BritishColumbia
Bench
we Are In This!!!
Freddy Sanchez sucks. He can't hit and he has a rag arm. Great move Sabean.
Oh dear, the last thing I want is a hot-headed ochocinco HR hitter at 1st next year. No to Prince.
We should have signed Dunn last winter. He was a free agent and fairly cheap. There are many of you disagreed with me on that but I believe I was right. With him, we would have had 10 more wins IMO, or even more. Just add 10 to a W column and see where we are at![]()
Seems a bit optimistic.Dunn has a 4.4 WARP (Wins Above Replacement Player) this year. The least valuable player that he could conceivably have replaced (by shifting the outfield) would be Rowand (0.9 WARP), which would translate to about 3.5 wins.
But yes, the Giants should have signed Dunn.
The price point for Adrian Gonzalez is probably a lot closer to Tim Lincecum than it is to, say, Madison Bumgarner. I doubt that a Bumgarner+Posey package would be sufficient to get Gonzalez, who has a team option for $5.5M in 2011...dude is a stud and a bargain, and they aren't going to let him go cheap. Fielder is under contract for $10.5M for 2010 only, but Bumgarner+Posey is probably in the ballpark for him.
I'm glad we said no to Dunn. He would NOT be putting up those numbers at AT&T. Simple as that.
Just give me Jason Bay next year and I'll be happy.
Is he able to produce 35HR, 100 RBI, 100 BB? IMO, yes, he is.
And therein lies the problem. Everyone sees those stats and they stop before looking further. You did mention his defense issues, but he is also one of the WORST hitters in the majors when it comes to striking out.
If you think our team is bad now, wait til you plug this guy in at clean up. Look at his career stats.
http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/players/stats?playerId=4808
He averages 157 K's every single season. That's more than 1 per game assuming he doesn't play 162 every year, which he doesn't.
He's also been close to 200 k's twice. So, again - no thanks.
Ok, lets look at his stuff. He is a power hitter and he takes a lot of BBs. So, it is almost natural to him having a lot of SOs.
When every time you mention his SOs, you have to mention 100+ BBs. It is almost 100+ single hits!!
He does not make solid contact and relies too much on his power, and obviously, he is no A-ROD or Albert Pujols. BUT he is a dreadful slugger.
SOs and BA do not tell the whole story. Lets be honest, those stats are pretty meaningful in baseball. You do not judge a slugger by them. He has .407 OBP and .554 SLG, and .968 OPS!!!!!! That's the story.
So, I would not even think about his SOs .. think again - almost 1 OPS!!!! ... his lazy attitude and bad defense is the problem.
Giants' Villalona a murder suspect
ESPN.com news services
SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic -- A baseball prospect for the San Francisco Giants is the main suspect in the killing of a 25-year-old man in the Dominican Republic, police said Sunday.
Angel Villalona turned himself in 12 hours after the man was shot at a bar in the southern coastal city of La Romana, Col. Adrian Urbaez told The Associated Press.
http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=4489935
Yep. Don't let them come in and talk stats without mentioning these. Several players this year are showing that high strikeout totals are nothing to be overly concerned about.
Yeah but sticking one in the middle of a lineup that already is prone to striking out and scoring very few runs is something to be concerned about.
I really do not get it and I am very sincere about it. I see that BA and strikeout stuff is very important to you.
I want you to explain me why Dunn (a guy with .250 BA and 200 K) has a better OBP than Panda and even Ichiro.
1. Why do you think it happens?
2. And why do you think BA is more important than OBP?
3. And how a guy like Dunn (with .250 BA and 200 K) has almost 1 OPS?
4. And why you don't wanna look at SLG is the main component for a cleanupper?
And I am not playing with you. I really wanna understand you and that's why I want you to answer those 4 questions. I am not begging you, just asking. Please.
I'm not a huge OPS guy, but don't discount it either. The A's stress it so much that they no longer have any legitimate "hitters" on their team. Getting on base means nothing if no one can drive them in.
I really do not get it and I am very sincere about it. I see that BA and strikeout stuff is very important to you.
I want you to explain me why Dunn (a guy with .250 BA and 200 K) has a better OBP than Panda and even Ichiro.
1. Why do you think it happens?
2. And why do you think BA is more important than OBP?
3. And how a guy like Dunn (with .250 BA and 200 K) has almost 1 OPS?
4. And why you don't wanna look at SLG is the main component for a cleanupper?
And I am not playing with you. I really wanna understand you and that's why I want you to answer those 4 questions. I am not begging you, just asking. Please.
BA is more important than OBP when it is your cleanup hitter. Why in the world would I want my cleanup hitter to walk? We saw this for years with Barry and look where it got us.
I want Eugenio Velez and Freddy Sanchez to walk. I want my cleanup guy to get RBIs. And if his BA is only 250, that means he is only getting a hit 25 % of the time. I couldn't care less about his walks. A number 4 hitter needs hits.
There is something to be said for the #4 hitter being able to drive in runners ahead of him with base hits, but maybe less than you might think.
I went to the lineup analysis tool at http://www.baseballmusings.com/cgi-bin/LineupAnalysis.py. I plugged in a reasonable Giants lineup constructed around a hypothetical hole in LF, which I filled with either Adam Dunn (.280/.410/.556) or the OF with the highest batting average who might reasonably have been available to the Giants in the offseason: Rajai Davis (.319/.376/.435).
Here Davis has a 39-point advantage in BA, but a 34-point deficit in OBP and a 121-point deficit in slugging. The results are that the Dunn lineup is expected to score 4.349 runs/game, while the Davis lineup is expected to score 4.111 runs per game. Here Dunn is expected to be worth 0.238 runs/game, despite a lower batting average.
However, I thought that was a bit unfair since Dunn is clearly a better hitter than Davis. So I also took Pablo Sandoval (.326/.381/.545), who I had originally slotted into the third slot in the lineup, and swapped him to the 4 spot for both Davis and Dunn.
Sandoval has a much better batting average than Dunn (46-point advantage), and his OBP (-29) is similar to Davis'. Importantly, his SLG (-11) value is almost on par with Dunn. In fact, the Dunn/Sandoval lineup does score more runs than the Sandoval/Dunn lineup: 4.357, for a difference of +0.008.
But what about swapping the Sandoval/Davis lineup to be Davis/Sandoval? Here Sandoval has a small advantage in BA (7 points) and OBP (5 points) but a big advantage in SLG (110 points). The result is an expected 4.171 runs/game, a difference of +0.060.
So the Sandoval/Dunn swaps show that putting OBP in the 3rd slot and BA in the 4th slot gives you a small advantage. But the Sandoval/Davis swap shows that moving SLG from the 3rd slot to the 4th slot (everything else about the same) gives you a much bigger advantage.
And the Dunn/Davis comparison shows that getting OBP/SLG is much more valuable than BA in the 4th slot. Ideally you would have them all, but if you've got to make a tradeoff, OBP/SLG gives you the better return.
BA is more important than OBP when it is your cleanup hitter. Why in the world would I want my cleanup hitter to walk? We saw this for years with Barry and look where it got us.
I want Eugenio Velez and Freddy Sanchez to walk. I want my cleanup guy to get RBIs. And if his BA is only 250, that means he is only getting a hit 25 % of the time. I couldn't care less about his walks. A number 4 hitter needs hits.
This is my stance against Dunn. If you want your cleanup hitter to BB or K and only 25 % of the time actually get a hit (and possibly an RBI), then you can take your chances on Dunn.
I will pass.