Now about Kendall's 2010 season, since it's over we can begin analyzing it and make no mistake it was bad, historically bad. Only three Royals catchers with at least 400 plate appearances have had worse seasons, two of which had sterling defensive reputations. I honestly believe that if Kendall were above average defensively AND didn't bat one time in the #2 spot fans in KC would've viewed him a lot differently this year. But on to the list:
| Rk | Player | OPS+ | PA | Year | HR | RBI | SB | BA | OBP | SLG |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | John Wathan | 67 | 469 | 1983 | 2 | 32 | 28 | .245 | .289 | .314 |
| 2 | Brent Mayne | 68 | 414 | 2003 | 6 | 36 | 0 | .245 | .307 | .344 |
| 3 | Jim Sundberg | 69 | 491 | 1986 | 12 | 42 | 1 | .212 | .303 | .322 |
| 4 | Jason Kendall | 70 | 490 | 2010 | 0 | 37 | 12 | .256 | .318 | .297 |
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Wathan was actually pretty good the year before, true his OPS+ was 86 but his OBP was .343 and he set a record for catchers with 36 stolen bases. He also threw out 34% of attempted base stealers. Mayne's second tour of duty with KC was a lot like his first, he was a terrible hitter but a premier defender. He actually had three other seasons that were worse than 2003 but they missed my arbitrary 400 PA cutoff. Sundberg was one of the heroes of KC's 1985 playoff and therefore is exempt from any sort of criticism. His 3-run triple in game 7 of the ALCS remains one of the most important at bats in team history.
But here's where it gets interesting and where his season becomes historically bad. Since 1901 of the 506 catchers that came to the plate as many times as Kendall (490) only 15 had worse seasons. What's unfortunate is this list is very Royals friendly (or unfriendly, depending on your point of view). Three future Royals (Sundberg, Kendall, Boone), two Royals (Sundberg, Kendall), and a future Royals manager (Pena) make up seven of the seventeen seasons, when it comes to catchers Kansas City definitely has a type.
Wathan was actually pretty good the year before, true his OPS+ was 86 but his OBP was .343 and he set a record for catchers with 36 stolen bases. He also threw out 34% of attempted base stealers. Mayne's second tour of duty with KC was a lot like his first, he was a terrible hitter but a premier defender. He actually had three other seasons that were worse than 2003 but they missed my arbitrary 400 PA cutoff. Sundberg was one of the heroes of KC's 1985 playoff and therefore is exempt from any sort of criticism. His 3-run triple in game 7 of the ALCS remains one of the most important at bats in team history.
But here's where it gets interesting and where his season becomes historically bad. Since 1901 of the 506 catchers that came to the plate as many times as Kendall (490) only 15 had worse seasons. What's unfortunate is this list is very Royals friendly (or unfriendly, depending on your point of view). Three future Royals (Sundberg, Kendall, Boone), two Royals (Sundberg, Kendall), and a future Royals manager (Pena) make up seven of the seventeen seasons, when it comes to catchers Kansas City definitely has a type.
| Rk | Player | OPS+ | PA | Year | Tm | HR | RBI | BA | OBP | SLG |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Brad Ausmus | 54 | 502 | 2006 | HOU | 2 | 39 | .230 | .308 | .285 |
| 2 | Brad Ausmus | 55 | 509 | 2003 | HOU | 4 | 47 | .229 | .303 | .291 |
| 3 | Jim Sundberg | 55 | 540 | 1975 | TEX | 6 | 36 | .199 | .283 | .256 |
| 4 | Luke Sewell | 55 | 499 | 1926 | CLE | 0 | 46 | .238 | .302 | .293 |
| 5 | Joe Girardi | 58 | 506 | 1995 | COL | 8 | 55 | .262 | .308 | .359 |
| 6 | Carlton Fisk | 60 | 491 | 1986 | CHW | 14 | 63 | .221 | .263 | .337 |
| 7 | Jason Kendall | 62 | 514 | 2007 | TOT | 3 | 41 | .242 | .301 | .309 |
| 8 | Bob Boone | 63 | 503 | 1986 | CAL | 7 | 49 | .222 | .287 | .305 |
| 9 | Red Dooin | 65 | 510 | 1909 | PHI | 2 | 38 | .224 | .264 | .271 |
| 10 | Tony Pena | 66 | 512 | 1991 | BOS | 5 | 48 | .231 | .291 | .321 |
| 11 | Luke Sewell | 66 | 509 | 1936 | CHW | 5 | 73 | .251 | .332 | .350 |
| 12 | Michael Barrett | 68 | 506 | 2001 | MON | 6 | 38 | .250 | .289 | .367 |
| 13 | Jim Sundberg | 69 | 491 | 1986 | KCR | 12 | 42 | .212 | .303 | .322 |
| 14 | Johnny Edwards | 69 | 515 | 1970 | HOU | 7 | 49 | .221 | .299 | .319 |
| 15 | Jim Hegan | 69 | 529 | 1949 | CLE | 8 | 55 | .224 | .298 | .338 |
| 16 | Jason Kendall | 70 | 490 | 2010 | KCR | 0 | 37 | .256 | .318 | .297 |
| 17 | Bob Boone | 70 | 541 | 1974 | PHI | 3 | 52 | .242 | .295 | .322 |
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
I'm sure people will be tempted to blame Kendall's lack of production on his injury but compare his numbers from the last three years to this one and you'll find they are remarkably similar.
07-09 - .243/.320/.313/69 OPS+
2010 - .256/.318/.297/70 OPS+
What's more likely is that this is just who he is, an aging catcher that has caught far too many games and is nearing the end of his career.
I'm sure people will be tempted to blame Kendall's lack of production on his injury but compare his numbers from the last three years to this one and you'll find they are remarkably similar.
07-09 - .243/.320/.313/69 OPS+
2010 - .256/.318/.297/70 OPS+
What's more likely is that this is just who he is, an aging catcher that has caught far too many games and is nearing the end of his career.
2 comments:
I know I'm crazy, but, slugging .297 over 400+ PA's just makes me feel like I'm reading this on April 1.
That's the magic of Jason Kendall.
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