Monthly Archives: February 2012

Players traded twice together

On Twitter, @Minor_Leaguer (who writes for Bluebird Banter) asked about players who have been traded twice or more together. He cited Jeff Kent and Jose Vizcaino, who were both involved in the following trades:

July 29, 1996: Traded by the New York Mets with Jeff Kent to the Cleveland Indians for Carlos Baerga and Alvaro Espinoza.

November 13, 1996: Traded by the Cleveland Indians with a player to be named later, Jeff Kent and Julian Tavarez to the San Francisco Giants for a player to be named later and Matt Williams. The Cleveland Indians sent Joe Roa (December 16, 1996) to the San Francisco Giants to complete the trade. The San Francisco Giants sent Trent Hubbard (December 16, 1996) to the Cleveland Indians to complete the trade.

Can you think of any other examples of players who were traded together two or more times?

High Heat Stats news

A few quick news items:

  • I have added a mobile theme that makes the blog easier to read on your mobile device. You also have the option to revert to the standard desktop theme if you wish.
  • I have asked the ad server to stop with the pop-up full-page ads and videos and they have agreed. Please do not block ads otherwise on the site–I have made them unobtrusive and it’s important that they get displayed to maintain our traffic numbers.
  • I’ve implemented spam filters for comments and most should get blocked now. You still might see the occasional spam comment make it through…just ignore them.

Lou Brock is no Hall of Famer

Lou Brock / Icon SMI

Lou Brock played 18 seasons in the majors. He took over the career lead for stolen bases from Billy Hamilton in 1978 and led until 1991 when Rickey Henderson passed him.

Brock was a 6-time All-Star, received MVP votes in a staggering 10 different seasons, and was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1985, his first year of eligibility.

I don’t actually have any problem with Brock being in the Hall of Fame–regardless of what the numbers say, he was held in extremely high regard during his era as the preeminent base stealer of the day as well as one of the best leadoff batters.

However, a pretty good devil’s advocate case can be made that he doesn’t deserve to be enshrined. Continue reading

Brad Hawpe and the worst defensive seasons of all time

Brad Hawpe drops a fly ball / Icon SMI

Recently (you know, on the only other real post I’ve written on the new blog so far) a couple of readers mentioned Brad Hawpe’s awful 2008, which was worth -41 Fielding Runs. That is, in fact, the worst defensive season of all time as measured by Baseball-Reference.com’s data set. Click through for a full list, including a number of other fascinating seasons. Continue reading

Young position stars of 2010-11

In case you’ve forgotten, here are the top bWAR seasons over the past 2 years by players who will be 26 or under in 2012.

All seasons of at least 3.9 WAR are listed. No SS or 2B reached that level, so in order to round out a lineup (see the top 8 in the table), I’ve included the top figure at each position. (Dustin Ackley’s 2.5 WAR in 90 games does project to 4.5 per 162G.) Lastly, I included Brett Lawrie’s 2011 on the grounds of  his tremendous rate of 10.5 WAR per 162 games. Continue reading

Good bat, but bad everything else @LoMoMarlins

Logan Morrison attempts to catch a ball while looking less-than-confident / Icon SMI

Most fans only think about a player’s offensive production when judging his value. In 2011, though, there were 3 players to produce at least 10 Batting Runs (a component of WAR: see the Stats Glossary link above) while have an overall WAR of at most 1.0–these players had negative contributions from most of the other aspects of their performance. Continue reading