1) NERP defense adjuster for pitchers
The worst fielder among pitchers avaiable in ATG is Frank Bertainia. His fielding rating is 5e51. The NERP value of his defense is +1.09. On the opposite hand, the Glavines of ATG world (1e0) have a NERP fielding value of -0.17. Everything else is in between.
To put that in a formula is kinda complicated, because some errors are added to hits, but if you want it, here it is
A) 2*(ROUNDUP(1.5*(range-1);0)/20)+errors/54*2*ROUNDUP(1.5*(range-1);0)/20+errors/54*2*(20-(roundup(1.5*(range-1);0)))/20.
B) Anything in excess of 2 of this sum must be put in another column.
C)Then you take the sum (in A) X 0.56 + the excess (in B) X 0.31 minus 0.17.
BK and WP have a slightly greater range. The worse ratings are found in Dave Stewart and Ontiverious (curiously, both Oakland As members of the 1988) with balks and wp at 17 apiece. The net NERP adjustment is + 2.09 for these two pitchers. You have to consider though that WP happen twice as frequently than BK, so for example David Cone's 1988 card (BK=17 WP=9) has roughly the same NERP adjustment on this regard compared to Nolan Ryan's 1986 card (BK=0; WP=17)--both at 1.4. 1990's Dave Stewart (BK=0, WP=6) has a NERP adjustment of 0.5. In fact, these are roughly estimates...in theory you should adjust these ratings for the on-base presence (a pitcher with a WP of 8 will allow more wild pitches than a pitcher with a WP of 6 that allows half the on-base).
Holding too is affected by the level of on-base, so in theory it too should be influenced by how much on-base a pitcher will allow. I'm less on solid grounds on how to adjust NERP for holds in ATG, but my rule of thumb is to adjust the NERP by adding +1 for the very bad holders (+5 and above) and by substracting -0.15 to the best holders (-6):
+5 and above +1
+4....0.92
+3....0.83
+2....0.66
+1...0.51
0...0.38
-1...0.26
-2...0.15
-3...0.07
-4...0
-5...-0.1
-6...-0.15
Supertyphoon mentions the adjustment for hitters' pitching card. I didn't calculate the value of, say, a 8N hitting card or a 5w hitting card, but I have estimated that roughly speaking, by the time a pitcher will get through his pitching card (216 PA), there is roughly 3 offensive at-bats where a 8N or a 5w will get a hit instead of an out. So it would make sense to adjust the NERP for the hitting cards from 0 (for worst hitters) to +1.5 (for better hitters). This won't make choose Krukow over Klippstein (the latter has a much better card) if I'm looking for a cheap pitcher, but it would make me opt for Walter Johnson's 10.98M over Pete Alexander's 10.99 card, so it is something to consider.
nels52 wrote:2). How good of a metric do you strato-tyrants find NERP to be for Pitcher's pitching ability?
Not good enough considering that the impact of on-base is neglected somehow, as explained in other post above.
Something that works for me is to estimate how many outs a pitcher will get from 216 plate appearences, compared to an average pitcher. To illustrate, let's say I estimate that Maddux (in a league with highly potent hitters) will get 155 outs for every 216 PA, whereas an average 5M pitcher will get only 140 outs.
Then I take Maddux's final NERP and do the following adjustment:
raw NERP/140 X 155 = NERP-adjusted to onbase.
By doing this, I put Maddux's NERP value on an "out" basis, where it should be, rather than on a PA basis.
NERP should be based on outs because the bottom line of this game is to win after your opponent reached 27 outs. Your opponent may get 40 PA or 50 PA to reach those 27 outs, depending of the quality of your pitchers, but the numbers of outs are invariable if you win a 9-inning game.