Since molina’s rookie season, the cardinals have allowed the fewest stolen bases in the MLB by 400. There is a bigger gap between 1st and 2nd than there is between 2nd and 25th.
In March 2005 Tony Larussa was asked about benching Yadi due to a hitting slump. Larussa said “Even if he goes hitless the rest of the season, he’s our catcher.” That’s how important Yadi is on defense.
@@FoolishBaseball I'm fairly new to baseball and I remember watching your video on Jeff Mathis and pop time as a measurement for catchers. It really helped me appreciate how insanely good Yadi is!
Honestly still blows me away that all 3 brothers won World Series rings all while all playing the same position. Feel like there can't be too many families with multiple World Series winners
There's another aspect that doesn't often get mentioned. Molina has always had a unique way of being on the same mental wavelength as his pitchers. He so often calls the exact pitch they're wanting to throw... not a lot of shaking off. This gets the pitcher into a rhythm and keeps the defense on their toes because the pitcher is working faster. It's a very underrated intangible, but it goes a long way and has a hand in why the Cardinals consistently have put out some of the best pitching staff numbers in the league over the last 2 decades.
@@bobkochera3447 Could be the pitchers trust Molina to call the right pitch... could be that Molina is good at predicting the types of pitches the pitcher wants to throw. Could be a combination of the two.
I was reading Wally Schang's Wikipedia page and found this crazy nugget: "In the early 20th century, when players with facial hair became a rarity in baseball, Wally Schang became the last major leaguer to sport a moustache, in 1914. After that, is reported that the first players to sport moustaches during the regular season were Dick Allen (St. Louis Cardinals) and Felipe Alou (Oakland Athletics), both in 1970".
why do we not refer to baseball eras as 'old timey stache era', the 'no fun era', and the 'porn stache era. The 90's wasn't the steroid era it was the goatee era.
Yadi is also the new owner of the Vaqueros de Bayamon, a professional basketball team in Puerto Rico. They are currently 15-0 in the new season and are miles above everyone in the league. THE MOLINA EFFECT
I'd like to see what those numbers look like on a "per baserunner allowed" basis - obviously the graph shows a pretty striking pattern, but the number of stolen bases a team allows is also going to depend on how many players the other team gets on base. A team with a crummy catcher could still have a lower number of steals if they don't allow many walks and mostly give up Home Runs (or triples for that matter) when they do allow hits.
@@jared8538 Not sure why the laughs - I'm not expecting it to have much impact on the Cardinals standing out, especially when looking at such a long timeframe ("number of runners with opportunity to steal" might be pretty similar across teams when averaged over such a period). But could be an interesting way to look at shorter timeframes and specific catchers, where a low number of steals against could be a mix of catcher contributions and other factors - caught stealing is easy to count, but you can really only attribute the "threat" of a catcher's arm to _suppressing steal attempts_ if we know how many runners had a chance to steal against that catcher in the first place.
One of the more interesting things growing up as a catcher and Yadi being my idol was the idea of framing fatigue. If you try to frame absolutely everything, particularly when you have a reputation of getting umpires to make bad calls, you can actually make the strike zone smaller just because they get in their head you’re trying to trick them. Yadier Molina though really doesn’t try to frame much outside of high leverage pitches to try and increase his chances of stealing a strikeout or getting back ahead in the count against a dangerous hitter. One of the most useful things I learned.
I think my favorite Molina stat is that, despite his well-deserved reputation for being one of the slowest players in the MLB, he is more successful at stealing bases than the collective rest of the MLB is at stealing bases against him (65.09% v 59.63%).
That's like that chart of Bob Lemon hitting vs Bob Lemon pitching where he for most of his career never hit for average, but he DID hit better than his opposition
@@senorpepper3405 That word is the definition of Molina's game "smart", it's just insane how a pitcher can have a difference between being mediocre to having a barely Hof career like Wainwright, just by having Molina calling his pitches. And a lot of what Molina does can't be quantified by metrics.
Very very happy you brought up his arm. I'm not even a Cardinals fan, but that stolen bases allowed since 2005 stat is one of my favorites in baseball.
I love watching videos of Yadi picking out fools running on him (or even just, you know, absent mindedly wandering off base a little too far), and I'm a Giants fan. I love Posey, but Yadi is my favourite catcher in baseball.
@@DrQuak Wow, I'm gonna have to mark this down on the calendar! A Giants fan finally admitting that Yadi is a better catcher than Posey! (Buster is, of course, a much better hitter.)
As a yankee fan and Yadier Molina believer, I’m going to stop watching now that I’m 7 minutes in so I can convince myself that Jorge Posada and Brett Gardner are both hall of famers. Thanks Bailey!
Speaking of "count" stats: his Caught Stealings (putouts, pickoffs and anything derived from those) has been lowered due to his great defense. If players had run against him at league rates, he'd have what? Another two or three hundred putouts against runners, and anything related to that?
Exactly! I was just about to post that "No one runs on him!" Then the piece was shown on SBs by team and Andrew McCutchen (which surprised me about him, but it just shows he's smart not to try).
I grew up playing catcher and will tell you that to be able to perform at a high level for 20 years of MLB play is alone a great testament to him. Over the years, great catchers have come and gone, but Molina's longevity and the value it has had to the pitching staff in St Louis must be his greatest accomplishment. That alone is HOF material.
Yes, time played is a seriously underappreciated stat for figuring out the value of a player over their career. As us soccer enjoyers like to say, "the greatest ability is availability".
I’ll be the first to admit that compared to what I was 20-25 years ago, I’m a pretty casual fan. But I seriously had no idea this was even a debate. I thought it was pretty much universally accepted that Molina was one of the greatest catchers ever, and a shoo-in first ballot hall of famer.
It's mostly a debate with sports writers trying to get an angle for a column. Or troll Cardinals fans. His offensive numbers not being Piazza's is the ding. But, yeah, most people recognize that this small ding won't keep him out. Probably not even for a year. Nor should it. (Hmm. Number one reason to hope Pujols plays one more year. To see him and Yadi go into the HOF together.)
@@josephfeldmann1025 I’m a Texas Rangers fan for more than 40 years, so I hate the cardinals lol. But I easily recognize the brilliance of Yadi behind the plate. It’s asinine to me to think anybody would dream of keeping him out. The catcher position has never been about huge offense. Their value to the team is immeasurable in other ways. And nobody has given more value than yadi, except maybe Pudge Rodriguez.
@@josephfeldmann1025 you know writers are trolling when they pretend Piazza was actually a catcher and not a first baseman who got lost and ended up behind the plate.
@@FoolishBaseball The only catcher today who could maybe come close to what Jason Kendall did is J.T. Realmuto. He stole 12 in 2016, and he is on pace to hit double digits this year. People rave about J.T.'s defense and game-changing power, but people also forget the dude has wheels!
No, and it's not particularly close. He was a very good player for a long time, but his peak was far too brief. The Dave Parker of catchers. Yadi is in the Darrell Porter-Jason Kendal tier. Close, but not 'maybe' close. Just not good enough.
I love baseball and I’m a Dodgers fan..this man’s teams always broke our spirits in the postseason but I can say this..dude is one of the best catchers in MLB History..his game and everything he does backs it up..he is a well deserving future hall of famer 💯🙏🏼
as someone from St Louis I can't tell you how extreme he's loved in this city, his face might as well be the Cardinal's logo, if he drove through town and choose a random house, walked in the front door without knocking he'd almost for sure be asked if he wanted something to drink and if he wanted to stay for dinner
I’m a big advocate that the HoF should lean harder into the “fame” part and what players have contributed to the growth of the sport. Molina, regardless of his bona fide stats that already put him into the HoF, should get in on the sheer fact that he is a legend in the sport and the perfect example of what a catcher should strive to be.
Agreed. ‘Fame’ should definitely be a factor and Molina is a rockstar. Considering ‘fame’ as a factor, Roger Maris IS Hall of Fame worthy (a pet peeve of mine).
For me, what's amazing about his career is his offensive stats given his role. From day one it was apparent he was a defensive genius. That was a given. To me what was amazing is his offensive stats. He made himself into a really damn good hitter and a lot of his hitting stats rank really well among offensive minded catchers.
I'm 44. been a Cards fan since I was 8... Yadi Is my all time favourite player. So when a fan of divisional rival gives high praise like this, my heart is warmed.
hall of fame or not, here in st louis we will raise a statue of him right next to stan musials. and im glad you mentioned yogi berra. when he passed a couple years ago everybody over on The Hill drove by his moms old place, where yogis sister still lives. we lined up for hours in our cars to pay our respects. The Hill is the name of the italian neighborhood here in stl. i was working just down the street at the time and my boss gave us extra time for our break to head by and say a few words. yeah, there's a reason yadi stayed here. some things cant be bought.
Also forgot how good he is at calling games and sequences. IMO he’s a genius at that and how most of the times brings out the best out of any pitcher. That’s why for me that is the main reason he’s the greatest catcher of all time. The other things are extra points.
And the reds will continue to try to cause some more😊 (at least this season. The division is usually wild, or a lopsided blowout at the top) Edit: Ultimate pain
Small correction, Johnny Bench is NOT the all-time leader for Gold Glove awards with 10. It's Iván Rodríguez with 13. Molina made a bit of fuss last year about MLB not letting him catch Bench, but I guess that was just for the National League lead, not the all-time lead.
Why do you say he is the best defender of all time when you don't have good data for most of that time? Will you also say Nick Ahmed is the greatest shortstop of all time because he leads in outs above average?
@@michaellhoover94 You can keep in mind that I technically said that ~in character~, but that's a bit of a cop out. I would point out that framing data goes both ways. Who is to say that Johnny Bench, Gary Carter, or Bill Dickey weren't negative framers? If they were, it would actually hurt their metrics. And that's certainly a possibility. Look at the reputation Salvador Perez has cultivated for himself despite being statistically a very poor framer throughout his career. And of course, this is a criticism that can really only apply to catchers. Other positions have Total Zone or UZR/DRS to cover their metrics for all of MLB history. So the Molina vs Ozzie Smith and Brooks Robinson comparisons don't need as much justification.
@@FoolishBaseball hey its about time! I was watching this video hoping to hear a reference to my great grand dad Bill Dickey. Low and behold I had to come to the comments for it Edit: unless I just missed it in the video ; )
@@FoolishBaseball but do you really think that it is likely most of the great defensive catchers have been bellow average framers? Given Yadier Molina's contemporaries that seems unlikely to me. He has not clearly separated himself from other great framers of the era. He is worse than Martin and McCann in terms of total framing runs and ahead and of Posey by the same amount he is behind those two. Molina is not doing anything we have not seen in terms of framing value over the short time we have had it. He's just an elite catcher nothing transcendent as far as I can tell. Edit: also I can appreciate the in character point to an extent but that argument does not get walked back in the same way the other arguments you set up as flawed do during the rest of the video. Also I can admit that Yadi is probably (there is still debate about how we calculate framing after all) a better defender than Ozzie but all that is really telling me is that catcher is historically underrated in terms of Defense. We really do not know from that if he unprecedented in terms of catchers. The other great catchers of the era suggest he's probably not.
One of my favorite Yadi stories is that the one time in spring training a pitcher didn’t listen to his call and gave up a HR, and he never questioned Yadis calls after that
I grew up a Cubs fan. I booed McGwire, Pujols, Edmonds, Carpenter, Smith, and Coleman. Molina won my respect, period. He's the best I've ever seen as a catcher, and only Pudge Rodriguez is even close.
Since I’m a Mets fan, yadi always has been an enemy in my eyes, especially with THAT home run. But to say that he isn’t one of the best catchers in the sport is an understatement. He’s one of the most talented defensive catchers and constantly helps his teams pitching. You know what makes the cardinals rotation go? Molina. He’s such a smart man even if he isn’t the one behind the plate every day.
"Yadier Molina is a baseball player." Foolish Bailey just spittin out facts like he always does (can't wait to see your video on why Tyler Wade deserves to win the MVP)
Idk if that intro "How good was Yadier Molina REALLY" was a False Swipe Gaming reference, but if so, this channel is even cooler than I thought. Oh ya, and amazing video!
His framing is SO Clean. Best I’ve ever seen. Sooo smooth & that’s what matters. Doesn’t even look like he’s moving his glove. Most catchers look like they’re snatching it even Gold Glovers Not Yadi Dadi
This video was perfectly timed. The day after it was uploaded, Yadier Molina announced that next season will be his last. Feels good to know I could learn how great he was before he hung em up for good.
I think they are the best family in all of sports. Sure the Manning brothers in football have two championships each. There are three Molina brothers and all three have two rings.
As a cardinal fan for 60 years, I can tell you the best thing about Yadier Molina is not his arm. (Even though it's best I've ever seen) The best attribute about Yadi is his leadership. If you're an opposing player, you don't talk bad about other players or teams in the media. Brandon Phillips did that and Yadi was the one who confronted him about it. Brandon learned his lesson that day. Yadi makes everyone around him better. He is THE General on the field. What he says, goes. Managers listen and do what Yadi says nearly all of the time. When there is a meeting on the mound amongst players, it's Yadi talking and everyone else listening. ... His leadership is why he is the greatest catcher ever to wear a baseball uniform.
Every force has an equal opposite force in physics. We had Ricky Henderson for offense and smart base running. Years later, Molina is the defensive equivalent of Ricky's genius. Great video.
Also as a cardinals fan, we do respectably need that part two though. It can be dangerous to truly believe that a living person is also an actual God. lol. Seriously, it is true that we St. Louisans overexaggerate his offense because of both "numbers from longevity (with this same fan base)" and also because of the ever-so-magical "clutch offense" that is obviously real as one-off examples, but also... kind of made up. LOL. But yes, I loved the segue where the video explained that though Yadi has only "above average" offense for a catcher or as a player in some/many respects... it still doesn't really matter regarding conversation to do with "best defensive player", "best catcher", or "hall of farmer" when he simply has/had so much more/else going on.
This was an incredibly well researched and put together video. People like you are a big part of the reason why I love baseball and its world of statistics. This is awesome.
I got a game ball from Yadi when he was warming up a pitcher between innings while Mattheny put on his gear, and after that game got it signed by Albert Pujols and Dan Haren.
I think the aspects of your brilliant storytelling goes unnoticed each video. The way you broke this down into the old average fan, the new hotshot, and the person who digs a little deeper. Amazing perspective and one of your best videos. Keep it up!
Bengie Molina was also instrumental to Buster Posey’s MLB transition. Combined with Jose Molina and you have easily the best catching family ever and likely for all time.
We lived in Arlington, Texas when the Rangers brought up Rodriguez and knew several of them from going to Bobby Valentine’s restaurant. I always thought that Pudge was the best until I started watching the Cardinals. Molina is a beast. He has played 1st base a few times, too.
I've been a very big Cardinals fan since 1996. I've probably watched 90 percent of the games Yadi has played in. What he does for pitchers is what is "under the radar" special. He's taken every pitcher he's worked with and made them better than what they would have been otherwise. Oh, and I had a dog named Yadi.
I have seen him enough to know how great he is. I think a lot of people only have stats to go by and say well his abc and xyz was low. He is one of those guys you just had to see play.
One of those unquantifiables on a stat sheet but absolutely important. He’s even doing it today JA Happ has a lower ERA since being trading to the Cardinals (under 2) than Max Scherzer since being traded to the Dodgers.
Anyone who’s seen Yadi play knows that he’s a HOFamer. It’s not just his production and numbers, but how he plays the game. The Lythe motions, quick, flexible arm, the ease of movement behind the plate, leadership on the field. It’s the presence of raw talent and charisma.
I’ve always liked Yadi, even as a non Cards fan. He’s the heart and soul of the team - I remember watching a post season game where he got injured whilst hitting and was like “well, that’s the cards screwed….” (which they ended up being)
I was always told you know a hall of famer when you see them play. That goes for any sport. I'm a White Sox fan, grew up seeing Harold Baines play and never once thought that. I don't think any Sox fan thought that. We all thought he was an All Star caliber player from time to time but that doesn't make him a hall of famer. Yadi is one of those players you know is a hall of famer. You can see it in the way he plays and the way he carries himself on the field.
Yadi is probably my favorite player of all time. Seems to get the big hit whenever his team needs it the most . The 2017 Puerto Rico team does not make the wbc final without him
You know, I don’t know squat about baseball, nor how the stats work, or anything else. But you make it so amusing and interesting at the same time, I can’t stop watching your videos!
I'm relieved to know what a bunch of morons sabermetricians are. For statistical analysis to have any real world utility, it has to account for changes in total observations that result from cause and effect. This is called survivorship bias and has inspired some clever internet memes. Now I have seen and heard people say some damning things about Yadier Molina. ("He's not even as good as Bengie!") But if it is true that sabermetricians do not even account for the ancillary effect of Yady's arm, that's just pathetic! Baseball stat geeks are the sort of fans that could never wrap their head around American Football. They would never understand that the best cornerbacks in the NFL have fewer tackles and interceptions than other cornerbacks on their team, simply because their receiver never gets open. They would never get that running back productivity is more often the result of good O-Line play than the back being especially talented. I am ashamed of baseball fans. I've said it!
Awesome video as always Foolish! When you announced a few days ago that you'd be working on a catcher video, I was really hoping it would be about Molina, and I wasn't disappointed. I think this video made tons of great points, and it makes it very clear that Yadi deserves to be a HoFer. Keep up the great work!
An absolute gem of a video! I must admit my bias as a diehard Cardinals fan and having idolized both Yadier and Waino growing up, so I was ecstatic to see this coming down the pipeline. I look forward to the incoming content in the future, thank you for brightening my day!
Incredible video! Catcher fanatic my whole life - my childhood favorites were all three Molinas and Kendall, so this was like a dream come true. Glad to see Prospectus favors Jose in framing runs. He was a framing god and instrumental to NYY's 2009 WS victory. Yadi's probably my favorite player whose whole career has taken place while I followed the game. I am a homer, but it feels like in every meaningful way he's a titan of the game from the catching position. To echo one of the least-statistical points made early in the video, he's a winner and a top-tier competitor above all else. Surefire HOFer, indeed.
An important note, at approx. the @10:00 min mark, you describe pitch framing as "lying to umpires to steal stikes" that's a VERY reductive view of the skill. A good pitch framer is able to steal strikes, BUT it's also getting the RIGHT call too. A bad pitch framer can get a legit borderline strike called a ball instead. A more ACCURATE description of the skill is maximizing the optimum call on borderline pitches. That means getting strikes when they're out of the zone, and keeping strikes when they are in the zone.
Thanks for that final stat. I heard a similar stat (I think the stat I heard was stolen base attempts against by team since 2005, which was also eye opening) from John Smoltz on MLB Network or Sunday Night Baseball. I haven’t been able to find that stat since. Anyway, the difference between 29th in baseball and Yadi was almost unbelievable. Factor in all the snap throw pickoffs and smothered balls in the dirt and he is, by far, the best defensive catcher I remember seeing. Sorry, Pudge. (I saw Bench catch a game in StL but was too young to remember it).
Great video as always! Something I'd really like to know about Yadier, though. I wonder what his batting stats look like in games where he gave up a stolen base and/or caught someone stealing. He has always been a player who plays with a lot of emotion and it'd be noteworthy to see if people trying to run on him helped/hurt him at the plate. Thanks again!
for a long time, i was a baseball hater. i lived and died by basketball and baseball struck me as nothing but an unentertaining sport. that was until one of your videos popped up in my recommended this year. we’ve all been trapped @ home so i figured why not watch just for kicks. next thing i knew, i was pretty much hooked instantly. n from that july till now ive been as invested in this great sport as ever, and i have a newfound respect for baseball players and fans. thank you for making the game fun for me foolish
I like how a theme when you’re analyzing players based on the 3 groups of no, some, and all analytics is that the no analytics and all analytics groups strangely align.
Damn this video is so well made. I’m not even a huge fan of the Rod Barajas one, but this definitely deserves to be in the hall of Catcher videos. Definitely one of my new favorites
Foolish Baseball Hey Foolish Bailey you should make a video where you rank all your videos by how much you like them personally!! This comment of yours gave me the good idea
@@FoolishBaseball I get that, really well made video, and interesting. I don’t know why it doesn’t hit white the same spot for me as your Locastro, Mathis, Timmy/Tulo, etc. Those videos have the same quality but I just truly love, not dissimilar to your new one. Anyway, great work all around
I've been a lifelong Red Sox fan but Yadi has been one of my favorite players of all time since I first saw him play. He's what's right about baseball. Loyal and a workhorse, not to mention he has a bazooka.
I turned on a Spring Traing game at the beggining of this year while it was already going, I didn't know who was pitching, who was catching, I had just turned it on. The pitcher threw the ball in the dirt, and off to the side, it was a rough pitch. The catcher jumped in front of it while standing up, he immidiately started the motion towards to throw the ball to second but it wasn't needed. My first thought, instictively while still not knowing who was catching, was "Oh, Yadi's in." Then I laughed at myself because that was awefully short sided of me, then I saw that it was in fact Yadi.
Rickey Henderson once tried to steal 2nd base off of Yadi Molina. It was 1988. Yadi threw the ball from 2009 and still got Rickey by a good body length.
Those intangibles you mentioned are what really set Yadi apart. He is the on-field defensive director. You see the young infielders playing a shift with runners on their bag, you'll see Yadi pulling them back. You know who is one of the best coaches for new 1st basemen? Yep, it's Yadi. The list just goes on. He makes that defense the beast it is. The fact that he now has Goldy and Arenado to help him out just makes this team a defensive nightmare for opposing teams.
Since molina’s rookie season, the cardinals have allowed the fewest stolen bases in the MLB by 400. There is a bigger gap between 1st and 2nd than there is between 2nd and 25th.
I love this. do you have a source. I know my friends.
@@DanLawo i would hope you know your friends
@@smoceany9478 😂😂😂
Yadi’s the Goat catcher.
@@DanLawo Watch the video. The stat is at the end and I'm glad you know your friends.
In March 2005 Tony Larussa was asked about benching Yadi due to a hitting slump. Larussa said “Even if he goes hitless the rest of the season, he’s our catcher.”
That’s how important Yadi is on defense.
You know Yadi is a brilliant catcher when Kolten Wong is so excited he stole on him that he literally took second base home with him
Wong has seen and caught many throws from Molina during his career. He knows how hard it is.
@@FoolishBaseball I'm fairly new to baseball and I remember watching your video on Jeff Mathis and pop time as a measurement for catchers. It really helped me appreciate how insanely good Yadi is!
It's crazy that he has that pop time even at his age.
Yadi will be goated for life.. nobody can revoke his g card.
Remember, Kolten Wong caught a lot of Yadi’s throws
Honestly still blows me away that all 3 brothers won World Series rings all while all playing the same position. Feel like there can't be too many families with multiple World Series winners
🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷
🦾🦾🦾
There's another aspect that doesn't often get mentioned. Molina has always had a unique way of being on the same mental wavelength as his pitchers. He so often calls the exact pitch they're wanting to throw... not a lot of shaking off. This gets the pitcher into a rhythm and keeps the defense on their toes because the pitcher is working faster. It's a very underrated intangible, but it goes a long way and has a hand in why the Cardinals consistently have put out some of the best pitching staff numbers in the league over the last 2 decades.
it might not be calling a pitch that the pitcher wants but the pitcher's trust in Molina and not shaking the call off!
I concur
@@bobkochera3447 Could be the pitchers trust Molina to call the right pitch... could be that Molina is good at predicting the types of pitches the pitcher wants to throw. Could be a combination of the two.
@@bobkochera3447 It's probably both. Like any great partnership, it goes both ways
And good defense
I was reading Wally Schang's Wikipedia page and found this crazy nugget: "In the early 20th century, when players with facial hair became a rarity in baseball, Wally Schang became the last major leaguer to sport a moustache, in 1914. After that, is reported that the first players to sport moustaches during the regular season were Dick Allen (St. Louis Cardinals) and Felipe Alou (Oakland Athletics), both in 1970".
You know Schang.
Shit, it’s 1970.
Time to tache up for the next ten years.
why do we not refer to baseball eras as 'old timey stache era', the 'no fun era', and the 'porn stache era. The 90's wasn't the steroid era it was the goatee era.
@@thetroyzernator lol
@@DM0407 and now we're in the full beard era
Yadi is also the new owner of the Vaqueros de Bayamon, a professional basketball team in Puerto Rico. They are currently 15-0 in the new season and are miles above everyone in the league. THE MOLINA EFFECT
Sweet, cool info
Hot damn he wins too much, now I know I can't bring my ole lady round him. He'd win her too
You forgot to mention that they were the Champions last year
Eric Fortman gotta watch yo back with Yadi around
@@alt842 True. Honestly forgot about the COVID bubble season. Was a blur
That chart of stolen bases allowed by teams legitimately blew my mind, that’s an insane drop off.
That chart is the face Yadier Molina made to Jose Siri, but in a numerical format
@@traviswrigg5158 lol
I'd like to see what those numbers look like on a "per baserunner allowed" basis - obviously the graph shows a pretty striking pattern, but the number of stolen bases a team allows is also going to depend on how many players the other team gets on base. A team with a crummy catcher could still have a lower number of steals if they don't allow many walks and mostly give up Home Runs (or triples for that matter) when they do allow hits.
@@chrislukes9037 lol
@@jared8538 Not sure why the laughs - I'm not expecting it to have much impact on the Cardinals standing out, especially when looking at such a long timeframe ("number of runners with opportunity to steal" might be pretty similar across teams when averaged over such a period). But could be an interesting way to look at shorter timeframes and specific catchers, where a low number of steals against could be a mix of catcher contributions and other factors - caught stealing is easy to count, but you can really only attribute the "threat" of a catcher's arm to _suppressing steal attempts_ if we know how many runners had a chance to steal against that catcher in the first place.
One of the more interesting things growing up as a catcher and Yadi being my idol was the idea of framing fatigue. If you try to frame absolutely everything, particularly when you have a reputation of getting umpires to make bad calls, you can actually make the strike zone smaller just because they get in their head you’re trying to trick them. Yadier Molina though really doesn’t try to frame much outside of high leverage pitches to try and increase his chances of stealing a strikeout or getting back ahead in the count against a dangerous hitter. One of the most useful things I learned.
Man yadi has like 50000000 iq
What a great comment. I never thought about that (and I guess I'm not alone) but it makes perfect sense.
If you ever needed an indication of how great Yadi was, look at the Cardinals this season
So true, and as a lifelong Cardinal fan, so sad.
Fr
Its like how badly the Colts fell off after losing Peyton for a season
No matter how good he was. He was the captain and heart and at that the soul of the team for YEARS. And there's nothing more valuable than that
also look at that base steals this year the catchers are so bad now
I think my favorite Molina stat is that, despite his well-deserved reputation for being one of the slowest players in the MLB, he is more successful at stealing bases than the collective rest of the MLB is at stealing bases against him (65.09% v 59.63%).
that's actually insane
That's like that chart of Bob Lemon hitting vs Bob Lemon pitching where he for most of his career never hit for average, but he DID hit better than his opposition
he's just a smart baserunner. i saw him go first to third the other day on a base hit. for the most part he knows what he can get away with.
@@traviswrigg5158 aye secret base fan
@@senorpepper3405 That word is the definition of Molina's game "smart", it's just insane how a pitcher can have a difference between being mediocre to having a barely Hof career like Wainwright, just by having Molina calling his pitches. And a lot of what Molina does can't be quantified by metrics.
Very very happy you brought up his arm. I'm not even a Cardinals fan, but that stolen bases allowed since 2005 stat is one of my favorites in baseball.
HOF on that alone.
I was getting ready to write up that yeah the framing is great.... but what about the throw-outs. then ofc foolish chucks it in the last 20 seconds.
It's impossible to make a Hall of Fame case for Molina without bringing up his arm.
I love watching videos of Yadi picking out fools running on him (or even just, you know, absent mindedly wandering off base a little too far), and I'm a Giants fan. I love Posey, but Yadi is my favourite catcher in baseball.
@@DrQuak Wow, I'm gonna have to mark this down on the calendar! A Giants fan finally admitting that Yadi is a better catcher than Posey! (Buster is, of course, a much better hitter.)
As a yankee fan and Yadier Molina believer, I’m going to stop watching now that I’m 7 minutes in so I can convince myself that Jorge Posada and Brett Gardner are both hall of famers. Thanks Bailey!
Great plan.
It's a Gardy party
Jorgie may not be a hall of famer but he deserved more than one year on the ballot
Lmaooo Yankees don’t have any hall of gamers on there roster for next 20 yrs good luck
@Jersey Boy Probably took him an hour to come up with that
Speaking of "count" stats: his Caught Stealings (putouts, pickoffs and anything derived from those) has been lowered due to his great defense. If players had run against him at league rates, he'd have what? Another two or three hundred putouts against runners, and anything related to that?
Exactly! I was just about to post that "No one runs on him!" Then the piece was shown on SBs by team and Andrew McCutchen (which surprised me about him, but it just shows he's smart not to try).
All teams have rules for stealing against another team. For several teams their steal rule against The Cardinals (with Molina) is "don't".
I somehow didn’t even think about that, thanks for calling this out! Amazing point
@@WallisTylerJ when players like Billy Hamilton struggle to steal against Yadi, I can imagine the fear ruminating through other club houses.
it’s for the same reason that deion sanders or darrelle revis don’t have tons of interceptions
I grew up playing catcher and will tell you that to be able to perform at a high level for 20 years of MLB play is alone a great testament to him. Over the years, great catchers have come and gone, but Molina's longevity and the value it has had to the pitching staff in St Louis must be his greatest accomplishment. That alone is HOF material.
20 years, as a catcher as well. That is unheard of.
He is a shoo-in HOFer. I don’t think that even should be debatable
@@louies5988 He better be!
Yes, time played is a seriously underappreciated stat for figuring out the value of a player over their career. As us soccer enjoyers like to say, "the greatest ability is availability".
I’ll be the first to admit that compared to what I was 20-25 years ago, I’m a pretty casual fan. But I seriously had no idea this was even a debate. I thought it was pretty much universally accepted that Molina was one of the greatest catchers ever, and a shoo-in first ballot hall of famer.
It's mostly a debate with sports writers trying to get an angle for a column. Or troll Cardinals fans. His offensive numbers not being Piazza's is the ding.
But, yeah, most people recognize that this small ding won't keep him out. Probably not even for a year. Nor should it.
(Hmm. Number one reason to hope Pujols plays one more year. To see him and Yadi go into the HOF together.)
@@josephfeldmann1025 I’m a Texas Rangers fan for more than 40 years, so I hate the cardinals lol. But I easily recognize the brilliance of Yadi behind the plate. It’s asinine to me to think anybody would dream of keeping him out. The catcher position has never been about huge offense. Their value to the team is immeasurable in other ways. And nobody has given more value than yadi, except maybe Pudge Rodriguez.
@@josephfeldmann1025 you know writers are trolling when they pretend Piazza was actually a catcher and not a first baseman who got lost and ended up behind the plate.
If Mike Mussina is a hall of famer, give me a break that Yadi isn't
@Wesley Antrim You couldn't be more wrong.
The one main lesson I took from this video is that we’re lucky to be watching Yadi, but we should also pay more attention to Jason Kendall lol
The other crazy Jason Kendall thing is that he stole bases. He had eight seasons with double-digit steals, and three with 20+.
@@FoolishBaseball He even batted leadoff sometimes
@@FoolishBaseball The only catcher today who could maybe come close to what Jason Kendall did is J.T. Realmuto. He stole 12 in 2016, and he is on pace to hit double digits this year. People rave about J.T.'s defense and game-changing power, but people also forget the dude has wheels!
This just made me feel sad for Jason. He deserved more talk. Guess that’s what happens when your best years are in Pittsburgh
@@GaIeforce lol, Phillies broadcast guys don’t stop talking about his speed.
He is a slam dunk Hall of Famer in my book. One of the best catchers ever.
Yeah I think it's a SD for sure. He does a lot
No, and it's not particularly close. He was a very good player for a long time, but his peak was far too brief. The Dave Parker of catchers. Yadi is in the Darrell Porter-Jason Kendal tier. Close, but not 'maybe' close. Just not good enough.
@@johnstrawb3521 did you watch the video you just commented on?
@@johnstrawb3521 What an insane thing to say Mr. Strawb
As a pirates fan he’s easily first ballot I’m shocked it’s a question tbh
I love baseball and I’m a Dodgers fan..this man’s teams always broke our spirits in the postseason but I can say this..dude is one of the best catchers in MLB History..his game and everything he does backs it up..he is a well deserving future hall of famer 💯🙏🏼
You broke OUR spirits this last post season 😢
as someone from St Louis I can't tell you how extreme he's loved in this city, his face might as well be the Cardinal's logo, if he drove through town and choose a random house, walked in the front door without knocking he'd almost for sure be asked if he wanted something to drink and if he wanted to stay for dinner
I’m a big advocate that the HoF should lean harder into the “fame” part and what players have contributed to the growth of the sport. Molina, regardless of his bona fide stats that already put him into the HoF, should get in on the sheer fact that he is a legend in the sport and the perfect example of what a catcher should strive to be.
Agreed. ‘Fame’ should definitely be a factor and Molina is a rockstar. Considering ‘fame’ as a factor, Roger Maris IS Hall of Fame worthy (a pet peeve of mine).
By that logic Patrick Mahomes should be in the baseball HOF lol
@@ZbagdoesMC If he is an owner of the KC Royals for a long time and does a ton for the team and the sport then yes I agree
Must of never heard of a guy named ivan Rodriguez
For me, what's amazing about his career is his offensive stats given his role. From day one it was apparent he was a defensive genius. That was a given. To me what was amazing is his offensive stats. He made himself into a really damn good hitter and a lot of his hitting stats rank really well among offensive minded catchers.
If he's as good as this channel, he's a hall of famer
you're too kind
2035 Hall of Fame inductie foolish Bailey
@@MacDaddyMace 9 years left, enjoy him while he lasts
@@FoolishBaseball Long story short: You rock, FB!!!
@@MacDaddyMace so he’s retiring in 2030? 😔
As a reds fan, I am at peace with the fact that yadier molina will live rent free in my head until the end of time
I'm 44. been a Cards fan since I was 8... Yadi Is my all time favourite player. So when a fan of divisional rival gives high praise like this, my heart is warmed.
In much the same way, Brandon Phillips and Johnny Cueto live rent-free in mine.
You love him like we love Votto, you just won't admit it
@@arsenal-slr9552 I’m with you on the Votto love as a Cards fan. The dude is boss.
hall of fame or not, here in st louis we will raise a statue of him right next to stan musials. and im glad you mentioned yogi berra. when he passed a couple years ago everybody over on The Hill drove by his moms old place, where yogis sister still lives. we lined up for hours in our cars to pay our respects. The Hill is the name of the italian neighborhood here in stl. i was working just down the street at the time and my boss gave us extra time for our break to head by and say a few words. yeah, there's a reason yadi stayed here. some things cant be bought.
Also forgot how good he is at calling games and sequences. IMO he’s a genius at that and how most of the times brings out the best out of any pitcher. That’s why for me that is the main reason he’s the greatest catcher of all time. The other things are extra points.
not even close to the best. get outta town lol
@@CTEBIKEFOODDELIVERY never said he was the best … he’s in the conversation to being the best for sure
@@CTEBIKEFOODDELIVERY we rarely see a pitcher shake off yadi's call, even other All-stars, so his game calling is elite
@@CTEBIKEFOODDELIVERYit is the best and the cardinals fall off after he left only solidifies that.
"The NL Central is anarchy."
Best baseball quote ever from FB.
It’s so true
And the reds will continue to try to cause some more😊 (at least this season. The division is usually wild, or a lopsided blowout at the top)
Edit: Ultimate pain
That's because all the best quotes are true
Same as it ever was.
No place Id rather be
The bit about Willie Mays being worried about the wrong WAR is why you’re the best baseball channel on TH-cam
He is smiling with his mouth, but not his eyes.
Small correction, Johnny Bench is NOT the all-time leader for Gold Glove awards with 10. It's Iván Rodríguez with 13. Molina made a bit of fuss last year about MLB not letting him catch Bench, but I guess that was just for the National League lead, not the all-time lead.
Why do you say he is the best defender of all time when you don't have good data for most of that time? Will you also say Nick Ahmed is the greatest shortstop of all time because he leads in outs above average?
@@michaellhoover94 You can keep in mind that I technically said that ~in character~, but that's a bit of a cop out. I would point out that framing data goes both ways. Who is to say that Johnny Bench, Gary Carter, or Bill Dickey weren't negative framers? If they were, it would actually hurt their metrics. And that's certainly a possibility. Look at the reputation Salvador Perez has cultivated for himself despite being statistically a very poor framer throughout his career.
And of course, this is a criticism that can really only apply to catchers. Other positions have Total Zone or UZR/DRS to cover their metrics for all of MLB history. So the Molina vs Ozzie Smith and Brooks Robinson comparisons don't need as much justification.
@@FoolishBaseball hey its about time! I was watching this video hoping to hear a reference to my great grand dad Bill Dickey. Low and behold I had to come to the comments for it
Edit: unless I just missed it in the video ; )
Nerd
@@FoolishBaseball but do you really think that it is likely most of the great defensive catchers have been bellow average framers? Given Yadier Molina's contemporaries that seems unlikely to me.
He has not clearly separated himself from other great framers of the era. He is worse than Martin and McCann in terms of total framing runs and ahead and of Posey by the same amount he is behind those two. Molina is not doing anything we have not seen in terms of framing value over the short time we have had it. He's just an elite catcher nothing transcendent as far as I can tell.
Edit: also I can appreciate the in character point to an extent but that argument does not get walked back in the same way the other arguments you set up as flawed do during the rest of the video.
Also I can admit that Yadi is probably (there is still debate about how we calculate framing after all) a better defender than Ozzie but all that is really telling me is that catcher is historically underrated in terms of Defense. We really do not know from that if he unprecedented in terms of catchers. The other great catchers of the era suggest he's probably not.
Wow! Andrew McCutchen forever stopped attempting stolen bases against Yadier Molina. That is actually quite incredible
One of my favorite Yadi stories is that the one time in spring training a pitcher didn’t listen to his call and gave up a HR, and he never questioned Yadis calls after that
“Yadier Molina contains multitudes” - Foolish Baseball 2021
so say we all
"No Yadi? Woop time to run!" is one of the best lines from you so far, Bailey.
Cubs fan here to say that Yadi is the best Molina, the best catcher, and one of the greatest defensive weapons in MLB history. Hats off to the man.
Benji is better
Are there any new Molinas in the pipeline?
Cards fan here. Hearing a cubs fan say that got me teary eyed
Bench pudge berra clear by a significant amount lol
I grew up a Cubs fan. I booed McGwire, Pujols, Edmonds, Carpenter, Smith, and Coleman. Molina won my respect, period. He's the best I've ever seen as a catcher, and only Pudge Rodriguez is even close.
Since I’m a Mets fan, yadi always has been an enemy in my eyes, especially with THAT home run. But to say that he isn’t one of the best catchers in the sport is an understatement. He’s one of the most talented defensive catchers and constantly helps his teams pitching. You know what makes the cardinals rotation go? Molina. He’s such a smart man even if he isn’t the one behind the plate every day.
Not a cards fan but mad respect for the man and "yes" 1st ballot hall of fame! This man is a BEAST behind the plate.
He thought we wouldn’t notice the Jeff Mathis link when he started talking about framing, but we did.
Jeff Mathis
@@FoolishBaseball “Jeff Mathis” - David Fletcher
@@FoolishBaseball Jeff Mathis
@@FoolishBaseball Jeff Mathis
@@FoolishBaseball Jeff Mathis
"Yadier Molina is a baseball player." Foolish Bailey just spittin out facts like he always does (can't wait to see your video on why Tyler Wade deserves to win the MVP)
In the New York Yankees’ hour of need,
Wade proved most valuable, indeed
Idk if that intro "How good was Yadier Molina REALLY" was a False Swipe Gaming reference, but if so, this channel is even cooler than I thought. Oh ya, and amazing video!
I've watched that channel before, but I was actually thinking more along the lines of Dave Chappelle's "how old is 15, really?"
@@FoolishBaseball One of the greatest jokes by one of the greatest comedians of our time.
Good God, what a wierd place to run into your channel, love your stuff
how does jrose have time to watch baseball with some of the videos he makes
@@FoolishBaseballLOL I love you
His framing is SO Clean.
Best I’ve ever seen. Sooo smooth
& that’s what matters.
Doesn’t even look like he’s moving his glove.
Most catchers look like they’re snatching it
even Gold Glovers
Not Yadi Dadi
Garth, that was a haiku.
This video was perfectly timed. The day after it was uploaded, Yadier Molina announced that next season will be his last. Feels good to know I could learn how great he was before he hung em up for good.
Thankfully people don’t like arguing on the internet and this case is closed. Thanks Bailey!
What a relief!
@@FoolishBaseball You have no idea
I don't know, I don't think people like arguing on the internet. Wait, that's what you said? Yeah, agreed!
We will never see another family with the accolades of the Molina brothers. Absolute legends.
I think they are the best family in all of sports.
Sure the Manning brothers in football have two championships each.
There are three Molina brothers and all three have two rings.
Post career antics aside, the Alomars were pretty damn good as well
Nobody pays attention to hockey but the real best brother combo is the Sedin twins
If only the Sedin twins won a Cup (or two) I’d be with ya
@@williamklumpenhower1188 and If you include the Father-Son combo..
I'd say Bobby Hull and Brett Hull should be included.
When he was giving him props and then level two just said “fraud” I started dying
It is I who contained multitudes all along.
@@FoolishBaseball Unfolding that dialectic
@@FoolishBaseball Maybe the real stats accumulation was all the friends we made along the way
Fraudier Molina
@@wyssmaster best comment
Announced today his next season will be his last, feel like I’ve been watching him since I was in diapers. Legend of the game.
2004 to 2022
As a cardinal fan for 60 years, I can tell you the best thing about Yadier Molina is not his arm. (Even though it's best I've ever seen) The best attribute about Yadi is his leadership. If you're an opposing player, you don't talk bad about other players or teams in the media. Brandon Phillips did that and Yadi was the one who confronted him about it. Brandon learned his lesson that day. Yadi makes everyone around him better. He is THE General on the field. What he says, goes. Managers listen and do what Yadi says nearly all of the time. When there is a meeting on the mound amongst players, it's Yadi talking and everyone else listening. ... His leadership is why he is the greatest catcher ever to wear a baseball uniform.
Know you were heavy grinding on this one Bailey we appreciate the effort
Thank you!
Every force has an equal opposite force in physics.
We had Ricky Henderson for offense and smart base running. Years later, Molina is the defensive equivalent of Ricky's genius.
Great video.
As a cardinals fan, I'm glad I pushed through that part 2. The final part was perfect summation of Yadi
Also as a cardinals fan, we do respectably need that part two though. It can be dangerous to truly believe that a living person is also an actual God. lol.
Seriously, it is true that we St. Louisans overexaggerate his offense because of both "numbers from longevity (with this same fan base)" and also because of the ever-so-magical "clutch offense" that is obviously real as one-off examples, but also... kind of made up. LOL.
But yes, I loved the segue where the video explained that though Yadi has only "above average" offense for a catcher or as a player in some/many respects... it still doesn't really matter regarding conversation to do with "best defensive player", "best catcher", or "hall of farmer" when he simply has/had so much more/else going on.
This was an incredibly well researched and put together video. People like you are a big part of the reason why I love baseball and its world of statistics. This is awesome.
As a Mets fan, it hurt when he hit that HR in 06. As a Puerto Rican, Yadi is a legend and one of my favorites of all time.
Lol the McCutchen fever dream got me cracking up! Thanks for doing a video on Yadi, love him as a player, he's handed me a game ball before.
I keep waking up from this recurring nightmare where Andrew McCutchen plays for the Yankees.
I got a game ball from Yadi when he was warming up a pitcher between innings while Mattheny put on his gear, and after that game got it signed by Albert Pujols and Dan Haren.
@@jefferycraig5353 that's awesome! I got mine in between innings but couldn't get it signed; it's great nonetheless.
I think the aspects of your brilliant storytelling goes unnoticed each video. The way you broke this down into the old average fan, the new hotshot, and the person who digs a little deeper. Amazing perspective and one of your best videos. Keep it up!
We need “Gary Sánchez, the Anti-Mathis”
The anti-Mathis was and always will be Ryan Doumit
Title: Gary Sanchez Can Hit, but He's Bad for Baseball. "ANALYTICS LOVE HIM!"
@@A.B.421 that's why i switched the title to the opposite. It's just a joke
More like Gary Sanchez: The Double Water Bottle Guy
@@fredstudios2593 yes
Bengie Molina was also instrumental to Buster Posey’s MLB transition. Combined with Jose Molina and you have easily the best catching family ever and likely for all time.
We lived in Arlington, Texas when the Rangers brought up Rodriguez and knew several of them from going to Bobby Valentine’s restaurant. I always thought that Pudge was the best until I started watching the Cardinals. Molina is a beast. He has played 1st base a few times, too.
I like the weird fever dream he had about McCutchen lmao
It's very strange sight
I've been a very big Cardinals fan since 1996. I've probably watched 90 percent of the games Yadi has played in. What he does for pitchers is what is "under the radar" special. He's taken every pitcher he's worked with and made them better than what they would have been otherwise.
Oh, and I had a dog named Yadi.
I have seen him enough to know how great he is. I think a lot of people only have stats to go by and say well his abc and xyz was low. He is one of those guys you just had to see play.
One of those unquantifiables on a stat sheet but absolutely important. He’s even doing it today
JA Happ has a lower ERA since being trading to the Cardinals (under 2) than Max Scherzer since being traded to the Dodgers.
There's something very satisfying knowing that the Molina family had one offensive specialist, one defensive specialist, and one mix of both.
Bengie, Jose, Yadi in that order?
@@MisterTeal yes
Their parents should make the Hall of Fame
Anyone who’s seen Yadi play knows that he’s a HOFamer. It’s not just his production and numbers, but how he plays the game. The Lythe motions, quick, flexible arm, the ease of movement behind the plate, leadership on the field. It’s the presence of raw talent and charisma.
You singlehandedly got this man an extension
I’ve always liked Yadi, even as a non Cards fan. He’s the heart and soul of the team - I remember watching a post season game where he got injured whilst hitting and was like “well, that’s the cards screwed….” (which they ended up being)
Bengie Molina is watching this like, "Hey! I'm a Molina brother too!"
Only Molina with a cycle
@@davidlevison9334 That was beautiful
He's the only Molina to play for both pennant winners in the same season
He’s my favourite player ever and I’ve waited for this forever. P.S. hof
I'm a Red Sox fan and I always loved Yadier since
I first saw him in the 2004 World Series.
I was always told you know a hall of famer when you see them play. That goes for any sport. I'm a White Sox fan, grew up seeing Harold Baines play and never once thought that. I don't think any Sox fan thought that. We all thought he was an All Star caliber player from time to time but that doesn't make him a hall of famer. Yadi is one of those players you know is a hall of famer. You can see it in the way he plays and the way he carries himself on the field.
Yadier Molina is my favorite player and definitely deserves to get in Cooperstown
Yadi is probably my favorite player of all time. Seems to get the big hit whenever his team needs it the most . The 2017 Puerto Rico team does not make the wbc final without him
To this day my eyes tear up...
My opinion before watching this video: HOF
My opinion while watching the video: HOF
My opinion after watching this video: HOF
Very principled
@@FoolishBaseball thank you sir Bailey
Now, let's hope the sports writers from both coasts give up that bias and vote Molina in to the HOF as he deserves.
You know, I don’t know squat about baseball, nor how the stats work, or anything else.
But you make it so amusing and interesting at the same time, I can’t stop watching your videos!
Watching him his entire career, he’s a hall of famer, I don’t care what sabremetrics say
Sabermetrics aren't even real stats, been saying it for years and no one can convince me otherwise.
@@anthonyhansel9175 Ooh, who's an edgy boy! Yeah, you are!
Both things can be valid. Sabermetrics are very useful, but Yadi is still a HOFer.
I'm relieved to know what a bunch of morons sabermetricians are. For statistical analysis to have any real world utility, it has to account for changes in total observations that result from cause and effect. This is called survivorship bias and has inspired some clever internet memes.
Now I have seen and heard people say some damning things about Yadier Molina. ("He's not even as good as Bengie!") But if it is true that sabermetricians do not even account for the ancillary effect of Yady's arm, that's just pathetic!
Baseball stat geeks are the sort of fans that could never wrap their head around American Football. They would never understand that the best cornerbacks in the NFL have fewer tackles and interceptions than other cornerbacks on their team, simply because their receiver never gets open. They would never get that running back productivity is more often the result of good O-Line play than the back being especially talented. I am ashamed of baseball fans. I've said it!
@@anthonyhansel9175 What does that even mean? What's a "real" stat?
Well structured video. Really amazing how you're able to incorporate all the criticisms of Molina while still making it about how great he is.
As a true Cardinal fan who deeply appreciates Waino and Yadi. Hell of a video my guy. I love that you saved the best for last.
My favorite player of all time. Got me really into baseball watching him and been a huge Cards fan ever since, hoping this vid is a banger
Not sure how long you've been a fan, but welcome to the best fanbase in all of sports.
“I’m worried about the wrong WAR rn” killed me 😂😂
I love when Bailey breaks out the “Hey poindexter”
Awesome video as always Foolish! When you announced a few days ago that you'd be working on a catcher video, I was really hoping it would be about Molina, and I wasn't disappointed. I think this video made tons of great points, and it makes it very clear that Yadi deserves to be a HoFer. Keep up the great work!
An absolute gem of a video! I must admit my bias as a diehard Cardinals fan and having idolized both Yadier and Waino growing up, so I was ecstatic to see this coming down the pipeline. I look forward to the incoming content in the future, thank you for brightening my day!
Incredible video! Catcher fanatic my whole life - my childhood favorites were all three Molinas and Kendall, so this was like a dream come true. Glad to see Prospectus favors Jose in framing runs. He was a framing god and instrumental to NYY's 2009 WS victory. Yadi's probably my favorite player whose whole career has taken place while I followed the game. I am a homer, but it feels like in every meaningful way he's a titan of the game from the catching position. To echo one of the least-statistical points made early in the video, he's a winner and a top-tier competitor above all else. Surefire HOFer, indeed.
An important note, at approx. the @10:00 min mark, you describe pitch framing as "lying to umpires to steal stikes" that's a VERY reductive view of the skill. A good pitch framer is able to steal strikes, BUT it's also getting the RIGHT call too. A bad pitch framer can get a legit borderline strike called a ball instead.
A more ACCURATE description of the skill is maximizing the optimum call on borderline pitches. That means getting strikes when they're out of the zone, and keeping strikes when they are in the zone.
Thanks for that final stat. I heard a similar stat (I think the stat I heard was stolen base attempts against by team since 2005, which was also eye opening) from John Smoltz on MLB Network or Sunday Night Baseball. I haven’t been able to find that stat since. Anyway, the difference between 29th in baseball and Yadi was almost unbelievable. Factor in all the snap throw pickoffs and smothered balls in the dirt and he is, by far, the best defensive catcher I remember seeing. Sorry, Pudge. (I saw Bench catch a game in StL but was too young to remember it).
I'm gonna miss watching Molina play when he retires.
We only have him for one more season 🥲
Great video as always!
Something I'd really like to know about Yadier, though. I wonder what his batting stats look like in games where he gave up a stolen base and/or caught someone stealing. He has always been a player who plays with a lot of emotion and it'd be noteworthy to see if people trying to run on him helped/hurt him at the plate. Thanks again!
Everytime I catch a Cardinals, I hope Molina is playing. He's really good.
It is pretty hard to miss him. Unless he is injured he plays in like 19 out of 20 games.
for a long time, i was a baseball hater. i lived and died by basketball and baseball struck me as nothing but an unentertaining sport. that was until one of your videos popped up in my recommended this year. we’ve all been trapped @ home so i figured why not watch just for kicks. next thing i knew, i was pretty much hooked instantly. n from that july till now ive been as invested in this great sport as ever, and i have a newfound respect for baseball players and fans. thank you for making the game fun for me foolish
glad to hear it!
A lot of people needed to see this. Thank you!!
Damm, wrong Molina. I was hoping for Bengie
Let's be honest, Jose is the best one. Bengie did have that cycle though.
@@FoolishBaseball I was expecting an hour long baseball bits on that cycle! I can’t help but be disappointed.
I like how a theme when you’re analyzing players based on the 3 groups of no, some, and all analytics is that the no analytics and all analytics groups strangely align.
It's a perfect example of a danger of incomplete understanding of topic.
Damn this video is so well made. I’m not even a huge fan of the Rod Barajas one, but this definitely deserves to be in the hall of Catcher videos. Definitely one of my new favorites
Rod Barajas is probably my favorite video I've made. Either that or Locastro.
Foolish Baseball Hey Foolish Bailey you should make a video where you rank all your videos by how much you like them personally!! This comment of yours gave me the good idea
@@FoolishBaseball I get that, really well made video, and interesting. I don’t know why it doesn’t hit white the same spot for me as your Locastro, Mathis, Timmy/Tulo, etc. Those videos have the same quality but I just truly love, not dissimilar to your new one. Anyway, great work all around
I've been a lifelong Red Sox fan but Yadi has been one of my favorite players of all time since I first saw him play. He's what's right about baseball. Loyal and a workhorse, not to mention he has a bazooka.
Amazing bro. This one is up there with the best of baseball bits for sure. Took me on a wild emotional ride with a happy ending :)
“He has less WAR than Brett Gardner” holy fuck you just snuck that in there but that seriously just made my jaw drop. I can’t believe that.
Yeah I made an audible ohh sound
@@Kyle-mw3bo I literally said “oh shit” out loud and paused the video to take it in.
Brett bangs
Brett Gardner is my sister
loved watching both Benji and Jose play for the angels back in the day, and both were great in my opinion, but Yadier is great
I turned on a Spring Traing game at the beggining of this year while it was already going, I didn't know who was pitching, who was catching, I had just turned it on. The pitcher threw the ball in the dirt, and off to the side, it was a rough pitch. The catcher jumped in front of it while standing up, he immidiately started the motion towards to throw the ball to second but it wasn't needed. My first thought, instictively while still not knowing who was catching, was "Oh, Yadi's in." Then I laughed at myself because that was awefully short sided of me, then I saw that it was in fact Yadi.
Rickey Henderson once tried to steal 2nd base off of Yadi Molina. It was 1988. Yadi threw the ball from 2009 and still got Rickey by a good body length.
Those intangibles you mentioned are what really set Yadi apart. He is the on-field defensive director. You see the young infielders playing a shift with runners on their bag, you'll see Yadi pulling them back. You know who is one of the best coaches for new 1st basemen? Yep, it's Yadi. The list just goes on. He makes that defense the beast it is. The fact that he now has Goldy and Arenado to help him out just makes this team a defensive nightmare for opposing teams.
i love how bailey just sounds confused the entire time while reading his script
Catcher is the most valuable position on the baseball diamond and one day when we realize that catchers are gonna win mvp every year
Yadi's the G.O.A.T. of catching.
Great video. I like how you looked at Yadi's career from different angles and perspectives. Very informative and well done.
Excellent video and I agree, people stopped running on Yadi!