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Yesterday, it was reported by Ken Rosenthal and others that both the Mariners and Nationals had strong interest in Prince Fielder. Frankly, anyone with money to spend should have strong interest in the big slugger unless they are petrified by the Saberhagenmetrics going on in his stat line. Odd-numbered seasons have been the superior ones for Fielder while even-numbered years have been steps back from the previous years. Looking at yearly patterns can be entertaining or unnerving depending on how much faith you put in patterns, but there is no concrete proof that any of it matters.

What can be demonstrated is how a ballpark will affect a hitter’s numbers. It seems a bit ridiculous to talk about a ballpark affecting a hitter’s power totals when that hitter hits home runs 486 feet in Houston, but park dimensions do not discriminate. According to HitTracker, Fielder had the longest home run in all of baseball in 2011 and two of the top 10 home runs by distance this past season, and he has great power to all fields.  With Fielder unlikely to return to Milwaukee, we should start looking at how a change in home address will affect Fielder’s power numbers in 2012.

Thanks to the handy tool at katron.org, it is rather simple to see how batted ball data carries over from one ballpark to the next. Simply choose the current park, choose the new park, choose the batter, and instantly see where the balls would land by distance. It is a two-dimensional measurement that does not take into account wall heights, but it gives you a way to see where batted balls would land. For some hitters, doubles become home runs while others would have their home runs find the grass instead of the bleachers.

Using the tool, here is how Fielder’s fly outs, doubles, and home runs from Miller Park would have played out at Nationals Ballpark.

While parks factors at StatCorner show that Miller Park is far more favorable for lefty homers than Nationals Park, the good news for anyone with Fielder in a keeper league is that the change in parks would appear to have a much smaller impact on Fielder individually. Just one of the home runs he hit at Miller Park in 2011 would not have left the yard in Nationals Park, though a few of those “just enough” home runs may be closer calls in 2012 should he join the Nationals.

To compare, here is how Fielder’s data would translates into Safeco Field (home of the Seattle Mariners—another team that has been linked to Prince):

Note that five of his home runs that were hit at home would not go over the wall in Seattle, but at least one of his doubles could clear the fence. Safeco is a known suppressor of power to left-field, as Adrian Beltre can attest to. Someone like Fielder who enjoys going the other way would be facing an uphill climb trying to hit home runs to the unfriendly part of the park. A move to Seattle could have a trickle-down effect on Fielder’s power production not just because of the park effects but because the drop in overall team talent from Milwaukee to Seattle could result in a reduction of runs driven in, runs scored, or even the frequency that Fielder is pitched to by opposing managers.

Given the roster situations and the ballpark, if the Nationals and Mariners are the two most serious suitors of Fielder and his most likely destinations, it would be far better for his fantasy potential in 2012 that he go to the more desirable situation in Washington, D.C.

Thank you for reading

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batts40
11/29
Cool stuff.
Hudsonbelinsky
11/30
Interesting stuff. I just took a look at Fielder's homerun log at baseball-reference and noticed that he hit 8 of his 14 road homeruns at the parks of division rivals. It'd be interesting to see which balls would have stayed in or traveled out in the parks of his would-be division rivals.
jthom17
11/30
Great article! I was unable to locate a workable tool at katron.org (katron.org/projects/baseball/hit-location/). It maybe that I am using the wrong browser (Explorer). Any suggestions?
Thks,
jthom17
11/30
The tool is accessible with Google Chrome -- but not Internet Explorer.
smocon
11/30
You can get it on explorer but it doesnt allow you to do certain things.

The thing I found most interesting is that if Fielder was a Cub last year, he would have hit 7 more HR.

Another interesting point was that in the Kemp vs Braun debate (on which I was of the side that felt Kemp more deserved the MVP than Braun), Braun would have hit 7 fewer HR if he were a Dodger, and Kemp would have hit 3 more HR as a Brewer. Kemp was the better player.
dianagramr
11/30
Back in the mid 80s, I did my Master's Thesis on the use of computers in baseball. I came across an article that stated that the A's didn't fear trading Tony Armas to the Red Sox because their proprietary computer system analyzed Armas' flyballs, and when superimposed upon Fenway Park's dimensions, found that he wouldn't be as good a powerhitter there.

It turns out they were wrong, as Armas hit .280/.323/.524 in his career at Fenway.
Drungo
11/30
So does this tool take altitude into account? Or any kind of adjustment for average distance hit that might be a reasonable proxy for altitude, humidity, wind and the like?
granbergt
11/30
I was wondering the same thing...
moonlightj
11/30
It does not. I thought I clarified that in the piece but I may have not explained that clearly. It shows distance traveled but not any heights.

jintman
11/30
Thanks for the new toy.
jthom17
12/02
I have played with this tool a fair amount. It is interesting but utilizing only distance is not the most revealing for a player changing home parks. It would be great if it included other elements (altitude, humidity, etc). Take the recent signing of Ramon Hernandez by COL -- Tool shows Coors as an slight inhibitor on his HR since demensions are slighty bigger at Coors than Great American. However, Ballpark Factors indicate a 6% improvement by moving to COL