by MARCPELLETIER » Tue Jun 13, 2006 11:21 pm
I only checked total base, as I said. In terms of total bases, Quinlan has 44.5, and you can add 2.5 for his singles and 21 total bases for his BP homeruns, for a total of 68 TB. Marrero has 38.3 of which you add 24 TB for his homeruns, for a total of 62.3 TB. So it's a pretty good advantage for Quinlan (I only report Strat numbers, without checking them). On-base wise, Marrero has 17.4, of which you can add the 6 on-base from his BP homeruns in MM. Quinlan has 24.4 on-base, plus BP homeruns, plus BP singles. So clear edge to QUinlan there as well.
Why is that not translated in the numbers you provided, I'm not sure.
To answer your question, if I could coach my team by myself, I would get on my bench a "homerun hitter" and a "single/double hitter", and I would use either of them in the right situation. But Hal is my coach, and I don't think Hal understands this logic. Therefore, as a GM, I don't necessary prefer a guy with greater portion of his slugging pct coming from HRs, because there are times where the single or double is just as important, so I just want to provide to Hal's bench with the best hitter available for the lower price.
Also, I don't want to lose a game because of Hal's inability to make the appropriate call, so I am highly concerned to have a player like Marrero who has so many ways to lose a game (with his glove or by being used as a pinch-hit vs rhp).
Of course, this is only one point of view. The day I'll have Marrero hit a walk-off homerun, I'll think otherwise for sure!!!