by Mean Dean » Fri Dec 07, 2007 5:34 pm
[quote:94784bcbed]if Pete Pitcher has a -1 hold, and Steve Stealer has stealing (A) *2-6, 11/- (17-13), and Carl Catcher has a -3 arm, what are the odds that Steve will steal 2nd base.[/quote:94784bcbed]You can assume that any baserunner with a star is being held. Each roll on a d20, as you probably know, is 5%. So assuming Steve gets the lead, his chance of stealing the base is 85% (his first steal number, 17, * 5%), minus 10% for having the lead and being held on base, minus 20% for the hold/arm (-4 * 5%) = 55%.
His chance to get the lead is [url=http://www.tauonline.org/Article/121/SixSidedDiceProbabilities/]the chance of rolling a 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 or 11 on 2d6[/url], which is 47.2%.
If he [i:94784bcbed]doesn't[/i:94784bcbed] get the lead, then his chance to steal will be 65% (his second steal number, 13, * 5%), minus 20% this time for not having the lead and being held on base, minus the same 20% for the hold/arm = 25%.
The chance of his not getting the lead, obviously, is (1 - 47.2%) = 52.8%.
So, what we've got so far is that the chance that he will end up on 2nd after a steal attempt is (55% * 47.2%) + (25% * 52.8%) = 39.2%.
(If we knew the catcher's T-rating, we could factor it in at this point. There is a 15% chance on a steal attempt that the catcher's T-rating will be tested. If he rolls his T-rating or lower on that test, then it's a throwing error and the basestealer goes to 3rd base. For instance, if t = 4, the chance of an error is 15% * 20% = 3%, which would be added to the stealer's success chance. Since we don't know it in this example, we'll assume t = 0, so it's still a 39.2% total chance for Steve.)
Finally, we come to pickoffs and balks. Every time a runner goes for the lead, there is a 5% chance of a possible pickoff. This chance is based on his second stealing number; he has to roll that number or less to avoid the pickoff. So in his case, the pickoff will occur 30% of the times it has the possibility to occur. 5% * 30% = 1.5%. This brings the total chance of the steal attempt placing him on 2nd to 37.7%.
A balk also has a 5% chance to happen on each lead attempt, and happens if the pitcher rolls his balk number or less (so for instance, if bk = 5, the balk occurs 25% of the time that the possibility arises, and the total chance is 5% * 25% = 1.25%). That would, naturally, be added to the baserunner's safe chance. We don't know the balk rating here, so we'll leave it out.
That is as complete as the calculation gets. Of course, in reality, you have the option to bail out on the steal attempt if you don't get the lead. That means that, unless it's the rare situation involving terrific basestealers and/or terrible defensive pitchers/catchers where stealing without a lead becomes plausible, the only things you generally need to worry about are a) the chance to succeed given the lead, and b) the chance of getting the lead or a balk, as compared to the chance of an automatic CS or pickoff. (Automatic CS are the numbers right after the slash in the stealing info; Steve Stealer as you described him doesn't have any, which made this a little easier ;)
Last edited by
Mean Dean on Sat Dec 08, 2007 3:59 am, edited 2 times in total.