Lou Hendrickson 's gbfb is 62 but his HR rate is much higher than
Timothy Carreon's 35 gbfb because Hendrickson's gets chopped into pieces by LH batters, and because Carreon has slightly better control and P1 and P2.
Derrik Hayes had one of the best seasons i've ever seen, better HR rate than either of them despite having 50 gbfb and average splits, because he has 90 control with two 88+ pitches and above average p3-p5s. Similar story for
Adrian Sparks, his control is only 77 but his pitches are as good as any player in the league. His 83 gbfb is a bonus in the sense that when he walks guys he gets extra double plays.
Melky Quixote is only 62 vR but with his combo of pitches and 95 control he's virtually unhittable. For the hell of it you can even go into your minors for pointless guys like
Yimi Lee, gbfb of 12 but 1 career HR in 50 IP because his control, splits, and P1-P2 are all way higher than average for his level.
Similar logic applies to
Reggie Page, his gbfb is a whopping 98, but he gives up tons of HR (S32 18 HR in 82 IP) because his control is 64 and his weakside split is 64. Players like Page can be serviceable for long periods of time because they have the ability to get in and out of jams thanks to high pitches and gbfb, but to say that gbfb itself has anything to do with slugging percentage and/or HR rate is utterly false because WIS defines gbfb as groundball OUTS rather than groundball EVENTS
Next time just say thanks for the free help I'm giving you
7/23/2015 9:27 PM (edited)