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I probably haven't listened closely enough to Morgan to be defending him. The back-and-forth between Miller and him is easy enough on my ears that I've never quite understood the intensely negative feelings about him that I keep encountering, but maybe that's all credit to Miller. And I have the additional bias that the mid-'70s Reds were my favourite team. This goes back a ways, but I used to think Palmer, Seaver, and Reggie were great in the booth. As analysts, I can't remember. I just liked them.

clemenza, Thursday, 26 August 2010 19:39 (fifteen years ago)

to clemenza, i don't know dude, you seemed pretty "blinders-on" when discussing Bonds' achievements and were in the process of pooh-poohing him on the Pujols thread so........... idk, was tbh hard to take you seriously in your short shrift dismissal of him as a legit triple crown candidate given the 232 BBs that got in the way of him chasing such a "retro-cool" counting achievement (all the while destroying almost every offensive record in the process).

but kudos to all y'all who were reading bill james in the summer of love~~~

i don't mind Morgan and Miller, because they're both local guys. Morgan seems way worse on the page then in the booth ime.

_▂▅▇█▓▒░◕‿‿◕░▒▓█▇▅▂_ (Steve Shasta), Thursday, 26 August 2010 19:45 (fifteen years ago)

francoeur is a streaky hitter in that he has a lot of cold streaks

ciderpress, Thursday, 26 August 2010 19:49 (fifteen years ago)

Steroids notwithstanding, I really wasn't discounting the magnitude of Bonds's statistical achievements--just that I thought the walks ruled out him ever having a realistic shot at the Triple Crown. Not just in terms of RBI, but, I thought, also in BA. But Ciderpress's math made me realize that he in fact likely would have won one, maybe even two. Which was your point to begin with--you were right, I was wrong. What I didn't appreciate, though, was pulling out VORP as kind of a gotcha moment, like I'd just been teleported out a 1974 issue of Baseball Digest. (Not to knock BD, which I used to love.) Again, I've been reading James forever.

clemenza, Thursday, 26 August 2010 19:58 (fifteen years ago)

That's cool, just like I said, you appeared to be full blinders in your take on Bonds achievements.

Also, VORP was introduced 9 years ago by Keith Woolner. Bill James has always preferred win-shares and runs-created in my 10 years of being familiar with SABR. IIRC.

_▂▅▇█▓▒░◕‿‿◕░▒▓█▇▅▂_ (Steve Shasta), Thursday, 26 August 2010 20:11 (fifteen years ago)

who went to the pitchF/X summit in SF?

kind of shrill and very self-righteous (Dr Morbius), Monday, 30 August 2010 02:38 (fifteen years ago)

i liked this little bit from the pitchFX summary on bpro:

5:39: Brad Hawpe play: starts with a >80% chance of catching the ball, but freezes in place and fails to make the play. Difficult to represent visually, because the out probability plummets while Hawpe stands in place and time elapses. In a different Hawpe play, his first step gives him a lower probability of catching the ball, since he broke in the wrong direction. Rumor has it no Rockies reps are in attendance, but they’re not missing out, since they’ve enjoyed a front-row seat for this sort of action for the last several years.

ciderpress, Monday, 30 August 2010 20:05 (fifteen years ago)

haha

no gut busting joke can change history (polyphonic), Monday, 30 August 2010 21:23 (fifteen years ago)

http://www.baycityball.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2010/08/chernoffteams.png

no gut busting joke can change history (polyphonic), Friday, 3 September 2010 16:12 (fifteen years ago)

wau

call all destroyer, Friday, 3 September 2010 16:14 (fifteen years ago)

source?

kind of shrill and very self-righteous (Dr Morbius), Friday, 3 September 2010 16:57 (fifteen years ago)

http://www.baycityball.com/2010/09/01/wednesday-graph-major-league-chernoff-faces/

no gut busting joke can change history (polyphonic), Friday, 3 September 2010 18:42 (fifteen years ago)

one month passes...

players w/an OPS of 1.000 or more in 2000

Todd Helton
Manny Ramirez
Carlos Delgado
Barry Bonds
Jason Giambi
Gary Sheffield
Vladimir Guerrero
Frank Thomas
Sammy Sosa
Moises Alou
Jeff Bagwell
Nomar Garciaparra
Richard Hidalgo
Alex Rodriguez
Brian Giles
Jeff Kent
Mike Piazza
Troy Glaus
Edgar Martinez

players w/an OPS of 1.000 or more in 2010

Josh Hamilton
Miguel Cabrera
Joey Votto
Albert Pujols

('_') (omar little), Monday, 4 October 2010 06:32 (fifteen years ago)

jim thome and justin morneau deserve a mention on that too for partial seasons of 1.000+

ciderpress, Monday, 4 October 2010 16:41 (fifteen years ago)

man some of the names on that 2000 list

call all destroyer, Monday, 4 October 2010 17:11 (fifteen years ago)

Richard Hidalgo is the one that jumps out at me. I sort of remember him...I think.

clemenza, Monday, 4 October 2010 17:12 (fifteen years ago)

I just looked him up--wow, his 2000 was huge. Should have mentioned him on the fluke thread a while back (although he did a few other good seasons).

clemenza, Monday, 4 October 2010 17:14 (fifteen years ago)

troy glaus didn't even get an mvp vote that season (though his teammate darin erstad did with one of the weirdest fluke seasons of them all)

ciderpress, Monday, 4 October 2010 17:28 (fifteen years ago)

for good measure, the players this season who finished between .900 and .999 --

José Bautista
Paul Konerko
Carlos González
Troy Tulowitzki
Matt Holliday
Jayson Werth
Adrián Béltre
Robinson Canó
Adrián González
Luke Scott

and in 2000:

Jim Edmonds
Bobby Abreu
Chipper Jones
Edgardo Alfonzo
Will Clark
David Justice
Carl Everett
Bernie Williams
Rafael Palmeiro
Jermaine Dye
Darin Erstad
Geoff Jenkins
Tim Salmon
Jorge Posada
Ken Griffey Jr.
Luis Gonzalez
Mike Sweeney
Jim Thome
Jeffrey Hammonds
Scott Rolen
Jose Vidro
Magglio Ordóñez
Phil Nevin
Bobby Higginson
Ryan Klesko
Travis Fryman
Andruw Jones
Steve Finley
Sean Casey

('_') (omar little), Monday, 4 October 2010 23:30 (fifteen years ago)

Didn't realize Luke Scott had such a good year.

funky house skeptic (polyphonic), Monday, 4 October 2010 23:33 (fifteen years ago)

I know nothing about sabermetrics. (Well, I read Moneyball once.) Where do I start? Go buy some of Bill James's old 1980s Baseball Abstracts on eBay?

Mr. Snrub, Tuesday, 5 October 2010 00:23 (fifteen years ago)

That's a good question. Is there a beginner's section at BP? Sabr 101?

In "Bob" There Is No East or West (WmC), Tuesday, 5 October 2010 01:05 (fifteen years ago)

http://playahardnine.wordpress.com/saber-101-saber-201/

http://www.baseball1.com/bb-data/bbd-bj1.html

kind of shrill and very self-righteous (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 5 October 2010 02:54 (fifteen years ago)

What about OPS+ for 2000 vs 2010? The league difference is probably 40-50 points of slugging. I'm betting that those lists nearly even out if you use OPS+ > 135 or 140 as the cutoff.

NoTimeBeforeTime, Tuesday, 5 October 2010 09:19 (fifteen years ago)

context makes the length of the list -- see 1930 vs 1912

kind of shrill and very self-righteous (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 5 October 2010 11:32 (fifteen years ago)

Lisa Simpson as sabermetric Little League coach right now...

Bill James: "I made baseball as much fun as doing your taxes."

kind of shrill and very self-righteous (Dr Morbius), Monday, 11 October 2010 00:16 (fifteen years ago)

"It's the triumph of number crunching over the human spirit"

kind of shrill and very self-righteous (Dr Morbius), Monday, 11 October 2010 00:23 (fifteen years ago)

I don't know how many of you (if any) subscribe to James's site. He's been great lately. Right now, I get the feeling he is to sabermetrics what Andre Bazin ended up being to auteurism: original inventor (not quite true of Bazin, who was more the inspiration), now a somewhat skeptical onlooker. Bazin had that famous quote: "Auteur, yes--but of what?"

Here's James a couple of days ago on jargon:

Along the lines of your "PDO" story. . .at a spring training game in 2004 I was sitting in front of Mark Bellhorn's wife and son, and this boy, who I think must have been four years old at the time, is kind of chattering to his mom about the game. A player comes up that he doesn't know, and he says. .. I swear I am not making up one word of this. . . "Is he a good player? What's his on base percentage against left-handers?" That will always stick with me as the moment at which I realized that sabermetrics was mainstream, hearing this kid who I am sure hadn't started school yet ask about a player's on base percentage against left-handers.

But the question you pose is more central than you realize, I think, because what you are really asking is "How do you reach the public with your information?" I think the distinction I would make is between careless and careful progress. After RBI were introduced to the public and explained to the public, about 1912, there as eventually a column added to the Sunday batting summaries in the paper, "RBI". Somebody who saw the new column and didn't understand it could ask "What is this, RBI?", and there was probably a code at the bottom of the column that explained it.

That is CAREFUL progress. On the other hand, people will write articles in which they introduce LIPV (Leverage Index Performance Variation) and PAD/1000 (Pythagorean Advantage per 1000 games) and EBOR (Enhance Base/Out Ratio) and sixteen other measures, and then toward the end of the article they'll write that Michael Bourn had a 163 LIPV despite his -43 QXTR and his pathetic .721 M2D2, and you're thinking "What in the hell is he talking about?" That's careless progress.

My attitude has always been "Be sure that you take the public with you,"--or, at least, do what you can to take the public with you. Don't start speaking your own language that only you and two other people understand; take the time and make the effort to give anybody who wants to understand what you're saying a fair shot at it. I'm sure that sometimes I have failed to do that, but that's what I believe in. Take the time to type out "Batting Average on Balls in Play", rather than BABIP, and "Wins Above Replacement", rather than WAR. It just takes a few seconds.

Three things James often says that I love:

1) I need to look at that again.
2) I was wrong.
3) I don't know.

Especially the last one. I don't see those words too often around here. From at least a couple of you, I'm not sure if you're even familiar with those concepts.

clemenza, Saturday, 23 October 2010 13:59 (fifteen years ago)

Let me preemptively provide you with your comeback:

"I sometimes think Clemenza makes sense. I need to look at that again."

clemenza, Saturday, 23 October 2010 14:01 (fifteen years ago)

Every major saberoriented writer I'm aware of says there are tons of things we don't know.

But this was Neyer the other day disagreeing w/ James about the lingo thing:

http://espn.go.com/blog/sweetspot/post/_/id/5960/lets-not-call-the-whole-babip-thing-off

There's this really cool thing called Google. There was a time, not so long ago, when if you were reading a book or a magazine and you came across some obscure technical term and couldn't figure out what it meant, you were basically stuck.

You're not stuck anymore.

...Bill knows what BABiP means. The great majority of Bill's readers -- all of whom are interested enough to spend actual money to read his missives on the Internet -- know what BABiP means. BABiP's been around for 10 years, and is well-established among the people who pay to read Bill James. In that particular space, spelling out Batting Average on Balls in Play would be almost as pointless as spelling out Earned Run Average.

I think Bill just doesn't like BABiP because he didn't grow up with it. When I worked for him, he didn't like it when I wrote that a player slugged .472 (or whatever)....

You wanna put me on TV, before the great unwashed masses? Then I'll spell out anything you like. Until then, I'm going to reserve my right to use acronyms and abbreviations that I believe you can handle.

kind of shrill and very self-righteous (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 23 October 2010 14:14 (fifteen years ago)

"There's this really cool thing called Google."

No kidding, plus sabermetric writers are writing for a sabermetric audience. That audience (the one that presumably pays their bills, not the "great unwashed masses", not that I have any idea how these dudes make money) isn't going to want to read every acronym spelled out.

Fig On A Plate Cart (Alex in SF), Saturday, 23 October 2010 14:18 (fifteen years ago)

Every major saberoriented writer I'm aware of says there are tons of things we don't know.

I'm sure that's true. Like I said, I just don't hear it very often around here. I guess I could do a search, but if Morbius ever came on and said "You know, you're right about that--what was I thinking?", I think I'd have several heart attacks on the spot.

As far as the acronyms go, I realize James is being disingenuous; he used to use things like RC/27 habitually. But I agree with his central point that jargon is odious. I deal with it every day in my job. No one can dream up ridiculous acronyms like educational resource teachers. Our big focus right now is "TLCP": Teaching Learning Critical Pathways. Which'll be in place till they dream up a new one.

clemenza, Saturday, 23 October 2010 14:28 (fifteen years ago)

clemenza, I try not to post anything here I'm not certain of. I save that for the politcs thread.

also, jargon SAVES TIME.

kind of shrill and very self-righteous (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 23 October 2010 14:33 (fifteen years ago)

Okay--I'm headed over to the politics thread to sample the humble, truth-seeking, "You know, I was wrong about that" version of Morbius!

clemenza, Saturday, 23 October 2010 14:36 (fifteen years ago)

no, that's not what I meant...

kind of shrill and very self-righteous (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 23 October 2010 17:13 (fifteen years ago)

I'm with Morbs on this one!

macaroni rascal (polyphonic), Saturday, 23 October 2010 18:30 (fifteen years ago)

no, that's not what I meant...

Bizarre notion: explaining what you meant may actually help explain what you meant.

clemenza, Saturday, 23 October 2010 22:54 (fifteen years ago)

are you this passive-aggressive with your middle school students?

avoyoungdro's number (k3vin k.), Saturday, 23 October 2010 23:36 (fifteen years ago)

I try not to take the bait from Morbius's amen corner. But I do appreciate your contribution.

clemenza, Saturday, 23 October 2010 23:38 (fifteen years ago)

"now go to the principal's office"

avoyoungdro's number (k3vin k.), Saturday, 23 October 2010 23:39 (fifteen years ago)

I think I literally send a kid to the principal's office every two or three years. But is there any way I can send you back to the politics thread?

clemenza, Saturday, 23 October 2010 23:41 (fifteen years ago)

four weeks pass...

pretty funny nerdfight going on in here: http://www.insidethebook.com/ee/index.php/site/comments/pujols_the_57mm_man/#comments

the nemeses part cracked me up

sanskrit, Monday, 22 November 2010 14:46 (fifteen years ago)

Praiseball Bospectus is my one-stop shop for sabr-slapfights:

http://praiseball.wordpress.com/

Onigaga (Princess TamTam), Monday, 22 November 2010 14:54 (fifteen years ago)

oh ok, hi Shasta.

kind of shrill and very self-righteous (Dr Morbius), Monday, 22 November 2010 15:08 (fifteen years ago)

The guy who does that blog seems to use "SABR" as jackassedly as you do. Ignorance is the new skinnyjeans.

kind of shrill and very self-righteous (Dr Morbius), Monday, 22 November 2010 15:09 (fifteen years ago)

nice one SS, will bookmark

morbs no collins bump?

sanskrit, Monday, 22 November 2010 15:13 (fifteen years ago)

where are u looking, on the politics thread?

also, why get excited about a middle manager?

kind of shrill and very self-righteous (Dr Morbius), Monday, 22 November 2010 15:16 (fifteen years ago)

damn.. some club just flat out bought the CHONE numbers and the guy who put em together. i kind of slightly liked those more than MARCEL.

http://www.baseballprojection.com/

sanskrit, Wednesday, 1 December 2010 19:28 (fifteen years ago)

damn, his projections were the most accurate the past few years of any of the public systems, free or subscription

ZIPS is the best one now i guess

ciderpress, Wednesday, 1 December 2010 19:41 (fifteen years ago)

I SO SAD

http://www.anditisliz.com/lusciousliz/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/figgins.jpg

sanskrit, Wednesday, 1 December 2010 20:46 (fifteen years ago)

Padres closer (and all star) Robert Suarez - bWAR is 1.8, fWAR is 0.6?

― timellison, Monday, July 15, 2024 12:33 PM (nineteen minutes ago)

i haven't followed the changes in WAR calculations between these two sites that closely recently so i don't want to speak *too* confidently, but generally/historically speaking fangraphs pitcher WAR is more FIP/predictive stats based whereas BR's is based more on outcomes. in suarez's case his ERA is 1.67 but his xERA is 3.07 and his xFIP is 3.87 so i'd imagine that's where the discrepancy is coming from

slob wizard (J0rdan S.), Monday, 15 July 2024 16:59 (one year ago)

yeah barring rare exceptions the bbref/fg differences in pitcher WAR almost always even out after couple more years worth of data

brony james (k3vin k.), Monday, 15 July 2024 18:11 (one year ago)

Lost track of Nate Silver for a long while, but the election led me to the Substack he does now. In a recent post on Kamala Harris--pros and cons--this, one of the pros, made me laugh:

12. It’s not that Biden can’t win — maybe the polls have been way off all along or there will be an alien invasion or something. But any election that Biden could win, any reasonable Democrat should be able win at this point. He is probably a below-replacement-level candidate.

https://www.natesilver.net/p/the-case-for-and-against-kamala-harris

clemenza, Thursday, 18 July 2024 16:09 (one year ago)

Joe Biden, -0.3 WAR.

clemenza, Thursday, 18 July 2024 16:09 (one year ago)

9/9, 9. First time I've used Gene Garber, I think, famous for ending Rose's 44-game hit streak in 1978. Vintage Rose: he complained after the game because Garber wasn't man enough to throw him a fastball.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y1sm1rOUfTg

https://i.postimg.cc/TP6qp28r/grid.jpg

clemenza, Sunday, 21 July 2024 12:01 (one year ago)

"In Rose's final at bat in that game, in the ninth inning, he struck out against Garber, but Rose was critical for Garber not throwing more fastballs. 'He was pitching like it was the seventh game of the World Series,' said the Reds' 'Charlie Hustle.' Garber was not amused. 'I had an idea,' said the Atlanta reliever, 'that Rose was hitting like it was the final game of the World Series.'"

Meanwhile, Rose starts the AB by trying to lay down a bunt.

clemenza, Sunday, 21 July 2024 12:07 (one year ago)

Wrong thread...I don't know how that happened, but I can't be bothered re-posting.

clemenza, Sunday, 21 July 2024 12:08 (one year ago)

nine months pass...

there is something awry with aaron judge’s defensive stats. fangraphs has him at -4.9 runs and soto at +1.7, and whether you believe soto is having a better overall defensive year than judge (even accounting for the fact that judge has played about a quarter of his time at DH), judge is not closer in defensive value to a full time DH than he is to soto. some of this may just be small-sample noise, but I wonder if there is some sort of systematic error here considering they play next to each other: there could be something about how they are positioned that is confusing the zone ratings. I don’t really have a deep enough knowledge of defensive stats these days to be confident, but it reminds me a bit of NBA adjusted plus-minus stats and how I was pretty convinced nikola jokic was being shorted and guys like kentavious caldwell-pope were being rewarded for playing so many minutes together

― brony james (k3vin k.), Saturday, July 13, 2024 7:02 AM (nine months ago) bookmarkflaglink

it’s early, but gonna go ahead and claim victory on this one

brony james (k3vin k.), Thursday, 1 May 2025 16:23 (one year ago)

three months pass...

From Posnanski today: who is/was the Ultimate Replacement-Level Player?

But the right answer is Mario Guerrero. Guerrero played for four teams in his eight-year career from 1973 to 1980 and was always filling in for somebody or other. With the Red Sox, he was often playing for an aging Luis Aparicio. For the 1975 Cardinals, he played a lot in place of the less-tattooed Mike Tyson. He went to California, where he would spell Jerry Remy and Dave Chalk. Then he went to Oakland, where, for some reason, they played him every day before having him back up Rob Piccolo.

Through it all, he had a career WAR of exactly 0.0. And he was so remarkably consistent about it. He never had a 1.0 win season. And he never had a minus-1.0 win season. He just kept going, 70 OPS+, slightly below-average defense, slightly below-average baserunning, available when needed. There really is something beautiful about it.

Vaguely remember him.

clemenza, Thursday, 21 August 2025 17:08 (nine months ago)

one month passes...

Do defensive metrics differentiate between making a play easily and making a play but it was a lot closer than it should have been? I could ask the internet but asking ILB is usually more interesting.

Noob Layman (WmC), Sunday, 28 September 2025 23:33 (eight months ago)

Isn’t that the range factor?

Marsee playground (gyac), Sunday, 28 September 2025 23:37 (eight months ago)

Range Factor was James's primative defensive metric when there really wasn't much of anything beyond fielding pct. in the '80s. It was to measure how many balls a player actually got to, as opposed to having a good fielding pct. for many fewer plays. Range Factor = putouts + assists / innings played. It wasn't related to easy-play/difficult-play, though.

clemenza, Monday, 29 September 2025 16:26 (eight months ago)

(Like a metric that elevated Ozzie Smith and downgraded Derek Jeter.)

clemenza, Monday, 29 September 2025 16:28 (eight months ago)

the key data here is the plays made that, if they hadn’t been made, would still have been scored hits. lost to time.

Tracer Hand, Monday, 29 September 2025 16:39 (eight months ago)


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