Pinch Hit: Concerned About Hinske?

Sunday, August 31 2003 @ 11:51 AM EDT

Contributed by: robertdudek

Leigh Sprague comes up with a nice pinch-hit, examing Eric Hinske's lack of homeruns this year in the context of hitters with similar groundball/flyball ratios.

There's no doubt in my mind that Eric's hand injury has led to a loss of power and I don't expect much to change in the last month of the season, but I'm optimistic that Eric will hit more homeruns next year.

Take it away, Leigh ...


Concerned About Hinske? (By Leigh Sprague)

I am a regular poster on a fantasy baseball website, and recently came across the following response to a post in which I recommended to a fellow fantasy owner that he pick up Eric Hinske off of the waiver wire:

I laugh everytime I see someone recommending Hinske. I dropped him a month ago and I should have done it even earlier. He is sooo over-rated. If your league gives a lot of points for 3B that consistently hit .240 with an occasional HR - then he is your man. If not, I think you can do much better than Hinske.

Now, I tend to get a little bit defensive when a fellow message board poster laughs at my player recommendations, especially one who uses the 12 year-old girl spelling of the word “so”.

So naturally, I decided to look for some evidence to back up my recommendation, lest the readers of the post think that the picture of Rance Mulliniks on my avatar somehow constitutes bias.

My conclusions below are based on a couple of assertions: firstly, flyball hitters tend to hit more homeruns that groundball hitters. This is an accepted and perfectly reasonable assertion, because groundballs cannot clear the fence. Secondly, a decrease in homerun rate can sometimes be dismissed as a minor irregularity in a player’s career path if that player experiences, at the same time, an increase in the rate at which he hits doubles.

To date in 2003, Hinske has a groundball/flyball ratio of 0.95 (endnote 1). This is low, and thus indicates that Hinske hits a disproportionately high number of flyballs.

There are twenty Major Leaguers who, in 2003, have at least 345 plate appearances and a groundball/flyball ratio between 0.90 and 0.99. Of those twenty hitters, Hinske has the lowest rate of homeruns per double.


Player

Team

Pos

G

AB

2B

3B

HR

GB/FB

HR/2B

Ensberg, M

Hou

3B

103

307

11

1

19

0.94

1.73

Jones, A

Atl

OF

125

485

22

1

31

0.97

1.41

Thome,J

Phi

1B

128

470

26

2

36

0.94

1.38

Klesko,R

SD

1B

117

382

18

0

20

0.92

1.11

Ramirez, M

Bos

OF

130

485

30

1

31

0.92

1.03

Delgado, C

Tor

1B

131

466

33

1

33

0.94

1.00

Lee, C

ChW

OF

128

501

27

1

26

0.96

0.96

Pena, C

Det

1B

101

348

18

6

14

0.93

0.78

Cruz, J

SF

OF

129

445

22

1

17

0.97

0.77

Wells, V

Tor

OF

131

557

40

3

30

0.92

0.75

Ventura, R

LA

3B

109

342

17

1

11

0.96

0.65

Gonzalez, L

Arz

OF

129

485

38

4

22

0.99

0.58

Koskie, C

Min

3B

106

393

25

1

14

0.98

0.56

Matos, L

Bal

OF

83

346

19

3

10

0.99

0.53

Kielty, B

Tor

OF

109

346

21

1

11

0.95

0.52

Molina, B

Ana

C

113

385

24

0

11

0.97

0.46

Fick, R

Atl

OF

102

340

24

1

10

0.96

0.42

Liebertal, M

Phi

C

105