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Thursday, May 12, 2005

A Sea of Green

On Monday night I took my family to Coors Field for the first time to see a game played at altitude - which the Rockies won 7-6 I might add. As I explained to my nine-year old daughter with her eyes glazed over somewhere around the fourth inning, "lots of runs are scored at Coors Field and one of the hypotheses* given for this is that the fences must be very deep so that there aren’t too many homeruns, but one of the side effects is that more singles and doubles fall in front of the outfielders".

* We home school and so any time you can throw in a word from a recent lesson you do

She nodded as her eyes fixated on the cotton candy vendor and I went back into my contemplation of these and other great thoughts. But it occurred to me that I hadn’t ever actually seen any data that would support this hypothesis so I dug into the play by play data for 2004. I reasoned that Coors Field would produce more singles and doubles classified as fly ball or popup than would other parks. I wrote a quick query and found the following:


Fly Pop Total
MIN 170 9 179
BOS 125 6 131
CHN 120 10 130
NYN 108 11 119
CHA 104 8 112
BAL 99 7 106
COL 94 6 100
NYA 95 3 98
ANA 87 8 95
KCA 84 4 88
SFN 72 12 84
HOU 79 5 84
PIT 74 6 80
PHI 73 7 80
FLO 71 5 76
DET 66 8 74
SLN 67 4 71
ATL 64 6 70
SEA 55 11 66
LAN 55 11 66
OAK 54 7 61
TBA 55 5 60
TEX 51 4 55
SDN 51 2 53
MIL 47 6 53
CLE 41 10 51
MON 43 6 49
TOR 41 4 45
ARI 34 3 37
CIN 34 1 35

This of course is not really what I was expecting. Could it really be possible that there were 170 fly ball singles in the Metrodome but only 34 in the Great American Ballpark, a ratio of 5 to 1? And why would there be 125 fly ball singles in Fenway Park, a ballpark with a small outfield?

When looked at in total Coors Field did produce the most singles at 1,104, just ahead of Anaheim at 1,097. Of those, 556 were line drives with only the Ballpark at Arlington producing more at 557, and 448 were ground balls with Detroit far outpacing the field at 539.

Putting these questions aside I went ahead and ran a similar query for doubles.

Fly Pop Total
BOS 186 3 189
CLE 157 1 158
COL 146 2 148
SDN 141 2 143
MIN 140 2 142
PIT 131 1 132
SEA 130 0 130
CHN 127 3 130
NYN 127 2 129
ATL 124 2 126
HOU 119 2 121
ARI 114 0 114
FLO 112 1 113
NYA 106 2 108
TOR 105 1 106
TEX 98 0 98
MON 94 0 94
SFN 92 2 94
BAL 91 2 93
ANA 90 2 92
PHI 83 3 86
KCA 77 3 80
OAK 80 0 80
CHA 80 0 80
CIN 76 0 76
SLN 74 0 74
DET 70 1 71
TBA 66 0 66
LAN 56 3 59
MIL 50 0 50

Now this was really disturbing. While Coors Field ranked third, Boston still had 186 fly ball doubles while Milwaukee had just 50. Again, when looked at in total Coors Field produced the second most doubles at 379 (Fenway saw 395) with 188 line drives and 42 ground balls.

So in summary Coors produced the most singles and second most doubles but this analysis did not support the hypothesis that this is because more balls fall in front of outfielders who have to cover the spacious outfield. My daughter will no doubt be thrilled by my analysis.

In thinking about these results I was reminded of Joe Buck calling last year’s World Series and his annoying habit of describing every ball hit into the outfield as a popup, many of which traveled 350 feet or more. Taking the "Buck Factor" in account, the large differences between parks I think can better be explained by differences in how those who score the games interpret fly balls and popups. From my experience scoring games for MLB.com (from which this data is derived I believe) it is sometimes difficult to decide where the line is between ground ball and line drive, popup and flyball, and flyball and line drive. Generally, my criteria is that if a ball touches the ground before it reaches the outfield grass it is a ground ball. If a ball is hit on an arc greater than around 30 degrees (definitely subject to a lot of interpretation), the ball is a flyball if it travel more than 200 feet or a popup if less. Everything else is a line drive. I also use the L- scoring as in S9/L- (single to right on a softly hit line drive) for flares that fall in over the infield.

Of course if anyone has any better data on this I'd love to see it...

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Boston may have more fly ball 1B and 2B than expected because of balls hit off the Green Monster.