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I spent some time today staring at the Blue Jays' statistics so far this year. (Since it's a rainy workday, and I needed to cheer myself up, I spent more time on the hitting stats than the pitching ones.) Here's a few interesting numbers for you:


- Vernon Wells and Tom Wilson have each walked 11 times, and have each struck out 26. Rocking-chair Tom has compiled his numbers in 84 at-bats, while Vernon has needed 193.

- Carlos Delgado is not the Jays' leader in extra-base hits or total bases - Wells is. Vernon has 28 extra-base hits to Carlos's 24, and 106 total bases to Carlos's 101. To think that the Jays have this guy locked up for four more years.

- Eric Hinske seems to have refined his game to exclusively doubles: he leads the team with 18, but has done nothing else noteworthy with the bat. He has as many runs scored as doubles; can't anyone get this guy home from first?

- I hardly ever seem to notice Josh Phelps doing much these days, but he still has an OPS of .847, which is better than a boot in the head. He's drawing more walks; I think opposing pitchers are avoiding his power zone.

- Carlos Delgado and Greg Myers are the only Jays with more home runs than doubles. Myers's OPS is a healthy 1.004. Tom Wilson's is .881. (Ken Huckaby's was .200.)

- Congratulations to Tanyon Sturtze, who has already exceeded last year's win total (he's got 4). Go in there and ask for a raise, Tanyon!

- One traditional measure of pitching competence is hits per innings pitched: good pitchers usually give up less than a hit an inning. Right now, only Cory Lidle and Cliff Politte meet that standard, and both only barely. The next-best Jay in this category? Doug Creek.

- Of course, this doesn't mean that Doug Creek has actually been any good: he's given up the same number of walks in 13 innings as Cory Lidle has given up in 67. Still, at least he's not Jeff Tam, who has walked more batters than any current member of the Jays' starting rotation.
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_Jurgen - Tuesday, May 20 2003 @ 06:09 PM EDT (#102424) #
http://espn.go.com/mlb/news/2003/0519/1556525.html
I'm sorry for the hijack, but I couldn't resist. From ESPN (click above):

When [former Red Sox general manager Dan] Duquette said that I was done, if I'd have taken his advice and went home, I wouldn't have been a Hall of Famer. So it's a no-brainer. It's definitely pretty easy. Reggie spent five years here, and this will be five for me."

--Roger Clemens on why he wants to go the Hall of Fame as a Yankee, despite 192 career wins with the Red Sox.

Man, I hate that guy. If he wasn't distorting the truth, his rationale might make sense: "The Yankees took me in when nobody else wanted me." But of course it was the Jays, not the Yankees, that took a shot with him, and the Yanks only really wanted him after he'd already proven that he wasn't washed up.

There is some light at the end of the tunnel. If Carter's forever an Expo, I bet Clemens will be forced to wear a Boston cap.
_Dr B - Tuesday, May 20 2003 @ 07:38 PM EDT (#102425) #
"Rocking Chair Tom" Ha, ha. I like that. :-)

It would seem Roger would love to rub Boston's face in it. Wouldn't it have been great if he'd been matched up against Pedro?
Coach - Tuesday, May 20 2003 @ 07:58 PM EDT (#102426) #
Eric Hinske seems to have refined his game to exclusively doubles

Obviously, his sore "wrist" has cost him a few HR. On the broadcast last night, there was a good closeup of some new padding Eric's wearing to protect the injury, which Cerutti explained is more of a bruised hand problem, common to hitters who let the knob of the bat rest against the same place on every swing. So far, the adjustment is working fine.

The rocking chair line is great. It sure is a weird stance, but who cares, as long as it gets results?
_Chuck Van Den C - Tuesday, May 20 2003 @ 08:13 PM EDT (#102427) #
Carlos Delgado is not the Jays' leader in extra-base hits or total bases - Wells is. Vernon has 28 extra-base hits to Carlos's 24, and 106 total bases to Carlos's 101.

Of course, the extra 35 AB's don't hurt.
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