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#41 |
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All Star Starter
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Maryland
Posts: 1,999
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Sounds to me that you're in favor of giving a ton of credit for the defense to the pitcher. That's not really gigging you, that's the traditional way of doing things. If you want that there's a simple stat that takes care of it for you, called ERA.
But if you want to delve a little deeper in to cause and effect, and splitting up the blame for allowing runs between the pitcher and his defense and random distribution of stuff, then look at FIP and WAR. Your guy is simply allowing runs at a much lower rate than someone with his K/9, BB/9 and HR/9 typically would.
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#42 | |
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All Star Reserve
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Kincheloe, MI
Posts: 521
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Quote:
The amount of innings pitched in a baseball season is massive, I think over 40,000 innings. BABIP is a stat which, in the game, is not a skill whatsoever, and in real life, is probably barely a skill. Over small samples, such as this pitcher's 600 career innings, of course there will be people with BABIPs around .335 or so. If you took 20 random 600 inning samples from random pitchers, some of them will stay around the average of .300, and of course there will be the few that randomly jump to .270 or .330 for awhile. It would be stranger if it was always .300 no matter what, of course there will be variability. |
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#43 |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: Spencerville, ON, Canada
Posts: 27,665
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I always figured that the semantic difference between 'traditional' stat fans and the more sabr crowd is that people looking at the trad stats are purely results orientated. Nothing wrong with that as long as it isn't misused.
"This guy got 20 wins! He won a lot of games for his team!" Truth. The problem comes when people try to use those stats to say things that the stats do NOT say. "This guy got 20 wins! He is the best pitcher in the league!" If/Then error. That is why 'most sane' people (to steal a line from earlier int he thread)don't assume that being on top of the leaderboards doesn't automatically assume you are the best pitcher any more than winning the triple crown made Miggy Cabrera the actual most valuable player in the AL this year. (What did Cabrera winning the triple crown actually say? It said he got more Homeruns and RBIs and a higher batting average than any other qualified player in the league. Anything else you want to say is extrapolation... sometimes faulty extrapolation.) |
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#44 |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: In a dark, damp cave where I'm training slugs to run the bases......
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What the WAR hawks don't seem to realize is that the opposite of all those same arguments apply to their pet. Leading the league in a composite metric doesn't mean you did anything to actually help a team win this particular year. It means you could have maybe, if the circumstances were different.
WAR and FIPS, etc. are fine tools to use to try to build your team for NEXT year, but to use them to decide who was the most productive player this year under this year's peculiar sequence of events is just as ludicrous as someone saying Orel Hershiser was the greatest pitcher ever since he had the longest scoreless innings streak of all time. Runs Scored, RBIs, ERA, wins and losses, etc. tell us who contributed the most in actual point of fact this year under this year's circumstances. WAR, FIPS, Runs Created, etc. tell us who is likely to contribute the most NEXT year...... Doofuss if you disagree..... |
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#45 | |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Jun 2006
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RBIs, ERA, wins and losses are all garbage dinosaur stats.
WAR and FIPS tell you what the player actually did. The garbage dinosaur stats tell you what the player AND the rest of the team did together. In the case of ERA, it's not just what the pitcher and the rest of the pitching staff and the defense did, it's also what decisions the official score subjectively made about what was an error and what wasn't. RBI is controlled by batting order position, and the OBP's and batting position of the other batters. It's foolishness to think that those stats mean anything significant. If you hate FIP then at least use R/9 instead of ERA to at least get the subjectivity out of it
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#46 | |
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Minors (Rookie Ball)
Join Date: Jan 2013
Location: UK
Posts: 35
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Quote:
But I think you're mistaken in conflating it with WAR and RC, both of which are counting stats (a rate stat equivalent might be Baseball Prospectus's "True Average", though I confess to not really knowing how this works as this particular "WAR hawk" chooses to build his nest on FanGraphs :) ) that most assuredly do (aim to) measure offensive production this year. You're correct that a pitcher could have an optimal FIP, but still end up not seeming to produce much value for their team; but it would be unlikely for a batter to not produce much value if they had a season with exceptional WAR or RC values. It's funny because I think your perspective - "Leading the league in a composite metric doesn't mean you did anything to actually help a team win this particular year. It means you could have maybe, if the circumstances were different" - is completely right. I just think that illustrates, rather than detracts from, the value of composite stats. A player who registers high RBI totals can do so if his team gets good on base numbers ahead of him in the lineup; a player in a weak lineup will struggle to put up such high RBI totals even if he is, overall, batting 'better'. |
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#47 | |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Jun 2006
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I post this about once a month. You have two identical pitchers, Al and Bob. They each start the same number of games and year and pitch the same numbers of inning, giving up the same BB's and HR's, getting the same number of K's and allowing the same number of balls to enter play.
Al pitches for a team with a defense with great range and with a great bullpen. His fielders get to almost everything, and they regularly get charged for errors on balls that they just were able to get to but couldn't quite field. Al's team's bullpen rarely lets inherited runners score. Al's ERA is marvelous. Bob pitches for a team where the defense has no range, so a lot of balls become hits that Al's team would have turned into outs. Because of the defenders' lack range they get to so few balls in play they make very few errors. Bob's team's bullpen also sucks and the runners Bob leaves on base routinely score. Bob's ERA sucks. Al and Bob are the same pitcher but outside factors give them drastically different ERA's. You should therefore never use ERA as a pitching performance metric, because it isn't one. It's a team metric.
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#48 | |
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Hall Of Famer
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“When their guys are hitting ground balls, I’m doing my job. I’m just not getting the results. There’s nothing I can say to make people understand when you go out there, do what you want to do, make the pitches and you don’t get the results.” - Tom Glavine
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#49 | |
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All Star Starter
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Maryland
Posts: 1,999
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Quote:
WAR, FIPs, RC... they try to pull the player out of the context and give you a value that doesn't depend on his teammates. This is all about not making the ludicrous claim that you're a better player because your GM had a budget that allowed him to sign Rickey to hit in front of you.
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#50 |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: In a dark, damp cave where I'm training slugs to run the bases......
Posts: 16,142
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I actually think ERA is one of the stupidest stats ever invented. A pitcher's job is to prevent runs, not earned runs. Errors happen. If a pitcher trusts his defense to make the play and they don't he should still be responsible for that. He could of struck them out and not had to worry about anyone helping him (but the catcher).
It boggles my mind that you cannot find what should be the most basic stat for a pitcher (Runs allowed per 9 innings) published anywhere. Even in OOTP, there is no option to include it in your views. Just mind-blowing to me..... One final comment on this issue and then I'm done: The fact that you knocked in 120 runs means you knocked in a 120 runs. How you did it, why you did, or whether you could do it again for the '69 Padres is irrelevant to the question of who's bat plated the most runs this year. I guarantee that every single person who thinks RBIs are meaningless never managed his team play-to-play day-to-day season-to-season. They have tremendous value in and of themselves; they don't have to mean anything else. The fallacy all these beatnik statheads are falling into is trying to make them stand for something other than what they are. And when they find they don't mean what they hoped they mean they throw them out as meaningless. All RBIs are are a count of the times a hitter came through when it counted. Some hitters get more opportunities to come through than others do. So what? That's life. Should we not count them then? Seems like the T-Ball games where they don't keep score. It's not fair! He got 200 more chances to knock in runs than the other guy! Okay, valid argument. However, what the beatnik statheads don't understand is that you can't make it fair. Every formula and metric just alters the perception of fairness without really making anything fair. But that's life and that's baseball. There will always be those that want to bring Utopia to the masses and shove it down their throats, ignorant of the fact that their Utopia is just another Purgatory with a newly painted set. |
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#51 | ||
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Minors (Rookie Ball)
Join Date: Jan 2013
Location: UK
Posts: 35
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Quote:
Not to hijack but I actually wish a couple more rate stats were available too, such as AB/SO or AB/HR for hitters. Quote:
And, contrary to your assertion, I do play out games: when I do so, and it's time to pinch hit, the first stat I check is situational splits, and the very last RBIs. Seems to work for me. :) Last edited by stannis; 01-23-2013 at 03:41 PM. Reason: speeling errur |
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#52 |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: In a dark, damp cave where I'm training slugs to run the bases......
Posts: 16,142
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Nothing wrong with that, RBI's per opportunity is just like hits per opportunity or batting average. But knowing that one guy had 200 hits in 600 chances and the other had 20 in 50 is useful, thus the actual count has value.
The mixing of two different 'religious' views in one statement was meant to greater illuminate the issue. The metaphor was only selected after long and thoughtful deliberation and research, I assure you..... |
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#53 | |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Jun 2006
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“Totally useless,” Law said of RBIs. “In terms of measuring the value of a player’s performance, I find them absolutely useless because 1) it’s determined by how many opportunities you get — the guys who hit in front of you in the lineup, how often did they get on base; and 2) there’s no particular skill to driving runs in. There’s no such thing as a hitter who is significantly better in RBI opportunities.”
http://fullcount.weei.com/sports/bos...ss-statistics/
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#54 |
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All Star Starter
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Washington, DC
Posts: 1,118
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Seems like people are talking past each other. If you want to evaluate a player in a way that is portable (that is, John Doe did X last year, what might he do for his new team this year?) then obviously a stat like RBI doesn't tell you much in isolation. But it's obviously valid as a simple statement of fact about his past value to a team ("he hit in 50 runs for us last year"). It doesn't tell you much beyond that, but it is what it is.
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#55 | ||
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Jun 2006
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Quote:
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Five thousand thanks for a non-modder? I never thought I'd see the day. Thank you for your support. Last edited by The Wolf; 01-23-2013 at 08:36 PM. Reason: Wolves can't do acronyms |
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#56 | |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Nov 2002
Posts: 3,693
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Quote:
StatsLab has R/9IP and HR/PA.
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#57 | |
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All Star Reserve
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Kincheloe, MI
Posts: 521
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Quote:
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#58 | ||
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: All alone
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Quote:
"The formula is (HR*13+(BB+HBP-IBB)*3-K*2)/IP, plus a league-specific factor (usually around 3.2) to round out the number to an equivalent ERA number. FIP helps you understand how well a pitcher pitched, regardless of how well his fielders fielded."
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#59 | |
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Minors (Rookie Ball)
Join Date: Jan 2013
Location: UK
Posts: 35
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Quote:
There was a mention of playing through games by PbP. Ok. You must have encountered situations where you are asked (assuming you're managing Baserunning) whether the runner from 3rd should try for home? Clearly, in those cases, a good baserunner, fast and with good instincts, is going to score more often than someone slow or prone to gaffes. Yet regardless of who that runner is, once they cross the plate it's scored as a run - and thus an RBI for whoever was batting then. Thus, someone whose RBIs have come more often from a speedy runner able to score from first on a double, second on a shallow single, third on a sac fly, etc., is having the same apparent value to their team as someone all of whose RBIs come from genuinely good hits that would have advanced even the slowest runners. RBIs are simply useless. Whatever its flaws otherwise, at least Runs Created (for example) makes an attempt to differentiate between the value of a sacrifice fly and a solo home run. |
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#60 |
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Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: In a dark, damp cave where I'm training slugs to run the bases......
Posts: 16,142
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you guys really make me laugh....
You're watching you're favorite team....runners at second and third....two out....bottom of the ninth.....the good guys are down a run.....Joe Palooka at the plate.....you holler at him, "Come on, Joe! Stroke one!".....he drives the ball into right center for a clean hard single and both runners score.....game over.....good guys win!....you're jumping up and down....everybody's jumping up and down.....you holler at the top of your lungs, "Now THAT mean's absolutely nuthin'!"......... |
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