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- Joined: Thu Sep 06, 2012 11:27 pm
I had some thoughts about this, wanted to share and have feedback.
The leverage index is basically "(a) measure of how important a particular situation is in a baseball game depending on the inning, score, outs, and number of players on base" (quote Fangraphs). Intuitively, it's very simple, if your reliever gets in a game tied-up with two men on-base, you have a high-leverage situation. If you reliever mops-up a 8th inning in a game you are trailaing by 5 runs, you have a low-leverage situation. I'll refer you to the fangraphs.com site for more information.
I won't get into the maths (I'm not sure I understand it myself), but there is some sort of weight that sabermetricians have created, it's called the leverage index. If a closer has saved your team 10 runs in situations with a high leverage index, it has more impact to winning than if a mop-up has saved your team 10 runs in situations with a low leverage index. They created this index so that 1 is the leverage value when you start a game. Above 1, you are in a high critical situation, and below 1, chances are the probability to win or lose the game is lower.
As you probably know, in a course of 162 games, saving 10 runs is worth roughly 1 win. But in the above example, you can't deduce that each reliever contributed to 1 win each because each saved 10 runs. Instead, my understanding of the leverage index is that, if the closer above saved 10 runs with a leverage index of 2.0, he gave your team 2 extra win. The mop-up above who saved 10 runs with a leverage index of 0.5 gave your team 0.5 extra win. In other words, there is half the chance that this mop-up gave your team a chance to come back and win---and there is half the chance this didn't happen.
The reason I write all this is because I want trying to figure a way to apply potential leverage index for the relievers we select in SOM.
Here is what I did: I took all relievers from the 2014 seasons with more than 30 innings. I created six categories:
The closer (any reliever with more than 30 saves)
The 1set set-up man (any reliever with more than 20 holds)
The 3rd string (any reliever with a combined save/holds between 10 and 20)
The mop-up guy: any reliever with more than 55 innings and less than 10 combined holds/saves
The specialist: a select group I chose and who had generally more games than innings---all with less than 55 innings.
The 0.5M guy (aka the extra reliever we have to take but we don't really need): any reliever with less than 55 innings not in the above categories
(While doing this exercice, I had to create another category: the set-up man who won the closer job (ex. Romo), but I'll leave this aside for a moment).
I average the leverage index that you can get on the fangraphs site for all relievers who fit the above categories. Here are the results:
Closer: Leverage index of 1.90
set-up: Leverage index of 1.44
3rd string: Leverage index of 1.18
Mop-up: Leverage index of 0.82
Specialist : Leverage index of 1.02
The rest: Leverage index of 0.74
What I'm wondering is whether I can use these numbers for strat. Does a closer who has roughly the same use than in MLB (80 games, 80 innings, 40 saves) might be attributed a leverage index of 1.90? Does a set-up guy who, in Strat, will often cumulate 120-140 innings, should be attributed a leverage index of 1.44? Or maybe a leverage index somewhere between 1.44 and 1.18? What about a reliever who is both closer and set-up? (For the record the category "set-up guy who won the closer job" had a leverage index of 1.60).
And does this mean that a closer worth 4M who pitches in high leverage situations contribute like a 6M reliever who never closes?
The leverage index is basically "(a) measure of how important a particular situation is in a baseball game depending on the inning, score, outs, and number of players on base" (quote Fangraphs). Intuitively, it's very simple, if your reliever gets in a game tied-up with two men on-base, you have a high-leverage situation. If you reliever mops-up a 8th inning in a game you are trailaing by 5 runs, you have a low-leverage situation. I'll refer you to the fangraphs.com site for more information.
I won't get into the maths (I'm not sure I understand it myself), but there is some sort of weight that sabermetricians have created, it's called the leverage index. If a closer has saved your team 10 runs in situations with a high leverage index, it has more impact to winning than if a mop-up has saved your team 10 runs in situations with a low leverage index. They created this index so that 1 is the leverage value when you start a game. Above 1, you are in a high critical situation, and below 1, chances are the probability to win or lose the game is lower.
As you probably know, in a course of 162 games, saving 10 runs is worth roughly 1 win. But in the above example, you can't deduce that each reliever contributed to 1 win each because each saved 10 runs. Instead, my understanding of the leverage index is that, if the closer above saved 10 runs with a leverage index of 2.0, he gave your team 2 extra win. The mop-up above who saved 10 runs with a leverage index of 0.5 gave your team 0.5 extra win. In other words, there is half the chance that this mop-up gave your team a chance to come back and win---and there is half the chance this didn't happen.
The reason I write all this is because I want trying to figure a way to apply potential leverage index for the relievers we select in SOM.
Here is what I did: I took all relievers from the 2014 seasons with more than 30 innings. I created six categories:
The closer (any reliever with more than 30 saves)
The 1set set-up man (any reliever with more than 20 holds)
The 3rd string (any reliever with a combined save/holds between 10 and 20)
The mop-up guy: any reliever with more than 55 innings and less than 10 combined holds/saves
The specialist: a select group I chose and who had generally more games than innings---all with less than 55 innings.
The 0.5M guy (aka the extra reliever we have to take but we don't really need): any reliever with less than 55 innings not in the above categories
(While doing this exercice, I had to create another category: the set-up man who won the closer job (ex. Romo), but I'll leave this aside for a moment).
I average the leverage index that you can get on the fangraphs site for all relievers who fit the above categories. Here are the results:
Closer: Leverage index of 1.90
set-up: Leverage index of 1.44
3rd string: Leverage index of 1.18
Mop-up: Leverage index of 0.82
Specialist : Leverage index of 1.02
The rest: Leverage index of 0.74
What I'm wondering is whether I can use these numbers for strat. Does a closer who has roughly the same use than in MLB (80 games, 80 innings, 40 saves) might be attributed a leverage index of 1.90? Does a set-up guy who, in Strat, will often cumulate 120-140 innings, should be attributed a leverage index of 1.44? Or maybe a leverage index somewhere between 1.44 and 1.18? What about a reliever who is both closer and set-up? (For the record the category "set-up guy who won the closer job" had a leverage index of 1.60).
And does this mean that a closer worth 4M who pitches in high leverage situations contribute like a 6M reliever who never closes?