Mon Oct 31, 2016 11:35 am
I'm with rburgh on this one. Any time a team jumps off to an incredible start, you need to look at how many overperformers you have. I've tested hitting normalization off and on since they officially turned off that switch back in 2008, and I see no signs of normalization for hitters. Looking at Lanier's team:
- You have a bunch of hitters overperforming even after your current 1-8 cold snap. Even platooning, Uggla and Trosky are off to really hot starts and I would expect each to cool down.
- Your entire outfield is raking beyond expectations. The power isn't surprising, but Belle, Griffey, and Post all batting over .300 this far into the season is unexpected.
- Your bullpen is pitching out of its mind. In a pure hitters' park, having four relievers with ERAs all below 3.5, especially with a weaker defensive team, is a sign of huge overperformance. Even Rivera at 2.05, while not stunning, is better than you would expect for a full season in Baker.
- I don't really see any underperformers other than May.
Typhoon - that's a good lineup of small ball hitters, but the top 7 all hitting .320 or better is a sign of some good fortune. 4 regulars were batting over .380 at game 51, and two of your sub 1M subs (Sizemore and Frazier) were batting .400 at that time. The odds of that continuing are slim to none.
It's not normalization - it's regressing to the mean. When you're way over or under performing, eventually the rolls will start landing on the bad columns instead of the good columns.