Friday, December 27, 2013

Lou Gehrig hit many more doubles on the road. Why? Apparently, the short right field porch in Yankee Stadium.

Aerial view Yankee Stadium September 1923.
Paul Plaine  Ballpark PrintsLLC

Sunday, December 22, 2013  Lou Gehrig hit many more doubles on the road. Why?

Lou Gehrig hit doubles per at bat 48.5% better on the road than at home in Yankee Stadium.
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Quick look at home/road splits for all Yankees in two seasons:

1927123/168
2013110/137

I figured I was asking about the park.  So, what was it about Yankee Stadium?  I guess the short right field porch.  As can be seen in the photo above the original Yankee Stadium had a huge center field, about 490 feet straight away and the wooden bleachers extended to the foul lines.  That is the reason for the answer to a trick question:  How many home runs did Babe Ruth hit into the upper deck in Yankee Stadium?  Answer: none.  The right field grand stand was not extended into fair territory in right field until the the 1937 season.  Ruth's last Yankee season was 1934.  The left field grand stand was extended into fair territory for the 1928 season.  The original design was for the grand stand to completely enclose the field but it was implemented in stages and never all the way, not even in the current billion dollar version.  The only constant from the original to the refurbished in 1976 to the new park in 2009 has been the short porch in right field.

Cliff Blau sent this: Seamheads.com Ballparks Database.

In only eleven of the seasons from 1923 through 2008 was Yankee Stadium above league average in rate of doubles hit.  The first such season was 1960 with only 101, i.e., only one percent above league.  The rate appears to be generally higher for righty batters than for lefties like Gehrig.  From 1925 through 1938 when Gehrig played almost all his games the doubles rate was about 70% of league average for lefties at Yankee Stadium.  So lefties were worse by about 30%.

Gehrig's doubles rate was 15 (at bats divided by doubles)  However, his home/road split was 18.7/12.6.  As mentioned in the original post: "Lou Gehrig hit doubles per at bat 48.5% better on the road than at home in Yankee Stadium."  So it appears that Gehrig suffered even more than lefty batters generally in Yankee Stadium when it came to hitting doubles.  Gehrig's biggest doubles season was 1927 with 52: 16/36.  Rate 17.3/8.5  Again, lower is better.  Gehrig's home rate was more than double his road rate.


Rk Player 2B Year Age Tm Lg G PA AB R H 3B HR RBI BB IBB SO HBP SH SF GDP SB CS BA OBP SLG OPS Pos
1 Don Mattingly 53 1986 25 NYY AL 162 742 677 117 238 2 31 113 53 11 35 1 1 10 17 0 0 .352 .394 .573 .967 *3/5D
2 Lou Gehrig 52 1927 24 NYY AL 155 717 584 149 218 18 47 175 109 84 3 21 10 8 .373 .474 .765 1.240 *3
3 Alfonso Soriano 51 2002 26 NYY AL 156 741 696 128 209 2 39 102 23 1 157 14 1 7 8 41 13 .300 .332 .547 .880 *4/HD
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 12/27/2013.

Lets look at the two other Yankee seasons with at least 50 doubles, one by a lefty batter (Mattingly) and the other by a righty batter (Soriano).

Mattingly: 23/30.  Rate: 13/9/12.9.

Soriano: 24/27.  Rate: 14/13.4.

Both Mattingly and Soriano were better on the road but pretty even.  Go figure.

2 comments:

paul46 said...

How about those 18 triples by Lou in 1927. Something else besides doubles you did not see a lot of in Old Yankee Stadium.

Unknown said...

Because of the huge outfield gaps a majority of those 18 triples would be doubles in a smaller park on the road.