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The idea that speed on the basepaths is worthless is ridiculous. If you have a team of 2000 pound men who can walk 60% of the time, they may be OBP machines, but if they cannot run, hit or field,you are going to lose a lot of ballgame.
But obviously there's a point on the other side where cosmetically a player might LOOK like they clog up the bases but do not, or at least do not to an extent that they trump their strengths.
Finding that point is worth striving for. That there are people doing so ineffectively on either side is not an indictment of the strategy.
There is simplistic "Fat Catcher" sabermetrics. But there is also the idea that you can use detailed performance analysis to address subtle changes in game environment that may not be picked up by naked eye observations. If you build a 60-foot wall in center 500 feet away, you should rate speedburners higher than power. If you have a low run scoring environment and great bunters, you should bunt all day. If you build a tiny park in a league where the pitchers are wild, you should buy plate discipline, powerful players. Anyone knows these things, but with only naked eye analysis, you are less likely to be able to make similar adjustment in more subtle conditions.
We were dumbass high school kids. I'm quite sure that
Fair enough and of course. There is a place for both.
I've read Jonas, his "The Gnostic Religion" is a great piece of scholarly reconstruction and existentialist philosophy, but it's way out of date. He drew a lot of conclusions from faulty anthropology which dated the religious myths of the Mandaeans many centuries earlier than they should have, and used their modern myths as ancient sources. He was working primarily from the heresiologists, and among them primarily from Irenaeus. He ended up recapitulating many of Irenaeus' categories pretty much uncritically.
There's very little evidence of any unitary Gnosticism. There's no evidence of people who saw themselves as Gnostics. The category has served for many, from the heresiologists to modern scholars, as a bugbear against which to define the moderate and true Christianity. Irenaeus' work was incredible at defining what it meant to be a Christian by defining his people over and against an other, but we have little reason to believe that other constituted a real, unified historical being.
And don't diss Jonas.
Serously, how is this "issue" supposed to be decided once and for all in less than 600 posts.
>>You might want to lay off the Union Kool-aid. I wasn't nasty with you, and I don't see myself as being clever. I'd say most of the people who post here are probably quicker than I am. I have some opinions, and I am here to test them/examine them and to learn. And also to see RETARDO and Nieprorent go at it.
"People here have not said Morgan "has weaknesses." They've routinely called him an idiot. B'lasher has NEVER called Beane an idiot, but has questioned the fanboy love and the uncritical attitude towards him."
>>OK, people have called Morgan an idiot. I wasn't defending them--I was suggesting that there are some areas of baseball analysis in which informed outsiders know more than Joe Morgan, just as there are areas in which Joe Morgan knows more than they do. People here and elsehwere have also criticized Morgan on a case-by-case basis. Is that something you do not think should be done, and if so, why not?
"There is no equivalence in the treatment. And yes, Beane's experience in baseball helps him in baseball. I said nothing to make you think otherwise. Stick to the point."
>> Yes, sir.
"What was "counterintuitive" is this crazy divide between "playing baseball" and the "objective analysis of baseball events." You guys are deluding yourselves if (1) you think it's really objective, and (2) if you think "playing baseball" does not confer knowledge on those involved such that they'll be able to understand baseball better than those who have not (typically)."
>>I made my view of this pretty clear with the Bellhorn example and the James/Garciaparra quote. As you yourself said, there is a place for both. Playing the game certainly does "confer knowledge." However, you and Backlasher appear to be taking the position that "inside" knowledge is generally, if not always, superior. You may be right. I tend to disagree, however, and like I said, and as any number of others have said, it's a false dichotomy anyway.
BL--
Thank you for the long and informative answer to my questions about the Braves.
Morgan is an idiot. Have you listened to him? I'm not talking about his failure to follow sabermetrics. One can be unanalytical or even wrong without sounding stupid. But Morgan can't. Just listen to his common discussions with Jon Miller over the course of a game. He's incapable of framing his own arguments intelligently or holding an intelligent exchange with Miller. That doesn't mean everything he says is wrong. People can be right and stupid. It doesn't mean he has no useful information; often when he's calling a game he can point to something small which happened which most people would overlook which led to a particular outcome. It just means he isn't smart.
At what point do the objectivists revisit their assumptions? When do they figure that perhaps they're looking in the wrong places? Never, b/c as so many philosophers of science have shown, ostensibly "objective" science is captured by biases and context as most if not all knowledge is.
To turn a paraphrase, "objective" science is the worst form of knowledge... except all the others. They figure that perhaps they're looking in the wrong places when someone shows where the right places are and what's in those places. This pop-ThomasKuhnism is way out of control. It's a lot easier to say "I don't believe the result because science has biases and I can put scare quotes around the word 'objective'" than to actually do the hard work of showing how and why the result is wrong.
What was "counterintuitive" is this crazy divide between "playing baseball" and the "objective analysis of baseball events." You guys are deluding yourselves ... (2) if you think "playing baseball" does not confer knowledge on those involved such that they'll be able to understand baseball better than those who have not (typically).
Playing baseball -- which, by the way, I think most if not all of us have done at _some_ level -- confers a certain _type_ of knowledge that doesn't come from objective analysis. For instance, if I want to know how a fast guy on first makes the pitcher feel, I'll ask Joe Morgan. (Actually, I won't, because Morgan -- not being a pitcher -- doesn't have any firsthand knowledge of this. I'll ask a pitcher. (On the other hand, does "a pitcher" really speak for all pitchers?))
But if I want to know the effect on the pitcher, I don't care how he "feels." I care how he performs. That's objective, and you're deluding yourself if you think mere playing of baseball confers such knowledge on those involved such that they'll be able to understand better than those who have not (typically). As so many cognitive psychologists have shown, ostensibly experiential "knowledge" is far more subject to bias and context than "ostensibly objective" knowledge is.
*snicker* Because bunting -- no matter the circumstances, no matter the context -- is the focus of evil in the modern world.
the A's also have only 2 SB so far this season.
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speaking as someone who has enjoyed following the A's really closely since '99, the next several seasons strike me as holding the promise of much intrigue, but perhaps i'm either easily entertained or lack context..
anyway, fwiw, Chavez is advertising in bright lights that he misses his buddy Miguel over there in Baltimore - the topic of chavez, tejada, and Beane - or who to sign if your Beane and had to choose between the two, looks like it favors one side pretty clearly right now - (sure it's only been a year, but, I didn't see the A's in the play-offs last year)...
speaking of the play-offs last year,
i might be off base here, but my memory is that a workable arguement could be made that the A's missed the playoffs last year as much due to the way the Big 3 pitched in September (down the stretch) as anything else anyone cares to point out..
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Mark Kotasy has been terrific for the A's for the past year!
:-*)
I guess that you can consider Earl Weaver modern, but he thought that bunting was pretty evil.
If I'm not mistaken, the Yankees of the 40s-60s didn't sacrifice a whole lot either.
If I'm not mistaken, the Yankees of the 40s-60s didn't sacrifice a whole lot either.
Yes, but not bunting when a catcher is playing 3B is not smart, tactical baseball. In fact, it's quite the opposite.
Weaver, McCarthy, Stengel, Houk, whoever, all would have screamed at their speediest players for not bunting down the 3rd base line given the right situation.
I agree, watching Mulders last start was painfull. He was god awful.
1) Marco Scutaro (aka losing Mark Ellis for the entire season)
2) The collapse of the bullpen (aka Foulke taking so long to make his decision that by the time Billy Beane knew he needed a new closer, Arthur Rhodes was the only option left)
3) Eric Chavez's injury
I actually did write something about steriods in the "LASIK" discussion. Ask and ye shall receive, hehe. It's something of a rant - no real format or organization. But it's something. Maybe you missed it?
Quick Link
I look forward to a response.
The reason the A's didn't make the playoffs last year is named Vladimir Guerrero.
I can't criticise the A's for not bunting. It would make no sense, since they've already used the bunt to beat the Angels in an extra inning game this year.
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