Forecaster and Handbook are out!

I got my copy of the Baseball Forecaster about 10 days ago, but closing the magazine meant not cracking it, even though I’ve got a short bit in it (which happened to run here first, about WHIP v. WH/9), until now.

Ron’s lead essay is very smart. It’s about how wrong we are about players, year after year, and he wonders why we pursue exacting but nearly always wrong projections. Then he comes up with something new, called the Mayberry Method.

There’s a lot to like about the way the MM summarizes a player’s skills in a descriptive way. Yet despite it’s simplicity, I’m not convinced it is going to catch on. New stuff often doesn’t, even when it has real merit. On the other hand, the benchmarks MM describes so succinctly are becoming increasingly entrenched as leading indicators, making me wonder why–if we’re getting better at defining leading indicators–we’re not getting better predicting breakouts.

As Ron says in the piece, we may be smarter now than we were 20 years ago, but that may not be such a good thing.

Steve Moyer always gives us so-called experts a copy of the hot-off-the-press Bill James Handbook at First Pitch Arizona, for which I am very grateful. Not that I wouldn’t buy it, I have many times, but this way it ends up in my hands even sooner.

The book continues to grow, with increased focus on the defense awards and rankings, focus on baserunning skills, and the ever useful park factors. I’m a great fan of baseball-reference.com and fangraphs.com, both of which I use all day long, but I sit and read the Bill James Handbook, poring over its pages as if it were a ripping good yarn, which in many ways it is.

I’m glad for both these books and recommend them highly.

BPs Kevin Goldstein on Stephen Strasburg

FakeTeams

Take a deep breath. Strasburg has thrown in four professional games in the AFL. Scouts love finding the new guy, and Strasburg is talented enough to be the new guy. But new guys are often blowing out the radar gun because they’re doing stuff that isn’t sustainable.

The beauty of Sidd Finch is that he found a way to do it that was sustainable, because of his zen discipline. But Finch was fiction.

It isn’t a mistake to attach to phenoms and roster them, if they are cheap or go in the late rounds. But bidding these guys up puts you at a huge disadvantage. You want to roster risk cheaply. That’s the way to a better team.

Why Scott Boras Isnt As Evil As You Think He Is

Deadspin

One reads a lot of crap analysis about sports (well, and other stuff too), but this is totally on.

It doesn’t mean that Boras isn’t a problem in the context of organized MLB baseball, but why would us fans choose to side with the owners and their uncounted stores of money, rather than the players, who make the game we like to watch with their talent?

Information Please!

I picked up on a Tweet from an MLB character tonight who says that the White Sox will DFA Wilson Betamit tomorrow and promote Gordon Beckham.

I’m not opposed to this. I’ve been carrying Betamit in the American Dream League, and I recently traded for Beckham, who will certainly play if promoted.

But I’m posting this here because it seems dubious to me that this chain of events will actually happen.

I’m hoping they do, but how reliable is this Tweet? I have no idea at all.

And, if it is, does that mean that future Tweets are more reliable? Or just another indication that information on the internet isn’t always reliable?

Which is why I’m going to bed.

Cheers.

Origins of Major League Starting Pitchers, 2008 –

 Minor League Ball John Sickels looks at all the starting pitchers with 10 or more win shares in 2008 and looks at where they were at when they stepped over to the professional game. First rounders have a big edge, but what stands out is that successful pitchers come from everywhere.

A similar list tracking the last 20  or more years would be of great interest, if anyone has time tomorrow (or the next day), since the list itself isn’t exactly objective. I would assume that the way scouts and organizations work has changed over the years, and this would be reflected. Or, more tantalyzingly, maybe not.