— Twenty-four, Twenty-five, Twenty-six.... ?
CTR: Inside the Numbers
20 games into the season, and the Yankees are 11-9. What's more encouraging to me is the shape of their underlying performance, which indicate that they're a far better team than that. Here's a look inside their numbers so far.
| Last |
PA |
wOBA |
OPS+ |
RAA |
psRAA |
psOPS+
|
| Jeter |
95 |
0.498 |
217 |
13.7 |
14.6 |
241
|
| Giambi |
79 |
0.542 |
254 |
14.4 |
13.2 |
232
|
| Rodriguez |
91 |
0.398 |
148 |
5.1 |
3.8 |
137
|
| Cano |
74 |
0.363 |
123 |
2.0 |
3.1 |
140
|
| Damon |
97 |
0.339 |
109 |
0.6 |
2.6 |
134
|
| Posada |
75 |
0.352 |
109 |
1.3 |
2.2 |
126
|
| Sheffield |
92 |
0.380 |
132 |
3.8 |
2.2 |
120
|
| Cairo |
19 |
0.366 |
135 |
0.6 |
0.3 |
123
|
| Matsui |
87 |
0.317 |
100 |
-1.2 |
0.0 |
115
|
| Crosby |
10 |
0.234 |
35 |
-0.9 |
-1.0 |
32
|
| Stinnett |
13 |
0.220 |
53 |
-1.3 |
-1.1 |
62
|
| Phillips |
23 |
0.180 |
0 |
-3.1 |
-3.4 |
0
|
| Williams |
53 |
0.234 |
38 |
-4.5 |
-5.4 |
34
|
If you've read
The Book, you are familiar with wOBA. If you haven't, go read it. wOBA is a linear-weights based formula scaled to map with OBP, ie .300 is bad, .400 is good, .500 is exceptional. It's the run value per plate appearance multiple by 1.15 to more closely match OBP. I use wOBA to calculate RAA(runs above average) by subtracting the league average wOBA from the player's wOBA, dividing by 1.15, multiplying by plate appearances, and then park-adjusting. psRAA and psOPS+ are just based on a comparison to the players listed at the same position in the AL.
| Last |
G |
GS |
IP |
ERA |
FIP |
FIP-ERA |
ERA+ |
BABIP |
CERA |
CERA+ |
HR+ |
BB+ |
K+ |
AVG |
OBP |
SLG |
wOBA |
RAA
|
| Mussina |
5 |
5 |
33 |
2.45 |
3.19 |
0.74 |
195 |
0.264 |
3.86 |
133 |
135 |
186 |
143 |
0.214 |
0.260 |
0.307 |
0.253 |
9.0
|
| Johnson |
5 |
5 |
25.7 |
2.81 |
3.43 |
0.62 |
162 |
0.273 |
3.98 |
129 |
94 |
347 |
118 |
0.235 |
0.254 |
0.381 |
0.273 |
6.4
|
| Wang |
5 |
5 |
30 |
4.80 |
3.56 |
-1.24 |
99 |
0.314 |
3.64 |
141 |
398 |
110 |
77 |
0.277 |
0.333 |
0.328 |
0.302 |
3.4
|
| Proctor |
8 |
0 |
13 |
1.38 |
3.04 |
1.65 |
346 |
0.222 |
4.20 |
122 |
inf |
52 |
113 |
0.174 |
0.309 |
0.227 |
0.261 |
3.4
|
| Myers |
10 |
0 |
6.3 |
0.00 |
1.77 |
1.77 |
inf |
0.200 |
2.76 |
185 |
inf |
188 |
170 |
0.143 |
0.182 |
0.143 |
0.155 |
3.4
|
| Villone |
8 |
0 |
7.7 |
2.35 |
2.67 |
0.32 |
204 |
0.250 |
3.03 |
169 |
inf |
132 |
101 |
0.207 |
0.258 |
0.286 |
0.243 |
2.4
|
| Smith |
2 |
0 |
1.3 |
0.00 |
3.19 |
3.19 |
inf |
0.000 |
2.36 |
218 |
inf |
inf |
0 |
0.000 |
0.000 |
0.000 |
0.000 |
1.2
|
| Rivera |
7 |
0 |
8.3 |
4.32 |
2.23 |
-2.09 |
111 |
0.370 |
2.98 |
172 |
inf |
158 |
118 |
0.278 |
0.351 |
0.333 |
0.312 |
0.7
|
| Farns |
10 |
0 |
7.7 |
3.52 |
2.67 |
-0.85 |
136 |
0.318 |
3.72 |
138 |
inf |
73 |
147 |
0.233 |
0.324 |
0.367 |
0.310 |
0.7
|
| Chacon |
6 |
4 |
25.7 |
4.56 |
4.56 |
0 |
105 |
0.286 |
4.77 |
108 |
118 |
98 |
92 |
0.255 |
0.330 |
0.431 |
0.331 |
0.1
|
| Sturtze |
9 |
0 |
5.7 |
4.76 |
7.07 |
2.31 |
100 |
0.267 |
6.87 |
75 |
37 |
102 |
130 |
0.273 |
0.333 |
0.591 |
0.387 |
-1.1
|
| Wright |
2 |
1 |
7.2 |
7.2 |
3.39 |
3.81 |
66 |
0.500 |
3.40 |
151 |
inf |
124 |
86 |
0.393 |
0.483 |
0.539 |
0.452 |
-3.0
|
CERA is also known as component ERA. CERA+ is calculated the same way as ERA+ but compared to the league average CERA. HR+, BB+, and K+, are park-adjusted comparisons to league average for BB, HR, and K per batters faced. wOBA is wOBA against, and is used to calculate the runs saved by the pitcher(RAA).
| POS |
NAME |
INN |
Runs |
Innings |
On Pace
|
| 1B |
Miguel Cairo |
20 |
0.36 |
165 |
3
|
| 1B |
Andy Phillips |
51 |
1.37 |
420 |
11
|
| 1B |
Jason Giambi |
104 |
-1.45 |
856 |
-12
|
| 2B |
Miguel Cairo |
18 |
-0.02 |
148 |
0
|
| 2B |
Robinson Cano |
157 |
2.32 |
1292 |
19
|
| 3B |
Alex Rodriguez |
175 |
0.26 |
1440 |
2
|
| SS |
Derek Jeter |
172 |
-4.71 |
1415 |
-39
|
| SS |
Miguel Cairo |
3 |
0.00 |
25 |
0
|
| LF |
Bernie Williams |
8 |
0.29 |
66 |
2
|
| LF |
Bubba Crosby |
6 |
0.09 |
49 |
1
|
| LF |
Hideki Matsui |
161 |
0.10 |
1325 |
1
|
| CF |
Johnny Damon |
143 |
0.29 |
1177 |
2
|
| CF |
Bernie Williams |
16 |
0.11 |
132 |
1
|
| CF |
Bubba Crosby |
16 |
0.40 |
132 |
3
|
| RF |
Bernie Williams |
25 |
0.58 |
206 |
5
|
| RF |
Bubba Crosby |
9 |
0.05 |
74 |
0
|
| RF |
Gary Sheffield |
141 |
-0.01 |
1160 |
0
|
| C |
Jorge Posada |
139 |
0.76 |
1144 |
6
|
| C |
Kelly Stinnett |
36 |
0.56 |
296 |
5
|
|
Total |
175 |
1.37 |
1440 |
11.26
|
I'm using the Zone Rating system that Chone Smith (aka Anaheim Rallymonkey of Maryland) first introduced in his
Tweaking Zone Rating article on this very site. Standard caveats about sample size and defensive metrics apply, of course. I thought these numbers are way off, but the Yankees are fifth in the AL in defensive efficiency, so maybe they're not as off as I thought.
Strength of schedule has to be considered when looking at these numbers. I can't see the Yankees preventing runs at this pace all year. The best thing I see for the Yankees' chances so far has been the resurgence of Mike Mussina. If that continues, they'll be in pretty good shape.
SG in ATL
Posted: April 28, 2006 at 01:14 PM |
8 comment(s)
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Anyways, I still like looking at run values per out rather than PA, since the only thing a player does that leads to the game ending is making outs. The numbers stay pretty close, but not quite. Some of your differences are probably because you've added in PFs, which I have yet to do.
And how long will it be until Torre cuts bait on Sturtze.Sadly, probably not until the end of the season, after he's blown four or five games.
SG, I think I figured out a solution. If not I'll email you. I don't know if I know your IM name.
I thought Yankee fans might get a kick out of this article:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/12519086/from/RS.3/
I think Mike Celizic is the biggest idiot alive.
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