baseball_2006-02-21 <-
Talks
<-
Sean Forman <-
You Are Here
Next: What kind of park /
Previous: Sabermetric examples: Talk Outline
/
Up: baseball_2006-02-21
Extracted from The Bill James
Baseball Abstract 1988
Ballantine Books, New York
Copyright 1988 by Bill James
"What I wanted to write about... is a very basic
question. Of all the studies I have done over the last 12 years,
what have I learned? What is the relevance of sabermetric
knowledge to the decision making process of a team? If I were
employed by a major-league team, what are the basic things that I
know from the research I have done which would be of use to me in
helping that team?"
- Minor league batting statistics (when properly adjusted) will
predict major league batting performance with essentially the same
reliability as previous major league statistics.
- Talent in baseball is not normally distributed. It is a
pyramid. For every player who is 10 percent above the
average player, there are probably twenty players who are
10 pecent below average.
- What a player hits in one ballpark may be radically
different from what he would hit in another.
- Ballplayers, as a group, reach their peak value much
earlier and decline much more rapidly than people
believe.
- Players taken in the June draft coming out of college (or
with at least two years of college) perform dramatically
better than players drafted out of high school.
- The chance of getting a good player with a high draft
pick is substantial enough that it is clearly a
disastrous strategy to give up a first round draft choice
to sign a mediocre free agent. (see note #1)
- A power pitcher has a dramatically higher expectation for
future wins than does a finesse picther of the same age
and ability.
- Single season won-lost records have almost no value as an
indicator of a pitcher's contribution to a team. (Eric Milton
14-6, 4.75 ERA in 2004, 8-15, 6.47 ERA in 2005).
- The largest variable determining how many runs a team
will score is how many times they get their leadoff man
on base.
- A great deal of what is perceived as being pitching is in
fact defense.
- The defensive spectrum is: DH - 1B - LF - RF - 3B - CF - 2B - SS - C
- True shortage of talent almost never occurs at the left
end of the defensive spectrum.
- Rightward shifts along the defensive spectrum almost
never work.
- Our idea of what makes a team good on artificial turf is
not supported by any research.
- When a team improves sharply one season they will almost
always decline in the next.
- The platoon differential is real and virtually universal
Next: What kind of park /
Previous: Sabermetric examples: Talk Outline
Copyright© 2005, Saint Joseph's University and Sean Forman