Coog97 said:
The Porkchop Express said:
Mathguy64 said:
Farmer1906 said:
Jeff Bagwell 91-95
26.6 WAR
148 wRC+
113 HR
469 RBI
2975 PA
Yordan Alvarez 19-24
23.3 WAR
166 wRC+
164 HR
466 RBI
2668 PA
How much of that 91-95 Bagwell data set if from that 94 season? That partial season was the greatest RHH season I have ever seen. Without the broken hand and strike it would have assaulted the record books in ways never seen.
It is a staggering exercise in what-ifs. The season ended after 113 games, Bagwell had played 110.
Simple stat projections to 162 games for him
573 AB
149 runs scored
211 hits
46 doubles
56 HR
166 RBI
22 SB
93 BB
93 K
.368 / .451 / . 750
The all-time bummer of the season is that the strike cost Tony Gwynn a legit shot at .400. The Padres had played 117 games and he was hitting .394
Gwynn was on pace for 228 hits. He entered August hitting .385 and had started the month hitting .475 through 10 games (19 for 40).
The 94 strike may have also very well ended the Expos dynasty before it had a chance to begin. 30 years later, it still turns my stomach.
It also kept Matt Williams from hunting down Roger Maris. Williams had 43 and was on pace for 62. Strike kept him from 400 HR.
And Greg Maddux was having an unreal season. He was first in ERA at 1.56, and #2 was Bret Sabehagen at 2.74. Maddux had 16 wins and was on pace for 23. The next year he was 19-2 with a 1.63 ERA, but 1994 was potentially going to be better.
That expos team was off the charts amazing. Best OF in baseball - Moises, Marquis Grissom, and pre-Rockies Larry Walker. Not to mention 22-year-old Pedro Martinez.
Life is better with a beagle