| PLAYER | CAPE TEAM | CAPE ERA | COLLEGE | COLLEGE ERA |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aaron Crow | Falmouth | .42 | Missouri | 3.59 |
| T.J. Hose | Bourne | .42 | East Carolina | 3.97 |
| Kyle Gibson | Falmouth | .96 | Missouri | 4.12 |
| Kevin Couture | Chatham | 1.25 | USC | 5.79 |
| Josh Zeid | Harwich | 1.53 | Vanderbilt | 18.69 |
| Andy Oliver | Wareham | 1.69 | Missouri | 5.52 |
| Eddie Burns | Y-D | 1.69 | Missouri | 3.58 |
| Christian Friedrich | Falmouth | 1.86 | Missouri | 2.09 |
| D.J. Mitchell | Bourne | 1.93 | Clemson | 3.27 |
| Wade Miley | Wareham | 2.01 | Missouri | 3.86 |
This isn't a major revelation, of course. An ERA in the three's is very good in the world of college baseball. On the Cape, sub-2.00 ERA's are pretty common. But while it's not earth-shattering to put these stats together, I think it's worth looking at them. In the end, both numbers are probably skewed. The college ERA's are inflated because of metal bats -- pitchers won't see those in the pros. But the Cape ERA's are deceiving as well -- Cape hitters, for the most part, haven't fully adjusted to wood.
Ultimately, the numbers are all relative. Besides, the cream usually rises to the top, wherever the top may be.
*One other thing to note: several of these players are on pace to put up significantly fewer walks than they did in the spring. That's probably less a sign of increased control across the board, and more a sign of a willingness to attack hitters.
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