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Mark17 11-19-2021 08:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Snowman (Post 2166050)
All of this talk is irrelevant though if it actually never happened. I, for one, have never even heard this rumor before about Randy Johnson throwing games or faking injuries. I'm just saying kudos to him for finding a way out of Seattle if he did. But if you look at his stats from the year he got traded, and even the year before that, he didn't appear to miss any time and his stats were in line with what he was doing in the years just prior to that, so I'm not so sure I buy it. If he were actually throwing games, that would show up in his stats, and if he were faking injuries, he would have been missing starts, no?

Ah, nevermind. Bad idea. Silly me thinking statistics can help answer questions. That's just like, my opinion, man.

Tell me how Joe Jackson's stats in the 1919 World Series would clue you in to the fact he was on the gamblers' payroll, paid to lose.

Peter_Spaeth 11-19-2021 09:12 PM

Randy Johnson 1st 60 percent of 1998 ERA 4.33 (SEA)
Randy Johnson 2nd 40 percent of 1998 ERA 1.28 (HOU)

His WHIP went down by .3 from SEA to HOU

Maybe the DHs were killing him.

BobC 11-19-2021 09:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mark17 (Post 2166054)
Tell me how Joe Jackson's stats in the 1919 World Series would clue you in to the fact he was on the gamblers' payroll, paid to lose.

We've had threads on that in the past. Jackson got duped by listening to Comiskey who didn't help him when he tried to report it and asked what to do. But you're absolutely right about his play. Believe he had the highest BA of anyone in that WS, around .380 or so, and don't believe he commited any errors either. But any good statistician would have looked Jackson's stats up right away before accusing him of actually throwing a game, or so you'd think.

BobC 11-19-2021 09:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2166066)
Randy Johnson 1st 60 percent of 1998 ERA 4.33 (SEA)
Randy Johnson 2nd 40 percent of 1998 ERA 1.28 (HOU)

His WHIP went down by .3 from SEA to HOU

Maybe the DHs were killing him.

In all fairness, part of the reason for that big ERA drop could be from switching to a new league where none of the batters had seen him before. But those are still major league hitters, and as good as Johnson was, I can't ever see such a move creating that big of a change in his ERA in such a short of a period of time. Unless maybe he had some type of injury or something during the first part of that year that contributed to the higher ERA? But I'm not aware of any such thing. It doesn't look good for Johnson otherwise though.

Tabe 11-19-2021 09:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Snowman (Post 2165987)
The idea that one needs to try to win at all costs while playing for a team that has made it abundantly clear that they intend to lose at all costs is pretty silly. Especially if he was being treated like shit in the process. Kudos to Randy Johnson for getting himself out of a bad situation.

When you're already in a hole, stop digging.

Tabe 11-19-2021 09:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BobC (Post 2166071)
In all fairness, part of the reason for that big ERA drop could be from switching to a new league where none of the batters had seen him before. But those are still major league hitters, and as good as Johnson was, I can't ever see such a move creating that big of a change in his ERA in such a short of a period of time. Unless maybe he had some type of injury or something during the first part of that year that contributed to the higher ERA? But I'm not aware of any such thing. It doesn't look good for Johnson otherwise though.

Johnson complained about his back the entire first half of the season and visibly wasn't giving full effort when pitching. All that magically disappeared when he went to Houston. The assistant GM for the Mariners all but stated as much (that Johnson tanked) at the time.

Peter_Spaeth 11-19-2021 09:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BobC (Post 2166071)
In all fairness, part of the reason for that big ERA drop could be from switching to a new league where none of the batters had seen him before. But those are still major league hitters, and as good as Johnson was, I can't ever see such a move creating that big of a change in his ERA in such a short of a period of time. Unless maybe he had some type of injury or something during the first part of that year that contributed to the higher ERA? But I'm not aware of any such thing. It doesn't look good for Johnson otherwise though.

The same hitters couldn't touch him for the next four years either. Four years, four Cys, absurd strikeout totals, total dominance. Don't think that explains it.

BobC 11-19-2021 10:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tabe (Post 2166073)
Johnson complained about his back the entire first half of the season and visibly wasn't giving full effort when pitching. All that magically disappeared when he went to Houston. The assistant GM for the Mariners all but stated as much (that Johnson tanked) at the time.

Was just trying to be nice because we can't actually prove it, but remember hearing the rumors and accusations as well.

BobC 11-19-2021 10:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2166075)
The same hitters couldn't touch him for the next four years either. Four years, four Cys, absurd strikeout totals, total dominance. Don't think that explains it.

I know, I know, you're preaching to the choir. LOL

Carter08 11-19-2021 10:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Snowman (Post 2166050)
All of this talk is irrelevant though if it actually never happened. I, for one, have never even heard this rumor before about Randy Johnson throwing games or faking injuries. I'm just saying kudos to him for finding a way out of Seattle if he did. But if you look at his stats from the year he got traded, and even the year before that, he didn't appear to miss any time and his stats were in line with what he was doing in the years just prior to that, so I'm not so sure I buy it. If he were actually throwing games, that would show up in his stats, and if he were faking injuries, he would have been missing starts, no?

Ah, nevermind. Bad idea. Silly me thinking statistics can help answer questions. That's just like, my opinion, man.

You sound kind of like a dick sometimes. No one else does.

Tabe 11-20-2021 12:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Snowman (Post 2166050)
But if you look at his stats from the year he got traded, and even the year before that, he didn't appear to miss any time and his stats were in line with what he was doing in the years just prior to that, .

His ERA was over 2 full runs higher in 1998 before the trade compared to 1997 but, sure, his stats were right in line.

Snowman 11-20-2021 03:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Carter08 (Post 2166083)
You sound kind of like a dick sometimes. No one else does.

No one else does? LMFAO. What'd you do, filter out everyone's posts but mine? This entire thread has been others posting their opinions, them me providing my opinions, others shitting on me for having them, and then me throwing shit back.

And what about this very post of yours? Not a dickish post?

Snowman 11-20-2021 03:24 AM

I tried to find an article about Randy throwing games and faking injuries to get out of Seattle. I couldn't even find one. Sure seems like you guys are just making shit up. I did, however, find articles about him having back surgery. Twice.

His K/9 was 12.0 while he was in Seattle in 1998. It was 12.3 the year prior. His BB/9 was 3.4. It was 3.3 the year prior. And while, yes, his ERA was 4.33, his FIP was 3.35, almost a full run lower, and is also right in line with his FIP from the two seasons prior to that. Which means a full run per game of that 4.33 ERA was due to circumstances outside of his control.

I'd wager good money that this rumor about him throwing games and faking injuries (if it even was an actual rumor) came about because people who don't understand variance and sample sizes looked at the borderline irrelevant discrepancies between his ERA in Seattle and Houston that season and just pulled that explanation out of their ass because that's how stupid people attempt to explain away variance.

I'll say it again. Stop looking at wins, and stop looking at ERA if you want to evaluate pitching performance. I understand that this may be a difficult habit to break because it's been pounded into your heads for decades, but all it's doing is confusing you, whether you recognize it or not.

Carter08 11-20-2021 05:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Snowman (Post 2166096)
No one else does? LMFAO. What'd you do, filter out everyone's posts but mine? This entire thread has been others posting their opinions, them me providing my opinions, others shitting on me for having them, and then me throwing shit back.

And what about this very post of yours? Not a dickish post?

Your second point is valid. My apologies.

Snowman 11-20-2021 06:45 AM

Randy also posted a 0.337 BABIP during his time with Seattle in 1998 before being traded, which was almost the highest BABIP he posted in his entire career. This means that the ever so slightly elevated numbers he posted that season in Seattle were entirely explainable simply by bad luck. Nothing about his statistics from 1998 are indicative of him throwing games or pitching worse than he was capable of during his stint with Seattle. This is not just my opinion or me trying to say something controversial. It's a simple fact. If you disagree, you simply don't understand how statistics works with sample sizes, variance/luck, and confidence intervals.

Snowman 11-20-2021 06:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tabe (Post 2166094)
His ERA was over 2 full runs higher in 1998 before the trade compared to 1997 but, sure, his stats were right in line.

This is the type of nonsense I'm talking about. The fact that he posted an ERA of 2 runs higher than he did the year before in Seattle at the trade deadline literally means absolutely nothing. It tells you nothing about how well he was pitching without also looking at his other stats like FIP, BABIP, K/9 and BB/9. The data clearly shows that he simply got unlucky over the course of the first 2/3s of the season but was still every bit as dominant with the factors that were within his control.

mrreality68 11-20-2021 07:19 AM

Beware of Stats.

1. that do not always mean anything
2. Different people value different stats differently
3. Some people use the Same Stats and read it differently to make their points

Aquarian Sports Cards 11-20-2021 08:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bnorth (Post 2166036)
My favorite give it all guys are Derek Jeter in baseball and Alonzo Mourning in basketball. They both seemed to give all they had all the time.

Randy being a quitter that year could be why he has such a small fan base and the reason his cards are dirt cheap.

Also as Wilt Chamberlain once said, "Nobody roots for Goliath"

cjedmonton 11-20-2021 08:29 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mrreality68 (Post 2166143)
Beware of Stats.

1. that do not always mean anything
2. Different people value different stats differently
3. Some people use the Same Stats and read it differently to make their points

Or more colloquially…

https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/tag/statistics

Peter_Spaeth 11-20-2021 09:37 AM

I thought a pitcher's BABIP could be indicative of his ability to induce weak contact and therefore having a higher one than typical could indicate he was not pitching as well as before and not just random bad luck.

Anyhow I guess his bad luck just disappeared the day he was sent to Houston and his BIP then dropped by over .3 for the rest of the season. Just regression to the mean, inconsequential.

BobC 11-20-2021 10:31 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cjedmonton (Post 2166165)

Those quotes are hilarious..............and at the same time, pretty much spot on!

So true, so true.

Deertick 11-20-2021 10:46 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mrreality68 (Post 2166143)
Beware of Stats.

1. that do not always mean anything
2. Different people value different stats differently
3. Some people use the Same Stats and read it differently to make their points

63% of all statistics are fake.

cjedmonton 11-20-2021 11:09 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BobC (Post 2166207)
Those quotes are hilarious..............and at the same time, pretty much spot on!

So true, so true.

One more famous one that didn’t make the first page cut:

“Statistics are like a bikini. What they reveal is suggestive, but what they conceal is vital”

Aaron Levenstein, economist, November 1951

Peter_Spaeth 11-20-2021 11:31 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BobC (Post 2166207)
Those quotes are hilarious..............and at the same time, pretty much spot on!

So true, so true.

As this thread shows all too well, raw data may be objective, but how one presents and interprets it is anything but.

BobC 11-20-2021 12:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2166185)
I thought a pitcher's BABIP could be indicative of his ability to induce weak contact and therefore having a higher one than typical could indicate he was not pitching as well as before and not just random bad luck.

Anyhow I guess his bad luck just disappeared the day he was sent to Houston and his BIP then dropped by over .3 for the rest of the season. Just regression to the mean, inconsequential.

Yeah Peter, I vaguely seem to remember someone on here posting about how they used that same statistic to declare that Spahn was just lucky and not so great a pitcher. Good thing his luck didn't last for more than 363 wins or 20 or so successful winning seasons. Otherwise, people might actually begin to question the infallibility of such a statistical measure and the thoroughly conclusive answer that can be gleaned and ultimately drawn from it in regards to something as readily and objectively measurable as the level of Spahn's luck. But of course, we all know that a loss of faith in statistical infallibility would never happen, especially when such a conclusive and non-arguable determination of Spahn's luck is drawn from such totally unbiased and all-inclusive statistical and intangible data by qualified data scientists in their unrivaled capacity and knowledge, the results of which they so unselfishly bestow upon and honor us with. For without them, we, the unknowing minions, would truly be in the dark. But fortunately for us, we have our beloved statisticians and data scientists to instead smile down upon us with their sage and benevolent wisdom, and lead us unto the light! Amen.

(Shoot! Did I just cross a line and post something religious? If so, my apologies, no offense meant to anyone............well, almost! :rolleyes:)

BobC 11-20-2021 12:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cjedmonton (Post 2166218)
One more famous one that didn’t make the first page cut:

“Statistics are like a bikini. What they reveal is suggestive, but what they conceal is vital”

Aaron Levenstein, economist, November 1951

Oooooo, I like that one.

Trying to keep it in a baseball vein, here's one I think would have been a classic Yogiism:

Statistics can always tell you everything you want to know.........about half the time!

BobC 11-20-2021 12:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2166225)
As this thread shows all too well, raw data may be objective, but how one presents and interprets it is anything but.

Again, so true.

Peter_Spaeth 11-20-2021 12:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BobC (Post 2166249)
Again, so true.

Which is fine, as long as the interpretative part isn't presented as infallible objective truth. PS if you ever want to see people spin data (one could in some cases say manipulate), look at some clinical trial results sometime, including for some of our favorite drugs.

Tabe 11-20-2021 01:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Snowman (Post 2166125)
Randy also posted a 0.337 BABIP during his time with Seattle in 1998 before being traded, which was almost the highest BABIP he posted in his entire career. This means that the ever so slightly elevated numbers he posted that season in Seattle were entirely explainable simply by bad luck. Nothing about his statistics from 1998 are indicative of him throwing games or pitching worse than he was capable of during his stint with Seattle. This is not just my opinion or me trying to say something controversial. It's a simple fact. If you disagree, you simply don't understand how statistics works with sample sizes, variance/luck, and confidence intervals.

"ever so slightly elevated numbers", LOL.

Peter_Spaeth 11-20-2021 01:21 PM

If 2/3 of a season is too small a sample size to make any meaningful observations that exclude good or bad luck, as apparently is the case for Randy Johnson 1998 and his slightly elevated first 2/3 numbers, why is a full season really that much better? Maybe we should just junk the Cy Young award, since it's just rewarding randomness.

Snowman 11-20-2021 01:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2166185)
I thought a pitcher's BABIP could be indicative of his ability to induce weak contact and therefore having a higher one than typical could indicate he was not pitching as well as before and not just random bad luck.

Anyhow I guess his bad luck just disappeared the day he was sent to Houston and his BIP then dropped by over .3 for the rest of the season. Just regression to the mean, inconsequential.

Yes, it did. This happens all the time. He even got lucky in Houston. His HR% was half of what it normally is for him during those 10 starts. Anything can happen in 11 starts. It's just way too small of a sample size. Hell, nearly anything can happen even over the course of a full season too, let alone 11 games.

A pitcher's BABIP is almost entirely outside of his control. There are some who suggest that they may be able to exercise some minuscule amount of control over it, to the tune of a few points, but that's not an easy sell even at that. Either way, large fluctuations above and below the league average BABIP is indicative of a pitcher having gotten either lucky or unlucky that season. Just go look up your favorite 10 pitchers and look at their best and worst seasons with respect to their ERAs and WHIPs. You'll usually find that those were usually just seasons where every bounce or wind gust went their way (or failed to when their numbers were "bad"). Especially when there is a discrepancy between their ERA and their FIP.

If I want to know how well a pitcher performed, I look at the stats that are within their control.

Peter_Spaeth 11-20-2021 01:33 PM

Your logic would mean there's no such thing as a great pitcher who pitches to contact, or who isn't a dominant strikeout pitcher, because once a batter puts a ball in play it's all just dumb luck. That just does not square with experience. Did you ever watch Greg Maddux pitch?

Put another way, putting a ball in play on a pitch that was a hanging curve or a fastball with no movement down the middle is just not the same as doing so on a wicked slider two inches off the plate. A great pitcher can throw more pitches that are difficult to make solid contact with and thus your chances of getting a hit off him on a ball you put into play is not just random or some stat that will eventually hit the mean.

BobC 11-20-2021 01:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2166253)
Which is fine, as long as the interpretative part isn't presented as infallible objective truth. PS if you ever want to see people spin data (one could in some cases say manipulate), look at some clinical trial results sometime, including for some of our favorite drugs.

Absolutely. I have no problem with using statistics, they are a vital and necessary tool in helping to find solutions, trends, and so on, over an infinite number of situations and questions. And the people who have learned and mastered this mathematical science can come up with and discover some truly amazing things. But for the most part, you and I both know statistics are rarely, if ever, going to be 100% accurate and/or predictive in their results. And as you pointed out, can be (and many times are) able to be manipulated. The problem isn't in the statistics themselves, its with the people who ignore the shortcomings of relying solely on statistics without taking into account inherent weaknesses and bias in the data they're using, or that manipulate it, knowingly or unknowingly, for their own purposes or ends.

And speaking of manipulating data, reminds me of an old accountants joke. Owner of a company needs a new accountant, so he puts an ad in the paper (I did say this was an OLD joke). Later that week, he starts having people come in for interviews. And at the end of every interview as the applicants get up to leave, he always asks them one last quick question. "What's 2 + 2 equal?" And invariably they all they all give him the correct answer of 4. So he shakes their hands, thanks them and says he'll be in touch, and they part company. Now its Friday, and the owner has been at these interviews all day, and still hasn't found an applicant he really likes for the accountant's job. He's tired, but has one has last interview for the day. So the applicant comes in, sits down, and they start. Interview goes okay, like pretty much all the other earlier ones. And as they wrap it up and the applicant starts to get up to go, the owner asks his same final question. "By the way, what's 2 + 2 equal?" To which the applicant quickly replies, "What do you want it to be?" And as he then goes to shake the applicant's hand, he smiles and asks one more question. "When can you start?"

BobC 11-20-2021 01:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2166277)
If 2/3 of a season is too small a sample size to make any meaningful observations that exclude good or bad luck, as apparently is the case for Randy Johnson 1998 and his slightly elevated first 2/3 numbers, why is a full season really that much better? Maybe we should just junk the Cy Young award, since it's just rewarding randomness.

Careful there Peter, you're using too much logic and sense for some people!

Peter_Spaeth 11-20-2021 02:01 PM

One of pharma's favorite spins is relative vs absolute risk reduction. If I told you I had a pill that could cut your risk of serious adverse event X by 50 percent, you might be like, wow that's impressive. If I told you it could cut your risk from .001 to .0005, you might be, well is it worth the risks and side effects? Same data, different look.

BobC 11-20-2021 02:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2166285)
Your logic would mean there's no such thing as a great pitcher who pitches to contact, or who isn't a dominant strikeout pitcher, because once a batter puts a ball in play it's all just dumb luck. That just does not square with experience. Did you ever watch Greg Maddux pitch?

Put another way, putting a ball in play on a pitch that was a hanging curve or a fastball with no movement down the middle is just not the same as doing so on a wicked slider two inches off the plate. A great pitcher can throw more pitches that are difficult to make solid contact with and thus your chances of getting a hit off him on a ball you put into play is not just random or some stat that will eventually hit the mean.

Isn't that the whole idea behind good knuckleball (or sinkerball) pitchers? Don't let batters get good contact on balls so they hit mostly pop us, weak grounders, or foul balls. But that isn't really cool anymore so no one really tries mastering it. Nowadays seems like everyone wants the studs throwing 100 MPH that strike everyone out, so are more and more the kinds of pitchers you see coming up.

Peter_Spaeth 11-20-2021 02:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BobC (Post 2166296)
Careful there Peter, you're using too much logic and sense for some people!

I also question some "oh it's too small a sample size" arguments. Those always seem to me to reflect cherry-picking, to dismiss inconvenient stats that don't fit the theory. We used to see that argument all the time here to rebut the theory that Kershaw was not a good post-season pitcher; his lousy performances were just random events and couldn't possibly reflect that he wilted under pressure. Of course after a full season worth of postseason outings there's still a huge disparity so maybe that argument has been retired.

Of course when the stats do fit the theory, we don't see the sample size argument so much.

Peter_Spaeth 11-20-2021 02:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BobC (Post 2166305)
Isn't that the whole idea behind good knuckleball (or sinkerball) pitchers? Don't let batters get good contact on balls so they hit mostly pop us, weak grounders, or foul balls. But that isn't really cool anymore so no one really tries mastering it. Nowadays seems like everyone wants the studs throwing 100 MPH that strike everyone out, so are more and more the kinds of pitchers you see coming up.

I've watched enough baseball games to be pretty damn sure there are pitchers who are harder to hit solidly whether you put the ball into play off them or not, but maybe it's all an illusion. Incidentally Maddux' BABIP for his career was 9 points below the league average, and if you exclude his end of career seasons probably a bit better than that. That seems significant to me but I don't know. Kershaw -- 23 points below.

BobC 11-20-2021 02:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2166299)
One of pharma's favorite spins is relative vs absolute risk reduction. If I told you I had a pill that could cut your risk of serious adverse event X by 50 percent, you might be like, wow that's impressive. If I told you it could cut your risk from .001 to .0005, you might be, well is it worth the risks and side effects? Same data, different look.

And therein you have so elegantly described the beauty, and the curse, of statistics, in one short, sweet, simple statement. Kudos.

G1911 11-20-2021 02:51 PM

Statistics don't lie. People misusing them to support their narratives or stripping them of proper context do.

Snowman 11-20-2021 02:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tabe (Post 2166274)
"ever so slightly elevated numbers", LOL.

Laugh all you want, but the numbers that actually matter, the ones that aren't subject to luck were nearly identical to his prior years (12.0 K/9 vs 12.3, 3.4 BB/9 vs 3.3, 3.35 FIP vs 2.82 and 3.42). If that's not "ever so slightly elevated", then I don't know what is.

But you can keep looking at ERA if you want to. The imbeciles always do.

Peter_Spaeth 11-20-2021 02:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Snowman (Post 2166322)
Laugh all you want, but the numbers that actually matter, the ones that aren't subject to luck were nearly identical to his prior years (12.0 K/9 vs 12.3, 3.4 BB/9 vs 3.3, 3.35 FIP vs 2.82 and 3.42). If that's not "ever so slightly elevated", then I don't know what is.

But you can keep looking at ERA if you want to. The imbeciles always do.

Those are the product of the same set of games you dismissed as being too small a sample size to be meaningful, so why are they now meaningful when they favor your argument?

Snowman 11-20-2021 02:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2166285)
Your logic would mean there's no such thing as a great pitcher who pitches to contact, or who isn't a dominant strikeout pitcher, because once a batter puts a ball in play it's all just dumb luck. That just does not square with experience. Did you ever watch Greg Maddux pitch?

I realize people think that, but the fact of the matter is that yes, it is dumb luck. The idea that Greg Maddux was better able to control the fate of the ball after contact than his peers is not supported by the data, though often claimed. His BABIP numbers across the course of his career are precisely in line with league average BABIP numbers during that era. If you don't believe me, I can plot it for you.

Peter_Spaeth 11-20-2021 03:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Snowman (Post 2166325)
I realize people think that, but the fact of the matter is that yes, it is dumb luck. The idea that Greg Maddux was better able to control the fate of the ball after contact than his peers is not supported by the data, though often claimed. His BABIP numbers across the course of his career are precisely in line with league average BABIP numbers during that era. If you don't believe me, I can plot it for you.

No they are 9 points lower, I already posted that.

If your thesis is that Greg Maddux' career (after all he was not a dominant strikeout pitcher with 6 K/9) was jut the result of dumb luck, you have pretty much disqualified yourself as knowing anything about baseball, however good you are with data.

Snowman 11-20-2021 03:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2166277)
If 2/3 of a season is too small a sample size to make any meaningful observations that exclude good or bad luck, as apparently is the case for Randy Johnson 1998 and his slightly elevated first 2/3 numbers, why is a full season really that much better? Maybe we should just junk the Cy Young award, since it's just rewarding randomness.

If it gets awarded to whoever has the best W/L record and the best ERA, then yes, it is borderline meaningless. As has been mentioned earlier in this thread, the award has gone to countless pitchers over the years who clearly did not deserve it.

But it wouldn't be that difficult to make it meaningful. They just need to look at the right statistics. They finally figured this out for offensive players. Maybe they'll come around sooner or later with pitchers too? Who knows.

Peter_Spaeth 11-20-2021 03:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Snowman (Post 2166328)
If it gets awarded to whoever has the best W/L record and the best ERA, then yes, it is borderline meaningless. As has been mentioned earlier in this thread, the award has gone to countless pitchers over the years who clearly did not deserve it.

But it wouldn't be that difficult to make it meaningful. They just need to look at the right statistics. They finally figured this out for offensive players. Maybe they'll come around sooner or later with pitchers too? Who knows.

Sample size is just as small for all statistics, no?

Snowman 11-20-2021 03:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2166323)
Those are the product of the same set of games you dismissed as being too small a sample size to be meaningful, so why are they now meaningful when they favor your argument?

Because the sample sizes needed for those statistics is remarkably smaller than it is for ERA, and thus their corresponding confidence intervals are much narrower. This is because they are not nearly as subject to luck as ERA is. It takes years for ERA to converge. It takes months for K/9, BB/9, and even FIP.

carlsonjok 11-20-2021 03:16 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by Snowman (Post 2166328)
IThey just need to look at the right statistics. They finally figured this out for offensive players.

Oh, really?

BobC 11-20-2021 03:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2166306)
I also question some "oh it's too small a sample size" arguments. Those always seem to me to reflect cherry-picking, to dismiss inconvenient stats that don't fit the theory. We used to see that argument all the time here to rebut the theory that Kershaw was not a good post-season pitcher; his lousy performances were just random events and couldn't possibly reflect that he wilted under pressure. Of course after a full season worth of postseason outings there's still a huge disparity so maybe that argument has been retired.

Of course when the stats do fit the theory, we don't see the sample size argument so much.

And by any chance could the fact that pitchers end up facing the best teams during the playoffs and WS possibly be a factor in their not-so-stellar playoff performances also? Or how about those pitchers where age, injuries, the long regular season, and other factors would then catch up to them at playoff time? Corey Kluber may be a great example of that particular set of circumstances. A fantastic pitcher and Cy Young winner, Corey was always focused and ready to go. But as he'd head into the postseasons, it always seemed like he'd run out of gas or nagging regular season injuries finally caught up to him. Still, when he was right and rested, he could hang with the best of them.

The one other thing you said that I really like is in reference to the possibility that someone like Kershaw could also possibly wilt under post season pressure. Now I'm not saying he does, but I think ALL people realize and recognize that stress can and does affect every single one of us, and does so differently depending on the unique set of facts and circumstances a person is presented with. That is a prime example of one of those human elements I keep harping on about that statisticians can't possibly ever effectively measure and fully account for in their equations, formulas, and algorithms. They may try to tell that they in fact do have such variables and factors accounted for, until you ask them to show you and prove it to you, and then you get the excuses about how you wouldn't understand, or it would take too long, and so on.

Now I actually don't doubt that statisticians may in fact try to account for human variables like luck, stress, heart, competitiveness, or whatever, but since there is no real way to effectively measure and quantify such human variables in their work, the things they do to account for them are at best, SWAGs, and at worst, WAGs. And a guess is basically no more than someone's opinion, maybe an educated one, but still an opinion, no more, no less. Not ever saying a statisticians work is bad, just that they should be honest and admit what it actually is, their (very) educated guess more often than not.

Peter_Spaeth 11-20-2021 04:22 PM

Is there a statistic that tracks the deer in the headlights look that (unfortunately, as I like him) Kershaw gets time after time after time in the post season?

BobC 11-20-2021 04:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2166308)
I've watched enough baseball games to be pretty damn sure there are pitchers who are harder to hit solidly whether you put the ball into play off them or not, but maybe it's all an illusion. Incidentally Maddux' BABIP for his career was 9 points below the league average, and if you exclude his end of career seasons probably a bit better than that. That seems significant to me but I don't know. Kershaw -- 23 points below.

Peter,

I'm with you. It's the interperative abilty of some people that seems to totally fail them. Oh, they can compile the data and create the formulas and all, but they still have to then determine and interpret the results and how truly meaningful they really are.

Example, there are a ton of different tax programs out there that are used by accountants, and some are definitely better (or worse) than others. Truthfully, most accountants/CPAs will tell they all have issues and could use lots of improvements to work better and more effectively. But the problem is these programs are created by programmers, not the accountants/CPAs that most often use them. And when we complain to programmers about issues, shortcomings, and errors in these programs they invariably give us their excu.....er, reasons, for not being able to really change anything because they are the programmers, we are not, and they know what they are doing so that is how it is. Hard to believe there could be so many variations in tax software out there when they are all supposedly trying do the same calculations across the board. One would think all tax programs should pretty much be exactly the same, basically this minus that times this rate = income taxes due, right? But its not, because programmers know programming, not taxes. And each different programmer puts their own unique thinking, biases, and such into the tax software product they create. And that's why their different tax software can end up being easier or harder to use than others, can do more or fewer things, and can even come up with completely different tax liability results.

Now go back and swap statisticians for programmers, and ask them to develop their formulas and equations to determine who the greatest lefty pitcher of all time is, instead of how to figure out what your income taxes will be next year. Want to guess how many statisticians will come up with different equations/formulas, along with different answers to the question, especially since each statistician will likely complete their assignment using their own definition of what "greatest" means, without ever asking what you or anyone else thought or wanted it to be?

Peter_Spaeth 11-20-2021 04:55 PM

I was told Maddux' BABIP "tracked precisely" the BABIP's of his era. I'd still like to know if -- given that in fact his career BABIP was 9 points lower than the average -- that is tracking precisely or not. Hard to explain away 23 years or whatever it was as a small sample size.

The other thing is, his BA against was 14 points lower than the average, even though he wasn't much of a strikeout pitcher. How does that happen?

BobC 11-20-2021 05:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2166362)
I was told Maddux' BABIP "tracked precisely" the BABIP's of his era. I'd still like to know if -- given that in fact his career BABIP was 9 points lower than the average -- that is tracking precisely or not. Hard to explain away 23 years or whatever it was as a small sample size.

The other thing is, his BA against was 14 points lower than the average, even though he wasn't much of a strikeout pitcher. How does that happen?

Statistics don't lie Peter, so you've got to be right! LOL

Maybe a better question to ask some statisticians is what day of the week it is (or maybe what hour of the day), because that's how quickly their sample sizes and other statistical arguments seem to change in this discussion.

Tabe 11-20-2021 05:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Snowman (Post 2166322)
Laugh all you want, but the numbers that actually matter, the ones that aren't subject to luck were nearly identical to his prior years (12.0 K/9 vs 12.3, 3.4 BB/9 vs 3.3, 3.35 FIP vs 2.82 and 3.42). If that's not "ever so slightly elevated", then I don't know what is.

But you can keep looking at ERA if you want to. The imbeciles always do.

So a 20% jump in FIP is "ever so slightly"?

His home runs were up 40%. OPS was up 20%. Line drive% was up 33%. All that stuff says guys were hitting the ball hard off of him A LOT more than the previous year - and the rest of 1998 and the next four years.

Please specify the EXACT number of starts and/or innings to qualify as NOT a small sample size. Just for grins.

p.s. Name-calling reflects poorly on you. Do better.

Peter_Spaeth 11-20-2021 05:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tabe (Post 2166378)
So a 20% jump in FIP is "ever so slightly"?

His home runs were up 40%. OPS was up 20%. Line drive% was up 33%. All that stuff says guys were hitting the ball hard off of him A LOT more than the previous year - and the rest of 1998 and the next four years.

Please specify the EXACT number of starts and/or innings to qualify as NOT a sample size. Just for grins.

p.s. Name-calling reflects poorly on you. Do better.

Irrelevant man. Once the ball leaves the bat, it has nothing to do with the pitcher, it's just dumb luck and coincidence, or a function of other factors beyond the pitcher's control such as fielding. BABIP is binary -- either it's a hit or it's not -- and the rest is meaningless. Besides, every number you cite suffers from small sample size and confidence interval issues -- only numbers that support the thesis that his first half was just random are reliable.

All pitchers are essentially fungible beyond their ability to strike batters out. Maddux is the same as any other 6K/9 pitcher you can name. Johnson's K's stayed up, so all the rest is noise.

G1911 11-20-2021 06:58 PM

If it was all dumb luck, then BABIP would, over the course of long careers, all come out about the same when you factor in the defense behind the pitcher. There would not be pitchers who have incredibly successful and long careers, not giving up many runs, while being contact instead of strikeout pitchers. It doesn’t.

If it’s all dumb luck, how are contact pitchers often just as successful as strikeout pitchers? Maddox and Randy Johnson put together similar total careers. Johnson’s BABIP is league average, Maddux, like most hall of fame contact pitchers, is well below it. They achieved similar ERA’s and total careers via very different methods, in huge sample sizes.

Tabe 11-20-2021 07:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2166380)
Irrelevant man. Once the ball leaves the bat, it has nothing to do with the pitcher, it's just dumb luck and coincidence, or a function of other factors beyond the pitcher's control such as fielding. BABIP is binary -- either it's a hit or it's not -- and the rest is meaningless. Besides, every number you cite suffers from small sample size and confidence interval issues -- only numbers that support the thesis that his first half was just random are reliable.

All pitchers are essentially fungible beyond their ability to strike batters out. Maddux is the same as any other 6K/9 pitcher you can name. Johnson's K's stayed up, so all the rest is noise.

I appreciate you clearing it up for me. It seems so simple when you explain it that way.

cammb 11-20-2021 07:53 PM

This is way off the subject. You guys are probably boring other readers. Let’s end it now. Koufax is the GOAT period. Good night

Peter_Spaeth 11-20-2021 07:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by G1911 (Post 2166407)
If it was all dumb luck, then BABIP would, over the course of long careers, all come out about the same when you factor in the defense behind the pitcher. There would not be pitchers who have incredibly successful and long careers, not giving up many runs, while being contact instead of strikeout pitchers. It doesn’t.

If it’s all dumb luck, how are contact pitchers often just as successful as strikeout pitchers? Maddox and Randy Johnson put together similar total careers. Johnson’s BABIP is league average, Maddux, like most hall of fame contact pitchers, is well below it. They achieved similar ERA’s and total careers via very different methods, in huge sample sizes.

Maddux's success was the result of dumb luck!! 21 years of it, well, maybe 16 of which really defined him.

G1911 11-20-2021 08:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cammb (Post 2166423)
This is way off the subject. You guys are probably boring other readers. Let’s end it now. Koufax is the GOAT period. Good night

Koufax is the GOAT period. Another stunning Koufax argument. We’re going to hit 2,000 posts without a logical argument for Koufax actually being presented.

G1911 11-20-2021 08:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2166424)
Maddux's success was the result of dumb luck!! 21 years of it, well, maybe 16 of which really defined him.

Well, he pitched for 21 years which seems like a lot, but it was only 5,008 innings. The sample is just too small. Maddux was lucky. Also a bum because only K pitchers who played after Spahn, except for Koufax who is exempted because I don’t know, are any good.

Lorewalker 11-20-2021 09:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by G1911 (Post 2166437)
Well, he pitched for 21 years which seems like a lot, but it was only 5,008 innings. The sample is just too small. Maddux was lucky. Also a bum because only K pitchers who played after Spahn, except for Koufax who is exempted because I don’t know, are any good.

Snowman is always right. Just ask him.

BobC 11-20-2021 09:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lorewalker (Post 2166450)
Snowman is always right. Just ask him.

He even has a statistical algorithm to prove it. But don't ask him to show you, because he hasn't actually created it yet. And he doesn't really have the time to do it right now, unless you want to pay him. But even if you do, and then he does, it probably doesn't matter because he'll tell you you're too ignorant to understand it anyway.

Snowman 11-21-2021 12:23 AM

1 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2166326)
No they are 9 points lower, I already posted that.

If your thesis is that Greg Maddux' career (after all he was not a dominant strikeout pitcher with 6 K/9) was jut the result of dumb luck, you have pretty much disqualified yourself as knowing anything about baseball, however good you are with data.

My instincts about Maddux's BABIP were wrong. You're right, Maddux did beat the league average BABIP, particularly between 1992-1998 (see plot below). But you appear to be misunderstanding what I'm saying. I'm not saying Greg Maddux was just a "lucky" pitcher. He was an excellent pitcher. I'm saying that people conflate his remarkable ability to control the ball with him having the ability to also control where the ball goes after someone puts it into play. The extent to which pitchers actually have this ability is miniscule at best. It's probably at least an order of magnitude less than people are thinking of when they make that claim. Maddux rarely walked hitters. He led the league in BB/9 9 times, and was probably in the top 3 15 times or more. This was his superpower. As I mentioned earlier, there is some research (which I'd have to read again, it's been a while) that suggests a really strong pitcher may have a small, but measurable effect on their BABIP, but that estimate is only something like 5 points worth of BABIP, which is to say out of every 1,000 times a ball gets put into play, an elite pitcher is able to prevent an additional 5 of those into becoming hits than his peers (hence I said it's a tough sell). However, a pitcher's BABIP can often fluctuate 70 or 80 points from one season to the next. Even if 5 of those points are within their control, that still leaves 65 to 75 points worth of variance or "luck" which is completely outside of their control.

BABIP is a very useful statistic for putting other stats into context. It is influenced primarily by luck, but also by the defensive talent of the players on the field, the skill of the batters, and by the ballpark. Hitters have a fair amount of control over their BABIP numbers (though they are also very much subject to luck in the short term) as exit velocity is highly correlated to BABIP values. The harder you hit the ball, the more likely it is to drop in for a hit. But pitchers face an approximately uniform (top of the order inflated) distribution of batters, so hitting talent mostly evens out for them with some minor exceptions (e.g., pitching in the NL yields a slightly lower BABIP than the AL because of the DH spot, and pitching in a division that is stacked with good hitters can deflate your BABIP if you have a higher than average number of starts against strong offensive teams than your peers. But these effects are fairly small. The overwhelming majority of the variance in BABIP values is simply due to random chance. And this variance is actually pretty wide from season to season, and it correlates highly with the fluctuations you see with other stats that are highly subject to luck as well (like ERA and WHIP).

A pitcher like Maddux had a few things going for him which should have helped him outperform the league average BABIP numbers. He pitched in the NL, was in a pitcher's park, and had Andruw Jones chasing down balls for him in CF. I'm not sure exactly how much each of those factors weighs in exactly off the top of my head, but they do have a measurable impact. But even if it is true that a pitcher as great as Maddux is capable of "beating" the BABIP line, the evidence shows that it would only be to the tune of a few balls out of 1,000. That's certainly not what people who promote the idea that he can control ball flights with his pitching style mean when they make such claims. If playing in a pitcher's park is worth 1 or 2 balls per 1,000, and having Andruw Jones running down fly balls is worth 1 or 2 per 1,000, and pitching in the NL is worth 2-3 balls per 1,000 and having god-like control is worth 3-5 balls per 1,000, that would add up to someone like Maddux beating the BABIP line by 9 points.

If you haven't read it before, this is worth a read. It has a pretty good explanation of BABIP and why it's important.

https://library.fangraphs.com/pitching/babip/


And since I was wrong and am happy to admit when I'm wrong, here's a plot of Maddux vs the league average BABIP showing that he did in fact beat the league for a good several-year run in the 90s (note the blue line is MLB average, not NL average, which would be slightly lower).

Lorewalker 11-21-2021 12:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BobC (Post 2166455)
He even has a statistical algorithm to prove it. But don't ask him to show you, because he hasn't actually created it yet. And he doesn't really have the time to do it right now, unless you want to pay him. But even if you do, and then he does, it probably doesn't matter because he'll tell you you're too ignorant to understand it anyway.

Pretty much sums up our snowman on every thread, Bob. Since I have been here this is the fastest I have seen someone overstay their welcome however he is very amusing because of how serious he takes himself.

Snowman 11-21-2021 02:05 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by G1911 (Post 2166437)
Well, he pitched for 21 years which seems like a lot, but it was only 5,008 innings. The sample is just too small. Maddux was lucky. Also a bum because only K pitchers who played after Spahn, except for Koufax who is exempted because I don’t know, are any good.

Maddux also pitched in the NL, in a pitcher's park, and with one of the greatest defensive center fielders of all time catching balls for him. His BABIP would be expected to be lower than MLB average. If you look at Smoltz and Glavine's numbers during the same time, they also both beat league average MLB BABIP.

Perhaps you should read up on BABIP? I somewhat excuse the level of ignorance on these topics by the non data savvy people in this thread because it's not exactly their job to understand numbers. But if you are serious about being a data analyst, your perpetual ignorance displayed throughout the entirety of this thread with respect to just basic statistics and simple statistical concepts is remarkably embarassing. You should be ashamed of yourself. Go read a book. Or three.

Snowman 11-21-2021 02:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by G1911 (Post 2166437)
Well, he pitched for 21 years which seems like a lot, but it was only 5,008 innings. The sample is just too small. Maddux was lucky. Also a bum because only K pitchers who played after Spahn, except for Koufax who is exempted because I don’t know, are any good.

I'll give you $1k right now if you can repeat my arguments in a way I'll sign off on. Good luck.

Snowman 11-21-2021 02:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BobC (Post 2166455)
He even has a statistical algorithm to prove it. But don't ask him to show you, because he hasn't actually created it yet. And he doesn't really have the time to do it right now, unless you want to pay him. But even if you do, and then he does, it probably doesn't matter because he'll tell you you're too ignorant to understand it anyway.

And I'll give you $1k right now if you can explain in detail why a pitcher's win totals and ERA from any given season should not be used to evaluate pitching performance. And you can't just say "sample size". Good luck.

BobC 11-21-2021 02:29 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lorewalker (Post 2166477)
Pretty much sums up our snowman on every thread, Bob. Since I have been here this is the fastest I have seen someone overstay their welcome however he is very amusing because of how serious he takes himself.

LOL

Hopefully things will change, but the fact he got bounced off Blowout makes the the question others have asked as to whether or not he's a troll, more possible than not I guess. He's a smart guy, just wish he'd be a little more open minded and realize he's not always going to be right. Oh well. Guess we'll wait to see what happens. I just put him on "Ignore" myself and don't read his posts anymore. It's better that way.

Aquarian Sports Cards 11-21-2021 05:40 AM

from MLB.com

"The formula

(H - HR)/(AB - K - HR + SF)
Why it's useful

BABIP can be used to provide some context when evaluating both pitchers and hitters. The league average BABIP is typically around .300. Pitchers who have allowed a high percentage of hits on balls in play will typically regress to the mean, and vice versa. In other words, over time, they'll see fewer (or more) balls in play fall for hits, and therefore experience better (or worse) results in terms of run prevention. The same applies for batters who have seen a high or low percentage of their balls in play drop in for hits.

That said, skill can play a role in BABIP, as some pitchers are adept at generating weak contact, while some hitters excel at producing hard-hit balls. For example, Clayton Kershaw finished the 2019 season with a lifetime .270 BABIP allowed, while Mike Trout ended the campaign with a career .348 BABIP."

My Thoughts:

The all-time leader of BABIP for starters over 1000 innings is Babe Ruth at .241, 2000 innings Andy Messersmith at a slightly higher .241, 3000 innings Catfish Hunter at .243 Those are all fine pitchers but none of them are in the running for all-time greatest status. So clearly BABIP, even to the degree it is controllable, isn't a perfect stat either.

Peter_Spaeth 11-21-2021 08:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Snowman (Post 2166475)
My instincts about Maddux's BABIP were wrong. You're right, Maddux did beat the league average BABIP, particularly between 1992-1998 (see plot below). But you appear to be misunderstanding what I'm saying. I'm not saying Greg Maddux was just a "lucky" pitcher. He was an excellent pitcher. I'm saying that people conflate his remarkable ability to control the ball with him having the ability to also control where the ball goes after someone puts it into play. The extent to which pitchers actually have this ability is miniscule at best. It's probably at least an order of magnitude less than people are thinking of when they make that claim. Maddux rarely walked hitters. He led the league in BB/9 9 times, and was probably in the top 3 15 times or more. This was his superpower. As I mentioned earlier, there is some research (which I'd have to read again, it's been a while) that suggests a really strong pitcher may have a small, but measurable effect on their BABIP, but that estimate is only something like 5 points worth of BABIP, which is to say out of every 1,000 times a ball gets put into play, an elite pitcher is able to prevent an additional 5 of those into becoming hits than his peers (hence I said it's a tough sell). However, a pitcher's BABIP can often fluctuate 70 or 80 points from one season to the next. Even if 5 of those points are within their control, that still leaves 65 to 75 points worth of variance or "luck" which is completely outside of their control.

BABIP is a very useful statistic for putting other stats into context. It is influenced primarily by luck, but also by the defensive talent of the players on the field, the skill of the batters, and by the ballpark. Hitters have a fair amount of control over their BABIP numbers (though they are also very much subject to luck in the short term) as exit velocity is highly correlated to BABIP values. The harder you hit the ball, the more likely it is to drop in for a hit. But pitchers face an approximately uniform (top of the order inflated) distribution of batters, so hitting talent mostly evens out for them with some minor exceptions (e.g., pitching in the NL yields a slightly lower BABIP than the AL because of the DH spot, and pitching in a division that is stacked with good hitters can deflate your BABIP if you have a higher than average number of starts against strong offensive teams than your peers. But these effects are fairly small. The overwhelming majority of the variance in BABIP values is simply due to random chance. And this variance is actually pretty wide from season to season, and it correlates highly with the fluctuations you see with other stats that are highly subject to luck as well (like ERA and WHIP).

A pitcher like Maddux had a few things going for him which should have helped him outperform the league average BABIP numbers. He pitched in the NL, was in a pitcher's park, and had Andruw Jones chasing down balls for him in CF. I'm not sure exactly how much each of those factors weighs in exactly off the top of my head, but they do have a measurable impact. But even if it is true that a pitcher as great as Maddux is capable of "beating" the BABIP line, the evidence shows that it would only be to the tune of a few balls out of 1,000. That's certainly not what people who promote the idea that he can control ball flights with his pitching style mean when they make such claims. If playing in a pitcher's park is worth 1 or 2 balls per 1,000, and having Andruw Jones running down fly balls is worth 1 or 2 per 1,000, and pitching in the NL is worth 2-3 balls per 1,000 and having god-like control is worth 3-5 balls per 1,000, that would add up to someone like Maddux beating the BABIP line by 9 points.

If you haven't read it before, this is worth a read. It has a pretty good explanation of BABIP and why it's important.

https://library.fangraphs.com/pitching/babip/


And since I was wrong and am happy to admit when I'm wrong, here's a plot of Maddux vs the league average BABIP showing that he did in fact beat the league for a good several-year run in the 90s (note the blue line is MLB average, not NL average, which would be slightly lower).

Two points: one, you at first presented your "instincts" about Maddux as if they were facts you already knew. Read the language of your post.

Two, Kershaw's BABIP is 27 points below the ML average for his career. What's your take on that which obviously can't be explained by NL alone?

Carter08 11-21-2021 08:18 AM

Many probably know this but I’ll repeat it here. Simply amazing:

Maddux faced 20,421 batters during his time in the league. In those 20,421 at-bats, only 310 hitters saw a 3-0 count. Out of those 310, 3-0 counts, 177 of them were intentional walks.

Peter_Spaeth 11-21-2021 08:54 AM

Until he ended it with an intentional pass, Maddux once went 72 straight innings without a walk.

cardsagain74 11-21-2021 09:37 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2166306)
I also question some "oh it's too small a sample size" arguments. Those always seem to me to reflect cherry-picking, to dismiss inconvenient stats that don't fit the theory. We used to see that argument all the time here to rebut the theory that Kershaw was not a good post-season pitcher; his lousy performances were just random events and couldn't possibly reflect that he wilted under pressure. Of course after a full season worth of postseason outings there's still a huge disparity so maybe that argument has been retired.

Of course when the stats do fit the theory, we don't see the sample size argument so much.

And sometimes people don't look at it a little deeper (when they want to dismiss an argument). Like you said, it's not always just as simple as "postseason doesn't matter" because of the sample size.

Willie Mays hit one homer in 134 postseason plate appearances, and that was at the end of a game that was 8-1. So, basically none.

If you assume that 100 of Mays' 134 postseason PAs were relevant (for lack of a better word), the chance of him hitting no homers in those (given his lifetime HR rate) is around .005.

Even if you factor in how it's tougher to hit homers against the quality of championship-level pitching, that's still way too out there on the bell curve to assume that it's just random statistical noise.

G1911 11-21-2021 09:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Snowman (Post 2166480)
Maddux also pitched in the NL, in a pitcher's park, and with one of the greatest defensive center fielders of all time catching balls for him. His BABIP would be expected to be lower than MLB average. If you look at Smoltz and Glavine's numbers during the same time, they also both beat league average MLB BABIP.

Perhaps you should read up on BABIP? I somewhat excuse the level of ignorance on these topics by the non data savvy people in this thread because it's not exactly their job to understand numbers. But if you are serious about being a data analyst, your perpetual ignorance displayed throughout the entirety of this thread with respect to just basic statistics and simple statistical concepts is remarkably embarassing. You should be ashamed of yourself. Go read a book. Or three.

The only person being embarrassed in this thread is you. You’ve progressed into actually having some points beyond claiming to be infallible and have a statistical model you can’t show that proves your claims, but any good point in it is lost by the constant insults of everyone else here and the childish immaturity of your ‘over the top brag - insult’ pattern that never ceases. I’m well aware of what BABIP is and already said the defense behind the pitcher needs to be adjusted for. Regardless of what you claim, great contact pitchers find success at not giving up many runs, often equal to or even better than great K pitchers. Dismissing all non K centric pitchers, which seems to be your implied basis for ignoring Spahn but including his exact contemporary Koufax, is not supported by the data. It does not appear to be random luck, and they tend to have lower BABIP’s over large sample sizes.

But I’m illiterate and homeless, among many other things.

Lorewalker 11-21-2021 10:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BobC (Post 2166483)
LOL

Hopefully things will change, but the fact he got bounced off Blowout makes the the question others have asked as to whether or not he's a troll, more possible than not I guess. He's a smart guy, just wish he'd be a little more open minded and realize he's not always going to be right. Oh well. Guess we'll wait to see what happens. I just put him on "Ignore" myself and don't read his posts anymore. It's better that way.

He seems to double down and then resort to putting everyone down in every thread in which his theories, which he presents as facts, are successfully challenged. He might be smart but he is not that bright.

Carter08 11-21-2021 11:30 AM

Maybe not the thread for this but why didn’t the yanks trot Ruth out to pitch more often? I assume it’s the obvious - to keep him healthy and batting and if it ain’t broke don’t fix it.

Snowman 11-21-2021 11:36 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Peter_Spaeth (Post 2166580)
Until he ended it with an intentional pass, Maddux once went 72 straight innings without a walk.

And when asked about his scoreless innings steak, his response was "honestly, it was mostly luck"

Carter08 11-21-2021 11:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Snowman (Post 2166626)
And when asked about his scoreless innings steak, his response was "honestly, it was mostly luck"

Humble guy. An admirable quality usually displayed by people confident they are good.

Mark17 11-21-2021 12:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Carter08 (Post 2166622)
Maybe not the thread for this but why didn’t the yanks trot Ruth out to pitch more often? I assume it’s the obvious - to keep him healthy and batting and if it ain’t broke don’t fix it.

From what I understand, Ruth didn't want to do both.

He should've said, "Pay me 2 salaries and I'll be a starting pitcher, and an outfielder." Of course, he ended up being paid more than the President of the country anyway......


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