GannonFan wrote:So, to sum up, Jeter's poor range is not to be blamed on him, it's to be blamed on poor Yankee pitching. Also, the Yankees have great pitching because the Yankees have a lot of wins. Sounds very logical.

Where did you see that? I said that stat was pretty much useless and speaks nothing as to a player's "range." My comment was that the assumption that, once in play, a ball is as likely to land in one defensive zone as another, is faulty and appeals only to someone who never played beyond little league.
Zone rating appeals only to math geeks who approach baseball defense like it's board game.
What's illogical is that a player can be among the top half of the league in assists, but can be "shown" by Zone Rating to have poor range, near the bottom of the league. If a guy is getting his fair share of assists, he is getting to his fair share of balls. How can you claim otherwise? Some of these new stats (like OPS) are valid, but Zone Rating takes defensive measurement into a whole new level of abstract -- and baseless abstract at that.
Baseball is a game of hard numbers. You register three outs and you get to hit again. If an infielder achieves an assist, he has contributed to achieving what really matters: an out. You do that at the league average, or slightly above the league average (as Jeter does), you are doing your part to achieve the "hard" number that really counts: three outs per inning.
It's like the comment above that "wins" are useless. But that's what counts in the standings. I want a pitcher who gets his decisions, because a guy who gets a win has pitched well enough deep enough into the game to get that decision. That means on that given night, he was the better of the two starters. I don't give a damn if another pitcher, let's say in Seattle, pitched
better than my starter that night -- unless I'm playing Seattle. In the end, I want the guy who is most often the better of two starters on a given night, because that gets wins, and that's what counts in the standings.