Effectively Wild: A FanGraphs Baseball Podcast - Effectively Wild Episode 944: How Many Barry Bondses?
Episode Date: August 24, 2016Ben and Sam banter about Rich Hill and Dylan Stoops, then answer listener emails about Collin McHugh, stacking rosters with clones of Barry Bonds, diving into first base, Dylan Bundy and Ervin Santana..., and more.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What does it mean? What does it mean? It's meant to be.
Wild the wall. Wild the sea. Not for nothing, but it ain't nothing for us to debunk this club right now.
I think the coast is clear. Let's go. Leave our coaching beers. Let's go. Leave your girlfriends here. Let's go.
Leave your hopes and fears. Let's go. What you scared for?
Let go, let go, let go, let go. Hello and welcome to episode 944 of Effectively Wild, the daily podcast from Baseball Perspectus,
presented by our Patreon supporters and Playindex at BaseballReference.com.
I'm Ben Lindberg of The Ringer, joined by Sam Miller of Baseball Perspectus.
Hello.
Heyo.
Happy Rich Hill Dodgers debut day.
I've heard that before.
How many...
Yeah, we'll see.
It feels like I've seen a Rich Hill is doing something tweet every other day since he got
traded.
And then a Rich Hill is not going to do that thing, tweet the next day every single time.
So mostly what he's doing is tending to his blister.
It's occupying much of his time.
Yeah.
But hopefully not for much longer.
Yep. How are you? I'm okay. Did you? No blisters? his blister. It's occupying much of his time. Yeah. But hopefully not for much longer. Yep.
How are you?
I'm okay.
No blisters?
No blisters.
Did you get my G chat about Dylan Stoops?
Oh, yes.
I did see this.
Yes.
I made plans to go watch a ball game with Wilson Caraman from the Baseball Perspectives
Prospect team.
And just by geography and scheduling, I happened to plan to go to the game in Rancho Cucamonga tonight, Wednesday, August 24th, my first minor league game of the year.
And it just so happens that Dylan Stoops is making his affiliated debut. sheet for the Sonoma Stompers last year, who is one of our very favorite people on the team and also one of our very favorite players on the team and who has since been signed by the San Diego
Padres, assigned to their high A affiliate in Lake Elsinore, and making his debut tonight at the game
that I was already scheduled to go to. It is amazing. I don't know what to make of this
coincidence. What are the odds? I guess we could figure out what the odds are. How many minor league
games are there in a season?
I don't know.
A lot, but.
Probably 20,000, maybe 20,000-ish.
Probably a little less because short season. It's got to be less.
Well, I don't know.
There's 2,430 major league games.
And every team has, you know, depending on what you consider an affiliate, six to eight affiliates.
Again, depending on definition.
Some of those are short season but if you multiply 24 30
by 7 then you get you know roughly 15 000 of course we could probably just limit the denominator to
minor league games in california that you could attend which is still a pretty big number well
he had to be he had to be assigned he had to be assigned there there's only one there's only one
league in my geography the cal league is the only league that is within driving distance of me.
So he had to be assigned to the one league.
Yeah, well, if people want to read more about Dylan Stoops' story,
I posted a Facebook story about it and tweeted a link to it.
So it's an interesting story, and we'll probably have him and Santos Saldivar,
our two Stompers signees in Affiliated Ball now, on the podcast at the end of their seasons to talk about their rookie years.
But it's a fun story, and it's even better that you get to go.
So I'm jealous.
Say hello to Stoops for me.
I will.
All right.
So we're doing an email show.
Anything else to discuss?
Nope.
Okay.
Well, we got an email about something that happened last week that we didn't get to discuss because we recorded Monday's show early. Nope. then be replaced without getting an out. I'm too lazy to go back, but I think the answer was six, but four for a rookie.
Last night, this was last week, the Astros and Orioles played, and Colin McHugh gave
up four home runs before recording an out.
I guess this supports y'all's theory, I guess.
And the actual sequence of events in this game was, it was the first inning, And Colin McHugh is on the mound
So the play-by-play went
Adam Jones home run
Hyunsoo Kim single
Manny Machado home run
Chris Davis home run
Mark Trumbo home run
The Orioles hit a lot of home runs
They hit four in five batters against McHugh
Before he recorded an out
And then there was a coaching visit to the mound
And then he
got out of the inning without giving up any more runs. And Story actually had a happy ending because
the Orioles starter, Wade Miley, was even worse. I guess it's not a happy ending for Wade Miley.
It's exactly as happy as every other game.
Yeah. For Colin McHugh, it was happy because he didn't take the loss. And the Astros actually
ended up winning by seven
runs, and he stayed in for a couple more innings and only gave up a couple more runs. So it wasn't
quite as disastrous as the start, but the beginning of that game was as disastrous as they come. So
did that make you rethink your opinions on how bad a pitcher could be at the beginning of a game
without getting replaced?
Well, to some degree, the length of time it took for him to get a visit does. It makes me think
longer. But my answer was really hinged on the idea that a record was being pursued and broken.
I chose four for a rookie and five for a veteran because I would think that a rookie or young pitcher, the manager would want to avoid having him set a shameful record and that a veteran
might be allowed to set it, would be allowed to set it in these circumstances. But once that is
done, would not be allowed to extend it. Like five would be enough. So it's really impossible
to compare this to that because the single in the middle kept McHugh from reaching record territory.
However, it does seem like a lot of batters before a visit to the mound.
I maybe would have guessed that he would have gotten a visit one batter earlier, maybe two, maybe two batters earlier.
Because it's the beginning of the game.
If you go home run, single home run, why not?
Why not use that visit?
I mean, you're not probably going to,
you don't need to save that visit for anything.
And you might just go out there and say, hey, take a deep breath.
It's a long game and all that because it's the beginning of the game.
So I guess I'm surprised that there wasn't a visit,
maybe even two batters earlier.
So maybe that would extend my guess a little bit more.
Uh-huh.
I was in a car, so I wasn't watching or listening.
I don't know whether the Astros had anyone up.
That would be an interesting thing to know,
whether after the third consecutive homer and fourth of the inning,
someone started warming when the coaching visit happened.
I'd be interested to know that if anyone can fill me in.
But yeah, I don't think it dramatically changes what we were thinking.
Yeah. Randy Johnson once allowed eight homers in a game.
Wow.
In 2008. No, I'm sorry. No, sorry. He didn't.
He didn't.
Total lie. Who's been spreading that?
Wow. Yeah. That's not a nice thing to say about Randy Johnson Never happened
It's not even close to true
Alright, let's take a question
From Andrew Patrick
Patreon supporter who says
Let's say you run a team filled entirely
With league average players
And you're given the unique and magical option
Of replacing as many of those players
As you like with Barry Bonds
How many Barry's do you take
Where do they play where do you hit them
In the order and how many games does the
Team win alright so
Andrew I replied to Andrew
To clarify he doesn't say what
Year Barry Bonds were talking about and
It is currently 2016 and the answer
For a 2016 Barry Bonds would be very
Different than if he said peak Barry Bonds
So I would encourage us to answer this question three times.
One is for 1993 Barry Bonds, when he was clearly the best player in baseball
and also young and sprightly and fast.
And then let's say 2004 Barry Bonds, when he was clearly the best hitter in baseball,
maybe in history, but very defensively limited.
And then 2016 Barry Bonds, which who knows.
But we also have to, I guess I didn't ask Andrew to clarify when he says team is made up entirely of league average players.
I can't imagine a team with 25 to win players on it.
I can't imagine a team with 25 two-win players on it.
So even if he means, I will take that to mean that every starting position player and every member of the rotation is roughly a two-win player.
Every bench player is basically what you would think of as an average bench player.
In other words, a little bit better than a replacement level.
And then relievers we'll call one win players. Okay. All right. So let's start with 2016 Barry Bonds on this team. Does Barry Bonds have a role? And we'll assume that Barry Bonds doesn't have to
start doing this tomorrow that he can work out, go to extended or go to, you know, the complex
and get in baseball shape and do, you know, a little quick tour through the minors and get his timing down.
Yeah, well, obviously, if I were watching this game as a fan, I would want at least one Barry Bonds just to see what Barry Bonds could do.
If I were doing it solely as a talent evaluator, though, obviously, you don't replace any pitcher spots with barry
bonds you can't really even replace say you know your utility guy or something with barry bonds
because at this point i mean he is he's a lot less bulky than he was last time we saw him you know
why right but he probably is in no condition to be a defensive replacement at any position.
So it's basically if you're an AL team, you could consider DHing him,
and if you're not, then maybe you use him as a pinch hitter off the bench.
That's basically the only roles you could even consider 50-year-old Barry Bonds for,
or however old he is.
So probably if you were just
Approaching this as
Will you win more games
The answer is zero Barry Bonds
Yeah the question is
Could he hit the way that Jim Tomey hit
At the end of his career
Because he would be the Jim Tomey role
Tomey was a 112 OPS plus guy
In his last year
And then was asked not to return
So I wouldn't
Bet on Barry Bonds hitting that well
Right now so I agree
Zero zero Barry Bonds is
Right maximum maximum
Of one and I would not count on it
Adding much no even
Even in an optimistic scenario
Even even if Barry Bonds is better than
We're giving him credit for I don't
Think you could use him in a role that would add more than a couple of runs
Agreed, sadly
Alright, 2004 Barry Bonds
Okay, so I'm going to say that he was so great on offense
That you definitely stick him in both corner outfield spots
He DHs if you have a DH
Any bench hitter you have who is primarily a hitter
he obviously replaces which is probably at this stage in the sport only one guy yeah unless you
but however you might consider it worthwhile to build the rest of your bench with extreme utility
like guys who can basically play all eight
positions so that you can have an extra berry bonds right okay maybe so like maybe your catcher
is also your backup shortstop and can play left field and all that and so maybe you can squeeze
two berry bonds is on your bench okay Okay. So that's without changing your pitcher-batter ratio.
So we're up to...
So that's four Barry Bonds, maybe five if you have a DH.
Five if you have a DH.
You're not putting him at first?
Yeah, sure.
You should put him at first too.
If you do it.
Five or six Barry Bonds.
You wouldn't put him in center?
I mean, you probably should put him in center.
I would think at that age...
What were his defensive stats in would think at that age What were his defensive stats
In like left field
Yeah he was a minus 8 defender
In left field
So let's be very very
Cruel and call him a minus
40 defender in center
Which is not how you would normally do
The position by position adjustments
But let's just do it
Let's call him minus 40 we could call
him minus 50 if you call him a minus 50 he's still a five win player yeah and well then you can start
right so then you start playing that game with every position so could barry bonds just stand
at third base and as a better than a negative 50 yeah i mean fewer opportunities fewer opportunities
to screw up of course he's even less familiar with the position and it requires quick reactions
and he's left-handed and he's left-handed so could you get could you see him going to minus 75 as a
third baseman i mean i could see a minus 75 third baseman if they're just
abusing him with bunts yeah that would happen too yeah i mean he was still he was old he was he was
still in the lineup almost every day and he had six steals that year and only got caught once
yeah so he wasn't like totally totally mobile course, if he had been playing in the field every day at demanding positions, who knows if he would have broken down. But I mean, he was just such a transcendent hitter at that point.
How many runs does a lineup of nine Barry Bonses score?
2004 Bonses with a 1400 OPS.
Should I put it into the budget lineup generator machine?
Yeah, sure.
The baseball musings tool.
All right, hang on.
So we've got, what are we going for here?
We've got 609, 812.
Yep.
812.
609!
609!
A whole lineup all right here we go a lineup of nine barry bonzes according to baseball musings lineup analysis would score 13.4 runs a game
all right so then you could afford to give up like eight runs a game and you'd beat everyone
most of the time well if you yeah you could i mean you'd be you'd win 125 games yes i think
if you did that so the question is how bad could a babbit be in your fip a you know if you could
put together a team with a fip of four, how bad could the BABIP
be and still have the ERA or the runs allowed be lower than eight? And only what? So two-thirds,
roughly, not even two-thirds of play appearances end up with a ball in play, even less when you
take into account home runs. So like a huge portion of your pitching
staff would be the same as it always was fly balls you should be okay on you know the gappers are
going to hurt you anything that requires running but a lot of plays are obvious so i guess part of
the question is could bonds play at all credible in field like at all like could would a ground
would ground ball babbitt go to like 650 or something like that which seems
possible i mean if you have four left-handed 40 year old barry bonds is playing in the infield
yeah i'm not sure i go i don't go there i don't think i go there i think i stick with right center
and left although if you have two barry bonds is then the penalty of having a berry
bonds in center is even greater like you probably should just go get some very speedy no hit guy
who can overlap with the traditional left and right field coverage areas a little bit yeah maybe
maybe you can get away with one berry bonds in the infield if you have you know if you get if you go defense
on this I don't know I think I go um I think I go seven Barry Bonds is six if six if not the
bat at catcher oh man you Barry Bonds ain't gonna catch he doesn't have to move that much
oh that's right I had Barry Bonds in my lineup analysis as the catcher, but that's not going to happen. Not
doing that. I go six, seven if it's a DH. And then the question is, is there a benefit to having one
extra Barry Bonds on your bench instead of your left-handed reliever or your long man or something
like that? Yeah. Well, at this point, you already have as many Barry Bonds on your bench as you do
non-Barry Bonds in the lineup, right? Or close.
Well, yeah, but the pitcher's spot comes up.
Oh, we're doing DH League.
If you're doing DH League, then the pitcher's spot, I guess, doesn't matter.
And you can't really
pinch hit for any of your position players very much
because you have limited your bench.
You only have two other
non-Bonsas on the bench.
So yeah, I guess you're right.
But you want to rest some of those berry
bonzes oh that's true he's a 40 year old bond so he can't play 162 games just to keep the bonds
is fresh and to make sure that you have a bonds when a bond get hurt gets hurt that would probably
be worth sacrificing at least one reliever, maybe more.
Yeah.
Yeah, and you're going to need a bigger bench.
Yeah, you need some backup Bonzes.
Yeah.
So I'm saying you go 10-man pitching staff, six Barry Bonzes,
seven if it's a DH league,
and then you keep all the other normal bench guys that you would have.
Uh-huh.
Okay.
So what's our grand total of Bonds'?
Seven.
Seven Barry Bonds'.
All right.
All right.
Now, 93.
93 Barry Bonds'.
So you're no longer getting quite the same level of hitter.
However, Barry Bonds' in 93 had a 206 OPS+, which is basically Bryce Harper of last year.
He hit 336 458 677
And he was
A 10 win player
Who was
Only slightly worse than
2004 Bonds
As an overall player
As a hitter he was worse
But you now have a guy who
Also stole 29
Bases and had 40 Steal seasons of him, who was considered an elite defender, one of the greats.
Other than his arm, one of the greats of all time at his position.
Best hitter in the majors, MVP, gold glove, all of that, all the awards.
And so now can you make a case that he is every position, let's put catcher aside, but every position except catcher?
Yeah, I mean, this is 28-year-old Barry Bonds, still fairly fleet of foot.
So I would think that you could convert Barry Bonds into, obviously he plays center.
You could convert him into, I mean, I might have him everywhere other than catcher and maybe shortstop.
Yeah. Is there any chance? And then he, he is every, he's every bench spot, but is he also
your backup shortstop? I mean, you don't want him there every day, but is he good enough
that he can be your backup? I mean, yeah, sure. I don't know. There's no way to say really,
but yeah, I mean, he was extremely athletic and mobile, so I'd try it.
Does he replace any of your pitchers? Like, is he actually, like actually as a pitcher?
Do you, would you rather have a team with Barry Bonds as your pitcher?
No. Me neither. It's only 9.4 runs a game huh that's a shame yeah can you win with uh scoring
9.4 runs a game if you've got barry bonds is at all positions i mean you know even if barry bonds
is a uh even if he's very good at fielding ground balls even if he's very smart he's still left
handed and doesn't have a good arm yeah i might i think i'm keeping a shortstop yes i'm definitely keeping a shortstop okay i
Think i'm keeping one other infielder and maybe maybe a second baseman and i'm swapping him based
On handedness of the batter okay sure so a super utility type guy and you're starting shortstop
And then you still want all the bonzes on the bench, and you probably still want to sacrifice a reliever to have backup Bonzes.
So how many Bonzes are we talking now?
11.
11 or 12.
Yeah.
Okay.
So that's the definitive answer.
Okay.
How many Barry Bonzes you would want at each stage of his career.
All right.
Question from Gary.
For years now, every time we see a runner dive into first base to beat a throw,
we're told by the broadcasters that despite the illusion that it is faster,
diving across first base versus just running as fast as you can actually slows the runner down.
But now we have Olympic runner Shawnee Miller,
who narrowly beats a foot runner by diving across the finish line to win a gold medal.
Does this disprove the baseball broadcaster's adage? This was one of those famous Olympics images of her angled forward and breaking the finish line while everyone else was just a hair behind her and standing straight up.
And I don't think this affects anything about the baseball calculus.
anything about the baseball calculus. I think my understanding of the diving into first base issue,
and it seems like there's still considerable debate about this, is that you can, if you execute it perfectly, help yourself, but you're unlikely to execute it absolutely perfectly
because you have to dive, you have to slide, you will probably hit the
ground before you have to, and that will slow you down and it'd be faster just to keep running and
not break your momentum. So I don't think this has any bearing on the baseball example because
in this case, she didn't have to reach down and touch a particular thing. She just had to break
the finish line with some part of her
body. And I'm not even sure whether she was intentionally diving or just exhaustedly
collapsing at the end of the race. But I think if getting to first base worked like track and field
and you just had to cross the plane of the base instead of touching the base with some part of your body,
then I think diving or at least leaning forward would make sense.
So I don't think it's quite analogous,
and I don't think baseball players should be following the Sean A. Miller example
if they weren't planning to before.
Yeah, there are various video experiments on the internet,
including I think Mythbusters and I think maybe ESPN. as evidence, but anybody who has played tag can, of course, recall diving for a person,
which is the same basic idea. And really even diving for a fly ball is to some degree,
the same basic idea. It's that diving for a spot low on the ground is not faster than running
through it, I think. Yeah. Right. Okay. Play index? Sure. Let's see. This was inspired by Cat Garcia's piece today about Justin Verlander at Baseball Perspectives.
And Verlander had a fairly normal career arc for an ace.
He was really great.
He was strong and he threw hard and he had great seasons.
And then some physical problems struck him.
He lost a little bit of his dominance. He lost a little bit of his dominance.
He lost a little bit of his velocity.
And that's a normal career.
And then suddenly he got good again.
And he now seems like he might, we don't know, he's a pitcher,
but he seems like he might be poised to have a very good 30s
as well as his very good 20s.
And I'm always very interested by looking at players as having two careers,
their pre-30s and their post-30s.
And as we talked about with Raul Ibanez a long time ago,
I'm fascinated by Raul Ibanez's career because he was essentially a Hall of Famer
if baseball started at 30.
If everybody's career started at 30, Raul Ibanez would be remembered
as one of the 30 or 40 greatest players of all time. And Omar Vizquel would be remembered as one of the greatest
players of all time. And of course, Randy Johnson is one of the greatest pitchers of all time. But
if careers ended at 30, Randy Johnson would not have been remembered as one of the greatest players
of all time. And Mariano Rivera and so on. So I was curious about the top players ever through 29 and the top players ever after 30
and how much overlap there is between them. So I basically went to Play Index and looked at career
war totals through 29, career war totals after 30 for hitters, and then did the same for pitchers
career war totals after 30 for hitters and then did the same for pitchers and lined them up to see how much overlap there is. So I am going to ask you, first, do you think that there is greater
overlap for hitters or pitchers? And before you answer, I will make the quick case for either.
The case for hitters, of course, is that they have much more predictable career arcs, generally
speaking.
They don't tend to blow out their elbow at 28 and be terrible forever.
On the other hand, they very predictably decline.
And the feeling I have anecdotally is that you have fewer sort of outliers of the, you know, Roger Clemens,
Randy Johnson, Andy Pettit mold, where they keep pitching at the same level.
Like you don't have to decline as a pitcher.
It basically, if you adjust, if you make the necessary adjustments, if you manage to keep
your elbow from snapping, you don't really need to have a decline until much later.
Whereas hitters pretty much almost all decline on a fairly predictable arc. So which one has more overlap?
I'm going to go with hitters.
You are correct. All right. All right. There you go.
There are, well, I'm not going to tell you how many there are. Second question, how many of the top 200 hitters of all time through age 29 do you think were also top 200 hitters all time from 30 on?
That's interesting.
I wrote earlier this week about Adrian Beltre, and he's a guy who has kind of turned himself into a no-doubt Hall of Fame candidate, or at least what should be a no doubt Hall of Fame candidate after age 30. And no one really talked about him as one before age 30. And yet, he was,
I believe, 72nd all time through his age 29 season, something like that. And he's been
like 14th all time after that, or, you know, from age 30 to 37 37 so he has been much better but he was still certainly among the
top 200 actually among the top 100 so yeah 72 and 22 by baseball reference 72nd 72nd best player
ever through 29 helps that he started early helps that he had consistently good defense
that was overlooked but uh yeah an all-time great He was like through 29, he was wedged in
between, you know, Rod Carew and Derek Jeter and just behind Jeff Bagwell and just ahead of Chipper
Jones. Right. And no one really thought of him in their class at the time. And so I'm guessing that
even players we think of as great post-30 performers maybe were better before 30 than we thought they were.
You want to try this on any other? You want to ask me about any others?
All right. So I'm guessing how many of the 200 post-30 are also in the 200 pre-30? I'll say 130.
130. Way, way off. It's 82. And now to some degree, this is a little bit of an artificially low number because guys like Andrew McCutcheon, Dustin Pedroia have not played out their 30s yet
and might still make it. But we're talking, that's a fairly small handful of players on this list.
Otherwise it's 82. So about 40%, call it somewhere between
40 and 50% of the top 200 players will be great. Obviously, much less great there. To get on the
top 200 through age 29 requires 30 wins. And that would be Paul Molitor is the bottom of that list. To get on the top 200 after 30 requires only 21 wins.
And that would be like Gary Carter or even BJ Surhoff.
So 82 to date.
All right.
So then what about the same question for pitchers?
What percentage of top 200 pitchers?
Hmm.
Then for pitchers, I'll say 25%.
It is 67.
And so it's about 35%.
Okay.
So it's actually pretty close.
Not that much different.
No, not that much difference.
One thing that is different is that the ratio of post 30 war for hitters, sorry, pre 30
war to post 30 war for hitters is higher than it is for pitchers. The top 200
pitchers after 30 are pretty close to just as good as the top 200 pre-30 pitchers. Whereas for
hitters, there's a pretty big difference between those kinds of careers. All right. Anything else
you want to know? Because I find these lists to be very interesting to eyeball, but I don't have a,
I don't know what would be
interesting and I don't have, I haven't really narrowed down what I find interesting enough to
share. One thing that is interesting is that if you were just looking, like Babe Ruth is number
five all time pre-30 and number four all time post-30. Partly this is because he was a pitcher
early in his career and that war is not included on this. And he also ended his
career earlier than a lot of these guys who kept playing much later. But all the same, Babe Ruth
was not, he's number one all time for war, I believe. Maybe, I think. Maybe he's number two
now. But he is not number one for either of these. He's five and four. And if you look at the
pitchers, the closest comparable is Roger Clemens, who is number
three before 30 and number four after 30. And just by that standard, you could, I mean, Roger Clemens
is close to the Babe Ruth of pitching. Roger Clemens is really, has a unbelievable career
compared to pretty much every other pitcher when you look at it this way. There's really nobody else who comes close to being that high for both decades.
You have a lot of pitchers who were unbelievably great for 10 years and are very high on one of these lists, like Randy Johnson, like Pedro Martinez.
But the other half, they just aren't that good.
You see a lot bigger discrepancy. But Roger Clemens was a top five player before 30 and a top five player after 30. And he's really the only pitcher and Walter Johnson, two guys who were great, obviously, but also pitched at a time when things were completely different. And you just threw way more games than pitchers do today. And so you had more opportunities to rack up wins above replacement, whereas Babe Ruth was mostly just a hitter. I mean, his pitching added to that also, but it's not as if he was, after he stopped
pitching regularly, used in some dramatically different way than players are today. He was just
that much better than everyone else. Randy Johnson, as we talked about in another episode,
is number one all time after 30. And I was shocked by how close number two is to him.
We might've even talked about, I might've been shocked at the time that we talked about it, but
he's got a pretty big gap on number three and a pretty big gap on number four. And you
can really see him. Randy Johnson after 30 is just unlike anything else that we really ever saw,
except for one pitcher who is within one win of him. Do you know who that pitcher is?
Yeah. I feel like we did talk about this. Was it a Necro?
It is. Yeah. It's the Necro. Phil Ne necro 89 wins after 30 yeah a lot that is a lot any other
notables that stand out to you who are on one list very high up but not on the other at all
uh who are very high up and not on the other at all that's a good question i i was more interested
for my purposes for guys guys who were very consistent.
So like Ricky Henderson is 20 and 21.
Greg Maddox is 14 and 14.
But yeah, like Brett Saberhagen was number 20.
And Kevin Apier was actually number 16 before 30.
And neither one is on the list at all for post 30.
Felix is actually number 15 all time for before.
And it'll be interesting to see whether
he makes the latter one
because his career has a certain
trajectory. Same with Sabathia, who's
23 all-time. Koufax,
of course, is on
one and not the other.
For hitters, actually, the top
11 hitters are all on
the post-30 list
as well, to varying degrees.
Like Mickey Mantle just makes it.
Albert Pujols is actually on it.
Surprised me a little bit.
Not high, but he is already on it.
So the highest player who's only on the pre-30 and not on the post-30 is, do you have a guess?
He's relevant currently, relatively relevant.
I mean, you read his name this summer a lot.
It's Ken Griffey.
Oh, right.
Ken Griffey, number 12, and didn't make it.
All right.
You got the fun one.
Ernie Banks.
Ernie Banks was number 31 before 30 and didn't make it after.
Huh.
I didn't know that.
Me neither.
Actually, there was an issue of Craig Wright's newsletter, a page from Baseball's Past,
which I subscribe to, Ernie Banks and now that
I think about it he had knee problems
And he had to switch from shortstop to first
Base and wasn't as valuable after that
So that explains that
Alright you can use the play index
Yourself use the coupon code BP
When you sign up at baseballreference.com
Get the discounted price of $30
On a one year subscription
Wait wait one more thing
Mike Trout
Who just turned 25
Is already number 49
On the pre-30 list
Wow
He's already ahead of Joe Morgan
Tim Raines
Guys who were pretty good
Where do you predict he will finish?
Let's see.
So he's got ages 25, 26, 27, 28, 29.
He's got five more years by baseball accounting.
So if he were an eight-win player for those five years, he would end up third all-time.
Slightly, slightly, slightly like a win behind Ty Cobb and Rogers Hornsby.
All right.
And a win ahead of Mickey Mantle
All right
Ahead of Ruth but probably not counting Ruth's pitching war
That's correct
All right question from BP's Matt Trueblood
So Dylan Bundy would obviously be claimed on waivers
In fact I bet he would be claimed on waivers by the first team with an opportunity to claim him on waivers
The Twins
So let's say they did that
And let's say the Twins then offered the Oriolesvin Santana straight up. They are not paying down the contract obligations in exchange
for Bundy. If you were Dan Duquette, would you do it? So my first response to this without thinking
about it all that much is absolutely not like I wouldn't even consider it. But Matt doesn't ask
frivolous questions. So can you make the case for why this is a perfectly reasonable offer?
It's funny because in episode two or so of this podcast,
I was making the case that the Orioles should have traded Dylan Bundy
and Manny Machado because that was their –
I thought that that year was their fluke window
and that they should make the most of it
and trade those guys who were both rookies having just made their debuts.
And I was wrong about their window, as everybody was and as some of us continue to be.
I was wrong about Manny Machado, the extremeness to which he is great.
But you could have traded Dylan Bundy and been pretty happy with that up to now.
But you could have traded Dylan Bundy and been pretty happy with that up to now.
But now, thanks to the fact that Dylan Bundy got injured at just the right time,
unless we were wrong when we looked at his service time last time,
they do still have him for six years.
And Dylan Bundy seems like a pretty good pitcher.
I wouldn't expect.
How many innings will Dylan Bundy pitch over the next six years?
Well, I guess that's the crux of the question. So the case for Urban Santana would be that he is fairly durable and he's a league average to better pitcher. He wasn't particularly durable last season, but for the most part, he'll be around 200 innings or so and he'll give you a league average ERA better some years.
better some years, and you can kind of count on that. And he signed for two years at a reasonable rate, 13.5 per with a $14 million team option for the third year. So you can reasonably expect,
I don't know, I mean, any pitcher probably you have to factor in some injuries when you're
going out three years. So I don't know what I'd
project from Irvin Santana over three seasons, maybe 400 innings or something like that.
So from Bundy, who hasn't pitched really any innings for the past few years and is now beyond
what he has done in any of those years. And as we talked about, maybe showing some signs of fatigue from that workload and having
had some serious injuries what would you project for him over six years probably not more than i
would project for santana over three yeah santana when he's not being suspended he does he does give
you 200 innings a year yes i i i probably uh part of my snap judgment is that I just don't like Irvin Santana as much as I probably should.
I have a feeling about him being lumped in with other guys that the twins have signed basically.
And that before him –
Kevin Correa or Ricky Nolasco or something.
Right, exactly.
And before him, guys that the Royals were acquiring for their rotation.
So I probably lump him in as a worse pitcher than he is.
He's a perfectly adequate pitcher.
He is worth starting in a postseason game.
And I would have put him just below that line.
And I think I'm wrong about that.
He's not – if he is starting game one for you
Which he would for the Orioles maybe
Then you've got a very uphill climb
To the World Series
But he is better than Ricky Nolasco
Yes, definitely
And he's better than Ricky Nolasco has been for years
And he's better than
Matt Latos
And he's better than Aaron Horang.
And those are the guys that I sort of am thinking of him as being with.
I don't know why that is.
I don't know why I have such a negative feeling toward him.
I guess maybe because of his last year with the Angels?
I would say that is probably it.
It is because of his last year with the Angels, which I covered.
Yeah.
So, right.
So if you have him starting early in a playoff series that's probably not great
But he will start
In a playoff series at least if you want him to
Which you can't really say about Dylan Bundy
And he doesn't have any of the upside
He's not going to turn
Into a top of the rotation starter
Which Dylan Bundy at least has a chance
To be but he's
Also going to be there probably
So it's just a high floor versus high ceiling low
floor kind of argument so uh bundy will make you know roughly in six years he'll make roughly what
santana is going to make in three yeah roughly speaking yeah um and so if i told you 450
innings for bundy do you take the over or under on that over the next six years?
Probably under.
Yeah.
I mean, the most likely number is the mode, I guess, would be sub 50.
It still remains relatively likely that he just, you know, something snaps again.
Yeah.
But that's probably only like 8% likely.
There's a lot of possibilities.
Yeah.
But that's probably only like 8% likely.
There's a lot of possibilities.
I think I'd probably go over 450 and like I would go under 650 though, I think. Uh-huh.
And so they're paid close to the same.
Their innings are relatively close.
Although Santana, you can, you know, the floor is, the realistic floor is is probably like his mode is not under 50 no and
santana is available for this postseason which and this pennant race which is the only thing that we
know is going to happen in the future of the world uh every year after that becomes less predictable
and so there's some benefit to getting it now, right now for the Orioles where they are. Of course, Bundy is available sort of right now.
Yeah.
If I had the decision-making power to make this trade though, I would also have the decision-making power to shut Bundy down.
And I think I would.
Even in the pennant race?
I wouldn't for most pitchers, and I'm probably more of the let the guy keep pitching school than baseball GMs have been over the last few years.
But with Bundy, I think so, yeah.
I mean, 60 innings over the last three years total.
Yeah.
And the signs are not suggesting anything other than fatigue to my eye, to my way of thinking about it. And he's young
and he's got a potentially extremely bright future. I mean, he still has the potential
legitimately to be a number one, a guy who's, you know, a true ace making the minimum for you
next year. So yeah, I think I would, I would shut him down down Okay, so it turns out to be a better question
Than it seems like at first blush, I think
So it's not a no-doubter
Yeah, if the choice is
Oh man
If the choice is Bundy keeps pitching
For the rest of this year
Or getting Santana
I think I take Santana
If the choice is Bundy gets shut down, paradoxically,
or maybe not paradoxically, but sort of surprisingly,
the less I expect from Bundy this year, the more I want him.
So it's a tough question.
Yeah, it's a fine question.
It's a tough question.
I'm probably wrong.
All right.
I don't think I'd do it.
I changed my mind. I don't like I do it I changed my mind
I don't like Irvin Santana
So you changed your mind twice
I'm changing my mind
No matter what
I'm turning it down no matter what
I'm keeping Bundy no matter what
I'm either rolling the dice on him pitching this year
Or I'm taking the long-term upside of next year onward
And I'm keeping Dylan Bundy in this scenario.
All right.
I think I am keeping him also.
All right.
So we will leave it there.
One cool thing to announce,
free offer for Effectively Wild listeners.
One of our listeners is Clay Dreslow,
who is the developer of Baseball Mogul,
the much-loved baseball simulation management computer game, which is
on its, I think, 19th installment, something like that. Always gets good reviews and is right up the
alley of most of our listeners. Clay has just offered to give it away for free. So if you join
our Facebook group, I will post the link in there to last year's version of the game, Baseball Mogul
Diamond, and anyone who's in
the Facebook group can download it using that link. And Clay is also offering a free download
of the latest version of the game, Baseball Mogul 2016, to our Patreon supporters at the $15 level.
So I will add that information and message those people too. So free computer game. If you've never
tried Baseball Mogulul i have seen firsthand what
it can do it's my roommate in college started playing baseball mogul and then just never
stopped playing baseball mogul for days weeks months after that so if you feel like getting
addicted to a cool baseball game you can do that it's a very statistically sophisticated sim i've
used it for articles in the past You can take over historical teams
It also has updated rosters
So you can take over a current franchise
It's a good game with a long legacy
So join the Facebook group
Facebook.com slash groups slash Effectively Wild
And try it out
So thanks Clay
Alright so that is it for today
If you aren't the developer of a respected baseball simulation
You can still support the podcast in another way By going to Patreon at patreon.com slash effectively wild.
Five listeners who have already pledged their support.
Mark Hauscher, Dan Shatuck, Eric Saar, Jesse Schwartz, and Doug Gale.
Thank you.
As mentioned, you can find our Facebook group at facebook.com slash groups slash effectively wild.
And you can rate and review and subscribe to the podcast on iTunes.
You can buy our book, The Only Rules It Has to Work,
our wild experiment building a new kind of baseball team.
Check out the website at theonlyrulesithastowork.com.
And please leave us a review on Amazon and Goodreads if you like the book.
You can reach us at podcastatbaseballperspectives.com
or by messaging us through Patreon.
I'll have an episode of the Ringer MLB show up tomorrow,
so you can listen to me there.
And Sam and I will be back with another episode of effectively wild later this week
i've got no answers
i've got no answers
i've got no answers