Posted by toddcommish on 2/22/2012 4:51:00 PM (view original):
I'm pretty sure this has broken down to a generational debate between guys who actually WATCHED THE GAMES in the 70's and stat monkeys that study numbers in their mom's basement
Yeah. And it always ends with "You don't understand stats" as if there's some magical new stat that is the ULTIMATE STAT.
As I mockingly said earlier, I think most of us have known that walking a batter is bad. Not allowing a batter to put the ball in play is good. And letting the batter hit the ball a long way is bad. I haven't needed a stat to tell me that since I first picked up a bat in 1969. But I also learned that it was easier to hit some pitches much harder than others. Easier to square up on the ball on certain pitches. And, despite playing against other 6 year olds, it was sometimes better to take a pitch that you couldn't hit well than to weakly tap it back to the pitcher.
But, at the end of the day, the game is about scoring/preventing runs. And part of that is getting/preventing baserunners.
We can sit back and look at stats 40 years later and say "Carlton struck out more batters and gave up less homers. He was obviously the better pitcher." Or we can say "They allowed almost an identical amount of runs per 9 innings. In fact, against the top competition in the playoffs, it pretty obvious that Hunter did better. But Carlton did pitch a phenomenal amount of innings in his career."