Posted by Jtpsops on 6/14/2016 5:08:00 PM (view original):
I never said each method isn't applied equally to all players. But if different methods are used, players are not always going to fall at the same ranking in each method. And if each method produces different numbers for each player or doesn't produce results ranking players in the exact same order, then clearly it's not something that is 100% reliable and must be taken with a grain of salt.
There are concrete, measurable stats (BA, OBP, homers, runs, etc.) that are finite - you can't calculate them differently and come up with a different result. Metrics like WAR leave room for discrepancy. By and large, they give you a good approximation of who the best players are, but there are flaws since it is not a concrete stat.
How is it true that if something is not 100% reliable it must be taken with a grain of salt? My car is not 100% reliable, but I take it seriously. My experiment is not 100% reliable, but I'm getting a PhD from it, and I think most people will take that seriously. Almost nobody's household scale is 100% accurate, but they still step on them at a ridiculous frequency. Grading systems everywhere just straight-up suck for lots of things. But people take grades seriously - both the students and potential employers, graduate schools, etc.
Ultimately, almost no numerical measures of anything are really 100% accurate in the real world. So what? They're still useful approximations to things.