Jump to content
Grand Central Mets
  • Create Account

Recommended Posts

Posted


I brought up the team's total ineptness with the bags full briefly in last night's IGT.

Taking a closer look at it, they're up to 114 plate appearances with the sacks drunk this year (99 ABs) with a totally pitiful slash line of .202/.219/.273
That's 15 singles, 3 doubles, 2 triples, and (famously by this point) 0 grand slams. Also 10 Sac Flies plus 4 BBs and 1 HBP

Even if they were merely matching the usual level of sub-par NYM-2010 noffense - which is down to a paltry .248/.312./381 at this point - the totals would be more like 17 singles (2 higher than now), 5 doubles (+2), 1 triple (we lose one there), plus 2 actual GS and 5 extra walks. That gain alone might be worth 15-20 runs and maybe 2 games in the standings even if the extra hits weren't selectively applied to games where they were most needed.
The fact that teams normally hit better in bases-loaded situations because the pitcher is at a disadvantage there (NL as a whole bats 19 points higher) would jack those numbers up even more.


Guest John Cougar Lunchbucket
Guests
Posted


I'd like to blame dumb luck but to me this team is just plagued with anxiety, and I want to blame Jerry.


Posted


This team would have a tough time scoring at the Chicken Ranch.

And it doesn't matter how many runners are on base.

Later


Guest Edgy DC
Guests
Posted


Baserunners are elements of scoring. Of course it matters.


Posted


There are baserunners at a brothel?
Man, you really know how to party.

Later


Guest LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr
Guests
Posted


My brain says SmaSamSz-- I mean, after 114 PAs or so, Murphy looked like our starting LFer, no?-- but my gut says that it's got to be an approach thing. (Well, either that, or that I shouldn't have had tuna for breakfast.)


Guest Edgy DC
Guests
Posted


The thing is that it's a sample size of advantageous at-bats.


Posted


Well presumably the Mets know if they approach bases-loaded situations differently than other situations, and if they do, they should probably stop.


Posted


My brain says SmaSamSz-- I mean, after 114 PAs or so, Murphy looked like our starting LFer, no?-- but my gut says that it's got to be an approach thing. (Well, either that, or that I shouldn't have had tuna for breakfast.)

Funny you should mention Murphy.
I thought about him earlier in the week and looked up some numbers in baseball-reference.
They show that Ike really hasn't given the team more than a healthy Dan Murphy would have.
Davis: .320/.423/.744
Murphy (career): .331/ .437/ .768
In fact, less.

Later


Guest LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr
Guests
Posted


Edgy DC wrote:
The thing is that it's a sample size of advantageous at-bats.


Well, yeah, but that just means the norm these numbers are likely straying from should be higher than their overall triple-slash*.

*It feels like there should be a Wolverine-ish sound effect here, doesn't it?


Grand Central Contributor
Posted


My brain says SmaSamSz-- I mean, after 114 PAs or so, Murphy looked like our starting LFer, no?-- but my gut says that it's got to be an approach thing. (Well, either that, or that I shouldn't have had tuna for breakfast.)

Funny you should mention Murphy.
I thought about him earlier in the week and looked up some numbers in baseball-reference.
They show that Ike really hasn't given the team more than a healthy Dan Murphy would have.
Davis: .320/.423/.744
Murphy (career): .331/ .437/ .768
In fact, less.

Later


I would've bet on Murphy having a better year than Davis. Davis has the advantage defensively though. And all the 'intangible' "He looks like a ballplayer" stats point to him being better right? He hit more home runs too. farther.


Guest LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr
Guests
Posted


Well, yeah, but the ISO and defense (presumably, according to the eyetest and the nowhere-near-statistically-reliable-for-predictive-purposes UZR/plus-minus samples) are better, right?


Posted


what's surprising is that the mets aren't striking out excessively much (21 SO / 114 PA) , which pretty much matches the season rate.

the babip, however, is a paltry 0.227, lowest in teh league. colorado has a 0.228; the next worst babip is milwaukee's 0.263.

that's some shit contact we're making.


Posted


Yeah, I suppose the next step would be to see what the NYM bases-loaded LD% / FO% / PO% / GB% stats look like compared to the overall.

Claiming bad luck because your BABiP stats suck would be one thing - but if you're killing most of your ABs hitting infield pops during that time that argument loses ground.


Posted


On the flip side of the equation ...

Our pitching line with bases loaded is .291/.327/.528 -- as compared to their overall of .260/.328/.392
Or, in 150 PAs (127 ABs) they've coughed up 25 singles, 3 2Bs & 9 GS. Also 12 BBs, 2 HBPs, and 9 Sac Flies
If NYM pitchers pitched to their "normal" rate, the results would be more like 24 singles (-1), 7 2Bs (+4), 1 3B (+1), 3 GS (-6), 13 BBs (+1), 27 Ks (-5), 1 HBP (-1)

Obviously the high level of Grand Slams are the biggest problem as basically the expected 2Bs & 3Bs are becoming HRs - something that alone is probably worth 10 runs or more.

So just by getting 'expected' results out of our bases-loaded situations alone (both ways) we'd maybe be 3 to 5 games higher in the standings.


Posted


TheOldMole wrote:
You don't explode for seven runs. Seven is a good game, not an explosion. I'd say explosions start at about 13.


The Mets leaked seven runs in Pittsburgh last night.


Posted


Is it possible more cowbell will help this situation.
Cause I am ready with the cowbell.
I'm just sitting here and the cowbell is right up on the bookcase.
I can go...
hold on a sec.....


Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.
The Grand Central Mets Caretaker Fund
The Grand Central Mets Caretaker Fund

You all care about this site. The next step is caring for it. We’re asking you to caretake this site so it can remain the premier Mets community on the internet.

×
×
  • Create New...