-
So, using WOWY (With Or Without You) based on balls in play, I selected the best twenty or so infielders (2B, SS, 3B) since 1993. It's mostly the names you know: Everett, Sanchez, Bartlett, Rolen, Reese, Hudson, Inge, etc. By looking at a large enough number of great infielders, the idea is that all the noise around them will cancel out. My only additional constraint was that he must have been on the field for at least 1000 outs for a given team-season, and must have been off the field for at least 1000 outs for that same team-season.
I came up with 68 such seasons since 1993. The total number of games played was 5386 games on the field and 5400 games off the field. You have to admit that that's alot of games. When the star fielders were on the field, their team allowed 4.60 runs per game, and when they weren't on the field, they allowed 4.83 runs per game. Per 162 games, this difference comes out to 37 runs.
--snip--
If I take the top 20 fielders in UZR, minimum 162 games, their average is +18 runs per 162G. So, we should feel quite confident that a great fielder adds some 20-ish or so more runs than an average fielder, per 162 games.
I know most readers here see the range for fielding as +/- 20 runs. That's pretty much spot on.
Comments
Advertisement
ESPN Video
- 01:34
Yankees blast 4 dingers in the 1st inning
Trent Grisham, Aaron Judge and Ben Rice go back-to-back-to-back to start the game, and Cody Bellinger adds the Yankees' fourth homer of the inning.
- 00:17
Shohei Ohtani hits leadoff HR on the first pitch he sees
Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani crushes his seventh home run of the season on Sandy Alcantara's first pitch of the game.
- 00:26
Daulton Varsho stumbles and falls before incredible backhand catch
Daulton Varsho does acrobatics and falls over before completing an incredible catch for the Blue Jays vs. the Red Sox.