The Analyst
Steve Hirdt/ The Elias Sports Bureau
August 31, 1992
Good As GoldFielding numbers are the black sheep of baseball statistics. The same world that embraces RBIs, ERAs and, yes, batting averages in late-inning pressure situations regularly thumbs its nose at defensive stats. O.K., fielding percentages aren't as sexy as, say, Mark McGwire's home run tally. Still, they deserve recognition, so here are the leaders at each position. To qualify, an infielder or outfielder must have played in at least two thirds of his team's games; a catcher, in at least half. Tom Glavine gets the nod among pitchers because he has had the most chances without an error.
Good As Gold
Fielding numbers are the black sheep of baseball statistics. The same world that embraces RBIs, ERAs and, yes, batting averages in late-inning pressure situations regularly thumbs its nose at defensive stats. O.K., fielding percentages aren't as sexy as, say, Mark McGwire's home run tally. Still, they deserve recognition, so here are the leaders at each position. To qualify, an infielder or outfielder must have played in at least two thirds of his team's games; a catcher, in at least half. Tom Glavine gets the nod among pitchers because he has had the most chances without an error.
[This article contains a table. Please see hardcopy of magazine or PDF.]
