Warner2BruceTD
2011 Poster Of The Year
Pete Rose had a career OPS of .784 and if I'm not mistaken, was one of, if not the highest payed player in the league, especially when he signed with the Phillies in '79. Was he overrated?
Many people thought he was, but again, here is a guy who would spike his own mother to break up a double play, and do anything it took to win. That stuff rubs off, and he won everywhere he went.
He's another guy who OPS doesn't treat fairly, because its a stat that favors a slugger who K's a lot and hits into DP's, over a good hitter who does neither. Never mind baserunning, fielding, and non boxscore things like moving runners over, going first to third, etc.
This is why I have shifted my thoughts on OPS and OPS+ to using it to compare hitters with similar skill sets, as opposed to "well, this guy was 127, this guy was 108, so that's that." Thats short sighted imo.