good dolphin wrote:
rogers park bryan wrote:
good dolphin wrote:
I think I have asked this before and I certainly cannot be the first to have asked this but if a strikeout is equal to any other out from a batting perspective the equation must balance that the same is true from a pitching perspective.
It's about the single player and what is and isnt in their control. It's designed to predict future performance, not tell you what happened in the past.
Same thing with the Runs Scored/Runs against. A team might win a bunch of one run games and that's fine. They won those games. They count. But the team that is outscoring opponents like crazy is more likely to win more in the future.
But yes, like all stats they are flawed
The HUGE problem with WAR is the balance between Off and Def which is why you have guys like Zobrist and Lawrie on top ten lists
I'm just focused on this one, compartmentalized problem. It MUST balance mathematically and logically.
You're wrong. The numbers are what they are.
It's two completely different situations. One is a hitter trying to get on base. One is a pitcher trying to record an out. Certain things indicate future success at each activity.
It's not equal on both sides when using numbers to predict the future.
If you're talking about what happened, then yes the strikeout is just another out. That's the history. But these are predictive numbers.
4 strikeouts yesterday is a bad game but it's not any worse than 4 flyouts when predicting future performance
Buehrle might throw a perfect game with 0 Strikeouts. Thats fine and its a great game. A guy who gives up 2 soft hits and strikes out 14 is more likely to be better going forward.
all of that is meaningless is the underlying equation is incorrect. If a+b=c then c-b=a