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He aint even the best SS in chi-town
Guess it was a down year for AL shortstops.
Alright, I'm bored in computer tech so let's rundown the numbers for Castro and Ramirez...
BA
Ramirez: .282
Castro: .300
OBP
Ramirez: .313
Castro: .347
OPS
Ramirez: .744
Castro: .755
HR
Ramirez: 18
Castro: 3
RBI
Ramirez: 70
Castro: 41
R
Ramirez: 83
Castro: 53
BB%
Ramirez: 4.3
Castro: 5.7
K%
Ramirez: 14
Castro: 15.3
BB/K
Ramirez: .33
Castro: .41
ISO
Ramirez: .149
Castro: .108
wOBA
Ramirez: .322
Castro: .325
wRC+
Ramirez: 97
Castro: 98
UZR/150
Ramirez: 10.1
Castro: -3
WAR
Ramirez: 3.8
Castro: 2.0
I'd say offensively, it's pretty even with a slight edge to Ramirez just because of his 30 more runs scored, 29 more RBI, and 15 more HR, while Castro was better disciplined. Defensively, I can say without a doubt that Ramirez is the far superior defensive SS. Castro just looks too raw out there, Ramirez has made huge strides defensively since his rookie year. He did rate out as arguably the best defensive SS this past year for a reason (among the 9 AL SS's with at least 900 innings in the field, Alexei was 1st in DRS, 2nd in double play runs, 2nd in range runs, 1st in UZR, and 1st in UZR/150). Not just going off of those numbers, but from watching Alexei the whole year and Castro about a few times a week, it was pretty clear to me who was better defensively.
Alright, I'm bored in computer tech so let's rundown the numbers for Castro and Ramirez...
BA
Ramirez: .282
Castro: .300
OBP
Ramirez: .313
Castro: .347
OPS
Ramirez: .744
Castro: .755
HR
Ramirez: 18
Castro: 3
RBI
Ramirez: 70
Castro: 41
R
Ramirez: 83
Castro: 53
BB%
Ramirez: 4.3
Castro: 5.7
K%
Ramirez: 14
Castro: 15.3
BB/K
Ramirez: .33
Castro: .41
ISO
Ramirez: .149
Castro: .108
wOBA
Ramirez: .322
Castro: .325
wRC+
Ramirez: 97
Castro: 98
UZR/150
Ramirez: 10.1
Castro: -3
WAR
Ramirez: 3.8
Castro: 2.0
I'd say offensively, it's pretty even with a slight edge to Ramirez just because of his 30 more runs scored, 29 more RBI, and 15 more HR, while Castro was better disciplined. Defensively, I can say without a doubt that Ramirez is the far superior defensive SS. Castro just looks too raw out there, Ramirez has made huge strides defensively since his rookie year. He did rate out as arguably the best defensive SS this past year for a reason (among the 9 AL SS's with at least 900 innings in the field, Alexei was 1st in DRS, 2nd in double play runs, 2nd in range runs, 1st in UZR, and 1st in UZR/150). Not just going off of those numbers, but from watching Alexei the whole year and Castro about a few times a week, it was pretty clear to me who was better defensively.