Originally posted by Honus Wagner Rules
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For his career, Brett had 97 triples at home and 40 on the road and most of that disparity came through '79, but he ended up with 181 road HRs and 136 at home (because RS was fairly expansive).
Check out the BA splits though:
Home/Road
'74: .310/.257
'75: .362/.255
'76: .367/.301
'77: .337/.287 (did hit 12 home runs on the road)
'78: .352/.233
'79: .373/.283 (12 home runs on the road though)
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Only '76, '77 and '79 would have been all star type years based on his road stats (plus given a usual 4-5% rate boost at home). Clearly, the Charlie Lau Approach, R.S. and George Brett's hard grounder/line drive hitting and aggressive running approach meshed in those years and also probably hurt him on the road where grounders were more likely to turn into outs. What really was Brett through '79? He probably was a .285 hitter with 25 home run power given a normal approach in a normal park which is a lot more in line with his minor league numbers that show pretty good power but not a .300 hitter. He still hit .290 on the road for his career which is in line with about a .300 overall average especially with a different earlt approach.
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