Thread: Overall Ratings
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Old 11-18-2023, 10:46 PM   #7
Dave Stieb II
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Join Date: Mar 2020
Posts: 664
Quote:
Originally Posted by Pelican View Post
I'll make a pitch for the 0-100 scale; unless you are a present or former MLB scout who would understand the curious (anachronistic) 20-80 scale. Or a mathematician who favors the standard distribution approach.

The risk of 0-100 is that it conveys a false sense of precision. These are scouts' estimates, that may, or rather, will change over time. And 10 should thus not be regarded as significantly different from 11. (Of course, this is equally true of 20 versus 21 on the traditional scale.)

But if you happen to have grown up with the decimal system, 0-100 will be easier to use and understand. Plus it manages to capture the truly bad ratings under 20, and the truly exceptional ratings over 80, rather than lumping everybody together.

Also, minor point, I always set ratings as relative to MLB, not to the level on which the guy is playing. An absolute scale, in other words, not a relative one. That is because the number one question I need to answer is can this dude help my (MLB) team? The number two question, if he can't right now, is what is his potential? Two clicks, and you have his potential.
And I'll weigh in as being in favor of the 20-80 scale. I mostly play modern games and it's nice to compare prospects' ratings in OOTP to real life sites like fangraphs. Not to mention comparing their ratings as they develop - or regress - through the minors and into - or not - the majors.
But, hey, that's just me and to each their own.
OUtsider has provided al link (above) to how the 20-80 scale works if anyone is interested.

Last edited by Dave Stieb II; 11-18-2023 at 10:48 PM.
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