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| OOTP 18 - General Discussions Everything about the 2017 version of Out of the Park Baseball - officially licensed by MLB.com and the MLBPA. |
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#1 |
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Minors (Rookie Ball)
Join Date: Mar 2017
Posts: 25
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Your opinions on Award winners?
So I just finished a season, and before awards come out I go to manual award voting and checked computer's decision. Its decision regarding AL MVP and Cy Young surprises me and I would love to hear your opinions on the matter.
AL MVP: https://imgur.com/vSqmv7v The computer select Rowdy Tellez to be the winner, Aaron Judge to be the runner-up and Josh Donaldson comes in third. Tellez primarily played (120 games) as DH, spend the rest of time playing 1B, so his WAR is affected a bit. He did break all-time rookie HR and RBI record and it would be great to have him win MVP also, but still I think his lack of contribution defensively should prevent him from winning. Machado, as you can see, had a monstrous season. He would be my top pick. He had a great lead in WAR despite missing around a month of action. Does this and/or Orioles' poor performance (67-95) as a whole kept him away from computer's top 3? AL Cy Young: https://i.imgur.com/XM70Fs1.jpg The computer choose Andrew Miller to win, Joe Biagini to be the runner-up and Aroldis Chapman third. As you can see, most (or maybe I should all) AL SPs had mediocre seasons. None really stands out except Joe Biagini, who wasn't actually amazing either. I wonder would this justify an elite closer win Cy Young. Miller blew only one save and Chapman blew 3 , all coming in a tough week. They both had a good year and Miller is clearly (I hope?) the better of the two. Still, they are not close Britton's performance in real life last year and since Britton did not win, should they? I would love to hear your opinion on this, also just any general award voting rule of thumb would be appreciated. I could supply any further stats on demand. Last edited by El Nino; 09-06-2017 at 02:14 PM. |
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#2 |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Inside The Game
Posts: 30,937
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no problem with either Tellez or Miller for me
__________________
Go today don't wait for tomorrow It isn't promised, all the time you get borrowed Don't live your life for other people Don't bottle your emotions till they crack and fill a couple just sorrows Take your mind and refocus go get a paper write your goals out Throw your middle fingers to all your haters "Stay Strong"
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#3 |
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Minors (Triple A)
Join Date: May 2016
Posts: 252
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I think it would be a travesty if Machado didn't win the MVP. He had a monster season and a 4.5 win advantage over Tellez in WAR is huge. Machado produced only 1.4 WAR less than Tellez and Judge combined and if you scaled his season to equal the same number of games as Tellez and Judge combined, he's only 0.3 WAR short. I think the AI is over-valuing HR's in this case.
The pitchers are not quite so clear-cut. Fulmer is an interesting case. Despite his high ERA, he lead all of the other starters in FIP and WAR. He struck out a bunch and hardly walked anyone and kept the ball in the park. But he gave up too many hits and his WHIP is the worst of everyone on the list. Miller was utterly dominant, but a closer just doesn't pitch enough to be as valuable as even a mediocre starter in my mind. That 4.3 difference in WAR looms large. Stroman and Archer were next best in WAR and had nearly identical seasons to each other. But their WHIPs were also on the high side. Biagini kept people off the bases nearly as well as the closers did, but his 4.4 WAR is a little puny. I think the decision comes down to how much you value dominance (Miller) or overall contribution (Fulmer) or some combination of the two. What I really want to do on this one is abstain. OK. I'm voting for Fulmer... no Miller! ... no Biagini! No, I'm going to flip a coin, heads Stroman, tails Archer. Wait a minute. I can't decide between Stroman and Archer, so I'm ruling them out.... OK. OK. It's Miller. Nah it can't be a closer with only 2.3 WAR. OK then. Fulmer! But he keeps getting hammered.... The league's hitting .285 against him and his ERA is over 4.00! You're going to give the Cy Young to someone with a 4.20 ERA? OK then, Biagini. Compromise solution. Good WHIP, decent ERA. But only 4.2 WAR? Fulmer was over two wins more productive! OK. Are you a traditionalist of a sabermetric guy? Do you believe in WAR? (yes). OK, then it has to be Fulmer. Hold your nose. OK. Fulmer. |
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#4 |
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Banned
Join Date: Apr 2015
Posts: 7,273
Infractions: 0/1 (3)
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that's a ridiculout decision for the MVP, but it'd be tough for me to give the cy young for 65IP, there's not a steller SP season but quite a few contenders, nonetheless.
biagini or whatever, i'd go with... devinski had a low whip and good k and bb rates. but hr rate was a bit high. i look at awards and 100% based on results, including whatever luck they had that year, good or bad... i don't 'normalize' for those things in my head. this is mostly the opposite of how i evaluate players... funny stuff... and why i don't put any stock into awards. i do make a change or two on occasion after asking computer for the award winners.. ootp and i have some differences of opinions, imagine that. |
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#5 | |
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Minors (Double A)
Join Date: Sep 2016
Location: Northern Indiana, USA
Posts: 121
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Quote:
As for MVP, homeruns and RBI's are overvalued, but they always have been in MLB history. It's odd how the selection of Cy Young looks to be driven by WAR alone, yet the most obvious MVP candidate has the highest WAR, and didn't even finish in the top 3. While I do think Machado's numbers prove he probably deserves it, it isn't a landslide. I'd have Machado and Kepler 1-2, despite their poor RBI numbers (could be that their teams weren't very good). Looking at the Sabermetrics, Machado was extremely lucky, with a .401 BABIP, so maybe he loses points for that in the AI evaluation. I bet team record also reduces his value quite a bit. Last edited by Danius; 09-07-2017 at 10:12 PM. |
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#6 | |
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Minors (Triple A)
Join Date: May 2016
Posts: 252
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Quote:
Yeah, if you rule out the closers based on limited innings then you really aren't left with any good candidates. Fulmer had the highest ERA of those starters but the lowest FIP. That's odd don't you think?. It means he was extremely unlucky or the fielders behind him were basically tree stumps. With a little luck, and/or decent fielders, his inflated ERA, WHIP and OAVG would be back down to levels we'd feel more comfortable with. If his ERA matched his 2.91 FIP, we wouldn't have much trouble giving him the Cy Young. So do you penalize him for bad luck and poor fielding, reasoning that it's results that count? Maybe. Or do you go with what FIP and WAR are indicating and posit that he really was the best of that group despite the dubious ERA and give it to him based on that? Maybe. I don't think there's any absolutely correct approach either way. For that matter, I wouldn't fret much if Miller got it in a case like this. But I do think that whatever one thinks about sabermetric statistics, at least they can spark a debate occasionally and give us a little more insight. After all, without FIP and WAR, there's no way I would have even consided Fulmer in this case. Now at least, I have a few more tools at my disposal. As for the Cy Young, another way to look at it is ask who you would want starting for your team in a critical game (based on the information we have available). For me, it's Fulmer - especially since I've got great fielders on my team.... |
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#7 |
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Major Leagues
Join Date: May 2004
Posts: 328
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Machado was clearly the best player. for mvp, aside from overvaluing HRs , i dont know if things like playoff team or no are taken into it
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ABL 2020 - Brewers
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#8 | |
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Minors (Double A)
Join Date: Sep 2016
Location: Northern Indiana, USA
Posts: 121
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Quote:
Last edited by Danius; 09-08-2017 at 10:01 AM. |
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