Archie
SP Nation and I Ruin things
- Since
- Jan 27, 2010
- Messages
- 24,451
- Score
- 2,385
- Tokens
- 50
Hits (and hence batting average) are generally a function of luck and the quality of the defense rather than any reflection of the pitcher. The BABIP is the batting average of balls in play which is largely influenced by the defence and also random variation; BABIP should generally revert to a pitcher's career numbers, .471 is unsustainable through the season.
I understand Babip and regression to the mean for both pitchers and hitters in that category.
but I find it hard to agree completely with the first portion of the above statement. Hits/BA are generally a function of luck and the quality of defense?
I believe that is a portion of a hitter's BA, but its alot smaller than the actual fundamental skill on squaring a ball up that a hitter has.
otherwise how would we have such consistent lucky outliers year after year like Pete Rose, Wade Boggs, Tony Gwynn, Stan Musial, Ty Cobb, George Brett, Ichiro, ect ect.
they didn't get THAT lucky every year.
3-4 years ago I was big on using the eye test of defense when capping a baseball game. I think the market was behind in that. It caught up in 2010 I think. and became efficient by and large.
I think that Defensive metrics suck and will never fully tell the whole story. I think people can over Sabermetricize and lose some of the innate feel for the game.
players AREN'T just random number generators as Justin7 might say.
I least I hope not. cause I hate computers