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 Post subject: WAR
PostPosted: Sun Jul 21, 2019 11:19 pm 
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Somethin about this stat seems to mystify me.

I was lookin at Lee Smith's CAREER stats today, and over his career, he had (only) a WAR of 29.

Really?

He was only good for 29 wins over the average relief pitcher, in his entire fuckin career (18 years)?

Seemed hard to believe. I mean thats like saying his average replacement would have had about 2 saves per year less than Smitty. Which in itself woulda still been great. Also, I would think stoppers have a higher WAR than some starters., since if they save 40 or 45 games a year, they are involved in more wins.

By contrast, Rizzo ALREADY has a WAR of 31.5 for his career. Sounds about right. A value of 4 or 5 wins per year for one player is about right for a good player like him, on a good team full of good players who have good WARS in their own right.

So somebody explain this WAR to me. Does 29 sound about right to you for Smith?

Do u think WAR is a useful stat? I mean it seems like a good concept to me, but not sure if its being applied correctly.

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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Sun Jul 21, 2019 11:52 pm 
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Mariano Rivera had a career WAR of ONLY 56.

Really?

652 fuckin saves, a winning record (82-60), and a 2.21 career ERA and you only have a WAR of 56?

I would think for him that should be around 150.

I mean, fuck, if u turn some of his saves into blown saves (leaving him with still, for example, 600 saves), shouldnt that theoretically kill his WAR pretty quickly?

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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Mon Jul 22, 2019 5:03 am 
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What is it good for?


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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Mon Jul 22, 2019 6:20 am 
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Cashman wrote:
What is it good for?


Absolutely not evaluating the value of relievers

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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Mon Jul 22, 2019 6:23 am 
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The thing about saves is that rationally, 2-3 run leads should almost never be blown.

I found a site online that calculates average runs expected in different situations (https://gregstoll.dyndns.org/~gregstoll ... nning.html), and taking what it spits out for coming in at the beginning of the 9th inning with an average pitcher and an average hitting team:

- There should be a 87% chance of saving a 2-run lead
- There should be a 95% chance of saving a 3-run lead

So closers really have a hard time adding to their stats in those situations.

Of course, saves are not rational, because of nerves. Look at Carl Edwards or LaTroy Hawkins. But a rational model like WAR or WPA+ doesn't understand how to adjust for that.

For closers, I think there are only two good metrics:
- 1-run saves converted/blown
- 4+ out saves converted

Giving up a run when you come in with a 3-run lead against the bottom of the order and you're experimenting and one goes out of the park, that's just as irrelevant as Sammy Sosa's multitude of 8th inning solo home runs when they were down by 4-5.

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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Mon Jul 22, 2019 6:39 am 
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ERAs are often deceivingly good for relievers because they sometimes come in with one or two outs in an inning.

Back in the day, Murph suggested having a modified ERA system where runs allowed would count against both the pitcher who let the runner on and the one who let him score. Let's say the first pitcher allowed a runner to reach first, and then the reliever allowed him to score. The first pitcher would be charged with 1/4 run and the other pitcher 3/4. That made a lot of sense to me...I assume some of the latest metrics do something similar to equalize a reliever's performance and also reflect the fact it's easier to keep your ERA low when you only have to get one or two outs.

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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Mon Jul 22, 2019 7:53 am 
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MajorKong wrote:
Cashman wrote:
What is it good for?


Absolutely not evaluating the value of relievers



I would argue it excellent for that very thing. "Closer" is the most overvalued position in the game.

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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Mon Jul 22, 2019 8:19 am 
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Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
MajorKong wrote:
Cashman wrote:
What is it good for?


Absolutely not evaluating the value of relievers



I would argue it excellent for that very thing. "Closer" is the most overvalued position in the game.


I would agree with the second part. The issue is that WAR is a compiling statistic. Relievers only pitch ~70 innings per season, so an elite reliever can often fail to accumulate more WAR than a mediocre starter.

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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Mon Jul 22, 2019 8:22 am 
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MajorKong wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
MajorKong wrote:
Cashman wrote:
What is it good for?


Absolutely not evaluating the value of relievers



I would argue it excellent for that very thing. "Closer" is the most overvalued position in the game.


I would agree with the second part. The issue is that WAR is a compiling statistic. Relievers only pitch ~70 innings per season, so an elite reliever can often fail to accumulate more WAR than a mediocre starter.


But that reflects- correctly- the limited impact of the reliever.

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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Mon Jul 22, 2019 8:26 am 
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Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
MajorKong wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
MajorKong wrote:
Cashman wrote:
What is it good for?


Absolutely not evaluating the value of relievers



I would argue it excellent for that very thing. "Closer" is the most overvalued position in the game.


I would agree with the second part. The issue is that WAR is a compiling statistic. Relievers only pitch ~70 innings per season, so an elite reliever can often fail to accumulate more WAR than a mediocre starter.


But that reflects- correctly- the limited impact of the reliever.

Until you see a bad one! A bad closer can just kill a season.

(Not sure if you mean closer or relievers in general.)


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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Mon Jul 22, 2019 8:29 am 
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tommy wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
MajorKong wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
MajorKong wrote:
Cashman wrote:
What is it good for?


Absolutely not evaluating the value of relievers



I would argue it excellent for that very thing. "Closer" is the most overvalued position in the game.


I would agree with the second part. The issue is that WAR is a compiling statistic. Relievers only pitch ~70 innings per season, so an elite reliever can often fail to accumulate more WAR than a mediocre starter.


But that reflects- correctly- the limited impact of the reliever.

Until you see a bad one! A bad closer can just kill a season.

(Not sure if you mean closer or relievers in general.)


Is that perception or reality though? Of course when you lose a game in the ninth inning it stands out more than when you blow it in the fifth.

I agree that the last three outs seem to be difficult. And it appears that certain guys do not have the makeup to consistently and successfully get those three outs. But whether my perception is based upon small samples and anecdotes, I can't be certain.

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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Mon Jul 22, 2019 8:35 am 
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Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:

Is that perception or reality though? Of course when you lose a game in the ninth inning it stands out more than when you blow it in the fifth.

I agree that the last three outs seem to be difficult. And it appears that certain guys do not have the makeup to consistently and successfully get those three outs. But whether my perception is based upon small samples and anecdotes, I can't be certain.

Honestly not sure. I was thinking about going back to look at a few Sox teams where bad closers cost them games, and I was wondering to what extent this was actually true.

On the other hand, I think a good closer can make a decent team really good.


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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Mon Jul 22, 2019 8:51 am 
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Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
MajorKong wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
MajorKong wrote:
Cashman wrote:
What is it good for?


Absolutely not evaluating the value of relievers



I would argue it excellent for that very thing. "Closer" is the most overvalued position in the game.


I would agree with the second part. The issue is that WAR is a compiling statistic. Relievers only pitch ~70 innings per season, so an elite reliever can often fail to accumulate more WAR than a mediocre starter.


But that reflects- correctly- the limited impact of the reliever.


Not all innings pitched are equally valuable. Mike Leake getting three outs with a 5 run lead isn't as important as Josh Hader coming in to strike out the side with the bases loaded. Yet, both go down as scoreless innings.

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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Mon Jul 22, 2019 9:16 am 
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MajorKong wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
MajorKong wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
MajorKong wrote:
Cashman wrote:
What is it good for?


Absolutely not evaluating the value of relievers



I would argue it excellent for that very thing. "Closer" is the most overvalued position in the game.


I would agree with the second part. The issue is that WAR is a compiling statistic. Relievers only pitch ~70 innings per season, so an elite reliever can often fail to accumulate more WAR than a mediocre starter.


But that reflects- correctly- the limited impact of the reliever.


Not all innings pitched are equally valuable. Mike Leake getting three outs with a 5 run lead isn't as important as Josh Hader coming in to strike out the side with the bases loaded. Yet, both go down as scoreless innings.



I agree. But there are often high leverage innings pitched by relievers prior to the ninth. Coming in to a game in the fifth with 2 on and 1 out and coming away scoreless is probably worth more than coming into a fresh ninth and finishing it.

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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Mon Jul 22, 2019 1:00 pm 
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MajorKong wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
MajorKong wrote:
Cashman wrote:
What is it good for?


Absolutely not evaluating the value of relievers



I would argue it excellent for that very thing. "Closer" is the most overvalued position in the game.


I would agree with the second part. The issue is that WAR is a compiling statistic. Relievers only pitch ~70 innings per season, so an elite reliever can often fail to accumulate more WAR than a mediocre starter.


Adjusted WPA/out would do it, but that would lose too many people mathematically. But even then, you come in and pitch a clean 9th in three run game, you've added a whole 0.03 WPA over 3 outs, or 0.01/out.

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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Mon Jul 22, 2019 4:45 pm 
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Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
But that reflects- correctly- the limited impact of the reliever.


Image

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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Mon Jul 22, 2019 4:52 pm 
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STOPPER does not equal CLOSER

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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Tue Jul 23, 2019 7:12 am 
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If we're talking about changes to the game, one thing that I believe is a positive development over the past couple seasons is more first pitch swinging. The first pitch is often the best pitch of an at-bat and if you're taking it in the interest of merely "seeing pitches" you're helping create a boring game dominated by walks and strikeouts. It got to a point where pitchers could impudently throw a get-me-over fastball on the first pitch and start many counts 0-1. The increase in first pitch swings is clearly an adjustment to this.

Another thing I think is interesting is that all these teams have their detailed spray charts and proprietary data that informs their shifts, yet BABIP remains right at .300 no matter what the defense does. Tip of the cap to Voros McCracken.

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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Fri Jul 26, 2019 12:21 am 
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Chet Coppock's Fur Coat wrote:

Adjusted WPA/out would do it, but that would lose too many people mathematically. But even then, you come in and pitch a clean 9th in three run game, you've added a whole 0.03 WPA over 3 outs, or 0.01/out.



:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

fuck! :lol:

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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Fri Jul 26, 2019 12:22 am 
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Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
If we're talking about changes to the game, one thing that I believe is a positive development over the past couple seasons is more first pitch swinging. The first pitch is often the best pitch of an at-bat and if you're taking it in the interest of merely "seeing pitches" you're helping create a boring game dominated by walks and strikeouts. It got to a point where pitchers could impudently throw a get-me-over fastball on the first pitch and start many counts 0-1. The increase in first pitch swings is clearly an adjustment to this.

Another thing I think is interesting is that all these teams have their detailed spray charts and proprietary data that informs their shifts, yet BABIP remains right at .300 no matter what the defense does. Tip of the cap to Voros McCracken.


whats BABIP mean?

I'm still stuck at BA, OBP, and SLG, only.

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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Fri Jul 26, 2019 12:28 am 
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I just find it hard to believe that Rivera, a legend, only had a value of 56 victories over the average replacement.

I mean he came in a lot leading by only a run, came in with men on base in the 8th inning, etc. Did more 4 and 6 out saves than most of his contemporaries, in an age of specialization.

As far as Lee Smith, he pitched a ton of innings for a reliever. Up to 140 IP some years with no starts. So he was in games longer and therefore had a LOT of decisions for a reliever, and he was well under .500 for his career. So, with so many losses I can sorta see where it dragged down his WAR to negate the high save total.

But Rivera, 82-60, 652 saves, 18 years, I woulda thought he would be up around 80 or 90 for WAR.

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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Fri Jul 26, 2019 7:05 am 
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WAR has always been a flawed stat designed from the beginning to find the answers that were wanted. It starts off with a bunch of assumptions that fall apart so much people have to say "Well, it's only good for comparing players who play the same position" even though a positional adjustment is one of the whole points for this. It then throws in defense without adjusting for how little defense matters at some positions.

It is an easily digestible stat for internet arguments and sports radio because it puts a number value on a player so you can say "No, Player X is better because he has a WAR of 3.1 and Player Y has a WAR of 2.0!" without having to think about anything else in that equation.

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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Fri Jul 26, 2019 7:15 am 
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Boilermaker Rick wrote:
WAR has always been a flawed stat designed from the beginning to find the answers that were wanted. It starts off with a bunch of assumptions that fall apart so much people have to say "Well, it's only good for comparing players who play the same position" even though a positional adjustment is one of the whole points for this. It then throws in defense without adjusting for how little defense matters at some positions.

It is an easily digestible stat for internet arguments and sports radio because it puts a number value on a player so you can say "No, Player X is better because he has a WAR of 3.1 and Player Y has a WAR of 2.0!" without having to think about anything else in that equation.


the moment a "should have" factor is included into an equation, it no longer becomes scientific

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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Fri Jul 26, 2019 7:30 am 
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good dolphin wrote:
Boilermaker Rick wrote:
WAR has always been a flawed stat designed from the beginning to find the answers that were wanted. It starts off with a bunch of assumptions that fall apart so much people have to say "Well, it's only good for comparing players who play the same position" even though a positional adjustment is one of the whole points for this. It then throws in defense without adjusting for how little defense matters at some positions.

It is an easily digestible stat for internet arguments and sports radio because it puts a number value on a player so you can say "No, Player X is better because he has a WAR of 3.1 and Player Y has a WAR of 2.0!" without having to think about anything else in that equation.


the moment a "should have" factor is included into an equation, it no longer becomes scientific


You both are right. The part Rick makes about it being easily used in conversations and talk radio screams that point. The stats like that are fine if kept in the perspective necessary you can have both worlds and enjoy the game.

For me, it seems a lazy tool as well as sometimes flawed for people in fantasy or talk jobs that don't want to watch every player and/or game.

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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Fri Jul 26, 2019 8:16 am 
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Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
If we're talking about changes to the game, one thing that I believe is a positive development over the past couple seasons is more first pitch swinging.

Image

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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Fri Jul 26, 2019 9:02 am 
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whistler wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
If we're talking about changes to the game, one thing that I believe is a positive development over the past couple seasons is more first pitch swinging. The first pitch is often the best pitch of an at-bat and if you're taking it in the interest of merely "seeing pitches" you're helping create a boring game dominated by walks and strikeouts. It got to a point where pitchers could impudently throw a get-me-over fastball on the first pitch and start many counts 0-1. The increase in first pitch swings is clearly an adjustment to this.

Another thing I think is interesting is that all these teams have their detailed spray charts and proprietary data that informs their shifts, yet BABIP remains right at .300 no matter what the defense does. Tip of the cap to Voros McCracken.


whats BABIP mean?

I'm still stuck at BA, OBP, and SLG, only.


Batting Average for Balls In Play.

Even though "batting" is in the title, it's really a pitching stat. The theory is that a pitcher can only control three outcomes: strikeouts, walks, and home runs. All other balls that are put in play are considered good luck (out) or bad luck (hit) and not a function of a pitcher's skill. This is because someone discovered that all pitchers at the MLB level seem to have about the same BABIP. Assuming that's true, then all you would need to do to judge a pitcher is look at his strikeouts, walks, and home runs against. You can also look at a pitcher's recent BABIP to see if he's been lucky (his BABIP is lower than average), or unlucky (BABIP higher than average) because over time it should come back to the average.

Of course, many disagree with the notion that a pitcher has no effect on whether a ball in play is a hit or out. Some pitchers would seem to be good enough to induce weak contact, while others get pounded.

BABIP doesn't work as well as a metric for batters, in that there is more variability depending on the hitting style. For example, Ichiro had a very high BABIP because of the many infield hits he had.

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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Fri Jul 26, 2019 9:08 am 
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Jaw Breaker wrote:
whistler wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
If we're talking about changes to the game, one thing that I believe is a positive development over the past couple seasons is more first pitch swinging. The first pitch is often the best pitch of an at-bat and if you're taking it in the interest of merely "seeing pitches" you're helping create a boring game dominated by walks and strikeouts. It got to a point where pitchers could impudently throw a get-me-over fastball on the first pitch and start many counts 0-1. The increase in first pitch swings is clearly an adjustment to this.

Another thing I think is interesting is that all these teams have their detailed spray charts and proprietary data that informs their shifts, yet BABIP remains right at .300 no matter what the defense does. Tip of the cap to Voros McCracken.


whats BABIP mean?

I'm still stuck at BA, OBP, and SLG, only.


Batting Average for Balls In Play.

Even though "batting" is in the title, it's really a pitching stat. The theory is that a pitcher can only control three outcomes: strikeouts, walks, and home runs. All other balls that are put in play are considered good luck (out) or bad luck (hit) and not a function of a pitcher's skill. This is because someone discovered that all pitchers at the MLB level seem to have about the same BABIP. Assuming that's true, then all you would need to do to judge a pitcher is look at his strikeouts, walks, and home runs against. You can also look at a pitcher's recent BABIP to see if he's been lucky (his BABIP is lower than average), or unlucky (BABIP higher than average) because over time it should come back to the average.

Of course, many disagree with the notion that a pitcher has no effect on whether a ball in play is a hit or out. Some pitchers would seem to be good enough to induce weak contact, while others get pounded.

BABIP doesn't work as well as a metric for batters, in that there is more variability depending on the hitting style. For example, Ichiro had a very high BABIP because of the many infield hits he had.



Yeah, it's a pitcher's stat. Theoretically, anyone who pitched a large enough sample would have a BABIP right around . 300.

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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Fri Jul 26, 2019 9:14 am 
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I was never a Cub fan, but Lee Smith was my favorite Cubs player of all time.

When he came in, you knew the game was over for the other team. He threw fastballs past everyone.

Harry would get all worked up about him. It was very exciting to watch as a youngster.


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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Thu Aug 01, 2019 1:01 am 
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Dignified Rube wrote:
I was never a Cub fan, but Lee Smith was my favorite Cubs player of all time.

When he came in, you knew the game was over for the other team. He threw fastballs past everyone.

Harry would get all worked up about him. It was very exciting to watch as a youngster.



I felt the same way. Exciting, and his slow walk was hilarious and I always imitated it.

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 Post subject: Re: WAR
PostPosted: Fri Aug 16, 2019 12:27 am 
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So Harper turned a 2 run loss into a 2 run win with one swing o' the bat. Instantly. In the 9th. Walk-off.

In this case, does that increase his WAR by a full 1? Or at least close to 1, say .99?

I mean, very few players woulda hit an instant grandslam in that situation. Sure, some guys mighta hit a double, but that only ties that game and doesn't guarantee a fuckin victory.

So to the original question, does this hit increase his WAR by 1?

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