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Breaking Balls: A Stroll Through the Mailbag
by Derek Zumsteg
We missed all four division series predictions here at Baseball Prospectus. I predicted
that the A's would beat the Twins in "Three. Four max." The email
immediately started to flow in:
Here's a more in-depth example:
After the Twins finished the A's off, the gloating began in earnest:
Earlier this year,
Gary
Huckabay wrote a 6-4-3 column in which he noted that "the nature of the
game--and the universe--makes forecasting a task that is both somewhat
unattainable, and even more irresistible because of that." Huckabay's a
smart guy.
The Playoff Prospectus, for what it's worth, is the worst kind of forecasting
baseball writers have to do. Trying to
predict the outcome of a short series is folly. I'd rather try and predict
next week's Seattle area weather.
Diamond Mind Baseball's Tom Tippett wrote a great article entitled "May the best
team win... at least some of the time". His Twins-Oakland forecast came
out favoring Oakland, saying they'd win the series about 62% of the time, based
on win percentages. But that's still a lot of winning for the Twins. Where'd I
go wrong?
Here's what went into my Playoff Prospectus: I looked at the formats we'd used
before, sketched out what I thought the lineups would be like (before the 25-man
postseason roster), and then started to look at things that might not show up in
their overall win percentages: the Twins' weakness against left-handers, picking
Mays to start over Lohse (and not even considering starting left-handed Santana
against Oakland), things like that. Some things I discarded: Zito dominated the
Twins in the regular season, but was more vulnerable in general against lefties,
for instance. Finding this stuff wasn't rocket science: I'm not on the STATS
Inc. payroll, I don't have all the time in the world, and I'm working with the
tools at hand. I saw where those things took me, mixed it all up, and in the
end, there's a prediction to be made.
And it was wrong.
I stand by the components of it. The lefty starters did well against the Twins.
Koskie is not as good a defender as Chavez is, whatever Dave Campbell says. You
can make fun of defensive statistics all you want, but they're about even on the
decent ones, and Koskie plays on EZ-Field Turf half the time, while Chavez toils
in the Al Davis Reconfigurable Hole. And Rivas? His turf-enhanced fielding stats
are still awful.
I didn't think Howe would keep going to Ted Freaking Lilly in crucial
situations, no, but in retrospect, I knew he was prone to making wacky
decisions, so I should have harped on that more.
Four of us wrote a Division Series Playoff Prospectus, and all four of us were
wrong on the final outcomes. I disagreed with some of them, but in the other
three there were things I hadn't considered about those series, things I thought
were weighed too strongly, or not strongly enough. All three of them made me
think, and that's why I wrote mine.
I've never understood why people think that contrary opinions are somehow
created to attack them, rather than something a reasonable person could
have arrived at in an entirely rational and intelligent manner.
Anyway, to another topic--I got a ton of email on my Daily
Prospectus about Oakland charging insane prices for tickets. Turns out
another problem was that the game times weren't announced until the last minute,
which meant it was almost impossible for people to get time off for the
afternoon games. Some people thought that ticket prices were set by the league
(which isn't the case), but almost all the A's fans were shocked and astounded.
Some sent me cool proof of past playoff attendance to show that people would
come out if they could.
Aaaaand then, of course, there were other e-mails:
So on a side note: Thanks to everyone who sends me email that has cool stuff in
it. Thanks to everyone who disagrees rationally. Thanks to everyone who submits
a quote to Week in Quotes, whether I use it or not, if I manage to send thanks
or not. Reader feedback has been one of the most rewarding parts of writing for
Prospectus, even if it's also one of the most overwhelming and frustrating, too.
Derek Zumsteg is an author of Baseball Prospectus. You can contact him by
clicking here.
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