
Originally Posted by
Dante1847
ha, bigmf wants to see a fight, so Ill start one!
those in favor of picking Cabrera over Trout are simply using irrational arguments: "oh he has done something that hasn't been done in 45 years"; "his team made the playoffs", etc. its just baseball purists spoon feeding bull**** reasons to justify their job and credentials, when in fact their line of thinking is flat out outdated, illogical and ultimately wrong.
consider the fact that one of those Triple Crown categories--RBI--is a stat that is dependent on situational factors and other elements outside of a player's control. it should be ignored, for the sme reasons that Wins should be ignored when evaluating pitchers. the Triple Crown as a whole is overhyped simply because it's rare, similar to hitting for the cycle. A player who hits for the cycle is going to displace his teammate who on the same night went 4-4 with 2 doubles, a HR, and a walk. of the two, who has more "value"? people too easily throw the Triple Crown out there like it tells us a lot about a player's value, when it just doesn't. it's like saying a player is good for not hitting into double plays because he strikes out a lot. Triple Crown requires a lot of randomness that needs to go the players way. I bet if Cabrera fell short on of the categories, his MVP candidacy wouldn't have been nearly as strong. that tells us all we need to know about how much to use the Triple Crown in deciding MVPs.
exactly how are sabermetrics stupid and useless? all they do is provide objective analysis of a player's value, independent of **** like place in the lineup, who got on base before, when they got on base before you, etc.
Bigmf hit it right about how to judge "best player". Doesn't just include HR's, RBIs, and batting avg. Trout had a slightly better OBP, slightly worse SLG (his home field hurt him a little), added MUCH more value running, and was more valuable defensively playing a slightly tougher position. He was the better player.
the whole MVP argument is really an argument against tradition. that might be what bugs me the most, how the Cabrera side is using arguments that have nothing to do with how much value a player had for the team.