Jump to content
Twins Daily
  • Create Account
  • Twins News & Analysis

    Big Splash? More Like Big Slash


    Tom Froemming

    The Cleveland Indians are in the World Series, marking the third-straight season and fourth out of the last five years the American League Champion has come from the Central. So the Twins are doomed to toil in last place in this juggernaut division, right? Maybe not.

    Yes, things are looking up in Believeland, but the rest of the division appears to be very much up in the air. And if you read some of the season review/offseason preview content, there are a lot of things to like if you're a Twins fan.

    Image courtesy of Peter Aiken, USA Today

    Twins Video

    After back-to-back World Series appearances culminating with a title, the Royals appeared poised for an extended stay atop the division. After all, they had very few changes to their championship roster. But Kansas City finished right at .500 this season, and it sounds like general manager Dayton Moore will be very limited financially.

    Sam Mellinger of the Kansas City Star took a look at the organization's future in an excellent piece. In that article, Mellinger reports the Royals are likely to lower their payroll from last season. He speculates that accomplishing that task would require not only declining the options on both Edinson Volquez and Kendrys Morales, but the team would also have to trade someone like Wade Davis.

    Could Detroit also be positioned to trade away established players? The Tigers actually finished second in the division, bouncing back from a last-place finish the year prior to fall just 2.5 games out of the playoffs. Sounds like a team on the rise, right? Not so much when you listen to quotes from general manager Al Avila.

    "We certainly want to stay competitive," Avila told MLB.com reporter Jason Beck. "We certainly want to be able to try to get back in the playoffs. But at the same time, this organization has been working way above its means for many, many years."

    It's not like Miguel Cabrera or Justin Verlander are going anywhere, but it also doesn't sound likely the Tigers will be making their annual big splash either. If anything, it sounds like they'll be trying to shed payroll.

    The White Sox made some splashy moves of their own last offseason and posted a surprising 17-8 record in April. They collapsed from there, finishing with 78 wins. It was an odd season that started with Adam LaRoche's sudden retirement, had Chris Sale cutting up throwback jerseys somewhere in the middle and has ended with manager Robin Ventura stepping down after five seasons.

    ESPN's Buster Olney said the handling of Ventura's final days, "provided perfect insight into the organization's dysfunction and why the team is doomed to mediocrity for years to come unless something changes in the way it operates." And quotes from their GM aren't exactly going to get Sox fans rushing out to renew their season tickets.

    “Everyone in that front office is looking for the best path to get us on an extended period of success even if that involves a short-term step-back,” Rick Hahn told Daryl Van Schouwen of the Chicago Sun Times.

    If you ask me, that sounds like GM speak for "we're going to rebuild." Hahn also said "by the time we make our first or second transaction, publicly it will be fairly clear as to our direction." Or, GM speak for "we're gonna be super obvious about rebuilding."

    Swinging back to Cleveland, yes, they will have most of their core returning next season. All except their secret weapon ... Derek Falvey (insert evil laugh). But seriously, with their pitching staff back healthy (presumably), Cleveland will likely be the favorite to repeat as division champs. Good teams never have problems attracting players, but don't expect Cleveland to blow the bank on free agent additions.

    Revenue has been tough to come by, Cleveland ranked 28th in attendance this season and the last time the they were even inside the top 20 in attendance was 2002. Their bottom line will get a nice boost from all these postseason games, but it's not like they'll be singing any superstars.

    As for the Twins, we don't have any doom and gloom quotes from our GM, no sir. Then again, we don't have one of those yet. And our President of Baseball Operations is working for another team at the moment. But when you're coming off the worst season in team history, sometimes no news is good news.

    Follow Twins Daily For Minnesota Twins News & Analysis

    Recent Twins Articles

    Recent Twins Videos


    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    Featured Comments

    if you look at the larger sample of playoff teams, you'll see far more large salaried teams that small. That's reality.  The same is true with series winners and repeats.  Having money matters. It's not an obstacle that cannot be overcome, but it's silly to think that it can be ignored.

    If it's just a crapshoot, how do you explain the Twins playoff history in the 2000's?

    If it was random, the Twins would have had a mix of outcomes, and would have posted roughly a .500 playoff record over that span.

     

    If you roll double sixes every single roll, roll after roll after roll, the dice are not random.

     

    If it's just a crapshoot, how do you explain the Twins playoff history in the 2000's?
    If it was random, the Twins would have had a mix of outcomes, and would have posted roughly a .500 playoff record over that span.

    If you roll double sixes every single roll, roll after roll after roll, the dice are not random.

     

    Did you watch any of those games?  Because is there weren't nearly a dozen times you were flabbergasted by amazing strokes of bad luck, I don't know if we watched the same games.  

     

    The other half of those terrible records was a psychological component.

     

    But to cut past all this, if you don't think isolated 5 or 7 games samples aren't the definition of small sample size, you just frankly don't believe in small sample size.  And you should.  That's a thing.  Like, an important fact about looking at statistics.  So...you're just plain off base.  (No Punto Puns intended there)

    Did you watch any of those games? Because is there weren't nearly a dozen times you were flabbergasted by amazing strokes of bad luck, I don't know if we watched the same games.

     

    The other half of those terrible records was a psychological component.

     

    But to cut past all this, if you don't think isolated 5 or 7 games samples aren't the definition of small sample size, you just frankly don't believe in small sample size. And you should. That's a thing. Like, an important fact about looking at statistics. So...you're just plain off base. (No Punto Puns intended there)

    Small sample size is not the same thing as crapshoot.

    Calling it a crapshoot implies it is virtually luck, with little or no skill involved.

     

    Could you please give examples of all the amazing strokes of bad luck? Aside from the blown call against the Yankees, I don't remember much of that, just poor performance by the Twins.

     

    Of course there was a psychological component. That is evidence for my side, not the crapshoot side. Not folding under pressure is a skill, not luck.

     

    There is no reason to speak to me like a five year old just because you disagree with me.

     

    Small sample size is not the same thing as crapshoot.
    Calling it a crapshoot implies it is virtually luck, with little or no skill involved.

    Could you please give examples of all the amazing strokes of bad luck? Aside from the blown call against the Yankees, I don't remember much of that, just poor performance by the Twins.

    Of course there was a psychological component. That is evidence for my side, not the crapshoot side. Not folding under pressure is a skill, not luck.

    There is no reason to speak to me like a five year old just because you disagree with me.

    Does horrible managing fall under bad luck? :-)

     

    Small sample size is not the same thing as crapshoot.
    Calling it a crapshoot implies it is virtually luck, with little or no skill involved.

    Could you please give examples of all the amazing strokes of bad luck? Aside from the blown call against the Yankees, I don't remember much of that, just poor performance by the Twins.

    Of course there was a psychological component. That is evidence for my side, not the crapshoot side. Not folding under pressure is a skill, not luck.

    There is no reason to speak to me like a five year old just because you disagree with me.

     

    Calling it a crapshoot means the outcome is uncertain no matter what you think you see beforehand.  I

     

    I could go back and pick out 5 game stretches and argue the Twins deserved to be a 100 win team.  Would that be a valid way of determining their talent or ability? 

     

    No?  Then why is it ever?  Small samples are prone to wild swings of luck and demonstrations of play that exceed or slump relative to expectations.  We have playoffs for atmosphere, entertainment, and a variety of other reasons.  It does absolutely nothing for determining the league's best team beyond ceremony.  The 162 game season already pretty much told us who the best team was and that team doesn't win the playoffs with much regularity.

     

    So yeah, it's a crapshoot.  

    Calling it a crapshoot means the outcome is uncertain no matter what you think you see beforehand. I

     

    I could go back and pick out 5 game stretches and argue the Twins deserved to be a 100 win team. Would that be a valid way of determining their talent or ability?

     

    No? Then why is it ever? Small samples are prone to wild swings of luck and demonstrations of play that exceed or slump relative to expectations. We have playoffs for atmosphere, entertainment, and a variety of other reasons. It does absolutely nothing for determining the league's best team beyond ceremony. The 162 game season already pretty much told us who the best team was and that team doesn't win the playoffs with much regularity.

     

    So yeah, it's a crapshoot.

    Of course there is more variance in a string of 5 and 7 game series than there is over 162 games.

    But there is still plenty of skill involved. Most people believe the Cubs are the best team in baseball and they made the world series, pure coincidence I guess.

     

    Would skill matter if the Cubs played a little league team, in a 1 game series? Such a small sample size, I guess we really can't say which team would win.

     

    The Twins lost 15 of their last 17 playoff games. The odds of that happening based on pure randomness (coinflip), is 1:963.8

     

    So, possible sure, but extremely unlikely. The more likely answer is that skill (or lack of) contributed as much or more than luck.

     

    Are you suggesting that results are meaningless if there is ANY luck involved?

    What is your threshold for how much luck can be involved before it's a legit outcome and not just small sample size noise?

    Because if you a need a large enough sample size to weed out all luck, then the regular is also meaningless.

     

    It's still a team of humans pitting skills against another team of humans. The results still mean something.

     

    Of course there is more variance in a string of 5 and 7 game series than there is over 162 games.
    But there is still plenty of skill involved. Most people believe the Cubs are the best team in baseball and they made the world series, pure coincidence I guess.

    Would skill matter if the Cubs played a little league team, in a 1 game series? Such a small sample size, I guess we really can't say which team would win.

    The Twins lost 15 of their last 17 playoff games. The odds of that happening based on pure randomness (coinflip), is 1:963.8

    So, possible sure, but extremely unlikely. The more likely answer is that skill (or lack of) contributed as much or more than luck.

    Are you suggesting that results are meaningless if there is ANY luck involved?
    What is your threshold for how much luck can be involved before it's a legit outcome and not just small sample size noise?
    Because if you a need a large enough sample size to weed out all luck, then the regular is also meaningless.

    It's still a team of humans pitting skills against another team of humans. The results still mean something.

     

    1) Most people believed the 2015 Cardinals were the best team.  What happened to them?  Go back and look at the teams with the best records and see what happened to them in the playoffs.  This is what happens over a small sample size.  The better team routinely gets beaten.  

     

    Hell, how many play-in teams in just the last few years have made WS runs?  So, c'mon, that argument is nonsense.

     

    2)  Of course the Cubs would beat a little league team.  One of them isn't filled with professional baseball players.  Again.  C'mon.

     

    3)  1, 5, or 7 game series after a 162 game season are the definition of a small sample size.  Small sample sizes are not nearly as good a measure of quality as a larger sample.  To deny that small sample size terrorizes better teams in the playoffs is to deny a simple reality about statistics.  You are welcome to do so, but you're wrong if you do.

     

    This is, in no way, arguing the Twins were a better or worse team.  That'd have to be a year by year thing.  The argument that the playoffs do anything other than show "this team lucked and skilled their way over a ridiculously small sample to a title" is nonsense.  The playoffs are purely for entertainment.  The regular season always give us the best measurement of who the best team is.  What happens in the playoffs is just crazy *@%$ you hope you come out on the right side of.

     

    Can you try and have a roster that gives you better odds of surviving all that crazy *@%$?  Sure.  You'll still fall victim.  No matter how you construct your build.  No matter how much more superior you are to your opponent.  No matter how well you manage.  You will still fall victim.  Often.  More often than you'd like.  That's what small samples do, they lie.  The outcomes frequently lie about who is better.

    Edited by TheLeviathan

    1) Most people believed the 2015 Cardinals were the best team. What happened to them? Go back and look at the teams with the best records and see what happened to them in the playoffs. This is what happens over a small sample size. The better team routinely gets beaten.

     

    Hell, how many play-in teams in just the last few years have made WS runs? So, c'mon, that argument is nonsense.

     

    2) Of course the Cubs would beat a little league team. One of them isn't filled with professional baseball players. Again. C'mon.

     

    3) 1, 5, or 7 game series after a 162 game season are the definition of a small sample size. Small sample sizes are not nearly as good a measure of quality as a larger sample. To deny that small sample size terrorizes better teams in the playoffs is to deny a simple reality about statistics. You are welcome to do so, but you're wrong if you do.

     

    This is, in no way, arguing the Twins were a better or worse team. That'd have to be a year by year thing. The argument that the playoffs do anything other than show "this team lucked and skilled their way over a ridiculously small sample to a title" is nonsense. The playoffs are purely for entertainment. The regular season always give us the best measurement of who the best team is. What happens in the playoffs is just crazy *@%$ you hope you come out on the right side of.

     

    Can you try and have a roster that gives you better odds of surviving all that crazy *@%$? Sure. You'll still fall victim. No matter how you construct your build. No matter how much more superior you are to your opponent. No matter how well you manage. You will still fall victim. Often. More often than you'd like. That's what small samples do, they lie. The outcomes frequently lie about who is better.

    I don't think I ever claimed the best team will always win in the playoffs.

    But I also don't think it's pure randomness luck.

    I'm sorry. Agree to disagree there.

    Most of the time if a team gets beat it's because they left pitches up in the zone, made defensive errors, or some other human error. Rarely is it because they got unlucky.

    I think if you consistently build one of the 3 or 4 best teams in baseball, with a good manager, you will eventually cash in a title or two.

    And that was my point all along. Nowhere did I ever claim you are guaranteed to win every year just because you have the best roster.

    Leaving pitches up, making errors, or having defensive gaffes are not a direct reflection of talent. Sometimes the bad luck is that otherwise reliable players had that happen and the resulting damage is heightened in the playoffs.

     

    Call that whatever you want, but talent doesn't determine that either way. That sort of randomness is why the playoffs are a crapshoot.




    Create an account or sign in to comment

    You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

    Create an account

    Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

    Register a new account

    Sign in

    Already have an account? Sign in here.

    Sign In Now

×
×
  • Create New...