Hoopstarr wrote:Michael Bradley wrote:Hoopstarr wrote:Like Schad said, it's pretty ridiculous to expect a six win swing from your worst starter, let alone your ace, which is why I find it ridiculous when MB said that Roy Halladay made a 10 win difference by himself. Baseball just doesn't work like that.
It does when the disparity between top and bottom is as great as it was when Halladay was here (mostly the early years). The Jays with Halladay were typically top heavy. In 2002 for example, Halladay had a 2.93 ERA (6.9 WAR) in 239 innings. The rest of the starters (Carpenter, Loaiza, Parris, Walker, and Miller) had a collective ERA of 5.41 in 507 innings. The best of that group was Pete Walker at 4.79 in 115 innings. Yet they finished a couple of games off from .500. Replace Halladay with a league average starter and that team is horrendously bad. The pitching continued to stink after Roy for years until about 2006 or so. A team without a capable 2nd guy in the rotation to win 80-ish games for a few years without a top level offense seems pretty obviously to be on back of Halladay.
In 2005 Doc took that Kevin Mench line drive off his leg and ended his season on July 8. The Jays were 44-42 at the point. They finished 80-82. He was essentially replaced by Downs and McGowan who combined for a 4.98 ERA. So even if you think the entire team record was decided by that one change alone, the difference between an ace who got off to a 12-4 start with a 2.41 ERA and a 4.98 ERA replacement, which would be a #5 starter, was only 4 wins.
You conveniently ignored that to get to 44-42 in the first place they needed Halladay to pitch like he did (he was on his way to his best season ever). You think half a season of playing sub-.500 ball after Roy's injury means the Jays would have been just a few wins short of 80 if Halladay was replaced by Scott Downs for the whole year? Wow.
So in 2002, replace Halladay with a league average starter, and the team lead by Pete Walker in the rotation is going to win a few games less than the 78 they ended with? Ok. You believe that.
Look at St. Louis this year. Albert Pujols, I think we'd agree, is better than Halladay. His team is 80-75 right now. By your logic, if he was replaced with a league avg hitter, they would have like 68 wins. It's just not like basketball where you take away an elite player and the team is totally crap.
So according to you I created a 10 win criteria (which I don't remember doing unless it was to illustrate that Roy carried 75-win talent to 85 win seasons), which now increases to 12?
Remove Pujols from the team and replace him with an average hitter (assuming everything else stays constant) and the team is a lot worse. 5, 10, whatever. Worse. Substantially worse. He is the best hitter in the game. The downgrade from Pujols to league average is astronomical. For anyone to suggest it would only be a 2 or 3 game loss if a 1.000 OPS guy is replaced by an .750 OPS guy (or whatever the league average is), that is pretty naive.
On the flip side of that, the Jays had a ton of 5+ ERA starters in 2003, Escobar at 4.29, and Doc. They still won 86 games. If you replaced Doc with a league average starter, would that mean they would've won only 60-something or even 70-something? Of course not. They would very likely still finished with 80+ wins.
So now it goes from 10 games to 12 games to 20 games worse? Where are you getting these arbitrary numbers from? If you are using something I said as hyperbole to illustrate a point, I don't see what that is supposed to prove.
You constantly made the argument in the past that the Jays pythag showed they were better than they were, and my argument was Halladay weighed the pythag in Toronto's favor more than it should have been (for example, they were +2 without him in 2003 and +66 when he started). Yet you would point to the run differential as if Ricciardi built a great team around Roy that was stunted only by the division, which is flat out incorrect. Halladay alone carried that group to a much better mark than they had any right to be (except in 2006-08 where the talent base got better).
The reason the team is better this year has nothing to do with losing Roy; it is improvement from damn near everyone else. Put Roy on this team over Tallet/Litsch/etc and it is better. How much better? Who knows, but better. Less strain on the pen, more CG's, etc, etc.
The difference between league average and slightly better isn't much. But if you think the difference between league average and elite is this small, then I don't know what more I can say.