Sunday, April 29, 2007
Rookie Turns Three
Interestingly, there were two of them turned in 1923 one by the Red Sox on September 14th and the other by the (Boston) Braves on October 6th. There were also two turned in 1927 on consecutive days by the Cubs Jim Cooney on May 30th and the Tigers Johnny Neun on May 31st. There was one unassisted triple play in the post season belonging to Bill Wambsganss in the 1920 World Series for the Indians. This is also the 8th instance of a shortstop turning one. There were three by second baseman and two by first baseman.
The game was notable for a couple other reasons as well as Todd Helton set the Rockies single game record for walks with five. He singled in the first and then walked in the 2nd, 5th, 7th, 9th, and 11th. That last walk came right before Matt Holliday ended it on a walk-off two-run homer to center field against Steve Coyler. Up until that point Holliday had had a rough day going one for five with only an infield single in the 9th inning rally where the Rockies tied the game at 7 against Braves closer Bob Wickman. Prior to that Holliday had struck out and grounded into two double plays in addition to flying out to right. For Helton that gives him 32 hits and 24 walks on the season good for a .523 on base percentage. He still just has the one homerun and so you begin to wonder whether the power is permanately gone or not. Holliday now has 41 hits and continues to lead the league in hitting at .394 and extended his hitting streak to 12 games. Brad Hawpe also homered in the game (his first of the year) accounting for the Rox sixth and seventh homeruns of the season here at Coors and their first multi-homerun game all season. Their home record stands at 6-7 as they head out on the road to face the Giants. In another quirk of the current schedule, as the Rockies make their 9 day road trip they'll land in all four time zones.
Friday, April 27, 2007
Chat Today!
Update: The transcript has been posted. Thanks again to everyone who participated.
Wednesday, April 25, 2007
Wednesday Links
Tuesday, April 24, 2007
Clutch...Again
Rays Win!
All in all a nice evening.

Friday, April 20, 2007
Quick Workers and Human Rain Delays
Quick Workers (no particular order)
Mark Buehrle
Zane Smith
Bob Gibson
Jim Kaat
Bronson Arroyo
John Lieber
Catfish Hunter
Roy Halladay
Greg Maddux
Tim Wakefield
Mark Mulder
Slow Workers
Vicente Padilla
Joey Hamilton
Jeff Gray
Steve Trachsel
Others..and why do you suppose the first list includes pitchers of higher quality? Do we simply remember when good pitchers work quickly or is that a part of their success?
Friars and Rox
Tonight the Padres come to town to take on the Rockies with Chris Young facing Josh Fogg. I'll have to admit that mentioned in the BP2K7 all things considered Fogg turned in a better 2006 season than most would have predicted. Once again though he was still hit hard by lefties to the tune of .309/.388/.512 and fell apart in August and September. Some of that can no doubt be attributed to bone chips that he had to have removed from his elbow after the season. Of course he does get groundballs with his sinker (I happened to attend his masterpiece against the Mariners at SafeCo Field last season that lasted all of 1 hour and 52 minutes) and yet he still struggled mightily at Coors Field. The Rockies management really like his approach and attitude and since Byung-Hyun Kim has struggled, it appears the fifth spot is Fogg's to lose. This will be his third start of the season although he did appear in relief last Monday against the Giants.
Interestingly there have been only 6 homeruns hit at Coors Field this season ahead of only Camden Yards for fewest per game this season. Unfortunately most of that poor showing can be attributed to the Rockies hitters who also have only hit 39 extra basse hits all season ahead of only St. Louis, Washington, and Cincinnati and have been shutout in extra base hits 4 times this season. And not surprisingly the Wrigley Field has seen only 6 homeruns in 495 at bats as well.
As far as the Padres are concerned they come into tonight's game with Heath Bell and Cla Meredith each having thrown 10.3 scoreless innings out of the bullpen. They also have rookie Kevin Cameron who has thrown 9.0 innings of scoreless relief to start his career (most for a San Diego pitcher to begin a career since Clay Condrey worked 14.3 innings in August and Septemebr of 2002 - aren't you glad you know that?). Trevor Hoffman has also thrown six scoreless innings and overall Padres relievers rank second in the NL with a 2.15 ERA (15 ER in 62.7 IP) behind only the Mets (1.51, 7ER/41.7 IP). They've held opposing hitters to a .181 average and have 47 Ks to boot.
Tomorrow there will be an interesting SABR meeting before the 6:05 game. Should be a fun weekend.
Thursday, April 19, 2007
Thrown Out in the End
The second half of the article deals with another demonstration of baseball's version of natural selection in how starting jobs are kept or lost piggy-backing on an article from two weeks ago chronicling the demise of Angel Berroa.
Wednesday, April 18, 2007
A Different Look at Post Season Odds
Since we're early in the season and the discussion at this time of year always turns to small sample sizes I thought I'd take a different look at post season odds than the one we use on Baseball Prospectus where the system uses our adjusted standings and runs simulations of 1,000,000 seasons to determine the probability of each team winning their division, taking the wild card, and making it to the postseason. There are also ELO and PECOTA adjusted versions and overall that approach is similar to the kinds of simulations I've run in the past for looking at postseason odds.
What I did here was different and is instead rooted in sort of the inverse of the uniformitarian philosophy embodied by the phrase "the present is the key to the past". In other words, it's a view from the historical record.
The first table below compares each 2007 team's record as of this afternoon to all other teams who have ever had that record and then includes two pieces of information - the average final winning percentage of all of those teams and the percentage of the time those teams reached the post season.
W L Teams FinalPct PSPct Teams
10 4 149 0.560 0.302 Dodgers
8 4 266 0.545 0.282 Mets
9 4 198 0.559 0.278 Braves
8 5 327 0.529 0.248 Blue Jays, Twins
8 6 368 0.528 0.209 Reds, Padres
6 4 416 0.526 0.207 Indians
7 5 393 0.521 0.201 Red Sox
9 6 312 0.529 0.196 Tigers, Diamondbacks
5 4 493 0.520 0.185 Mariners
7 6 403 0.514 0.154 Brewers
7 7 359 0.504 0.131 Orioles, A's
6 6 425 0.503 0.118 Yankees, Astros,Pirates
6 7 362 0.490 0.099 Rangers,Marlins, Cardinals
5 7 371 0.475 0.078 White Sox
6 8 349 0.475 0.074 Devil Rays, Angels, Rockies
5 8 335 0.463 0.060 Cubs
3 9 143 0.438 0.049 Phillies
4 8 241 0.450 0.046 Giants
4 10 149 0.438 0.040 Nationals
4 11 110 0.428 0.027 Royals
So here we see the Dodgers at 10-4 have the highest probability of reaching the post season at 30.2% (our basic report on BP has them at 41.2%) and teams in their position have gone on to play .560 baseball over the course of the season equivalent to 91 wins. On the opposite side the Royals have a 2.7% chance of reaching the post season (BP has them at 7.8% which seems extraordinarily high to me) and teams have come in at 69 wins (.428).
But of course this technique doesn't take into consideration the fact that more teams reach the playoffs given the current format. The following table takes this into account by looking only at seasons since 1995 when the three division format and wild card were introduced.
W L Teams Final PctPSPct Teams
9 4 25 0.555 0.480 Braves
10 4 23 0.545 0.435 Dodgers
8 4 49 0.544 0.429 Mets
8 5 66 0.530 0.394 Blue Jays, Twins
9 6 58 0.529 0.379 Tigers, Diamondbacks
8 6 66 0.523 0.364 Reds, Padres
7 5 70 0.515 0.357 Red Sox
5 4 84 0.519 0.345 Mariners
6 4 68 0.520 0.338 Indians
7 7 65 0.500 0.292 Orioles, A's
7 6 65 0.501 0.262 Brewers
6 7 70 0.496 0.243 Rangers,Marlins, Cardinals
6 6 75 0.503 0.227 Yankees, Astros,Pirates
5 7 56 0.476 0.179 White Sox
5 8 54 0.480 0.167 Cubs
6 8 64 0.481 0.156 Devil Rays, Angels, Rockies
4 8 44 0.465 0.136 Giants
4 11 20 0.446 0.100 Royals
4 10 24 0.447 0.083 Nationals
3 9 20 0.448 0.050 Phillies
The smaller sample here illogically puts the Braves at 9-4 ahead of the Dodgers at 10-4, but as you can see the odds of those teams reaching the post season goes up quite a bit since approximately 28% of all teams have made the playoffs since 1995.
Mostly what this tells us is that it is a long season and unless your team is 4-11, 4-10, or 3-9, based on history they still have a chance to make some noise.
Monday, April 16, 2007
Hitless (almost) Winning
Be that as it may that prompted me to take a look at how many games have been won by a team who managed just one hit. The complete list going back to 1957 (and excluding 1999) sorted in descending order by date is as follows...
2006-09-03 NYN at HOU W (2-1)
2006-06-22 SLN at CHA W (1-0)
2005-08-23 CHA at MIN W (1-0)
2002-04-27 NYA at SEA W (1-0)
2000-05-21 CHA W (2-1) at TOR
1997-09-03 BOS at MON W (1-0)
1996-04-13 KCA W (3-2) at MIL
1995-08-02 TOR at BAL W (1-0)
1993-07-27 TEX W (1-0) at KCA
1992-07-25 PIT at ATL W (1-0)
1992-04-14 OAK at KCA W (3-1)
1991-09-14 NYN at SLN W (2-1)
1989-08-15 TEX at SEA W (2-0)
1986-09-07 SFN W (1-0) at MON
1986-06-16 TEX at CAL W (2-1)
1984-08-24 CIN W (2-0) at PIT
1983-05-18 CHA at BAL W (1-0)
1982-09-05 ATL at MON W (2-1)
1975-07-19 CHN at SDN W (2-1)
1974-09-08 CHA W (1-0) at CAL
1974-09-04 CIN W (2-1) at HOU
1971-09-02 KCA at MIL W (1-0)
1971-07-30 KCA at BAL W (1-0)
1969-09-05 ATL at CIN W (2-11)
1969-06-08 CAL W (3-2) at CLE
1965-09-09 CHN at LAN W (1-0)
1965-05-15 CHN at LAN W (3-1)
1964-09-12 KC1 at BAL W (1-0)
1964-09-06 BOS at MIN W (2-1)
1959-05-26 PIT at MLN W (1-0)
1957-06-16 MLN at PHI W (1-0)
Wednesday, April 11, 2007
Assignment Discovery: Sabermetrics
Using only a calculator, a stat book, and some custom equations, a new generation of baseball statisticians believes that it's possible to predict a player's true value to his team. The results will surprise you.It'll be interesting to see if they're really talking about "prediction" or simply quantification after the fact. The former has its limits while the latter is very well understood. I'm also interested in these types of presentations since they often misrepresent and distort subjects that are somewhat technical. I wrote about two depictions of sabermetrics back in November in a column titled "The Numb3rs Game" on BP.
Wednesday, April 04, 2007
Selection Pressure
It turns out that has happened 96 times in baseball history for 85 different players. Those 96 instances are shown in the table below sorted by primary position of the player in their first year (the second year would be the first year of the decline) and NOPS/PF in that first year. You'll then see their NOPS/PF for each subsequent season and the average decline per year calculated using the geometric mean. The list is sorted by position since a shortstop has a greater probability of keeping his job even in an offensive decline given that his defense is more important and therefore a good defender will see less selection pressure applied to his offense.
NOPS/PF
Name Yr1POS Yr1Age Year1 Year1 Year2 Year3 Year4 Avg
Jimmie Foxx 1B 24 1932 160 157 150 147 2.6%
Lou Gehrig 1B 27 1930 158 155 147 145 2.4%
Norm Cash 1B 26 1961 157 123 122 115 4.7%
Jimmie Foxx 1B 25 1933 157 150 147 133 4.4%
Jimmie Foxx 1B 26 1934 150 147 133 119 5.9%
Andres Galarraga 1B 27 1988 130 111 104 88 11.2%
Keith Hernandez 1B 25 1979 130 128 124 116 3.1%
Eddie Murray 1B 27 1983 129 128 126 118 2.0%
Gregg Jefferies 1B 25 1993 124 119 106 101 5.9%
Sean Casey 1B 24 1999 123 113 110 90 7.3%
Gregg Jefferies 1B 26 1994 119 106 101 98 5.3%
Willie Upshaw 1B 26 1983 118 110 106 95 6.3%
Steve Balboni 1B 27 1984 112 107 99 91 6.5%
Willie Upshaw 1B 27 1984 110 106 95 93 4.3%
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Eddie Collins 2B 27 1914 145 137 124 118 6.3%
Larry Doyle 2B 24 1911 133 121 111 110 4.1%
Jimmy Williams 2B 24 1901 125 122 109 107 3.6%
Jimmy Williams 2B 25 1902 122 109 107 102 4.5%
Frankie Frisch 2B 24 1923 121 120 114 107 2.9%
Bret Boone 2B 25 1994 116 104 86 85 5.9%
Carlos Baerga 2B 24 1993 113 110 105 88 5.8%
Tony Cuccinello 2B 27 1935 112 111 110 104 1.6%
Damion Easley 2B 27 1997 110 104 99 98 3.0%
Marty McManus 2B 24 1924 110 105 102 101 2.3%
Billy Goodman 2B 27 1953 108 101 100 98 2.3%
Dick Egan 2B 25 1909 107 94 92 89 4.4%
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Eddie Mathews 3B 27 1959 142 139 132 124 4.0%
Heinie Zimmerman 3B 25 1912 140 129 116 107 8.5%
Richie Hebner 3B 24 1972 132 120 119 103 4.7%
Tommy Leach 3B 24 1902 121 115 103 101 4.6%
Richie Hebner 3B 25 1973 120 119 103 101 2.8%
Max Alvis 3B 25 1963 115 110 103 101 3.8%
Kevin Seitzer 3B 25 1987 114 110 102 101 2.9%
Bill Mueller 3B 26 1997 109 107 104 97 3.3%
Bobby Byrne 3B 27 1912 109 98 96 84 6.4%
Eddie Foster 3B 27 1914 108 104 102 93 4.0%
Bill Coughlin 3B 26 1905 102 95 92 83 6.0%
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Mike Scioscia C 26 1985 121 104 98 97 4.4%
Gus Triandos C 27 1958 114 109 107 104 2.8%
Manny Sanguillen C 27 1971 113 108 104 101 3.6%
Rick Ferrell C 25 1931 109 107 106 101 2.0%
Sammy White C 24 1953 102 99 96 82 5.1%
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Ken Griffey CF 27 1997 135 127 121 118 4.1%
Raul Mondesi CF 27 1998 114 108 107 101 3.0%
Brian Hunter CF 25 1996 94 90 82 73 7.5%
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Bobby Higginson LF 25 1996 125 118 108 94 8.5%
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Ty Cobb OF 25 1912 156 154 152 147 1.8%
Ty Cobb OF 26 1913 154 152 147 144 2.1%
Kevin Mitchell OF 27 1989 153 131 126 108 9.2%
Tris Speaker OF 24 1912 149 147 145 130 2.7%
Albert Belle OF 27 1994 148 142 130 109 8.2%
Bobby Murcer OF 25 1971 147 141 118 105 9.0%
Joe Medwick OF 25 1937 147 125 119 118 3.9%
Tito Francona OF 25 1959 142 118 116 103 6.8%
Duke Snider OF 27 1954 142 140 133 126 3.3%
Edd Roush OF 24 1917 136 131 128 125 2.7%
Tony Oliva OF 25 1964 131 126 123 119 3.1%
Mike Greenwell OF 24 1988 130 112 109 104 5.5%
Jim Rice OF 25 1978 130 128 112 109 3.7%
Steve Kemp OF 24 1979 125 116 115 111 2.8%
Kirk Gibson OF 27 1984 123 122 117 116 1.4%
Tom Tresh OF 27 1965 123 115 106 98 7.3%
Jim Russell OF 25 1944 123 115 110 99 6.6%
Al Smith OF 27 1955 121 110 104 103 3.6%
Greasy Neale OF 25 1917 120 110 100 95 7.2%
Carl Furillo OF 27 1949 119 110 107 94 6.3%
Amos Otis OF 25 1972 118 115 110 101 4.5%
Tito Francona OF 26 1960 118 116 103 93 5.7%
Phil Bradley OF 26 1985 117 114 109 108 2.2%
Steve Kemp OF 25 1980 116 115 111 101 3.0%
Paul Blair OF 25 1969 116 111 104 96 5.9%
Gus Bell OF 26 1955 116 115 101 93 4.4%
Jack Smith OF 26 1921 115 113 106 97 4.5%
Jackie Brandt OF 27 1961 114 111 103 97 4.8%
Luis Polonia OF 26 1990 112 101 94 86 8.3%
Mule Haas OF 27 1931 111 102 101 93 4.0%
Marty Cordova OF 25 1995 110 106 96 92 5.2%
Marquis Grissom OF 25 1992 110 107 103 93 4.6%
Don Mueller OF 27 1954 108 98 86 83 7.3%
Joe Vosmik OF 27 1937 107 105 96 94 3.2%
Devon White OF 24 1987 101 97 93 90 3.7%
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Raul Mondesi RF 26 1997 127 114 108 107 3.7%
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Alex Rodriguez SS 24 2000 136 134 127 125 2.3%
Robin Yount SS 26 1982 135 127 113 107 7.0%
Alex Rodriguez SS 25 2001 134 127 125 117 3.7%
Barry Larkin SS 27 1991 126 120 116 107 5.0%
Ray Chapman SS 26 1917 119 111 109 108 2.2%
Travis Fryman SS 24 1993 117 103 98 97 3.9%
Freddy Parent SS 27 1903 117 115 95 93 4.0%
Jeff Blauser SS 26 1992 116 115 94 89 4.4%
Jay Bell SS 27 1993 115 106 99 96 5.4%
Jody Reed SS 26 1989 106 104 99 87 4.8%
Chick Galloway SS 25 1922 106 94 87 79 9.2%
Rafael Ramirez SS 24 1982 99 98 87 85 3.0%
Angel Berroa SS 25 2003 98 92 90 73 6.3%
Bud Harrelson SS 25 1969 93 92 91 86 1.9%
What you'll notice of course is that all but four of these declines started with the hitter having an NOPS/PF greater than 100. As you might expect, players can retain their jobs through performance declines typically only if that decline starts from a fairly high plateau. Overall, the average of the first year is 123 and the fourth 104. You'll find Berroa second from the bottom as only Bud Harrelson began from a lower NOPS and retained his job through three years of decline. But you'll also notice that Berroa's decline averaged 6.3% while Harrelson was fairly steady at 1.9%.
The bottom line is that Berroa's ability to keep his job was pretty much unprecedented given his offensive performance and even more incredible given that under John Dewan's Plus/Minus system and the data shared by The Hardball Times he fielded 84 fewer balls than would have been expected.
Major League players are under a great deal of selection pressure akin to what organisms feel ala natural selection. Berroa didn't feel it nearly as acutely as he probably should have.
Five Games Per Pitcher?
"If you don't replace your gold glover in centerfield what you're going to have is Johann Santana, now that twenty-game winner he's gonna be a 15-16 game winner. All your other guys that are going to win 12, 13 ballgames now are going to win 9 and maybe 10 games because you're losing something in your centerfield. Torii Hunter wins at least wins five games a year per pitcher - three to five games per pitcher just with his defense in centerfield."Five games a year with his defense per pitcher? So Hunter's defense is worth 25 wins? I'm sorry but even a non-stathead who has no understanding of sabermetric defensive metrics must realize how absurd this statement, when taken literally, is from a simple common sense persepctive. If he is worth 25 wins on defense then he's saving something like 250 runs all by himself.
But most likely what Gladden was thinking was not that Hunter "wins" 25 games all by himself but rather impacts 25 games with good defensive plays and so Gladden mentally attributes the win to Hunter since without the play the team might have lost. Even so, what that formulation leaves out is the fact that any centerfielder will make some percentage of those difficult plays and so it's not as if another player would simply have failed to make all of those plays and therefore cost the team all of those games. And of course he probably selectively remembers all of the good plays and never the cost of over-aggressiveness that sometimes results in errors that let in runs.
More realistically, in 2006 Hunter was slightly below average according to David Pinto's PMR and slightly above according to the Davenport Translations.
Geivo-Fest!

The event will last until 2:30pm and then all are invited to take in the Rockies/Padres game at 6:05. Tickets are available for $7 and requests and payment can be sent to Paul Parker. Deadline for the tickets is April 18th.
Back in the Saddle
Last night the Rockies escaped with a 4-3 victory in 11 innings on the strength of some shoddy D'Backs defense in the bottom of the 11th inning. After Todd Helton and Matt Holliday started the inning with opposite field singles, Brad Hawpe grounded into a 6-3 double play to put Helton as the tying run on third with two outs. Troy Tulowitzki then hit a Jose Valverde pitch to right field that was poorly played by Eric Brynes and Tulowitzki was credited with a double. On an 0-1 count Chris Iannetta hit a grounder to third baseman Alberto Callaspo and it skipped under his glove for an error and a 4-3 Rockies win.
In the top of the 11th Byung-Hyun Kim got the first two outs before walking 8th place hitter Chris Snyder and hitting Callaspo. Stephen Drew singled to right to score Snyder to give the Diamondbacks the 3-2 lead they carried into the bottom of the frame. The Rockies, however, should never have been in that position. Some poor bullpen management by interim manager Jamie Quirk (Clint Hurdle was serving a one-game suspension stemming from a spring training incident that involved starter Jeff Francis) saw Manual Corpas, LaTroy Hawkins, Brian Fuentes, and Ramon Ramirez all pitch just one inning each which led to having to resort to Kim with the game on the line in the 11th. That said, Quirk did have the good sense or good fortune to bring Kim in when he would face three righthanders to start the inning. As mentioned in our BP2K7 player comment on Kim lefties tagged him to the tune of .325/.414/.534 in 2006 and interestingly, even though he's probably better suited to a relief role (a ROOGY?) given his splits, as he did last night he seems to have control issues out the pen and last season the Rockies brass complained that he works too fast with runners on base. Once runners got on last night Quirk had fewer options and so did not bring in his last lefty reliever in Jeremy Affeldt (with Tom Martin on the DL).
The game also saw a play that I don't think I've seen before. With one out in the top of the third and runners on first and second Snyder hit a fly ball to short right field where Hawpe promptly dropped the ball. The runner on second hesitated and Hawpe had time to relay the ball to Troy Tulowitzki who then threw on to Garrett Atkins to complete the force play. So the play was coded 965(1)/FO/F.1-2. Querying the Retrosheet logs I don't see a similar force play by a right fielder on a runner heading to third. Maybe it was unique.
By the way, here is an excellent article by Joe Sheehan (not the Baseball Prospectus one) on using some of the data generated by the new Gameday implementation. This is similar, although Joe did more work, to an article titled "The Information Revolution" I wrote during the World Series last year.
Monday, April 02, 2007
Opening Day Hype
Sunday, April 01, 2007
Predictions Time
Update: The National League predictions have now been posted.