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Wednesday, July 13, 2005

Last year, I stated that I'd happily trade Sammy Sosa for a bag of baseballs. Turns out, that would have been a good deal (quote follows from Hardballtimes.com):

Sammy Sosa Baltimore Orioles Right Field
AVG OBP SLG OPS
Sammy Sosa .225 .305 .383 .688
Average MLB RF .270 .348 .453 .801

Sammy Sosa's decline as a player has been one of the swiftest and most pronounced in recent memory, as he has essentially gone from being an elite MVP-caliber player to being one of the worst outfielders in baseball over the span of just a few seasons. The most interesting thing about Sosa's decline is that his numbers have dropped in nearly every way, and they have done so for five straight years.

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005
AVG .328 .288 .279 .253 .225
OBP .437 .399 .358 .332 .305
SLG .737 .594 .553 .517 .383
OPS 1.174 .993 .911 .849 .688
IsoP .409 .306 .275 .264 .158

Sosa had his best season in 2001, hitting .328/.437/.737 with 64 homers, 34 doubles, 116 walks, 160 RBI, and 146 runs scored. He finished second in the NL MVP voting (behind one of the greatest seasons in baseball history) and led the league in both RBI and runs scored. Since then, his batting average, on-base percentage, slugging percentage, OPS, and Isolated Power have each gone down every season. The end result has Sosa at just .225/.305/.383 this year and on pace for a measly 17 homers and 50 RBI in 127 games.


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