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Post a Comment On: Rany on the Royals

"Royals Report Card 2011: Part Seven."

12 Comments -

1 – 12 of 12
Blogger McGoldencrown said...

Rany, when are you going to stop using "luck" as an excuse whenever player performance can't be explained the way you want it to?

Sadly, this is your biggest weakness as a writer. Your reliance on sabermetrics as a foundation of fact from which you build your opinion.

Its a trap that the less minded blogosphere commonly fall into, only to drown in their own ignorance.

Advanced Statistics and metrics are valuable tools and they have their place on the shelf.

Unfortunately, their enticingly arrogant logic have addictive properties that ruin great baseball minds when abused.

There are no equations that will ever completely be able to explain or predict baseball. It's just far too complex and it is insulting to the game to think otherwise.

There IS no luck.
Some players are just unique. It's what makes the game great.

March 9, 2012 at 2:13 AM

Blogger Michael Tate said...

Unique players are part of it, sure... But, baseball is a numbers game... always has been. Some people watch baseball because they want to see home runs. Some people like great defense. Others love to watch a guy throw 100 mph.... and some people use numbers to try to make sense of what they're seeing with numbers. Even people who pay no attention to sabermetrics say things like, "Oh, man, Adam Dunn, you're lucky that you're at the Cell. If that fly ball were in Kauffman Stadium, you'd'a been out!" (Even Mickey Mantle talked about how the Dodgers hit all kinds of homers at Ebbets that wouldn't have been homers at Yankee Stadium.) The sabermetrics folks just try to put numbers to that kind of thing. ... and, it isn't hurting the game... and it isn't hurting YOU, either. if you hate it so much, why read it?

March 9, 2012 at 4:59 AM

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March 9, 2012 at 8:06 AM

Blogger Robert said...

If you don't consider Paulino unlucky, what do you consider him? It's either that or he's the most extreme BABIP pitcher since we've been able to track it. It's pretty obvious to me which of those is more likely.

March 9, 2012 at 10:09 AM

Blogger Steve N said...

Who was Teaford's pitching coach in 2010? He might be useful.

March 9, 2012 at 10:21 AM

Blogger John said...

When Paulino has a season where his BABIP against is about .225, and he proceeds to go 19-5 with a 2.05 ERA, a lot of people are going to rave about how much he's "improved."

And Rany will write, correctly, that he's just the same pitcher he's always been, only the hitters are hitting the ball at people for once in his life. And some people will call him ignorant for it.

But he'll still be right.

March 9, 2012 at 11:02 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hey McGoldencrown, you're on the wrong site! Dude, Lee Judge writes for the KC Star. This is Rany on the Royals. Sorry about the mixup. We who enjoy the arrogant logic of stats rather than the arbitrary nature of the Polk system forgive you for typing in the wrong address.

March 9, 2012 at 5:53 PM

Blogger Jacob said...

Paulino is the real deal. He throws an easy 94-95 and has a lot of movement. Great pickup by GMDM. More than makes up for the Yuni signing.

March 9, 2012 at 8:49 PM

Blogger Jayboid said...

McGoldencrown..............If luck has nothing to do with baseball explain Chen.

March 9, 2012 at 9:21 PM

Blogger Jayboid said...

McGoldencrown..........the majors are filled with records of lucky players. Explain Chen with luck is the mix.

March 9, 2012 at 9:22 PM

Blogger Antonio. said...

Chen isn't lucky! He's unique! Why there's a difference between these two words in the baseball vernacular, I don't know...

March 9, 2012 at 11:31 PM

Blogger dkoehn said...

The argument between success being based on previously being unlucky and regressing to a mean, even if Paulino's avg BABIP is higher than most, and him making an adjustment that completely causes the improvement is kind of a silly one. If Paulino drastically improves it means that both things have happened to some degree. What I like about Paulino is that he has the raw tools (95 mph fastball and movement) that the right adjustments and regressing to an avg BABIP give him a very high ceiling. Wouldn't it be awesome it that happened for Paulino this year and Danny Duffy's performance was a sign of how he will perform this year. That would be a validation of "the process". I'm drinking the blue cool aid and letting hope abound when I dream such dreams, but it makes me feel good so I'm letting myself do it.

March 10, 2012 at 9:57 PM

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