Quote:
Originally Posted by BWillie
I used to be more of a supporter for the run differential stat. But, I think in baseball it can be flawed.
High OBP, high K guys feast on garbage pitching. They feast on the #5 guy, long relief, or chodes you just put in when you are down and probably going to lose the game. These situations, they matter less. In the playoffs, you don't even see the #5 guy, so the fat high OBP guy doesn't get to feast upon these pitchers in the playoffs. Usually teams with shitty starting pitching, don't make the playoffs anyway, so this further skews the numbers.
This basically allows these players and teams to produce some gaudy looking numbers, when these other teams basically, in layman's terms, aren't trying their hardest and are saving their closers, set up man, and #1s and #2s for games that actually matter.
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High OBP, High K guys.... I think you may be looking at that with kind of an altered vision of Adam Dunn, etc... but in reality... these type of players also include the Reggie Jackson's, the Mike Trout's, the Alex Rodriguez's... these are some of the best hitters in the game. And some of the most productive hitters in Post Season. I don't really think you can classify it all like that.... or maybe i'm reading your classification too literally.