Smart Baseball
Posted: Sun Nov 05, 2017 9:17 am
I am reading a book called 'Smart Baseball' by Keith Law. Law has impressive credentials in that he is a writer for ESPN and has worked in the front office of Major League baseball teams.
I am just starting Chapter Five and am hoping for the book to improve.
So far, Law has only gotten across that batting average, Wins, rbi and other 'old time' statistics are flawed.
NO SHIT?
Real baseball fans already know that EVERY stat has a flaw.
At the same time, every stat has a purpose. A fact that is lost on Law.
He rips voters of Most Valuable Player voters and Cy Young award winners for voting the way they did in past votes.
Law doesn't take into account that the system for these votes are flawed as well. But of course, these votes are made by his writing brethren. It is much easier to attack statistics than friends who digest those statistics and vote wrong in his eyes.
I get that rbi is a statistic that does not define a batter. That the better lineup in front of an above average hitter, the more rbi.
We all know that.
Law wants 'runs created' to be used as a reflection of a players ability over rbi.
But here is the thing.
Baseball statistics need to be simplistic. They engage eight year old kids. They have eighty year old men arguing over who is the better player.
RBI are understood by both age groups and everyone in between.
Law is smart about baseball. There is no doubt. Everybody reading this post is also smart about baseball.
Our job, as fantasy players is to gauge each statistic, weigh them against each other, and formulate a thesis in which statistics benefit us most when drafting players.
Every statistic.
We know the failures and tendencies of each statistic.
We know that there is no one statistic that defines any one player.
As said, I am only about to read chapter five and I know that Law is leading up to On Base Percentage as being a more important statistic than Batting Average, RBI, or other older hitting statistics.
meh.
It is just another statistic for us.
In this day and age, reaching first base has become, well, not that important.
The extra base hit has.
Every team seems to be under the impression that even if giving a batter like Mike Trout first base, it'll take two singles to score a run.
BUT, only one extra base hit.
If anything, today's game actually renders OBP as NOT that important as even three years ago.
Baseball statistics flow and trend quickly!
Everybody in baseball have known for years that the Win statistic is deeply flawed and that the Save statistic is almost laughable.
The Win statistic was employed when most pitchers threw complete games. That is far from the case now.
Heck, only one pitcher in baseball (Kluber) averaged throwing seven innings.
The pitcher that throws the worst inning(s)during a game can get a Win.
It is indeed, stupid.
I believe that Wins should be eliminated.
Not only in fantasy baseball, but real baseball.
No one pitcher 'Wins' a baseball game. Especially by today's standards.
Wins is a statistic that tells us nothing about a game.
A Win can be given to a pitcher with a 7ip, 0 runs, as well as a pitcher with a 1/3 ip, 3 runs line.
I agree with Law that Wins has outlived its purpose.
The Save has never really had a purpose. It was made to glorify the pitchers who 'saved' a game by entering the ninth inning and 'preserved' a game.
The statistic itself, changed the way Managers looked at a game and made a lot of one inning pitchers a lot of money.
It put emphasis on the ninth inning being much more difficult than the first eight innings.
A pitcher can have a Save with a line of 1/3 inning, 2 runs allowed.
While in the seventh inning, another reliever came into the game in the seventh inning with the bases loaded with two out, got the out, then retired the side in the eighth.
For his efforts, he gets a 'hold'. Another statistic not embraced by most baseball fans.
During the playoffs, Managers eschew the Save philosophy. They have their usual Saves pitcher warming up much earlier in the game.
When 'having' to win a game, they want every pitcher on board. Not just a pitcher to throw an inning with a three run lead in the ninth inning as in the regular season.
If used properly, the 'Save' can still be an effective statistic.
The problem being, subjectivity.
The 'Save' should not have the perameters or rules of a statistic as it has now.
Instead of going to the last pitcher standing, it should go to the pitcher who actually did the best job of saving the game.
However, this requires subjectivity on the scorekeepers part.
Any subjectivity by a scorekeeper, unless obvious, diminishes a statistic.
It's a tough nut.
I'll keep reading the book. I'll read any baseball book.
Law has inspired this post after all and has got me thinking about statistics. A good thing.
At the same time, I feel that he believes his readers are not that savvy when it comes to baseball.
That's alright.
The eight year old who can read a box score and the eighty year olds arguing over box scores won't bother to read it.
I am just starting Chapter Five and am hoping for the book to improve.
So far, Law has only gotten across that batting average, Wins, rbi and other 'old time' statistics are flawed.
NO SHIT?
Real baseball fans already know that EVERY stat has a flaw.
At the same time, every stat has a purpose. A fact that is lost on Law.
He rips voters of Most Valuable Player voters and Cy Young award winners for voting the way they did in past votes.
Law doesn't take into account that the system for these votes are flawed as well. But of course, these votes are made by his writing brethren. It is much easier to attack statistics than friends who digest those statistics and vote wrong in his eyes.
I get that rbi is a statistic that does not define a batter. That the better lineup in front of an above average hitter, the more rbi.
We all know that.
Law wants 'runs created' to be used as a reflection of a players ability over rbi.
But here is the thing.
Baseball statistics need to be simplistic. They engage eight year old kids. They have eighty year old men arguing over who is the better player.
RBI are understood by both age groups and everyone in between.
Law is smart about baseball. There is no doubt. Everybody reading this post is also smart about baseball.
Our job, as fantasy players is to gauge each statistic, weigh them against each other, and formulate a thesis in which statistics benefit us most when drafting players.
Every statistic.
We know the failures and tendencies of each statistic.
We know that there is no one statistic that defines any one player.
As said, I am only about to read chapter five and I know that Law is leading up to On Base Percentage as being a more important statistic than Batting Average, RBI, or other older hitting statistics.
meh.
It is just another statistic for us.
In this day and age, reaching first base has become, well, not that important.
The extra base hit has.
Every team seems to be under the impression that even if giving a batter like Mike Trout first base, it'll take two singles to score a run.
BUT, only one extra base hit.
If anything, today's game actually renders OBP as NOT that important as even three years ago.
Baseball statistics flow and trend quickly!
Everybody in baseball have known for years that the Win statistic is deeply flawed and that the Save statistic is almost laughable.
The Win statistic was employed when most pitchers threw complete games. That is far from the case now.
Heck, only one pitcher in baseball (Kluber) averaged throwing seven innings.
The pitcher that throws the worst inning(s)during a game can get a Win.
It is indeed, stupid.
I believe that Wins should be eliminated.
Not only in fantasy baseball, but real baseball.
No one pitcher 'Wins' a baseball game. Especially by today's standards.
Wins is a statistic that tells us nothing about a game.
A Win can be given to a pitcher with a 7ip, 0 runs, as well as a pitcher with a 1/3 ip, 3 runs line.
I agree with Law that Wins has outlived its purpose.
The Save has never really had a purpose. It was made to glorify the pitchers who 'saved' a game by entering the ninth inning and 'preserved' a game.
The statistic itself, changed the way Managers looked at a game and made a lot of one inning pitchers a lot of money.
It put emphasis on the ninth inning being much more difficult than the first eight innings.
A pitcher can have a Save with a line of 1/3 inning, 2 runs allowed.
While in the seventh inning, another reliever came into the game in the seventh inning with the bases loaded with two out, got the out, then retired the side in the eighth.
For his efforts, he gets a 'hold'. Another statistic not embraced by most baseball fans.
During the playoffs, Managers eschew the Save philosophy. They have their usual Saves pitcher warming up much earlier in the game.
When 'having' to win a game, they want every pitcher on board. Not just a pitcher to throw an inning with a three run lead in the ninth inning as in the regular season.
If used properly, the 'Save' can still be an effective statistic.
The problem being, subjectivity.
The 'Save' should not have the perameters or rules of a statistic as it has now.
Instead of going to the last pitcher standing, it should go to the pitcher who actually did the best job of saving the game.
However, this requires subjectivity on the scorekeepers part.
Any subjectivity by a scorekeeper, unless obvious, diminishes a statistic.
It's a tough nut.
I'll keep reading the book. I'll read any baseball book.
Law has inspired this post after all and has got me thinking about statistics. A good thing.
At the same time, I feel that he believes his readers are not that savvy when it comes to baseball.
That's alright.
The eight year old who can read a box score and the eighty year olds arguing over box scores won't bother to read it.