pwootten wrote:Since so many in baseball have caught up with Billy in terms of finding those hidden OBP gems, his path to the playoffs is considerably more difficult than ten years ago. The next wave seems to be built upon development of a solid minor league system that continually replenishes itself, allowing a team to promote from within and occasionally trade a "can't miss" prospect for a year or two of a solid player that can get them to the playoffs. This includes a solid presence in Latin America. Tampa Bay has had that going. The Royals seem to as well, though we will see if they live up to the replenishment part. If we learned something from the Royals last year, it was that solid defense and hitters that make contact can be of as much value as OBP.
On an unrelated note, I just finished reading Jon Pessah's "The Game" about the inner-workings of baseball's labor issues and internal squabbles among team owners and the commissioner. Great book if that type of stuff interests you.
Yes, the new wave of advanced statistics and development-oriented GMs like Epstein, Hoyer, Friedman, Cherington, Luhnow, and--to a somewhat lesser degree--Daniels have all implemented the Beane model very well, and he doesn't catch as many GM's "looking' as he used to do. It is interesting to see a somewhat more traditionally-trained GM like Moore not only bone up on the new methods but--as you pointed out--tweak the model as well.
Thanks, too, for the book recommendation. I will check it out.