So you don't have an anti-Drew bias and a pro-Nixon bias?
f***ing christ almighty. Yeah, he's been really f***ing injury riddled this year, ay? 2008 is the only season since 2003 where he's missed a significant amount of games. You're positive he will break down in the future on what evidence, doctor? Once again, you clearly can't differentiate between durability issues and performance issues. Either that, or you're just pulling arbitrary junk out of thin air.
Admission that I stuck words in your mouth? My mockery of your ridiculous ideas flew clear over your head, and now you front this terrible attempt at saving face. If anything, you're the one placing words in my mouth with this post. I can now write you down as a hypocrite.
.374 OPS, .842 OPS, 15 HR. THIS ISN'T MEDIOCRE. HIS PERFORMANCE IS MEDIOCRE IF YOU LOOK AT THE HORRIBLE, MEANINGLESS, ARCHAIC STATS THAT YOU'VE BEEN CLINGING TOO.
I'll say it one more time. Batting average and RBI are stat abortions that completely massacre the very idea of common sense. It's one thing to just read numbers, apparently it's another to comprehend what these numbers are telling you.
But he gets on base, DOESN'T MAKE OUTS, and contributes to the offense positively. He can be an estrogen druggie and I wouldn't give a s*** as long the aforementioned holds true.
Atlanta and LA lost him through free agency. Drew left Atlanta to sign a fat deal with the Dodgers. He became too expensive for the Braves. Drew opted out of his LA deal to sign a fatter deal with Boston. LA had two outfield prospects ready to make a splash on the major league team, and had no desire to overpay for Drew as a result.
St. Louis the only team that cut the ties with Drew, as opposed to Drew cutting ties with them.
DREW CUT TIES WITH LA AND ATLANTA, NOT THE OTHER WAY AROUND.
St. Louis traded him both for pitching and
Jones signed a two year deal for $36 million, and they hoped to make him a reclamation project. If it didn't work, they weren't bound to him long-term. Drew would have required that they commit five years, which they didn't want to do with the likes of Matt Kemp, Andre Either, and (at the time) Delwyn Young coming through the system.
Comparing Manny to Drew? Really?
RBI are an insult to intelligence. What does this information tell you? That the batter produced a base hit that caused a runner on base, that he had no hand in putting on base, to score. The batter is credited with the base hit, rightfully so. But the batter is also credited with driving in the runner he has no connection to, which is ********. Baserunners and batters, on the same team, are almost entirely different factions in any given game situation.
Clutch isn't just meaningless and irrelevant, it's non-existent.
I know they aren't robots. That doesn't mean their hitting ability increases or decreases with a runner at X base with X outs.
Good, you can have the 100 instances of a meaningless statistical recording, while I focus on plate discipline, walks, getting on base, and not making outs, and come away with all the winnings.
Oakland Athletics, wins per season in order from 2000-2006: 91, 102, 103, 96, 91, 88, 93. Their sole offensive focus through this entire period was plate discipline, on-base percentage, and walks.
All with either the lowest or among the lowest payrolls in baseball.
Since I know the world series argument is coming next, the playoffs are a crapshoot. One bad outing by your ace in a given series can ruin your season... even if you are the better team. That's one of the reasons why a wild card team is in the WS virtually every year.
Currently the franchise is rebuilding, since they don't really have the financial to go get outside guys to assure they stay on stop every year.
Because half of baseball is still putting their money on RBI's. 65 year old baseball-lifer goons that only recognize and acknowledge names and completely dismiss common sense... they don't sway my opinion in the least.
I don't understand what you're asking.
This is the finest example yet of your strict adherence to whatever those f***s on ESPN tell you.
Drew gets on base (DOESN'T MAKE OUTS) at a rate similar to some of the best players in the history of the game? Oh no, that can't be right! He's not enough of a gritty dirtdog for that to make any sense!!
Sweet jesus.
If you would stop hugging batting average and RBI for two seconds, and look at something meaningful for a change, all the evidence is right there. Quality on-base percentage? Check. Quality OPS? Check. Walks? Check. Not making outs? Check.
You know what, let's try this another way:
Runs scored for each team that J.D. Drew has been a member of and played a meaningful role:
2000 Cardinals: 809
2001 Cardinals: 887 (one of his very best statistical seasons, hampered a bit by injuries)
2002 Cardinals: 787
2003 Cardinals: 876
2004 Braves: 803
2005 Dodgers: 685 (Drew played 72 games)
2006 Dodgers: 820
2007 Red Sox: 867
2008 Red Sox: 845
2009 Red Sox: 620 thus far
So tell me, is he just always in the right place at the right time, constantly shielded and piggy-backed by the likes of Mark McGwire, Albert Pujols, Chipper Jones, and Manny Ramirez, or is he some underlying factor in each team's run total? I think I already know your answer.
Unbelievable. This is like me taking Martinez's lack of stolen bases and using it to try and front a coherent argument about how unproductive he is. Wouldn't make much sense, would it?