Valen wrote:Pretty much in line with geekor.
Not to be a smart arse, but did you guys see Tanaka pitch in Japan?
No. Clearly only saw highlights and read things written by scouts who did see him pitch a lot in Japan. There was not much doubt he was going to be good.
The debate of whether he would be a #1 or a #3 was irrelevant. A #3 merely means you have 2 other good pitchers. For a contending team a #3 pitcher in rotation is still pretty good.
Who is #3 on Detroit? Dodgers? Oakland?
Too much is made of who is 1,2,or 3 when it really does not matter a week in to season when everyone pitches the same, once every 5 days.
Don't be such a hypocrite. You, yourself, considered the "debate of whether he would be a #1 or #3" relevant in the last Tanaka forum*,
where you said your "greatest concern about him" was whether he would be a "#3 starter" paid ace money. So, you obviously
do give the starter ranking terms credence, and you really shouldn't haughtily carp about others using them.
Also, you know very well that the general terms "#!-#5 starters," which denotes 5 varying quality types of starters, are different from the terms "number 1-5" starters that denote the best to worst starters on a staff...Zack Greinke is arguably a #1 starter, but he is the number two starter on the Dodgers. So your hypocritical tirade against the terms "#1-5 starters" was erroneous (and a bit silly), since it complains about the irrelevance of the first group (
the ones I was actually using), while the examples it gives are from the second one (
the ones I wasn't). Yes, all starters may pitch on the first, second or third day, but that does not mean all pitchers are #1 or #2 or #3 starters.
And these terms
are relevant, by the way. They are useful ways of ranking and categorizing starters for both professional baseball people (e.g. GMs and scouts) and fans. Baseball America--based on scouts' consensual views of the matter--has actually defined the five terms by attributing the assortment of qualities particular to each. For example, a #1 starter (e.g. Seaver) has: two plus pitches, an average third pitch, plus/plus command and plus makeup. And a #2 starter (e.g. Weaver) has: two plus pitches, an average third pitch, average command, and plus makeup...and so on.
So, while the #1-5 starters on a staff vary in quality from team to team, the terms #1, #2, #3, #4, and #5 starters are relatively constant terms MLB baseball people use to generally evaluate a starter's abilities and communicate those evaluations to others. And since baseball people currently use those terms, there's no reason why we fans shouldn't either...as
your appropriate use of them in that previous forum well proved.
*...I quoted (in a May 16, 12:14 PM entry) that post of yours that worried whether Tanaka was a #1 or #3 starter and
placed it at the end of your "Would you go after Tanaka" post (Sun, Apr 6, 11:46 PM). You and others are free to check it out.