The Baseball-Reference.com Play Index Stat of the Day

Create Your Own Stats of the Day!
Try the Play Index tools for Free! Create Custom Reports from 51 years of searchable play-by-play and gamelog data and 137 years of full-season data. You can also save your reports to share with others. Subscriptions with full reports are $29/year or $5/month. Examples:
   Most Home Runs in a season by a Shortstop
   Longest Batting Streak in games played as a Catcher
   All 89 HR allowed by Anaheim vs. LHB in 2006

January 15, 2008

Don Cardwell

Filed under: Pitcher vs. BatterAndy @ 8:12 am

For the second day in a row, a pitcher from the 50s and 60s has passed away. Yesterday it was Don Cardwell.

Cardwell’s career was not particularly remarkable, except that he seems to have pitched in some bad luck. His career W/L record is 102 up and 138 down, which is unusually lopsided for a guy with a 95 career ERA+. Indeed, neutralizing his stats converts the record to 113 up and 117 down, which makes a lot more sense. In 1961, he went 15-14 with a 110 ERA+, and when neutralized that converts to a 17-13 record that season. It’s only a difference of a couple of decisions each way, but 17-13 sure sounds lot better than 15-14.

Image from www.baseball-almanac.com

Here are the guys with the most career PAs against Cardwell:

                    **PA**  AB  H  2B 3B HR RBI  BB  SO   BA   OBP   SLG   OPS   SH  SF IBB HBP GDP G_miss YR_miss
+—————–+——-+—+—+–+–+–+—+—+—+—–+—–+—–+—–+—+—+—+—+—+——+——-+
 Hank Aaron          121   109  39  4  3 10  34  11   9  .358  .413  .725 1.138   0   1   1   0   3      8
 Willie Mays         117   106  30  4  0  5  17   8  13  .283  .333  .462  .795   0   2   1   1   0
 Maury Wills         103    92  20  1  2  0   2  10  14  .217  .291  .272  .563   0   1   0   0   2
 Tony Gonzalez        96    86  26  2  1  2  10   9  17  .302  .375  .419  .794   0   0   0   1   2
 Eddie Mathews        96    74  22  5  2  6  13  21  12  .297  .448  .662 1.110   0   1   4   0   2      8
 Bill Mazeroski       95    85  22  3  0  1   7   6  13  .259  .316  .329  .645   0   2   4   2   0
 Frank Robinson       94    87  26  5  0  7  17   4  12  .299  .351  .598  .949   0   0   0   3   1
 Johnny Callison      93    81  25  7  1  4  17  11   7  .309  .398  .568  .966   0   0   2   1   1
 Jim Gilliam          93    84  26  5  0  0   8   9   5  .310  .376  .369  .745   0   0   0   0   0
 Tony Taylor          93    83  21  2  0  0   5   5  13  .253  .319  .277  .596   2   0   0   3   1
 Orlando Cepeda       92    79  14  1  0  2   9   9  17  .177  .283  .266  .549   0   1   2   3   4
 Roberto Clemente     91    89  29  5  1  1   3   2  14  .326  .341  .438  .779   0   0   1   0   1
 Vada Pinson          90    85  24  5  2  3   9   4   9  .282  .322  .494  .816   0   0   0   1   2
 Dick Groat           87    84  19  0  0  0   2   1   7  .226  .244  .226  .470   1   0   0   1   5
 Bill Virdon          85    75  16  3  3  1   1   9   6  .213  .306  .373  .679   0   0   0   1   1
 Felipe Alou          82    77  15  4  1  2   5   2   8  .195  .235  .351  .586   1   0   0   2   1      6
 Bob Skinner          81    76  21  3  2  1  10   4   7  .276  .309  .408  .717   0   1   0   0   4
 Willie McCovey       77    64  21  3  0  7  14   9   8  .328  .442  .703 1.145   0   0   3   4   4
 Bill White           77    73  22  5  1  0   7   4  10  .301  .338  .397  .735   0   0   0   0   2
 Ken Boyer            75    70  24  4  3  2  11   4  11  .343  .373  .571  .944   0   1   0   0   2

Wow, there are a lot of great names on that list. It’s a totally unfair sample, and as you can see, a lot of them did quite well against Cardwell (hello Hank Aaron.)

Actually, here are the lowest career OPS against Cardwell, minimum 50 PAs:

                    PA  AB  H  2B 3B HR RBI  BB  SO   BA   OBP   SLG   **OPS**   SH  SF IBB HBP GDP G_miss YR_miss
+—————–+—+—+—+–+–+–+—+—+—+—–+—–+—–+———+—+—+—+—+—+——+——-+
 Daryl Spencer      56  55   8  0  0  0   2   0  11  .145  .161  .145    .306     0   0   0   1   3
 Roy McMillan       69  64   8  2  0  0   1   5   8  .125  .188  .156    .344     0   0   0   0   2      1
 Del Crandall       52  48   7  0  0  1   6   2   6  .146  .192  .208    .400     0   1   0   1   2      1
 Dick Groat         87  84  19  0  0  0   2   1   7  .226  .244  .226    .470     1   0   0   1   5
 Julian Javier      68  64  12  1  0  1   7   2  10  .188  .221  .250    .471     0   1   1   1   1
 Jose Pagan         53  49   8  2  0  1   5   3   3  .163  .226  .265    .491     0   0   1   1   1
 Matty Alou         56  51  12  0  0  0   1   3   1  .235  .291  .235    .526     1   0   0   1   0
 Ron Santo          57  52   9  1  0  2   8   4   9  .173  .228  .308    .536     0   1   0   0   1      1
 Johnny Edwards     55  44   6  0  1  1   5   9   6  .136  .291  .250    .541     0   1   1   1   0
 Orlando Cepeda     92  79  14  1  0  2   9   9  17  .177  .283  .266    .549     0   1   2   3   4
 Maury Wills       103  92  20  1  2  0   2  10  14  .217  .291  .272    .563     0   1   0   0   2
 Felipe Alou        82  77  15  4  1  2   5   2   8  .195  .235  .351    .586     1   0   0   2   1      6
 Tony Taylor        93  83  21  2  0  0   5   5  13  .253  .319  .277    .596     2   0   0   3   1
 Wes Covington      55  48  11  2  0  0   4   6   5  .229  .327  .271    .598     0   0   2   1   0
 Jim Davenport      61  56  11  3  0  2   4   3  11  .196  .250  .357    .607     1   0   0   1   1
 Pete Rose          53  47  10  2  0  1   5   5   7  .213  .302  .319    .621     0   0   0   1   2
 Bob Aspromonte     55  45  10  1  1  0   3   6   9  .222  .345  .289    .634     0   1   0   3   4
 Bill Mazeroski     95  85  22  3  0  1   7   6  13  .259  .316  .329    .645     0   2   4   2   0
 Bill Virdon        85  75  16  3  3  1   1   9   6  .213  .306  .373    .679     0   0   0   1   1
 Bob Skinner        81  76  21  3  2  1  10   4   7  .276  .309  .408    .717     0   1   0   0   4

A few of the same names, plus Ron Santo, Pete Rose, and others.

I don’t know much else about Cardwell. Some of you readers must have some stories. Let’s hear them.

January 8, 2008

Goose Hearts Rickey

Filed under: Pitcher vs. BatterSteve Lombardi @ 4:52 pm

New Cooperstown Hall-of-Famer Rich Gossage loved Rickey Henderson.  But, I don’t think the feeling was mutual.  Thanks to Baseball-Reference.com’s Play Index Pitcher Vs. Batter Finder, for the Goose, shows us that Henderson faced Gossage 11 times in his career - and Rickey whiffed 9 times (and walked twice).  On the flipside, the late Darrell Porter faced Goose 30 times in his career - and never whiffed once.  Play Index tells us all about it.

December 26, 2007

Alan Knicely

Filed under: Pitcher vs. BatterAndy @ 9:00 am

Since Mr. Knice Guy got shortchanged yesterday, I thought I’d use the PI batter-vs-pitcher feature to point out some of his career performances. (more…)

November 29, 2007

Bert Blyleven versus the Hall of Fame

Filed under: Pitcher vs. BatterAndy @ 7:34 am

I heard a great interview with Bert Blyleven today, and it made me think more about his Hall of Fame candidacy, what with the vote coming up again (see the end of the post for a special announcement on this.) He’ll be on the ballot for the 12th time, meaning there are just 4 more chances for the writers to finally get it right and put him in. He is significantly more qualified than quite a number of pitchers already in the HOF, and there are many sites out there with more info on it (including my previous post on this blog about him.) We’re not talking about someone like Jim Rice or Tony Perez here, whose numbers are fringe for the HOF.

Anyway, since this whole thing is starting to feel like Blyleven against the HOF, I thought I’d post his lifetime pitching lines against HOF batters:

                    **PA**  AB  H  2B 3B HR RBI  BB  SO   BA   OBP   SLG   OPS   SH  SF IBB HBP GDP G_miss YR_miss
+—————–+——-+—+—+–+–+–+—+—+—+—–+—–+—–+—–+—+—+—+—+—+——+——-+
 Reggie Jackson      140   131  28  6  0  6  12   8  49  .214  .264  .397  .661   0   0   2   1   1
 George Brett        128   117  27  5  1  2  10   6  15  .231  .281  .342  .623   0   2   0   3   6
 Robin Yount         114   110  20  8  1  1   7   4   4  .182  .211  .300  .511   0   0   0   0   2
 Paul Molitor         80    74  19  8  0  0   4   5  14  .257  .304  .365  .669   1   0   0   0   0
 Cal Ripken           78    67  19  0  0  3  10  10   9  .284  .372  .418  .790   0   1   0   0   0
 Carlton Fisk         70    63  17  1  0  4  10   3   9  .270  .343  .476  .819   0   0   0   4   0
 Eddie Murray         67    62  26  3  0  7  13   5  10  .419  .463  .806 1.269   0   0   0   0   1
 Carl Yastrzemski     65    58  19  4  0  1   7   5   6  .328  .385  .448  .833   0   1   0   1   0
 Rod Carew            53    50  13  1  0  0   2   3   4  .260  .302  .280  .582   0   0   0   0   1
 Dave Winfield        53    48  12  2  0  4   8   3  11  .250  .302  .542  .844   0   1   0   1   1
 Brooks Robinson      51    48  12  0  0  1   3   1   1  .250  .294  .313  .607   0   0   0   2   0
 Wade Boggs           46    43  11  4  0  1   3   3   2  .256  .304  .419  .723   0   0   1   0   1
 Gary Carter          45    42  11  5  0  1   7   2   7  .262  .295  .452  .747   1   0   0   0   2
 Kirby Puckett        41    41  17  2  1  1   6   0   4  .415  .415  .585 1.000   0   0   0   0   2
 Joe Morgan           36    32   6  0  0  1   3   2   3  .188  .222  .281  .503   0   2   0   0   0
 Mike Schmidt         33    23   8  1  0  2   7   7   5  .348  .485  .652 1.137   0   2   0   1   0
 Tony Perez           25    23   7  1  0  1   1   1   3  .304  .360  .478  .838   0   0   0   1   0
 Frank Robinson       21    20   7  1  0  2   3   1   5  .350  .381  .700 1.081   0   0   0   0   0
 Ozzie Smith          21    20   4  1  0  0   0   1   8  .200  .238  .250  .488   0   0   0   0   0
 Johnny Bench         19    17   4  1  0  2   3   1   2  .235  .263  .647  .910   0   1   0   0   0
+—————–+——-+—+—+–+–+–+—+—+—+—–+—–+—–+—–+—+—+—+—+—+——+——-+
                    **PA**  AB  H  2B 3B HR RBI  BB  SO   BA   OBP   SLG   OPS   SH  SF IBB HBP GDP G_miss YR_miss
+—————–+——-+—+—+–+–+–+—+—+—+—–+—–+—–+—–+—+—+—+—+—+——+——-+
 Willie McCovey       19    16   6  2  0  0   3   3   2  .375  .474  .500  .974   0   0   2   0   0
 Steve Carlton        18    15   2  0  0  0   3   0   2  .133  .167  .133  .300   0   2   0   1   0
 Luis Aparicio        17    16   3  1  0  0   1   0   2  .188  .176  .250  .426   0   1   0   0   1
 Billy Williams       17    15   1  0  0  0   0   2   3  .067  .176  .067  .243   0   0   1   0   0
 Al Kaline            11    10   1  0  0  0   1   1   1  .100  .182  .100  .282   0   0   0   0   2
 Phil Niekro          11    11   0  0  0  0   0   0   3  .000  .000  .000  .000   0   0   0   0   0
 Lou Brock            10    10   5  0  0  0   0   0   1  .500  .500  .500 1.000   0   0   0   0   0
 Orlando Cepeda        9     8   1  0  0  0   0   1   1  .125  .222  .125  .347   0   0   0   0   0
 Jim Palmer            8     8   2  1  0  0   1   0   4  .250  .250  .375  .625   0   0   0   0   0
 Gaylord Perry         8     5   1  0  0  1   2   1   3  .200  .333  .800 1.133   2   0   0   0   0
 Hank Aaron            7     7   0  0  0  0   0   0   1  .000  .000  .000  .000   0   0   0   0   0
 Don Sutton            7     5   1  0  0  0   0   1   1  .200  .333  .200  .533   1   0   0   0   0
 Tom Seaver            3     2   1  0  0  0   0   0   0  .500  .500  .500 1.000   1   0   0   0   0
 Rollie Fingers        1     1   0  0  0  0   0   0   0  .000  .000  .000  .000   0   0   0   0   0

Holy cow, can you believe Reggie had 140 PAs against him? And he hit terribly, as did George Brett, Robin Yount, and Paul Molitor. Cal Ripken and Carlton Fisk were so-so, but Eddie Murray had some serious PWNAGE going there.

I calculated an approximate average for all this data (should be within 2 or 3 points) and Blyleven’s complete line against all HOF batters is .255/.306/.409. Remember that a lot of Bert’s pitching came when offense was much less than today (for example in 1973, one of his best years, the AL hit.259/.328/.381) but that his career was through 1990 and that these numbers are against all HOFers. Pretty impressive stuff.

Now, for the special announcement, as per a great reader suggestion:

In the coming weeks, I am going to post another poll here, this time giving you a chance to vote on the Hall of Fame class of 2008. The real voting will be announced on January 8th, so I’ll probably post it just before the end of the year. This is announcement is just to get you thinking seriously about who you’d vote in to the HOF, given the chance. So check out the names on this year’s ballot, and get ready for my upcoming post!

November 23, 2007

Joe Kennedy

Filed under: Pitcher vs. BatterAndy @ 2:36 pm

In a piece of heartbreaking news, free agent pitcher Joe Kenndy has passed away. Leaving behind his wife and a young son the day after Thanksgiving, this is a terribly sad turn of events.

Kennedy has a largely nondescript career, primarily starting for below-average teams. One interesting tidbit I found is the list of batters he struck out the most times in his career, which ended much too soon:

                    PA  AB  H  2B 3B HR RBI  BB  **SO**   BA   OBP   SLG   OPS   SH  SF IBB HBP GDP G_miss YR_miss
+—————–+—+—+—+–+–+–+—+—+——-+—–+—–+—–+—–+—+—+—+—+—+——+——-+
 Jason Giambi       29  26   4  0  0  1   1   2    11    .154  .241  .269  .510   0   0   0   1   1
 Carlos Delgado     42  36   5  2  0  1   2   5     7    .139  .262  .278  .540   0   0   0   1   2
 Jorge Posada       33  29  12  6  0  0   2   4     7    .414  .485  .621 1.106   0   0   1   0   0
 Alfonso Soriano    31  27   5  0  1  0   2   3     7    .185  .258  .259  .517   0   1   0   0   0
 Eric Hinske        21  21   5  3  0  1   5   0     6    .238  .238  .524  .762   0   0   0   0   0                

He pitched quite effectively against some of the majors’ best hitters.

With the death of Josh Hancock earlier this season, that’s two active players who passed away this year, and that’s simply awful.

September 7, 2007

A-Rod Taking As Many With Him As Possible

Filed under: Pitcher vs. BatterSteve Lombardi @ 8:12 am

Alex Rodriguez has 48 homeruns (so far) this season.  Thanks to Baseball-Reference.com’s Play Index Batter vs. Pitcher function, we can see that A-Rod has gone yard against 46 different pitchers this year.  The only pitchers that Alex has tagged twice this year are Curt Schilling and Chris Bootcheck.

Bootcheck was in two different games.  But, Rodriguez got Schilling twice, this year, in the same game:  April 20th.

If Alex hits 50 homers this year, he’ll become the first right-handed batter in A.L. history to have three 50+ homer seasons.  Considering the unique nature of that mark, it’s nice that A-Rod is sharing it with so many different pitchers this season.

August 25, 2007

David Wells

Filed under: Pitcher vs. Batter, Season Finders, SplitsAndy @ 8:13 am

David Wells will shortly start his 12th tour of duty with a major league team. That’s 2 each with Toronto, New York, and San Diego (putting him in the Jeff Conine club), and one with Detroit, Cincinnati, Baltimore, Chicago (AL), Boston, and now Los Angeles.

I think there is a lot to like about Wells, both as a pitcher and as a candid person who is not afraid to take responsibility or make justifiable accusations about existing problems with MLB. But I have to say, Wells looks quite classless in this article (link via MLBTradeRumors.com.) I don’t care what kind of person you are. Replacing another player at his job and then making fun of him while he effectively cleans out his desk is one of the crassest things I have ever heard.

But anyway, this blog is about stats, so let’s look at some data about David Wells: (more…)

August 20, 2007

Tim Raines

Filed under: Box Scores, Leaders, Pitcher vs. Batter, Season FindersAndy @ 12:04 pm

There is an absolutely fantastic interview with Tim Raines over here at Baseball Prospectus (shout out to the guys over at The Book for pointing it out.) I’ll let you read the interview on your own, but I’ll use the PI to point out a few of the things that Raines mentions. (more…)

August 1, 2007

Julio Franco

Filed under: Pitcher vs. Batter, UncategorizedAndy @ 8:43 pm

48-year-old Julio Franco was released by Atlanta yesterday to make room for their new acquisitions.

Here’s a bit of trivia for you. How many different pitchers do you think Franco has faced in his career?

Really think about it and make a guess before clicking past the jump for the answer.

(more…)

July 31, 2007

Dennis Rasmussen

Filed under: Pitcher vs. BatterAndy @ 8:00 am

There’s a fellow named Rasmussen who has been in the news with regards to the Tour de France, which made me think of former pitcher Dennis Rasmussen (no relation, as far as I know.)

Looking at Dennis Rasmussen’s main B-R.com page, did you know that he was twice the “player to be named later” in a trade? Once in a trade for Tommy John, and the other in a trade for John Montefusco.

Just for curiosity, who hit the most homers of Rasmussen?

The answer isTom Brunansky with 5, followed by George Bell with 4, and several guys with 3.

Top OPS vs. Rasmussen, minimum 25 PAs?

The answer is Lloyd McClendon, with a robust 1.408 OPS over 26 PAs (11 hits, 3 2Bs, 2 HRs, 5 RBI in 23 ABs), followed by Larry Herndon at 1.293 and Alan Trammell at 1.217.

And finally, a positive stat: lowest OPS vs. Rasmussen, again minimum 25 PA:

Four guys have OPS under .400:

                    PA  AB  H  2B 3B HR RBI  BB  SO   BA   OBP   SLG   **OPS**   SH  SF IBB HBP GDP G_miss YR_miss
+-----------------+---+---+---+--+--+--+---+---+---+-----+-----+-----+---------+---+---+---+---+---+------+-------+
 Lance Parrish      25  23   2  0  0  0   0   2   7  .087  .160  .087    .247     0   0   0   0   0
 Spike Owen         33  30   3  0  0  0   2   3   7  .100  .182  .100    .282     0   0   0   0   1
 Craig Biggio       32  29   4  0  0  0   0   3   6  .138  .219  .138    .357     0   0   0   0   1
 Alfredo Griffin    38  34   5  0  0  0   1   3   8  .147  .216  .147    .363     1   0   0   0   0

On second thought, maybe Craig Biggio isn’t a Hall of Famer (just kidding.)

Next Page »
Powered by WordPress