Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
This is typical of the modern fan who is absolutely full of shit. You do know that every model suggests that the order of the hitters has minimal effect on overall run production. If a manager were really sharp he would simply order the hitters by OPS so the best guys got the most at-bats.
Then, wouldn't that be batting order having an effect on overall run production? If sentence "A" is true in the absolute, then "B" is purely asinine, as A already dictates that B is meaningless. I struggle to recall the degree to which order has an effect, but I seem to remember BP in their 2005 book centering on 1-3 "wins" (WAR-type--or at the time, VORP--wins) over a season.
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And the modern fan is obsessed with overall run production which is why he ignores the situation in which a bunt occurs. I agree that many of Ventura's bunts are ill-advised, but the object isn't to score the most runs over the course of a season. It's to win each individual ballgame.
You're treating the two ("score the most runs over the course of a season" and "win each individual ballgame") as mutually exclusive. People want the most runs to be scored over the course of a season because, throughout history, the teams scoring the most
tend to win more games, and you score more runs by not giving away outs all over the place. Playing for one run, in a vacuum, can work, and the run expectancy matrices bear that out (2nd and 3rd with 1 out, say, has a better chance to score one run than 1st and 2nd, 0 outs). However,
routinely playing for the "short run" will result in your team scoring fewer runs, and winning fewer games.
Betting for the hard way can make your night, but over time it will ruin your life, and Robin puts his chips in a precarious position all too often.
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Take today, for example, I wouldn't have had Cabrera bunt, but the other side of that is they had two fucking hits all day.
Yes, exactly...why arbitrarily reduce the number of remaining chances you have to get a hit, so that two guys who
combined make outs at a higher rate than Melky Cabrera can hit with two runners in scoring position? There are indeed times when playing for one run is feasible, as per the numbers, but it isn't with a guy with a near-team-high .340 OBP at the plate.
It's not only that Robin eschews the edicts of statistical analysis, especially with regards to bunting, its that his usage of the "old school" tactics are dumb even by "old school" standards. He took the bat out of the hands of one of his better hitters. I have a hard time seeing even the most ardent anti-numbers manager approving of that.
This guy gets it.