The Hardball Times

Comparing players between historical eras part two: pitchers

by Dan Lependorf
March 29, 2012

In my last article, I introduced a method of comparing batters from different historical eras to each other, by attempting to measure how dominant they were in the time period they played in. Here's the pitcher counterpart.

To recap, rather than using the usual "plus" stat (like OPS+ or ERA+) approach, I tried using a normalized standard deviation-based method, the z-score. "Plus" stats use simple percentage points, which work fairly well, but if the distribution of talent changes over the years, players from certain time periods will get an unjustified boost or an unfair punishment. In the deadball era of the 1910s, hitting performance fell, coupled with a decrease in the spread of talent. Not only did hitters perform worse, they also fell closer together in talent to each other. OPS+ will adjust for the deadball environment as a whole, but it won't adjust for the change in the talent spread.

For pitchers, I took every qualified player from 1871 to 2011 and calculated each year's league average and standard deviation for FIP. Graphed over time, it mirrors the changes in wOBA fairly closely. Click to enlarge.

image

And here's the top ten pitcher seasons by z-score.

Name Season Z-Score
Pedro Martinez 1999 3.64
Dwight Gooden 1984 3.05
Pedro Martinez 2000 2.73
Randy Johnson 2001 2.66
Bob Gibson 1970 2.56
J.R. Richard 1979 2.49
Randy Johnson 1995 2.48
Nolan Ryan 1987 2.42
Pedro Martinez 2003 2.39
Mike Scott 1986 2.38


Some thoughts:



References and Resources
Leaderboard here. Like last time, click over to list view if you want to sort it through Google Docs, or you can just download it and play with it in Excel or any other spreadsheet software. All data from Fangraphs.

Dan can be contacted here (email) or here (twitter). He welcomes all comments, even offers for cheap male enhancement pills and winnings from lotteries he didn't realize he had entered. (He really wishes you wouldn't, though.)

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