Ichiro B: Simplest Study Ever

 .............

We wondered whether Ichiro had his big years, in those seasons in which the #9 Mariner hitter was competent.

You'll never find a simpler study than this one:  without peeking, that is before looking at the splits, we put a tick mark beside Ichiro's four glory years.  Those were :

  1. 2001, the MVP ...
  2. 2004, the .372 season, when he broke the hits record ...
  3. 2007, when hit .351 with power and walks and finished #8 in the MVP ...
  4. 2009, batting .352 with a whopping .465 SLG, getting the #9 in the MVP ...
  5. whoops gotta add 2002, since he had a 120 OPS+ and by far his best EYE ratio.

In all of the above years, Ichiro's OPS+ was 120 to 130 ... in the other six years, his OPS+ was 84 to 113.  Okay, you've got a clean split, five MVP-candidate seasons and six lesser seasons, with no blurry seasons in the middle at all.  Beautiful.

Now let's see how the #9 hitters in the order did in those seasons.  tOPS+ means, here's how that spot hit compared to other American League #9 hitters, 100 being average:

Year Ichiro-MVP? #9 tOPS+ Players
2001 Yes 143 Guillen, McLemore, Bell
2004 Yes 132 Winn, Lopez, Bloomquist
2007 Yes 144 Betancourt, Lopez, Bloomquist
2009 Yes 116 Betancourt, Guti, Cedeno
2002 Yes 140 McLemore, Cirillo, Relaford
2011 No 104 Jack Wilson and 7 guys
2010 No 74 Josh & Jack Wilson, Saunders
2008 No 89 Betancourt
2006 No 76 Betancourt, Bloomquist, A. Jones
2005 No 66 W. Valdez, Torrealba, Borders
2003 No 84 Bloomquist, Lopez

There we are again:  Ichiro has runners in front of him, he gets his groove on.  Or he's asked to play all by himself, in the barren wasteland of a 513-run year, and he's got no life to his game.

Ichiro would much rather bat #1, go up there and whale away for 263 base hits, but the fact is that he needs to be playing with a good team, playing for victory rather than for stats.  File this as another melancholy case of "what the athlete wants is not what's best for him."

I've seldom seen a player so sensitive to the lineup around him, and it is because Ichiro's goals change with the context.  If there is no point to the at-bat, other than his own personal stats, he's in the swing-and-a-prayer mode.  Give him a team offense to play within, and you get Ichiro's toughest at-bats.

You could say that it would be a good idea to hit him third, I think.

BABVA,

Dr D

Comments

1

Wow! Wow!
Doc, that is baseball archeology at its best!
Howard Carter would be proud.
Great dig.
Amazing numbers.
moe

2
Camramaan's picture

... to say the least. Of course we still won't/don't know how much his age is going to be a factor, but this at least brings some reason to have hope in Ichiro having a rebound season batting after Ackley.

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