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The 100 Greatest Angels: #36 Gary Pettis

#36 - Gary Pettis, CF

Career Stats

I've seen a lot of Angels baseball and loved Erstad in Centerfield, was held breathless by Showboat Edmonds hotdogging it out there at the expense of the team, loved Devo, but for my money, Gary Pettis was the greatest defensive outfielder in Angels history.

Yes that was me, screaming hysterical on Bob Rowe's show at the end of the 1987 season when talk surfaced that they were going to trade Pettis for the Tigers' Dan Petry - what an awful thing it was - Pettis won three of his five gold gloves after being traded.

Gary Pettis still holds the record for most Stolen Bases (186) by any Angel (Erstad is only 17 behind him, Figgins is 75 back and Kennedy 79). Three of his SB season totals are in the club's single season total Top Ten.

Had Dave Henderson swung and missed in Game 5 of the 1986 ALCS, Pettis would have been named the series MVP, batting .346 with a homerun and 9 RBI. But with a post-Angel career in underachieving Detroit and Texas, there seemed to be that wistful almostness to Gary's days in the pros. At least he held the rank of best-dressed Major Leaguer in a 1990 Baseball Digest poll of 200 players.

In the Top 40 balloting, yeswecan picked Gary as 28th All-Time and I had him 27th, his two highest rankings in this poll. In an all-time Angels team, if it is the final game and we have a lead and I'm managing, Gary Pettis is pinch-running in the 5th inning and coming in as a defensive replacement, I don't care who gets juggled out of the lineup.

And now The Chronicler will take some time off from his Chronicles of the Lads blog to say a few words about Gary...

Gary Pettis' career OPS+ with the Angels was 80, which is going to make you think he was a lot worse than he was. So, the rebuttal:

1.  That OPS+ is heavy on the OBP.  His on-base percentage was above the park-adjusted league average every year he was a regular until1987, when he was 29 years old.  He could draw a walk, averaging 67 per 500 at-bats during his time with the Angels.

Star-divide

2.  He was a fantastic basestealer, stealing 186 bags with the Halos while only being caught 47 times.  That's a success rate of 79.8%, and likely added somewhere between 14 and 28 runs to his teams.

3.  He was an even better center fielder than he was a basestealer; we're talking Darin Erstad 2002 here, and then some.  I have no way of knowing this, but I wouldn't be surprised if he stole around as many homers in his career as he hit (21).  He won two Gold Gloves with the Angels, and they were no-brainers.

Don't get me wrong, he wasn't a great player.  He struck out a ton and had no power at all.  After his atrocious 1987 season (208/302/259), which nicely coincided with the emergence of Devon White (Pettis - Walks + Power = Devo), he got traded to Detroit for Dan Petry. He finally righted himself with the bat in 1989, and still had enough in him for three more Gold Gloves before being done in 1992.

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Pettis' fielding
Gary Pettis had a maximum 114 Rate2 at center in 1985, a number that makes him close but not quite equal to Darin Erstad's 117 in 2002. That level of effort must be damned hard to sustain; Willie Mays, whom Bill James rates as the greatest centerfielder of all time in his Historical Abstract, only had four seasons over 110, Ty Cobb had zero.  Mickey Mantle also had none. Joe DiMaggio had one.  You can see where this is going.

Viewed by fielding Win Shares, Erstad's 2002 (8.2) is close to some of the best single-season marks ever attained by a center fielder, including


 Rank  Player           Season  FWS
-------------------------------------
   1.  Devon White       1991   11.5
  T2.  Dwayne Murphy     1980   10.0
  T2.  Marquis Grissom   1993   10.0
   4.  Tris Speaker      1912    9.9
   5.  Andruw Jones      1999    9.8
...
 T30.  Darin Erstad      2002    8.2
 T30.  Jim Fogarty       1885    8.2
 T30.  Jim Barrett       1901    8.2
 T30.  Jigger Statz      1923    8.2
 T30.  Robin Yount       1988    8.2
 T30.  Rondell White     1997    8.2

He's in some fairly elite company there, though quite a commute from the best seasons from the best-of-the-best centerfielders.  Gary Pettis never once topped 6.0, his best defensive fielding score by Win Shares, which should perhaps tell you more about the trouble involved with trying to assign value to fielding ability than it does the relative merits of these two very good fielders.

The early bird gets the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

by scareduck on Jan 22, 2006 10:19 AM PST reply actions   0 recs

One last comment
The top ten all-time fielding win share seasons by Angels centerfielders:


 Rank  Player           Season  FWS
-------------------------------------
   1.  Darin Erstad      2002   8.2
   2.  Darin Erstad      2001   7.8
   3.  Devon White       1989   6.2
   4.  Gary Pettis       1986   6.0
   5.  Jim Edmonds       1998   5.8
   6.  Garret Anderson   1999   5.6
   7.  Chad Curtis       1993   5.4
  T8.  Jim Edmonds       1995   5.3
  T8.  Albie Pearson     1962   5.3
  10.  Jose Cardenal     1965   5.1

The early bird gets the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

by scareduck on Jan 22, 2006 10:29 AM PST up reply actions   0 recs

Pettis also had only one season....
... of more than 135 games in CF.

Also, Jim Edmonds' 1995 vaults up to 6.0 when you adjust to a 162-game season.

by mattwelch on Jan 22, 2006 11:44 AM PST reply actions   0 recs

IT TOOK TEN MONTHS
into this blog's existence until the dreaded name of CHAD CURTIS showed up. Yick.

by Rev Halofan on Jan 22, 2006 5:37 PM PST reply actions   0 recs

Read the Schofield piece before this one...
...but I'll always remember Pettis' home run in game 3 the 1986 ALCS too.

by LA Seitz on Jan 23, 2006 7:03 AM PST reply actions   0 recs

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