elimination series, that's your prerogative. But I do not. Too inconsistent, which is the same reason why Mike Baumann pitched himself off the active roster. when spot was needed for returning starters off the IL. Currently Coulombe is on IL so we can't even count on one of our best. Cano has regressed from last season. We've also witnessed last season how Webb broke down from over use and was ineffective in the playoff series against Texas. Perez goes in streaks of either really good or concernedly bad (he loses his command). Akin's problem is he leaves the ball over the heart of the plate and he doesn't have good enough stuff to get away with it. They're meatballs. We might get some good times from Baker now that he's up, but I would only expect a month or 2 at best from him before he returns to old habits. And Suarez is a starter who wants to be a starter. Who knows if he will go back to the bullpen? He'll have to go deeper into games if he wants to stay in the rotation, otherwise, I think he should be in the bullpen. But that's not what he is right now in this moment. He's a starter with a ERA in the 1s.
    • It's pretty hard to say definitively that the bolded is true.  It might be, but there's also the loss in ability you have to account for.  30 year olds are slower than 26 year olds too.  Maybe their game knowledge and practice have made it so they can overcome the meager loss in bat speed/athleticism over that time span.  But the picture is a bit muddy.   I also don't think the aging issue is limited to people in their mid-late 30s.  Bat speed peaks at like 24 or 25 based on the data we have right now on it, and after 31 starts falling off fairly fast.  Obviously this is population data and individuals are likely to see different curves.   But outside of the stars that have a lot of ability to lose, it's becoming pretty clear that once you hit your early 30s it's pretty hard to maintain your skills without all the "help" that is extensively tested for.   I think that even for early-30s players teams are much more willing to drop them over giving them expensive market-rate deals, especially since they can abuse young talent so readily.
    • After a really dumb day at work, this was an absolutely delightful read. Seeing a diamond expert and a can of corn detonate a yoked PBA pro was absolutely wonderful. I love this website. 
    • If you pitch Bradish on 5 days rest you'd pitch Rodriguez on 3 days rest?
    • I think if you look at it draft by draft most years Elias did not have a chance to take a pitcher early. 2019 was Adley/Witt, 2020 everyone wanted Austin Martin SS over Kjerstad, 2021 it was Cowser or a few high school SS, and 2022 it was 5 position players at the top of the draft. I think Asa Lacy or Max Meyer were the only pitchers we could have possibly taken up until last year. 
    • Damn I wish I was that guy
    • Crochet had a monstrous game tonight. 7 IP 2 H 1 ER 2 BB 13 Ks I would love to have him even if it meant moving him to the bullpen for the final stretch but someone is gonna drastically overpay for him with top of rotation potential and 2x additional seasons of club control.    assuming it starts with Mayo, Kjerstad, Povich etc 
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...