Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
Okay, I'll say a couple things about this and trust you to be honest.
First and foremost, I suspect that had we had this conversation 47 starts ago you would have said the same thing, that he was going to have better results over his next 100 starts. Am I wrong about that? Well, we're half way there and he's exactly the same as he's always been. Additionally, I believe he will pitch to his W/L record over his next 147 starts rather than to any other number(s). But that will be an argument where we just go in circles because you will simply state that he has "gotten worse", which certainly could be the case, but maybe a .500 pitcher is just who he is, all other numbers aside.
Second, I like to talk about baseball. I don't think it's life and death and I'm not gonna get rude or personal about it. But some people here enjoy that kind of thing, insults and personal jabs, snide remarks, etc. I won't start that shit, but I'm certainly not above engaging in it if someone comes at me that way. And I don't really have an issue with your statement about the next 147 starts. If I were having this same discussion with, say, leash or Favre Fan, I would say, "hmmm, yeah, maybe". But when I'm arguing with guys who are wrapping themselves in the pseudoscience and pseudo-statistics of Fangraphs and Baseball Prospectus and beating me over the head with it, you can understand why I'm not just gonna let some pure speculation like that go.
I'm not using anything other than W-L, IP, ERA, and K's to describe these 4 good pitchers. I'm not referencing any article, or any BP or Fangraphs piece. I'm pointing out these 4 pitchers as incredibly similar over 140 starts, the biggest difference between the 4 is that A and C you would call losers, and B and D you would call winners. When you look at the incredible similarity between their numbers aside from W-L, it just becomes more apparent that statistical outliers do occur.
These 4 guys are incredibly similar, yet you would call A and C non-competitive or something like that, a Quintana, and would say that Guys B and D were competitors or something like that. I just don't buy that, well I'll buy it if you show me some numbers to back it up. I'm simply looking at the guys below and saying, yeah, all 4 of those guys were good pitchers. And over a small (ish?) sample size, even good pitchers can run into a statistical oddity where they don't have a favorable W-L %, but they still pitched as well and as competitively as similar pitchers. I think that's what happened to Guys A and C below, they were just as competitive as Guys B and D, but they ran into a bad statistical anomaly. It happens.
Guy A: 135 starts, 60-59, 3.27 ERA, 1,015 IP, 1,114 K's
Guy B: 148 starts, 71-62, 2.86 ERA, 1,094 IP, 1,216 K's
Guy C: 158 starts, 56-56, 3.18 ERA, 1,000 IP, 1,053 K's
Guy D: 122 starts, 53-36, 3.17 ERA, 836 IP, 964 K's