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Valen wrote:Another factor in comparing players from different eras. Players in early 20th century did not have to contend with numerous hard throwing pitchers. Let's face it they didn't. Even when I was a kid Bob Gibson could be known as a fireballer while serving up 92 heat. Seaver ditto while reaching 94. The pitcher who reached 95 was rare. Vida Blue came along topping out at 98 and it was a revelation until Nolan Ryan hit 100. And then there was .... nobody else touching 100. Now almost every team either has a pitcher on staff who flirts with 100 or they have a few prospects that regularly light up the 3rd digit on the radar gun.
Then you have the Vlad type hitter. He would swing at anything. Yet did not accrue massive strikeout totals. He would swing at a pitch a foot outside and line it to RF. Uncanny how he could do that. The K rate alone would say he had good plate discipline. But anyone who watched him would tell you he had poor plate strike discipline. What set him apart was he was a great bad ball hitter. Why? The people who taught him to hit taught him the philosophy that what mattered is when you make the decision to swing do not half do it. Do not get cheated.
There is for sure the players who strike out a lot because they swing at pitchers that look like strikes but break out of strike zone. Maybe you could accuse them of poor plate discipline. There are others who's bat is just not quick enough to get through the zone on a 98+ heater unless they were guessing fast ball correctly. These will strike out a lot but not because they have poor plate discipline. As much as the sabre geeks would like to point to a single stat and say see, that proves bad plate discipline the real world simply does not work that way.
This does not address my last post or any of our discussions about Javier Baez and excessive strikeout rates. If it does, please show how by directly applying it to my posts to you. Considering you have failed to directly address my last two posts to you, you clearly can't.
As to your argument about comparing eras, there's a significant problem: The players on your and Bombers' list aren't from the early 20th century. All the players on your list were from the last 50 years, and many were in the last 20-30. Unless you can prove pitchers were throwing significantly less hard during the time of your batters listed--and you can't--their yearly strikeout rates are still relevant. As I showed in my last post, Bombers sure can't provide them.
And your going on about Guerrero and batters swings is still irrelevant. I pointed that out in my last post to you, and you (understandably) failed to counter it. Whether someone taught somebody is irrelevant to their having bad strike zone judgment. They still have bad strike zone judgment.
And what you said about reasons for striking out only applies to our original debate abut Baez if you can apply it to Baez. You haven't. Also, Baez has tremendous bat speed, so your using "poor bat speed" as an excuse won't work with Baez. So, you still have failed to support any of your previous arguments about Baez and strikeouts and, like Bombers, you have failed to provide the strikeout rates of those top ten players, and failed to show they, like Baez and Davis, had high yearly strikeout rates.