Saturday, October 31, 2015

Countdown - 10 Greatest P's In Major Leagues History: 5-7

At #'s 5-7 we have the big counting-stats guys.  Some of the key numbers: 6, 303, and 33...

At #7, we have 6-time Cy Young winner Vincenzo Smalley.  He's also #2 on the all-time wins list with 296.  Not quite the qualitative numbers of some higher on the list (he faced DH's in the AL for all but a few minutes of his career), he's had the longest period of dominance of any AL pitcher.

In at #6 is our all-time wins leader (303), Luis Contreras.  Although obviously a dominant pitcher, his claim to fame stems from his longevity - he's still our career leader in quality starts and strikeouts, and is #2 in shutouts.

At #5, we're getting into the territory of the guys who combine top counting stats with qualitative dominance.  At age 33, Tony Moya is already our career leader in shutouts (33), and is #5 all-time in WHIP and On-Base % Allowed.  With 4 Cy Youngs already, he seems a lock for 1 or 2 more.

Countdown - 10 Greatest P's In Major Leagues History: 8-10

Continuing with our history theme, we're counting down the 10 greatest pitchers and position players in Major Leagues' history.


Checking in at #10, we have the current 2-time defending AL Cy Young winner, Manuel Cano.  In addition to the 2 CY's, Cano has 6 All-Star appearances and has surged into the top 5 in career batting average allowed and career ERA.  Detractors point to Detroit's pitcher-friendly dimensions - it's a consideration, for sure, but his performance has been superior.  Style points note:  in 8 seasons his ERA has never been above 3.00.

At #9 we go back to a tougher pitching era and Bartolo Escobar.  Escobar dominated the AL from Seasons 9-13, winning the CY 4 times in those 5 years and baffling the sluggers of the day.  He wasn't a big innings guy, posting 2750 fro his career and usually around 200 per season.  But he was undoubtedly the top pitcher of the era immediately preceding Contreras and Rojas.

At #8, we have the NL equivalent of Escobar, Cesar Carrasquel.  No other pitcher dominated the NL during the pre-Long Normal era like Carrasquel.  He was more prolific than Escober, throwing nearly1000 more innings, and was more dominant in the qualitative stats.  And there was the glorious 4-straight CY stretch from seasons 5-8, when he averaged 20 wins and an ERA well under 3.  He may well have an argument for a higher ranking.

Thursday, October 29, 2015

Major Leagues "Scoring Eras" from Wild West to Little Ice Age.

It's popular to think of "eras" in HBD as the lively-ball "Steroid Era" with its torrid offense, and the "Post-Steroid Period" with its ascendant pitching.

In most worlds, and certainly in Major Leagues, there have been more distinct periods than just 2 each with its own scoring characteristics.

In summary, there has been a long, steady downward trend in scoring, bringing HBD pretty close to actual MLB levels.

Here are the 5 pretty easily-distinguished "eras" in Major Leagues history (runs per team per season):

Seasons 1 and 2 - The Wild West:  teams averaged 847.5 runs per season.  Home runs galore.  Quite a few individual hitting records and the foundations of many career hitting records.

Seasons 3-8 - The Mini-Steroid: offense was still dominant, but there was clearly an adjustment, as scoring fell 4% to 814 runs per team per season.  There wasn't much season-to-season variance either - a high of 823 and a low of 806.

Seasons 9-13 - The Transition: biggest percentage drop between eras - scoring fell 6.5% to 761 per team per season.

Seasons 14-28 - The Long Normal: the longest period with a relatively static scoring environment, but still a big drop of 4.8% from the previous era, to 724.5.

Seasons 29-31 - The Little Ice Age (???): Seasons 29 and 30 were the 2 lowest-scoring seasons in league history at 686 and 695, so it was looking like we had entered another new era.  Season 31 recovered to 711 (the low end of Long Normal levels), so it's not totally clear that we've had another algo adjustment.  But the 3-year average of 697.3 is down another 3.75% from the Long Normal.

Sunday, August 2, 2015

This just posted a few days ago on the HBD Updates thread...does this give us a real reason to put $$ in Advanced Scouting?

"Now that most worlds have rolled to the next season where the new logic from the May 26th release is in place, I wanted to provide a general overview of how the new scouting system is working since we've been receiving some customer support tickets from folks after their Amateur Draft.
 
'In the old system, the accuracy of all the scouting departments was the same (driven by budget amounts, of course).  A high school scout (with a budget of $10M) would be about as accurate as an advanced scout (with a budget of $10M).  If you had $10M budget for both your high school scouting and your advanced scouting and you drafted a high school prospect, his projected ratings would not change much when you signed him.
 
'In the new system, the accuracy of the high school, college and international scouting departments is now different and less accurate than the advanced scouting department. And because current ratings are no longer visible for prospects, scouts can now under project a prospect's ratings. This means the shift in projected ratings once a player enters your advanced scouting department can be potentially larger in the past.
 
'This also means the Amateur Draft will be less formulaic.  Budgets still matter very much, but there is more variability.  Can you occasionally have a scout be way off on a player with a $15 budget? Sure, but it'll be less likely than if you had a $10M or $5M budget. But it also means your scout may be wrong in a favorable way as well.
 
'Hope this helps explain what you may have experienced (or what may lie ahead)."

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Pitchers with Poor Control


The recent post in World Chat regarding Allen Haynes got me wondering about pitchers with really poor control.  I have a pitcher in Robinzon Neruda who has been quite good with control of 45, but just how bad can a pitcher's control be and he still be a useful MLB player?

The following table shows the players who have pitched at least 10 innings in a season with the worst ratings for Control in that season.  I don't see any seasons under a value of 30 for Control that I would want on my team, and most of the ones above 30 are still less than ideal.

ControlSeasonPlayerIPWHIPERA
1525Allen Haynes24.22.1106.570
211Joey Reid59.11.8908.040
221Harry Iorg27.12.4909.550
222Harry Iorg39.03.18013.150
221Donaldo Uribe81.02.3809.560
232Donaldo Uribe86.01.9107.430
2410Dante Klassen91.02.1108.310
241Stubby Stoops127.22.2209.520
251Del Yosida15.02.6008.400
259Gerald Bennett53.21.8806.040
2523Tsubasa Martin85.11.8606.750
262Ricky Westbrook50.12.1706.620
272Stubby Stoops160.22.1708.740
273Stubby Stoops128.12.30010.100
281Bailey Damon17.01.4704.760
282Flip Matthews63.02.57012.570
2825P.T. Hampton38.12.19011.030
293Flip Matthews59.01.9207.780
303Rick Becker35.02.3708.490
301Rip Ford58.01.8605.280
301Dustin Boudreau90.01.8104.400
302Dustin Boudreau80.11.7905.830
311Ronn Lesher45.11.9004.570
3118Andy Hull72.01.8207.130
3119Andy Hull112.01.8806.670
322Luis Martinez82.21.9808.380
322Cody Dunwoody86.01.9906.700
321Dennys Little183.01.6806.100
322Dennys Little173.11.9307.790
324Taylor Dean70.11.8605.760
3220Andy Hull58.02.0005.740
3219Alcides Hernandez55.21.7206.310
3220Alcides Hernandez39.21.8207.030
331Morgan Cepeda48.21.3803.510
332Morgan Cepeda30.11.6506.230
331Rico Zapata10.12.2306.970
332Phil Daniels169.01.6305.800
3315Stone Mercker118.01.2802.520
3316Stone Mercker91.11.7606.010
3313Yuniesky Brito19.01.8403.790
3315Cesar Andrus125.21.7305.590
3320Cesar Andrus130.11.7706.490
3321Don Shibata196.11.8106.560
3322Don Shibata85.21.7406.200
344C.J. Little110.12.1107.910
342Tomas Saenz100.21.7606.530
343Tomas Saenz106.11.5805.250
341Omar Castro116.11.7405.490
349Joel Gallagher14.13.07014.440
341Phil Daniels106.21.6405.650
343Phil Daniels18.11.9108.840
344Phil Daniels105.11.8406.070
3417Stone Mercker77.02.2109.000
3418Stone Mercker50.11.4103.040
3419Stone Mercker135.11.5704.590
3420Stone Mercker95.21.5203.860
3421Stone Mercker101.21.4804.430
3417Cesar Andrus173.21.3903.630
3418Cesar Andrus21.02.6206.430
3419Cesar Andrus19.12.0709.780
3418Peter Wood74.12.1306.300
3419Peter Wood25.12.1304.620
3419Danny Benton69.21.9505.430
351B.C. Carey16.11.5306.060
351Carson Butler83.21.5904.200
351Carson Butler51.21.7205.400
352Carson Butler120.01.8006.000
351Mike Stock24.11.9709.250
352Taylor Dean151.11.3903.630
353Taylor Dean50.01.5004.860
351Dan Quinn18.12.4009.820
3514Sam Moseley162.21.7604.980
3520Bubbles Spehr65.11.8106.890
3521Bubbles Spehr73.22.31010.140
3521Barney Lincoln63.12.0407.250
3523P.T. Melian35.12.4308.920
3524J.R. Voigt32.21.4103.310
361Ken Sauveur64.22.1008.630
363Carson Butler60.01.5505.850
364Carson Butler14.01.2101.290
361Taylor Dean108.11.5004.820
362Omar Castro100.21.8005.630
369Allen Mulder44.01.5004.700
3619P.J. Colangelo119.01.4803.930
3624P.T. Melian41.11.6505.230
3624Clarence Alexander97.02.1308.910
3625Clarence Alexander54.01.7203.670
371Greg Strange53.01.8907.640
371Kiko Thompson66.22.0907.700
372Kiko Thompson52.12.0308.250
371Wally Lincoln126.01.4704.500
371Eduardo Cairo46.12.0106.990
371Eduardo Cairo36.21.7705.150
372Eduardo Cairo164.01.7605.540
371Gene Decker181.11.4704.620
372Gene Decker196.01.5804.270
373Gene Decker82.21.7906.420
371Mitch Giles194.11.6705.840
372Mitch Giles172.01.4805.080
373Omar Castro64.01.8907.030