Skeptics will say this is because the tigers are bad at making productive outs and getting runners home on sacrifices before there are two outs. I say both things can be true but tigers are clearly one of the best teams with two outs somehow.
2 comments
I’m glad you posted this as I am always thinking in my head when we leave a runner stranded on third that we never push the run across. Needed this reality check.
I don’t think OPS is a great metric to judge this on. For example, if there were just a single runner on third then a single, double, and triple has the same result in terms of scoring that runner. A team that scores the run one time with a triple and gets out the other two times would have a similar OPS to the team that singles every single time and scores all three of the runners. I would rather see the % of times that runner scores.
2 comments
I’m glad you posted this as I am always thinking in my head when we leave a runner stranded on third that we never push the run across. Needed this reality check.
I don’t think OPS is a great metric to judge this on. For example, if there were just a single runner on third then a single, double, and triple has the same result in terms of scoring that runner. A team that scores the run one time with a triple and gets out the other two times would have a similar OPS to the team that singles every single time and scores all three of the runners. I would rather see the % of times that runner scores.