2018

2019

Is it projected to finish at 7,000? It looks like it bounces several hundred either way each year.Sibelius Hindemith wrote: ↑Fri Sep 13, 2019 3:12 pmWhen it jumps by 1500 from one year to the next, it's mainly the ball. All you really need to do is look at individual players' velocity off the bat and fly ball percentages. I'm guessing the former went up this year while the latter didn't so much. And then there is the forensic evidence...
I think this misses what the problem with the Mariners was this year. Hittable pitching and bad defense in combination with not just HR but hard hit balls rising. Yes, Kikuchi and Leake's HR issues were real (both top 5 still in MLB HR given up) but both are better with better defense behind them. You simply can't ignore defense.bpj wrote: ↑Fri Sep 13, 2019 2:37 pmTotal MLB Homeruns
2000: 5,693
2001: 5,458
2002: 5,059
2003: 5,207
2004: 5,451
2005: 5,017
2006: 5,386
2007: 4,957
2008: 4,878
2009: 5,042
2010: 4,613
2011: 4,552
2012: 4,934
2013: 4,661
2014: 4,186
2015: 4,909
2016: 5,610
2017: 6,105
2018: 5,585
2019: 6,173 currently
With all the talk of "Moneyball", teams have simply become much more power-centric than ever. Whether it's the ball or not, chasing speed, defense and stolen bases in todays game is foolish. You can't defend against a homerun, so you'd better be able to hit some of your own.
Those numbers don't say it's the ball to me. More and more teams are adding power at every possible position because it's what works. We have the best talent from around the world reaching MLB these days more tham ever. This is the result imo.
Looking at the prospects and team what we're looking at having a real good chance of around 21-22 is a team full of guys with speed and defense but also plenty of hit, power, arm and eye throughout. People will focus on the hit and power and give less credit to the other skills as per usual. Having a complete lack of speed kills teams. We've experienced base clogging at its ugliest before.bpj wrote: ↑Fri Sep 13, 2019 6:21 pmNobody wants to ignore defense. It's just at the bottom of my list of priorities instead of the top. Pretty much exactly the same thing you said.
A Vogelbach won't survive anywhere but DH or 1B. That much we can easily agree on.
On the other hand a Nola would be just fine at 3B/2B/C with close to an .800 OPS bat and average-ish defense, but is likely not a fit at 1B/DH because his OPS is likely to top out somewhere under .800 which doesnt fit the 1B profile without the gold glove defense.