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11 Players

April 19, 2009
 
Chipper Jones, Braves – Alright, I already wrote about Chipper. A few more things to say.
 
During the Braves/Phillies game on Opening Night, one of the announcers said that for the Braves to contend, Chipper Jones had to be healthy the whole season. It was Steve Phillips, I think.
 
Not to get caught up in semantics, but I’d like to offer a slightly different opinion: for the Braves to contend, Chipper has to play well. And it sure seems like he plays better when he misses 30-50 games a season.
 
In 2004, Chipper played 137 games. He was thirty-two then, and it looked like he was entering the decline phase of his career. His .248 batting average was the worst of his career, and he had the fewest extra-base hits since his rookie season.
 
In the four seasons since 2004, Chipper’s missed 167 games, or about forty-two games a season. Over that time he’s posted a batting line of .332/.430/.585.
 
He’s had an adjusted OPS of 162 over the last four seasons, second best total in the majors over that span. Before the four year stretch, Jones topped that mark exactly once in his career, when he won the NL MVP in 1999.
 
What’s my point? Efforting (is that a word?) to make Jones play more might limit how well he plays. Right now the Braves have a thirty-seven year old third baseman playing great baseball for 110-120 games a season. It might not be wise to push him to 140-150 games.
 
CC Sabathia, Yankees – That couldn’t have gone any worse, could it? Sabathia’s first, start for the Yankees, that is. He faced 25 hitters in his pinstripe debut, walking five and retiring only 13, none on strikeouts. His second start, against Kansas City, was far better.
 
Like T.S. Eliot, Sabathia finds April to be the cruelest month. In 35 April starts, Sabathia’s posted a 4.67 ERA and a pedestrian 11-11 record. C.C., as a few of you are aware, is a big fella. Which got me wondering if big guys generally struggle in the month of lilacs sprouting from dead land.
 
One of the challenges of looking into this is baseball’s reluctance to accurately weigh players. I did a search on pitchers who weighted 250 pounds and had 2000 career innings pitched. Only one player came up: Bartolo Colon.
 
-Bartolo Colon’s worst month was June. Then July. Then April.
 
-David Wells (listed at 225 pounds), had the most trouble in August, then April.
 
-Rich Reuschel, who most of you probably remember, posted his worst ERA in April. And Reuschel’s second worst month was July, just like Sabathia.
 
-Sid Fernandez, who was big and a lefty, had the most trouble in June, then April.
 
-Zambrano’s a big guy. August is his worst month, then April.
 
Six players is a small sample size of big players, but none of them pitched well in April. I wouldn’t state it as fact that big guys struggle early, not yet anyways, but there’s some evidence to suggest it.
 
Sabathia’s second start was excellent, but his third start was again rough: 5.2 IP, 5 hits, 5 walks. He threw 122 pitches in that third start, which is a lot of pitches for 5.2 innings.
 
Brandon Inge, Tigers – Has four homeruns in the season’s first seven games, which puts him on a pace for 92 homeruns. I’m confident he’ll maintain that pace and finish with seventy-eight homeruns.
 
Inge changed his batting stance during the off-season. It’s a shorter stance, and he’s conservative with two strikes; you don’t see too many hitters choke up on the bat when they’re behind in the count, but that’s just what Inge has been doing. One of his homers was on a two-strike count, when he was choking up on the bat.
 
It’s working well so far, though seven games isn’t anything to rely on. I hope he had a terrific season, though: baseball has gone pretty far in the direction of the ‘swinging-hard-and-hope-to-connect’ approach. I’d love to see the pendulum swing in the other direction; towards strategies that are geared towards contact.
 
Nick Swisher, Yankees – He’s making a case for himself, isn’t he? Six of his seven hits were for extra bases, which is tough to ignore.
 
Objectively, it’s tough to see why Swisher would be the odd man out among Matsui, Damon, Gardner, and Nady.
 
Think about it: Matsui and Damon are thirty-five years old, while Swisher is just 28. I’d sure as hell take age over beauty, health over injury.
 
Gardner might be a fine centerfielder, but he’s twenty-five, and his track record as a hitter can best be described as ‘marginal.’ Swisher’s always been a better hitter, and the Yankees have to score runs to win in the AL East.
 
Xavier Nady had a great year last year, which can’t be understated any. But Swisher’s had years just as good. And, again, Swisher is a few years younger.
 
Looking at it objectively, there was no good reason why the Yanks would choose Swisher as the odd-man out. But the Yankees don’t deal in objectivity. Swisher was the easy guy to put on the bench. It’s easier to bench him than Damon or Matsui, easier to bench him than Xavier Nady.
 
Anyway, (to quote Rick Springfield) the point is probably moot. Swisher’s hitting is too good to be ignored. He’s got a nice fastball, too.
 
Zack Greinke, Royals – I’m writing this as he’s pitching against Cleveland. It’s been something of a tightrope game: in the third, Greinke walked the first two batters he faced. He then struck out the third batter, before allowing Victor Martinez to single. So: bases loaded, one out. Greinke strikes out Hafner and Peralta to get out of it.
 
An inning later, the Indians have runners on second and third and Grady Sizemore up. Greinke strikes him out, keeping Cleveland off the board.
 
Through the first four innings Greinke has thrown 87 pitches, allowing two walks and five hits while notching eight strikeouts. It’s a fun to watch, frankly. I don’t think there’s a more interesting pitcher to watch than Zack Greinke.
 
 Update: Zach got through five innings, which brings his scoreless innings streak up to twenty-five consecutive innings. The Royals held on through a grit-your-teeth ninth inning to win.
 
Update: Had a terrific third start: shutting out the Rangers in Arlington while striking out ten batters and walking none. He’s 3-0 to start the year, and is currently sitting on a streak of 34 consecutive scoreless innings.
 
Tim Wakefield, Red Sox – I’ve always rooted for Wakefield. I followed the Pirates closely in the early 1990’s, and I remember the excitement of Wakefield’s rookie season, when he went 8-1 in the regular season, and 2-0 in the NLDS.
 
Wakefield has a weird contract situation with the Red Sox, a ‘rolling contract extension’ where the Sox have agreed to pay him $4 million per year for as long as the team wants him. It’s a no-muss, no-fuss kind of deal: if the Red Sox decide they no longer want him, then he’ll retire.
 
That’s how he is, I think. That’s his personality. Wakefield has been a selfless contributor to the Sox, a guy who has done everything the team has asked him to do without complaint. Be a starter? Sure. Be a middle-reliever? No problem. Close games because Tom Gordon is injured? I’ll give it my best shot.
 
Wakefield gave up the Aaron Boone homerun. We Boston fans have a track record of remembering things like that, and certainly we’ve demonized a few players who have choked in key situations. But Wakefield never got any flack for that, which is a testament to the kind of player he’s been, the way he’s perceived by the fans in Boston.
 
As of now, Wakefield is the only true knuckleballer in baseball. A friend asked me the other day whether the knuckleball would ever come back in vogue. I said I’m not sure. It takes a lot of patience to bring up a knuckleball pitcher, patience and a commitment to it. The Pirates quit on him really quick, but the Sox have shown a real commitment to him, and it’s certainly paid off.
 
I told him I’m not sure, but I hope the knuckleball makes a comeback. Having knuckleball pitchers makes the game more interesting, more entertaining. I hope Wakefield isn’t the last.
 
One last observation: the Red Sox are probably the best team to commit to a knuckleball pitcher. Mostly, knucklers play on lousy teams, but Wake’s been with the Sox for fifteen years now. That’s a long time for a perennially strong team to stick with a knuckleballer.
 
I wish Wake had gotten the no-hitter, but maybe it’s fitting that he didn’t. Wakefield is one of those guys who is extremely underappreciated, a guy who will be forgotten ten years after he retires. He’s never made an All-Star team, never won twenty games, and never led the league in anything positive. If he had thrown the no-hitter, then people might have noticed him, which is probably the last thing he wants.
 
Erik Bedard, Mariners – Three starts is three starts, but he’s looked sharp: 23 strikeouts in 19 innings, 3 walks, no homeruns.
 
A good candidate to win Comeback Player of the Year. Should not be confused with the Canadian speedskater Eric Bedard.
 
Chris Carpenter, Cardinals – Speaking of Comeback Players…
 
His start against Pittsburgh was great to see, wasn’t it? Seven innings pitched, seven strikeouts, one hit, two walks, one run.
 
He’s on the DL now with a strained ribcage, which he injured swinging a bat. One of the dangers of playing in the National League, I guess.
 
Here’s a question, which I don’t have the answer to: how much do National League pitchers train at hitting?
 
If I had to guess, I’d speculate that they don’t get a helluva lot of training as hitters. Sure, they might have to lay down a few bunts, but how extensive is the training beyond that?
 
I’m surprised there isn’t an NL team that has tried to adopt new strategies for their pitchers. For instance: you have more bat control if you spread your hand out slightly on the handle of the bat, the way old-time players used to do it. Why not have your pitchers practice that, practice making contact?
 
Ian Kinsler, Rangers – We have three excellent second basemen in Kinsler, Utley, and Pedroia, three players who do just about everything right.
 
In a good year, Joe Morgan would hit around .300 with 25 homeruns, sixty steals, one hundred walks, and Gold Glove defense.
 
Morgan has his back-to-back MVP seasons when he was 31 and 32 years old, which isn’t unusual. Sandberg has his big years as a hitter when he was 29-31. Grich was a better hitter after thirty.
 
Utley is thirty this year; Kinsler is 27; Pedroia is 25. Which is to say the best is yet to come. All three of them have the same diversity of skills that Morgan has, the same broad range of talents. They hit for power and average, get on base, steal with high success rates, and field their positions well.

It’s a Golden Age for second basemen, maybe the best of my lifetime. In the early 1980’s we had some fine second basemen: Sandberg and Whittaker, of course, plus the tail ends of Grich and Morgan. But these three are in their prime.  
 
Jack Cust, A’s – Has a streak of 40 straight games where he’s reached base, which is in jeopardy right now against Toronto.
 
He’s been batting fifth of sixth in the order, which is a tad strange. You have a player who a) sees a lot of pitches, b) rarely grounds into double plays, and c) has a great on-base percentage. Shouldn’t he be hitting high in the order, ahead of Giambi and Holliday?
 
The A’s have Ryan Sweeney and Cabrera going 1-2. Sweeney and O-Cab are fine players, but they have low on-base percentages. The A’s have had trouble in the first innings this year, posting a .261/.370/.304 line. Despite that, they’ve scored eight runs in the first, which is a good amount. But the A’s are useless in the third inning of games: they haven’t scored a third-inning run all season.
 
In 1986 the Red Sox had Dwight Evans hit leadoff. It was an unconventional move, but it made an intuitive sense: Dewey was a Cust-like hitter: he struck out a lot, drew tons of walks, and hit for good power. He wasn’t Rickey Henderson, but he did a fine job of it, posting a .378 on-base percentage from the leadoff spot. The Red Sox went 22-13 (.628) over those 35 games. But they chickened out: it was too weird having a guy like Dewey leading off, so they dropped him and went 66-51 (.564) the rest of the way.
 
Josh Johnson, Marlins – At this writing, the Marlins are 10-1 to start the season. How many teams that start 10-1 go on to the postseason?
 
The last time any team started 10-1 was in 2003, when the Royals and Giants started their seasons off with a bang. The Giants won their division. The Royals, a surprise team, finished in 3rd place.
 
-In 2002 the Indians started 10-1. They finished in 3rd place.
 
-In 1994, the Braves started 10-1. They finished second in their division and would have won the Wild Card
 
-In 1989 the Rangers started 10-1. They finished in 4th place.
 
-In 1987 the Brewers started 11-0. They finished in 3rd place.
 
-In 1984 the Tigers started 10-1. They won the World Series.
 
-In 1982 the Braves started 11-0. They won their division.
 
-In 1981 the A’s started 11-0. They won their division during the first half. It was the weird strike season.
 
-In 1980 the Reds started 10-1. They finished 3rd.
 
That covers thirty seasons, with eleven teams starting 10-1 or 11-0. Not counting the Marlins, that’s ten teams that started on such a blisteringly hot pace.
 
Of those ten teams, five made the playoffs, which bodes well for the Marlins. I don’t think that an objective observer would rank their chances of playing in October as fifty-fifty.
 
They have a ways to go, but it’s better to start ahead than it is to start behind. The Marlins have a lot of young and talented pitchers, Josh Johnson being the best. I still think the Mets will win the NL East, but the Marlins will put up a fight.
 
(Dave Fleming is a writer living in Iowa City. He welcomes comments, questions, and suggestions here and at dfleming1986@yahoo.com)
 
 

COMMENTS (11 Comments, most recent shown first)

ventboys
I forgot to enter this. Sorry if you care, and sorry if you don't, I guess. My 2 cents, as usual....

Chipper- Well said. Hell, all 11 of your mini articles are well said, inventive and thought provoking. I would love it if you did this for every player in the league. I almost left it all alone, since I really didn’t have anything Germaine to add. You know me, though. I couldn’t resist, lol. These are my provoked thoughts. That means that it’s all your fault, Dave, you expletive deleted…

I like Steve Phillips as a broadcaster, particularly when he is giving us inside info on the role of General Manager. His ideas about things that are the province of the manager, though, tend to be simplistic and old fashioned. When he and Joe Morgan go off on strategy rants it can get really funny.

“The real key to baseball is productive outs”, is my personal favorite. We here in M land had Ron Fairly for several years as a color guy. In 1997 the M’s hit something like 270 homers, but that didn’t stop old red crew cut from calling for a bunt every time that someone got on base. When anyone swung away and hit into a double play, he would rant for a couple of innings about how he wasted a chance to play some “little ball”. The final score would be 12-7, and even in the post game he was talking about the missed opportunity to get that guy to second base in the third inning. It was sad, funny, and extremely irritating. I’d think about Bogie and the strawberries.

Sabathia- Three starts into his seven year contract, is CC already a bust? I don’t mean that he won’t pitch well, or even win another Cy Young or two. The question that I am asking myself is “Would any team in the league, if the Yankees offered CC and his contract for a bag of used jockstraps, take that deal right now?”……

I am interested in any research regarding large pitchers. That’s a nice angle to look at, Dave. Can we retroactively weigh these guys? I have Cecil in the pool if we are looking for the heaviest guy, with Frank Howard circa Detroit in 1973 as my second choice. He was fat as hell at the time (he slimmed down again later), he looked like a giant Archie Bunker. I saw him hit one out, and it took him 10 minutes and a couple of oxygen tanks to get around the bases. I am probably exaggerating.

Inge- I love the sentiment, and you backed up your opinion by getting him on your team, but I don’t believe that even you are expecting more than 20-25 homers and a middle of the pack batting average from your boy. Even that would be a smashing success for Inge, who has been known to hit homers in bunches at times, and then go months without anything but about two dozen foul ball homers. I hardly ever see the Tigers, but I’ve seen Inge hit a good dozen foul homers. If he can fix that he can be great. If he can fix that, he’ll also be historically unique. I remember reading, in Jim Brosnan’s book about the 1961 Reds, that Gene Freese hit 26 foul homers that year. Inge has always reminded me of Freese in that way.

I am very much in favor of the game going back towards a contact game, over the current work the count and hit three run homers game. The ballpark architects need to get in that particular loop for it to happen, and a few rule changes would need to be made regarding double dipping and bat handle circumference. I’d like to see it. More foul territory would help as well, as it would punish some of the half swings that, in the age of no foul territory, invariably fall into the stands. Historically the parks with wide foul territory produce low batting averages, much more than the ones with long power alleys. Put the two together, and we might actually be able to make the guys try to hit the ball on the screws without so much uppercutting. Take away the incentive, and you take away the intent.

Swisher- I love the guy, he’s better than the Yankees deserve. I never worry about the Yanks winning with big money free agents. They never do. I sometimes worry about them getting smart, and Cashman is dammed smart, but the Germans always seem to come through and screw Cashman’s plans, so that is no problem. The one thing left that I worry about is that they might get lucky with guys that they seem to just end up with; players that can actually play but nobody else wants to pay. Swisher is an example of this type. At this point in world history, Swisher is the best outfielder that they have. Here’s hoping that he goes 2-25 and they bench him, before his accidental inclusion in the lineup wins them some games.

I have a lot of money on the Yankees not making the World Series this year. Swisher is good, but not good enough to make a difference. They won’t use him enough anyway. The Yankees have not won anything in the Steinbrenner era except for when he was suspended from the game and unable to mess up their huge, natural advantage. Cashman could dominate the game if he was left to run things, with his financial advantage and his intelligence. I am glad that the Germans won’t allow it. It would ruin everything.

Greinke- I already posted on him. I love to watch him pitch. He gets his entire body going in the correct direction, which is much more difficult than you would think. The analogy for Zack would be a supreme ball striker in golf. When it’s just right, it’s poetry. We talk about sweet swings a lot, but there are also sweet pitching motions. Greinke has a sweet, sweet motion.

I should call that a sweet delivery. That sounds better, not so creepy….

Wakefield- I concur about his career, you summed it up nicely. I wonder if we underrate just how hard it is to throw an effective knuckleball with consistency? There is just too much money to be made by doing it. If it was easy, or even doable with some effort, there would be 100 guys in the various forms of organized baseball working on it. Hell, there would be a thousand. I can’t believe that there is a strong enough prejudice against it in the instant information age to prevent someone, ANYONE (Red Sox?) from making the development of knuckleballers a prime mission statement. It hasn’t happened, at least so far.

Bedard- I live in Mariner territory. With their fast start, there are a lot of people getting on me for dismissing the M’s for this year as a rebuilding team. I am standing by my guns on this, but I have adjusted my expectations up a bit due to a couple of new factors.

-The Angels are getting horsewhipped again by fate. There have been seven Angels in their short history that have died in lightning flashes of being in the wrong place at the worst possible time. In addition, they have been hit by other injuries to key players. They survived it last year, but this team is nowhere near as deep as the one that walked away with the West last year.

-The A’s are not scoring runs, and their rotation is still learning to shave. I like the talent base, but most of the real studs are still years away from their prime.

-The Rangers’ pitching is a year or two away. I would love to pick the R’s to win this division, and I kind of am, but they are a team that projects to peak in 2011, not 2009.

-The castoffs that populate the M’s lineup behind their stars are fairly decent players. They have a black hole at first and the back end of the rotation stinks, but elsewhere they are actually not that bad. While most people don’t know who they are, the M’s do have some decent young pitchers behind Bedard, Felix and Morrow. If Washburn can pitch anywhere close to his current level over the season (good luck with that, he would lose to Moyer in a radar gun contest), the rotation might end up being fairly good. This is assuming that they are not contractually obligated to pitch Silva every 5th day.

More likely, though, is a reasonable scenario in which the M’s roar and die to a 73-89 record. They remind me of the recent incarnations of the Pirates or Royals. Both of those teams have had decent starts, but they eventually have to deal with the baseball reality that it takes more than a couple of good players to win. Until this plays out, us fans in the great northwest can dream….

If Bedard gets 33 starts, I’ll be amazed. His body holds a great deal of pitching talent, but it has never been able to hold up to the workload that his talent demands. It’s a really hard game.

Carpenter- I like the question. I don’t know the answer, but it would be a fun outside the lines segment. As far as my man, I have him in both of my leagues, so I am really bummed about the freak injury. I’m keeping the faith and holding on to him.

Kinsler- I’ll nitpick, or actually pass on what I saw when I looked it up:

Joe Morgan, in his 5 peak years, hit an average of 22 homers, drew 120 walks, stole 62 bases, scored 113 runs, and hit .304. I’d call that pretty close, Dave, as I assume that you wrote that from memory. I am impressed. I don’t think that any of these guys is or will be Joe Morgan, but they don’t have to be to be stars, or get in the Hall of Fame.

Kinsler is off to the kind of start this year that belies it, but I am not yet sold on him as being in Utley’s class, let alone Morgan or even Ryno. His BA went up 56 points last year, while his onbase went up only 20 points and his slugging went up 76 points. If he can hit .320 again I obviously will be sold, but let’s see it first. He’s good, don’t get me wrong, and he is still young enough to have another gear. He could be great. He could be one of any number of guys that are basically .270 hitters that had one hit lucky year, though. His K rate and his K/BB rates are encouraging, and as I said he is off to a great start this year.

Pedroia reminds me of another Red Sox guy, Jody Reed. The only real difference between them is that Pedroia hits some homers. If the homers are for real, Pedroia is a star. I am not sure that they are. I would not be surprised if last year was his career year. The 54 doubles that he hit are encouraging. Reed hit a lot of doubles, too.

That leaves me with Utley. His problem is simple: Age. He was 26 when the Phils finally made him a regular. He’s been playing in the manner of an MVP candidate ever since, and a Hall of Fame caliber player. Time will always be against him, because of his late start. The Hall of Fame has zero players enshrined that didn’t get their first shot at a regular role before they turned 26, and only one that started at 25. The 25 year old was Sam Rice, who made the majors as a pitcher before being converted.

Cust- The new Ken Phelps. Cust is listed on BBR.com as weighing 205. I used to weigh 205, too. Putting him in the outfield is like putting Aretha Franklin in a leotard and making do a double back handstand. Both have nothing to do with their talents, and both are (or would be in Aretha’s case) endlessly fun to watch, for all the wrong reasons.

Batting a guy like this in the leadoff spot would be interesting. It would be the culmination of the three run homer strategy that you railed against in the Inge comment. Any team that did this would lead the league in hitting into double plays, but I am not convinced that it wouldn’t work in the short term. Just a guess, but this wouldn’t work for long. One of the requirements for these guys walking 100 times a year is that pitchers would be reluctant to give them anything good to hit. Eventually this would change. Baseball is a game of adjustments. No sane pitcher would pitch them the same way, game after game, with nobody on base and no outs. This would be a good study; I would be very interested in the OBP of players like this in leadoff situations.

Johnson- I was surprised at how few of the 10-1 and 11-0 teams actually made the playoffs. If you adjust the ratio based on their preseason expectations, the Marlins’ chance of making the playoffs doesn’t look all that good. Add in that most of that 10-1 start was against teams that don’t exactly strike fear into their opponents, and you have the 2008 Buffalo Bills. The Bills started out 4-0 and 5-1, with all 5 of those wins against west coast teams coming east. Once the schedule evened out, they found their proper level and ended up 7-9.

If I am looking at trends, I expect them to fall off significantly when the schedule evens out. As a thinking man, though, I am actually high on the Marlins. I like their pitching, as you said, and they have talent all over the field. If they can stay healthy and get some luck with their youngsters, they might do some real damage.

2:49 AM Jun 5th
 
schoolshrink
I was at Safeco Field last night and paid attention to Jack Cust since you mentioned him here. I am watching him again as I am writing this. He certainly can hit with power but he is too inconsistent to justify a change in the rotation. I see that he is hitting .262. He looks like a guy who would hit at that level, but for a DH he should be doing better. I think he should consider losing 20 lbs. He just does not look like he will last given how many pounds he is packing. Just my two cents.
9:50 PM May 2nd
 
alljoeteam
Umm...Frank Howard batted leadoff once. It was in 1969.
1:19 PM Apr 29th
 
DaveFleming
Shoot...who else was mentioned as a slugger who batted leadoff?

Frank Howard, I think. Anyone else?
4:43 PM Apr 28th
 
smitty99
Lead off sluggers. Off the top of my head, Jim Wynn; Brian Downing and Bobby Bonds.
6:48 PM Apr 20th
 
DaveFleming
Okay, I checked on Singleton. Weaver batted him in the leadoff spot for most of 1975, 104 games that year. And unlike Swisher and Dewey, Singleton was a pretty good masher from the leadoff spot, posting a high slugging percentage alongside his typically stellar on-base average.

Does anyone know of any other sluggers who were slotted in the leadoff spot?
5:10 PM Apr 20th
 
SeanKates
I think this most recent start for Wakefield was the 3rd or 4th in which he took a no-hitter past the 7th without ever actually achieving the feat. Rough luck.

Also, I think that NL pitchers do a little more hitting than you assume, if only because it gets REALLY boring when you are only pitching every 5th game. Although they could, no doubt, try something different. I just assume that the last thing the team wants is for pitchers to put their hands in more danger of getting mangled, and moving the top hand up on the bat puts your pitching hand closer to the ball.
12:51 PM Apr 20th
 
alljoeteam
A's batting order suggestion (without batting Cust leadoff that could be excepted by A's fans):

Buck
Cust
Giambi
Holliday
Sweeney
Chavez
Ellis
Cabrera
Suzuki

Other than the big fellas (Cust, Giambi, Holliday) Buck likely will be the best OBP guy but not too much power (career line of .264/.347/.449). Hopefully he will improve to .360+. Sweeney and Chavez could be flopped if you like.
12:21 PM Apr 20th
 
schoolshrink
Eric Bedard has pitched very well, and though he had a bad year in 2008 the whole Mariner organization was such an ungodly mess that it led me to suspect some players could not be at their best under such circumstances. Maybe last year would have been an off year for him anyway, who knows, but I can only imagine that Bedard could not concentrate fully to help the team win, particularly after he got off to a slow start a year ago and the team's infighting escalated.

Also, I recall Bill writing once that the lead off hitter who reaches base has a 50% chance of scoring. That is probably what you were referring to in your comment regarding Cust. He also said from a thread on this board that batting order makes little difference except for at the early part of a game when the better perceived hitters and on base guys tend to get more AB's. I agree with your conclusion about the mindset thing, and moving him up would make sense if changing the order would benefit the performances of the other guys in the line up. I would not want to see them mess with a good thing otherwise.
11:55 AM Apr 20th
 
DaveFleming
Bill wrote, in the 1988 Abstract I think, that the #1 most important thing to scoring a run is to get the leadoff guy on base. As Cust is the best player on the A's at getting on base, it makes some sense to have him as your leadoff hitter.

Okay, now a counter-arguement: batting a good on-base power hitter in the leadoff spot tends to decrease that player's slugging percentage. Dewey's slugging percentage went way down when he was the leadoff hitter in 1987. Same thing happened to Swisher last year, when Ozzie tried to bat him leadoff.

Why? I don't know. Maybe it's a mindset thing: an established middle-of-the-order hitter who moves to the leadoff spot suddenly starts thinking about contact and drawing walks, and that messes up his power.
9:46 AM Apr 20th
 
evanecurb
Earl Weaver batted Ken Singleton first for the better part of a season ('78 maybe?). I think Bumbry was injured. He had to have been the slowest leadoff man ever.
8:42 PM Apr 19th
 
 
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