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Article: What has happened to Joe Mauer's defense?


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Posted

If you know what PERA is ... OPS+... DIPS... You are a stat head...

 

My question is why anyone would be insulted by stat head.

Posted

the use did not add value to the comments, but was used to generalize a group of people. If the author was not implying anything by the use of the term, then that was not the message received. An expression in the communications field is " message sent is not always message received". So if the word was not uses to imply something negative, why was it used at all?

Posted

Stereotypes exist because of the abstract halo of truth around the concrete reality, ofttimes the abstract shoes fit perfectly- at the other end is Billy Beane- I'd suggest you're somewhere inbetween.

 

I don't really consider myself a "stat-head" by any definition of the term. I use stats to support my opinions, not as the basis for them. (I mean, come on, I was railing against WAR on another thread just yesterday.)

 

I simply take exception to the whole "looks at box scores, doesn't watch the games, has never played baseball" mantra. I know plenty of fellow analysts who would be deemed "stat-heads" and the majority of them have played baseball before, watch tons of games and understand the intangible nuances of the sport. It's a vastly inaccurate stereotype.

 

Very well said... I would add that not only are there "stat-heads" who have played or coached, there are also some passionate baseball fans who don't follow stat sheets very closely AND have never coached or played.

Posted

If you get Metrics... Put it on your sleeve... It's a Badge. No reason to be insulted. I know what the stats mean... I'm a stat head.

 

My only concern with some use of metrics is the gospel like use of them by some. A good stat head should be able to recognize the fluctuations and realize that the stats don't provide an answer for the fluctuations and therefore can only be used as information of what has happened and not what will be with complete certainty.

 

The stat heads that should be insulted are the ones who take the numbers and say case closed!!! If that's not you... Don't be insulted.

 

There are baseball people who don't get metrics at all. That's a hole in their game.

Posted
If you get Metrics... Put it on your sleeve... It's a Badge. No reason to be insulted. I know what the stats mean... I'm a stat head.

 

My only concern with some use of metrics is the gospel like use of them by some. A good stat head should be able to recognize the fluctuations and realize that the stats don't provide an answer for the fluctuations and therefore can only be used as information of what has happened and not what will be with complete certainty.

 

The stat heads that should be insulted are the ones who take the numbers and say case closed!!! If that's not you... Don't be insulted.

 

There are baseball people who don't get metrics at all. That's a hole in their game.

 

Excellent post. BTW, I use stats all the time. I enjoy stats. What I object to is what Riverbrian pointed out--when people use stats as the gospel and don't take into account the nuances of the actual game play. That's what I was getting at (rather clumsily) in my post when I said that if you've got a good base stealer you almost always send them.

 

Since I'm the guy that used the term 'stat-head' let me explain a bit further. And I can't believe everybody on this board that love the numbers of baseball didn't see it.

 

The primary commodity in offensive baseball is the out. You get 3 of them per inning and just like it makes little sense to bunt early in a game and trade one of those three outs out to advance a single runner one base, it's usually not a good idea to send a risk a 25 to 40% chance of being thrown out in exchange for one out.

 

OK, what's wrong with this statement? Anyone?

 

The problem is that no decent base stealer gets thrown out 25% of the time, much less 40% of the time. That's why I said if you have a good base runner you should almost always send them, if the situation warrants it. If you've got a guy with a success rate of 80% as a base stealer and you need to get that guy into scoring position, you send him. I'm sure someone can find the stats that show the likelihood of a base runner scoring from first base with 'x' number of outs vs. the chances of the runner scoring from second base. Heaven's sake, Ryan Braun is a career 79.5% success rate at SB's and we don't even think of him as being a base stealer. Furthermore the league average on CS% is around 27% FOR ALL BASERUNNERS.

Posted

Stereotypes exist because of the abstract halo of truth around the concrete reality, ofttimes the abstract shoes fit perfectly- at the other end is Billy Beane- I'd suggest you're somewhere inbetween.

 

I don't really consider myself a "stat-head" by any definition of the term. I use stats to support my opinions, not as the basis for them. (I mean, come on, I was railing against WAR on another thread just yesterday.)

 

I simply take exception to the whole "looks at box scores, doesn't watch the games, has never played baseball" mantra. I know plenty of fellow analysts who would be deemed "stat-heads" and the majority of them have played baseball before, watch tons of games and understand the intangible nuances of the sport. It's a vastly inaccurate stereotype.

 

Very well said... I would add that not only are there "stat-heads" who have played or coached, there are also some passionate baseball fans who don't follow stat sheets very closely AND have never coached or played.

I hereby nominate the http://twinsdaily.com/member.php?182-The-Dread-Pirate to develop a Venn Diagram to put proper quantification and illustration of the intersection of the various subsets- with respect to 'stat-respect'- of the Twins fans in aggregation. Perhaps Pirate (who himself, said he occasionally has some available down-time) can go so far as to develop a questionnaire for each willing poster on Twins Daily so they can be identified and labeled by levels of stat-headedness, so the various camps and factions can determine if said poster is friend, foe or part-time intersecting ally.

Provisional Member
Posted
I really want to comment on this because I love analysis like this, but really, the relevant thing here is how long does it take from the time the ball is in Joe's mitt to the time he throws the ball. The footwork analysis is interesting but ultimately what matters is how long the exchange takes.

 

While that would be good supplemental information, what Gardenhire was referring to when he was saying Mauer is not getting behind the ball is that it is costing him some zip. It could be that he's getting a quick release in both cases however in his current form he's slightly slower at getting to ball to second overall.

 

 

Has anyone tracked Mauer's passed balls and wild pitches this season? It seems like more catchable balls have gotten past him this season than ever before. I seem to remember several going between his legs without him getting his glove down to block the ball.

Posted
I don't really consider myself a "stat-head" by any definition of the term. I use stats to support my opinions, not as the basis for them. (I mean, come on, I was railing against WAR on another thread just yesterday.)

 

By "any definition"? Is Billy Beane a stat-head or not?

 

I am in complete agreement with your middle sentence, but can't a stat-head do the same?

 

Finally, in response to your third sentence, your efforts on that thread with regards to WAR were admirable and did not go unnoticed by me.

 

 

I simply take exception to the whole "looks at box scores, doesn't watch the games, has never played baseball" mantra. I know plenty of fellow analysts who would be deemed "stat-heads" and the majority of them have played baseball before, watch tons of games and understand the intangible nuances of the sport. It's a vastly inaccurate stereotype.

 

Usage of the "Some of my best friends" arguments aren't overly persuasive.

 

Having said that-

If you look at the coke-bottle-lens-eyeware-, pocket protector-, White and unmarried single 20- & 30-Something bloggers-, indices in aggregate, I'd say the stat-heads make up a larger population of statistical-based analysts than the ex-jocks. (Let me be the first to say that Twins Daily is a refreshing excepton!-- although one of your brethren readily embraces the genre- with his self-titled, "Gleeman and the Geek" podcasts.

Posted
If you get Metrics... Put it on your sleeve... It's a Badge. No reason to be insulted. I know what the stats mean... I'm a stat head.

 

My only concern with some use of metrics is the gospel like use of them by some. A good stat head should be able to recognize the fluctuations and realize that the stats don't provide an answer for the fluctuations and therefore can only be used as information of what has happened and not what will be with complete certainty.

 

The stat heads that should be insulted are the ones who take the numbers and say case closed!!! If that's not you... Don't be insulted.

 

There are baseball people who don't get metrics at all. That's a hole in their game.

 

Excellent post. BTW, I use stats all the time. I enjoy stats. What I object to is what Riverbrian pointed out--when people use stats as the gospel and don't take into account the nuances of the actual game play. That's what I was getting at (rather clumsily) in my post when I said that if you've got a good base stealer you almost always send them.

 

Since I'm the guy that used the term 'stat-head' let me explain a bit further. And I can't believe everybody on this board that love the numbers of baseball didn't see it.

 

]The primary commodity in offensive baseball is the out. You get 3 of them per inning and just like it makes little sense to bunt early in a game and trade one of those three outs out to advance a single runner one base, it's usually not a good idea to send a risk a 25 to 40% chance of being thrown out in exchange for one out.[/b]

 

"OK, what's wrong with this statement? Anyone?

 

The problem is that no decent base stealer gets thrown out 25% of the time, much less 40% of the time. That's why I said if you have a good base runner you should almost always send them, if the situation warrants it. If you've got a guy with a success rate of 80% as a base stealer and you need to get that guy into scoring position, you send him. I'm sure someone can find the stats that show the likelihood of a base runner scoring from first base with 'x' number of outs vs. the chances of the runner scoring from second base. Heaven's sake, Ryan Braun is a career 79.5% success rate at SB's and we don't even think of him as being a base stealer. Furthermore the league average on CS% is around 27% FOR ALL BASERUNNERS."

 

Well-pllayed, powrwrap, RE- your complete and total dismantling of the all-too-common Twins Daily counter-point tactics- Argumentus Extremis Finitis with special sub-fallacies given by way of Stramineus Hominem (Straw Man) and Ignoratio Elenchi (Ignorance of refutation).

Posted

Well... this thread started off well. Now it seems to be directed by an egomaniac and a participant who will not be wrong at all costs. It is... quite a shame.:(

Posted
Well... this thread started off well. Now it seems to be directed by an egomaniac and a participant who will not be wrong at all costs. It is... quite a shame.:(

 

Actually I think he is just making his point. Seems Kosher to me... Although I can't be sure. His vocabulary is bigger than mine.

 

He might be ripping me or someone else a new one... or agreeing. I'm just not sure.

 

I wish I would have taken my English classes more seriously in school. :confused: :whacky028:

Posted
Well... this thread started off well. Now it seems to be directed by an egomaniac and a participant who will not be wrong at all costs. It is... quite a shame.:(

 

Actually I think he is just making his point. Seems Kosher to me... Although I can't be sure. His vocabulary is bigger than mine.

 

He might be ripping me or someone else a new one... or agreeing. I'm just not sure.

 

I wish I would have taken my English classes more seriously in school. :confused: :whacky028:

 

That makes two of us - but I do sense a negative overtone... maybe I am misreading it?:confused:

Posted

I think the issue in this thread is that some statheads are slow to adjust their criteria when the game changes. I wouldn't be surprised if they think that SB's are overrated because of a book that came out a decade ago when baseball was in the midst of a steroid enhanced offensive era. At the time it made less sense to steal bases because you were more likely to get hits/HR's. Now the value of scoring ONE run has increased since it's sort of becoming a pitcher dominated time. guys like these give any that uses advanced stats a bad name.

 

and to stay relevant to the thread Mauer is awful at throwing out basestealers and everyone is running against him. Making a blanket statement that SB's are overrated doesn't even come close to dismissing the damage that is being done. Almost every game the opposing team is getting a free base with almost 0% chance of being caught.

 

FWIW I use stats a lot and I use a lot of advanced stats and I disagree with the above generalization.

Posted

Good article, good topic.

 

IMO, the stats are interesting - how much they're telling us is open to interpretation.

 

Butera's numbers are decent - which pitchers? What are Mauer's numbers with those pitchers?

 

IMO, to really "get at it," we'd need to study the video of the stolen bases ... how big a jump are opposition base-stealers getting? If we studied enough tape, I bet we could find the "jump" dividing line - for the catcher to have a reasonable chance, the runner can't be more than X feet toward 2nd base when he receives the ball. Find out what the league average is and then compare your guy's number to that average ...

 

My sense ... and I hate to say this ... our staff's been lousy the past two years at a lot of things, holding down the running game included. It has to get frustrating, especially during a long season of losing.

 

IMO, this is an "off season" project. Get this year over, let Joe rest & recuperate, then - when the aggravation begins to wear off and enthusiasm is renewed, go to work on those fundamentals.

 

Oh, and tell Joe "We're busting the pitchers' asses about getting the ball off too."

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