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Tuesday, February 09, 2010

Baseball Prospectus:  Introducing SIERA

Matt Swartz and Eric Seidman introduce another way of measuring pitcher effectiveness:

[W]e have invented a new statistic, Skill-Interactive Earned Run Average (SIERA), which corrects the problems with old estimators while adding a few more realistic assumptions. This was done first by un-foiling all of the individual components in QERA while making an adjustment for the issue with the ground-ball denominator issue, and testing to see which interactions and squared terms were relevant by using multiple linear regression analysis. Essentially, we changed the GB/BIP to (GB-FB-PU)/PA and evaluated all of the terms in the exponential regression, removing those with insignificant p-values; while the QERA formula only shows three variables, un-foiling the formula reveals several more. We identified two terms that were not useful: the squared term of walks, and the interaction between walk and strikeout rate. The squared terms on strikeout and ground-ball rates were both significant, and we also found important interactions between walks and grounders and between whiffs and grounders that have strong effects on run scoring.

As a result, SIERA accomplishes the following:

1.  Allows for the fact that a high ground-ball rate is more useful to pitchers who walk more batters, due to the potential that double plays wipe away runners.
2.  Allows for the fact that a low fly-ball rate (and therefore, a low HR rate) is less useful to pitchers who strike out a lot of batters (e.g. Johan Santana’s FIP tends to be higher than his ERA because the former treats all HR the same, even though Santana’s skill set portends this bombs allowed will usually be solo shots).
3.  Allows for the fact that adding strikeouts is more useful when you don’t strike out many guys to begin with, since more runners get stranded.
4.  Allows for the fact that adding ground balls is more useful when you already allow a lot of ground balls because there are frequently runners on first.
5.  Corrects for the fact that QERA used GB/BIP instead of GB/PA (e.g. Joel Pineiro is all contact, so increasing his ground-ball rate means more ground balls than if Oliver Perez had done it, given he’s not a high contact guy).
6.  Corrects for the fact that FIP and xFIP use IP as a denominator which means that luck on balls in play changes one’s FIP.

Part 2 of the introduction can be found here.

Fred Garvin still has outstanding warrants Posted: February 09, 2010 at 08:25 PM | 13 comment(s) Login to Bookmark
  Tags: sabermetrics

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   1. The Piehole of David Wells, Depends Salesman Posted: February 09, 2010 at 08:50 PM (#3457062)
Wow. They published the formula. A lot of constants in it.
   2. Liver of blaspheming 'zop Posted: February 09, 2010 at 09:15 PM (#3457107)
You know what I hate (going back to my days in science)? The need to create strained phrases to justify acronyms. Are we too simple-minded to call it "adjusted era" and abbreviate it, "AERA"? We wont like it as much as if it has a witty acronym?
   3. JJ1986 Posted: February 09, 2010 at 09:18 PM (#3457118)
Are we too simple-minded to call it "adjusted era"


This is what ERA+ is actually called.
   4. Kid Charlemagne Posted: February 09, 2010 at 09:21 PM (#3457125)
SIERA? Now to be completists we need statistics named MYSTIQUE and AURA.
   5. Pasta-diving Jeter (jmac66) Posted: February 09, 2010 at 09:23 PM (#3457128)
since we all live our mothers basement, we could shout up the stairs "I found the treasure of SIERA, Madre!!"
   6. RoyalsRetro (AG#1F) Posted: February 09, 2010 at 09:28 PM (#3457134)
To get a more useful analysis, I would look at the Run Utilization Base Evaluation Number of Skill-Interactive Earned Run Average or the "RUBEN SIERA"
   7. The Essex Snead Posted: February 09, 2010 at 09:47 PM (#3457157)
[6] That acronym's way too bulky to be useful.
   8. davekemp Posted: February 10, 2010 at 01:25 AM (#3457397)
To get a more useful analysis, I would look at the Run Utilization Base Evaluation Number of Skill-Interactive Earned Run Average or the "RUBEN SIERA"


Primey for #6
   9. Cowboy Popup Posted: February 10, 2010 at 01:32 AM (#3457401)
[6] That acronym's way too bulky to be useful.

I think it'll be pretty good at first, but it won't age well. It could have a renaissance in about 15 years though.
   10. Barry`s_Lazy_Boy Posted: February 10, 2010 at 01:42 AM (#3457409)
I think RUBEN SIERA is bound to be a HOF-quality stat.
   11. PreservedFish Posted: February 10, 2010 at 01:56 AM (#3457414)
It's up there with NARWHAL
   12. Dock Ellis on Acid Posted: February 10, 2010 at 02:05 AM (#3457417)
Oh boy! Just in time for the subscription I canceled two years ago.
   13. Jeff R., P***y Mainlander Posted: February 10, 2010 at 02:32 AM (#3457429)
You know what I hate (going back to my days in science)? The need to create strained phrases to justify acronyms. Are we too simple-minded to call it "adjusted era" and abbreviate it, "AERA"? We wont like it as much as if it has a witty acronym?


Seriously. If I was goofing around with a toy projection system I might call it PECOTA, but I sure as hell wouldn't expect it to be taken seriously by anyone else.

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