by MARCPELLETIER » Tue Jul 13, 2010 4:03 pm
[quote:d25859cd75]While I tend to agree, haven't there been times when some player with WELL below the probabilities of another just tears it up and a player with an amazing card does poorly?[/quote:d25859cd75]
I think one part of the answer is ballpark probabilities. Some players tend to always be in hitters park while others, the Longorias, the Scutaros, they tend to be in pitchers park and it impacts their offensive profile.
But I would also add that coaches underestimate the impact of bad clutch, excellent running on the bases, double plays, not to mention that coaches like fans, even here, overvalue hits vs walks, and don't take fully account of the impact of defense.
Not that it matters much, winningwise, because TSN value those aspects pretty highly (actually, perhaps too highly). The irony is that you are perhaps better served by ignoring those issues!!! (well, except perhaps defense).
But bottom line, when you compare two cards that have who fall at two extremes on those issues, you just forget to link all the dots. Take for example Sandoval vs McCutchen, at 7.11M and 6.59, somewhat similar if you add up McCutchen 15-games injry risk. I would bet that most owners feel Sandoval bring much more to their teams than McCutchen (actually, in most 80M leagues, I believe McCutchen is snubbed).
They see on paper the impact of Sandoval, his batting average, his rbis, his runs, inflated by the so-many hits. There is no column in TSN for rbis lost by the team because of Sandoval's bad clutch, no trace of McCutchen scoring from first on a double, forcing a throw home, making other players advance, McCutchen's RC will not show the number of times he let his teams continue to score runs because he has no gbA on his cards. TSN, still, has no RC defense.
Moreover, because Sandoval has so many hits; if he starts the season on a hot streak, his batting average balloons by 50 points to .380 and you say, wow, what a all-star. The same hot streak for McCutchen would inflate his onbase by 50 points and his batting average by perhaps 30 points, making his line to something .300/.390/490. Good, but not spectacular.
Of course, that doesn't make Sandoval a bad player. I had him on two teams and he's been great.
To give another example, Kinsler's batting average is .250. Considering the quality of the pitching, and provided that TSN replicates pretty fairly his production, you should expect a drop by perhpas 40 points. When his BA touched .200, one of my good buddy just got mad, killed the card, and threw him in the freezer. Yet, I have the sense that the same drop, proportionnally, by Sandoval, from .330 to .290, would not trigger the same rage.