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- Path: sparky!uunet!comp.vuw.ac.nz!canterbury.ac.nz!otago.ac.nz!guilford
- From: guilford@otago.ac.nz
- Newsgroups: rec.sport.baseball
- Subject: Re: Cecil signs :-( :-( :-(
- Message-ID: <1993Jan28.143859.594@otago.ac.nz>
- Date: 28 Jan 93 14:38:59 +1300
- References: <1993Jan23.003631.5811@CSD-NewsHost.Stanford.EDU> <2467@blue.cis.pitt.edu> <1993Jan25.155100.5403@cs.cornell.edu> <2473@blue.cis.pitt.edu>
- Organization: University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand
- Lines: 102
-
-
- In article <2473@blue.cis.pitt.edu>, genetic+@pitt.edu (Dr. Dave) blurts out:
-
- > Thus spake tedward@cs.cornell.edu (Edward [Ted] Fischer):
-
- >>In article <2467@blue.cis.pitt.edu> genetic+@pitt.edu (Dr. Dave) writes:
-
- >> Billy Hatcher and Dan Gladden seem
- >>clearly useful, as without them (and their clones) around, major
- >>league baseball would only be able to field about 15 teams.
-
- > On the other hand, without them (and their clones), the teams that win
- > pennants wouldn't win nearly as easily. The fact that they may be the
- > best available for a given team at a given time does not change the fact
- > that they are making it *very* difficult to compete with the good teams.
- > Which is all I'm talking about. For purposes of comparing AGAINST THE OTHER
- > TEAMS IN THE LEAGUE (which is what pennants are all about), league average
- > is the correct baseline. W/L record is a zero-sum game among a finite
- > collection of teams, where every team gains advantage only by improving
- > relative to the quality of the opposition OVERALL, not by improving relative
- > to the ability level of the worst players in the league.
-
- 1. Okay, Dr. Dave is defining baseball value as wins over .500, rather
- than just wins.
-
- 2. Any baseline will do in making comparisons among, say, first basemen.
- Consider five baselines: worthless, O'brien, replacement, average, Fielder.
- The distance between O'brien and Fielder is the same, of course, regardless
- of the baseline used to measure their value.
-
- 3. Of course, the interesting nugget in this thread is, how to make
- comparisions BETWEEN (or *between*, take your pick) positions. So
- does Dr. Dave's valuation method help us answer this question?
-
- 4. At first glance, maybe. Suppose Cecil Fielder and Omar Vizquel are
- both one win above the average level (I'm assuming you measure distance
- from average in terms of wins). There is some intuitive appeal to
- saying that Cecil and Omar are equally valuable -- the presence of
- both on an otherwise average team will make that team 82-80 instead
- of 81-81.
-
- 5. On the other hand, is that relevant? The presence of both on
- a hypothetical team consisting of nine players -- one for each
- position -- who are each one win above average will not change that
- team's won-loss record -- it will be 90-72 regardless of whether they
- have Cecil or Omar.
-
- 6. And now suppose that the replacement level at SS is 2 wins below
- average and the replacement level at 1B is 1 win below average.
- A replacement level team will get 3 wins by acquiring Omar, 2 by
- acquiring Cecil.
-
- 7. Furthermore, suppose the Mariners and Tigers are contemplating a trade,
- CF for OV, where the M's would play a replacement level SS and the Tigers
- a replacement level 1B. Clearly the M's would lose one win by making
- this trade -- they wouldn't make it.
-
- It seems more likely that the M's would be able to trade Omar for a 1B
- that was 2 wins above average.
-
- (Market imperfections? I dunno)
-
- 7. Now suppose Frank Thomas becomes twice as good a hitter as he used
- to be. Clearly this drives up the average level at 1B. Does Cecil
- Fielder become less valuable? Well, how does this impact the Tigers
- chances of winning ballgames? Clearly, it's harder to beat the White
- Sox now, so Cecil may seem less valuable....but isn't Lou Whitaker
- and Mickey Tettleton just as less valuable? I'm confused as to how
- Frank's improvement changes Cecil's value, especially in making
- comparisons with other positions. Suppose Cecil is now only 0.7 wins
- above average. This doesn't seem to affect the equation in any
- potential trades, so I don't see how it affects his value.
-
- (Actually, I do think it affects his value, and the value of all of the
- other 1B -- just subtly, and the change in value doesn't seem to me to
- be the same as the distance from the average).
-
- > If you choose to field a team in a given league but not to try to win, you
- > of course will have a different notion of what a player's use value is.
-
- But why is "try to win" synonymous with .500, with the average level?
- It's possible to "win" with a 79-83 record, with below average players.
- At the same time it's nearly impossible to win with a 83-79 record.
- So this celebrated role for the average level seems to me somewhat
- artificial in principle....
-
- >>>Thought experiment: suppose everybody else's starting 9 suddenly got much
- >>>much better, but yours didn't, and the talent not currently in the majors
- >>>stayed the same. Clearly, your players are suddenly much less valuable than
- >>>they used to be, because they will win many fewer games than they used to.
- >>>But replacement level HAS NOT CHANGED; average level has.
-
- Perhaps it would be true, if there were only 28 infinitely-lived players
- for each position, that use value = distance from average. But I'm
- confused. Why average. And anyway, this isn't the way it is, careers
- are short and some teams have lots of talent at a position and others
- have little -- replacement level IS of interest.
-
- And besides, why are use value and market value different? I still don't
- follow....
-
- Bill Guilford
-