Baseball. Blogging. Whenever.

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Overheard during the Twins-Yankees game


David Wells, in the booth, going on about how the key to pitchers going deeper into games today is conditioning.

David Wells. Espousing the benefits of . . . conditioning.

I think I've heard everything.

Posted by Craig Calcaterra at 2:23pm (6) Comments

Statistics tell more truths than Selena Roberts


The New York Times, with some help from Tom Tango and Leverage Index, blows up the pitch-tipping allegations:

If a tipping conspiracy were in place, one would expect that Rodriguez and rival middle infielders in games he played to have hit better in low-leverage situations than in high-leverage ones. Using a fairly loose definition of high leverage as a L.I. above 1.5 and low leverage as below 0.7, the data provide a resounding answer: either no tipping was going on or it was pathetically ineffective.

Contrary to his reputation as a choker, Rodriguez was actually at his best when the game was on the line as a Ranger. According to data compiled by Sean Forman of Baseball-Reference.com, his combined on-base and slugging percentages (O.P.S.) from 2001 to 2003 was 1.076 in high-leverage situations, compared with 1.017 for medium leverage and .982 in low leverage. Opposing second basemen and shortstops showed the same pattern. They registered an .899 O.P.S. when leverage was high, .825 when it was middling, and .817 when it was low. Unless Rodriguez’s behavior was even more nefarious — tipping only when it mattered most — the numbers give no reason to believe he was involved.

Query: why doesn't someone from the Times get a comment from Roberts about this?


Posted by Craig Calcaterra at 9:34am (9) Comments