My Selections for the Fielding Bible Awards: Outfielders, Pitchers, Multi-Positional Players, and Defensive Player of the Year

How I Voted for the Fielding Bible Awards: Outfielders, Pitchers, Multi-Positional, Defensive Player of the Year


Jay Biggerstaff ImageRafael Suanes-Imagn Images

Yesterday, I published the first half of my votes for this year’s Fielding Bible awards, which will be released later today. This morning, I’m going to cover my ballots for the three outfield positions, pitchers, multi-positional defenders, and defensive player of the year. If you’re curious about the methodology I used, you can read all about it in yesterday’s article, but here’s a bite-sized refresher: I used a weighted blend of DRS, FRV, DRP, and UZR (the four flagship public defensive metrics), with the weights based on how well each metric did at each position when it comes to reliability and consistency. I used different weightings based on recent effectiveness at a few position groupings: first base, non-first-base infield, catcher, and outfield. That gave me an initial rough order. From there, I used my own expertise, both in terms of deeper statistical dives on individual players and the copious amounts of baseball I watched this year, to assemble my final rankings. I deferred to advanced metrics when the gaps were huge – Patrick Bailey is the best defensive catcher by a mile, for example – but for close calls, I leaned heavily on my own judgment.

So let’s get right to my last six ballots.

Left Field

  1. Colton Cowser
  2. Riley Greene
  3. Lourdes Gurriel Jr.
  4. Steven Kwan
  5. Jackson Chourio
  6. Alex Verdugo
  7. Wyatt Langford
  8. Ian Happ
  9. Brandon Marsh
  10. Taylor Ward

I thought that Cowser and Greene were the two easy choices for this award. They both played elite defense, with every metric above average and a few elite markers. (Greene was the best left fielder by DRS, Cowser by FRV.) They both exemplify what I’m looking for in a left fielder – namely, someone good enough that their team keeps playing them in center. In fact, if either were much better defensively, they might not qualify for this award; you have to play the plurality of your innings at a position to qualify, and they both played hundreds of innings in center. Chourio and Kwan fit that mold too. In fact, the main holdout from the “These Guys Are Center Fielders Playing Left Because They Have Even Better Defensive Teammates” group is Gurriel, who has quietly gone from defensive liability to asset over the last two years. He surely benefits from playing in an outfield with two spectacular defenders most of the time, but he’s now actively adding to the equation instead of getting carried by them. One very impressive and measurable change: his outfield jump. From 2019 through 2022, he posted below-average jumps every year. In 2023, he was dead average. This year, he was 1.5 feet above average. That marginal improvement turns tough plays into easy ones and impossible balls into ones he can at least attempt to catch. Finally, Ian Happ was tough for me to rank. His defensive metrics were all over the place, and I had him everywhere from third to ninth as I tried to work through my down-ballot votes. FRV does a particularly good job in the outfield and has consistently considered Happ’s defense middle of the road. DRS and DRP liked his work this year but have been up and down on him in the past. I decided that I should apply some regression toward the mean. I think he’s an excellent defender, and this is one of the rankings I’m least sure of, but there was a lot of confusion in the metrics here.

Center Field

  1. Jacob Young
  2. Brenton Doyle
  3. Pete Crow-Armstrong
  4. Jake Meyers
  5. Blake Perkins
  6. Daulton Varsho
  7. Julio Rodríguez
  8. Jose Siri
  9. Michael Siani
  10. Jackson Merrill

Jacob Young is outrageous. For my money, he was the best outfielder in the game this year. Young’s routes aren’t always perfect, but he’s just so ridiculously fast out of the gate that it often doesn’t matter, and his quick decision making gives him more chances to make spectacular plays than anyone else. Some of that exuberance costs him – he led center fielders in errors this year – but most of those errors were on balls that no one else would’ve even touched. That’s what you get when you combine the best first step in baseball with one of the fastest runners. His arm is the only real negative, but it was a small one. If that improves, he might be a perennial contender for defensive awards. Big shout out to Brenton Doyle, who would have been an easy choice for number one if not for Young. Doyle isn’t quite Young’s equal in terms of sheer range, but he still covers a ton of ground – and he has to in spacious Coors Field. He also has one of the best throwing arms in the sport, which feels almost unfair when stapled to a good defensive center fielder. He’s got a lot of Kevin Kiermaier to him, and I nearly voted for Kiermaier this year, even in a half-season, because he’s just that good.

The other interesting name on this list is Varsho. The other interesting name off this list is Jarren Duran. They’re both DRS darlings, and I’ll have more to say about them in the multi-positional defender category. Varsho was spectacular when he played center; he was about as good per inning as Young in my blended average. But he played only 672 innings there, which held him back for me. It’s hard to be the best center fielder if you aren’t playing it full time. Duran is a similar case, only he didn’t perform quite as well on a rate basis, and the systems weren’t quite as universally bullish. He’s obviously a great defender, I just don’t think he fits this category.

Right Field

  1. Wilyer Abreu
  2. Sal Frelick
  3. Mike Yastrzemski
  4. Jo Adell
  5. Max Kepler
  6. Wenceel Pérez
  7. Fernando Tatis Jr.
  8. Lawrence Butler
  9. Seiya Suzuki
  10. Jesús Sánchez

No one other than Abreu and Frelick has any business winning this year’s right field award. They’re first and second in DRS, FRV, and DRP, and first and third in UZR. They pass the eye test. They didn’t put up embarrassingly low innings totals. I used innings as a tiebreaker and put Abreu first, but it was a toss-up. A few other quick nods: Great work, Jo Adell, whom I was surprised to see as a solidly plus defender on three of the four systems I used. Yastrzemski fit a similar pattern. The only vote here I didn’t feel amazing about was Sánchez at 10th. My blended average metrics think he’s slightly below average, in fact. But there just weren’t many options, and one player I definitely would have voted for, Corbin Carroll, wasn’t eligible because he played 17 more innings in center than right. This was just a tough position, and I think the results will probably show that.

Pitcher

  1. Shota Imanaga
  2. Spencer Schwellenbach
  3. Michael King
  4. Paul Skenes
  5. Tanner Bibee
  6. Seth Lugo
  7. Chris Flexen
  8. Aaron Civale
  9. Michael Wacha
  10. Charlie Morton

I’m happy to admit when I’m unsure, and this is one spot where I was very unsure. I don’t spend a lot of time rating pitcher defense, and most of the statistical models don’t either. DRS does, and Statcast rates pitchers on controlling the running game, so I used those as my guide, but I have a much lower level of confidence here than at the other positions. I put Imanaga first because of his impressive ability to limit steals. Only four were attempted against him all year, the best rate for anyone with a full starter’s workload. Half of those attempts were unsuccessful. That’s so much of pitcher fielding that I felt good penciling him in for the top spot. The other interesting name here, for me at least, is King. DRS thinks he’s a good fielder, and Statcast thinks he’s pretty solid at preventing stolen bases. That’s a great combination, and I considered him for the top spot…

mmsporn factoryporn.mobi nude jatra dance sweetsinner xvideos erohardcore.info keralasex stories fuck vidios orgyvideos.info big boobs teacher rudra cartoon wetwap.info tamilauntiessex oriya girl sex teenporntrends.com bf sexy vidio
افلام سكس كلاسك iporntv.me نياكه بنات reshma bathing fatporntrends.com boobs suck sex www hindi bf movie tubereserve.mobi tripura video sex a family affair july 7 full episode pinoyofw.net gma live abot kamay na pangarap hoat sex video pornolife.mobi gesek.net
tirupati sex com porncorntube.net telugu x viodes lokal sexy video dudano.mobi xxx hd mp4 احلى نياكة porn-loop.net نيك نبيله عبيد india xxx video fistingporntrends.com desi prom video سكس كندي ahpornom.net افلام سكس محارم قديم