Backstage
Menu
Player Value Posts
To avoid spamming the general blog page with the Player Value posts for each season/team, this blog page will serve as a separate listing of all of the Player Value posts for each season/team. These posts will be less detailed, mainly just listing out the top players each season and including the necessary files.
In this post I will list out the All-Time Washington Nationals lineup, according to Player Value. I will follow along the same format as MLB uses with its new "All-MLB" teams, which you can view here. That format is 1 player for each defensive position, 5 starters, and 2 relievers. I will only use DHs for AL teams, since most NL teams don't have enough seasons with the DH to really have a deserving player. Importantly, and as the graphic above suggests, these are based on individual seasons according to Player Value. The question we want to ask here is which version of a player would we want on our team? I want to give guys that only played a few seasons with a team an equal chance at making the lineup as the guys that spent their entire careers with one team. If you had to give this NL team a DH spot, you would probably go with Anthony Rendon in 2019, who was mainly a 3B. Rnedon in 2019 has the 4th highest Batting Value season in Washington Nationals history, at 38.33. Two of the three seasons ahead of him are from players already on the team (Harper and Soto). The other season ahead of him is from Daniel Murphy, but was his 2016 season. Murphy in 2017 ranks higher overall due to his higher Fielding Value that season. Rendon also barely falls behind Zimmerman for the starting 3B spot due to Zimmerman's higher Fielding Value. Here is how the players on the all-time team compare in terms of their Player Value components: The team is led by Harper and Soto, with 63 and 56 Player Value seasons, respectively. View the file below to see the numerical values of the Player Value components for each player on the all-time team:
View the files below to see the Player Value components, hypothetical awards based on Player Value, and general statistics for each player season and position (if you're wondering how another player that isn't on the all-time team fares, this is the place to look):
And that's it! I'm trying to make these posts shorter and just focus on sharing the all-time teams themselves and necessary data files. If you want to investigate an individual season for a player on the all-time team, I encourage you to check out their page on Baseball Reference.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Archives
May 2023
Categories
All
|