by Outta Leftfield » Mon May 28, 2012 6:54 pm
One thing to keep in mind is that catcher throwing errors are not quite as bad as errors that add a baserunner. An errant throw into CF may let a base-stealer go to third, but it doesn't put an extra man on first. So I'm a little more tolerant about T-? errors than other errors.
Also, those T-? errors can vary a lot from year to year, even with the same player. For example, I've used Ed Bailey's 3.87M card—c-4(+1)e9,T-11(pb-2)—a few times and in one year he had 16 errors (not too bad, considering) and in another, 29 errors (not too good). In the bad year, he also was 209-69 vs the stolen base. What I didn't notice when I made a last minute addition to my starting staff was that Glen Hobbie was a +9 (!) hold vs the steal. My bad, because Hobbie allowed 73 SBs when he was pitching. Reliever Vincente Romo (+4) allowed 23 SBs. So most of the SB damage was done against those two pitchers with really bad holds.
OTOH, in his better defensive year for me (16 errors) Bailey was matched with an all LHP staff including Steve Carlton's -6 hold. Obviously, nobody was running on Carlton. Along with many fewer errors, Bailey allowed just 69 steals with an excellent .645 SB percentage. And with fewer steal attempts, Bailey made fewer throwing errors.
The moral might be that is that if you're going with a +1 T-11 catcher, try to match the C up with some pitchers with good holds and you'll minimize the damage. I do this with Berra, sometimes, too. He's got a -2 arm but with awful T-15 and T-17 throwing in his two ATG6 years. But if you use Berra with SPs with -1 or better holds, the combined -3 or better will deter overall steals and minimize the damage. :wink: