Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
IMU wrote:
What?
How does the team averaging .87 more than the other team score the extra runs? You act like they go out there and play 162 games and score 4.69 runs in each of those 162 games. If you took that team that averages 4.69 and had them play 162 games where they faced Clayton Kershaw or Doug Harvey each time, they wouldn't be scoring 4.69 runs per game. So if you're telling me a guy is a good pitcher, isn't it fair to expect that he would allow less than that team averages? Or does it make more sense to say he's unlucky because he faced a tougher offense?
They aren't extra runs. They are runs scored because their offense is superior to other offenses. And over the course of a season, most offenses are facing most of the same pitchers and teams.
All teams go out there and try to score 30 runs a game. Some teams end up scoring 3 runs a game. Others 5 runs a game.
If a team that scores 4.69 runs a game had to face Doug Harvey....who the fuck is Doug Harvey?
If a team that scores 4.69 runs a game had to face Clayton Kershaw or Matt Harvey each time, they wouldn't be scoring 4.69 runs a game.
If a team that scores 3.05 runs a game had to face Clayton Kershaw or Matt Harvey each time, they wouldn't be scoring 3.05 runs a game.
If Clayton Kershaw or Matt Harvey had to face the Toronto Blue Jays every game, they wouldn't have an ERA as low as they have either.
This is simple. fucking. stuff. These are averages. Everything is factored in. You keep trying to find ways to break a simple concept that has been around since mathematics came into existence.