by bomp helium » Thu Dec 21, 2006 10:23 pm
I've always been a contrarian -- if you want me to do something tell me I can't -- so when I joined last year and read the "secret formula" thread I immediately began experimenting with other paths. Six championships (three in 2005, three in 2006) in 34 teams isn't the best, but not bad either, especially for an absent-minded and perpetually-distracted contrarian...so I think there is actually room for debate on this...
I've always felt that fielding is mildly overrated. Perhaps it is because in real-time baseball the fielders are out there all day, looking important. A batter takes a few hacks and heads to the bench. So perhaps we have always psychologically overvalued the defensive aspect of a player's performance because that's where we see the player the most -- at his position in the field. But while Manny spends 95 percent of his time looking at chicks from his post in RF, he earns his salary in the ten minutes or so he is at the plate...
Is Ichiro REALLY more valuable than Manny Ramirez?
I ran the numbers in a thread last year and it sure seems that more than half of a players impact is offensive (number of likely X chances versus number of PA). For example, Manny may get one RF-X in a series, while he gets 15 PAs. I contend he'll do more damage in those PAs than in that one X chance.
Defense is really a subset of pitching (occuring on the pitcher's card), and i contended then (and now) that your money is better spent on starting pitching. Opponents' hits can come either off of X rolls or hits on the pitcher's card...it just depends on how you want to distribute the money (i.e., where you find the best value). I contend the better value is in pitching.
I did an experiment, repeated four times in 2005. Barry Larkin (a four at ss!) won two championships for me, and so I kept drafting him (not a problem; he's always available). At 6 million or so cheaper than Jeter, that allowed me to use that cash to make a huge upgrade in starting pitching (say Danny Haren to Jake Peavy) that I felt more than compensated for the extra bases Larkin allowed. And for every base Larkin allowed defensively, I contend he produced more than that with his bat. My experiment went like this:
At the halfway point of four seasons, I dumped Larkin, moved Lugo (3e29!) to ss, and picked up Pokey Reese (2B1)...the money was about equal: Larkin was all offense, Reese all D; each batted 9th...the experiment was to see which player -- all other things (except the rolls) being equal -- would be the better teammate. Same rosters, same opponents, same park. EACH TIME in my ridiculously small sample, my team took a significant dive after the change...from well over .500 to .500 or under...it got ridiculous at a couple of points, with nine and 13-game losing streaks...of course the losing streaks were followed by a few beer-inspired roster moves, but the scent in the air was clear: Reese was keeping my lineup from turning over. The bottom of a lineup is key, in that those are the guys the sluggers are often driving home. "Turning the lineup over" is what creates big innings. Reese's fine defense appeared to be negated by his rally-killing tendencies.
So my experience matched my intuition: hitting trumps defensive range, at least in these cases. It could be that defense is less a factor at Coors than Petco. I accept that's very much a possibility. It could be luck. It could be fate. It could be many things. But that's how it went down.
In 2006, I've continued the experiment and have just begun using Ronny Cedeno, this year's Larkin, at ss. He's a .300 hitter with a .67 pricetag. He's a winner so far (19-11). My feeling is that he's such a pricing bargain that it allowed me to have Ortiz, Berkman, Ramirez, Alou, Jones, Piedra and Valentin in my lineup. All inept glove-men, by the way, but all OBP-SLG machines. I'll keep you posted.
What I'm thinking is that the defense model may work for Petco (I've yet to play there), but to build a team at Coors, it may be OBP-SLG that wins. These are not the findings I was neccesarily looking for. But it appears, in hitting parks at least, that defense up the middle may not be the only path to success....
Great thread J-Pav. Thanks for opening the discussion...I just wanted to add another experience...