- Posts: 352
- Joined: Thu Aug 23, 2012 3:50 pm
Hello!
I've been working on valuation metrics for the entire player pool. So overall NERP for a player. Defense, clutch, speed etc.
For pitchers it's been a tad straight-forward with just NERP, END, BP #s, Hold, WP/BK, Defense, 4-man/5man status, Ks and a little bit of an imbalance tax. All these have a NERP score that pools into a pitchers' overall NERP. Diving back into this, the imbalance "tax" was something I wanted to refind as guys who dominate R like Scherzer, Millwood, etc or good ~4R or more extreme were terrible "values" according to the trendline of the whole player pool, whereas guys who kill L like G. Peters were seen as too good of values. But this starting assumption was far more problematic. Will change how or if I use an imbalance tax:
So I was using 50%/50% split of vs L NERP and Vs R NERP ---- basically assuming league breakdowns of PAs from Lefty hitters and Righty hitters was equal (for hitters I'm using 72% against R pitchers.) It shouldn't be 50/50?
I just crunched the numbers from 12 different $80mil DH ATG8 leagues. Comes from Team's L/R splits pages. Don't think the 365 game has anything like Report Writer on the PC game...
PA from L hitters = 0.443903715% (so 44.5%?)
PA from R hitters = 0.556096285%
**Strat only provides ABs for hitter vs L/R splits, so imperfect**
PA vs L pitchers = 0.357916107% (so 35.8% ? Far higher than my 28% but not I'm really picking at this)
PA vs R pitchers = 0.642083893%
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Does anyone have numbers or estimates for % of PAs going to L and R hitters? I'm thinking 44.5% vs L hitters....
I've been working on valuation metrics for the entire player pool. So overall NERP for a player. Defense, clutch, speed etc.
For pitchers it's been a tad straight-forward with just NERP, END, BP #s, Hold, WP/BK, Defense, 4-man/5man status, Ks and a little bit of an imbalance tax. All these have a NERP score that pools into a pitchers' overall NERP. Diving back into this, the imbalance "tax" was something I wanted to refind as guys who dominate R like Scherzer, Millwood, etc or good ~4R or more extreme were terrible "values" according to the trendline of the whole player pool, whereas guys who kill L like G. Peters were seen as too good of values. But this starting assumption was far more problematic. Will change how or if I use an imbalance tax:
So I was using 50%/50% split of vs L NERP and Vs R NERP ---- basically assuming league breakdowns of PAs from Lefty hitters and Righty hitters was equal (for hitters I'm using 72% against R pitchers.) It shouldn't be 50/50?
I just crunched the numbers from 12 different $80mil DH ATG8 leagues. Comes from Team's L/R splits pages. Don't think the 365 game has anything like Report Writer on the PC game...
PA from L hitters = 0.443903715% (so 44.5%?)
PA from R hitters = 0.556096285%
**Strat only provides ABs for hitter vs L/R splits, so imperfect**
PA vs L pitchers = 0.357916107% (so 35.8% ? Far higher than my 28% but not I'm really picking at this)
PA vs R pitchers = 0.642083893%
--------------------------------
Does anyone have numbers or estimates for % of PAs going to L and R hitters? I'm thinking 44.5% vs L hitters....