YEAR/TEAM / POS KAZ 2005 2B NYM JOSE 2004 NYM 2B
GP GS INN TC PO A E DP FPCT RF ZR 44 43 365 180 68 107 5 19 .972 4.32 .748 43 41 352 196 75 117 4 26 .980 4.91 .866
Before last night's game, they had each played 43 games at second base with very different results. What's the same of course is
1) new position, moving from short to second with only an off-season to make the adjustment
2) Shea infield
3) Mets pitching staff (basically the same, Pedro instead of Leiter the main difference)
etc.
Remember, Jose was not deemed a miracle man at second base last year. He was good, he showed promise, but he wasn't the return of Charlie Gehringer. No one was marvelling over his phenomenal fielding, and his stats place him in the middle of the pack for 2004 secondbasemen. Kaz's stats place him at the bottom or close to it in all major defensive categories. Look at the range differences between Kaz and Jose. How many extra plays did Jose make that Kaz isn't getting to? Jose was making close to a play per game that Kaz is not making, and it shows up all over the chart above, with many if not all of the same explanations applying.
|