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#1 |
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NetShrine MVP
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Caracas, Venezuela
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The split numbers of Ryne Sandberg from 1981 to 1992, home and away, as appears in retrosheet.org are as follows:
Home........ Away 857 games 848 3311 ab 3394 600 runs 476 1022 hits 917 178 2b 142 45 3b 22 135 hr 96 478 rbi 358 332 bb 287 460 k 488 157 sb 157 44 cs 46 .309 avg .270 .370 obp .327 .512 slg .410 .892 ops .747 Although retrosheet missed his last four seasons, Ryno's splits does not talk very well about his hitting skills out of Wrigley. In 1990, the year when he finnished as NL leader in hrs and total bases his splits were : home......away 78 games 77 25 hrs 15 357 avg 252 405 obp 319 679 slg 453 1084 ops 772 Then you have Jeff Kent's carrer numbers, not so highlighted in awards (GG and All Star games) as Ryno, with around 3 seasons away to have comparable numbers. However, at this moment, Kent passed Ryno in hrs and rbi playing almost all his whole carrer in pitchers park. Ryno was better glove, but Kent is nothing near to a defensive liability. If Sandberg makes the HOF any of this next years, is not making his case a good case for Kent in the future.
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#2 |
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I guess the obvious answer is that Sandberg player pre-1994, and Kent largely after - so you have to put power numbers in context.
Plus, if a 2B had a an OPS of 'only' .747 as sandberg has on the road, and had at least 3000 Abs between 1970 and 1990...he'd be 6th of all 2Bers...behind Carew, Morgan, Sandberg, Grich and Whitaker. So even using his road split, the guy is a wonderful hitter. Kent's a heckuva a hitter, but Sandberg deserves on his own merits regardless of how you slice it. And as long as Kent doesn't spend too much time washing his truck, he'll deserve it too. |
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#3 |
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NetShrine All-Century Team
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It would be interesting to see road/home splits for Kent. My gut reaction is that Kent is a far better hitter but that Ryno was a better glove man
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#4 |
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NetShrine All-Century Team
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Ryno had the benefit of playing most his career in a great hitters park, as evidenced by his splits. But, he did play in a rather low offensive era. Kent played at least some of his career in a tough hitters park (pacbell), but in a rather high offensive era. Kent has a career 125 OPS+, with highs of 165 (2000), 152 (2002), and 141 (1998). It wasn't until 1998 that he started hitting way above average though (at 30!).
Sandberg has a career OPS+ of 114, with highs of 145 (1992), 141 (1990), and 139 (1984). They appear to be close, but Kent may be a superior hitter when all is said and done. No matter what, Kent has probably ranks amongst the best hitters after the age of 30 ever.
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#5 |
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NetShrine All-Century Team
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I rescind my prior comment, insofar as my prediction he's amongst the all time best. Among 2nd basemen between 30 and 36, he's 5th in RCAA with a still impressive 212. That still fails to put him in the top 50 amongst all players though.
CAREER 2B AGE BETWEEN 30 AND 36 RCAA RCAA 1 Rogers Hornsby 328 2 Joe Morgan 324 3 Charlie Gehringer 321 4 Nap Lajoie 248 5 Jeff Kent 212 6 Jackie Robinson 207 7 Eddie Collins 178 8 Craig Biggio 175 9 Lou Whitaker 152 10 Bobby Grich 128 T11 Roberto Alomar 116 T11 Buddy Myer 116 T13 Ryne Sandberg 110 Not bad company to keep though. ![]() Sidenote: Buddy Myer didn't post a double digit RCAA until he was 29, with only 2 prior positives in 8 years. He finished with an RCAA of 111.
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Why does Aubrey Huff looked so mad in his picture? Oh wait... Last edited by Rajah : 02-11-2004 at 04:04 PM. |
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#6 |
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NetShrine's Historian
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Because of the era - it's Ryno.
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#7 |
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Kent leads Sandberg in the main offensive categories of RCAA 225 to 197, OPS versus the league .087 to .069, and OWP .603 to .566. Ryne Sandberg absolutely dominates Kent in defense and base running. I would say that Sandberg has the edge, but if Kent can post two to three more years at last year's level he will probably have enough offense to offset Sandberg's strength in the other areas. Considering Kent is entering his age 36 season that might be a lot to ask.
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#8 |
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NetShrine Rookie Of The Year
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A lot of players did better after the age of 30 thanks to the 1990's boom, Bonds and Galaraga came to mind. Any one who plays in Wrigley should get a boost and Sandberg is among many including Banks and probably Sosa as well. So it probably a toss up between Kent and Sandberg.
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#9 |
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NetShrine's Historian
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Wrigley's only helping hitters when the wind blows out. In the 80's, yes it was an offensive park due to the ashtrays that other teams had - but not now, in this era.
Last year the park factor was 99, which is about even. In 2002, it was 98. So the park helped Sandberg, but not Sosa. |
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#10 | |
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NetShrine Rookie Of The Year
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Quote:
I have seen where Sosa hit about the same amount at home as away in one season but have not really studied his record. What is an ashtray? Please explain why there is a difference now because I do not understand. Has not the wind always blown in some days and out others. I know the Power Alleys in Wrigley are short which helps but down the line is farther than most parks which hurts. |
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#11 |
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NetShrine Vagabond
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Ashtrays were big circular multisport parks (Cinci, Philly, etc.) that made Wrigley small by comparison. Now we have several newer, smaller parks. Since park factors are only relative to the existing parks at the time, a park can go from a hitters park to a pitchers park with little or no change, simply because the parks to which it is compared have changed.
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#12 |
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Inducted Into The NetShrine Assembly of Fame
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Having watched them both, I'd rather have Ryno. He dominated his era in the NL among 2B's.
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#13 |
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NetShrine All-Century Team
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Neither was the best, nor the 2nd best, during their respective careers.
Sandberg-- Code:
Kent-- Code:
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#14 |
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Inducted Into The NetShrine Assembly of Fame
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As you can see, both were second best to Biggio in the AL, but I think Sandberg fields better than Biggio, while Kent doesn't
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#15 |
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Kent might be better at hitting for power (although that's not certain, given the differences in era). And they're about even in hitting for average.
Baserunning, fielding, throwing, clubhouse factors -- Sandberg's advantages are so great as to render any differences at the plate wholly moot. Sandberg is better, by a comfortable margin. And Kent may be a HOFer, so that's saying something. |
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