If someone came up to you in the streets and asked you "How good has Matt Holliday been this year?", what would your response be?
I'm kind of hoping it would be some sort of confusion, at least. That would be the normal response, I would think. Maybe some sort of wariness. Why are random people on the street asking you about Matt Holliday?
But how about if I asked you that now, where it's not totally unexpected? I mean, he's good at least. He made the All-Star Game (although he was an injury replacement). I put him on the All-Star roster without using injury replacements, so that should move him up a few notches.
Would you believe he's one of the top 10 players in the Majors this year? Fangraphs credits him with 4.9 Wins Above Replacement, seventh in the pros (behind Mike Trout, Andrew McCutchen, David Wright, Ryan Braun, Carlos Ruiz, and Robinson Cano).
Baseball-Reference's version has him seventh as well, with 4.7 (tied with Braun and behind Trout, McCutchen, Wright, Cano, Justin Verlander, and Jordan Zimmermann). There's a very strong argument that he's been one of the top five players in the NL. Maybe even as high as top three.
And yet, he's gotten next-to-nothing for exposure.
As Craig Calcaterra noted Wednesday, "Heâs gonna hit 30 home runs and drive in 110 and most people wonât bat an eye."
And then, he went and hit two home runs in a five-RBI game that night (3-4). Somehow, he's found a way to deflect all the attention from himself, despite his performance.Â
I mean, his own manager even snubbed him from the All-Star Team at first! And in favor of a clearly-worse player from a rival team, at that! I even noticed this trend the other day: his entire career has been rather underrated.
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It's pretty obvious how he's been this valuable: he's been absolutely crushing the baseball.
He's fifth in the NL with 21 home runs, leads the league in RBI with 75, sixth in average with .325, fourth in OBP with .408, and sixth in slugging percentage with .561.
His 161 OPS+ (meaning his OPS is 61% better than league average, accounting for home field) is fifth in the NL, while his 164 weighted Runs Created (like OPS+, but with OBP weighted more to account for scoring) is fourth.
So, yeahâ"he's been a good hitter. On top of that, he's a slightly above-average base runner and a more-or-less average fielder (going by Fangraphs).
Really, thatâs the story of his entire career. Heâs always hit; he has a career 139 OPS+ and a career 141 wRC+.
Most defensive metrics (for example, Total Zone and Ultimate Zone Rating) agree that heâs at least not bad at fielding, maybe even good.
Heâs also been a surprisingly smart base runner, to make up for his lack of speed (Fangraphs credits him with 16 career runs-added just through running). Add it up, and in nine seasons, heâs at 44.6 Fangraphs WAR and 36.6 B-R WAR.
Thatâs starting to move into borderline Hall-of-Fame territory. And yet, I feel like not many people realize just how good heâs been.
I remember when he resigned with the Cardinals, how most people (myself included) thought it would be a vast overpay.
But Hollidayâs aged more gracefully than anyone imagined, to the point where he might actually provide surplus value on the contract. Fangraphs estimates heâs been worth $71.5 million since 2010, just based on the free-agent going rate for Wins Above Replacement.
That leaves just $48.5 million unaccounted for, with four-plus seasons to get there. Given the current approximation of one win equaling $5 million on the open market, that means he needs to be worth about 9.7 WAR through 2016, or basically a league average-starter each season thatâs left. And thatâs even before accounting for any possible inflation in WAR costs.Â
Doug Pensinger/Getty Images
Heck, just the Rest-of-Season projection (ZiPS (R)) is predicting heâll end the year with 6.7 WAR. That would leave him with just under 8 WAR the rest of the way. Thatâs more than accomplishable. And heâs only 32. That isnât exactly young in baseball terms, but it isnât unheard of for players to be productive into their mid-30s. I would think a player having an MVP-type of season at age 32 would at least be decent for most of ages 33 to 36.*
*Just did a quick searchâ"players in history and their OPS+ at 32. Players close to Holliday (161): Mike Schmidt (161 in 1982), Larry Walker (164 in 1999), Willie Stargell (164 in 1972), Ted Williams (164 in 1951), Frank Thomas (163 in 2000), Jeff Kent (162 in 2000), Lance Berkman (160 in 2008), Jim Edmonds (158 in 2002), Ken Singleton (155 in 1979), Jim Thome (154 in 2003), Dave Winfield (154 in 1984) Frank Robinson (153 in 1968), Manny Ramirez (152 in 2004), Jeff Bagwell (152 in 2000). Does that guarantee Holliday will be as good as them the next few year? Of course not. But it does give me reasons to be optimistic about his eventual decline.
Why exactly is Holliday underrated, though? I donât really understand.
Usually people love slugging corner outfielders who can field and run and play the game right and all of that. Part of it may be that he isnât particularly flashy or out spoken. Maybe some of it is that he got a bit of a late start (his first full year came at 24). Some of it might be that he was overshadowed by franchise players (Todd Helton in Colorado, Albert Pujols in St. Louis). Maybe some of it is that he isnât yet associated with one team (heâs spent about equal time with the Rockies and Cardinals). Maybe some of it is that he hasnât stood out for a particular moment, like a strong post-season run.
Thereâs this play, but thatâs about it.* Maybe people were eager to discount him after playing in Colorado, and took his short time in Oakland as proof that he wasnât good (although heâs since played well in Busch Stadium, a neutral/slight pitchersâ park). I have a bunch of theories, but no real answers. Maybe someone else has some ideas?
Justin Edmonds/Getty Images
*And really, thatâs not even totally fair to him. There were still two outs in the inning, and the Cardinals still had the lead. Even then, I would think that heâs redeemed himself, between last yearâs run and his career postseason batting line of .278/.361/.500.
Iâm sure people realized that Matt Holliday has been good. I mean, I know I did, at least. But I didnât realize just how good heâs been, especially over his entire career. The more Iâm looking at his overall body of work, the more Iâm realizing that the buzz around him just doesnât seem to match what heâs accomplished.
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