stevejrogers Old-Timey Member Posted July 16, 2006 Posted July 16, 2006 Seems like 3B for the Mets has had this rep of being more of a blackhole than any other position. I mean the 25th anniversary video had a song and video montage spotlighting it and its a perennial filler sidebar in the Mets media guideWell looking at Ultimate Mets Database the totals as of July 2006:C 71 players1B 126 players2B 113 players3B 133 playersSS 100 playersLF 200 playersCF 140 playersRF 171 playersDH 29 playersClearly 1st could be considered as much of a black hole as 3rd. Naturally the leader in games played, Ed Kranepool played for 18 years, hence he has a 450 game lead over Keith Hernandez. 2B the leader Wally Backman played in 680 games, I use that because the top two 3Bmen have over 700 games played, Howard Johnson (835) and Wayne Garrett (709)I'm not even going to get into the Outfield, but I'm curious as to how 3rd got to be so infamous that the Met PR department had to make a big deal about it when it doesn't seem as abnormal as the other positions.
Guest Edgy DC Guests Posted July 16, 2006 Posted July 16, 2006 1962-1980 was a struggle.Since then, it's been more reputation than anything. Much more.
RealityChuck Old-Timey Member Posted July 16, 2006 Posted July 16, 2006 3B and CF were big problems in the early years of the team, and one sportswriter started keeping tabs at 3B. CF stopped being an issue after Agee joined the team, but here are the numbers of third basemen:1962 -- 91963 -- 111964 -- 101965 -- 81966 -- 51967 -- 111968 -- 41969 -- 61970 -- 31971 -- 5The numbers are more reasonable from here on, but the issue is still the fact that there was incredible turnover, and no player ever had a long run at the position.Regular third baseman (i.e., most games at the position):1962 -- Felix Mantilla1963 -- Charlie Neal (Jim Hickman played only 7 games less, though)1964 -- Charlie Smith1965 -- Charlie Smith1966 -- Ken Boyer1967 -- Ed Charles1968 -- Ed Charles1969 -- Wayne Garrett1970 -- Joe Foy1971 -- Bob Aspromonte1972 -- Jim Fregosi1973 -- Wayne Garrett1974 -- Wayne Garrett1975 -- Wayne Garrett1976 -- Roy Staiger1977 -- Len Randle1978 -- Len Randle1979 -- Richie Hebner1980 -- Elliott MaddoxIn '81, Hubie Brooks took over, and the position has been relatively stable since. And the list doesn't indicate players during this time who were supposed to be a real 3B prospect but who never panned out.In retrospect, the team should have been satisfied with Garrett playing the position; if they had made that decision, Foy and Ryan would have remained with the team.Hojo and Garrett both played a lot of games, but the numbers drop off quickly. David Wright is almost certainly in the top ten already.
stevejrogers Old-Timey Member Posted July 16, 2006 Author Posted July 16, 2006 Top 5 for Wright if I'm not mistaken
stevejrogers Old-Timey Member Posted July 16, 2006 Author Posted July 16, 2006 Excuse me, right on the cusp at # 61. Howard Johnson 8352. Wayne Garrett 7093. Hubie Brooks 5164. Edgardo Alfonzo 5155. Robin Ventura 4366. David Wright 317
stevejrogers Old-Timey Member Posted July 16, 2006 Author Posted July 16, 2006 Certain fans and mediots would never have believed this 3 years ago, but in about 12 more games played Reyes will also be at #6 All-Time for Met Short Stops1. Bud Harrelson 12812. Rey Ord��ez 9073. Kevin Elster 5244. Rafael Santana 4785. Frank Taveras 3726. Roy McMillan 3357. Jos� Reyes 323
stevejrogers Old-Timey Member Posted July 16, 2006 Author Posted July 16, 2006 If all goes as planned, Edgardo may add here1. Wally Backman 6802. Felix Millan 6543. Doug Flynn 5334. Edgardo Alfonzo 524
stevejrogers Old-Timey Member Posted July 16, 2006 Author Posted July 16, 2006 Floyd is also sitting in the 6th hole!1. Cleon Jones 7942. Kevin McReynolds 7583. George Foster 6174. Steve Henderson 4825. Bernard Gilkey 3636. Cliff Floyd 351
stevejrogers Old-Timey Member Posted July 17, 2006 Author Posted July 17, 2006 Elster88 wrote:Well put.
MFS62 Old-Timey Member Posted July 17, 2006 Posted July 17, 2006 The Mets had nine third basemen in 1962, starting with Don Zimmer.http://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/NYM/1962.shtmlMany have said he screwed up the position so badly that it took the team many years to recover.They also had seven catchers that year, and it took the team a while to stabilize that position, too (with Jerry Grote).Later
Guest old original jb Guests Posted July 17, 2006 Posted July 17, 2006 A more accurate measure of instability at a position would be obtained as follows: Let N = p= i ∑ {Np x (Np/Gt).....+N(p+1) x (N(p+1)/Gt�+Ni x (Ni/Gt) } p=0 where i = number of third basemen Mets have hadgt = total number of Met gamesNp= number of games played by invididual player p. Weighted Average = N / (i) As usual, I do not have the time to run the numbers, but this formula, would adjust for a situation in which one or two players had very long stints and a larger number of players had very short stints during brief periods of instability.
Theoldmole Old-Timey Member Posted July 17, 2006 Posted July 17, 2006 ]If they had made that decision, Foy and Ryan would have remained with the team. Otis and Ryan?
metsmarathon Old-Timey Member Posted July 17, 2006 Posted July 17, 2006 ="old original jb"]A more accurate measure of instability at a position would be obtained as follows: Let N = p= i ∑ {Np x (Np/Gt).....+N(p+1) x (N(p+1)/Gt�+Ni x (Ni/Gt) } p=0 where i = number of third basemen Mets have hadgt = total number of Met gamesNp= number of games played by invididual player p. Weighted Average = N / (i) As usual, I do not have the time to run the numbers, but this formula, would adjust for a situation in which one or two players had very long stints and a larger number of players had very short stints during brief periods of instability.why does mlb.com show hojo as having 835 games played under 3b fielding stats for the mets, yet as a hitter, he has 1054 games played at third base?http://newyork.mets.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/stats/historical/player_stats.jsp?c_id=nym§ion3=1&statSet3=1&sortByStat=G&statType=3&timeFrame=3&timeSubFrame=0&baseballScope=NYN&prevPage3=3&readBoxes=true&sitSplit=&venueID=&subScope=pos&teamPosCode=5&HS=truehttp://newyork.mets.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/stats/historical/player_stats.jsp?c_id=nym&baseballScope=NYN&subScope=pos&teamPosCode=5&statType=1&sitSplit=&venueID=&timeFrame=3&timeSubFrame2=0&Submit=Submitusing the 835 number source, and jb's formula, i show the mets have a third base stability factor of 2.413no i haven't run the other positions yet.
Guest old original jb Guests Posted July 17, 2006 Posted July 17, 2006 ="metsmarathon"]="old original jb"]A more accurate measure of instability at a position would be obtained as follows: Let N = p= i ∑ {Np x (Np/Gt).....+N(p+1) x (N(p+1)/Gt�+Ni x (Ni/Gt) } p=0 where i = number of third basemen Mets have hadgt = total number of Met gamesNp= number of games played by invididual player p. Weighted Average = N / (i) As usual, I do not have the time to run the numbers, but this formula, would adjust for a situation in which one or two players had very long stints and a larger number of players had very short stints during brief periods of instability.why does mlb.com show hojo as having 835 games played under 3b fielding stats for the mets, yet as a hitter, he has 1054 games played at third base?http://newyork.mets.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/stats/historical/player_stats.jsp?c_id=nym§ion3=1&statSet3=1&sortByStat=G&statType=3&timeFrame=3&timeSubFrame=0&baseballScope=NYN&prevPage3=3&readBoxes=true&sitSplit=&venueID=&subScope=pos&teamPosCode=5&HS=truehttp://newyork.mets.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/stats/historical/player_stats.jsp?c_id=nym&baseballScope=NYN&subScope=pos&teamPosCode=5&statType=1&sitSplit=&venueID=&timeFrame=3&timeSubFrame2=0&Submit=Submitusing the 835 number source, and jb's formula, i show the mets have a third base stability factor of 2.413no i haven't run the other positions yet.I think Hojo played some games at centerfield.I'm not sure how you got to that number, because the final value should be in average number of games played per third baseman. I think I need to tweak the formula---don't run the other positions until I get a chance to fix it!
Guest old original jb Guests Posted July 17, 2006 Posted July 17, 2006 It's worse than I thought. I ran some examples, and honestly, my formula is, well, worthless. I don't know what I was smoking today, but the whole weighted average thing just doesn't work for this problem.Back to the drawing board!(And my apologies to the forum for being so enthralled with being able to put in a "sigma" that I failed to test out the formula before posting it.)
metsmarathon Old-Timey Member Posted July 18, 2006 Posted July 18, 2006 well, you're basically summing Np(i)^2 / Gtat first i had trouble making sense of the formula, but i think it may work.see, if you've got three cases:position one:eight players, each with one game playedposition two:four players. two with three games played, two with one game playedposition three:four players. one with five games player, three with one game played.so position one gives us:(1*1/8) + (1*1/8) + (1*1/8) + (1*1/8) + (1*1/8) + (1*1/8) + (1*1/8) + (1*1/8) =1/8 + 1/8 + 1/8 + 1/8 + 1/8 + 1/8 + 1/8 + 1/8 = 8/8 = 1position two gives us:(3*3/8) + (3*3/8) + (1*1/8) + (1*1/8) = 9/8 + 9/8 + 1/8 + 1/8 =20/8 = 2.25position three gives us:(5*5/8) + (1*1/8) + (1*1/8) + (1*1/8) = 25/8 + 1/8 + 1/8 + 1/8 = 28/8 = 3.5position three, despite having the same number of players as position two, was much more stable. the higher JB Factor means a more stable position.i think that while hte number may appear meaningless in that it is not a number less than one that you had expected, it is still meaningful in that it can quantify the difference between a few guys with moderate-length tenures signifying positional instability, and a position with a lot of short term fill-ins and some long term stanchions that would signify stability in a position.sure, there may be a better way of measuring it somewhere, but i think this works just fine. tho it'll be meaningless to compare outfield to infield, as outfielders tend to rotate around without necessarily indicating instability so much as flexibility. but we'll see. or we would see if i got around to playing with numbers... maybe if we summed the outfield...? just a hypothesis...OE: helps if i actually fully use jb's formula....position one: N = 1 JBF = 1/8 = 0.125position two: N = 2.25 JBF = 2.25/4 = 0.5625position three: N = 3.5 JBF = 3.5/4 = 0.875so with these numbers, it works, and returns a number less than one. i'll play with thtis more later, but i think its premature to simply toss it out. maybe...
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