[quote:9b414b402f="Sykes25"][quote:9b414b402f]but I agree with the thinking that offense is that much harder to produce in Fenway.[/quote:9b414b402f]
You folks really need to get a grip on this here. If I get time, I will post pitching and hitting stats from all of my Fenway teams and put them up against a sample of my 45,000 murphy teams. Teams in Fenway score more runs and give up more runs.[/quote:9b414b402f]
I really disagree, Sykes. I strongly believe the HR rating of a park weighs much more than the singles rating for two basic reasons -- a HR has much more impact than a single, and cards never have more than 5 BP single chances, while many hitters have 8 BP HR's on their cards.
Having said that, let's compare Bell and McReynolds a little more closely:
BP HR: 1-16 (Murph)
McReynolds hit 45 in 646 PA's(about 7 HR's per 100 PA's)
BP HR: 1-9 (Fen)
Bell hit 42 in 724 PA's(about 6 HR's per 100 PA's)
BP Singles 1-0 (Murph)
McReynolds hit 100 singles in 646 PA's (about 15.5 per 100 PA's)
BP Singles 1-16 (Fen)
Bell hit 127 in 724 PA's (about 17.5 per 100 PA's)
I'm not sure exactly what to conclude about this. McReynolds averaged 1 more HR per 100 PA's, which would be somewhat attributable to the BP difference. Bell averagd 2 more singles per 100 PA's which would be somewhat attributable to the BP difference.
As for other numbers:
2B: McReynolds 5.9/100; Bell 5.5/100
3B: McR 0.6/100; Bell 0.8/100
BB: McR 7/100; Bell 6/100
SB McR, 2; Bell 6 (w/ 7 CS)
R: McR 16/100; Bell 17/100
RBI: McR 18/100; Bell 18/100
Bell did lead the league in GIDP's (29). Don't know how many McR had but it was less than 21.
I still think it's too close to call. Anyone else have a different take on these numbers?