Nolan had a couple tough losses but nothing historic in 9 innings.
And don't forget, he lead the majors in strikeouts that year with 270. The ultimate hard luck season.Quote:
In 1987 he went 8-16 and lead the league in ERA.
Safe at Home said:And don't forget, he lead the majors in strikeouts that year with 270. The ultimate hard luck season.Quote:
In 1987 he went 8-16 and lead the league in ERA.
Diggity said:
Just goes to show how useless the W-L metric is. People have figured that out now.
Quote:
I remember that season, he was incredible, the offense when he pitched, not so much.
well, I could argue that the current W-L marks of the Astros starters...is very indicative of how they have pitchedDiggity said:
Just goes to show how useless the W-L metric is. People have figured that out now.
It's not useless, it tells you something valuable it just shouldn't be used as the primary measure of how well a pitcher performed. It's no different than RBI. It is a statistic based on skill, but also involving good fortune and teammates doing their jobs well.Diggity said:
Just goes to show how useless the W-L metric is. People have figured that out now.
So... basically useless when telling us about pitcher performance?Harry Dunne said:It's not useless, it tells you something valuable it just shouldn't be used as the primary measure of how well a pitcher performed. It's no different than RBI. It is a statistic based on skill, but also involving good fortune and teammates doing their jobs well.Diggity said:
Just goes to show how useless the W-L metric is. People have figured that out now.
Or 1984 when Jose Cruz led the team with 12 home runs!Safe at Home said:And don't forget, he lead the majors in strikeouts that year with 270. The ultimate hard luck season.Quote:
In 1987 he went 8-16 and lead the league in ERA.
not totally useless. Just not comprehensive. With a few exceptions that pitched for teams with high-powered offenses or just got very lucky, a 20-game winner tells you that someone had a great season. A 15-game winner tells you they had a pretty good one. Even the casual baseball fan knows that, so it has value. The slightly more in-depth fan can look at ERA along with the win loss record. Really knowledgeable fans look further than that.irish pete ag06 said:So... basically useless when telling us about pitcher performance?Harry Dunne said:It's not useless, it tells you something valuable it just shouldn't be used as the primary measure of how well a pitcher performed. It's no different than RBI. It is a statistic based on skill, but also involving good fortune and teammates doing their jobs well.Diggity said:
Just goes to show how useless the W-L metric is. People have figured that out now.
k20dub said:
Game today starts at 5:10. Watch the Astros for 3 hours then switch to the Rockets game right after at 8.
updated itBowSowy said:
You can change it yourself if you go to your profile page
I look at ERA for starting pitchers, and ERA/WHIP for relieversHarry Dunne said:
Tell me a basic statistic that you think is valuable for pitchers. None of this BABIVORP sequencing **** either. Something most people in the ballpark are going to know.
ERA and WHIP for common statistics.Harry Dunne said:
Tell me a basic statistic that you think is valuable for pitchers. None of this BABIVORP sequencing **** either. Something most people in the ballpark are going to know.
So are we saying that if the majority of our society doesn't know about something, then it isn't an effective measure?? If that's our cutoff, then I should just return my degrees.Harry Dunne said:
Tell me a basic statistic that you think is valuable for pitchers. None of this BABIVORP sequencing **** either. Something most people in the ballpark are going to know.
You're getting it backwards. I think all of those statistics are more accurate and more useful. I'm just arguing that wins are not useless insomuch as they provide some context for average Joe fan.Buck Compton said:So are we saying that if the majority of our society doesn't know about something, then it isn't an effective measure?? If that's our cutoff, then I should just return my degrees.Harry Dunne said:
Tell me a basic statistic that you think is valuable for pitchers. None of this BABIVORP sequencing **** either. Something most people in the ballpark are going to know.
The entire fact that people don't believe in some of the more accurate statistics is LITERALLY the only thing that provides any sort of competitive advantage for a GM...
Eh... maybe you're right.Diggity said:
I just can't think of any other statistic that is less in a players control than W/L record.
That, to me, makes it of little use.
Keuchel leads the AL in losses (6) while posting a 3.43 ERA. Please argue that his record is indicative of how he's pitched.W said:well, I could argue that the current W-L marks of the Astros starters...is very indicative of how they have pitchedDiggity said:
Just goes to show how useless the W-L metric is. People have figured that out now.
I can't decide if its more or less useless than saves. Both stats need to just go away.irish pete ag06 said:
I am pretty sure we agree on what useless means. It literally means nothing about how a pitcher performs. Nothing. I have no idea why people even refer to it anymore. That and the save. On a useless scale of 1-10 those are 10s. RBIs are about an 8.
astros4545 said:k20dub said:
Game today starts at 5:10. Watch the Astros for 3 hours then switch to the Rockets game right after at 8.
Why starting so early in Cleveland
Don't those people have jobs