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Mark Leonard

Stats can be dull and/or revealing

Too much rhetoric has been devoted recently to the Indians' offensive woes. This will attempt not to add to that pile. Instead, it may dull with numbers.

What is about to be displayed is a list of the club's primary batsmen, with their relative "production" through the first 30 games of this 2008 MLB season, with figures for home runs, runs scored and rbi deliberately omitted in order not to obscure what is being presented.

Ten more games must yet be played before the so-called quartermark is attained, which would make the projected math easier and, according to those who subscribe to the quartermark theory, more relevant, as well.

Still, a portrait can be painted if the anticipated figure of 600 at bats is employed. Most of the Tribesmen is at or near 100 at-bats.

List arranged according to the number of ABs:

Sizemore    112 AB         BA .277       OBP  .393       23 K         18 BB

Hafner        110                     .209                 .305       30            14

Peralta        102                     .216                 .279       25              9

Garko          99                      .242                 .361       15            15

Gutierrez      99                      .253                 .295       21             5

Martinez      95                       .347                .380         8             4

Blake           94                      .202                 .286       25             9

Cabrera       89                      .191                 .284       20            11

Dellucci       72                       .264                 .349       12             8

Michaels      58                      .207                 .258       13              4

Carroll         37                      .216                 .396         3              7

So, what can be determined from these numbers? There is a lot of striking-out. Six guys project to K figures in excess of 120, with Travis headed for 180 and both Peralta and Blake for 150. What is more, the disparity between walks and strikeouts is horrid, which is reflected in the next stat examined. 

That would be the atrocious lot of low OBPs. For comparison's sake, a reasonable OBP is .330, with .370 considered elite. Only Carroll, Grady and Victor merit the latter designation, which is no particular surprise. What is telling, however, is that only Garko and Dellucci join them among the reasonable. And it is not even close for the rest of the lineup. Five can't even crack .300!

When it is further considered that a batting average in the .240 range is grounds for benching, this is a club that could not field a starting nine. Only five would make that arbitrary cut, and Garko only because his OBP mitigates his .242.

It is a terrible offensive team, at least thusfar. But you knew that before these numbers confirmed it.

Before the season began, I'd described the team's chances as overly-reliant upon "too many marginals," players who scarsely distinguish themselves among the MLB masses. What has tranpired is even worse than anticipated.

Naturally, the sentiment remains that this outfit will right itself. That the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. That it won 96 ballgames last year. That it came within a single victory of getting to and probably winning a World Series. That too many of these guys have established track records they will eventually replicate.

Maybe. Maybe not. What is surely apparent is whatever it is they have been doing when stepping into the batter's box has not been working for far too many of them.

But, again, you probably deduced that for yourselves by now. 

Read the complete post at http://www.xanga.com/MALeonard/655578413/stats-can-be-dull-andor-revealing.html

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