It makes perfect sense. Starters having more pitches to fall back on. Relievers usually only have one or two good pitches, so the pitcher has less options to make adjustments.
Read More...This lines up well with what Jeff Zimmerman and I found regarding pitcher aging and how it differs depending on a pitchers role.
Let’s take the example of strike outs. Jeff and I found that while starting pitchers were able to mitigate against their decline in velocity–and therefore experienced a less drastic decline ...
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1. Mirabelli Dictu (Chris McClinch) posted on March 08, 2013 at 10:06 AM # hit 0 | hit 0Wow is this spectacularly wrong. Yes, a portion of the organization is stat minded folks doing stat things but SABR is so much more than that. It is an organization that actively explores the history of the game and tries to keep it at the forefront. For every sat based presentation at the convention there is one about scouts or some historical figure that is forgotten about or so much more.
The informal discussions (my favorite part of every convention) are often just good old fashioned but informed baseball discussion. I can't imagine a more fun group of baseball fans, not number crunchers, baseball fans anywhere.
Bingo. To me the most important/rewarding work I've read over the years as a member has been the non-stat related work. The quality of material that is published is often at an extremely high level, and as noted, local chapter/convention meeting banter is unmatched.
Several years ago SABR created the Chadwick Award, to honor the greatest researchers in history, a veritable Hall of Fame for the field, Of the 22 honorees thus far, five could be said to lean toward the statistical in their research,
Chadwick Award.
That strikes me as fairly representative.
Most especially including the fine biographical material produced under the guidance and assistance of the gentleman who posted immediate after this.
And for God's sake, can we PLEASE finally put away the "they told Torii there was no money and then signed Hamilton" bulls**t?! Hunter signed with Detroit on November 16th. The Angels were still pursuing Zack Greinke at that time, who signed for kind of a lot of money with LA about 3-4 weeks later, and suddenly the Angels had a lot of cash they were willing to part with, and a willing taker. Maybe if Hunter had waited it out a bit, he'd still be in Anaheim.
I love Torii and everything he did for the Angels these last 5 years.
But Hamilton is 1) 5 years younger and 2) a bigger star. Seems to me the Angels took a go big or go home approach here, and had they not landed Hamilton they would have gone with internal options. I don't think it likely they were going to spend in Hunter's range, he did the right thing to sign with the Tigers.
Because Bill James made the well-intentioned mistake of calling it "sabermetrics" and now it's a connection that SABR can't avoid no matter what SABR really is. If you want to do your bit for helping clarify what SABR is, stop using the term sabermetrics.
The SABR Rattlers would be a good new for a nerdy alt rock band.
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