="soupcan"]Edgy DC wrote: Coors isn't really Coors anymore. |
It's now MillerCoors
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soupcan Nov 11 2008 08:04 AM
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Oh.
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Vince Coleman Firecracker Nov 11 2008 08:39 AM
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John Cougar Lunchbucket wrote: I think Holliday is pretty good, but not a great given the fact he can't run or field very well. |
Actually, he's a pretty damn good [url=http://www.baseballprospectus.com/statistics/sortable/index.php?cid=421535]baserunner[/url], 6th best in the league, according to BP.
="Edgy DC"]Holliday's splits last year:
Home: .332 / .413 / .584 // .997 Away: .308 / .405 / .486 // .892
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His career splits:
Home: .357 / .423 / .645 // 1.068 Away: .280 / .348 / .455 // .803
Not bad away from home, but not close to a superstar.
="Edgy DC"]Coors isn't really Coors anymore. |
Coors Field Park Factor, 2008:
Batting - 125, Pitching - 126
For comparison, Citizen's Bank Park, 2008:
Batting - 102, Pitching - 101
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soupcan Nov 11 2008 08:42 AM
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="Vince Coleman Firecracker"]="Edgy DC"]Coors isn't really Coors anymore. |
Coors Field Park Factor, 2008:
Batting - 125, Pitching - 126
For comparison, Citizen's Bank Park, 2008:
Batting - 102, Pitching - 101 |
So.......it is still Coors?
Not that I know what any of those numbers mean.
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Edgy DC Nov 11 2008 08:45 AM
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="soupcan"]="Edgy DC"] Coors isn't really Coors anymore. |
Why is that? It's still in Denver.
Not trying to be contrary just genuinely wondering what they've done there to compensate besides playing with soggy balls (that's what she said). |
The why isn't really what I'm commenting on --- cold balls, I guess is part of it. Maybe, if we read the fine print on the steroids ban, we'll see that they must've applied it to parks as well.
The what, though is an offensive park factor that's drastically reduced from where it had been.
2008: 105 2007: 109 2006: 107 2005: 110 2004: 119 2003: 110 2002: 117 2001: 121 2000: 129 1999: 125 1998: 125 1997: 113 1996: 129 1995: 128
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Vince Coleman Firecracker Nov 11 2008 08:47 AM
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Oops, put the wrong year for Coors. Here's 2008:
Park Factors (multi-year): Batting - 107, Pitching - 107 (one-year): Batting - 105, Pitching - 106
So, it was a normal Coors-y year.
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soupcan Nov 11 2008 08:52 AM
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Point me in a direction where I can find out what those numbers mean please.
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Vince Coleman Firecracker Nov 11 2008 08:53 AM
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soupcan wrote: Point me in a direction where I can find out what those numbers mean please. |
[url=http://www.baseball-reference.com/about/parkadjust.shtml]Here ya go[/url]!
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Vince Coleman Firecracker Nov 11 2008 08:57 AM
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="Edgy DC"]="soupcan"]="Edgy DC"] Coors isn't really Coors anymore. |
Why is that? It's still in Denver.
Not trying to be contrary just genuinely wondering what they've done there to compensate besides playing with soggy balls (that's what she said). |
The why isn't really what I'm commenting on --- cold balls, I guess is part of it. Maybe, if we read the fine print on the steroids ban, we'll see that they must've applied it to parks as well.
The what, though is an offensive park factor that's drastically reduced from where it had been.
2008: 105 2007: 109 2006: 107 2005: 110 2004: 119 2003: 110 2002: 117 2001: 121 2000: 129 1999: 125 1998: 125 1997: 113 1996: 129 1995: 128 |
You know what? I stand corrected. The historic park factor is only a 3 year span (for some reason). Coors, while still among the best hitter's parks in the game, is no longer Coors.
Fun fact! [url=http://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/NYM/2008.shtml]Shea[/url] was park-neutral last year!
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John Cougar Lunchbucket Nov 11 2008 08:58 AM
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Vince Coleman Firecracker wrote: Actually, he's a pretty damn good [url=http://www.baseballprospectus.com/statistics/sortable/index.php?cid=421535]baserunner[/url], 6th best in the league, according to BP.
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Yeah, call me a dinosaur on baserunning and fielding assessments but I go by EB (eyewitness baserunning) first then consider the other stuff. I'm sure his overall contribution is a positive one, he just doesn't look good getting it done. He also doesn't rank nearly as well in those categories in 07.
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Vince Coleman Firecracker Nov 11 2008 09:05 AM
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John Cougar Lunchbucket wrote: He also doesn't rank nearly as well in those categories in 07. |
But he was right there with speedsters Jason Tyner, Shane Victorino and Nate McClouth and was still rated better than Chase Utley, David Wright, and Hanley Ramirez, among many others.
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batmagadanleadoff Nov 11 2008 09:44 AM
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Vince Coleman Firecracker wrote: I think Holliday gets exposed this season. He'll only be a cut above league average away from Coors. |
I love it when this stuff happens to a Rockie. I'm so sick of players from that team being regarded as if they were as good as Ted Williams. It's only a matter of time before the Rockies eventually do get the next legitimate Ted Williams. And that guy'll probably bat .500 with 70 home runs a season over there.
If I was in charge of things, I would've never put a team in Denver in the first place. I realize that the city does a terrific job of supporting the Rockies, but I loathe the way the extreme atmospheric conditions in Denver distort the statistical end of the game.
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batmagadanleadoff Nov 11 2008 09:47 AM
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="soupcan"]="Vince Coleman Firecracker"]="Edgy DC"]Coors isn't really Coors anymore. |
Coors Field Park Factor, 2008:
Batting - 125, Pitching - 126
For comparison, Citizen's Bank Park, 2008:
Batting - 102, Pitching - 101 |
So.......it is still Coors?
Not that I know what any of those numbers mean. |
Coors is no longer the freak show that it was up until a few years ago, but even by present standards, it's still an extremely favorable hitter's park.
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Edgy DC Nov 11 2008 09:53 AM
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I think going from 129 to 105 has kind of redefined extreme.
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John Cougar Lunchbucket Nov 11 2008 09:56 AM
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batmagadanleadoff wrote:
="Vince Coleman Firecracker"]I think Holliday gets exposed this season. He'll only be a cut above league average away from Coors. |
I love it when this stuff happens to a Rockie. I'm so sick of players from that team being regarded as if they were as good as Ted Williams. It's only a matter of time before the Rockies eventually do get the next legitimate Ted Williams. And that guy'll probably bat .500 with 70 home runs a season over there.
If I was in charge of things, I would've never put a team in Denver in the first place. I realize that the city does a terrific job of supporting the Rockies, but I loathe the way the extreme atmospheric conditions in Denver distort the statistical end of the game. |
I totally disgree with this. I like that there's a team in Denver, because their fans support it first, but especially because it showcases the diversity of the conditions in our country. And seeing how the team can adapt to the advanrtages and disadvantages of its home park has always been a fun part of baseball. I care not for how fucked up the stats become.
It's windy in San Francisco, humid in Miami, pleasant in SD, cold in Detroit, etc etc. That's baseball in the USA, I say.
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batmagadanleadoff Nov 11 2008 10:00 AM
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="Edgy DC"]I think going from 129 to 105 has kind of redefined extreme. |
I know what you mean. I posted my message before I got through reading the entire thread. We'll see if 105 is a fluke or representsative of the new trend. I still hate Coors, though. The air is still thin ... it still reduces the break on a pitched ball. The place is just too odd for baseball at the major league level, if anyone asks me. (No one has). I'm also suspicious of this humidor thing and the way it's enforced. How does anyone know if the Rockies aren't getting livelier balls to hit?
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batmagadanleadoff Nov 11 2008 10:02 AM
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John Cougar Lunchbucket wrote:
="batmagadanleadoff"]="Vince Coleman Firecracker"]I think Holliday gets exposed this season. He'll only be a cut above league average away from Coors. |
I love it when this stuff happens to a Rockie. I'm so sick of players from that team being regarded as if they were as good as Ted Williams. It's only a matter of time before the Rockies eventually do get the next legitimate Ted Williams. And that guy'll probably bat .500 with 70 home runs a season over there.
If I was in charge of things, I would've never put a team in Denver in the first place. I realize that the city does a terrific job of supporting the Rockies, but I loathe the way the extreme atmospheric conditions in Denver distort the statistical end of the game. |
I totally disgree with this. I like that there's a team in Denver, because their fans support it first, but especially because it showcases the diversity of the conditions in our country. And seeing how the team can adapt to the advanrtages and disadvantages of its home park has always been a fun part of baseball. I care not for how fucked up the stats become.
It's windy in San Francisco, humid in Miami, pleasant in SD, cold in Detroit, etc etc. That's baseball in the USA, I say. |
I agree with every single point you made. Except the part about the stats.
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smg58 Nov 11 2008 10:03 AM
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Holliday could still post an OPS a bit above .900 playing in Oakland. It's a fair question, though, if one year of that from a leftfielder is worth an established closer, a young starting pitcher whose rookie year performance was better than his won-lost record by itself would suggest, and a toolsy outfielder who ranked high on most top prospect lists the last two years.
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Edgy DC Nov 11 2008 10:16 AM
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="batmagadanleadoff"]="Edgy DC"]I think going from 129 to 105 has kind of redefined extreme. |
I know what you mean. I posted my message before I got through reading the entire thread. We'll see if 105 is a fluke or representsative of the new trend |
It's been trending downwards since 2001.
="batmagadanleadoff"]I'm also suspicious of this humidor thing and the way it's enforced. How does anyone know if the Rockies aren't getting livelier balls to hit? |
It's the umpire who decides which balls to put in play.
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batmagadanleadoff Nov 11 2008 10:43 AM
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="Edgy DC"]="batmagadanleadoff"]="Edgy DC"]I think going from 129 to 105 has kind of redefined extreme. |
I know what you mean. I posted my message before I got through reading the entire thread. We'll see if 105 is a fluke or representsative of the new trend |
It's been trending downwards since 2001.
="batmagadanleadoff"]I'm also suspicious of this humidor thing and the way it's enforced. How does anyone know if the Rockies aren't getting livelier balls to hit? |
It's the umpire who decides which balls to put in play. |
Is this entirely blind and random? How does the system work, exactly?. I'm asking because I'm not sure. I thought that the Rockies managed and supervised the humidor. My web search to determine precisely how the humidor balls are distributed, step-by-step was unsuccessful.
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