Joe Carter | 10.95 |
Greg Vaughn | 10.61 |
Tim Salmon | 10.37 |
Ron Gant | 10.29 |
Mike Schmidt | 10.22 |
Dan Uggla | 9.86 |
Mark McGwire | 9.62 |
Bobby Bonds | 9.57 |
Alfonso Soriano | 9.42 |
Gorman Thomas | 9.31 |
So Trout is currently way ahead of even the best, Joe Carter. Here is the top ten through age 24 with 1,000 PAs:
Mike Schmidt | 14.25 |
Cory Snyder | 13.73 |
Mike Trout | 13.58 |
Bobby Bonds | 13.53 |
Ellis Burks | 12.47 |
Andrew McCutchen | 12.44 |
Dean Palmer | 11.44 |
Dave Nicholson | 11.25 |
Chris Young | 10.87 |
Mark McGwire | 10.76 |
Trout will not turn 24 until August, so this counts as his age 23 season. Now let's add in SB and CS
Player | RBI/GDP | SB | CS |
Mike Schmidt | 14.25 | 31 | 14 |
Cory Snyder | 13.73 | 7 | 4 |
Mike Trout | 13.58 | 109 | 14 |
Bobby Bonds | 13.53 | 109 | 21 |
Ellis Burks | 12.47 | 73 | 20 |
Andrew McCutchen | 12.44 | 78 | 25 |
Dean Palmer | 11.44 | 21 | 16 |
Dave Nicholson | 11.25 | 5 | 9 |
Chris Young | 10.87 | 43 | 12 |
Mark McGwire | 10.76 | 1 | 2 |
Just think of all the DPs Trout helped his team avoid by stealing. AND he does not kill rallies by getting caught very much, either. The only guy who matches him in stealing is Bobby Bonds but he got thrown out 7 more times. I wonder if there is some way to adjust the RBI/GDP ratio based on SB & CS. If so, Trout might be way ahead of everyone else.
I did create a stat once to judge leadoff men. It was how many times a guy got into scoring position (2B+3B+SB-assumes all SB are of 2nd base, not quite right) divided by how many outs he makes (not just batting outs but CS added in and GDP added in-just once for GDP since an out is already there). Call it SCP/Out.
This next table has the 20 through age 24 with 1,000 PAs in both RBI/GDP and SCP/Out. Players who made both lists are in red:
Player
|
RBI/GDP
|
|
Player
|
SCP/Outs
|
Mike Schmidt
|
14.25
|
|
Rickey Henderson
|
0.297
|
Cory Snyder
|
13.73
|
|
Hanley Ramirez
|
0.212
|
Mike Trout
|
13.58
|
|
Marquis Grissom
|
0.210
|
Bobby Bonds
|
13.53
|
|
Juan Samuel
|
0.210
|
Ellis Burks
|
12.47
|
|
Cesar Cedeno
|
0.200
|
Andrew McCutchen
|
12.44
|
|
Bert Campaneris
|
0.188
|
Dean Palmer
|
11.44
|
|
Mike Trout
|
0.178
|
Dave Nicholson
|
11.25
|
|
Jose Altuve
|
0.170
|
Chris Young
|
10.87
|
|
Bobby Bonds
|
0.169
|
Mark McGwire
|
10.76
|
|
Chad Curtis
|
0.169
|
Scott Rolen
|
10.61
|
|
Amos Otis
|
0.168
|
Mark Reynolds
|
10.60
|
|
Paul Molitor
|
0.166
|
Andre Dawson
|
10.26
|
|
Melvin Upton
|
0.163
|
Jose Cardenal
|
9.89
|
|
Andrew McCutchen
|
0.163
|
Pat Burrell
|
9.88
|
|
Rondell White
|
0.158
|
Juan Samuel
|
9.87
|
|
Ryne Sandberg
|
0.157
|
Josh Barfield
|
9.82
|
|
Ellis Burks
|
0.156
|
Pete Incaviglia
|
9.65
|
|
David Wright
|
0.154
|
Bill Melton
|
9.48
|
|
Matt Kemp
|
0.152
|
Alex Rodriguez
|
9.44
|
|
Jason Kendall
|
0.151
|
Five guys are on both lists. Trout is highest among them in RBI/GDP and only Samuel beats him in SCP/Out. Bobby Bonds is very close to Trout in both numbers. Hanley Ramirez was 21st in RBI/GDP ratio.
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