By Brian Joura January 10, 2021
First, it seems we
need to have some historical perspective. They say a generation is 20 years
long. Since the Mets started in 1962 – and there’s not a lot to be gained by
looking at the offense of an expansion team – let’s take a generational view of
how the starting eight did for the Mets in 1972, 1992 and 2012. The starters
are taken from Baseball-Reference. These might not necessarily be the leaders
in games played at each position but it’ll be close enough for our purposes.
The number is their fWAR for the season.
1972 |
|
1992 |
|
2012 |
|
1.9 |
-0.2 |
0.9 |
|||
1 |
2 |
1 |
|||
-0.1 |
0.7 |
1.6 |
|||
0.1 |
1.7 |
6.6 |
|||
0.2 |
2 |
1.7 |
|||
1.6 |
0.8 |
-0.9 |
|||
0.7 |
-1.2 |
1.5 |
|||
0.8 |
1.4 |
-0.7 |
|||
Total |
6.2 |
|
7.2 |
|
11.7 |
Want to win a bet with your friend? Ask him which starter on the 1972 Mets led the team in fWAR. Take a hike, Jerry Grote! That team looks pretty bad – and it was without Staub in the lineup – but it’s not like it was a whole lot better 20 years later. Flash forward to 2012 and we finally see a good year from one player – Wright – but there’s still not a lot of offense going on. And, of course, fWAR takes more into account than just offense. Certainly 2012 Duda isn’t helping himself with either baserunning or defense. But we’re all familiar with what’s a good fWAR and it’s easier to add together than, say, wRC+.
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