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Get Rid of the Error

10
Vote

by user Tmizzle

Defensive scoring in major league baseball has almost completely deteriorated in the past couple of decades. This is common knowledge among baseball fans, of course. Everybody remembers the 1999 first base Gold Glove winner, Mr. Rafael "I have never taken steroids, period" Palmeiro, who played a total of 28 games in the field that year. I hate how when a guy loses a ball in the sun, it's called a hit, and when a guy gets an inside-the-park home run because the center fielder dives after a ball at the inopportune time. I've always known that the defensive scorekeeping in baseball has been somewhat lax, but I've believed that the defensive epidemic was a little overblown. Tonight though, I saw something that led me to believe that maybe we should just outlaw all errors and change ERA to just run average, and remove the unearned run altogether. Ok, that might be going a little far, but something has to be done. Tonight I was watching the Mets-Marlins game, and a play happened that was so very obviously an error, I was flabbergasted (yes, flabbergasted) that it was ruled a hit. Let me set the scene for you: It's the top of the third, and there are 2 outs. Emergency starter Chan Ho Park has given up a hit to the pitcher, and then walked the bases loaded. Miguel Cabrera lines the ball at the second baseman, Damion Easley. The ball is actually in the webbing of Easley's glove before he drops it. Two runs score, and the Marlins score 5 runs in this inning, all with two outs. The ball that hits Easley's glove is ruled a single. I mean, come on, it's INSIDE his glove before he drops it. If the Mets second baseman closes his glove, the inning is over and the Mets are out of the inning and still in the game. Instead, they're down 5 runs and the I turn off the game. For Park, the pitcher, he ends up having all 5 of these runs earned. He leaves the game after 4 innings with an ERA north of 15. If that play is called an error, only 2 of the 7 runs he gives up are earned, and his ERA is so much less appalling. Any ideas on fixing the way errors are called, send them my way, I'd love to hear them.


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KelsdadAll-Star
925 days ago
Score 2+-
I wholeheartedly agree. It seems the job of the official scorer now is to favor the home town team. Funny thing, I was in a conversation the other day on this subject. In most cases, players today are NOT definitively better than those of 20-30 years ago. The blatant disregard of scoring rules and the unwillingness of anyone to do something about it is why. Make official scorer's employees of Major League baseball instead of the individual teams.
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TylersaltAll-Star
925 days ago
Score 2+-
It's not so much the fault of the official scorer as it is a fundamental flaw in the error statistic itself. From wikipedia (which I believe takes it from the official rules), an error is "the act, in the judgment of the official scorer, of a fielder misplaying a ball in a manner that allows a batter or baserunner to reach one or more additional bases when such an advance should have been prevented given ordinary effort by the fielder." (my italics) The problem is that the statistic that has created a hegemony of thinking about defense that teams are just now beginning to break out of after a hundred years is actually defined to be a judgment call! The whole earned-unearned run system is broken, and basing it on something as nebulous as "normal effort" of the fielder is ridiculous.
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Tmil42AAA-er
925 days ago
Score 0+-
That's a great point. Also, "normal effort" for Manny Ramirez is different than the "normal effort" given by Torii Hunter. They need to scrap the whole thing and just come up with a better way to determine errors and whatnot.
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KelsdadAll-Star
925 days ago
Score 0+-
According to rule 10.12, the definition of an error is,

An error is a statistic charged against a fielder whose action has assisted the team on offense.

Clearly, Easley dropping the liner assisted the Marlins, they scored five runs. The Official Scorer does have some latitude when deciding hit/error, but this situations are actually covered in the rules. There is no situation which describes this play, so, clearly, the scorer is wrong.
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Tmil42AAA-er
925 days ago
Score 0+-
Easley definitely assisted the offense on that play. Hell, give that man one of Cabrera's RBI.
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KelsdadAll-Star
925 days ago
Score 0+-
I just read the game report and here's how it described the inning,

"Park hit a wild streak in the third inning after Olsen's two-out single to center. Park walked Ramirez and Dan Uggla on eight straight balls, before Miguel Cabrera's two-run single opened a five-run third inning. Second baseman Damion Easley made a leaping attempt on Cabrera's liner, and the ball popped out of his glove. The Mets defense also didn't help Park out on Mike Jacobs' RBI double to center, which fell between three players."

You saw the play, and I trust what you saw, but the scorer would be covered under "reasonable effort", even though there may not have been.
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Tmil42AAA-er
924 days ago
Score 1+-
The ball did pop out of his glove, he should have had it. The scorer might be covered under "reasonable effort," but I honestly think he definitely should have had it. The game report also might be a little bit too flattering to Easley. That makes it seem like it was an extremely difficult play, when in fact it wasn't all that tough of a play to make.
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TylersaltAll-Star
924 days ago
Score 1+-
Also, the very fact that Derek Jeter won a Gold Glove last year should be evidence that the error is overrated as a defensive stat. Jeter's range factor/game is 3.97, compared to a league average of 4.02. That doesn't seem like a big difference, but when you consider that Alex Gonzalez had a range factor/game of 4.22 last season, a full quarter of a point higher than the Gold Glove winner in the AL, it makes you wonder. Heck, Gonzalez even made fewer errors, and that's when he's getting to more balls per game on average than Jeter. The knock on Jeter from this perspective has always been that he doesn't amass high error totals for a shortstop because lots of balls are getting by him for base hits that other, more mobile shortstops would have had at least a chance at.
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TylersaltAll-Star
924 days ago
Score 1+-
Oh, and:
[[ ]] This article has been wikified by Tylersalt.
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Tmil42AAA-er
924 days ago
Score 1+-
Thanks for doing that.
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KelsdadAll-Star
924 days ago
Score 1+-
Of all the awards, Gold Glove has the most subjectiveness in the voting. The right thing to do would be Easley calling the scorer and taking the error, unlikely he will though.
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Taytay 24All-American
924 days ago
Score 2+-
This is all very interesting, but if the Mets want to avoid runs, earned or unearned, they need to NOT pitch Chan Ho Park. Problem solved.
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Tmil42AAA-er
924 days ago
Score 0+-
They didn't really have a choice. They couldn't call up Jorge Sosa, who's destroying Triple-A (4-0, 1.13 ERA), because he pitched yesterday. Phillip Humber isn't ready yet, but I guess they could have used Aaron Sele as an emergency starter. But please don't pitch Chan Ho Park ever again.
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Retrieved from "http://armchairgm.wikia.com/Get_Rid_of_the_Error"

This page was last modified 10:21, 1 May 2007. Content is available under the GFDL.

Categories: Opinions | Opinions by User Tmil42 | May 1, 2007 | MLB Opinions

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