helloimustbegoing said:
His 2 career sacrifice flys are against the Astros and the Mets.
Even though I know that, objectively, this is true, there are some stats that seem so preposterous that one's immediate reaction is "haha, you made that up".
It should be acknowledged that sac flies are obviously not a True Outcome that is within the batter's control. That is why a modern base ball Svengali like Joseph Gallo does not care about them. Joey cannot conjure a batter on third with less than two outs whenever he likes.
Nonetheless, I seemed to recall that a solid Yankees outfielder of yore, for example, Paul O'Neill, used to hit quite a few sac flies. Obviously we are not talking about a Hall of Famer here, just a solid contributor on a good team like Our Joseph.
So I went to the data to cross check my memory against reality, and indeed, Paul O'Neill hit 90 sac flies in his career in about three times as many at bats as Joey. That indicates that Joey is FIFTEEN TIMES less likely to hit a sac fly versus Paul O'Neil, which again sounds so ludicrous that it beggars belief.
Lastly, although there is obviously no TexAgs MLB sac fly thread and never will be, I took it another step farther and decided to look into the shortest period of time that it took Paul O'Neill to hit two sac flies.
The answer was: One game, twice (7-13-95 off Kyle Tapani & Eddie Guardado of the Minnesota Twins, and 5-10-98 off of Eric Milton and Eddie Guardado of, natch, the Minnesota Twins).
Twice in his career, Paul O'Neill matched the
career sacrifice fly numbers of Joey Gallo in
one game.Examining Joey's greatness is like the blind men trying to describe an elephant. Every time you think you have a handle on it, another piece of amazing information comes in and shocks you all over again.
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