http://www.whatifsports.com/HBD/Pages/Popups/PlayerProfile.aspx?pid=1565126http://www.whatifsports.com/hbd/Pages/Popups/PlayerProfile.aspx?pid=1051149An interesting (though small sample size) from one of my teams. Hitting ratings for both players are very similar. Christensen has better contact and Tejera has better vL, but otherwise they are pretty close across the board.
From a pure power perspective, Tejera is basically the same as before the fix. His SLG is down, but so is his average. His 3B/HR are all about the same as last year and his 2B are down slightly.
Christensen however is having a very bad year by his standards. Some of that could be just a bad year, but what makes me think it isn't is that his ave is about where it was last season (slightly lower), but his HRs (and for some reason BB) are way down and his Ks are up.
http://www.whatifsports.com/hbd/Pages/Popups/PlayerProfile.aspx?pid=1050474Now this guy is actually hitting for a little more power, but not a statistically significant amount. He is doing about what I would expect someone with his ratings to do. He has been remarkably consistent in his last 5 years never having an OPS lower than 974 or higher than 1002.
http://www.whatifsports.com/hbd/Pages/Popups/PlayerProfile.aspx?pid=1359305The last player I wanted to show is similar to the first 2. His BA is actually up this season, and his HRs are behind last year's pace. He has 1/2 the 2B and no 3B this season. Oddly, his BB are down as well.
All these guys are on the same team and are playing in the same home park as last season. The league as a whole is pretty good and doesn't have major issues with people playing players out of position or anything like that. I always felt that the numbers were pretty legit in the league. The league average ERA has historically been around 4.5 - 4.6 and is around 4.2 this year. Clearly they wanted runs down and they got what they wanted. The question is did they go about doing it the right way?