T O P I C R E V I E W |
ranger32 |
Posted - 04/26/2012 : 19:52:32 Can anyone tell me the position that is most drafted by the pros. And what position moves up the fastest. |
8 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
throwitaround |
Posted - 04/27/2012 : 15:08:48 Then you are not really "in the know." ha ha |
in_the_know |
Posted - 04/27/2012 : 09:45:16 quote: Originally posted by throwitaround
How many were lefty and how many were righty?
Not gonna count.
I can filter by position, not by arm.
I do know that, at least in the 2011 draft, those who didn't throw with their right arms were considered lefties |
bmoser |
Posted - 04/27/2012 : 09:26:25 9.7% of American boys in the general population are Lefty's. ~1 in 10
~32% (250 of 792 pitchers) taken in the 2011 MLB Draft were Lefty throwers, ~1 in 3.
If the proportion of ~1 in 10 Lefty males in the American general population also holds true for American male baseball players, then Lefty's are drafted at a ratio of >3:1 than Righty's.
quote: Originally posted by throwitaround
How many were lefty and how many were righty?
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AA17Dad |
Posted - 04/27/2012 : 08:55:28 1. Pitchers 2. Catchers 3. Hitters 4. Speed |
throwitaround |
Posted - 04/27/2012 : 08:36:35 How many were lefty and how many were righty? |
TMB |
Posted - 04/27/2012 : 07:23:19 Pitcher & Catchers... Position guys move quick when they figure it out at the plate! |
in_the_know |
Posted - 04/27/2012 : 07:11:02 OK, found some fact to back up my previous post.
In 2011 draft, total of 1,530 players selected. 792 of those were pitchers, so just over half. |
in_the_know |
Posted - 04/27/2012 : 00:09:10 Well, if you look at an MLB roster, you'll see that nearly half of every teams roster is comprised of pitchers, so it reasons that pitchers are drafted at a nearly 1:1 ratio to all position players. It would also reason that they would likely also move up fastest (and down fastest as well). |