Sunday, July 28, 2019

Will Trout join elite group by leading league in OPS+ for the 5th year in a row?

Trout came into today with a 188 OPS+. Nelson Cruz was 2nd with 154 and George Springer was 3rd with 151.

Since 1900, the only players to lead their league at least 5 straight years were Ty Cobb, Rogers Hornsby, Babe Ruth, Mickey Mantle, Mike Schmidt and Barry Bonds. Ted Williams led the AL 1941-42, missed 3 years in WWII, then led from 1946-49.

In the Angel's remaining games, the average ERA+ of the teams they will face is 106.75 (that actually includes their games yesterday and today against the Orioles-I also used ERA+ thru Friday).  So my guess is that the average ERA+ of the teams he has faced so far is below 100, but I did not calculate that.

I looked at how Trout has done in his career against teams that had at least a 106 ERA+ over the years 2012-2019. His OPS against those teams (there are 8 of them) is .932. But his career OPS is .999. That means that his OPS against everyone else was above 1.000, probably around 1.020.

So let's say that Trout will be 100 points less than his current 1.102 the rest of the way. So I estimate that he will finish with an OPS of 1.070.

Cruz is also 2nd in OPS with .980. If is going to beat 1.070, he would need to have an OPS of about 1.260 the rest of the way.

Of course, there would be adjustments for park effects. But it looks like Trout will join that elite group if he stays healthy.

Sunday, July 21, 2019

Was Bob Gibson even better in 1970 than he was in 1968?

I have written about this before. See Explaining Bob Gibson’s 1968 Season.

In the table below we can see that his FIP ERA as a percentage of the league average was lower in 1970 than in 1968 (1967 and 1969 were not far behind). Also, his lowest FIP- ERA (which takes park effects into account, from Fangraphs) was in 1970. The 61 in 1970 means that his FIP ERA was 61% of the league average.


Year
FIP
Lg FIP
%
FIP-
1959
3.55
3.87
0.917
87
1960
3.68
3.64
1.011
95
1961
3.58
3.94
0.909
85
1962
3.02
3.84
0.786
73
1963
3.13
3.27
0.957
89
1964
3.02
3.39
0.891
83
1965
3.33
3.42
0.974
90
1966
2.76
3.49
0.791
80
1967
2.34
3.26
0.718
73
1968
1.77
2.83
0.625
65
1969
2.30
3.45
0.667
68
1970
2.29
3.84
0.596
61
1971
2.70
3.38
0.799
80
1972
2.54
3.33
0.763
77
1973
2.83
3.69
0.767
77
1974
4.17
3.62
1.152
118
1975
4.50
3.60
1.250
128
 
Gibson is famous for his 1.12 ERA in 1968, but there was alot more offense in 1969 and 1970. So context matters.

On thing that helped him in 1968 was his very low BABIP.

In 1968, Gibson's BABIP was .230, 34 points below what it was for the entire Cardinal staff. That was the farthest below the rest of the staff he was in his career.

In 1969 and 1970, he was actually .002 and .005 above the entire staff. In 1967, he was .012 higher.

I also broke down his performance into RISP and non-RISP situations to try to understand how his ERA could have been so low. He allowed a batting average of .184 overall in 1968 but just .141 with RISP (and .193 in non-RISP situations).  His career average allowed overall was .228 while with RISP it was .219. Those two are pretty close, indicating that Gibson probably did not have any special ability with RISP. He just happened to do very well in those situations in 1968.

Wednesday, July 10, 2019

Smoltz and Joe Buck Imply LeMahieu Was Not Helped By Playing In Colorado

From last nite's all-star broadcast

John Smoltz: "But for anyone who says its just all about Colorado, DJ LeMahieu is proving that wrong"

Joe Buck: "You're right. Everybody always does "the yah but" arguments for the Colorado guys. Doesn't apply to LeMahieu."

Here are  LeMahieu's AVG-OBP-SLG home and away in the years he played for the Rockies. This  covers 400+ games both home and away. Numbers from Baseball Reference and the Baseball Reference Play Index

Home) .329-.386-.447
Away) .267-.314-.367

Playing in Colorado sure helped him a lot. One half season like this year does not prove anything.

His highest single season road OPS with the Rockies was .753. This year it is .845. That might be a bit lucky. That is in only 183 PAs

Sunday, July 7, 2019

Fernando Tatis's 159 OPS+ At Age 20 Puts Him In Great Company

Yes, there is still lots of the season to go, but only 8 guys since 1900 had at least a 150 OPS+ age 20 or less with 200+ PAs. 7 are in the top 40 of career offensive WAR. The other is Trout (at 66).


Player
OPS+
PA
Year
Age
Mike Trout
168
639
2012
20
Ty Cobb
167
642
1907
20
Mel Ott
165
675
1929
20
Al Kaline
162
681
1955
20
Mickey Mantle
162
626
1952
20
Alex Rodriguez
161
677
1996
20
Ted Williams
160
675
1939
20
Fernando Tatis Jr.
159
230
2019
20
Rogers Hornsby
151
550
1916
20


Lowering it to 140 OPS+ gives us


Player
OPS+
PA
Year
Age
Mike Trout
168
639
2012
20
Ty Cobb
167
642
1907
20
Mel Ott
165
675
1929
20
Al Kaline
162
681
1955
20
Mickey Mantle
162
626
1952
20
Alex Rodriguez
161
677
1996
20
Ted Williams
160
675
1939
20
Fernando Tatis Jr.
159
230
2019
20
Rogers Hornsby
151
550
1916
20
Jimmie Foxx
148
473
1928
20
Ronald Acuna Jr.
144
487
2018
20
Juan Soto
143
338
2019
20
Juan Soto
143
494
2018
19
Frank Robinson
143
667
1956
20
Dick Hoblitzell
143
590
1909
20

Here all the guys with a .900 or higher OPS (not adjusted in any way) at age 20 or less with 200+ PAs in the first half since 1908 (from Baseball Reference Play Index)


Player
Year
OPS
PA
Mel Ott
1929
1.139
376
Al Kaline
1955
1.067
378
Fernando Tatis Jr.
2019
1.013
234
Alex Rodriguez
1996
0.996
322
Frank Robinson
1956
0.991
310
Ted Williams
1939
0.987
301
Mike Trout
2012
0.959
290
Juan Soto
2019
0.943
342
Mickey Mantle
1952
0.934
275
Juan Soto
2018
0.929
209
Ken Griffey Jr.
1990
0.907
361