1 hour ago1 hr 4 minutes ago, vilehoopster said:Right off google:AI OverviewAs of 2025, the league-wide average save percentage for MLB relievers is approximately 63%.As usual, you’re completely full of BS!Relievers and closers bundled into that would make sense but a closer with 63 is a loser.
1 hour ago1 hr 6 minutes ago, vilehoopster said:Right off google:AI OverviewAs of 2025, the league-wide average save percentage for MLB relievers is approximately 63%.As usual, you’re completely full of BS!This is what I got when I asked AI the same question for what it's worth:"Based on historical data and modern trends, the league-wide average save percentage (Save Opportunity conversion rate) for MLB relievers in save situations has hovered around 88% to 90% for established closing pitchers.Medium +2While individual, non-closer relievers may have lower rates, major league closers tasked with finishing games in recent decades have maintained a high baseline of success, with elite closers often exceeding 90% and career leaders averaging roughly 89%."
1 hour ago1 hr AI doesn't know how to different elite closers from non closing relievers.Not to mention three inning save conversions in blowouts count too for those stats.A Hector Santiago special. Edited 1 hour ago1 hr by caulfield12
1 hour ago1 hr Author 6 minutes ago, vilehoopster said:Right off google:AI OverviewAs of 2025, the league-wide average save percentage for MLB relievers is approximately 63%.As usual, you’re completely full of BS!For "relievers". That's not closers. There are 20 player's with 3, or more, saves in MLB currently. Of them none have an equal, or worse, save rate than Anthony. He is dead last.
1 hour ago1 hr 2 minutes ago, Lip Man 1 said:This is what I got when I asked AI the same question for what it's worth:"Based on historical data and modern trends, the league-wide average save percentage (Save Opportunity conversion rate) for MLB relievers in save situations has hovered around 88% to 90% for established closing pitchers.Medium +2While individual, non-closer relievers may have lower rates, major league closers tasked with finishing games in recent decades have maintained a high baseline of success, with elite closers often exceeding 90% and career leaders averaging roughly 89%."There you go.Bottom at 85% tolerable/keep your spotShould be definition of elite.Would argue 95% and up. Edited 1 hour ago1 hr by caulfield12
1 hour ago1 hr 39 minutes ago, tray said:That is your opinion. I respectfully disagree.Guess I have to s%*# talk him more often
1 hour ago1 hr 25 minutes ago, vilehoopster said:Right off google:AI OverviewAs of 2025, the league-wide average save percentage for MLB relievers is approximately 63%.As usual, you’re completely full of BS!You failed at Google. 🤣But even without your failed attempt at Googling, you really thought a closer failing to save one out of every three games would be good?!?Wow… Edited 1 hour ago1 hr by WhiteSox2023
1 hour ago1 hr 1 hour ago, Lip Man 1 said:Congratulations to Schultz on his first win.He looked a lot more comfortable out there than in his first start.I see more Sale than Johnson
1 hour ago1 hr 2out of 3 in Oakland...oops Sacramento. We'll take it and forget about the middle game. That ballpark sure looked full for 12,000 people. Edited 1 hour ago1 hr by soxrwhite addition
48 minutes ago48 min 43 minutes ago, WhiteSox2023 said:You failed at Google. 🤣But even without your failed attempt at Googling, you really thought a closer failing to save one out of every three games would be good?!?Wow…Yes, he would be good because he would be above average as the AI said.
46 minutes ago46 min I'm still a glass half full kind of guy, but it's cold beer and going down fast so hurry up and turn this season around. Sox really need Teel back in the line-up and Antonacci to start hitting. And my pet peeve here - please sit Acuna in favor of Derek Hill in CF.
45 minutes ago45 min Author 2 minutes ago, vilehoopster said:Yes, he would be good because he would be above average as the AI said.AI is only as good as the prompt you give it. Judging by the answer you got, I am guessing how accurate the prompt was.Proof? Last year you have to go down to 30th in saves in MLB to find someone with a 60%, or worse, save percentage. Coincidentally, it was Leasure at 58.3%.I rest my case.
44 minutes ago44 min 3 minutes ago, vilehoopster said:Yes, he would be good because he would be above average as the AI said.Like others have already responded, your Google search was flawed. You got the save percentage result for all MLB relievers, not just closers. A 66% save percentage would not be good for a highly payed closer, and I didn’t even need AI to know that. Edited 38 minutes ago38 min by WhiteSox2023
25 minutes ago25 min 1 hour ago, southsider2k5 said:For "relievers". That's not closers. There are 20 player's with 3, or more, saves in MLB currently. Of them none have an equal, or worse, save rate than Anthony. He is dead last.Again I call BS. TB and LAA have closers also with 4 saves in 6 opportunities. There 13 or so guys doing better than Dominguez, but beyond that there are very few who have had 6 or more svos. There’s a bunch of guys at 2- 0 and 3 - 0 in svos. Also a bunch at 1 - 0 or 2- 0 or 1 - 1. WSH’s guy is 2 of 4 svos. Hoffman of TOR is 2 of 5 svos. Leiter of the As is 2 of 4 svos. So Dominguez is NOT dead last. Why come on here and misrepresent something that is not at all true. Here’s the link to save stats: https://www.mlb.com/stats/pitching/saves?page=1
22 minutes ago22 min 50 minutes ago, caulfield12 said:There you go.Bottom at 85% tolerable/keep your spotShould be definition of elite.Would argue 95% and up.Last season's saves leader (Estevez, 42/46) had an 87.5% save rate. Chapman (32/24) was the only pitcher (out of 8) with 30+ saves at a rate above 90%. If you lower the threshold to 20 saves, Jansen (28/29) and Hader (27/28) make the cut which would be 3/21 closers. Which is fine, if that's your bar for elite, the top 10-15% probably makes sense.But by these standards, only a handful of closers are even at a "tolerable" 85%. Mason Miller, who most would call elite, I guess should be grateful he just managed to keep his spot at that rate (22/26). And the Brewers were lucky to win so much with their just barely tolerable 83% save rate from Megill (30/36)?It's an inherently high noise stat due to small sample sizes. Only ~17 guys got 30+ save opps last season, and nearly all of them will have also pitched 20+ innings in non-save situations that won't be captured by the stat at all.It's a cool stat for when guys are on wild streaks or for comparing the work of really established closers over time, but I'm not sure there's a less predictive stat than any relievers "save rate" over a five game sample. Jeff Hoffman (2/5), the guy who literally closed over Dominguez in Toronto last year, is worse if we're going by 5 SVO samples. Edited 21 minutes ago21 min by Autumn Dreamin
22 minutes ago22 min https://www.espn.com/mlb/stats/closers/_/year/2025There you go.Everyone well above 80% until Will Vest.Who's not elite either.
20 minutes ago20 min Author 2 minutes ago, vilehoopster said:Again I call BS. TB and LAA have closers also with 4 saves in 6 opportunities. There 13 or so guys doing better than Dominguez, but beyond that there are very few who have had 6 or more svos. There’s a bunch of guys at 2- 0 and 3 - 0 in svos. Also a bunch at 1 - 0 or 2- 0 or 1 - 1. WSH’s guy is 2 of 4 svos. Hoffman of TOR is 2 of 5 svos. Leiter of the As is 2 of 4 svos.So Dominguez is NOT dead last. Why come on here and misrepresent something that is not at all true.Here’s the link to save stats: https://www.mlb.com/stats/pitching/saves?page=1Can you read? Because nothing you said contradicted what I said. I even went back to the last full season of 2025 to further clarify the point.You are erroneously associating "relievers" with closers.Why is this an important distinction? Because only closers get a chance to actually save games, versus a non-closer who can blow saves, but gets very few actual saves.
14 minutes ago14 min 10 minutes ago, caulfield12 said:https://www.espn.com/mlb/stats/closers/_/year/2025There you go.Everyone well above 80% until Will Vest.Who's not elite either.This is not the best source to use, since it splits stats by player team and backend BP arms are among the most commonly traded assets at the deadline. Just at first glance, it leaves out Mason Miller's post-trade Padres tenure, where he went 2/5 on save opps.Sorry quoted wrong post Edited 12 minutes ago12 min by Autumn Dreamin
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