Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
One Post wrote:
Nope, that's not what I'm doing at all, it isn't even close. I'm saying that if you look at the past two seasons, this is probably the best indicator of what Rizzo is likely going to do in 2016. Then I listed two reasons, one is that he accumulated a significant number of plate appearances in those two seasons, 1300, and the second reason is that those were his age 24 and 25 seasons leading into his age 26 season, so we shouldn't expect any regression because of age.
Actually if I wanted to use this infinite upward arc bullshit that you are hawking, what I would do is say that in 2012 Rizzo had an OBP of .342 and in 2014 he had an OBP of .386, which is an improvement of 12%, so based on this career arc, I can extrapolate that Rizzo will have an OBP of .432 in 2016.
That's not anywhere close to what I am doing. All I'm saying is that Rizzo had an OBP of right around .385 in his age 24-25 seasons, and that's a pretty good indicator that he'll have an OBP of right around .385 in 2016.
JORR the ultimate peddler of bullshit in the Cubs forum. When I read JORR I can't help but think of the awesome Bill James quote: "Bullshit has tremendous advantages over knowledge. Bullshit can be created as needed, on demand, without limit."
That's JORR, the ultimate pusher of pure bullshit.
As if no guy in baseball history has ever followed a good season with a not so great one. You're looking at the Cubs through rose colored glasses. That's fine. You're a Cubs fan. But you're the one peddling "scientific" bullshit.
I've never seen Abreu go through stretches where he looked overmatched vs. big league pitching. Rizzo has such stretches all the time. You don't have to look back very far to find them. But I suppose the playoffs don't count either.
Uh, so now your argument is that just because something has occurred in the past to some player on some team that it is going to happen to Rizzo in 2016?
JORR predicts that the 2016 World Series will be interrupted by an earthquake because it happened in the past.
Here is what I'm looking at. A baseball player at the age of 24 had an OBP of .386 (.421 vs LPH and .373 vs RHP), this same player had an OBP of .387 at the age of 25 (.409 vs LHP and .378 vs RHP). These OBP numbers were accumulated in seasons in excess of 600 PAs. I'm saying that those numbers are a fairly accurate predictor of how this player will do in his age 26 season as it relates to OBP.
Is this a proven scientific theorum? No, but it is at least using prior performance to try and determine future production. I think is is a better method, than your "a guy in 1915 had a bad season after a good one so Rizzo isn't going to get on base much in 2016" coal car full of bullshit that you're pulling around this thread.
Rizzo has a 1300 PA stretch of killing MLB pitching to the tune of an OPS+ in the 150 range, clearly overmatched. Cubs might have to send him down to fix all the holes in his offensive game.