Ag2012 said:
friscodick said:
Ag2012 said:
friscodick said:
Beltran hasn't been as good at the plate as we hoped but you can't measure the mentoring he's provided to all the young guys (and we have plenty). The plate discipline our team shows now compared to the last few years is night and day (we used to be a team full of Jake's...HR's or strikeouts and that's not a winning recipe).
The only thing Gomez mentored anyone on was how to bat flip and act like an a$$.
Huh, I guess I didn't realize y'all's .240 hitter was moonlighting as the hitting coach. Funny how you guys are all about advanced metrics until they don't advance your argument and then it's right back to anecdotes and intangibles.
You mean the guy with 20 years of MLB experience, once one of the best 5 tool players around, and one of the purest switch hitters to ever play the game. Yeah, just a crappy .240 hitter with nothing to offer the young guys.
Please do go on. I was told all last season that clubhouse chemistry, veteran leadership and response to adversity were just make believe things that must be false because they aren't a statistical category on Fangraphs.
There must have been some sabermetric advancement this offseason that made those legitimate factors to baseball success.
Nope.
You were told all last year by me that your team was the luckiest, most fortunate, whatever you want to call it team when it came to sequencing and cluster luck. The Rangers outplayed their Pythagorean by 13 games which is the highest since the 2009 Baltimore Orioles outplayed theirs by 11.
You were told by me and many other "saber nerds" that out playing your Pythagorean by that much of a margin has never in the history of baseball been proven to be a repeatable skill.
So, last year I said multiple times that the Rangers were the luckiest .500 team in recent MLB history. Welp, your team is proving me right. So far this year you have a +28 run differential. Through game 74 last year you had a +38 run differential. Your 3 games below your pythagorean this year.
So essentially through 74 games, pythagorean record for the Rangers
2016: 39-35
2017: 40-34
This is the same team minus the historic luck. Oh and the Rangers are 4-12 in 1-run games this year. So you Rangers fans have that regression to look forward to... or should I remind you, sometimes regression doesn't come in 1 season.