Sun Jul 21, 2013 6:37 am
I dunno. A high second number is kind of more indicative of a really good base runner. Guys who stole a ton of bases and didn't get caught a lot have a high second number; my personal example would be Eric Davis in '86. He stole 80 bases and only got caught 11 times. His steal numbers are 20-16, so you can see he has pretty good success swiping second even without a lead, and stealing third if he can get a lead there. Biggio was a good base stealer, 47 SB and 10 CS or 50 and 8 . . . but he still got caught a higher percentage of the time. That second number is a little lower, and I don't know if it's because he got caught more (again, as a percentage) or didn't steal third often, or what. The bottom line is, you look at guys like Rickey and Brock, they have that really high second number; they're some of the best base stealers to have played the game. Biggio was good, but probably not among the best. He seems to have had some bad luck getting picked off multiple times though.
This is why you set Bill Plummer to "Don't steal" . . . That 20/6 actually looks pretty decent . . . until you factor in how infrequently he'll get the lead, and that he's dead in the water if they throw over there.