Jump to content

White Sox Sign Dunn


Vote4Pedro
 Share

Recommended Posts

If you have ESPN Insider, this link was sent from the heavens. I won't paste the entire article, but I'll go ahead and hook you up with some of it.

 

http://insider.espn.go.com/mlb/blog?name=o...&id=5878412

 

Some of the numbers on Dunn, from Mark Simon of ESPN Stats & Information:

 

The players who've hit the most homers, since 2004:

 

Albert Pujols: 294

Adam Dunn: 282

Alex Rodriguez: 268

David Ortiz: 260

Ryan Howard: 253

 

And the most consecutive seasons of 38-plus home runs, all time:

 

Rafael Palmeiro: 9, 1995-2003

Adam Dunn: 7, 2004-2010

Babe Ruth: 7, 1926-1932

 

Isolated Power is a metric that looks strictly at a player's ability to get power hits (doubles, triples, homers). Basically it's extra bases per at-bat (slugging percentage without the singles). Dunn rated consistently among the best in the NL in this stat. Here are his numbers over the past seven seasons:

 

2010: .276 (T-2nd)

2009: .262 (8th)

2008: .277 (4th)

2007: .289 (3rd)

2006: .257 (1st)

2005: .293 (3rd)

2004: .303 (5th)

 

Over the past seven seasons, only Ichiro has played more games and only Pujols has hit more home runs than Dunn. During that time he has the most strikeouts AND the most walks in the majors. Where Dunn ranks across MLB in parentheses:

 

Games: 1,108 (2nd)

HR: 282 (2nd)

K: 1,262 (1st)

BB: 750 (1st)

 

And where the White Sox ranked at DH last year:

 

OBP: .332 (9th)

Slug pct: .396 (9th)

HR: 18 (10th)

BB: 65 (9th)

 

And a look at Dunn's numbers from 2010 compared to where he would have ranked (in parentheses) had his primary position been DH:

 

OBP: .356 (7th)

Slug pct: .536 (2nd)

HR: 38 (1st)

RBI: 103 (2nd)

 

Not only was Dunn one of the most prolific home run hitters last season, ranking second in the NL with 38 homers, but his homers were consistently also among the longest. According to Hittracker, his 38 homers traveled an average of 411 feet, the fourth-highest true distance average among players with at least 20 homers last season. He also hit the third-longest homer last season, a 479-foot shot Sept. 14 at Turner Field. Here's how his average shot stacks up:

 

Josh Hamilton: 421

Mark Reynolds: 416

Carlos Gonzalez: 415

Adam Dunn: 411

Troy Tulowitzki: 410

 

The fact the White Sox gave Dunn a four-year contract is somewhat surprising and uncharacteristic of the team based on their history with free agent contracts. Dunn's four-year contract would be just the 16th free-agent contract of four or more years given out by the White Sox since the 1990-91 offseason. The White Sox are one of five teams to have given out 15 or fewer contracts of four-plus years since then. These teams have given the fewest since 1990-91, excluding Dunn's deal:

 

Twins: 13

Marlins: 14

White Sox: 15

Brewers: 15

Tigers: 15

Edited by Steve9347
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 746
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

QUOTE (Steve9347 @ Dec 3, 2010 -> 10:30 AM)
If you have ESPN Insider, this link was sent from the heavens. I won't paste the entire article, but I'll go ahead and hook you up with some of it.

 

http://insider.espn.go.com/mlb/blog?name=o...&id=5878412

So what you're saying is that Dunn is an upgrade from Kotsay?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

QUOTE (Capn12 @ Dec 3, 2010 -> 11:43 AM)
OK, since I'm too lazy to look it up in this monster thread....what are we looking at, payroll wise? I'm assuming the hopes are that we find a way to get PK back at first, and say goodbye to Jenks.

 

They're close to $100 million now, and that's before Quentin, Danks, and Pena. If they sign Konerko, they'll be around $120-$125 . Big-city baseball team.

Edited by flavum
Link to comment
Share on other sites

QUOTE (ozzfest @ Dec 3, 2010 -> 12:45 PM)
Does anyone realize how much this guy sucks with runners in scoring position?? Isn't that a big indicator of how good a hitter really is?

He has a career .902 OPS overall, and a career .890 OPS with RISP.

 

He had a bad year with RISP in 2010 and a great year in 2009. So yeah, that's an indicator of how good of a hitter he really is.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

QUOTE (Balta1701 @ Dec 3, 2010 -> 12:09 PM)
He has a career .902 OPS overall, and a career .890 OPS with RISP.

 

He had a bad year with RISP in 2010 and a great year in 2009. So yeah, that's an indicator of how good of a hitter he really is.

 

The only indicator if how good a hitter is couldn't be more simple - does he lead to runs?

Dunn? - YES

Link to comment
Share on other sites

QUOTE (ozzfest @ Dec 3, 2010 -> 11:45 AM)
Does anyone realize how much this guy sucks with runners in scoring position?? Isn't that a big indicator of how good a hitter really is?

 

.231/.411/.478/.890 for his career

 

No I was not aware of something that is not true

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.

×
×
  • Create New...