OT: Moneyball
Posted: Mon Jul 7, 2008 7:25 pm
Who owns it or has read it or used it to prop up a chair? What was your opinion/takeaway of/from it?
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tisbee wrote:Read it. Eh.
Once you get past the author's deification of Beane it does give a diff perspective on baseball. One of the keys to moneyball is the walk. In moneyball a walk is better than a single,and since guys who walk a fair amount don't put up huge hitting numbers,they come cheap.(Walks require more pitches,so you tire out the pitcher much quicker. Tired pitchers make mistakes that even mediocre hitters can take advantage of. Plus you also get into the other team's middle relief pitching fairly regularly and those are generally the worst pitchers on the staff.)
The theory behind moneyball is trying to find the right statistics that explain what happened on the field. The reality is trying to find an otherwise average player who does something special that helps his team win,but is so ordinary that he can't justify asking for big dollars. It's interesting that of all the moneyball stats that have come into common acceptance,none of the defensive stats are worth a d***.
Morey is of the new generation of NBA Execs who are using the digital revolution to break down players and games into data that can be compared in all sorts of new ways.(For a hypothetical example-say McGrady shoots better % coming off a screen on the right side. The team is looking at getting a back-up SG and there are 2 candidates who are very similar. But one shoots much better coming off a screen on the left side and the other shoots about the same either way. All else equal the team would go after the second player,because the first would require the other players running the play do opposite of what they normally do,leading to more blown assignments.)
tha_rock220 wrote:IMO the premise is flawed because those bargain players become big money guys so you only keep them around for a couple years. So yeah you can compete with bigger market teams despite spending less money, but you can't compete with them every season.
tha_rock220 wrote:Morey uses in depth statistics, but I don't really know if he takes the moneyball approach to things. It's also worth noting that no team has ever actually won anything by using this approach.
tisbee wrote:Once you get past the author's deification of Beane it does give a diff perspective on baseball