Posted by MikeT23 on 11/15/2017 4:35:00 PM (view original):
Well, first, I think you're confusing me with someone else. I've said it can be useful but it's not a be all to end all stat. You tend to treat it the same way the rightest of wing Christians treat the Bible. Thus far, you and I have found no common ground.
Are you refusing to answer the "EM, top 10 in WAR, once in his 7 peak years, fantastic" question because it ***** on EM or WAR and you can't decide which one you value more?
OK, so when I point out that Jeter only made the top 10 twice in his entire career, does that make you re-evaluate Jeter's candidacy?
Career totals:
EM's WAR - 68
DJ's WAR - 71
A three WAR difference over 18 or 19 years really isn't really a difference. I'm sure you'll say, "yeah but Jeter played defense." And I'll answer with, "but
did he?"
Joking aside, WAR includes defense. And, on top of that, it includes a positional adjustment. So, while Jeter gets credit for his defense and Martinez doesn't (for the most part, since he did play ~600 innings at 3rd), Jeter also gets +7 runs per 150 games and Martinez gets -15 runs per 150 games right off the top, before you ever factor in what they actually did on the field or at the plate.
So, over twenty years, Jeter basically got a 40 WAR head start on Martinez.
And they finished at 68 and 71.
So yeah, Martinez belongs. He was a fantastic hitter.
**********super important...if Jeter had actually played league average defense at SS, this wouldn't be close. He'd destroy EM by like 35 WAR. But he didn't and that matters. Jeter was a LF masquerading as a shortstop. If we're going to hold it against EM for not playing defense, we also need to hold it against Jeter. Which WAR does, appropriately.