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- Joined: Wed Feb 05, 2014 6:55 am
Since 80 million is the standard expected team salary then they might set total salaries at 30 times 80 million=2.4 billion. If you look at Nick Markakis's and Dustin Pedroia 's cards they are priced identically, even though you would expect Pedroia's card to be a lot more expensive because second base is far more valuable defensively. This leads me to think that they have comparisons at each position (as I. Strether argued above). So looking at offense you add the contributions ( by looking at Strat's criteria and weighting them by their importance) of the players at each position to find its contribution to offense and defense. Then if RF had more of a contribution it would be assigned a higher percentage of the total 2.4 billion than say LF (just for example). A similar assessment would be done for pitchers. So each position would get a total amount of salary based on its relative contribution. Then for each position the mean is taken of all the players based on Strat's weighted criteria and that mean score will be given the average salary calculated by adding the total of the salary allocated to the position/total number of players with salaries being given based on positive or negative standard deviations from the mean salary. So that is why you get the anomaly of Pedroia being wrongly priced on a par with Markakis--each position will have a different skewing of its salaries based on its variance from the mean and perhaps Markakis's excellent defense gets overvalued because right field defense was bad last year.
Just speculation of course (I cross-posted with Wavy Gravy)
Just speculation of course (I cross-posted with Wavy Gravy)