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THE BOOK--Playing The Percentages In Baseball

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Tuesday, December 09, 2008

Primer on: The need for the positional baseline

Someone asked me, so here’s my reply:

At it’s most basic, the question is: “How would Willie Bloomquist field at each position, relative to the average player already at that position?”

It presupposes that Willie Bloomquist is not predisposed to have a special skill that can be leveraged more by one position than the other.  That is, he has average speed, average strength, average everything.  It doesn’t have to be literally Willie, but any composite will do.  Willie fits the definition so well.

Anyway, if Willie played SS, then the average SS would save 7.5 runs with the glove more than Willie would.  If Willie played 1B, then the average 1B would save 12.5 runs less than Willie would.

The problem that we are trying to rectify is finding some common baseline to compare each of our fielder to.  Since obviously the average SS is a far better fielder than the average 1B, we need to find a player who plays both positions, and is not a “natural” at either position.  That’s Willie.  I sometimes call this “Wins over Willie”.

With hitting, we don’t have that problem, because we know EXACTLY what the average hitter will do.


(6) Comments • 2009/01/01 • SabermetricsTalent_Distribution
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