Actually, I just did a spot check of the teams in my league (the years-range for each team). Two of the teams in my division have pitching staffs generally from the dead ball era (all of whom have '3.00-.400' ERAs though). One other team in my 'National' League has a rotation of primarily dead ball ERA starters (again, all of which have 3.00-4.00 ERAs).
Comparable Players XBH in my division
| Year |
Player |
Actual |
Current |
| 1930 |
Gehrig |
6.12 |
9.05 |
| 1927 |
Ruth |
5.88 |
6.58 |
| 1937 |
Medwick |
6.87 |
11.47 |
| 1948 |
Musial |
6.24 |
20.78 |
| 1927 |
Gehrig |
5.26 |
8.85 |
| 1927 |
Ruth |
5.88 |
8.25 |
| 1901 |
Lajoie |
8.53 |
10.6 |
| 1911 |
Jackson |
8.52 |
13.86 |
The bolded ones play on teams that has one of the dead ball era rotations. I emphasized their #s to show that they're facing less pitching from the dead ball era than the others.
So, essentially, while this does emphasize that the old adage of "good pitching beats good hitting" bears out here, I'm not seeing Musial's complete XBH depletion due largely to the pitching he's facing here.
5/20/2015 11:40 AM (edited)