by bleacher_creature » Mon Mar 06, 2006 12:37 pm
Here is my original e-mail asking the question to Glenn Guzzo, whose [url=http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0879462809/sr=8-1/qid=1141666140/ref=pd_bbs_1/104-9685521-8806324?%5Fencoding=UTF8]book on Strat-O-Matic[/url] can be purchased at Amazon.
[quote:73b3b79dbf]Hi Glenn,
Over at the funnest website on the planet, TSN/SOM, we are having a
discussion about clutch ratings:
[url]http://forums-beta.sportingnews.com/viewtopic.php?t=67206[/url]
Some players think that the clutch factor is just a way to control RBIs. I
believe someone used Ichiro's 2005 card as a good example of a player who
tears it up with RISP, and RISP/2 out, but has negative clutch symbols.
The discussion centers around playing specialized leagues WITHOUT the clutch rating. This sounds insane to me, and I know there is more to Mr. Richman's calculations than what meets the eye.
I believe someone like you may be able to shed light on how the clutch
ratings work.
-Sean[/quote:73b3b79dbf]
The response:
[quote:73b3b79dbf]Hello, Sean -- I'll use this in the next Talk Show. For now, briefly: Clutch ratings are an RBI adjustment, using most of a player's AB for the formula rather than just RISP/2.
A byproduct: The clutch ratings help gamers use regular players in realistic lineup positions (sort of what the closer ratings do for relief pitchers).Prior to clutch, I once won a pennant by letting 1981 Carney Lansford (4 HR, 52 RBIs) hit cleanup on a low-power team. He had hit .336 in '81 and his card was rich in two-star singles. Today, that card probably would be poor enough in the clutch that Lansford would bat elsewhere in the lineup, as he did in the real '81.
Glenn
[/quote:73b3b79dbf]
The [url=http://www.strat-o-matic.com/sphere.html]Talk Show link [/url]is at the SOM Strat-O-Sphere page.
edit: Upon re-reading, this part makes a lot of sense to me: [i:73b3b79dbf]"The clutch ratings help gamers use regular players in realistic lineup positions."[/i:73b3b79dbf]
Take Ichiro again. I live in Seattle where every once in awhile people have wondered how he would do in the #2 or #3 hole. However, the sense is that Ichiro hits lead-off because that's what Ichiro wants.
He has never hit #3. It might work out in terms of RBI production, it might not. I say he doesn't get the +clutch until he shows he is a true RBI producer.
Anyway, if you look at Richman's comments further up in this thread, the formula is not as simple as RBIs either.