Like I said. You and many other overrate WAR. Analysis - whether it is current or predictive - cannot use something like WAR alone. Jtpsops pointed that out in his statement. You are locked into WAR and although it certainly can be a useful tool, you often use it as an end all.
I'm not overrating it. Like I said, it's not perfect but it's a good shorthand. If one shortstop has 85 WAR and another has 65, it's a pretty safe bet to say the first shortstop was significantly better over his career.
Think of some questions that come up among baseball fans - who is better? What team will win the WS? How will so and so do in his new home? It's bottom of the 7th and so and so is up with 2 on, 2 out, in a 2-1 game. I root for the pitcher's team. Should I be worried?
Statistics are historical performance. They should give us a lot of information to answer these questions. But they don't give us all the answers.
Those are all very different questions. Who is better is almost always best answered by stats. You could make a pretty good guess at what team will win the world series with an in-depth look at individual stats, but there's a lot of luck that also goes into that answer. The best team, in terms of talent, doesn't always win. How will so and so do could also be estimated based on stats, but you'll never be sure because no one can predict the future. NOTHING gives us all the answers.
Look at the 1988 series. Going into it the Dodgers as a team had a 40 WAR and the A's had a 50 WAR. If we went solely on WAR, not knowing the outcome, I'd say overwhelmingly the A's would squash them.
See my paragraph above. This is kind of ridiculous. You're hating on one stat because it doesn't do something that no stat does.
WAR doesn't tell us **** about how that could have occurred.
It's not trying to. Neither is batting average or home runs. They are just stats.
That's why when I hear you prattle on about this or that stat, I know you don't watch any of the games, and probably sat the bench during your short career at Robeson Community College. None of all of that even occurs to you. Baseball to you is basically Sim League Baseball. You read only the box scores.
And you say all this because I like stats? Everybody enjoys baseball for their own reasons. I love watching games. I watched almost the entire Red Sox/Padres game the other night because David Price was pitching and the Padres have a flashy young shortstop who really can't hit but fields like a stud and has been given up on by a couple teams already. And I'm a Dodger fan. I don't have a vested interest in that game. especially with the Padres 795 games out of first place.
But I also like understanding why Matt Kemp is garbage even though he's going to have 30+ home runs and 100+ RBI this year. I like understanding that Tony Gwynn and Tim Raines were pretty similar in overall career value despite the difference in reputation. WAR helps with those things.