Effectively Wild: A FanGraphs Baseball Podcast - Effectively Wild Episode 605: Emails for the Asking
Episode Date: January 28, 2015Ben and Sam answer listener emails about a world without the minors, bigger bats, Ernie Banks, and more....
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I need to know how you feel. How am I to know if you don't tell me so, tell me so, tell me so.
Good morning and welcome to episode 605 of Effectively Wild, the daily podcast from Baseball Perspectives presented by the Play Index at BaseballReference.com. I am Ben Lindberg of Grantland, joined by Sam Miller of Baseball
Perspectus. Hello. Howdy. Howdy. How are you? I am okay, thank you. Good. This podcast is the
only thing between me and a sled and a hill with snow on it. Where's your hill? Central Park,
a hill with snow on it. Where's your hill? Central Park, Pilgrim Hill. It's a sizable hill.
You own the sled? I have a couple of those cheapo plastic things. One of them, a circle that you have no control over, and one of them that you have slightly more control over. And so when,
as a father, I've learned that you're actually not allowed to hang out at a playground if you don't have kids, which is fine because I have kids. But if you don't have kids, you're definitely
not allowed to be there. The same rule does not apply for sledding? I don't think so. I deliberately
avoid going during the day, especially during a snow day, because then it's just packed. So if you
go after it's dark
There are no kids around and it's not really an issue
Is it well lit?
Yeah, there are some lampposts
It's just inside the park
Good place to go
If anyone is in Manhattan
Alright, any other banter?
No
I'm deciding whether I want to go forward
With more night sledding banter But I think we can just go on.
Okay. It's been a slow week for banter material.
It's been a slow week for baseball.
It has. We all wrote our articles about the commissioner and his comment about shifts that he later walked back, and that was all any of us has to talk about.
All right. So fortunately, we have emails, us has to talk about Alright so Fortunately we have emails
And we can talk about those
So I will
Pick out a couple from
The bottom of the mail bag
These are back when we
Talked about minor league salaries
Both of these questions were prompted by that episode
This one is from Sean
He says let us imagine that an attempt
To curtail global
warming backfires and results in global cooling that while short of catastrophic makes it cost
prohibitive for MLB teams to support minor league baseball. But Ben, what do you think it would be
like if it was catastrophic? Like would there be a train involved, would you think? There should be
a train involved. People are going to be so happy about a Snowpiercer reference.
Too expensive to keep the grass green or something.
What would MLB be like without the minors?
Let us assume that all amateur baseball survived unscathed.
How would the play in the field be different from what we are accustomed to
if MLB were just like the Pro Football League
and that drafted amateurs went straight to the top pro league?
Our current low minors provide little insight because they have no veterans were just like the pro football league and that drafted amateurs went straight to the top pro league.
Our current low minors provide little insight because they have no veterans
and the games they play are not the products
parents' clubs are selling,
as Sam has frequently pointed out.
I also wonder how the average MLB career
would differ in longevity and productivity.
And Mike D in St. Louis, our pal Mike D,
asked a similar question.
Could a team compete if they got rid
of their minor league system?
Could one team supplement their injuries
and lack of talent by trading with others
or picking up free agents?
How many minor league levels
would be a minimum to compete?
Do you think that the premise requires us
to assume that if it's cost prohibitive
for MLB teams to support minor league baseball,
that independent baseball wouldn't exist?
Probably.
Amateur baseball exists, he says.
So I don't know.
How much difference does it – I guess it makes some difference.
I think that you would have – so let's say – well, all right.
So Mike Trout would have gone to college.
And so that would be the solution to Mike Trout, right?
Mike Trout wasn't ready to play in the majors when he was drafted,
but he just wouldn't have been drafted until after college.
But still, you have the average college player is not obviously ready to go to the majors.
And yet, if you're a team that wants to have,
who's a good, Justin Verlander or something,
he was very close to major league ready.
I'm trying to think of somebody who, just anybody.
There are a thousand people.
Why can't I think of a name?
Somebody who went to college and then went to the minors and now is really good at baseball.
It's pretty rare.
Think of one.
Just off the top of your head, that's a tough one.
A player who went to college.
Dustin Pedroia. All right.. A player who went to college. Dustin Pedroia.
All right.
So Dustin Pedroia went to college.
And when he got out of college, he wasn't ready for the majors.
And yet, if you're the Red Sox, there's enough incentive for you to keep Dustin Pedroia around, probably,
and reap the huge MVP-like rewards of his maturation
some years down the line,
it would be tricky because there'd be a lot of guys
who didn't turn into Dustin Pedroia.
And so probably everybody who's drafted in the third or fourth round or lower
maybe wouldn't really justify an immediate assignment to the majors.
But a lot of guys would, certainly like Barry Bonds would have.
And so you'd have a whole bunch of these guys
who wouldn't be good enough to play in the majors
and yet would still justify a roster spot.
And so you would think that the quality of play would go way down
to some degree because you'd have to carry some of those guys.
And you'd also have, in a way, much shallower rosters
because you wouldn't really be able to get much use out of your Pedroias
and your Bonses, and therefore your 25-man roster might be, you know,
effectively something like 19 to 22 usable men.
And so probably the game itself would change quite a bit.
You wouldn't be able to burn through relievers as much.
And so in a way, the quality of play would come down for that reason too and bring it a little bit closer to where the college draftees are.
Hard to imagine that some sort of minor league substitute
wouldn't spring up.
I mean, the condition is that there's no minor leagues,
but we're not.
You would think that if teams did this,
the problem is you'd want to play those guys.
You wouldn't just want them to sit on the bench
like bonus babies or something.
You'd want to play them so they could get better.
the bench like bonus babies or something you'd want to play them so they could get better and yet i mean this would it would kind of you'd always have to be balancing things because
teams that just went all veteran would be really good probably just in the short term but they'd be
killing themselves long term right they would be like the battered bastards of baseball, playing guys who
maybe have less
future promise and therefore don't justify a spot
on some team's short season
minor league affiliate, but are 25
and clearly way better than their competition.
So you'd have
yeah, certainly you would have teams
that would probably
go heavy. You might have a lot less
parity. You might have 20 win teams.
If you were really tanking in this regard,
you could imagine a 15 or 20 win team
because you could load up on those guys.
A guy like Albert Pujols,
I guess Pujols emerged early enough
that he probably would have emerged
by the fourth year of college.
But your typical guy who graduates, goes a level at a time, and then at 25 or something breaks out, let's say like Corey Kluber or something like that, would they just never be discovered?
Is it conceivable that they just wouldn't exist?
Their career would never happen?
Probably, yeah.
They wouldn't even
know that they were ever going to get good?
Maybe so. I don't know.
I mean, it's the... Wait a minute. Wait.
Wait. Why don't they play in domes?
That's a good question.
I don't know.
I guess they'd all go to Japan and play in domes.
Not enough resources
to build domes in the U.S.?
Or power the domes, power the air conditioning and the like.
So yeah, if you weren't good enough,
if you weren't some minimum level of present ability
where a team could carry you on the roster,
you would just fade into obscurity, I guess.
I mean, right, if there's no if there's no
independent leagues there's no like holding pen where you could go to which is effectively what
the minor leagues are then yeah you'd have to go support your family in the post global cooling
environment so i i'm gonna try to say this and we might edit it out because i might not be able to
say it correctly but so in football uh when you get drafted say this and we might edit it out because I might not be able to say it correctly but so
in football when you get
drafted you're more or less
keep going
you're more or less expected to contribute
you know
fairly quickly almost immediately
so football is the example of this
or maybe basketball is the example of this
so football and basketball have different aging curves than baseball.
But still, there is an aging curve.
Players, I assume, get better as they get older.
And you can probably chart that curve as a multiplying effect or something like that.
And so you could extrapolate from that and assume that if all players at age 21 are X percent better by age 27, then you
could sort of extrapolate how many players aren't worth drafting at 21 in those sports
and yet should be good enough to play in the professional leagues, the top leagues, by
27, assuming they follow the same aging curve.
So I wonder if in those sports, those undrafted players are underrepresented compared to the same group of kind of not ready for the majors, 21-year-olds in baseball. Does that make sense? Do 21-year-olds in baseball matriculate at a much, much higher rate than 21-year-olds in the NBA and NFL who aren't ready to contribute?
Yeah, that's a keeper.
I'm keeping that in the podcast.
All right.
All right.
And Mike D's tangentially related question.
So the minor leagues do not disappear, but one team loses its minor league system or
just we start taking away minor league levels from that franchise.
we start taking away minor league levels from that franchise.
How many minor league levels do you think you could take away and still have a team have a reasonable chance of competing?
So this team is going back to pre-Branch Rickey, pre-Cardinals, pre-farm system,
while everyone else gets to keep theirs.
I think you could probably get rid of two levels without it being apparent to the naked
eye that the big league club was any different over the course of 20 years.
I think if you cut A ball, so you just skipped from low A to high A and then maybe cut high
A to triple A, that would probably work. Maybe you cut
triple A and keep double A or something like that. But you need the depth, that's one issue,
and you need the place to store all of your penny stocks in the hope that one of them
will turn into a very valuable stock.
The idea of taking all of them away, I just wrote about the value of the best farm system
in baseball.
So I found that if you have the best farm system in baseball, I've done this three years
in a row, I've taken the best farm system in baseball and looked at what the franchise turned that into over the next nine years plus.
You're really stuck in a rut. I like those articles.
So how many wins above replacement you get from those guys as well as from guys
that you trade those guys for if you treat them as assets, how many wins above replacement
do you get from them? Of the top 30 prospects for each of those three teams, the three organizations
I've looked at, the top 30 prospects have produced roughly 100 wins above replacement
at below market rates over the next nine years. All three of them are still getting some value
out of them, even 10, 11, 12 years later.
The Brewers, it's hard to assign at this point because how much of Carlos Gomez do you give credit to J.J. Hardy?
Because they extended Carlos Gomez.
But still, the Brewers still have Carlos Gomez as a result of that class. The Angels have now Andrew Heaney and Tyler Skaggs and Santiago as a result of that class.
And the Diamondbacks have like 16 guys as a result of that class.
So let's say it's somewhere between 100 and 120 wins.
So that's just from your top 30.
You also end up getting surprised by one or two guys
outside the top 30. You also end up getting surprised by one or two guys outside the top 30 who
produce. So maybe you're gaining from a very good farm system, maybe call it 10 to 15 wins
a year. And that doesn't even include the depth issue of having a sixth, seventh and
eighth starter down there and half your bullpen probably starts the season in the minors. So even excluding
that, you're probably docking teams 12 wins or so a year. So if there was no farm system,
that's a very good farm system, but if there was no farm system, it would be hard to obviously
compete. I mean, we knew that. Everybody knew that was going to be the answer, but I just
gave you some numbers.
compete? I mean, we knew that. Everybody knew that was going to be the answer, but I just gave you some numbers. Yeah. That makes it sound much more authoritative. Yeah. So I don't know. You
start stripping away minor league levels. It's like downgrading to a smaller market or something,
maybe. If you take away a couple of minor league levels, you're the Brewers or something in terms of long-term expectations.
If you have no minor league system, if you are stuck in the Snowpiercer world while everyone else gets to have a minor league system, then you are in big trouble.
Then you will never win probably.
Okay, question from Michael.
I read the following story in Ben Bradley's recent biography of Ted Williams
Late in his career, Williams, who had always struggled against the shift
Or at least lost some hits pulling the ball into the shift
Switched to a heavier bat at the beginning of one season
Suddenly he started hitting the ball to the opposite field
Something he had rarely done before despite the shift
This was accompanied by talk that Williams was getting older
and could no longer get around on the ball.
At some point, defense stopped shifting,
and Williams switched back to his regular bat and went back to pulling the ball,
going on to hit.388 for the season.
So is this a way for hitters to try to beat the shift,
or would it mess up hitters' swing mechanics to the point where it would be counterproductive?
Just because the greatest hitter ever could do it doesn't mean any hitter could.
Or is this whole story overstated or apocryphal?
You don't hear that much about baseball players' bats changing sizes.
Every once in a while you'll hear that somebody went to a heavier bat or has a heavy bat or whatever.
But I don't really know whether they're tinkerers with that or not.
And I don't really know how much an ounce matters to them. If they picked up a bat that
was off by an ounce, I wonder if you'd see it in their numbers at all. Or if your body
just would intuit it and you would immediately adjust slightly. I mean, when you're a kid,
you might change bats three times a game and have different sizes three times a game because you're just superstitious or tinkering or whatever, some dumb scheme.
different than that. But I never noticed particularly a huge difference in what you had to do when you were up there. Like when you go up there as a kid and you've switched from the 25 to
the 27 or whatever, you're not thinking start early or you're just swinging the bat. Just
swinging it. It's like when you're hammering a nail and you get a bigger hammer, it's not very cognitively challenging.
Yeah, I don't know.
I guess it sort of sounds persuasive.
I mean, if you have a heavier bat, then you swing a little more slowly and yet there's more momentum.
So there's more force applied,
so you still hit the ball harder, but maybe you're slower to the ball.
So I don't know whether it cancels out, whether you would just hit the balls,
the same balls that you would hit otherwise you would still hit,
but the trajectory would be changed a little bit,
or whether you would just miss some balls that you otherwise would have hit
i don't know we should have alan nathan on to answer this question but yeah or a hitter because
i feel like a hitter no i'm that wasn't that wasn't trying to be glib i would actually be
very interested in finding out from a hitter what it's like yeah i don't know it's it it reminds me
of my failed gary sheffield theory that i used to have or that i don't remember. It reminds me of my failed Gary Sheffield theory that I used to have,
or that I don't remember whether I had it or just everyone had it, and I liked it at the time,
but that Sheffield hit just so many, he was so quick and he pulled so many balls foul,
so many line drives foul, that it just seemed like if he lost a little bat speed at some point,
he would suddenly start hitting more balls fair really hard. And I
don't think that really happened. Although maybe I should check, but I don't know. Ted Williams,
the season that Michael is referencing is 1957 when he was 38. And that was maybe his best offensive season rate rate stat wise or second best perhaps but uh williams i
mean williams struggling was amazing like the you know a couple years before that he had had a 200
209 ops plus and the year before that 201 so he was if he was really getting hurt by the shift so much, he was still the best
hitter in baseball despite it. So I don't know. It's an interesting question. Maybe we can email
someone and get a more informed answer at some point. All right, let's take Francis in the Bronx.
The Bronx. In the podcast with Dirk Hayhurst, he mentioned the concept of momentum in the pitcher-batter struggle.
Ben's Grantland colleague Bill Barnwell has dismissed what he calls momentum, or no-mentum, in the NFL.
Meanwhile, Russell Carlton and others have said similar things about momentum among baseball teams.
Do you think that meaningful momentum exists in any aspect of the game?
Does the ball really look like a balloon
to hitters who found a groove is success up and down the lineup really contagious to what extent
does momentum matter when have we seen it recently so i don't have it before we answer this it's you
just inhaled which implies that you have an answer which i'm glad about maybe but um i i want to real
quickly tie this to the previous question because the question of does the ball look like a balloon is kind of like, does the bat feel lighter after you've had a hitting donut on it?
It does feel lighter.
It's not lighter.
You're not stronger.
So far as I can tell, it's just an illusion, I think.
Yeah, scientifically it shouldn't work, right?
I think I've read that.
Well, logically it shouldn't work.
How would it work?
Well, I mean, right.
But by swinging a heavier bat, you actually tire yourself out
and make yourself less able to swing quickly or whatever.
Yeah, so it is very – I believe that the ball looks like a balloon,
like a balloon when you're, when you're up there, it is unfortunately not a balloon.
It's a baseball traveling very fast with much resistance and you're going to have a hard time
hitting it. Well, I, which is not an answer to this question. It's the balloon question.
Which is not an answer to this question.
It's an answer to the balloon question.
Yeah.
I don't know.
Most of the cases where people mention momentum, I don't really differ from people who have looked at it and not found anything.
The ball looks like a balloon is, I don't know, I wouldn't call that momentum.
I guess you could call it momentum. I would just call it, I don't know, a hot streak or being locked in or whatever. And I do believe in that to some extent. I don't know. When we talked about
things that we believe about baseball without evidence sometime recently, talking about that
Ken Arneson essay where he listed things he believed in without evidence, and I couldn't
really come up with anything at the time. I guess this is one where I believe it. The evidence is that every hitter will tell you it's
true, but it's hard to find statistical evidence, at least that definitively proves it. But I do
believe that some hot streaks are at least partly the result of a hitter having a true talent level during
that streak that is higher than his normal true talent level for whatever reason his mechanics are
practiced at that moment and nothing is amiss and maybe he's healthy at that moment and he's
not bothered by any nagging injuries and it's's not as if guys suddenly become 450 true talent hitters
over the course of a hot streak where they hit 450.
But I do believe that even if it's not predictive,
even if we can't look at how a guy has been hitting lately
as a guide to how he will hit even the next day,
I do believe that there are times when hitters are better prepared to
maximize their abilities than other times. I just don't know if we can ever really tell
from looking at numbers. Yeah. I think that there's kind of two different ways that people
phrase this question. One is, does the hotness feed itself? And that is not what you, which is one way of phrasing it. There's another legitimate way of phrasing it, which you answered, which is, does the hotness feed itself? And that is not what you, which is one way of phrasing it.
There's another legitimate way of phrasing it, which you answered, which is, does performance
cluster for various reasons?
And I would believe that performance clusters for various reasons, some of which are identifiable,
some of which aren't, and many of which are prone to false positives. And I am inclined to believe that there is a small
and perhaps not useful, but nonetheless,
real effect of the hotness feeding itself in some way
for some skills to some players.
Because, again, not a major leaguer, never was. And my level of performance is
not, well, any mental deficiencies that I have would probably be weeded out by the weeding
process. But I used to shoot 100 free throws every day and you'd hit nine in a row and
then there would just be this trigger in your brain that said, not this one, you know, you'd hit nine in a row, and then there would just be this trigger in your brain that said,
not this one, you're not hitting this one, and you'd shank it.
And it was undeniable, and it was never false.
And I'm much more weak-willed than the average elite athlete,
but elite athletes, there's got to be a weak will or so in there.
Yeah, I would believe that, But elite athletes, there's got to be a weak will or so in there.
Yeah, I would believe that, but I would also believe that just about any time anyone ever makes an argument based on that or cites it as a reason for someone's performance, that it's probably overblown,
that it's just one of those things that might exist on a very small level or maybe a larger level for the very rare athlete.
But on the whole, if you're praising a guy for having that quality,
you are probably over-praising that particular quality.
All right, Play Index.
Sure.
So I got to have dinner with Doug Thorburn yesterday
And while Doug and I were having dinner
The conversation of best pitcher ever came up
Do you by chance have a pick?
Who is your best pitcher ever?
Pedro for peak
And Maddox or Clemens
Oh my gosh, you're the worst at this game
Ben, there's only six people that one could pick You've named three of them And Maddox or Clemens? Oh my gosh, you're the worst at this game.
Ben, there's only six people that one could pick.
You've named three of them.
We know who the six are.
The point is to make a decision.
Pick one.
Is it peak or is it career?
And if it's career, which one is it?
Okay, Maddox.
All right, so I say Pedro.
Because I'm a peak guy.
And Doug says Randy Johnson.
Yeah, Johnson.
Peak is great, but for pitchers particularly?
Oh, it's not.
If your peak is three years, I don't go peak. But if your peak is a decade, then I go peak.
It's just so impressive when a pitcher lasts,
no matter how he pitched, while he's lasting.
So if you can combine elite and lasting, that's just amazing.
I agree.
And I also, I mean, you might get me.
Most days I say Pedro.
Some days I say Clemens for the longevity reasons.
But there's like six guys you could say.
It's the ones we've named plus maybe Seaver and maybe Lefty Grove and maybe Walter Johnson.
And that's pretty much it.
And so I said Pedro.
He said Randy Johnson.
And that got me thinking about something.
And what it got me thinking about was our Corey Kluber discussion.
Corey Kluber is not going to turn into Randy Johnson, I'm pretty sure. But when I was naming all the guys who had
unexpected breakouts and then did not keep it up, I could have also given the counterexample
of Randy Johnson, who, like Corey Kluber, was not very good through age 26, had his
first kind of breakout, or had a semi-breakout at 27, and then was very good at 28, I think, or maybe
29, something like that. Around that time, and same time as Kluber, he was sort of putting
things together. And so, let's say 29, when he was 29, he basically had his first year
with under 100 walks. He had 99. But he struck out 308. His ERA was well above average for the first time.
He finished second in Cy Young voting. Before that, he'd been pretty bad. And of course,
Randy Johnson is the same guy who Doug Thorburn thinks is the greatest pitcher of all time. So
something obviously changed. And if you had taken the under on his projections going forward, you would have been wrong for a very, very long time.
And so I wanted to see just how extreme Randy Johnson's career was to get him from there
to where he ended up.
So I looked at where he ranked in career war at each age from 27 to 45. And so I have those. Here it goes.
So it's pretty much just a pretty awesome curve. So age 27, he was the 813th greatest
pitcher of all time, which actually sounds way better than it is because he had, I think, five war.
And so if you think about guys with five war, like, I don't know, that's probably somewhere like maybe Charlie Morton.
I'm not sure.
But that's the kind of name that you find at 5.3 war through age 27.
So through 27, this is not through 23.
Through 27, which is the same age that Kluber was in 2013.
Charlie Morton, no.
I was going to look also.
All right, so 813.
This is, by the way, since 1920,
because before that everybody threw 65 starts and 550 innings a year um all right age 28 he goes
from 813 up to 670 still very poor age 29 his biggest jump he goes from 670 to 334 basically
cuts in half wow pitchers in history who were better than him how valuable a season was that
uh age 29 that was the one i said where he was second in Cy Young voting.
Although, probably didn't deserve to be.
He still walked a ton of guys.
But no, yeah, he deserved to be.
6.8 war.
And then age 30, which is when he finished third in Cy Young voting, but had a better
year, he went from 334 to 213.
And then age 31 was his first Cy Young, and this is by far his best year up to that point.
Maybe arguably the best year he ever had, maybe not.
It was the year he went 18-2, the strike semi-shortened season.
It was the year he pitched in-2. It's the strike semi-shortened season. It was the year he
pitched in relief in that game and everything. So from there, he went from 213 to 118. And so now
he is in the conversation. By the way, 213 through age 30, just to put that in perspective,
Ubaldo Jimenez is 30 right now, and they were tied. So through age 30, he was Ubaldo Jimenez is 30 right now, and they were tied. Okay.
So through age 30, he was Ubaldo Jimenez,
and Ubaldo Jimenez was Randy Johnson, which kind of makes you think.
It does.
All right, age 31, 118, that's the same as John Lackey was through that age.
To put that in perspective, Lackey, a very good pitcher,
one of the best number twos, I would say, in the game through that age.
And that's what Randy Johnson was.
Age 32, he actually backslid slightly because he got injured.
He was very good but injured.
He only started eight games.
So he falls back to 128.
And now he's basically Dan Heron's career, which is also very good.
Not a Hall of Famer, but very good.
Age 33, he's 85th.
And you know how I said 813 at the beginning is actually worse than it sounds?
85th is better?
85th is actually a lot better than it sounds.
So he was 33 and 85th.
Zach Granke basically tied with him right now.
Granke's only 30, so three years ahead of Randy Johnson's pace.
Kershaw is ahead of him considerably at 26.
So Kershaw is well over seven years ahead of Randy Johnson's pace. Kershaw is ahead of him considerably at 26. So Kershaw is well over seven
years ahead of Randy Johnson's pace. So it sounds good, but it's still below Hall of Fame for sure.
Age 34, he goes up to number 63 all-time, which matches Javier Vazquez. Age 35, he's up to 37th
all-time through that age, which is about where Tim Hudson was. Age 36, he finally
catches up to Curt Schilling, which is interesting
because Schilling also kind of a late bloomer.
Had a lot of years of wandering.
But by 36, he's the 22nd
best pitcher of all time
through that age. He ties
Schilling. He was just behind. He ties
Schilling at 37. It's 15th.
38th. Moves into the top
10. 39. 7th. 38th, moves into the top 10.
39th, 7th, just a tiny bit behind Pedro Martinez.
Age 40, he passes Steve Carlton.
He's now 6th.
Age 41, he's now 5th.
And then he, when's your 5th?
It's very hard to keep moving up.
It's Grove, Clemens, Seaver, and Maddox ahead of him.
And so he's trying to close the gap, and he just can't quite do it. He manages to get to within.3 war of Greg Maddox
in his career. So he ended up fifth all-time,.3 wins behind Greg Maddox, starting at age
27 at 813, which is an amazing, amazing, amazing career.
And he is the best pitcher in history from age 30 on, from age 31 on,
from any of those sort of ages you want to check.
Incidentally, from age 31 on, the 17th best pitcher of all time is Jamie Moyer,
and the 16th best of all time is David Wells.
So they're kind of like the Raul Abanezes of pitchers,
where they're not Hall of Famers, but they had Hall of Fame 30s.
They had Hall of Fame-level decades.
Yeah, I was going to make a Raul Abanez comp
at the beginning of this Play Index segment.
I'm glad I refrained.
That's a good one. Good Play Index.
All right, so use the coupon code BP
to get the discounted price of $30 on a one-year
subscription. Okay. Ernie Banks. We got an Ernie Banks question. I was wondering if you guys
think Ernie Banks was the greatest player in the modern era to never play a postseason game.
If not, who? That question is from Neil. And it's really a Three man race I would say
Baseball reference helpfully
Has a list on its homepage right now
Of players with the most games played
With no postseason appearance
Ernie Banks is at the top of that list
25-28 games
19 seasons
So when you have a Hall of Famer
At the top of the list
Who also played the most games It's pretty hard to beat that.
The only guys who really, I think, have a case are his longtime teammate, Ron Santo, and Luke Appling, who is second in games played without making a postseason appearance.
And I think Banks takes it.
Appling actually has a higher career war,
but Banks' peak was just ridiculous.
It blows away Appling's peak,
blows away lots of players' peaks.
I guess he is the anti-Raul Labanez,
or really he's the anti-Randy Johnson
Because his 20s were amazing
But Santo though
Santo's peak was pretty amazing too
I mean Santo only played like 14 years didn't he?
Yeah that's true
Let's see
Santo
I will see what his peak war score in Jaws is
He played 15 years, 22, 43 games.
And yeah, he ended up with actually a higher war,
very slightly higher war than Banks.
His peak was 53.8 war in his seven-year peak.
And Banks had 51.9 seven-year peak, and Banks had 51.9, seven-year peak.
So, yeah, I guess Santo has just about as strong a case,
unless you want to give Banks extra credit for just playing longer
without somehow running into a postseason appearance.
But best player, it is pretty close.
So Adam Dunn made the playoffs technically.
Yeah, he's actually on this list.
Is that, yeah, I don't know if we would count him or not.
Do you have to appear in it?
I don't know.
It's a good question.
But anyway, let's move beyond that.
So Dunn was like a 17-war career.
What do you think going forward,
assuming that the playoffs will never be scaled back,
they will be as is or expand,
and player movement presumably isn't in danger of being scaled back anytime soon.
So it's hard to imagine there's not going to be a Santo or a Banks
who spends an entire career with one team
and that one team manages to never make playoffs.
Very unlikely.
So going forward from now until the end of our lifetimes,
what do you think will be the highest war
that anybody ever produces without a playoff appearance in their career.
It seems like it would be tough to get beyond about 10 seasons at this point.
I'm looking at the list of active guys other than Vernon Wells, who is technically still active.
Alex Rios is the next highest guy at 11 years
and obviously hasn't played most of his career
in the 10-playoff team era.
So it would be tough to get beyond that probably.
So, I mean, if we're talking about 10 years-ish,
and the better the player is,
probably the less likely he is to be on this list so i
don't know for two reasons for like his teams will presumably be a little better because he's good
and also he probably won't stop playing after 10 years right yeah it's good so i don't know i'll say
50 oh wow that's way higher than I would have said.
I might bet that there is never another player who produces 35, maybe even 30.
I guess that makes sense.
Yeah, okay.
All right.
Yeah, Banks, if you haven't looked at Ernie Banks,
his baseball reference page in the last few days, which I'm sure many of you have, his peak, his 20s were really amazing.
He hurt his knee and moved to first base just like starting with his age 31 season.
And after that, he was just kind of an average-ish player sometimes.
But before that, he was amazing.
There was just no one doing what he was doing.
At the time he moved off of shortstop,
I think he had 277 home runs, something like that,
as a shortstop, which was the most anyone had ever had.
And over that span, like 53 to 61,
when he was playing shortstop regularly,
he tripled the next closest shortstop in terms of home runs he was just kind of one of a kind and a good defender
too according to the stats that we have and also just an amazing hitter i wonder why he moved to
first so early?
Injury.
Oh, is that what it was?
Yeah, he had a knee thing.
So he couldn't even play second or third.
Yeah, that's an unusual transition probably, especially at that age.
All right.
Unlike Appling, who played shortstop forever.
He actually moved.
He first moved to left field.
Did you know that?
Banks?
Oh, yeah.
I read that briefly.
Briefly.
Very briefly.
And Willie Mays occasionally played second base.
Did you know that?
Yeah.
I tweeted it not that long ago.
It's every... Wait.
Maybe I have that wrong.
Maybe it was Hank Aaron.
Willie Mays did not ever play second base It was Don Mattingly
Don Mattingly played one out at second base
Hank Aaron played five
Appeared at second base in five different seasons
Would just show up at second base
For a game or two Okay Have we fulfilled our obligation different seasons. Would just show up at second base for game two.
Okay.
Have we fulfilled our obligation
as Carson Sestoli says?
I have fulfilled mine and you have
fulfilled yours and we have both fulfilled Carson's.
Great. Alright, so that is it
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