Posted by tecwrg on 5/23/2014 1:20:00 PM (view original):
Posted by bad_luck on 5/23/2014 1:02:00 PM (view original):
Posted by tecwrg on 5/23/2014 12:29:00 PM (view original):
Posted by bad_luck on 5/23/2014 12:10:00 PM (view original):
Posted by MikeT23 on 5/23/2014 11:58:00 AM (view original):
But let's use BABIP for a moment.
I guess it's pretty close to .300 for the league. So, essentially, 3 out of every 10 balls put in play is a hit.
100% of the MLB strikeouts do not fall in for hits. Striking out takes that 30% chance of a hit, and we're not even counting homers, away from your team.
No one has said that a strikeout was the same as a ball in play. The argument is that strikeouts are the same as outs in play.
"The argument is that strikeouts are the same as outs in play."
And virtually any and every knowledgeable and credible baseball person says "No, they're not".
Since you're saying "Yes, they are", what does that say about your knowledge and credibility?
I think we've been over this before.
Most of the time, all outs have the same negative run value. A small percentage of the time, a groundball out up the middle or to the right side or a deep fly out is less of a negative than a strikeout, pop out, shallow fly out, or groundball to the pitcher/3rd baseman. More often than that, a groundball out is signigicantly worse than a strikeout, a fly out, or a pop out.
Overall, things even out and a pop out or a strikeout is no worse than any other out. The rate that outs are made is much, much more important.
Wrong, Perfesser Einstein.
Look at a run expectancy chart. Please show me an instance where an out that advances runners results in the same (or worse) new expected value than an out that does not advance runners. Since you'll be unable to do that, let me jump ahead to my next question: how does an out that advances runners "have the same negative run value" as an out that does not advance runners?
I get the "double plays are devastating" argument. They are bad for an offense. But it's part of the risk/reward of trying to make something happen by putting the ball in play. I'll take the more instances of increasing my chances of scoring runs over the fewer instances of inning killing GIDP every time.
I'm not arguing that an out that does not advance runners is ever better than an out that does. It's just the same most of the time.
Base Runners |
1993-2010 |
1B |
2B |
3B |
0 outs |
1 outs |
2 outs |
__ |
__ |
__ |
0.240 |
0.168 |
0.133 |
1B |
__ |
__ |
0.061 |
0.071 |
0.071 |
__ |
2B |
__ |
0.015 |
0.027 |
0.034 |
1B |
2B |
__ |
0.015 |
0.027 |
0.033 |
__ |
__ |
3B |
0.002 |
0.009 |
0.015 |
1B |
__ |
3B |
0.006 |
0.012 |
0.016 |
__ |
2B |
3B |
0.003 |
0.008 |
0.008 |
1B |
2B |
3B |
0.004 |
0.010 |
0.012 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
73.0% |
|
|
|
|
|
20.6% |
|
|
|
|
|
6.4% |
|
|
73% of the time, all outs are exactly the same, plus all the times in the other 27% where a strikeout is exactly the same as a pop out, ground ball to third, shallow fly out, or ground ball out to the pitcher.
20.6% of the time, a ground ball out is a disaster while all strike outs, shallow fly outs, and pop outs are the same. Included in this 20.6% is about 5% of the time where a fly ball is better.
6.4% of the time, a ground ball to 2nd or first (and sometimes SS) and a deep fly ball are better than outs that don't advance the runner.
Combined with the 5% from the second group, you're looking at about 12%. 12% of the time, a certain out in play is less negative than a strikeout. 20% of the time, a certain out in play is much worse than a strikeout. 73% of the time, how the out is made makes no difference.
And again, no one is arguing that players shouldn't try to hit the ball.