Hey Dodgers Fans

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Unit2Sucks
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Unfortunately not for anyone other than us.

:beer:

NYCGOBEARS;842682779 said:

Unit, I guess the brevity of my post didn't convey the idea well enough! Good job.
beelzebear
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LINK: Jared Goff 'open' to switching baseball allegiance from Giants to Dodgers
Ncsf
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Unit2Sucks;842682774 said:

Ncsf - you have me all wrong. I think Kershaw is phenomenal. As a Giants fan I enjoy the fact that he's had some bad outings in the playoffs which have led to early exits by the Dodgers but I recognize Kershaw is the best thing going. I am more than happy the Giants have Bumgarner and you can't take away his playoff success.

None of that is relevant though to the discussion I am having. This started because beezlebear claimed Cueto was a bust and not worth his contract because he had a bad inning. I only mentioned Kershaw to point out that one bad outing does not a pitcher make. The question was never whether Cueto was better than Kershaw, it was whether Cueto was a bust because he had a bad outing.

It's obviously far too early to determine whether Cueto is going to live up to his contract, but at this point I don't see how a reasonable person can conclude he's not meeting expectations.



I see on baseball reference that he's tops among active pitchers, but what makes you think he's number one all time?


I apologize for not reading more in-depth. I was guilty of questioning Cueto but he's been great! I hope he holds up physically
Ncsf
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Unit2Sucks;842682774 said:

Ncsf - you have me all wrong. I think Kershaw is phenomenal. As a Giants fan I enjoy the fact that he's had some bad outings in the playoffs which have led to early exits by the Dodgers but I recognize Kershaw is the best thing going. I am more than happy the Giants have Bumgarner and you can't take away his playoff success.

None of that is relevant though to the discussion I am having. This started because beezlebear claimed Cueto was a bust and not worth his contract because he had a bad inning. I only mentioned Kershaw to point out that one bad outing does not a pitcher make. The question was never whether Cueto was better than Kershaw, it was whether Cueto was a bust because he had a bad outing.

It's obviously far too early to determine whether Cueto is going to live up to his contract, but at this point I don't see how a reasonable person can conclude he's not meeting expectations.



I see on baseball reference that he's tops among active pitchers, but what makes you think he's number one all time?


Because I'm pretty sure he is as of this last year. He's the best pitcher in the last 20 years- and I don't like him! All my guys who have hit against him say the same thing.
GB54
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Ncsf;842683214 said:

Because I'm pretty sure he is as of this last year. He's the best pitcher in the last 20 years- and I don't like him! All my guys who have hit against him say the same thing.


He's certainly not best all time- not even close. Best among modern era, yes- with the exception of Mariano but he is a different category
sycasey
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beelzebear;842683202 said:

LINK: Jared Goff 'open' to switching baseball allegiance from Giants to Dodgers


Wrong answer, Jared.

Even if I were a Dodgers fan I wouldn't want this turncoat among our ranks.
sycasey
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GB54;842683221 said:

He's certainly not best all time- not even close. Best among modern era, yes- with the exception of Mariano but he is a different category


MIGHT be best of the modern era, but he also hasn't run into his decline phase yet so we don't know what that will look like.

You could argue Pedro Martinez had the more impressive peak, playing in a higher-offense era and in an offense-friendly park.
Ncsf
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GB54;842683221 said:

He's certainly not best all time- not even close. Best among modern era, yes- with the exception of Mariano but he is a different category


He's the best starter in the last 20 years. Let's see where he ends up before saying not even close. And agreed- Rivera is a reliever so separate category. A quick look shows that Kershaw has the best ERA as a starter since at least 1950 which we can consider modern era (post JR #42). Rivera an even better ERA but as a reliever there's definitely an advantage.
Ncsf
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sycasey;842683229 said:

MIGHT be best of the modern era, but he also hasn't run into his decline phase yet so we don't know what that will look like.

You could argue Pedro Martinez had the more impressive peak, playing in a higher-offense era and in an offense-friendly park.

Pedro for those 3-4 years was amazing! Lincecum similar. The difference is Kershaw is a big body guy and should last longer and maintain velo.
GB54
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sycasey;842683229 said:

MIGHT be best of the modern era, but he also hasn't run into his decline phase yet so we don't know what that will look like.

You could argue Pedro Martinez had the more impressive peak, playing in a higher-offense era and in an offense-friendly park.


The argument is kind of silly since it ignores other changeable items like the height of the mound, the strike zone, live or dead ball, ballparks and steroids. IMO Pedro in the steroid era was the most dominant picture I've seen.
TheSouseFamily
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GB54;842683244 said:

The argument is kind of silly since it ignores other changeable items like the height of the mound, the strike zone, live or dead ball, ballparks and steroids. IMO Pedro in the steroid era was the most dominant picture I've seen.


Speaking of PEDs, good to see Barry Bonds is showing his new Marlins "pupils" how to excel.
Unit2Sucks
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Ncsf;842683212 said:

I apologize for not reading more in-depth. I was guilty of questioning Cueto but he's been great! I hope he holds up physically


No worries.

As for Kershaw, as I've repeatedly said I think he's the best pitcher in baseball and I would expect him to continue to be a top 3 pitcher for a while. Playoffs will continue to be a small sample size and he has some baggage to overcome there.

To the other guys' points about Pedro and Lincecum and peak value, I think Pedro's dominance was best shown when you look at comparative stats and not just absolute ones (eg need to evaluate against their peers). The league average ERA is down about a run from it's peak in the steroid ERA and that doesn't take into account NL vs AL. All this gets baked into some of the advanced stats like WAR, VORP and ERA+. Over his 18 year career, Pedro had the same ERA+ that Clayton has right now in his prime (154). Pedro's top 5 seasons were above 200 and his peak was 291 (higher is better). Kershaw's peak was 197 and has been decreasing for 3 seasons.
sycasey
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GB54;842683244 said:

The argument is kind of silly since it ignores other changeable items like the height of the mound, the strike zone, live or dead ball, ballparks and steroids..


Sure, but to some extent you can adjust for these by comparing to the league averages at the time. Ballpark factors can be calculated similarly. During Pedro's peak the league-wide averages were much higher than they are now (because of steroids or whatever). Putting up consistent sub-3.00 ERAs in that environment was really something, especially in Fenway Park which is a launching pad compared to Dodger Stadium.
GB54
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sycasey;842683268 said:

Sure, but to some extent you can adjust for these by comparing to the league averages at the time. Ballpark factors can be calculated similarly. During Pedro's peak the league-wide averages were much higher than they are now (because of steroids or whatever). Putting up consistent sub-3.00 ERAs in that environment was really something, especially in Fenway Park which is a launching pad compared to Dodger Stadium.


Yes, but a lot of baseball fans assume statistics are the Word of God. To me one of the most telling statistics was in 1968 when they raised the mound and the major league ERA was 2.98-we're talking average here!. Yet all we hear about is how dominant Gibson, Marichal and Koufax were. They were-but relatively.
Ncsf
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Unit2Sucks;842683266 said:

No worries.

As for Kershaw, as I've repeatedly said I think he's the best pitcher in baseball and I would expect him to continue to be a top 3 pitcher for a while. Playoffs will continue to be a small sample size and he has some baggage to overcome there.

To the other guys' points about Pedro and Lincecum and peak value, I think Pedro's dominance was best shown when you look at comparative stats and not just absolute ones (eg need to evaluate against their peers). The league average ERA is down about a run from it's peak in the steroid ERA and that doesn't take into account NL vs AL. All this gets baked into some of the advanced stats like WAR, VORP and ERA+. Over his 18 year career, Pedro had the same ERA+ that Clayton has right now in his prime (154). Pedro's top 5 seasons were above 200 and his peak was 291 (higher is better). Kershaw's peak was 197 and has been decreasing for 3 seasons.


Very interesting stuff. Somebody needs to hire you. I can tell you how to throw a cutter but no clue on some of the new stats out there - many that have good input and validity. The one I like the most is whip. Says a lot about dominance IMO.
tydog
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How about Jake Arrieta? Guy came out of nowhere and is now making a legit run at Kershaw for being the best pitcher in baseball.
beelzebear
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sycasey;842683226 said:

Wrong answer, Jared.

Even if I were a Dodgers fan I wouldn't want this turncoat among our ranks.


I'm a Dodger fan and agree. I think Jared Goff was doing some polite politics...but no way he changes and he shouldn't. He'll have to learn how to joke about it and dodge the questions.

I know how that works being a Dodger fan up here. At one time I was dating someone and her brothers weren't just Giants fans, they were left field bleacher bums at the Stick who use to get arrested for drunkenness and fighting. They'd give a hard time and I gave back but the way I'd diffuse it is, like I can only take one of you guys, so who? (They'd always suggest the crazy one.) The other thing, acknowledge greatness on the other side. I have no problem saying Willie Mays is the greatest living ballplayer or the best ever. I also have no problem saying the Giants deserve all the credit for building ATT. They did it right and they're making bank.
TheSouseFamily
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Unit2Sucks;842683266 said:

No worries.

As for Kershaw, as I've repeatedly said I think he's the best pitcher in baseball and I would expect him to continue to be a top 3 pitcher for a while. Playoffs will continue to be a small sample size and he has some baggage to overcome there.

To the other guys' points about Pedro and Lincecum and peak value, I think Pedro's dominance was best shown when you look at comparative stats and not just absolute ones (eg need to evaluate against their peers). The league average ERA is down about a run from it's peak in the steroid ERA and that doesn't take into account NL vs AL. All this gets baked into some of the advanced stats like WAR, VORP and ERA+. Over his 18 year career, Pedro had the same ERA+ that Clayton has right now in his prime (154). Pedro's top 5 seasons were above 200 and his peak was 291 (higher is better). Kershaw's peak was 197 and has been decreasing for 3 seasons.


True about ERA+ but you also cited WAR. Pedro's career WAR is 86 over an 18 year career while Kershaw's WAR is 48 over 8+ seasons. Point for Kershaw. That's the tricky thing about all the advanced stats; you can always find something that supports a case. And why over-reliance on them can be lead to bad decision-making....like the Dodgers continuing to trot out Chris Hatcher in the 8th. He may lose a lot of games in that role but hey his peripheral metrics all look good!
sycasey
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GB54;842683274 said:

Yes, but a lot of baseball fans assume statistics are the Word of God. To me one of the most telling statistics was in 1968 when they raised the mound and the major league ERA was 2.98-we're talking average here!. Yet all we hear about is how dominant Gibson, Marichal and Koufax were. They were-but relatively.


The stats reflect the change in league ERA too. I'm not sure what your point is here. You made a comment suggesting that stats shouldn't be the "Word of God" and then made a statistical argument about why the ERAs in 1968 are not as impressive as they seem to the naked eye.
Unit2Sucks
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Ncsf;842683275 said:

Very interesting stuff. Somebody needs to hire you. I can tell you how to throw a cutter but no clue on some of the new stats out there - many that have good input and validity. The one I like the most is whip. Says a lot about dominance IMO.


I would happily trade being able to look up stats on the Internet for learning how to throw a cutter!

:beer:
Unit2Sucks
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TheSouseFamily;842683291 said:

True about ERA+ but you also cited WAR. Pedro's career WAR is 86 over an 18 year career while Kershaw's WAR is 48 over 8+ seasons. Point for Kershaw. That's the tricky thing about all the advanced stats; you can always find something that supports a case.


Not so fast - Pedro's WAR through 8 seasons was 51.7. Kershaw's best 3 seasons were 7.8, 7.5 and 7.5. Pedro's 11.7, 9.7, 9.0. Kershaw has been more consistent (his worst 3 years were better than Pedro's worst 3) but not quite as brilliant at his best.

I do hear you on your general point however. There are lots of statistics you can cite, the question is which ones are relevant and insightful.
GB54
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sycasey;842683311 said:

The stats reflect the change in league ERA too. I'm not sure what your point is here. You made a comment suggesting that stats shouldn't be the "Word of God" and then made a statistical argument about why the ERAs in 1968 are not as impressive as they seem to the naked eye.


No, my argument is that most fans view statistics not as a reflection of an era but as rankings in the continuum of baseball
sycasey
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GB54;842683380 said:

No, my argument is that most fans view statistics not as a reflection of an era but as rankings in the continuum of baseball


You mean like raw counting-numbers type stats. Yes, that's true. Hence the focus in this discussion on why you should compare those numbers vs. those of the era they came in.
GB54
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sycasey;842683384 said:

You mean like raw counting-numbers type stats. Yes, that's true. Hence the focus in this discussion on why you should compare those numbers vs. those of the era they came in.


We agree
beelzebear
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LINK: Vin Scully researched beards and his lecture was brilliant

Good stuff, classic Scully. Enjoy it because this is his last season.
Unit2Sucks
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Beez - I assume you noticed that Cueto threw another shutout tonight. Giants top end of the rotation is throwing pretty well so far (3 of the top 8-10 pitchers in the NL), although unfortunately they can only pitch against SD so many times in a season.

Chicago has a lot of firepower and is definitely looking as good as advertised.
Ncsf
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Unit2Sucks;842694485 said:

Beez - I assume you noticed that Cueto threw another shutout tonight. Giants top end of the rotation is throwing pretty well so far (3 of the top 8-10 pitchers in the NL), although unfortunately they can only pitch against SD so many times in a season.

Chicago has a lot of firepower and is definitely looking as good as advertised.

I questioned Cueto and shame on me. I short-changed his competitiveness. Agree with you on Cubs and Arrietta and Kershaw in a league of their own. I won't change the minds of some but watch Kershaw then watch Bumgarner and you will understand Kershaw is just at a higher level.
sketchy9
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Ncsf;842694500 said:

I questioned Cueto and shame on me. I short-changed his competitiveness. Agree with you on Cubs and Arrietta and Kershaw in a league of their own. I won't change the minds of some but watch Kershaw then watch Bumgarner and you will understand Kershaw is just at a higher level.


Until the playoffs
Ncsf
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sketchy9;842694552 said:

Until the playoffs


You keep holding on to that. I would take Kershaw in every playoff game every time going forward. Good for Bumgarner who was miraculous.
NYCGOBEARS
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Ncsf;842694568 said:

You keep holding on to that. I would take Kershaw in every playoff game every time going forward.

I would too but it doesn't dismiss his playoff history.
BearDevil
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The way Cueto, Bum, and Shark are pitching (and Cain showing signs of life), Giants won't need another starter at the trading deadline. Maybe another OF or a reliever. May make sense to cut Peavy loose at the All Star break if any of their young minor league starters are even remotely close to ready.

Kershaw is awesome, but it's fair to critique his playoff woes. Regular season stats are great, but October matters most.
tydog
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NYCGOBEARS;842694571 said:

I would too but it doesn't dismiss his playoff history.


2-6, 4.59 ERA in 13 games (10 starts). It's crazy how mediocre he's been in the post season, given that he is this generation's best pitcher (by a lot).
NYCGOBEARS
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tydog;842694596 said:

2-6, 4.59 ERA in 13 games (10 starts). It's crazy how mediocre he's been in the post season, given that he is this generation's best pitcher (by a lot).


Exactly, and that's not a small sample size.
sycasey
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NYCGOBEARS;842694597 said:

Exactly, and that's not a small sample size.


It adds up to about a third of a full season (Kershaw made 33 starts in 2015). That's still kind of small, but even so you'd expect him to do better than that, given that his career ERA is 2.39. Two full runs higher is a lot.
TheSouseFamily
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sycasey;842694655 said:

It adds up to about a third of a full season (Kershaw made 33 starts in 2015). That's still kind of small, but even so you'd expect him to do better than that, given that his career ERA is 2.39. Two full runs higher is a lot.


Yeah, it's just strange. For whatever reason, Kershaw has had a few melt-down innings in the middle of otherwise well-pitched games. Seen that a few times in the playoffs and that certainly skews the ERA. Even this season, as gaudy as Kershaw's numbers are, if you take out just the one inning (out of 80) in which he gave up a 5-spot to the Marlins , it's more than a third of all the runs given up this year (13). His era would be under 1 this year if it weren't for that one inning.

I guess he's valuable to the Dodgers. They're 9-1 in his starts and 14-22 in all the rest.
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