CookyPuss
Screw Blue
Jaxbuck;831196; said:.02:
-RO flat owns our ass
-Once again the only run is produced by the guy who simply isn't a run producer
-Fuck!!!
I've been trying to figure out this whole "not a run producer" thing for a while. The arguments for are that Dunn cannot hit a sac fly to save his life, he K's at record rates, and he seems to hit a good number of solo homers each year when the game doesn't "matter" (7th inning shot in a 8 run game). Okay, so what do the numbers tell us?
I looked at how many RBIs guys produce based upon situation (none on, runner on 1st, scoring position). I looked at Griff's career numbers and last 3 years and the percentages were roughly the same (I thought there would be a drop but there wasn't). Everyone else, I only looked career.
RBI per at bat
Player Empty On 1st RISP
Griffey .07 .16 .48
Dunn .07 .16 .39
Edwin .04 .08 .47
Phillips .02 .08 .36
Hatte .02 .08 .39
What this tells me is that Dunn is a better "run producer" without RISP than most, and probably a little above average with RISP. Griffey and Edwin are the guys your monsters with RISP. Just for curiosity, I looked up Aurillia's numbers from last year because he was so highly regarded as "clutch." He was a .40 guy with RISP, not really any better than Dunn and not as good as Griff or Edwin. He had a few "timely hits" that created this perception. What this info tells me is that Moron (I mean Narron) actually was onto something when he had Dunn-Edwin-Griff in that order. The only debate is whether you put Dunn at 2 or 3. I say 3 because that allows you to bat Hatte/Conine in the 2 spot. Also, if neither of the first 2 guys gets on, Dunn gives you the best chance of still making something happen. I have seen some stats that say lineups don't really matter (especially after the 1st two innings), but I wasn't able to determine if they factored for NL vs AL. I think it makes much more of a difference in the NL due to the pitcher spot. Anyways, based on what I see here, I'd go with a lineup of:
Hamilton (Best lead-off option with Freel on bench)
Hatte/Conine (Good bat control for hit+run/work count)
Dunn (most likely to produce with 1/no one on)
Edwin (RH most likely to produce with RISP)
Griff (LH most likely to produce with RISP)
Phillips (Low OBP keeps him from 2 spot)
Gonzo (Hot now, will regress to his norm)
Ross/Javy (You have to have a catcher)
Pitcher
(If Freel plays 3rd for Edwin, I bat Hamilton #2 and Conine #4 w/Hatte on bench).
I think this also puts your top 3 OBP guys in the top 3, which is where you want them. It makes no sense to put your top OBP guy (Dunn) in the 6 spot, where he is less likely to get knocked in. I love Marty, but he is dead wrong on this one. And Narron is stupid for listening to the idea if that's where he got it from. Dunn is very well suited for the 3 hole and will produce runs in droves in that spot both by knocking them in and getting on in front of Edwin/Griff.
Dunn is not a "contact hitter" is a true statement, that is very different than not a "run producer." I think in the NL you need a "contact hitter" in the 2 hole. Hatte/Conine are your best option there. Hamilton is still figuring things out and is going to take his rookie lumps. I think he will see alot of good pitches batting lead-off and he has some wheels. I was hoping Phillips would develop into a #2 hitter. He does seem to be taking more pitches, but he is still a hacker at heart. I would really like his speed at the top. He is far from your ideal #3 hitter, athough he is less likely than Dunn to hit into a "Casey."
As we all know, Narron will continue to fuss and fidget with the lineup card. I say you put Dunn-Edwin-Griff 3-4-5 every day and fuss with the rest if you want.
Edit: Except when Oswalt is pitching, then nothing matters.
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