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11-30-2012, 09:39 AM #41Senior Member All-Star
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I like using multiple seasons of UZR to determine if a player is excellent, above average, average, below average or awful defensively but I have issues with its weighting in WAR equations and I don't like WAR much as a result.
It would be great to address the SS issue but it's just not going to happen. The Twins have limited resources to trade or to spend and that needs to focus on starting pitching since that is a far bigger issue than addressing SS longterm. I am hoping that the Twins at least get a guy like Drew, YEscobar or Kelly Johnson to at least give the Twins one competent MI'er instead of a herd of utility players.
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11-30-2012, 09:39 AM #42Senior Member Big-Leaguer
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11-30-2012, 09:45 AM #43
That is a very poorly written paragraph. Jesus. I had to read it four times just to understand where he was going with it. Do you have a link to the full transcript or is that all there is to it?
Anyway, there are so many variables to UZR that the Law of Large Numbers applies even more than most statistics. When you're splitting the field into 80 (or whatever) zones, factoring out homers, line drives, infield flies, etc., then also factoring in pitcher GB rate, pitch speed, and a myriad of other factors, you're going to need a really large sample size for the metric to work.
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11-30-2012, 09:46 AM #44
I'm "bashing" something that both you and Brock seem to admit isn't worth relying on? That both of you seem to admit can be "doubled" for a centerfielder by having a faster rightfielder? That the inventor of said metric himself says "it doesn't mean what it says it means."
Sheesh. Doesn't sound like bashing to me.
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11-30-2012, 09:49 AM #45
I'm assuming you're addressing the Lichtman quote. It's from the Fangraphs "UZR Primer:"
http://www.fangraphs.com/blogs/index...hs-uzr-primer/
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11-30-2012, 09:52 AM #46
BTW...I'm curious...was Danny Valencia 6 runs better than the average AL third baseman over that sample size, or was he not? Or don't we know? Isn't that the crux of the issue?
Seems to me if you believe in UZR, you're obligated to believe, at least for that period of time, that Valencia was an above average third baseman.
Otherwise, we're back to "well no, but add 1+1=3 enough times...".
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11-30-2012, 09:55 AM #47Senior Member Big-Leaguer
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And here is more from the same kind of post
UZR tries to record a player’s likely true talent and estimate his future performance based on the nuances of the batted ball and the player’s response to those nuances. It is not trying to capture exactly what happens on the field according to some arbitrary categories, like most of the offensive metrics (which make no distinction between a lucky ground ball bleeder through the “5-hole” or a clean, line drive base hit to the outfield), even the advanced ones like wOBA or linear weights.
Sorry it is not a black and white number for you.
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11-30-2012, 09:55 AM #48
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11-30-2012, 09:56 AM #49Senior Member All-Star
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11-30-2012, 09:58 AM #50
Jesus, Chief. This is the very next paragraph:
The analogy with BA is, just because a player had a .334 BA does not mean that he hit the ball well. It is entirely possible the only reason that he hit .334 was because he got a lot of bloops and bleeders and most of his hard hit balls dropped for a hit. But, because we can verify that a player did indeed hit .334, we say that a player’s BA is a good record of what actually happened.
So he's not saying that he didn't play good defense, he's simply saying that the fielder was not challenged. It's akin to Joe Mauer getting to face AAAA pitchers for the entirety of September. Did he hit .450? Sure. Is that representative of how well he batted? Absolutely not.
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11-30-2012, 10:00 AM #51
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11-30-2012, 10:05 AM #52
He hit .311 but that tells you virtually nothing about how he actually played. I could also look at a guy's walk rate and then declare he had a stellar season because he walked 52 times in 500 PAs.
But then I'd probably tell you that it was Jamey Carroll and you'd laugh me out of the room.
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11-30-2012, 10:09 AM #53
The door should have stopped with Hardy. The day we picked him up nearly rivaled the stadium deal as one of my most exciting off-season days as a fan. I had spent several rediculously jealous years watching Hardy in Milwaukee. Stupid to let him go IMO. Few teams win without a solid SS, as Versalles and Gagne proved. Hopefully another will come along.
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11-30-2012, 10:11 AM #54
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11-30-2012, 10:15 AM #55Senior Member All-Star
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To some extent for the same reason he was .311 hitter. A few diving plays and some easy grounders hit to him and he makes more plays than an average 3Bman. I think the runs saved part of the equation is a little questionable since it's more of a plays made data set though.
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11-30-2012, 10:17 AM #56
1. He's saying that Jeter had good UZR numbers because he played SS in the major leagues for TWO YEARS and "wasn't challenged?" A) that's ridiculous, and B) how would he know that?
2. I would say if Joe Mauer hit .450 for a month that is EXACTLY representative of what his BA was. EXACTLY. Now you can parse the numbers, or the situation, and say he won't keep that up, because... . And you'd be right. But factually, he hit .450. Combine that with the next exactly accurate small sample of his BA, and the next, and the next, and you get an exactly accurate representation of what Joe Mauer hit, for any sample size you choose to construct.
So we're back the question, was, or was not, Danny Valencia better than average for that period of time as a third baseman? And if not, why should we trust the next small sample size? or the next? And why should we believe that adding together innacurate small samples leads to an accurate large sample?
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11-30-2012, 10:22 AM #57
Dude what on earth are you talking about? We are talking about how he doubled his UZR in 2011/2012 vs what he was putting up yearly in 2008-2010. In 2008-2010 he was healthy almost the entire time, 2011-2012 is when he had injury issues. Unless you think his concussion issues made him magically have a doubled UZR over his career average it is easy to assume that his UZR yearly average doubled 95% because of the fact that Revere was manning the OF with him.
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11-30-2012, 10:28 AM #58
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11-30-2012, 10:54 AM #59Senior Member Big-Leaguer
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By the numbers Valencia played well for a short stretch of time. Whatever motivated him to do so is clearly ancient history. As the sample size of his defense grew larger, his overall predictor of play became clearer. That is why you do not look at several small samples. You look at the whole pile of statistics of the playing career.
Is a Joe Mauer batting average against AAAA pitchers in September indicative of his talents against an ace?
Is what any September call up does 100% reliable for predicting future batting average? Brian Dinkleman batted .305 in 2011. Batting averages in spring training. By spring training numbers, Sean Burrows should have been a star.Small sample sizes. Look at the at bats versus the top line pitchers they faced would give a better indication of the talent. The talent is better assessed when you have more data. That is very basic, first concept, simple concept of statistics.Last edited by old nurse; 11-30-2012 at 11:05 AM.
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11-30-2012, 11:00 AM #60
1. He's saying that Jeter's situation and the low frequency of "determining" statistics (which is going to happen when you're dealing with a large number of variables and conditions) made Jeter look better than he actually was in reality. Conditions were favorable to him looking good as a fielder and there weren't enough "outlier" opportunities to draw a meaningful conclusion. Given the low frequency of certain situations that determine a player's "range", that's going to happen over the course of a season, even to shortstops (and definitely to outfielders, who receive even fewer opportunities to show their defensive acumen).
2. And I can list you fielding percentages. It doesn't tell you much of anything on its own. Yes, those fielding percentages "happened". It doesn't mean they're of much use to anyone. At the end of the day, looking at batting average is going to tell you just that, batting average. Which, on its own, is of limited use. UZR is attempting to do much more than that. It's trying to factor in dozens of things and give an accurate representation of what the fielder does in the field. Unfortunately, all those variables mean that you need A LOT of opportunities to draw any sort of meaningful conclusion... Again, we're back to the Law of Large Numbers.
Was Danny Valencia better than average defensively over that period of time? I have no idea, just like you'd have no idea if he faced scrub pitching to attain that .311 batting average. In the end, what do you prefer? A flawed metric that tries to take into account all possibilities faced by a player or a boolean metric that tells you only a fraction of the story? Me, I'll take the flawed metric that tries to explain the entire situation.



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