- Posts: 1107
- Joined: Thu Sep 06, 2012 11:27 pm
Thanks guys for chiming in.
I agree with Hack Wilson that the Babe's 16.47M is perhaps best used higher in the lineup than BAbe's 13.07M or 13.03M cards (although if I were to use him, I would probably build my lineup to set him as #2 rather than #1.
Hack also alludes to the Babe's speed with the 16.47M card, and I think it's part of the reason his card is snubbed relative to the 13.03M: the peripherals of the Babe's 16.47M card are better to the point of making a substantial difference.
Here is the rating of the Babe's card with games played in US Cellular type of park (low ballpark singles, high ballpark homeruns).
First, looking only at the offensive card, not considering running, defense, or injury-risk...the pure offensive card reading (WAR and salaries based roughly on 150 games, 648 chances precisely):
Card...........WAR........estimated salary
Babe 16.47M...11.7 WAR...15.73M
Babe 15.10M...11.2 WAR...15.20M
Babe 13.07M...8.3 WAR....12.34M
Babe 13.03M...10.1 WAR...14.15M
So the 13.03M offensive card is not far from the 15.10M and looks like a good buy.
Now, this is how the WAR is affected after considering the running game, the defensive side, and factoring in injuries. Remember that only Babe's two costliest cards are injury-free---the two 13M cards are expected to miss 6 games (and a few more at-bats in games where they are injured). I consider for the ratings a bench player worth 0.7M worth his card...for outfielders, that would be cards like Tom Paciorek and Frank Delahanty. In order words, the ratings below consider 162 games from Babe's 16.47M and 156 games from Babe's 13.03M supplemented with 6 games from Paciorek:
Card.......Off WAR.....run-adjusted...def-adjusted...inj-adj......estimated salary...value
Babe 16.47M...11.7 WAR...12.6 WAR...12.5 WAR...13.3 WAR...17.29M........+0.82M
Babe 15.10M...11.2 WAR...11.9 WAR...11.0 WAR...11.7 WAR...15.74M........+0.64M
Babe 13.07M...8.3 WAR....8.6 WAR......8.6 WAR....8.7 WAR....12.70M........-0.37M
Babe 13.03M...10.1 WAR...10.4 WAR...9.4 WAR.....9.5 WAR....13.54M........+0.51M
Babe's 16.47M card gets a slightly bigger run-adjusted bump (+0.9 WAR) over Babe's 15.10M (+0.7 WAR) despite both cards having the exact same running ratings because he's more like to reach first base and have the running game get going compared to the Babe's 15.10M.
That said, the +0.3M difference in favor the Babe's best card compared to his 13.03M card is rather small, so I would consider other issues before choosing one or the other. The Babe's 16.47M best lineup position, in my opinion, is the #2, so he needs real solid #3 and #4 threats. Babe's 13.03M is more a typical #3 or #4 hitter, so perhaps the better choice is the lineup is thin offensively. Also, Babe's 13.03M has a better arm, so looks more like a right-fielder compared to the 16.47M whose -1 arm makes him better suited for the left field. And as I wrote, the 13.03M has an injury risk, so the quality of the bench must also be considered before going with one or the other.
I agree with Hack Wilson that the Babe's 16.47M is perhaps best used higher in the lineup than BAbe's 13.07M or 13.03M cards (although if I were to use him, I would probably build my lineup to set him as #2 rather than #1.
Hack also alludes to the Babe's speed with the 16.47M card, and I think it's part of the reason his card is snubbed relative to the 13.03M: the peripherals of the Babe's 16.47M card are better to the point of making a substantial difference.
Here is the rating of the Babe's card with games played in US Cellular type of park (low ballpark singles, high ballpark homeruns).
First, looking only at the offensive card, not considering running, defense, or injury-risk...the pure offensive card reading (WAR and salaries based roughly on 150 games, 648 chances precisely):
Card...........WAR........estimated salary
Babe 16.47M...11.7 WAR...15.73M
Babe 15.10M...11.2 WAR...15.20M
Babe 13.07M...8.3 WAR....12.34M
Babe 13.03M...10.1 WAR...14.15M
So the 13.03M offensive card is not far from the 15.10M and looks like a good buy.
Now, this is how the WAR is affected after considering the running game, the defensive side, and factoring in injuries. Remember that only Babe's two costliest cards are injury-free---the two 13M cards are expected to miss 6 games (and a few more at-bats in games where they are injured). I consider for the ratings a bench player worth 0.7M worth his card...for outfielders, that would be cards like Tom Paciorek and Frank Delahanty. In order words, the ratings below consider 162 games from Babe's 16.47M and 156 games from Babe's 13.03M supplemented with 6 games from Paciorek:
Card.......Off WAR.....run-adjusted...def-adjusted...inj-adj......estimated salary...value
Babe 16.47M...11.7 WAR...12.6 WAR...12.5 WAR...13.3 WAR...17.29M........+0.82M
Babe 15.10M...11.2 WAR...11.9 WAR...11.0 WAR...11.7 WAR...15.74M........+0.64M
Babe 13.07M...8.3 WAR....8.6 WAR......8.6 WAR....8.7 WAR....12.70M........-0.37M
Babe 13.03M...10.1 WAR...10.4 WAR...9.4 WAR.....9.5 WAR....13.54M........+0.51M
Babe's 16.47M card gets a slightly bigger run-adjusted bump (+0.9 WAR) over Babe's 15.10M (+0.7 WAR) despite both cards having the exact same running ratings because he's more like to reach first base and have the running game get going compared to the Babe's 15.10M.
That said, the +0.3M difference in favor the Babe's best card compared to his 13.03M card is rather small, so I would consider other issues before choosing one or the other. The Babe's 16.47M best lineup position, in my opinion, is the #2, so he needs real solid #3 and #4 threats. Babe's 13.03M is more a typical #3 or #4 hitter, so perhaps the better choice is the lineup is thin offensively. Also, Babe's 13.03M has a better arm, so looks more like a right-fielder compared to the 16.47M whose -1 arm makes him better suited for the left field. And as I wrote, the 13.03M has an injury risk, so the quality of the bench must also be considered before going with one or the other.