Adam Dunn and all-or-nothing hitters

Adam Dunn is enjoying a spectacular bounce-back season from his nightmarish 2011 campaign. Presently, he is on pace for 58 HR, 132 RBI, 127 BB … and 252 Ks. He is also very likely to pass the 400 HR, 1000 RBI and 2000 K career thresholds in this, his 12th major league season.

After the jump, I’ll take a look at some similar sluggers (could be hard to find), and consider the implications of an all-or-nothing approach to hitting.

So, here’s where Adam currently stands for his career. As you can see, barring injury, all of the milestones I mentioned are clearly in view for later this season. What’s more, as we’ll discover, Dunn has a chance at becoming the first player ever to reach 400 HR before reaching 1000 RBI.

Rk Player PA HR RBI From To Age G AB R H 2B 3B BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS Pos Tm
5 Adam Dunn 6837 388 974 2001 2012 21-32 1634 5613 942 1363 292 10 1115 1909 .243 .374 .506 .879 *73D9 CIN-TOT-WSN-CHW
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 6/16/2012.

Now, let’s look at other hitters to reach 400 HR and 1000 RBIs in their first twelve seasons. The fastest, season-wise, to reach these plateaus was Albert Pujols. Here are his totals after his 10th season.

Rk Player PA HR RBI From To Age G AB R H 2B 3B BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS Pos Tm
1 Albert Pujols 6782 408 1230 2001 2010 21-30 1558 5733 1186 1900 426 15 914 646 .331 .426 .624 1.050 *37/59D64 STL
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 6/16/2012.

No other player reached these plateaus in his first eleven seasons (Ken Griffey came closest with 398 HR), so here are players to do this through 12 seasons.

Rk Player PA HR RBI From To Age G AB R H 2B 3B BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS Pos Tm
1 Alex Rodriguez 7100 429 1226 1994 2005 18-29 1592 6195 1245 1901 338 25 730 1265 .307 .385 .577 .962 *65/D SEA-TEX-NYY
2 Mickey Mantle 7199 404 1152 1951 1962 19-30 1675 5896 1340 1821 256 67 1251 1214 .309 .429 .581 1.009 *89/6475 NYY
3 Ken Griffey 7319 438 1270 1989 2000 19-30 1680 6352 1163 1883 342 33 841 1101 .296 .380 .568 .948 *8/D379 SEA-CIN
4 Willie Mays 7337 406 1179 1951 1963 20-32 1691 6458 1258 2033 333 106 791 750 .315 .389 .588 .976 *8/6 NYG-SFG
5 Frank Robinson 7651 403 1225 1956 1967 20-31 1786 6582 1248 2004 375 59 856 963 .304 .392 .563 .955 9738/5 CIN-BAL
6 Eddie Mathews 7799 422 1166 1952 1963 20-31 1792 6549 1220 1834 275 65 1155 1095 .280 .387 .535 .922 *5/73 BSN-MLN
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 6/16/2012.

What’s notable about this group is that 400 HR is the tough nut to crack – most have cruised past 1000 RBI well before reaching the 400 HR plateau. So, is there anyone who has reached this dual milestone in the same season?

Rk Player PA HR RBI From To Age G AB R H 2B 3B BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS Pos Tm
1 Mark McGwire 6314 457 1130 1986 1998 22-34 1535 5131 941 1353 219 5 1052 1259 .264 .391 .576 .967 *3/D59 OAK-TOT-STL
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 6/16/2012.

That’s it. McGwire also has the distinction of getting to 400 HR in the fewest PAs.

Mark McGwire cumulative career totals through career game #1412

G PA AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB IBB SO HBP SH SF GDP SB CS BA OBP SLG OPS
1412 5781 4728 835 1234 206 5 400 1023 930 43 1141 57 3 63 117 10 8 .261 .384 .560 .945

McGwire got to 400 HR about a full season (over 550 PA) sooner than anyone else. Harmon Killebrew is second, reaching that plateau at PA 6335.

The only other players to come close to reaching 400 HR and 1000 RBI in the same season are these guys.

Rk Player PA HR RBI From To Age G AB R H 2B 3B BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS Pos Tm
1 Harmon Killebrew 6262 397 1008 1954 1968 18-32 1533 5239 885 1367 189 17 938 1154 .261 .374 .531 .905 357/49 WSH-MIN
2 Dave Kingman 6159 377 1025 1971 1984 22-35 1639 5524 765 1316 205 25 513 1576 .238 .305 .489 .795 375D9/1 SFG-NYM-TOT-CHC-OAK
3 Willie McCovey 6564 384 1090 1959 1972 21-34 1712 5536 933 1547 237 40 911 1017 .279 .384 .545 .929 *37/9 SFG
4 Jim Thome 6421 381 1058 1991 2003 20-32 1536 5218 1028 1486 289 23 1108 1559 .285 .411 .568 .979 *35D CLE-PHI
5 Mike Schmidt 6892 389 1074 1972 1983 22-33 1638 5663 1068 1496 269 48 1086 1427 .264 .384 .535 .918 *5/643 PHI
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 6/16/2012.

Notice a theme? These players are all noted for making every swing with the apparent intention of trying to knock the ball out of the park. Not surprisingly, all struck out a lot. Problem, though, is nobody ever drove in a run by striking out.

These are the players with careers of 400 or more HR and RBI < 3 * HR.

Rk Player SO HR RBI G PA AB R H 2B 3B BB BA OBP SLG OPS Pos Tm
1 Jim Thome 2502 607 1687 2506 10182 8306 1573 2300 446 26 1732 .277 .403 .556 .959 3D5 CLE-CHW-TOT-MIN-PHI
2 Sammy Sosa 2306 609 1667 2354 9896 8813 1475 2408 379 45 929 .273 .344 .534 .878 *98D/7 TOT-CHW-CHC-BAL-TEX
3 Mike Schmidt 1883 548 1595 2404 10062 8352 1506 2234 408 59 1507 .267 .380 .527 .908 *53/64 PHI
4 Dave Kingman 1816 442 1210 1941 7429 6677 901 1575 240 25 608 .236 .302 .478 .780 37D59/1 SFG-NYM-TOT-CHC-OAK
5 Ken Griffey 1779 630 1836 2671 11304 9801 1662 2781 524 38 1312 .284 .370 .538 .907 *89D/73 SEA-CIN-TOT
6 Mickey Mantle 1710 536 1509 2401 9907 8102 1676 2415 344 72 1733 .298 .421 .557 .977 *8397/645 NYY
7 Andruw Jones 1709 426 1268 2137 8496 7454 1187 1907 378 36 874 .256 .339 .488 .826 *89D/73 ATL-LAD-TEX-CHW-NYY
8 Harmon Killebrew 1699 573 1584 2435 9833 8147 1283 2086 290 24 1559 .256 .376 .509 .884 357D/49 WSH-MIN-KCR
9 Mark McGwire 1596 583 1414 1874 7660 6187 1167 1626 252 6 1317 .263 .394 .588 .982 *3/D54967 OAK-TOT-STL
10 Willie McCovey 1550 521 1555 2588 9692 8197 1229 2211 353 46 1345 .270 .374 .515 .889 *37/9D SFG-SDP-TOT
11 Barry Bonds 1539 762 1996 2986 12606 9847 2227 2935 601 77 2558 .298 .444 .607 1.051 *78/D9 PIT-SFG
12 Willie Mays 1526 660 1903 2992 12496 10881 2062 3283 523 140 1464 .302 .384 .557 .941 *8/39675 NYG-SFG-TOT-NYM
13 Eddie Mathews 1487 512 1453 2391 10100 8537 1509 2315 354 72 1444 .271 .376 .509 .885 *53/7 BSN-MLN-ATL-TOT-DET
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 6/16/2012.

Definitely lots of free swingers here. Here are some comparative stats.

[table id=56 /]

 

I think you’ll agree that Adam Dunn is truly in a class of his own. Dunn’s current RBI to HR ratio is lower than all other players at the time of reaching the 400/1000 plateau. Among career marks for these players, only Mark McGwire has a lower RBI to HR ratio of 2.43.

Interestingly, the 400 HR club is pretty consistent in terms of walk frequency. But, there’s a big difference in driving in runs between the higher strikeout and lower strikeout groups. Of course, this isn’t really a surprise. However, the conventional thinking in this era of ever increasing strikeout rates runs something like this:

  • 1 – Lots of strikeouts are okay if the hitter hits lots of home runs
  • 2 – Lots of home runs are good because home runs score lots of other runs as well
  • 3 – More runs = more wins

Can’t argue with any of that, except that as point 1 becomes more pronounced, point 2 becomes less so. And, if point 2 is less pronounced, then so to is point 3. Just something to consider in evaluating today’s sluggers.

 

 

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Jimbo
Jimbo
11 years ago

What a legendary season he is having. Would be a real shame if he got injured. How often does a .229 hitter give us so much to talk about? How often does a .229 hitter get so much applause for having such a comeback season? How does a player bat .159 one year, and then set the all time single season strikeouts record the next year, while completely rebounding and having a season that will probably (if he keeps this pace) get him top ten in MVP voting?

It’s all absurd.

Nash Bruce
Nash Bruce
11 years ago
Reply to  Jimbo

and all of this improvement, because he actually bothered to pick up a bat and hit a little bit this offseason.

what a throwback.

I can almost hear Allen Iverson’s famous rant…..”we’re talking about…..practice?!?!?”

PP
PP
11 years ago
Reply to  Nash Bruce

but Dunn ain’t sitting here as no franchise player

Big Daddy V
Big Daddy V
11 years ago
Reply to  Nash Bruce

Didn’t Dunn have an emergency appendectomy in the spring of 2011? That obviously takes a lot out of you, and pro athletes are not exactly known for giving their injuries time to heal.

I would be willing to bet that a lot of Dunn’s issues last year were due to never really getting back to his full strength.

Richard Chester
Richard Chester
11 years ago
Reply to  Jimbo

Just for the heck of it here are the seasonal records for qualifying batters with a BA of .229 or lower.
HR…..Carlos Pena…..39
R…..Eddie Lake……96
H…..Ray Powell and Ron Santo….137
2B….AlexGonzales….37
3B….Hobe Ferriss….16
RBI….Tony Armas…..107
BB….Roy Cullenbine…137
OBP…Roy Cullenbine. .401
SLG…Carlos Pena… .537
OPS…Carlos Pena…. .893

The records for HR, R, RBI, SLG and OPS are in easy reach. BB is an outside chance. H is reachable but then his BA would rise above .229 unless his BB decrease.

Richard Chester
Richard Chester
11 years ago

And how about Roy Cullenbine in his final year, 1947. His .224 BA was by far the lowest for all qualifying batters with an OBP of more than .400.

Shping
Shping
11 years ago

Here’s a somewhat random question for which i’d love to hear some thoughts: What are the origins of the term “gopher ball?” Someone asked this on one of my fant baseball websites and it got me thinking — and i’ve yet to hear a satisfying answer. To me, one possibly obvious answer is that, after it’s hit, esp. in the old days, someone had to “go-fer” it, or go get it. But i doubt that’s it. Dictionary.com says “gopher ball” originated between 1945-55. Did we use the term “gopher” then to describe a low-level person who must perform menial fetching… Read more »

e pluribus munu
e pluribus munu
11 years ago
Reply to  Shping

Shping, I did a search on Google Books, and a couple of interesting findings turned up. Truly 99% of the hundreds of references were consistent with the 1945-55 date of origin. However, towards the close of my search I encountered this sentence in John B. Tunis, “The Kid from Tomkinsville” (NY: Harcourt, Brace, 1940): “The pitcher threw two wild ones, and on the next pitch Swanson hit a ‘gopher ball’ out of the park.” There were only two other pre-War instances. The “Daily Bulletin of the Manufacturer’s Record,” vol. 95 (1929) announced: “Bids Apr. 2 for one small road scarifier… Read more »

Shping
Shping
11 years ago

Thanks, epluribus, for the truly intriguing and humorous info. Definitely sounds like gopher ball had some older, totally different meaning back then as some type of device, that maybe old-time engineers would know about? Either that or: “….Bids Apr. 2 for one small road scarifier with gopher ball attachment…” …is some type of werid slang description for a proposed baseball trade involving Pepper Martin (“road scarifier” (?)), with Ripper Collins (“gopher ball attachment”) thrown in as part of the deal. 🙂 As for the 1909 reference you found, can’t resist saying that apparently, even back then, chicks must have dug… Read more »

Shping
Shping
11 years ago

More on “gopher ball” origins: Wow, i’m really excited because i think i might have figured this out! Following the clues from epluribus (see above), which included this line from a 1929 engineering document: “…one small road scarifier with gopher ball attachment.” and some research i just did, it sounds like a “scarifier” in engineering terms is a piece of construction equipment/machine used to break up asphalt, concrete, etc, as seen here: http://www.volvoce.com/dealers/en-au/genserv/products/motorgraders/attachments/Pages/midmountscarifier.aspx And this leads me to believe that, just maybe, “gopher ball” in engineering terms, used to refer to the giant, swinging balls-on-a-chain that construction crews use to… Read more »

Shping
Shping
11 years ago

Doug — great card/picture selection for Dunn, by the way. Gotta love the magical glinting/shining of his necklace as he smites the baseball!

tag
tag
11 years ago

I vaguely remember reading a study some sabermatrician did four or five or six years ago with Adam Dunn. He pitted nine Dunns against nine modern Hall of Famers who, I think (I could be wrong about several of these particulars; too many brain cells have taken it on the lam since then), had 3,000 hits with the fewest number of home runs. So guys like Molitor, Boggs, Gwynn, Carew, Yount, etc. And he ran 1,000 game simulations (or 10,000 or 100,000 – I don’t know what’s likely in these scenarios) and the nine Dunns beat the non-slugging Hall of… Read more »

Jim Bouldin
11 years ago
Reply to  tag

Throw in a couple or three base stealers like a Tim Raines and a Juan Pierre to that “small ball” team and I bet you get a different result completely. In fact, I’ve spent a good chunk of the day wondering what sort of small ball team would consistently beat a team of HR and K wizards.

tag
tag
11 years ago
Reply to  Jim Bouldin

You’re no doubt right, Jim, but I think even Carew and Molly and Yount will steal enough bases to beat the nine Dunns handily.

Plus if Dunn’s catching, Boggs with his .415 OBP and propensity to walk will be around to third so fast it’ll be dizzying 🙂

tag
tag
11 years ago
Reply to  tag

Plus too, I don’t remember the exact parameters for lineup inclusion, but if you now had to add Rickey Henderson to the team (though his 297 homers might just place him beyond qualification) you’d have your elite basestealer anyway.

tag
tag
11 years ago
Reply to  tag

And Brock, of course.

no statistician but
no statistician but
11 years ago
Reply to  tag

tag:

Hi. nsb here.

Don’t fall into the trap: game simulations aren’t games. Nine Adam Dunns on the field or at the plate would be total disaster. The map is not the territory. Statisticians from the invention of the abacus onward have picked and chosen what figures to use, what ratios of importance to consider, and so on, to get the results they want or think are the most likely or desirable, or simply to support a point of argument.

tag
tag
11 years ago

nsb (this time I think I got it right):

I was in no danger of falling into the trap. I found the whole thing absurd, as I noted. It’s just as you say, if you cherry pick the stats you want, you can prove just about anything. And of course millions upon millions of Monte Carlo simulations “proved” that investing in subprime mortgages via mortgage-backed securities and their more synthetic variants was safe, and we all know how that turned out.

Evan
Evan
11 years ago
Reply to  tag

I’d love to see a play-by-play of one of those simulated games of an entire team of Adam Dunns. It’d be like that scene from “Being John Malkovich” where John Malkovich goes inside his own head.

tag
tag
11 years ago
Reply to  Evan

That would be waaaay cool, but my suspicions and fears are that it would wind up being something far more prosaic and banal.
I.e.:

Dunn 1 strikes out
Dunn 2 strikes out
Dunn 3 walks
Dunn 4 strikes out

Until long about the fifth inning after, say, Dunn 6 strikes out and Dunn 7 walks and Dunn 8 walks and Dunn 9 strikes out, Dunn 1 comes up again and bombs a three-run homer. I think the play-by-play could end up being so mind-numbing you’d give a standing O to Dunn 5 for grounding out to second.

Jim Bouldin
11 years ago
Reply to  tag

Yeah the batting play by play could get old fast but defensively it would be interesting. For example, when Dunn 6 goes deep into the hole at short and throws out, say, Austin Jackson at first. 🙂 Seriously though, I’d be quite interested in seeing some good simulations along these lines, especially a small ball team with fast and aggressive base runners versus a home run derby type of lineup, or any other type of lineup for that matter. Certainly this topic must have been beaten to death by Bill James and others? But I’d like to see some good… Read more »

Jimbo
Jimbo
11 years ago

So does anybody know what happened to him last year? Such a consistent hitter over the rest of his career, and then a season where he slugged .277 slipped in.

RJ
RJ
11 years ago
Reply to  Jimbo

What’s the opposite of steroids?

Jimbo
Jimbo
11 years ago
Reply to  RJ

Alcohol?

It’s consumption is known to lower testosterone levels.

MikeD
MikeD
11 years ago
Reply to  Jimbo

Uhh, oh. Surprised I’m not growing breasts.

tag
tag
11 years ago
Reply to  Jimbo

Well, he had fairly major surgery and then tried to rush back before he was ready. That’s never a recipe for success. I think that could explain a good deal of the problem, with a feedback loop from the physical ailments leading to psychological “pressing” and whatnot in the first year of a big contract to just mess him up all around until he was able to recover fully over the summer, relax, and get back his swing.

Or he just could have been dating Paris Hilton.

tag
tag
11 years ago
Reply to  tag

That should have been “over the winter” obviously.

Doug
Doug
11 years ago

I believe the 1909 reference is to a toilet flushing mechanism. But, no idea why that might be called “gopher”.

The 1940 reference seems like a gopher ball is a mistake pitch that just begs to be hit. Or perhaps only if the hitter connects with such a pitch. Either way, the “go for it” contraction seems plausible.

Shping
Shping
11 years ago

Yeah, you’re right, it looks like “gopher ball” might also refer to a toilet or water-leveling mechanism, or something manufactured by the Gopher Company, so i’m not quite as excited as i was in #9 above, but who knows?

Maybe the Gopher Co. donated $1 for every homerun a team hit, and that’s how it got started?

I’ll try to stop any more wild speculating for now, but thanks for indulging me in the meantime guys.

e pluribus munu
e pluribus munu
11 years ago
Reply to  Shping

Actually, the Gopher Ball Cock was the product of The Union Brass and Metal Mfg. Co, St. Paul, Minn. The fact that the company’s ad specifies “bottom supply; raised seats,” confirms that you are on the right track (I thought these details indelicate to provide in my initial posting, ditto the excited boast of “Two Thumb Screws!”). Gopher seems to have been a Union Brass product line. The fact that the term appears without any gloss in a kids’ book of 1940 indicates that this was a well known term by the 1930s. Lefty Gomez claimed to have coined the… Read more »

kds
kds
11 years ago

Dickson’s Baseball Dictionary is not sure of the origin of “gopher ball”. There are several references going back to at least 1930 that mention coaches telling the batters to “go fer” 2 or 3 or more bases on a well hit ball. There is some speculation that the term goes way back to the very early days when there were no outfield fences and the outfielders would have to go for balls hit over their heads.

MikeD
MikeD
11 years ago

Interesting. Never really thought about it. Considering gopher ball means HR, which is an extreme flyball, and the opposite of a ground-dwelling creature. So, yeah, I could see it evolving from make the outfielders “go for” it. Or, perhaps, the coach saying, hit the ball to where only the gophers will find it.

Jimbo
Jimbo
11 years ago

A perfect 4-4 today from Dunn.

I mean, 3 k’s and a bb in 4 PA’s.

kzuke
kzuke
11 years ago

grantland.com’s weekly power rankings mention dunn and the possibility of the three true outcome triple crown

http://www.grantland.com/story/_/id/8065816/sweeping-away-nats-keeps-yankees-top-rest-league-plays-catch-up

(fingers crossed for decent formatting)

PLAYER YEAR HOME RUNS WALKS STRIKEOUTS
Murphy, Dale, Braves 1985 37 90 141
Schmidt, Mike, Phillies 1983 40 128 148
Wilson, Hack, Cubs 1930 56 105 84
Mantle, Mickey, Yankees 1958 42 129 123
Ruth, Babe, Yankees 1928 54 137 88
Ruth, Babe, Yankees 1927 60 137 89
Ruth, Babe, Yankees 1924 46 142 81
Ruth, Babe, Yankees 1923 41 170 94

(per ELIAS)

Richard Chester
Richard Chester
11 years ago
Reply to  kzuke

We all knew those 8 players per my post #37, “Thursday Early games/Late Wednesday notes” on 6-15-12

Richard Chester
Richard Chester
11 years ago

I should say those 8 events.