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#1851
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I think it would be appropriate at this time to point out that while SavoyBG and leewiley have been relentlessly attacking me, I've been having a completely non-personal, completely rational, and very pleasant conversation with Brett, STLCards2 and occasionally other members will pop in with questions and comments.
Perhaps there's a reason for the difference in conversational tone, hm? |
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#1852
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#1853
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It's been real.
It was fun. It's no longer real fun. I've had enough of the three of you, I think there's enough blame to go around. Have a nice life, I'm probably not the only one who is unsubscribing to this thread ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() : waving
__________________
Mythical SF Chronicle scouting report: "That Jeff runs like a deer. Unfortunately, he also hits AND throws like one." I am Venus DeMilo - NO ARM! I can play like a big leaguer, I can field like Luzinski, run like Lombardi. The secret to managing is keeping the ones who hate you away from the undecided ones. I am a triumph of quantity over quality. I'm almost useful, every village needs an idiot. Good traders: MadHatter(2), BoofBonser26, StormSurge |
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#1854
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Does anyone have BABIP rates with different ball/strike counts? |
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#1855
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Here, a bit like holding a mirror up to Medusa or publicizing Dorian's Gray's moldy portrait, is the tone exuded by SABR Matt on his fiefdom thread: Dorian Gray’s Mirror Quote:
2. [quoterUmm... Duh? Of course great seasons typically come with good performance with men on base. The ERA tends be lower when you...um...don't give up hits with guys on base. Yep. Check. That doesn't mean the year to year fluctuations in performance in that category are anything more than random. Think about this, Brett..[/quote] Who in his/her right mind could possibly interpret those first two "grunts" as anything but a direct attack on the intellect of another poster's suggestion? 3. Quote:
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5. [quoteOf course leewiley...if you had any reading comprehension skills, you would know that I was never arguing that the CAREER TOTALS in the situational splits were random. That's what you're giving me...career totals. I *AGREE!!* that a career as big as Ryan's will show patterns that can be understood and explored...that's a very good thing to be studying.[/quote] This pip came my way. It got a very direct, clear response. 6. Quote:
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[quoteAnd if you folks want to dismiss me because I have a harsh tone in this thread...fine, whatever...I get grumpy when confronted with a scientific fraud.[/quote] Noted. Again. 9. Let me spell this out very carefully so that your mind can process it and perhaps so that you can learn something. Nobody saying boo about the Japanese leagues doesn't mean nobody ANYWHERE...do you really imagine I haven't spoken to Jim Albright? Ahhh, yes: speak slowly and enunciate, so that lesser minds can attempt to grasp the gravitas of what is being offered. 10. Quote:
Now, maybe we can return to brett's question about pitchers. Last edited by leewileyfan; 11-07-2009 at 10:50 PM. |
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#1856
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You have to carefully read context when trying to judge something like this. My question was effectively rhetorical and I took his response quite differently. "Duh" is not questioning my intellect. It implies that I am able to see the answer. What if someone asks a friend if they should go out with a Megan Fox and the friend responds "Duh"? |
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#1857
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You have to carefully read context when trying to judge something like this. My question was effectively rhetorical and I took his response quite differently. "Duh" is not questioning my intellect. It implies that I am able to see the answer. What if someone asks a friend if they should go out with a Megan Fox and the friend responds "Duh"?[/quote]
Since you are/were the addressee, who am I to argue the point? However, the subsequent "errrrr" and the obvious reference to unquestionable facts would imply snark to readers not personally involved in the barbs exchanged. Now, may we go back to your BB question? |
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#1858
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#1859
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The bottom line here is that I can tell when someone enters a conversation with a set agenda and a group of hard assumptions about me, and I don't like it. leewiley and Savoy are both, IMHO, always reading the most negative spin on any of my words because they believe there is zero inherent value in anything a "math geek" (to directly quote one of them) has to say about baseball and they think anyone who studies the sport scientifically is bound to completely ignore the human element of the game. So no matter what I say, they attack me and claim everything I say has the intent of calling them stupid.
If you enter a conversation with me the way STLCards2 and brett typically do - genuinely curious and looking for ways to improve upon what I've done...you get a COMPLETELY different kind of response from me. There's a reason. Most people don't like to be labeled and typecasted, and I'm no exception. |
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#1860
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I cited 10 for you without even trying. Quote:
Last time I Googled, I gave up @ page 8. You have identified two posters who are admittedly fans of PCA, generally trying to stay on topic and asking you direct questions for you to field. It's very hard to be extremely rude when you are responding to direct, polite questions. Quote:
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#1861
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Continuing the discusion on Ryan - I just saw a site which converted pitchers' Game Scores into W-L%, and it had Ryan's Game Score W-L record near 390-210. I never realized just how much Game Score overemphasized strikeouts.
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1885 1886 1926 1931 1934 1942 1944 1946 1964 1967 1982 2006 1887 1888 1928 1930 1943 1968 1985 1987 2004 1996 2000 2001 2002 2005 2009 The Top 100 Pitchers In MLB History |
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#1862
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LOL
I'm not a fan of the game score, but I saw the SABR presentation where its secondary-proponent (a follower of James who created it) defended its use for posting corrected W-L records and he did have some good points about its surprisingly robust performance throughout the PBP era in correlating strongly with support/defense/park adjusted W-L. |
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#1863
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The site that I looked at did not adjust for era (which may explain why modern pitchers fair so poorly due to fewer IP) or park - so it was probably even worse that the presentation that you saw. Oh yeah - Halliday is 210-190 or something!
__________________
1885 1886 1926 1931 1934 1942 1944 1946 1964 1967 1982 2006 1887 1888 1928 1930 1943 1968 1985 1987 2004 1996 2000 2001 2002 2005 2009 The Top 100 Pitchers In MLB History Last edited by STLCards2; 11-07-2009 at 07:22 AM. |
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#1864
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Did Mussina's defenses hurt him as much as his offenses helped his record?
I estimate Ryan would have had between 351 and 360 wins and 254 losses in a totally neutral setting. |
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#1865
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But we know for a fact that he is no .545 pitcher. And Ryan is no .650 pitcher. And Halliday is no .540 pitcher. And Wells, Moyer, and Pettitte are no .500 or below pitchers. Game Scores double-counts K's, ignores park factors, pays zero mind to situational pitching, LOB%, etc., counts all hits as being equal (hurting guys who prevent XBhits), and does not account for era/IP accumulation. This explains why Bert Blyleven comes out looking better than Spahn, and why Sutton turns out looking better than Robin Roberts. I bet there is a much better correlation between all-time Game Score ranking and finessness of pitchers than Game Scores and run- support. Almost all of the guys with the biggest GS drops compared to real W-L% are modern day, lower K guys. It has Chuck Finley, Kenny Rogers and Jimmy Key as average to below average too pitchers.
__________________
1885 1886 1926 1931 1934 1942 1944 1946 1964 1967 1982 2006 1887 1888 1928 1930 1943 1968 1985 1987 2004 1996 2000 2001 2002 2005 2009 The Top 100 Pitchers In MLB History |
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#1866
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Agreed on all counts STL. Pitching is definitely a much more complex task than the game scores make it, and Ryan is a good example of why.
Mussina did have a lot of offensive support, but he also is unfairly penalized by park factor analysis and by the Yankee defenses for which he pitched. |
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#1867
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I am interested in how PCA rates the following sets of pitchers:
First Carlton Perry Niekro Ryan Second Gibson Koufax Marichal Whitey Ford Jim Palmer If you get some time I would like to see their year by year PCA scores. How would you rate the pitchers in each group? Is group 1 clearly better than group 2? |
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#1868
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Pca
I am new to this forum, I think I hit a gold mine.
What exactly is PCA? Please give extensive details. Is there a database where I could download the data? I am looking mainly for defensive ratings, at each position, from 1893 to present day. Thank you for yuor time, "Karl" jkberts1@comcast.net |
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#1869
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Hello Karl...you may want to check your e-mail.
![]() To get you started, I have sent along the awards data set, which gives top-tens for each league/year at each position for defense, and top 20s for batting wins and pitching wins (again for each league/year). I'll send along the PCA Manifest is you're interested in the full description of the system...or some general commentary if you want a shorter explanation. |
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#1870
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#1871
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I believe Brett also wanted Blyleven thrown in there from the first group.
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#1872
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Did you mention that Neikro probably gets underrated in DNRA+? (that's why I need an opinion too, and also looking at a players demonstrated level) I noticed that Carlton doesn't look any better in career numbers than Perry, Niekro or Blylevin, but he almost always gets rated higher because of the big seasons. He is last or tied for last in ERA+, ERA+ for peak consecutive 3000 IPs and 2000 IPS. IP ERA+ ERA+ 3000 (best stretch of complete seasons totalling 3000+ IP) ERA+ 2000 (same for 2000+ IP) Code:
Carlton Niekro Perry Blyleven
IP 5217 1/3 5404 1/3 5350 1/3 4970
ERA+ 115 115 117 118
ERA+ 3000 124 125 133 127
ERA+ 2000 126 129 130 134
And Koufax, Gibson, Marichal, Palmer and Ford. I wanted Hubbell but I don't think the data is as accurate. Thanks. Palmer and Ford are high on a lot of people's list who don't like Smoltz, Schilling and Kevin Brown and I think that they both might actually be below those 3. Marichal might be too. |
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#1873
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2 quick questions about methodology Matt.
1) Do you take into account that a pitcher does not pitch equally against each team opponent and at home and away, or do you just have a single TEAM run environment for DNRA+ 2) How do you calculate career DNRA+? Do you take the pitchers total career DNRA divided by his total environment or do you take the weighted average of each season's relative DNRA? for a simple example here, lets say column 1 is the pitcher's DNRA and column 2 is the league and column 3 is the relative DNRA. Assume the same number of innings each year. Season 1: 2 4 0.500 Season 2: 1 3 0.333 Season 3: 2 3 0.667 Season 4: 9 8 1.125 Season 5: 1 2 0.500 The average of column 1 is 3. The average of column 2 is 4. The relative ERA would be 0.750 by taking the average of each column separately but: The average of the relative ERA's is 0.625 which I believe to be more appropriate. Using method one to average, Season 4 gets weighted more than all the other seasons combined because the denomonator is 8. Last edited by brett; 11-20-2009 at 07:37 PM. |
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#1874
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__________________
Oh god, I'm so bored. |
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#1875
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Sticking with pitchers emphasized here on recent posts, I've done a Pythag against career decisions to project career Wins vs actual career wins for each. Pitcher..........Adj. ERA........Decisions.........Pythag %......E Wins.....Wins Perry............. 3.82.............589............... .570.......... 336....... 314 Niekro............ 4.40.............592............... .512.......... 303........318 Ryan.............. 3.62.............616............... .607.......... 374........324 Blyleven.......... 3.85.............537............... .577.......... 310........287 K. Brown......... 3.13.............355............... .674.......... 239........211 Carlton........... 3.81.............573............... .582......... 334........329 Jenkins.............3.77..............510......... ...... .588.......... 300........284 Gibson..............3.51..............425......... ...... .622.......... 264........251 Koufax..............3.18..............252......... ...... .667...........168........165 Marichal............3.57..............385......... ...... .639...........246........243 E. Ford..............3.19..............342........... .... .666..........228.........236 Palmer...............3.50..............420........ ....... .624..........262........268 Hubbell..............2.42..............407........ ....... .776.........316........253 Pettitte.............3.66...............364....... ........ .602.........219.......229 Wells.................4.14..............396....... ......... .542.........214........239 Moyer...............3.96...............453........ ........ .564.........255........258 Finley................4.27..............373....... ......... .526........196........200 The biggest outliers would appear to be Ryan and Hubbell. However, when one factors in team offense and team defense behind each + [in Ryan's case] a control issue, the gaps lessen in full context: -Hubbell's pitching staffs hovered @ slightly above average collectively for most of Hubbell's career. Subtracting Hubbell and recalculating the balance of the staff, pitching for the NYG was average to below-average, at best, without Hubbell. -Defense behind Hubbell was below average for @ two-fifths of his career; average @ one-quarter; and above average for the balance. -Batting runs behind Hubbell were @ 70 > LG average through most of his career. Collectively, we'relooking at a .500 team, 1928-1943 for the most part, without Hubbell. Re-inject Hubbell into the equations and we have a contender. P.S. My line for Don Sutton is: Adj. ERA [4.05]; Decisions [580]; Pythag Est. W% .552; Proj. W [320] Actual W [324] Last edited by leewileyfan; Yesterday at 03:44 PM. |
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