As a manager who does look at the Statistics in my leagues as the seasons progress, it strikes me that it really can be pretty fruitless in a way.
Let's take someone like Ryan Zimmerman.
If his Home Park is Petco, here are his slash lines batting vs. RHP.
272/385/516/902 with 5.74 HR chances
But with Cellular as his home park, vs. RHP
324/438/703/1.141 with 10.1 HR chances.
Hmm.
While this will effect his numbers, my bet is that at Petco, he will win just as many ballgames with his hitting as he would at the other park because ballparks effect players evenly, BUT, [i:e629ef170c]when you look at individual stats and leaders, it is very hard to tell just how well the player is performing[/i:e629ef170c].
He may be leading your team with a 280 average, and be YOUR MVP, but how can you tell except by instinct?
My question -- and an interesting challenge to the more mathematically gifted -- [i:e629ef170c]is there anyway to figure out a 'field leveling' formula for each ballpark? [/i:e629ef170c]Starting with, let's say 10/10/10/10 as the "norm," what would a 300 batting average and 20 HRs be at a 1/1/15/15 ballpark, or a 5/5/3/3 ballpark?
Yes, I know that for ATG, Diamond Dope has their great lineup evaluator for different parks, and for "NO BALLPARK EFFECTS" but minus that, is there a way to apply this to Excel to give an idea of just how each team's players are REALLY doing when adjusted for the ballpark.
Thanks for your wisdom.
Artie