On January 6 of this year, the Royals announced free agent Alex Gordon would remain in Kansas City. Kansas City, a franchise with a grand history of drafting and developing players to be traded for cash every July. Kansas City, the proud owners of a 29-year playoff drought. Yes, Kansas City was resigning a franchise player following a World Series victory. And how has the man repaid the Royals thus far? With a .219 batting average through August 18 and a stint on the DL earlier this year due to a fractured wrist. So KC fans, how's that $72 million, four-year contract looking now? I say it's still worth it.
I watched my first Royals game in about a long time on Monday, and in Gordon's first at-bat he was walked. People who follow the team should know where I'm going here. After first taking a called strike, Gordo sat back and watched three straight balls go by. And when a 90 mph fastball came in, he watched that strike slide by as well. Sitting now at 3-2, Gordon fouls off two more pitches before taking a base on the fourth ball of the battle. An 8-pitch gem of an appearance, and the start to just another day at the office for Alex Gordon.
Gordon had an otherwise decent night with two hits and a run scored, but that second inning battle is what makes him the player the Royals need. While historically low enough to believe he'll bounce back, the .219 batting average is bad. How bad? Gordon hasn't played enough games to qualify for statistical comparison in the MLB, but if he did he would rank second to last in the AL - only Chicago's Todd Frazier is worse and currently sits at #77 among qualified batters with a .210 average. Yet Frazier and Gordon aren't comparable, and it's not even close.
Despite the abysmal batting average, Alex Gordon has an on-base percentage of .321 - a full ten percent greater. He ranks 37th in walks with 38 this season despite missing June. (That's 38 walks in 86 games - a walk in almost 50 percent of games played.)
Walks aren't just important because they get a player on base. Unlike a single, they don't advance a player from third to home. However, they WEAR PITCHERS DOWN. Alcides Escobar can secure the occasional first pitch hit (if you recall, the very first pitch of the 2015 World Series was a fastball over the plate that resulted in an inside-the-park home run). However, in this era of micromanaged pitch counts and overburdened bullpens, an 8-pitch at-bat is one of the best weapons a team can have.
After Gordon hit a double in the sixth inning on the sixth pitch of the at-bat after taking three balls, and Detroit's pitcher was lifted. Daniel Norris had only thrown 88 pitches, and Gordon had seen 16 of them. If you're counting at home, that's 19 percent of the team's time in the box with Norris.
Alex Gordon can snatch the occasional home run, will steal a base or two (six so far this year), and be a smart baseball player. As a four-time gold glove winner and 2014 platinum glove winner (an award whose creation I remain dubious to), his defensive skills are beyond reproach. Yet he can't be valued as just a great defensive player. His lifetime batting average is .265, and as a 32-year-old we know that number isn't going to finish anywhere close to .300 at the end of his career. Yet Gordon is not a replacement level bat. Gordon takes pitchers out of the game because he makes them tired. He doesn't jack home runs regularly, but creates the conditions under which Moustakas and Hosmer can. And that's why he's still worth every penny he's getting paid.
Oh yeah, here's that lead-off, inside-the-park home run that Escobar jacked off Matt Harvey in the World Series when the Royals beat the Mets in five games and were the best team in the world and made everyone happy.
September 9 Update: Out of curiosity I looked up Gordon's stats this afternoon. In the past thirty days he ranks seventh among all qualified outfielders (and first among left fielders) with a .394 on-base percentage. He's also 10th in both batting average (.305) and slugging (.547) among outfielders. Not MVP numbers, but certainly indicative of a player on the right track. Once again, Gordon's BA of .219 as of August 18 was zero cause for concern.
The title portends a gateway to a vagary of takes on a multitude of topics. Really, I just like college football and energy economics. You should too.
Thursday, August 18, 2016
Monday, August 15, 2016
Do Running Quarterbacks Have Greater Value in 4 Point Passing Touchdown Leagues?
About once a week I listen to a fantasy football podcast, and inevitably an observation is made about Mobile Quarterback X being preferred in a league that only allows four points per touchdown pass because some of their touchdowns will come on the ground. This comment always sounded ridiculous to me - why would anyone draft according to this difference in the point system? You shouldn't be drafting one quarterback over another quarterback based on the potential that you could win by two points in a given week - you should draft the quarterback that consistently nets you the most points. And two points here or there in one system that you don't accrue in another shouldn't be enough to change that, right?
My assumption was this was the case, but the truth is a bit murkier. For my analysis, I used the basic scoring system (0.04 points per passing yard, 0.1 points per rushing yard, -2 points per interception)*, and opted not to include any bonuses for certain milestones (e.g., no extra points for exceeding 300 yards passing).
*I had a hard time pulling fumble data and ultimately left it out, but hopefully this shouldn't change things too much.
Here are the season and per game point totals for the top 34 quarterbacks in a 4 point per passing touchdown scoring system:
Here's that same table, with six points per passing touchdown:
If you waded through that for more than 30 seconds, good on you I guess. I can't/hate doing tables in html and simply copy/pasted those into blogspot's unforgiving system (when I was publishing regularly we used Wordpress, which was actually user-friendly on this front). Here's one more table for you, which is the one you want:
The top four QBs last year were ranked the same regardless of the scoring system. This is unsurprising - Newton, Brady, et. al. were putting up such gaudy numbers that a couple points here and there didn't matter. As the seventh best quarterback, Philip Rivers was ranked one position lower over the season, and two positions lower in points per game played, in a four point scoring system. Rivers did not have any rushing touchdowns, so a QB with rushing touchdown potential had a marginally better shot at surpassing him. Kirk Cousins, with his five rushing touchdowns actually finishes a tenth of a point behind Rivers in this system. However, in a six point per touchdown league, Rivers finishes 22 points ahead of Cousins.
Among the largest changes, Matt Ryan is ranked five spots higher in a six point per passing TD league (however, you should still never draft Ryan). Derek Carr and Andy Dalton both drop three spots in this system. This underlines a more important aspect that's never discussed: four point leagues don't simply place a premium on rushing touchdowns, but overall yards also become more important. Both Carr and Dalton had a low passing yards:passing touchdowns ratio compared to other quarterbacks, and their low yardage made them less valuable in four point leagues.
So should the scoring system impact your draft strategy? Possibly, but only on the margins, and not like you may think. It should only used to differentiate similar quarterbacks in the same tier (you can use it as an excuse to give Tyrod Taylor a bump over a Jay Cutler. Not a Drew Brees). And while mobile quarterbacks may be more important, equally if not more so is a quarterback that projects for a lot of yards (possibly QBs on bad teams that won't necessarily get you touchdowns, but will pass a lot trying to overcome deficits, a la Blake Bortles last year).
More important than those points is when you should draft a quarterback at all. QB1s scored 50-70 points more in six point TD leagues over the course of the season. The question isn't whether you should draft Brees or Newton based on the scoring system - it's whether you should draft a QB or snag a running back. Because in a four point per passing touchdown league, that question pushes both players back about two rounds for me.
My assumption was this was the case, but the truth is a bit murkier. For my analysis, I used the basic scoring system (0.04 points per passing yard, 0.1 points per rushing yard, -2 points per interception)*, and opted not to include any bonuses for certain milestones (e.g., no extra points for exceeding 300 yards passing).
*I had a hard time pulling fumble data and ultimately left it out, but hopefully this shouldn't change things too much.
Here are the season and per game point totals for the top 34 quarterbacks in a 4 point per passing touchdown scoring system:
Quarterback | End of Season Rank - 4 Pt Per Passing TD | |||
Total Points | Season Rank | PPG | PPG Rank |
Cam Newton | 397.1 | 1 | 24.8 | 1 |
Tom Brady | 344.1 | 2 | 21.5 | 2 |
Blake Bortles | 324.1 | 4 | 20.3 | 5 |
Russell Wilson | 342.3 | 3 | 21.4 | 3 |
Carson Palmer | 313.2 | 5 | 19.6 | 8 |
Drew Brees | 310.5 | 6 | 20.7 | 4 |
Philip Rivers | 295.5 | 8 | 18.5 | 11 |
Aaron Rodgers | 294.4 | 10 | 18.4 | 13 |
Kirk Cousins | 295.4 | 9 | 18.5 | 12 |
Eli Manning | 284.5 | 12 | 17.8 | 15 |
Ryan Fitzpatrick | 289.2 | 11 | 18.1 | 14 |
Matthew Stafford | 301.2 | 7 | 18.8 | 10 |
Jameis Winston | 276.8 | 13 | 17.3 | 17 |
Derek Carr | 275.3 | 14 | 17.2 | 18 |
Andy Dalton | 260.5 | 17 | 20.0 | 6 |
Ryan Tannehill | 241.9 | 19 | 15.1 | 27 |
Tyrod Taylor | 267.2 | 16 | 19.1 | 9 |
Matt Ryan | 270.2 | 15 | 16.9 | 20 |
Alex Smith | 248.1 | 18 | 15.5 | 26 |
Jay Cutler | 234.5 | 20 | 15.6 | 24 |
Ben Roethlisberger | 212.2 | 21 | 17.7 | 16 |
Sam Bradford | 200.9 | 24 | 14.4 | 29 |
Teddy Bridgewater | 204.4 | 23 | 12.8 | 30 |
Marcus Mariota | 205.9 | 22 | 17.2 | 19 |
Joe Flacco | 163.9 | 26 | 16.4 | 22 |
Brian Hoyer | 170.6 | 25 | 15.5 | 25 |
Blaine Gabbert | 130.8 | 29 | 16.4 | 23 |
Andrew Luck | 140.2 | 27 | 20.0 | 7 |
Josh McCown | 131.7 | 28 | 16.5 | 21 |
Brock Osweiler | 118.8 | 30 | 14.8 | 28 |
Nick Foles | 91.4 | 34 | 8.3 | 34 |
Peyton Manning | 98.1 | 33 | 9.8 | 33 |
Johnny Manziel | 110.2 | 31 | 12.2 | 31 |
Colin Kaepernick | 101.0 | 32 | 11.2 | 32 |
Here's that same table, with six points per passing touchdown:
Quarterback | End of Season Rank - 6 Pt Per Passing TD | |||
Total Points | Season Rank | PPG | PPG Rank | |
Cam Newton | 467.1 | 1 | 29.2 | 1 |
Tom Brady | 416.1 | 2 | 26.0 | 2 |
Blake Bortles | 394.1 | 4 | 24.6 | 5 |
Russell Wilson | 410.3 | 3 | 25.6 | 3 |
Carson Palmer | 383.2 | 5 | 24.0 | 6 |
Drew Brees | 374.5 | 6 | 25.0 | 4 |
Philip Rivers | 365.5 | 7 | 22.8 | 9 |
Aaron Rodgers | 358.4 | 9 | 22.4 | 11 |
Kirk Cousins | 353.4 | 10 | 22.1 | 12 |
Eli Manning | 342.5 | 12 | 21.4 | 15 |
Ryan Fitzpatrick | 351.2 | 11 | 22.0 | 13 |
Matthew Stafford | 363.2 | 8 | 22.7 | 10 |
Jameis Winston | 320.8 | 14 | 20.0 | 20 |
Derek Carr | 339.3 | 13 | 21.2 | 16 |
Andy Dalton | 308.5 | 16 | 23.7 | 7 |
Ryan Tannehill | 283.9 | 19 | 17.7 | 27 |
Tyrod Taylor | 307.2 | 17 | 21.9 | 14 |
Matt Ryan | 310.2 | 15 | 19.4 | 21 |
Alex Smith | 298.1 | 18 | 18.6 | 25 |
Jay Cutler | 276.5 | 20 | 18.4 | 26 |
Ben Roethlisberger | 254.2 | 21 | 21.2 | 17 |
Sam Bradford | 238.9 | 23 | 17.1 | 29 |
Teddy Bridgewater | 232.4 | 24 | 14.5 | 30 |
Marcus Mariota | 243.9 | 22 | 20.3 | 18 |
Joe Flacco | 191.9 | 26 | 19.2 | 22 |
Brian Hoyer | 208.6 | 25 | 19.0 | 24 |
Blaine Gabbert | 160.8 | 28 | 20.1 | 19 |
Andrew Luck | 164.2 | 27 | 23.5 | 8 |
Josh McCown | 151.7 | 29 | 19.0 | 23 |
Brock Osweiler | 138.8 | 30 | 17.3 | 28 |
Nick Foles | 109.4 | 34 | 9.9 | 34 |
Peyton Manning | 112.1 | 33 | 11.2 | 33 |
Johnny Manziel | 122.2 | 31 | 13.6 | 31 |
Colin Kaepernick | 115.0 | 32 | 12.8 | 32 |
If you waded through that for more than 30 seconds, good on you I guess. I can't/hate doing tables in html and simply copy/pasted those into blogspot's unforgiving system (when I was publishing regularly we used Wordpress, which was actually user-friendly on this front). Here's one more table for you, which is the one you want:
|
The top four QBs last year were ranked the same regardless of the scoring system. This is unsurprising - Newton, Brady, et. al. were putting up such gaudy numbers that a couple points here and there didn't matter. As the seventh best quarterback, Philip Rivers was ranked one position lower over the season, and two positions lower in points per game played, in a four point scoring system. Rivers did not have any rushing touchdowns, so a QB with rushing touchdown potential had a marginally better shot at surpassing him. Kirk Cousins, with his five rushing touchdowns actually finishes a tenth of a point behind Rivers in this system. However, in a six point per touchdown league, Rivers finishes 22 points ahead of Cousins.
Among the largest changes, Matt Ryan is ranked five spots higher in a six point per passing TD league (however, you should still never draft Ryan). Derek Carr and Andy Dalton both drop three spots in this system. This underlines a more important aspect that's never discussed: four point leagues don't simply place a premium on rushing touchdowns, but overall yards also become more important. Both Carr and Dalton had a low passing yards:passing touchdowns ratio compared to other quarterbacks, and their low yardage made them less valuable in four point leagues.
So should the scoring system impact your draft strategy? Possibly, but only on the margins, and not like you may think. It should only used to differentiate similar quarterbacks in the same tier (you can use it as an excuse to give Tyrod Taylor a bump over a Jay Cutler. Not a Drew Brees). And while mobile quarterbacks may be more important, equally if not more so is a quarterback that projects for a lot of yards (possibly QBs on bad teams that won't necessarily get you touchdowns, but will pass a lot trying to overcome deficits, a la Blake Bortles last year).
More important than those points is when you should draft a quarterback at all. QB1s scored 50-70 points more in six point TD leagues over the course of the season. The question isn't whether you should draft Brees or Newton based on the scoring system - it's whether you should draft a QB or snag a running back. Because in a four point per passing touchdown league, that question pushes both players back about two rounds for me.
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