by sschu » Wed Nov 02, 2005 11:12 am
The first team is pretty close, here are the numbers:
OBP vs RH 0.409
SLG vs RH 0.417
OPS vs RH 0.826
HR Rate vs RH 0.8
BPHR vs RH 10
OBP vs LH 0.389
SLG vs LH 0.418
OPS vs LH 0.806
HR Rate vs LH 1.3
BPHR vs LH 11
Slightly higher HR rate. This teams defense is a good deal better, Smith over Chapman, Fox over G-man, Gardner over Steiny and Furillo over Rice from a defensive standpoint.
The second team's numbers:
OBP vs RH 0.442
SLG vs RH 0.431
OPS vs RH 0.873
HR Rate vs RH 2.5
BPHR vs RH 12
OBP vs LH 0.394
SLG vs LH 0.420
OPS vs LH 0.814
HR Rate vs LH 1.9
BPHR vs LH 17
Clearly a much higher HR rate and SLG %.
The last team's numbers:
OBP vs RH 0.436
SLG vs RH 0.406
OPS vs RH 0.841
HR Rate vs RH 0.9
BPHR vs RH 12
OBP vs LH 0.441
SLG vs LH 0.403
OPS vs LH 0.845
HR Rate vs LH 0.8
BPHR vs LH 10
A bit lower SLG, but slightly higher HR rate, 94 team HRs seems high, but is usually away park dependent. Cochrane, Scott, Whit, Trammell and Buford all have the ability to hit double figures in HRs, which they did. Schalk, G-Man, Chapman and Steiny probably do not.
Perhaps jma500 would post his team now and at the end of the season and we can learn something, it would be interesting.
Lastly, I run a lot of numbers, and almost always when one of my teams does well or poorly I can look back and see why this happens. Teams over or under perform, but this tends to even out over a season. My teams seem to do especially poorly when I ignore the numbers .... :shock: :)
Best of luck, sschu