by bomp helium » Fri Dec 22, 2006 7:49 pm
As Plato suggested, [i:df809f222b]"study the impossible..."[/i:df809f222b]
statistics are difficult...they can not only be used to mislead, but they themselves can be misleading...for example, say 85% of champions use the SECRET FORMULA...that's an impressive statistic...unless in those leagues 90% of the teams used that formula...then that same statistic could be used to make the precise opposite argument...
restated, of course 85% of the winners will be strong up the middle, because that's the "secret formula" that 90% of the teams use...
that's why we love baseball...it's an art...it's more complicated than the numbers...the numbers are as tricky as a popup in the sun on a windy day...
just finished a 2006 season...I was in 2nd place very late in the season when I dropped Visquel (2.75) and picked up Berroa (.60)...sounds ridiculous but the upside was I was able to get Soloman Torres (2.42) for Novoa (.87)...Torres was key as they went on to be champs, with Berroa hitting a key three-run HR in finals game six...
so maybe there's ANOTHER SECRET FORMULA:
1) the lineup. score more runs than they do. Win 7-5. The lineup is most potent when it turns over, so 1-9 quality hitters is suggested. High OBP. High BA. High SLG. The idea team average is .300/.400/.500. Defense is secondary. Nine bats. High average. Clutch. High OBP. Bashers. Bombers. Ted Williams is the prototype. Get Nine Ted Williams (with the heads).
The advantage of a strong lineup is that it turns over (insert joke here). The advantage of turning the lineup over is that your best hitters are 1,2 and 3, and you want them hitting as much as possible, and with men on base (or even women). Your 8 and 9 hitters set the table for the Elites and also extend rallies. If 1-9 are strong then the Whole is much stronger than the Parts.
EXAMPLE A: Two outs and two on. 2005 Pokey Reese strikes out.
EXAMPLE B: Two out and two on. 2005 Barry Larkin walks. HAL brings in a lefty. 2005 JT Snow walks. 2005 Robb Quinlin singles. Y.A. hits one in the water. Six runs in. Game Over. Larkin's walk is perhaps more valuable than "one base", since it allowed the lineup to turn over, where the professional hitters could drive in runs.
Conversely, of course, a bad fielder can also extend a rally for the other team, so that is true as well. DAMN.
2) Strong SP. The other 50% of the rolls land on the pitchers card. Yes, our sluggers are a bit slow in the field, so there will be a few "X-roll" hits on their cards. We must compensate by getting pitcher's with strong cards. And since we have extra cash from not overspending for defense, we can get two #1 sps and three other quality guys and set them for Conservative. We can have a 1-9 hitting machine lineup AND strong starting pitching. Add a decent closer, based on park, two decent-to-good R2s, two cheap high-value R1s, and some enthusiastic scrubs for the bench...
3) Defense. Oh. I almost forgot. Keep the E numbers down (4e8, not 4e22)...hide your worst gloves: RF, LF, IB, C (too many examples to list)...even 3B if the bat is good enough (Jones, Wright)...3s are okay at 2B, SS and CF (with reasonable Es) (Young, Eckstein, Utley, Kent, Griffey)...no complete hacks (no Juan Pierre! no Todd Greene!)...there's nothing WRONG with good defense of course, as long as they can HIT...A-Rod is not a problem...but the better VALUE may be A-Ram...
4) money. it's about managing a budget. putting the most money on the field. Spend on Nine Hitters, Five Starters. $70 million for those 14 guys. Then a closer (2.79-5 mill), two relievers (2-3 mill), two cheap Joes (<1 mill), and four .50 scrubs to back up The Nine. get the best quality and fit you can for the least money. Specialty reserves are excellent. Cheap defensive reserves can make a difference in the late innings. But they have to be able to defend themsleves at the plate. .250 minimum to play. Speed and occasional OBP can be had for cheap. Guys like Deivi Cruz, Gaithright, Bubba Crosby, Surhoff...
5) Injuries. Don't worry. Be happy. They'll get hurt, miss two games, come back and hit a three-run HR. Don't worry about it. They're priced accordingly, and I think many of them fall into the "high-value" catagory. Excpet for Drew. I've had it with him. It's good to have a "super-reserve", a <$1 multi-positionalist who's not a complete idiot with the bat (Mackowiak). But Freel would be overkill. Too expensive. Never sit money on the bench. Minimize Sleeping Salary (dollars not on the field).
The important thing is a Lineup that Turns Over. It's fun. the next important thing is Starting Pitching that Discourages the Other Lineup from Turning Over. Then a Park-Specific Closer, a Reasonable Defense up the Middle, one or two Strong OF Arms, a Catcher with a Decent Arm, some Speed, Clutch Hitting, Low DPs...
And Lots of Luck...
LINEUP: 1) high OBP, speed. Wants to score from first on a double. A good place to stash a guy who hits into DPs, since he's most likely to bat with bases empty. 2) high OBP, low DPs, good SLG. Wants to hit a double. 3) best hitter, if not the league's best hitter. Wants to hit .400 with 175 RBI. 4) protects 3 with good OBP and power from both sides and loves to hit 3-run homers. 5) protects 4. 6) protects 5. 7) protects 6. 8,9) second leadoff hitters, with good speed and decent OBP (.350). they set the table for 1-3. Don't skimp on OBP at 8-9! (Freel! Lugo!)...
A typical possible ANOTHER SECRET FORMULA lineup that will never happen now that I am releasing it in a thread ($49 million):...
Abreu (OBP, speed) -- 7.00
Alou (OBP, BA) -- 4.91
Ortiz (OBP, power) -- 9.07
Jones (OBP, power) -- 6.07
Ramirez (OBP, power) -- 7.45
Utley (OBP, power) -- 6.41
Valentin (OBP, power) -- 5.07
Duffy (OBP, BA, clutch) -- 4.19
Renteria (OBP, speed) -- .86
typical ASF pitching ($30-32 million):
SP Johnson -- 6.46
SP Peavy -- 5.87
SP Blanton -- 3.85
SP Webb -- 3.14
S/RHalsey -- 1.04
R/C f-Rod -- 3.32
R/C Torres -- 2.42
R/C Macdougal -- 1.32
R Sanchez -- .76
R Merker -- .51
Hopefully, you win 7-5 60% of the time...
the ASF must be tailored to the Home Park (a tremedous potential advantage). Pitcher's parks favor high BA, OBP and speed. Hitters parks favor OBP and power.
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returning to the thread (sorry):
of course, SS and 2B ARE the premier strategic defensive positions...so choosing Larkin as my test subject was just a way to test the theory in extreme...in basic principle I agree with traditonal "baseball wisdom"...the example of Manny (or Sheffield) milling about the pastures of RF may be more a appropriate example...is Ichiro a more valuable teammate than Sheffield?...does Ichiro win more games with his glove than Sheffield wins with his bat?
All of this is possibly a Coors-specific discussion, since my experiment took place there...but I would suggest that the secret formula might be park-specific, and hence there may be more than one "secret formula"...
cheers...