are we still 100% convinced of this?vh2k6 wrote: Duncan should be in the lineup every day
his post April stats are pretty ugly
To me, there is nothing more painful that a bunch of goose eggs on the board. The Cardinals are 2nd in terms of fewest strikeouts, but 28th in runs scored. I'd take Dunn.cabby7588 wrote:You would really take Dunn? I don't know, he just doesn't do it for me. Sure the guy can hit some bombs, but there's just nothing more painful than a bunch of strikeouts (Preston Wilson, please stay hurt.)
Saw this on his BRef page and thought it was kind of funny. 50%!:Dunn would add mucho punch to the offense and his strikeouts would get annoying, but his 400-foot bombs would ease the pain pretty quickly I'm guessing. He's probably the best Three True Outcomes player in a long while.
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The Three True Outcomes: The Home Run, the Base on Balls, and the Strikeout. Potentially the first HOF'er with over 50% TTO. 49.88% career TTO%
He has a career .377 OBP. I think outs in general are annoying, and Dunn makes less than your average player. Much less than some of the scrubs the Cards are running out there right now.Sure the guy can hit some bombs, but there's just nothing more painful than a bunch of strikeouts
--P--Player A: Adam Dunn. Home run, walk, and stikeout machine.
Player B: Albert Pujols. Baseball god.
Player C: Juan Pierre. Out machine. Not confused with Babe Ruth.
Dunn's OBP is near average of the other two. His slugging percentage is closer to Pujols', but still near average of the two. His WPA? Probably what you would expect--near the average of the two.
My personal verdict on Dunn: People have been expecting him to "bust out" for a while now, but he keeps doing the same ol' thing. His OBP is actually slowly declining, and it's only been above .400 one season. His slugging has stayed more or less constant. His batting average has stayed more or less constant. If you want a .250/.375/.525 guy with a ton of K's, then Dunn can be your man. Just don't be expecting much more than that. Problem is, I expect that he's going to start getting paid for more than that starting in 2008.
If you really lust for Dunn and think Cinci won't trade him to the Cards, you could lust for Pat Burrell instead. They're very similar players, and in '08 Burrell may be making less money.
Dunn is making $10.5 million in 2007, and has a $13 million '08 club option with a $0.5 million buyout.haltz wrote:and Dunn makes less than your average player. Much less than some of the scrubs the Cards are running out there right now.