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Sunday, October 07, 2007

Bergen Record: O’Connor: The Boss to Torre: Win or else

Dump the Maypo-colored pajama jokes…the Boss is back! (until the next delicious batch of Vermont-styled maple goodness is ready..mmmmm!)

Joe Torre’s 12-year run as manager of the Yankees will likely end if his team does not rally to beat the Cleveland Indians in the AL Division Series, George Steinbrenner told The Record on Saturday night.

“His job is on the line,” the Yankees’ owner said in a phone interview. “I think we’re paying him a lot of money. He’s the highest-paid manager in baseball, so I don’t think we’d take him back if we don’t win this series.”

But with his team teetering on the brink of a knockout, the old Steinbrenner came out swinging on Saturday night, putting Torre on immediate notice and ripping into umpire Bruce Froemming, the veteran crew chief from Friday night’s Game 2 who declined to stop play despite an infestation of Lake Erie gnats.

“The umpire was full of [expletive],” Steinbrenner said of the retiring Froemming. “He won’t umpire our games anymore.”

Repoz Posted: October 07, 2007 at 01:18 PM | 138 comment(s) | Login to Bookmark
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   101. haven Posted: October 07, 2007 at 11:29 PM (#2566352)
Do you seriously reject the insight and utility offered by the Pythagorean principle?

Yes. Can you answer my simple question?

I have a degree in mathematics. I am a computer programmer. I honestly have trouble translating numbers into real life based on years of experience. This isn't about statistical analysis. This is about trying to ignore real life by focusing on numbers. In experience I don't think it works.
   102. Jolly Old St. Neck Wound, Moral Idiot Posted: October 07, 2007 at 11:32 PM (#2566362)
What do you get out of the analysis? It sure doesn't seem to have anything to do with real results.

Do you seriously reject the insight and utility offered by the Pythagorean principle?


The broad principle makes a lot of sense, but I'd find it even more useful if you could find a way to lessen the weight of extreme blowouts. I doubt if that 30-3 Rangers-Orioles game had a significance that lives up to the run total.

Beyond that, it'd be equally interesting to see a breakdown of how teams were able to score against pitchers of varying quality. They may already calculate this but I'm not sure where to find it.
   103. Steve Treder Posted: October 07, 2007 at 11:39 PM (#2566401)
Yes.

Then we are oceans apart.

Can you answer my simple question?

Yes. Pythag record has empirically proven to be a slightly better predictor of future W/L than actual W/L. It's not sensible to reject the value and utility of that insight.

This isn't about statistical analysis.

Yes, it is. Wins and losses are statistics. Runs scored and runs allowed are statistics. This is entirely about statistical analysis, whether simple or complex.

This is about trying to ignore real life by focusing on numbers.

The distinction between real life and numbers is a false dichotomy. Numbers are as real as anything else in the universe.
   104. Bob Dernier Cri Posted: October 07, 2007 at 11:43 PM (#2566416)
Well geez, the whole concept is that it isn't real life. It is a baseball game. If you score more runs than the other guy, you win.

If the Diamondbacks go on to sweep the LCS and the World Series, they are still faced with a problem in that they got outscored this year. They cannot conclude that runs scored do not matter. They can't say, "well, gritty play beats scoring runs, so let's extend Eric Byrnes another five years and let's acquire Darin Erstad to play first base."
   105. Zack F Posted: October 07, 2007 at 11:44 PM (#2566417)
Do you seriously reject the insight and utility offered by the Pythagorean principle?


Dunno...but I'm having a lot of trouble with the whole not eating beans thing!
   106. Steve Treder Posted: October 07, 2007 at 11:45 PM (#2566421)
The broad principle makes a lot of sense, but I'd find it even more useful if you could find a way to lessen the weight of extreme blowouts. I doubt if that 30-3 Rangers-Orioles game had a significance that lives up to the run total.

Then filter extreme blowouts out of the data, if you choose. They're rare enough that it wouldn't be all that hard to do.

Beyond that, it'd be equally interesting to see a breakdown of how teams were able to score against pitchers of varying quality. They may already calculate this but I'm not sure where to find it.

Lots of analysts perform this kind of stuff. Any of the mega-stats guys could direct you to it.
   107. haven Posted: October 07, 2007 at 11:50 PM (#2566440)
Then we are oceans apart.

We are definitely far apart.
Yes. Pythag record has empirically proven to be a slightly better predictor of future W/L than actual W/L. It's not sensible to reject the value and utility of that insight.

I am not completely sure what role actual W/L record provides in predicting future W/L record. So much changes. Plus I am not sure about the value of something that proves to be a slightly better predictor of the future. What is meant by slightly? And how do other factors figure into the prediction? Can that be measured?
The distinction between real life and numbers is a false dichotomy. Numbers are as real as anything else in the universe.

I guess this is why I can be a mathmetician and not a sabermatician. Numbers are real to me. Thinking numbers can predict future human performance is not real to me. Too many variables. Numbers can provide insights based on past performance. In my mind numbers can not predict.
   108. Steve Treder Posted: October 07, 2007 at 11:58 PM (#2566467)
I am not completely sure what role actual W/L record provides in predicting future W/L record.

Whatever role it provides has been empirically proven to be less impactful than Pythag.

Plus I am not sure about the value of something that proves to be a slightly better predictor of the future. What is meant by slightly?

I don't know the precise %'s. There are mountains of research on this subject.

Thinking numbers can predict future human performance is not real to me. Too many variables. Numbers can provide insights based on past performance. In my mind numbers can not predict.

I frankly don't understand what this means.
   109. haven Posted: October 08, 2007 at 12:12 AM (#2566540)
I frankly don't understand what this means.

That to me is your problem.

I mean situations change. Human beings change. We are talking about people playing a sport. Not something theoretical. Not pure mathematics. The human condition is never just about numbers. Some people learn. Some never learn. Some people adapt. Some never adapt. Numbers can not predict any of that.... Things can happen in a persons life that help their mental state or hurt their mental state. Numbers can not predict how a human being will change.

Just like trying to predict future W/L record based on past W/L record or past pythagorean W/L record seems like a fools errand to me. So much changes.
   110. bbc is prejudice bout men Posted: October 08, 2007 at 12:16 AM (#2566555)
well IF you are going to say that small sample size contest can't determind who is "the best" then the WS never DID measure it

and the question of future W/L - well what does that really have to do with which team got hot for 3 weeks and won the WS?

besides teams are not the same from year to year - guys leave, guys get hurt, guys get traded, guys retire, new guys play, the manager for no real reason you can figure decides to platoon an excellent offensive/defensive player with one who sucks, pitchers get older, pitchers get hurt, the ace reliever sux because albert pujols "destroyed" him

youneverknow...
   111. haven Posted: October 08, 2007 at 12:30 AM (#2566619)
youneverknow...

You really do never know.....

Despite how much you wish you knew.
   112. Mike Emeigh Posted: October 08, 2007 at 12:37 AM (#2566645)
Pythag record has empirically proven to be a slightly better predictor of future W/L than actual W/L.


Except for the one area that appears to be most relevant to this year's teams; teams that win in the .550 range while scoring and allowing runs in something closer to the .500 range. Every way I try to slice the historical data, I keep coming to the same conclusion: if the WP is in the .550 range, and the run differential is much lower than that, the .550 WP is more likely to be where the team ends up in the short term.

-- MWE
   113. Bob Dernier Cri Posted: October 08, 2007 at 01:09 AM (#2566761)
haven, I don't think anyone is going to deeply disagree with you. Numbers don't predict human behavior. You can't run a program that's going to tell you whether Joba Chamberlain is going to be discouraged by giving up a few runs to the Indians this October and thereby never meet his full potential. Who knows, indeed?

However, numbers are pretty good data for predicting numbers. Anything may happen in Albert Pujols's emotional and spiritual life in the next twelve months, but he is likely to hit somewhere around .330 next season. Their lifetime batting averages are better predictors of what Jason Bay or Vernon Wells -- or Jorge Posada or Placido Polanco, for that matter -- will hit in 2008 than their 2007 batting averages are. That sort of thing.
   114. haven Posted: October 08, 2007 at 01:16 AM (#2566785)
However, numbers are pretty good data for predicting numbers. Anything may happen in Albert Pujols's emotional and spiritual life in the next twelve months, but he is likely to hit somewhere around .330 next season. Their lifetime batting averages are better predictors of what Jason Bay or Vernon Wells -- or Jorge Posada or Placido Polanco, for that matter -- will hit in 2008 than their 2007 batting averages are. That sort of thing.

I don't disagree with this per say while including the broad idea that sometimes stuff changes.....

I just disagree with this general concept from what seems like a long time ago in my bourbon induced haze.....
No, isn't the only thing that really matters in the end. It is insofar as the winner of that World Series, of course. But it's perfectly all right to understand that there are plenty of additional ways in which to assess the value of the performance of teams. In fact I'd say it's more than all right; it's far more rational than being limited to the single lens of post-season results.
   115. cercopithecus aethiops Posted: October 08, 2007 at 01:31 AM (#2566807)
well IF you are going to say that small sample size contest can't determind who is "the best" then the WS never DID measure it

Exactly. And the first 65 or so times that they played it, hardly anybody even pretended that it did. It really was first and foremost a showcase. A reward for winning the pennant much more than a crucible for proving who had the better team. And I am not arguing that things were better back then; just pointing out that it really was different.

Well geez, the whole concept is that it isn't real life. It is a baseball game.

Thank you, Bob, from the bottom of my heart. Maybe Henry Kissinger knew what he was talking about when he said (paraphrasing), the lower the stakes, the more vicious the arguments.
   116. cercopithecus aethiops Posted: October 08, 2007 at 01:34 AM (#2566814)
So BTW, anybody buying the Brenly theory that big Stein's comments were part of a calculated plot to distract attention from the Yankees' hitters not hitting?
   117. Bernal Diaz has an angel on his shoulder. Posted: October 08, 2007 at 01:42 AM (#2566823)
And the first 65 or so times that they played it, hardly anybody even pretended that it did.


But it did eventually come to mean something. You have no point. None.
   118. haven Posted: October 08, 2007 at 01:50 AM (#2566830)
And the first 65 or so times that they played it, hardly anybody even pretended that it did.

This seems like a ridiculous concept to me. I honestly don't believe this at all. Do you have any proof that this statement is true. To me the series had meaning from the begining. It has meaning now. Why even play if this is not the case.
   119. We don't have dahlians at the Palace of Wisdom Posted: October 08, 2007 at 01:51 AM (#2566831)
I am saying the Yankees went 30-11 against those teams, does it not stand to reason that if they had, say, a series against more games against these teams, they would have won a few more games? Even if you give three games against the Indians they will have lost this week?

This game is fun. The Diamondbacks went 24-9 against the NL East this year. If they had been in that division all year, they would have won over a hundred games!
   120. cercopithecus aethiops Posted: October 08, 2007 at 01:57 AM (#2566842)
You guys know how to read? Good. So go back and read what bc wrote that I responded to. Nobody said the world series didn't mean anything. And I certainly didn't say that the teams that got there didn't try to win. She said it never determined who the best team was. That's what my comment was in response to, and what I wrote is true. If you don't believe me, just go read a little bit of what the people who played and managed in it in the pre-division era said about it. Getting to the world series was viewed as a much bigger deal than winning it.
   121. bbc is prejudice bout men Posted: October 08, 2007 at 02:00 AM (#2566844)
haven Posted: October 07, 2007 at 10:50 PM (#2566830)

And the first 65 or so times that they played it, hardly anybody even pretended that it did.

This seems like a ridiculous concept to me. I honestly don't believe this at all. Do you have any proof that this statement is true. To me the series had meaning from the begining. It has meaning now. Why even play if this is not the case.


- because back then didn't nobody care if it was "small sample size" or statistically significant. or if it would predict anything. just a contest between the top teams in 2 separate leagues
   122. Squash Posted: October 08, 2007 at 02:00 AM (#2566845)
Why even play if this is not the case.

Er ... is this a real question? Money?

It is actually true if you read the writings of the saintly old-timers, that the pennant was generally cited as the major goal. It even extended to popular baseball fiction, where the stories were almost entirely about winning the pennant with the WS being an afterthought.
   123. We don't have dahlians at the Palace of Wisdom Posted: October 08, 2007 at 02:02 AM (#2566849)
It is actually true if you read the writings of the saintly old-timers, that the pennant was generally cited as the major goal. It even extended to popular baseball fiction, where the stories were almost entirely about winning the pennant with the WS being an afterthought.

So then we're agreed. The Diamondbacks are the best team in the National League in 2007 and no crummy short series result will ever change that.
   124. Jolly Old St. Neck Wound, Moral Idiot Posted: October 08, 2007 at 02:17 AM (#2566870)
So BTW, anybody buying the Brenly theory that big Stein's comments were part of a calculated plot to distract attention from the Yankees' hitters not hitting?

If only Steinbrenner in his dotage had that subtle a sense of humor. But it did at least have the effect of keeping A-Rod out of the headlines for a day, which can't hurt.
   125. aleskel Posted: October 08, 2007 at 02:29 AM (#2566877)
great, since the Yankees won now Steinbrenner can think that his #### actually made a difference.
   126. Jolly Old St. Neck Wound, Moral Idiot Posted: October 08, 2007 at 02:42 AM (#2566890)
great, since the Yankees won now Steinbrenner can think that his #### actually made a difference.

Yeah, but hopefully by next week he'll have forgotten about it anyway, and will just fire Buck Showalter instead.
   127. cercopithecus aethiops Posted: October 08, 2007 at 02:43 AM (#2566892)
Steinbrenner has always thought that his #### actually made a difference. He's never needed evidence to convince him of that. Tonight's outcome won't change George's attitude about this kind of crap, and the other result wouldn't have changed it either.
   128. Steve Treder Posted: October 08, 2007 at 02:59 AM (#2566902)
teams that win in the .550 range while scoring and allowing runs in something closer to the .500 range. Every way I try to slice the historical data, I keep coming to the same conclusion: if the WP is in the .550 range, and the run differential is much lower than that, the .550 WP is more likely to be where the team ends up in the short term.

What's your sample size there, Mike?
   129. Joe Dimino Posted: October 08, 2007 at 03:19 AM (#2566918)
Anyone want to explain what the hell Joba is doing pitching more than one inning and 38 pitches with a 5-run lead? What was Torre possibly thinking?

I understand getting him one inning tonight, so he can get any confidence back that may have been lost after Friday's debacle. But there's no way he should have come out there for the 8th. Trust one of the scrubs with the 5 run lead, I mean you have a whole series to win here, not just one game.

He threw 25 pitches Friday, 38 Sunday and he's not going to be worth a damn Monday.

Brilliant Joe.
   130. Answer Guy Posted: October 08, 2007 at 03:28 AM (#2566922)
He's Joe Torre. He doesn't trust scrubs. He has his guys he trusts and that's about it unless he's trailing.

Plus if he lost tonight he'd have been fired. Or maybe not. *shrug* I hope Torre enjoys the money - seems like a lot to put up with.
   131. Big Train Posted: October 08, 2007 at 03:32 AM (#2566924)
Torre's explained that if he went to someone else, and they got in trouble, it would have been Mo for more than 3 outs.

He was thinking Joba and Mo for 6 innings today and tomorrow.

In the playoffs, you manage to win that game. I really didn't feel like sweating the Kyle Farnsworth show in the eighth.
   132. NJ is feeling better Posted: October 08, 2007 at 03:50 AM (#2566932)
Torre's explained that if he went to someone else, and they got in trouble, it would have been Mo for more than 3 outs.

He was thinking Joba and Mo for 6 innings today and tomorrow.


But with Hughes pitching as well as he was...why not get one more inning out of him?
   133. nick swisher hygiene Posted: October 08, 2007 at 04:25 AM (#2566946)
ok, so we have one Joba inning and 2 Mo innings tomorrow...Joba looked pretty gassed to me, but let's see what happens: he hasn't been hurt yet this year, which puts him one step ahead of Hughes.....

as for the main subject of this derailed thread: the way English football does it, where winning the league COUNTS, and winning the FA cup (single-elimination tournament, running alongside league season) also counts, makes all kinds of sense. because they both matter. the ability to dominate over 162 games matters. the ability to win a short series of agonizing high-pressure games in which a few big stars or unlikely heros can carry you also matters. the MLB system, like all American systems, favors the latter. and this I think plays into our obsession with chokers, big game players, and so on....
   134. willcarrollsux Posted: October 08, 2007 at 11:57 AM (#2567010)
Thinking numbers can predict future human performance is not real to me. Too many variables. Numbers can provide insights based on past performance. In my mind numbers can not predict.
That's flatly absurd.

Two minutes ago, I knew nothing about Spanish Premier League soccer. Then I looked up last year's standings, goals for, and goals against. That's now all I know about Spanish Premier League soccer.

I am willing to bet you that, this year, Barcelona will do well, and Athletic Bilbao will do poorly. Want to take that bet?
   135. cercopithecus aethiops Posted: October 08, 2007 at 11:58 AM (#2567011)
Trust one of the scrubs with the 5 run lead...

You watch those scrubs pitch much this year? I might not trust them with a fifteen run lead.
   136. Yeaarrgghhhh Posted: October 08, 2007 at 02:24 PM (#2567217)
Except for the one area that appears to be most relevant to this year's teams; teams that win in the .550 range while scoring and allowing runs in something closer to the .500 range. Every way I try to slice the historical data, I keep coming to the same conclusion: if the WP is in the .550 range, and the run differential is much lower than that, the .550 WP is more likely to be where the team ends up in the short term.

If this is based on your comments in that other thread, then your sample size is, what, three teams?

Look, pythagoras isn't everything, and there are always going to be exceptions, but it's still a sound way of analyzing teams. Baseball has been played for over 100 years, and there are thousands of team seasons in the books. If it were really true that a team could win consistently while getting outscored by leveraging their bullpen correctly (or whatever), then there should be a fair number of examples of such teams. AFAIK, there aren't. Nor are there enough examples of teams winning a lot of games while getting outscored to draw any meaningful conclusions about those teams. Doesn't mean that it's impossible to make the playoffs while getting outscored, just that it's probably pointless to try to derive much meaning from the DBack's success.
   137. Steve Treder Posted: October 08, 2007 at 11:42 PM (#2568207)
AFAIK, there aren't.

There aren't.

Four teams in MLB history have achieved a .550+ winning percentage while being outscored: the 1932 Pirates, the 1984 Mets, the 1997 Giants, and the 2007 Dbacks. It's the epitome of a fluke.
   138. robinred Posted: October 09, 2007 at 12:04 AM (#2568340)
They also provide him with far more talent than any other manager has.


About ten days ago, I asked you which team, Red Sox or Yankees, IYO, has the better:

25 man
system
FO
field manager

Your answer was "pretty close" in all areas.

So, do you think that the Yankees are actually a lot more talented than the Red Sox? Were they also a lot more talented in in 2003-2006?
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