by Hakmusic » Fri Dec 01, 2006 12:02 am
While I understand Adam's contention that you can do really bad with a premiere SS, and nothing in this exercise disputes that, it was the argument that a Smalley, Franco, or even Hojo at SS was a great bargain because the hitting can overcome the defense.
My thought was that you can be misled because teams could do pretty well with Smalley, etc, at SS, but to win a Championship, or be a "great" team, you had to have a 1 or 2 at SS. Not necessarily a "premiere" SS, but a 1 or a 2. I further agree with Yountfan to an extent, with the "if you can't have Yount, go cheap." I agree with it to an extent because he advocates Smalley as part of that, and I don't. To me go cheap means Concepcion or one of the under $1 million 2 guys (DeJesus, Uribe, etc.)
So my hypothesis was that to have a good team, a good hitting 3 def SS could be fine, but to have a great team, 1 was best, a midpriced 2 was next, an premiere 2 (Ripkin/Larkin) or a really cheap 2 (under $1 mil) would be even, and that a 3 of any type would be last.
I think the numbers so far, and this quick poll is far from conclusive, somewhat bare that out. Smith, Yount, Trammell, and Fernandez, all 1's, are the top 4. Smith is actually outpacing Yount, and both are far ahead of Trammell and Fernandez. While Concepcion is right up there, Ripken and Larkin did a lot better than I expected. I thought, given the same D, their offense didn't justify the price, and it would be hard to win a championship with them because of what you would have to give up more elsewhere. I think the under $1 million guys made a good showing, even though none of them in particular has won a lot, as a group, there are a lot of great teams with them. There are more championships with Smalley than I expected to see, but as a whole, the 3 defense group, didn't fare well (no Franco at all)
About 60% of the "great" and championship teams had a 1 at SS, about 34% had a 2, and only 6% had a 3.
Now it can certainly be argued that this is because so few teams play a 3 at SS, so the sample is biased, but I would argue that while there are far fewer teams that play a 3 at SS than a 2, I've seen a lot of teams with 3's, so its not as though they aren't out there.
so, nothing conclusive from this, other than after Yount and Smith it gets muddy.
Here are the numbers:
18 smith
16 yount
9 trammell
8 fernandez
7 Ripken
6 Concep
5 Larkin
4 Burleson
4 Smalley
2.5 Dejesus
2 Guillen
2 Uribe
2 Griffin
2 washington
1 Templeton
1 Oquendo
1 Owen
1 schofield
0.5 Fletcher