The Hall of…Very Good? Part 3

By Derek Rosenfeld

Babe Ruth won 94 games as a pitcher.

As time moves forward and a greater number of variables are introduced into any type of meritocracy, it’s natural for perceptions to change regarding those variables’ quality and value. You will often hear the phrase “watered down” when used to describe a perceived unnecessary influx of entries or articles into what was originally thought of as a very exclusive collectivity. Such is the case for the Baseball Hall of Fame (HOF).  

Whereas a (well above) .300 batting average, 500 home runs, or 3,000 hits were practically a prerequisite for earning enshrinement to the HOF prior to, say, 1990, today, those numbers have become more ambivalent and tougher to disseminate among the increasing quantity of players who are compiling them.
 
Popular broadcaster and former pitcher Jim Kaat, for example, finished his career with 283 wins, which places him 31st all time among Major League Baseball (MLB) pitchers. Yet, he was passed over by the Baseball Writers Association of America (BBWAA) all 15 times he was eligible for the HOF because he earned those victories over 25 seasons. At 13 wins a season, Kaat only sporadically displayed the domination voters and fans look for when choosing their all-time greats. There are 43 pitchers (44 including Babe Ruth) in the HOF with less wins than Kaat, yet they were perceived, and rightfully so, as being more dominant and worthy in their time than “Kitty.”
 
Another factor to consider regarding statistical ambiguity is that many facets of life evolve or devolve over time and, in many ways, eras can and cannot truly be compared; professional sports falls into the latter category. The all-time great Cy Young, who pitched from 1890-1911, is the winningest pitcher in MLB history with 511 victories; he also holds the records for the most losses with 316, games started with 815, and innings pitched with 7,356. In today’s carefully monitored and meticulously structured MLB player development system, those records are virtually impossible not just to break but to even come within a million miles of, figuratively speaking. Back in baseball’s salad days, pitchers did not throw nearly as hard or were not required to place as much stress on their arms and bodies with each delivery as they must today; hitters had yet to begin the intense exercise regimens that would improve their strength and hand-eye coordination, and there was no need for pitchers to counter them with sheer velocity. Back then, a pitcher would and could routinely throw several games a week without major injury. 
 
In the modern era, with huge salaries causing MLB executives to fear overuse and other factors that result in arm injuries, a pitcher who leads his league in innings pitched generally throws about 230-250 innings a year. (2010 Cy Young Award winners Roy Halladay and Felix Hernandez threw 250.2 and 249.2 innings last year, respectively.) At that pace, a modern-day pitcher would have to pitch more than 30 seasons without missing a start to break Young’s innings record. This is impossible.

 

With pitchers’ workloads being decreased (many will say they are being coddled); hitters’ power numbers spiking because of smaller ballparks, maple bats, and performance enhancing drugs (PEDs); a greater reliance on player specialization; and a constantly emerging and evolving circle of statistics, separating the wheat from the chafe in baseball is becoming more and more difficult and complex. This is creating a more controversial approach to determining who is an all-time great and who is merely just a great in his time.    

 

SABERMETRICS

Roy Halladay

Say the word “Sabermetrics” to the average sports fan, and you will probably get more than a few weird looks. It’s not a type of Star Wars weapon or a new muscle toning exercise but a more complicated and purportedly accurate statistical system of determining a baseball player’s value. Sabermetrics is a term derived from the acronym for the Society for American Baseball Research (SABR), founded at the HOF, and coined in 1977 by author Bill James in his highly influential self-published book The Bill James Baseball Abstract. James was a baseball fanatic working as a security guard in the mid-1970s when he began picking over box scores and applying new forms of statistical analysis to his findings. Since then, James has published a myriad of books (including Whatever Happened to the Hall of Fame? in 1994) employing his new-age baseball statistics to a variety of players and possibilities, which covers everything from the comparability of distant eras to modern times (Similarity Scores), the impact of major league players in comparison to their minor league/bench player counterparts [Wins Above Replacement (WAR)], and a more comprehensive way for determining defensive ability (Range Factor, Defensive Efficiency Rating).

  

Felix Hernandez

James was also a looming influence in Michael Lewis’s 2003 bestseller Moneyball. Soon to be a major motion picture starring Brad Pitt, the book took an in-depth look at current Oakland A’s General Manager (GM) Billy Beane, who made the A’s a perennial contender in the 2000s by expanding on former A’s GM Sandy Alderson’s reliance on sabermetrics despite having a limited budget with which to work. Focusing more on on-base percentage, slugging percentage, and the combination of the two (OPS) rather than more conventional statistics such as batting average and runs batted in, Beane became a sensation by winning five American League West titles in seven years between 2000-06. However, each title came with a first-round exit in the playoffs. Once the team’s “Big 3” starting pitchers Tim Hudson, Mark Mulder, and Barry Zito departed, the A’s once again fell back to the middle of the MLB pack, bringing into question just how well sabermetrics works for a team without great pitching.                             

 

Tim Lincecum

Among the more popular examples of sabermetrics, as mentioned in part 2 of my column, is the stat Walks plus Hits per Inning Pitched, or WHIP, which is slowly working its way into the mainstream. Created by Daniel Okrent (the inventor of Rotisserie League Baseball) in 1979, this measures a pitcher’s effectiveness simply by calculating the number of hitters who reach base safely—not counting errors—for every inning pitched. It is this stat, such as it is with OPS for hitters, that is helping  pitchers subvert more traditional stats such as Wins. A prime example of this stat’s impact can be seen in the past three years of MLB Cy Young Award voting. During this time, the San Francisco Giants’ Tim Lincecum, Kansas City Royals’ Zack Greinke, and Seattle Mariners’ Felix Hernandez each won Cy Young Awards with the three lowest win totals in MLB history with 15, 16, and 13 respectively. All three displayed domination in other, more individualistic sabermetric stats, whereas a pitcher’s wins are now being looked on as more team oriented and less telling of a pitcher’s own performance.

 

Zack Greinke

James currently works for the Boston Red Sox as a senior advisor; he received World Series (WS) rings after the team’s 2004 and 2007 WS victories because of certain player trades and signings that met with his approval. He was also named one of Time magazine’s 100 most influential people in the world in 2006. His work  and the work of others have turned 120 years of what was considered faultless analysis on its head and created a 21st-century version of America’s pastime that will  prove more rewarding and, to some pundits, more fair to its participants and fans than ever before.

 

In the fourth and final installment of my examination of the HOF, I will delve into the biggest question of all surrounding the Hall: The steroid question.

 

Images found on Wikimedia Commons. From top to bottom: Fabian1309, UCinternational, Schwenkenstein01, SD Dirk,  UCinternational.

 

Derek Rosenfeld is an associate editor for Fire Engineering. He is beginning his sixth season as the assistant baseball coach at Bergen Community College in Paramus, New Jersey. He is also an infielder for the semipro North Haledon (NJ) Reds. During the mid-90s, Rosenfeld was a three-year starter at second base for the Ramapo College baseball team in Mahwah, New Jersey, where he earned all-New Jersey Athletic Conference honors and was a two-time New Jersey Collegiate Baseball Association (NJCBA) all-star selection. He was named MVP of the 1997 NJCBA All-Star Game. He has a bachelor’s degree in communications from Ramapo College.  

  

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