 Hello and welcome to stats that exist but do not matter episode number 24. We're talking about Trevers today. In the 2020 season there were 10 players with the first name Trevor. Trevor Williams, Trevor Richards, Trevor Gott, Trevor Story, Trevor Cahill, Trevor Bauer, Trevor Rosenthal, Trevor Rogers, Trevor Kelly, Trevor May. Of those 10 Trevers, five of them have a middle name that starts with J. You have Trevor John Cahill, Trevor John Story, Trevor Jordan Rosenthal, Trevor Jadaniel Rogers and Trevor J. May. No one knows what it stands for. Trevor May, very mysterious with his middle name. Maybe it's just J. I kind of like that. Two of the Trevers have the middle name Michael. Trevor Michael Kelly and Trevor Michael Richards. None of that matters at all. What I found interesting is that of these 10 players, nine of them are pitchers. Only one is a hitter. In the history of Major League Baseball the Trevers have primarily been pitchers. There's been 19 people that have made it to the bigs with the given name Trevor and only four of them got the job done with the bat in their hand. And ever since Trevor Ploef had the involuntary retire after the 2018 season, Trevor Story has been the only person in the league who hits and fields a position whose name is Trevor. It's nine against one. Nine Trevor pitchers versus one Trevor Story. So I wonder does this weigh heavy on him when he steps into the back versus another Trevor? I mean all of his name brethren are on the other side of the line. Do they spite him because he gets the job done on flat ground while they're on the hill? Might be true because I looked at the stats. Trevor Story, you guys know him. In his career, really good numbers. In his career Trevor Story has a batting average of 277, an on base percentage of 343, a slugging of 535 and an OPS of 877. That's very good. That's above average. Good job Trevor Story. When he steps into the box and nods his head and the pitcher shares his first name, it's not pretty. I think it weighs heavy. He's got 31 plate appearances against Trevor's, a 143 batting average, 225 on base percentage, 214 slugging and a 439 OPS. Those are terrible numbers. When he steps into the box, it's almost as if he becomes a pitcher hitting, which is an interesting thing. He only has four hits, no home runs and he's struck it out 12 times. So I don't know. After all of this, what does it mean? Nothing at all, but maybe there's some guilt there that he thinks I should be a pitcher and maybe all the pitcher Trevers are pretty pissed at him for abandoning them, or maybe not.