Thursday, August 1, 2013

Trout In A Great Position To Join Ted Williams, Cobb, Hornsby And Ott In Exclusive Club

Ted Williams, Ty Cobb, Rogers Hornsby and Mel Ott are the only players to have at least a 150 OPS+ at both ages 20 & 21. Trout did it last year at age 20 and is likely to do it again this year.

OPS, of course, is on-base percentage (OBP) + slugging percentage (SLG). OPS+ is a stat that can be found at Baseball Reference. It adjusts for park effects and the league average. An average OPS+ would be 100 if a player had the league average OBP and the league average SLG and his park neither helped him nor hurt him as a hitter, his OPS+ would be 100.

I also later look at where Trout ranks in a stat called wRC+ (weighted runs created, which rates hitters a little differently but also adjusts for park effects and the league average).

The table below shows all cases of a 20 or 21 year old reaching an OPS of 150 (minimum 400 plate appearances (PAs)). All the players who have done it twice are in red and Trout is in green.

Notice that Trout has 175 so far this year. With about 1/3 of the season left, Trout only has to have an OPS+ of 100 the rest of the way to finish at 150. Then he would be in this club with Williams, Cobb, Hornsby & Ott. In fact, he could end up with the highest OPS+ ever at both age 20 & age 21.


Rk
Player
OPS+
Year
Age
1
Mike Trout
175
2013
21
2
Jimmie Foxx
173
1929
21
3
Eddie Mathews
171
1953
21
4
Mike Trout
169
2012
20
5
Rogers Hornsby
169
1917
21
6
Ty Cobb
169
1908
21
7
Ty Cobb
167
1907
20
8
Sam Crawford
167
1901
21
9
Mel Ott
165
1929
20
10
Cesar Cedeno
162
1972
21
11
Al Kaline
162
1955
20
12
Mickey Mantle
162
1952
20
13
Denny Lyons
162
1887
21
14
Alex Rodriguez
161
1996
20
15
Ted Williams
161
1940
21
16
Ted Williams
160
1939
20
17
Albert Pujols
157
2001
21
18
Ken Griffey
155
1991
21
19
Tom McCreery
155
1896
21
20
Mike Tiernan
152
1888
21
21
Stan Musial
151
1942
21
22
Rogers Hornsby
151
1916
20
23
Tris Speaker
151
1909
21
24
Hal Trosky
150
1934
21
25
Mel Ott
150
1930
21
26
Fred Carroll
150
1886
21

A more sophisticated measure, wRC+, gives a different weight for outcomes like singles, doubles, etc. Each event is multiplied by a different coefficient or run value. This gets summed and divided by PAs (or something close to it). Fangraphs reports this measure. Some links about it are at the end of this post.

wRC+ is also set up so 100 is average. Here are all the players who had at least 150 at ages 20 or 21. Fangraphs says Joe Jackson was born in 1889 while Baseball Reference has 1887. That is why Jackson's 1911 season does not appear in the above list (they both say 7-16 and if you are born after June 30 you age is the one you started the season with).

In this case the quartet that Trout would join by reaching 150 at both ages would be Cobb, Ott, Foxx and Williams. Hornsby just misses because his wRC+ was 146 at age 20. Foxx just missed being on the above list (for OPS+) by having 148 at age 20.


Rk
Name
wRC+
Year
Age
1
Joe Jackson
184
1911
21
2
Jimmie Foxx
177
1929
21
3
Mike Trout
171
2013
21
4
Eddie Mathews
167
1953
21
5
Mike Trout
166
2012
20
6
Cesar Cedeno
163
1972
21
7
Mel Ott
163
1929
20
8
Rogers Hornsby
162
1917
21
9
Ty Cobb
162
1908
21
10
Alex Rodriguez
161
1996
20
11
Ty Cobb
160
1907
20
12
Albert Pujols
159
2001
21
13
Mickey Mantle
158
1952
20
14
Ted Williams
158
1940
21
15
Ted Williams
157
1939
20
16
Al Kaline
156
1955
20
17
Stan Musial
155
1942
21
18
Jimmie Foxx
150
1928
20
19
Mel Ott
150
1930
21

Wikipedia's entry for Runs created

Fan Graphs on wOBA

Fan Graphs on wRC (wRC is based on wOBA, weighted on-base average)

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