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Showing posts with label Jamie Moyer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jamie Moyer. Show all posts

Friday, July 20, 2012

Lies Damned Lies and Statistics – MLB – July 20, 2012

The pennant races are getting really hot. With two additional Wild Card teams being invited to the playoffs this season, there are very few teams already looking ahead to next year. There are some players on teams that will be involved in some important series with some factoids on their resumes that might surprise you.

Jamie Moyer is Major League Baseball’s active leader in career wins.

The 49 year old Colorado Rockies pitcher has been in the big leagues since before I was old enough for the “12 and over” doses of Tylenol. I’m in my late 30s. To my knowledge, he is the sole remaining active professional athlete in a major sports league who played when I was in elementary school.

In fact, for contrast, there are only six active NHL players, two NFL players (Jason Hanson of the Detroit Lions and John Kasay of the New Orleans Saints), and no remaining active NBA players who played when I was in high school. The college contemporaries are growing thin, too.

Moyer has always been a solid contributor to his teams’ starting rotation, but never a dominating pitcher for an extended period of years like several of the men just beneath him on this list. Nonetheless, Moyer, with 269 career wins, leads all other active major leaguers. Unfortunately, playing for the Rockies, he will not add to that total very much.

Moyer in 1986. With good health and a little luck, a man can pile up a lot of wins in a quarter century.

C.C. Sabathia is the fifth in career MLB wins among active players.

C.C. Sabathia is one of the best pitchers in the game; many would argue the best left hander. But at a position in which players can remain active less than a year before their 50th birthdays, the fact that C.C., who debuted in 2001 and turns 32 tomorrow, is among the top five active win leaders is a powerful statement about just how dominant he is.

To put this in perspective, the active career wins leader born after Sabathia is 31 year old Carlos Zambrano of the Miami Marlins. Zambrano is 18th among active pitchers with 130 wins. The active career wins leader among lefties who are C.C.’s junior? Twenty-eight year old Zack Greinke of the Milwaukee Brewers, tied for 49th in wins among active pitchers with Cole Hamels of the Philadelphia Phillies with just 85 career wins.

The big question is can C.C.'s career win total ever exceed his weight in pounds? 2

Albert Pujols is 10th in career runs scored among active players.

Again, the fact that arguably the game’s best player is in the top 10 for active career achievements sounds intuitive. He is the best complete hitter of his time, has average speed, and is a smart baserunner, so why wouldn’t he be high on the career run list? However, at age 32, a healthy baseball player like Pujols is not in the twilight of his career, as players in other sports would be; he’s in (the back end of) his career peak. This is what makes this statistic somewhat incredible.

Pujols has scored 1,341 runs in his career as of this morning. Comparing him similarly to Sabathia, the active career leader, younger than Pujols, in runs scored is 32 year old Mark Teixeira of the New York Yankees with 926. That ranks Teixeira 32nd among active players. In fact, Jimmy Rollins of the Phillies is the next-highest active career leader in runs scored after Pujols among players under the age of 35, ranked 18th with more than 200 fewer runs scored.

Pujols is no diva; he isn't afraid to bring it to the catcher at the plate. Sometimes that doesn't work out so well. 3


The active career leader in triples, Carl Crawford of the Boston Red Sox with 112, is not even in the top 100, all-time for career triples.

This stat is as big of an illustration as any showing how much the game of baseball has changed. The top three all-time leaders are Hall of Famers Sam Crawford, Ty Cobb, and Honus Wagner, all Dead Ball Era hitters. If Crawford left the game today, he would rank 118th all-time.

What has changed? What are the characteristics of a play resulting in a triple? Typically there are three elements: a very hard hit line drive (all the way into the outfield), an awkward bounce off of the right centerfield or right field wall, and a speedy baserunner. The majority of the time a triple is hit, it comes from a left handed hitter. Lefties, of course, are more likely to put the ball in right field, which is almost a necessity for a triple since the greatest distance from the outfield to third base is from right field.

In the Dead Ball Era, some outfield walls were often farther back than modern walls, sometimes upwards of 500 feet to centerfield, meaning that, in some parks, a righty could pull the ball to left, get a quirky bounce off the wall, and still reach third. Sports nutrition supplements did not exist. Endurance and strength conditioning were not in the lexicon of any major professional sports, let alone the one sport in which an out of shape person could thrive – baseball. Fielding was not as crisp and synchronized as today. Outfielders were not as fast, and baserunners were willing to take more risks because hitters were less able to bring them home during the Dead Ball Era than today. In short, it was easier to reach third.

Hall of Famer Sam Crawford is the MLB all-time leader in career triples. 5

No relation to Carl Crawford, sliding to third. 4

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To advertise with The Daily Hat Trick, or to submit a guest column, please contact the editor at eric@thedailyhattrick.info.

The Daily Hat Trick is sponsored by Sports N Stuff. For great deals on jerseys, shirts, cologne, and other guy stuff, visit http://www.sportsnstuff.biz/.

1) Image from www.businessinsider.com
2) Image from www.cleveland.com
3) Image from www.usatoday.com
4) Image from www.flikr.com
5) Image from http://coquitlamlittleleague.ca

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Jamie Moyer Was ___ When

Last night, 49 year old Jamie Moyer (1-2, 2.55 ERA) of the Colorado Rockies pitched seven innings without giving up any earned runs (charged with two unearned runs) and earned a win in an N.L. West Division game against the San Diego Padres. The win made Moyer the oldest pitcher in the history of Major League Baseball to earn a win. Moyer debuted in the majors with the Chicago Cubs in 1986.

A lot has changed in the world since Moyer entered the big leagues. Even more has changed since he entered the world. The Daily Hat Trick, today, will put Moyer’s longevity against the backdrop of events that have taken place during Moyer’s life time.

Jamie Moyer
Born: November 18, 1962
Age: 49

Event: Kennedy Assassination
Date of Event: November 22, 1963
Moyer’s age: 1
Still alive: Gracie Allen, wife of George Burns (born 1895)
Not Yet Born: Brad Pitt (current age: 48)

Event: Apollo 11 lands on the moon.
Date: July 20, 1969
Moyer’s age: 5

Still alive: Mary Jo Kopechne, Ted Kennedy’s passenger killed at Chappaquiddick
Not yet born: Alonzo Mourning (current age: 42)

One small step for man. One large step for 5 year old Jamie Moyer. 1

Event: Richard Nixon resigns from the Presidency as a result of the Watergate scandal.
Date: August 9, 1974
Moyer’s age: 10
Still alive: Larry Fine, best know for his role as Larry of The Three Stooges (born 1902)
Not yet born: Eric Hatfield, Editor of The Daily Hat Trick (current age: 37)


Event: Elvis Presley dies
Date: August 16, 1977
Moyer’s age: 13
Still alive: Ford Frick, former Major League Baseball Commissioner and Baseball Hall of Famer (born 1894)
Not yet born: Ashton Kutcher (current age: 35)

Event: President Ronald Reagan is shot
Date: March 30, 1981
Moyer’s age: 18
Still alive: Jack Dempsey, former heavyweight champion of the world (born 1895)
Not yet born: Britney Spears (current age: 30)

Event: Challenger Explosion
Date: January 28, 1986
Moyer’s age: 23
Moyer’s current team: Pittsfield Cubs (AA)
Still alive: Dezi Arnaz (born 1917)
Not yet born: Megan Fox (current age: 25)

Megan Fox: Sex symbol to many, jailbait for Moyer. 2

Event: Magic Johnson retires, announcing he is HIV-positive
Date: November 7, 1991
Moyer’s age: 28
Moyer’s current team: St. Louis Cardinals
Still alive: Jim Garrison, DA who prosecuted Clay Shaw in the death of President Kennedy as featured in Oliver Stone’s “JFK” (born 1921)
Not yet born: Nick Jonas of The Jonas Brothers (current age: 19)


Event: Bill Clinton is impeached
Date: December 19, 1998
Moyer’s age: 36
Moyer’s current team: Seattle Mariners
Still alive: Cal Ripken, Sr. (born 1936)
Not yet born: Willow Smith, a.k.a. “Willow” (current age: 11)

"I...did not...have...sexual relations with that woman, Ms. Lewisnky." Neither did Moyer, nor would he. Have you seen his wife, Karen? MILF! MILF! MILF! MILF! 

Event: 9/11
Date: September 11, 2001
Moyer’s age: 38
Moyer’s current team: Seattle Mariners
Still alive: Dudley Moore (born 1936)
Not yet born: Alexa Gerasimovich, Natalie Snyder from As The World Turns (current age: 10)


Event: Hurricane Katrina
Date: August 29, 2005
Moyer’s age: 42
Moyer’s current team: Seattle Mariners
Still alive: Saddam Hussein (born 1937)
Not yet born: Maddie Aldridge, daughter of Jamie Lynn Spears (current age: 3)


Event: Jamie Moyer becomes the oldest MLB pitcher to earn a win.
Date: April 17, 2012
Moyer’s age: 49
Moyer’s current team: Colorado Rockies
Still alive: Dick Clark (born 1929)


Congratulations, Jamie! Keep it going! 4
Don't forget to vote in the fan polls!

To advertise with The Daily Hat Trick, or to submit a guest column, please contact the editor at eric@thedailyhattrick.info.

The Daily Hat Trick is sponsored by Sports N Stuff. For great deals on jerseys, shirts, cologne, and other guy stuff, visit http://www.sportsnstuff.biz/.

1) Image from www.kidport.com
2) Image from www.psxextreme.com
3) Image from www.freerepublic.com
4) Image from www.purplerow.com

Jamie Moyer Was Dealt a Good Hand

Some guys have all the luck. As you may have heard, 49 year old Jamie Moyer, starting pitcher for the Colorado Rockies, pitched seven innings and earned a win over the San Diego Padres. The victory made him the oldest winning pitcher in the history of Major League Baseball.

I cannot help but think of the expression, "You are only as old as you feel." This beautiful creature pictured below is Karen Moyer, Jamie's wife, age 47. By the way, she has seven children. I cannot help but think that a 47 year old woman with Mrs. Moyer's appearance with seven children must have a youthful disposition, which must rub off on Jamie.

That entire family has some good genes!


She made sure he ate his veggies so he could mow batters down in his late 40s. 1
1) Image from www.moyerfoundation.org