Page 3 of 19 FirstFirst 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 ... LastLast
Results 31 to 45 of 285

Thread: Famers on the Fringe: Andre Dawson

  1. #31
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Posts
    53

    Re: Famers on the Fringe: Andre Dawson

    Quote Originally Posted by Brewersfan View Post
    Blyleven maybe depends you can make a case either way. But Kaat & John. C'mon that's a big stretch. LOL. **** if you let them in players like Jack Morris, Charlie Hough, Doyle Alexander should be shoe-ins.
    Well after studing the stats. John maybe you could make a case. But I still don't think so. Kaat, I'm sorry he belongs nowhere near the HOF. He was nothing more than mediocre through his career.

  2. #32
    Join Date
    Aug 2002
    Location
    New Jersey
    Posts
    44,491

    Re: Famers on the Fringe: Andre Dawson

    Like he said, Blyleven, John, and Kaat were all very similar pitchers. Blyleven is obviously the better of the three, but they all had very similar careers. Kaat also has those gold gloves on his resume, something that surely helped Brooks Robinson.

    A case can be made for Jack Morris, I don't care much either way.

    Charlie Hough? he had 216 wins, 216 losses. He was basically the definiton of a league average pticher. He had a pretty good five year stretch, but overall he was nothing speical.

    Doyle Alexander is another league-average guy. He didn't even reach that coveted 200 win mark in his career, and while he could post a great year here and there, he could also post a fairly eh year

  3. #33
    Join Date
    Aug 2002
    Location
    New Jersey
    Posts
    44,491

    Re: Famers on the Fringe: Andre Dawson

    Quote Originally Posted by Brewersfan View Post
    Well after studing the stats. John maybe you could make a case. But I still don't think so. Kaat, I'm sorry he belongs nowhere near the HOF. He was nothing more than mediocre through his career.
    John was basically the same as Kaat...except Kaat had tons of Gold Gloves.

    Brooks Robinson had a very mediocre career, but got in the Hall on the strength of his Gold Gloves. His career OPS+ was 104, ffairly average.

  4. #34
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Location
    Austin, TX
    Posts
    205

    Re: Famers on the Fringe: Andre Dawson

    Quote Originally Posted by HoustonGM View Post
    A strikeout gives no room for fielder error.
    Wrong. Somebody still has to catch it, or have you never heard of a "passed ball"? Oh, that's right. Those only count for catcher stats.

  5. #35
    michaelg123789 Guest

    Re: Famers on the Fringe: Andre Dawson

    lol

  6. #36
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Posts
    53

    Re: Famers on the Fringe: Andre Dawson

    Ok first you make these quotes:


    You're judging pitchers ENTIRELY on the worst stat there is to judge them by - wins, oh, and their awards which we all know aren't the best judges of a player
    Wins are vastly more meaningful for starters than relievers, but they're still a junk stat. What if a guy happens to get lucky and has and gives up 10 runs each game he pitches, but his team gives him an average run support of 12, so he ends up with a 18-10 record. Is he a good pitcher? No.
    Then when I bring up these players you say this:



    Charlie Hough? he had 216 wins, 216 losses. He was basically the definiton of a league average pticher. He had a pretty good five year stretch, but overall he was nothing speical.

    Doyle Alexander is another league-average guy. He didn't even reach that coveted 200 win mark in his career, and while he could post a great year here and there, he could also post a fairly eh year
    Kaat had tons of Gold Gloves.
    So basically if it suits your argument you dismiss wins and awards as meaningless stats. But here you use them as meaningful stats to prove your argument against me!! So basically it all depends on the argument whether that stat is meaningful or not for you. Thats what I call a hypocrite!

  7. #37
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Posts
    1,014

    Re: Famers on the Fringe: Andre Dawson

    i just want to make it clear that im not saying Bert was the best pitcher of all time. he's far from it.

    im just saying it is impressive for a starting pitcher to be well above average for 20+ years.
    [I]"I think our lineup is better even though we lost Alfonso Soriano. With Guzman[/i] (!) [i]and Schneider, the way he is swinging this year, I think we'll score as many runs as last year."[/I]

    --Nationals third baseman [B]Ryan Zimmerman[/B]

    :eek:

  8. #38
    nuzzy62 Guest

    Re: Famers on the Fringe: Andre Dawson

    I'd say he was above average for most of 20 years, well is a bit subjective. He was well above average for at least four years.

  9. #39
    Join Date
    Aug 2002
    Location
    New Jersey
    Posts
    44,491

    Re: Famers on the Fringe: Andre Dawson

    Quote Originally Posted by TexanBob View Post
    Wrong. Somebody still has to catch it, or have you never heard of a "passed ball"? Oh, that's right. Those only count for catcher stats.
    You're not serious are you? :-\

    Quote Originally Posted by Brewersfan
    So basically if it suits your argument you dismiss wins and awards as meaningless stats. But here you use them as meaningful stats to prove your argument against me!! So basically it all depends on the argument whether that stat is meaningful or not for you. Thats what I call a hypocrite!
    They have meaning for the Hall of Fame. A pitcher has to be extremely good to be Hall worthy without high win totals, like Sandy Koufax. And while I only quoted wins, I could also quote the ptichers basically league average ERA's and other stats. The players you mentioned are not in league with Blyleven, John, and Kaat.

  10. #40
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Posts
    1,014

    Re: Famers on the Fringe: Andre Dawson

    Quote Originally Posted by nuzzy62 View Post
    I'd say he was above average for most of 20 years, well is a bit subjective. He was well above average for at least four years.
    Roger Clemens was above average for most of 20+ years too. so...

    Blyleven = Clemens

    no really....a 22-year career with ERA+ of ~118 equals well above average (17 above 100, 10 above 125, 5 above 140, and 2 above 150). thats better than every starting pitcher in the HoF from his era, except seaver (127), and only a handful of SP have 20+ year careers in that territory since WWII.
    [I]"I think our lineup is better even though we lost Alfonso Soriano. With Guzman[/i] (!) [i]and Schneider, the way he is swinging this year, I think we'll score as many runs as last year."[/I]

    --Nationals third baseman [B]Ryan Zimmerman[/B]

    :eek:

  11. #41
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Posts
    1,014

    Re: Famers on the Fringe: Andre Dawson

    dola

    if your math prof gave a test and then came back a few days later and said that the average score in the class, after adjusting for the curve, was a 75, would you have done "well above average" if your score was 90?
    [I]"I think our lineup is better even though we lost Alfonso Soriano. With Guzman[/i] (!) [i]and Schneider, the way he is swinging this year, I think we'll score as many runs as last year."[/I]

    --Nationals third baseman [B]Ryan Zimmerman[/B]

    :eek:

  12. #42
    nuzzy62 Guest

    Re: Famers on the Fringe: Andre Dawson

    Actually in a proper stanine bell curve 84.2 per cent and higher would be considered above average, 97.7 per cent would be considered well above average and .13 per cent exceptional.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell_curve_grading

  13. #43
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Posts
    1,014

    Re: Famers on the Fringe: Andre Dawson

    Quote Originally Posted by nuzzy62 View Post
    Actually in a proper stanine bell curve 84.2 per cent and higher would be considered above average, 97.7 per cent would be considered well above average and .13 per cent exceptional.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell_curve_grading


    i think you better go back to math class.
    [I]"I think our lineup is better even though we lost Alfonso Soriano. With Guzman[/i] (!) [i]and Schneider, the way he is swinging this year, I think we'll score as many runs as last year."[/I]

    --Nationals third baseman [B]Ryan Zimmerman[/B]

    :eek:

  14. #44
    nuzzy62 Guest

    Re: Famers on the Fringe: Andre Dawson

    Go take a look. There's no adding or anything it's printed right on the graphic

  15. #45
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Posts
    1,014

    Re: Famers on the Fringe: Andre Dawson

    Quote Originally Posted by nuzzy62 View Post
    Go take a look. There's no adding or anything it's printed right on the graphic
    yea, i understand the graphic. thats why i said you should go back to math class
    [I]"I think our lineup is better even though we lost Alfonso Soriano. With Guzman[/i] (!) [i]and Schneider, the way he is swinging this year, I think we'll score as many runs as last year."[/I]

    --Nationals third baseman [B]Ryan Zimmerman[/B]

    :eek:

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •