Sabermetrics: Baseball by the Numbers

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Sabermetrics: Baseball by the Numbers

Baseball has always been a game of numbers. Fans of the game have grown up being able to recite them by heart; Ted Williams’.406 batting average, Joe DiMaggio’s 56 game hitting streak, Babe Ruth’s 714 home runs. These numbers hold a special place in the history of the game. Statistics such as batting average, wins, home runs, and runs batted in have always been there to tell us who the best players are. Your favorite player has a .300 batting average? He’s an all-star. He hit 40 home runs and batted in 120 runs? That’s a Most Valuable Player Award candidate. Your favorite team’s best pitcher won 20 games? He’s a Cy Young Award contender. These statistics have been used to evaluate player performance since the game began. But what if we could dig deeper? What if there was a better method than batting average to determine who the best hitters are? What if we had a way to tell who the best pitchers are rather than relying on a counting statistic, such as wins? Welcome to the world of sabermetrics.

It isn’t possible to talk about sabermetrics without talking about Bill James. Bill James is widely known as the face of sabermetrics. While working as a night watchman at the Stokely Van Camp’s pork-and-beans cannery in Lawrence, Kansas, Bill James began working on his ideas about just how major league baseball games are won. His self-published newsletter, called Baseball Abstract, marked a fundamental shift in the understanding of the game. James’ methods were later adopted by Oakland Athletics general manager Billy Beane to build surprisingly successful teams, which Michael Lewis wrote about in his bestselling book, Moneyball (Boudway).

Sabermetrics is made possible in part because each game produ...

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