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Baseball Primer Newsblog — The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand Thursday, July 24, 2008THT: Studeman: Do veteran players ‘know how to win’?Must print out...head to bar...demand Sudsy “The 8th Dwarf” read it...play some Chuck Carbo on the pukebox...have a nearly satisfying Diet Coke.
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And that's where I stopped reading the article...
I was hoping for a West Side Story reference.
They aren't the same thing, though. Offensive production before and after August 1, by nearly any metric, would paint a much clearer picture than WPA, which adds a ton of noise to this analysis.
Imagine my disappointment!
Imagine my disappointment!
I was actually disappointed as I was genuinely interested in the article until that point. Next time don't use a stat that is horribly flawed.
Yes, my suffering is deep and knows no bounds.
WPA/LI would mitigate much of that. I wouldn't use unweighted performance metrics because (whether people want to admit to it or not) there IS a difference between a home run that adds to a lead and one that takes you from being behind to being tied or ahead. Not *as much* of a difference as raw WPA gives you, but enough of a difference, IMO, so that you want to account for it when measuring how players react as the pressure ratchets up. WPA/LI does that.
-- MWE
Either way, I was reading it more as a search for truth in numbers, and not so much as a rebuttal to a common argument. Your explanation clears up your choice of metric.
...something that's absolutely necessary to gain acceptance, much of the time.
Tango's development and presentation of leverage is IMO the most important conceptual breakthrough in sabermetrics in the last 10 years - because (a) it provides a framework within which analysts can discuss what non-analysts perceive to be true, that some PAs in a game are more important than others, (b) it provides a way to do a direct comparison, and (c) it presents it in a way that is both logical and simple for non-statistically-oriented people to grasp. It targets the audience that is IMO most skeptical about the value of statistical analysis and engages that audience on their terms to a degree that other approaches have not been able to do.
-- MWE
I don't disagree at all. You could make an argument for some fielding insights or DIPS (your other favorite subject) but LI is incredibly useful and can hopefully bridge the gap between analysts and non-analysts.
I understand that, but WPA does not measure contribution to wins.
For what it's worth, I think some aspects of the 'know how to win' thing might exist on one level or another, but it has more to do with the individual player than his veteranness. Some guys just love the big games more than others, but it's not something you're going to be able to quantify well.
It does by definition.
Whatever. This seems to be a religious debate and I'll try to abstain. And don't take this personally. I got into this with Larry Mahnken once and I like him.
Whatever. This seems to be a religious debate and I'll try to abstain. And don't take this personally. I got into this with Larry Mahnken once and I like him.
WPA claims to do so, but it fails. After Tango mentioned it in another thread, I read up on WPA/LI. If I understood it correctly, it does a much much better job than WPA at actually measuring contributions to winning. And I don't take anything posted on the internet personally.
Cool. I don't think that many people do, but I'm often afraid that they do.
You see, this is all subjective, if you cared to pay attention and look for it, you would also see veteran players finding all sorts of "ways to lose" as well.
This may be a futile errand, but: the savvy of a veteran has to be seen in the context of his declining athletic ability. All age groups could be about equal (indeed, as frequently noted, they pretty much are, because they're all major-league players; guys who aren't good enough yet or any more drop out of the sample). But the ratio of savvy to skillz could be much higher among older players. Hence, looking just at their "WPA Diff" or any similar clutch stat isn't going to determine the wisdom of the old saw very much, if all people mean by the old saw is that old age and deviousness will defeat youth and talent ...
The 31-35 increase IS interesting, but is confounded because we don't know what's going on in the other age groups. I would guess that the 36-40 group would be that which is most affected by wear and tear, so I'm not shocked.
IMO, one of the critical sabermetric questions left is the censoring issue. Future playing time is often determined by past performance rather than current true talent level, so our ability to measure performance at all will be biased. In other words, certain players will be allowed to struggle at the beginning and others won't, even if they have the same true level of ability and it all depends on past performance.
Agreed.
I can understand preferring WPA/LI to WPA, and it may become preferred by the majority eventually. But it's pretty dang hard to explain just what a player's WPA/LI number represents.
This has been said before, but WPA quantifies the ups and downs of a game, and I find it fascinating for just that reason. I like looking at how players contributed, or didn't, within that context. And I think the average fan can relate to it as a result.
And that's all I'll say about the subject. :)
Diamondbacks vs. the Padres in San Diego. Micah Owings is pitching (and batting ninth) for the Diamondbacks. Peavy is pitching for the Padres. Huge pitcher's duel (an understatement): there is only one hit (and no walks or errors or HBPs or anything else causing runners to reach base) the entire game. Both pitchers pitch the entire game.
(1) Micah Owings hits a home run in his first at bat (in the third inning), but strikes out in his other at bats (in the sixth and ninth).
(2) Micah Owings strikes out in the third and the sixth innings, but hits a home run, breaking up the no-hitter with two outs in the ninth.
What is Micah Owings's offensive WPA for the game in situation (1)? What is it in situation (2)?
It's A LOT higher in situation 2, because the DBack's win probability went from roughly 50/50 to (I don't know off hand, 95%?)
Same fact pattern but make it in AZ instead, and in sit 2 his WPA would be even higher, since a walkoff in that situation would have made the DBack's win probability 100%.
Of course the problem is that in hindsight Owings contributed the exact same amount to each win.
Meanwhile, I don't like a metric that ultimately rewards a guy for performing badly in the early innings when, with a better performance early on, his team wouldn't need his heroics late. If David Ortiz can hit home runs at will in clutch situations, let him hit them early on so that the team doesn't ever get into those clutch situations.
Well, it depends on how the WPA is collected. Based on the way Fangraphs does it right now, Ortiz is penalized for the baserunner's out. There is a lot to be improved upon in the way the data is collected, including fielding breakouts.
Based on the way Fangraphs collects it, that's true. I don't know if it's true for Baseball Reference, or any other site that tracks it.
Back in the day, Jay Bennett tracked postseason WPA, and I believe he broke out fielding and baserunning, cause he collected the data himself based on personal observation, and not based on PBP feeds.
..which is inappropriate. Ortiz should get credit for the runner going to 3rd, and the runner should get the penalty for the out at the plate. (That's the way that Bennett et. al. do it.)
Yes, but then it's also possible that a fielder should have been penalized for the hit in the first place instead of the pitcher.
You're not really the audience to whom the metric is being targeted, so you can feel free to ignore it. Again, sometimes you have to speak the language of the broader audience if you expect to be heard.
-- MWE
But the ninth-inning homerun was superclutch!
Seriously, I totally get why people think that WPA is a junk stat and is useless. But it's a really fascinating junk stat. Owings is going to remember his walk-off homerun more than his 6th inning one, as will fans, and WPA captures that.
WPA isn't supposed to tell you who the best player is. Disregarding a statistic because it doesn't do something that it isn't supposed to do ... that's like saying "I don't believe in OPS because it ignores baserunning."
In my experience the "particular" audience you speak of isn't going to be anymore receptive to WPA than they are to Warp or Vorp or Baseruns or Zone rating, if it confirms what they already believe about a specific individual they'll use it the way a drunk uses a lamp post, if it contradcits what they believe, they'll go on a Murray Chass rant about how WPA or PWA or whatever is sucking all the enjoyment out of the game
I had the same opinion- until posters started using it as the be all and end all argument ender in MVP discussions and which player is better discussions.
In that way it's like RBI, a good, or at least interesting stat that (to me anyway) has negative value due to the way it is misused.
I guess I just don't see much of that. It certainly comes up in MVP discussions, where someone will make the Stathead 201 argument that "we're talking about VALUE here," but I can't remember anyone on this site using it as the lynchpin of any serious argument on ability.
If you present leverage rather than WPA, people get it. They get that certain plate appearances are twice as valuable as a typical plate appearance, while others are half as valuable.
-- MWE
That's mostly been my experience, too. But we all have our windmills. In particular, THT is oriented toward the sort fan who is open to learning more about the game.
For those who haven't checked, Fangraphs shows LI numbers for each play, game, and seasonal totals for all players going back a few decades (so far). It's really cool to see how the leverage numbers of pitchers change. As an example, and focus on the column "pLI" near the bottom of the page: Keith Foulke
That 2002 season, where he was pulled from the bullpen (and you see it from his LI plumetting so much that season), and his clutch score being so negative. But, his WPA/LI, which gives a better view as to how he was actually pitching, really shows him to be the same year after year.
That's what WPA and LI deliver for you, something that the traditional lines don't: the LI shows that he wasn't used in as high leverage. His WPA shows that he had much less impact than in his surrounding years, and yet his WPA/LI shows that he was really the same pitcher, and his clutch score shows that he pitched bad in some crucial situations, which probably led to his demotion.
***
Chris/16: "I think LI and WPA are flawed ways "
LI has nothing to do with your concern. Your WPA concern is legitimate, but your LI one is not.
***
Bob/21: agreed.
***
studes/25: agreed, it is harder to explain WPA/LI compared to WPA.
***
The issue of baserunning and fielding in WPA is one of implementation, not the framework. The more granular you have the data, and the more programming you want to do, the more you are going to represent it to what it should. Obviously, the hitter should not get penalized for the runner being thrown out. That's not a WPA problem, but either a data collection or programming problem.
***
As for the HR in the 1st or 9th: the assumption of win expectancy, WE, (as in life) is that everything in the future is unknown, and therefore, your expectancy is that average things will happen. So, hitting a HR in the 3rd increases your win expectancy by, I dunno, +.130 (say from .500 to .630), because you have a certain expectancy of what will happen in the following 6 innings. So, the WE represents how much you are willing to bet on the game's outcome at that point in time, and the change in WE (i.e., WPA) simply pays off on that bet.
In the 9th inning, you are "all in". You may have say won most of the poker hands before that, but if someone goes all in, and he wins, you lose.
That's all WPA is... an accounting of money. In real-life terms, as studes put it, it simply tracks your emotions, and quantifies it.
So, I can see why WPA gets a bad rap... either because it is misunderstood or misapplied. OBP doesn't get a bad rap, even though it weights a walk and HR as exactly 1. Its limitations are self-evident, and therefore, no explanation needed. With WPA, we have to work harder at explaining what it is and what it isn't.
Belittling WPA, as a stat, makes no sense, because it represents what it purports to represent. Nothing more.
WPA is relatively easy to understand, and measures something tangible. As do RBI. The fact that a statistic is misused does not make it a junk statistic.
In the 9th inning, you are "all in". You may have say won most of the poker hands before that, but if someone goes all in, and he wins, you lose.
That's all WPA is... an accounting of money. In real-life terms, as studes put it, it simply tracks your emotions, and quantifies it.
I understand this and agree with this.
Belittling WPA, as a stat, makes no sense, because it represents what it purports to represent. Nothing more.
I do not agree with this. Several people have stated that WPA measures contributions to wins. It does not do that. As I understand it, WPA/LI does that. As long as people continue to claim that WPA measures contribution to wins, I will keep calling it a broken stat.
This is all it is: we know the amount of payoff for that event, and we know what event took place. We match the two.
Now, you can argue that most of that was pure random variation, and that an ace-pair will normally just make you a 20$ profit (which is what WPA/LI would give you). Fine. But, you actually ended up with a 500$ profit. If you don't wish to assign it to the ace-pair, you have to assign it somewhere. You can assign it to some "timing" bucket. Whatever you wish to do, is fine.
But, you did have a 500$ profit recorded.
Therefore, what we can agree with is that 500$ was earned, but what your valid point would be that you don't want to assign that 500$ to a particular event, because that event really was just "right place right time". No problem. Create a "timing" bucket, and we can move on.
On the other hand, WPA does serve a purpose, if you look at it from the pitcher. A pitcher is the one who puts himself in the position he finds himself. So, any bad timing, he'd have to answer to.
As for relievers, Mo sort of puts himself in LI=2 situations because he is Mo the Great.
You could in one sense carry two timing buckets, one for pitchers and one for nonpitchers. For the nonpitchers, they share the timing bucket, and for pitchers, they own theirs.
You can't have a reliever with a 1.00 ERA who only pitches in mopup situations "earn" alot of money. He's basically Steve Jobs in 1978... he's not yet STEVE JOBS, even if he worked as hard in 1978 as he did in 1984. The money just wasn't there. Or someone who keeps winning penny-ante pots, but is not put in the high-stakes games.
As for your particular question, I have answered it on my wiki, at Question 40.
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