Access The Runmakers: A New Way To Rate Baseball Players Produced By Frederick E. Taylor Presented As Mobi
analysis and the novel stat, PRG, upon which it is based is interesting, but the text is, sadly, superdry.
Arid. Utterly dessicated. The The Runmakers's structure, and Taylor's prose redefine the term "formulaic, "
Still, I found Taylor's normalized PRG to be a compelling basis for comparing players from different eras with some results that I, at least, found surprising but won't spoil for you.
This is a book I should have skimmed rather than read,for,HR,RBI, multiple runners LOB
Author Frederick Taylor delves into the sacred world of baseball statistics headfirst by proposing the semicomplex Potential Runs per Game PRG formula as a potentially superior method of determining the best hitters in baseball history.
While noting numerous times there is neither a guaranteed measure nor statistic proving one evaluation is better than another, he pleads his case to the jury of Sabermetricians, baseball statisticians, and fantasy baseball leagues.
His case breaks down the inefficiencies and flaws of current baseball measurements,
Ultimately, this book hits a leadoff laser like Ichiro, limps around first and second like Kirk Gibson, prematurely raises the base at third like Rickey Henderson, and ends up disappointing, while nonetheless demanding attention as a force to be reckoned with, like Barry Bonds.
Statistics are the lifeblood of baseball, Managers pore over batting averages to determine game day lineups and batting orders high number of runs batted in and low earned run averages receive praise from the press, higher salaries from the front office, and love from fans and the fate of fantasy
baseball players rises and falls with each statistical change.
The prominence of the RC/and other more complex, formuladriven stats has made numbers even more important to understanding and appreciating the game.
For all these baseball buffs and more, Frederick E, Taylor provides a new measure of hitting prowess that just might be a game changer,
Taylor's potential runs per game PRG measure accounts for batters getting on base, advancing runners, and driving in runs, and it separates leadoff and second batters from those in the middle of the order.
Taylor introduces the measure, explains how it works, and applies it to players past and present, He breaks the history of major league baseball into eight eras based on differences in runs scored per game.
He systematicallyplayerbyplayer and positionbypositioncompares the results of the PRG measure to those drawn from other statistics, such as onbase percentage and slugging average.
Taylor shows that PRG is more accurate and that career clutch hitting is a myth,
Sabermetricians, baseball fans of all stripes, and anyone who earns a living from the sport will find a wealth of information and a whole new set of stats to obsess over in The Runmakers.
Measuring baseball will never be the same, .