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  • Bonifacio Does Something Well

    thus bringing our running total to

    baseball-related things bonifacio does well: 1
    baseball-related things bonifacio does poorly: 3,241

    Finally got around to ordering my Bill James Handbook. During my initial perusal something jumped out at me -- a positive stat on Emilio Bonifacio!

    Bonifacio took a lot of criticism last season for his low on-base percentage and inconsistent defense at third base. Actually, manager Fredi Gonzalez and the front office took the brunt of the heat for keeping Bonifacio in the lineup and in the majors.

    The manufactured runs section of the Bill James Handbook offers a pretty good indication of why the Marlins stuck with Bonifacio, and why come spring training they'll give him every opportunity to play himself into the starting lineup again.

    Among National League players, only Michael Bourn (47) had a higher manufactured runs contribution than Bonifacio (32), who ranked ahead of David Wright (31), Dexter Fowler (29), Troy Tulowitzki (27), Matt Kemp (27) and Hanley Ramirez (27).

    James has comprehensive criteria for what constitute manufactured runs, but in a nutshell it's "any run on which two of the four bases result from from doing something other than playing station-to-station baseball." Anything involving a home run, or in most cases an extra-base hit, does not qualify as a manufactured run. Anything involving an infield hit, bunt, steal, sac fly or other productive out generally contribute to manufactured runs.

    Thanks mostly to Bonifacio, Ramirez, and Chris Coghlan, who was third on the team with 21 manufactured runs, the Marlins ranked fifth in the NL with 169 manufactured runs. Ahead of them: the Mets (181), Reds (173), Dodgers ( 172) and Rockies (172).

    For the Marlins, that's a huge improvement over 2008, when they finished second-to-last in the majors with 125 manufactured runs, ahead of only the Padres (104). The Marlins in 2009 were considerably less dependent on home runs and extra-base hits.

    Back to Bonifacio...he played his first game for Licey in the Dominican winter league on Nov. 6. Through nine games, he's 11 for 37 (.297) with no extra-base hits, three RBI, eight runs scored and a .333 on-base percentage. He's playing right field of all places.

    Some other winter league notes:

    Gaby Sanchez has played three games for Dean Treanor's Toros del Este. He's 2 for 9 so far. One of his teammates is minor leaguer Manny Mayorson, who through 21 games is among the league's hitting leaders with a .321 average (26 for 81).

    In his first start for Carolina in the Puerto Rican winter league, Rick VandenHurk got a no decision after allowing a run on three hits with no walks and five strikeouts through five innings.
    http://blogs.sun-sentinel.com/sports...bonifacio.html

  • #2
    Manufactured runs? Finally, a stat tailor made for Joe Morgan!

    Comment


    • #3
      I refuse to believe any runs created stats or stuff like that if the Twins aren't #1.

      Comment


      • #4
        I stopped reading at "productive out"... I hate that term.
        CSBC Commish

        Comment


        • #5
          The manufactured runs section of the Bill James Handbook offers a pretty good indication of why the Marlins stuck with Bonifacio, and why come spring training they'll give him every opportunity to play himself into the starting lineup again.
          No, it's because the FO is filled with douchebags

          Comment


          • #6
            Manufactured run? Does that mean a run that doesn't exist? Because I'd agree that Bonifacio led the league in those.

            Comment


            • #7
              He far and away led in Ire Drawn/9 Innings
              CSBC Commish

              Comment


              • #8
                The fact that the Mets ranked #1 in the NL in this statistic last season is enough for me to dismiss it as worthless.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Let's be realistic. He can run, his baserunning (outside of stealing) was very good. By Baseball Prospectus' measures, Bonifacio was some 5 runs better than average on non-steal baserunning.

                  Of course, he can't get on base or do anything else, so there's your problem.
                  Marlin Maniac, a Florida Marlins blog
                  Come attend Intro to Sabermetrics 101!
                  Writer, Beyond the Box Score

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    so he's a track star

                    that don't impress me much

                    (/cue shania twain here)

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Wow! Imagine what he could do IF he got on base over 30% of the time...
                      STANTON

                      Serious fun! GET IT IN!

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                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Ramp View Post
                        so he's a track star

                        that don't impress me much

                        (/cue shania twain here)
                        FUCK THAT FUCKING ANNOYING FUCKING SONG! FUCK!
                        Need help? Questions? Concerns? Want to chat? PM Hugg!

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by BigGameFish View Post
                          Wow! Imagine what he could do IF he got on base over 30% of the time...
                          That is something to remember while talking about his runs added on the bases. He was third by BP's metric taking out SB. Bourn was #1, and he had 604 total opps. Figgins was #2, and had 619 opps. Bonifacio, at #3, had 368 opps, or nearly half as many opps as the two guys ahead of him.

                          That ofcoarse doesn't just have to do with OBPs but also PA (Bourn had 678 PA, Figgins 729, Boni 509), but give the guy some OBP and he'll torch the bases.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by nny View Post
                            That is something to remember while talking about his runs added on the bases. He was third by BP's metric taking out SB. Bourn was #1, and he had 604 total opps. Figgins was #2, and had 619 opps. Bonifacio, at #3, had 368 opps, or nearly half as many opps as the two guys ahead of him.

                            That ofcoarse doesn't just have to do with OBPs but also PA (Bourn had 678 PA, Figgins 729, Boni 509), but give the guy some OBP and he'll torch the bases.
                            I'm guessing pickoffs don't count either. Which he had like 15.

                            EB sucks. If he plays top 5 defense, hits .330/.370 (.700), steals 60/80 bases, and doesn't get picked off, I MIGHT let him bat 8th on my hypothetical team.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Ramp View Post
                              so he's a track star

                              that don't impress me much

                              (/cue shania twain here)
                              You son of a bitch. I know have that and Feel Like a Woman stuck in my head.
                              Amy Adams, AKA Cinnamon Muff
                              Logan Morrison: "If baseball didn't exist, I would probably be ... like a curler. Or a hairstylist."
                              Noah Perio
                              Jupiter
                              39 AB
                              15 H
                              0 2B
                              0 3B
                              0 HR
                              0 BB
                              .385/.385/.385

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