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I’m spending a lot of time thinking about opposition ballparks today.
If you are in a pitchers park, would you expect to do better if the competition were all pitchers parks? All hitters parks? A mix? A mix but not within your division?
What about for a hitters park? A slanted park?
It seemed for a while in the past, ballpark ratings appeared irrelevant. Now I wonder if they should be a more primary consideration.
One possible explanation for a team repeating success across several leagues might be this:
The team is designed to win in a pitchers park, but not to the extreme of being unable to compete in the other parks (I would argue that the opposite is unlikely to work as well - teams generally designed to win in a hitters park usually do not fair well in places like AT&T).
Here’s an example:
https://365.strat-o-matic.com/team/1494807 (Went the distance, to boot ).
Note 50 wins at home, with the best road record in the league (44 wins).
So a pitchers park team will obviously do well at home (AT&T), but will also benefit some on the road from any bump in the hitters park slants, and maybe even more so in a tilted park like Wrigley, esp if the lineup is heavy on RH batters.
The three Globe Life teams and the four Wrigley teams might be suggesting there’s something to this. Like the AT&T team above, the three teams piloted by me all had the best road records in the league.
If you are in a pitchers park, would you expect to do better if the competition were all pitchers parks? All hitters parks? A mix? A mix but not within your division?
What about for a hitters park? A slanted park?
It seemed for a while in the past, ballpark ratings appeared irrelevant. Now I wonder if they should be a more primary consideration.
One possible explanation for a team repeating success across several leagues might be this:
The team is designed to win in a pitchers park, but not to the extreme of being unable to compete in the other parks (I would argue that the opposite is unlikely to work as well - teams generally designed to win in a hitters park usually do not fair well in places like AT&T).
Here’s an example:
https://365.strat-o-matic.com/team/1494807 (Went the distance, to boot ).
Note 50 wins at home, with the best road record in the league (44 wins).
So a pitchers park team will obviously do well at home (AT&T), but will also benefit some on the road from any bump in the hitters park slants, and maybe even more so in a tilted park like Wrigley, esp if the lineup is heavy on RH batters.
The three Globe Life teams and the four Wrigley teams might be suggesting there’s something to this. Like the AT&T team above, the three teams piloted by me all had the best road records in the league.