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There's a potential sanity check that I haven't seen applied for any of the defensive metrics. Basically check how pitchers changing teams are affected.
BTW, I'm not sure if current batting metrics, let alone fielding metrics, cover the 19th Century well.
To a point. The systems that have evolved tend to be based on the same underlying set of data, and we don't know the extent to which recent ball-in-play data (both types of balls in play and distribution of balls in play) is representative of historical ball-in-play data. Furthermore, most of the systems are vetted against either ZR or UZR, and to the extent those systems are biased because of the nature of the data set, the wisdom of the crowds approach will reflect the biases.
-- MWE
I do have it, worked on the outfielders last night. But it's not very good, nothing that I'd use if I had alternative and better data. That being said, high error rates are to our advantage. When a good fielder has 7 errors and a bad one 18, then error rate does little to show the difference between them, compared to some estimate of how many hits allowed. But if a good fielder has 25 errors and a bad one has 80, then that's a big difference which does explain a lot (though certainly not all) of their defensive worth.
Outfielders are a pain in the A, because not only do you not have innings played, you've got guys who split their time among three positions and all you have listed is "OF". It is a huge benefit that the Lahman database has games played by OF position going back to 1871. But it still requires some mathematical gymnastics to estimate how much time the OF played at each spot, and how much of his PO, A, E should be estimated to be at each spot.
Soon I'll be able to give an estimate, and so far it looks like it passes the smell test - players who were well-regarded defensively score well, those who weren't do not, and the ranges in runs are in the same ballpark as the modern defensive metrics show (I would have scrapped it if I saw players rating as +70 or -70 for a season or something like that). Still, the holy grail is for retrosheet to publish play by play accounts going all the way back. They have completed the boxscore accounts for all of the 1920s so one can hope.
I need some help in rating the best outfielders from the first part of last century
The left fielders:
Sherry Magee
Zach Wheat
Duffy Lewis
Bobby Veach
Charlie Jamison
Goose Goslin
Heinie Manush
Al Simmons
Joe Medwick
Bob Johnson
Ted Williams
Ralph Kiner
center field:
Ty Cobb
Clyde Milan
Dode Paskert
Tris Speaker
Max Carey
Cy Williams
Edd Roush
Lloyd Waner
Sam West
Earl Averill
Doc Cramer
Joe DiMaggio
Dom DiMaggio
Right field:
Sam Crawford
Harry Hooper
Babe Ruth
Sam Rice
Harry Heilmann
Paul Waner
Mel Ott
Chuck Klein
Wally Moses
Bill Nicholson
Enos Slaughter
Mike, I wasn't talking about the wisdom of THIS crowd. I was thinking more about the wisdom of Shirley Povich, Fred Lieb, Red Smith, Casey Stengel, and/or Red Barber. Folks like that.
I don't know...in an age when there were more balls in play, more errors, most likely a greater spread of talent, I think the ranges should certainly be larger than today.
I think we have a pretty good idea of pre-modern ordinal measurement, just not cardinal measurement. A lack of reliable cardinal measures for 19th century frustrates inter-era comparisons, but otherwise I think that baseball historians have a pretty good handle on who were the best from that era in pretty much ever facet of the game.
And frankly the deadball game was so radically different than the modern form, I don't think it would possible to construct an valid inter-era metric even if we had PBP data for the 19th century. IMHO, those hoping to develop a historical defensive system that allows comparisons to current players should just start with the 1920s (or possibly post-WWII for data considerations).
Right. It wouldn't make as much sense to trot out Roger Connor's WARP3 or Albert Spalding's ERA+ as it would were we talking about players 100 years later.
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