디시인사이드 갤러리

갤러리 이슈박스, 최근방문 갤러리

갤러리 본문 영역

do clutch hitters exist???앱에서 작성

ㅇㅇ갤로그로 이동합니다. 2018.09.07 10:58:15
조회 87 추천 0 댓글 3

Do Clutch Hitters Exist?

By Richard D. Cramer

The idea that there are batters whose hits are more noteworthy for their timeliness than for their quality is probably as old as the game itself. Efforts to measure "clutch-hitting" systematically include the RBI, one of the three most universal batting statistics, and more recently, the "game-winning hit". It is my own belief that clutch hitters, even if a few perhaps exist, have a negligible effect on the outcome of a pennant race.

The question of whether or not clutch hitters exist should be a fundamental issue in Statistical Analysis. Pete Palmer and I believe that one can explain most of the final season standings as some properly formulated total of the individual players' records. For example, the BRA considers only total bases, walks, hits, and so forth, without reference to the game situation when these occurred. Certainly a home run which occurs late in a tie game is more valuable to a team than one which occurs in a one-sided game. But Pete and I have always suspected that it is a matter of luck, not "clutch-hitting", if a particular player gets more than his share of dramatic hits. Should there however be evidence that we are wrong, then statistical analyses must somehow be revised to reflect the timeliness as well as the quantity of hitting.

In order to determine whether clutch hitters exist, we need a measure of hitting timeliness and a measure of hitting quantity. The inadequacies of the RBI and the "game-winning hit" as measures of timeliness have been deplored by many authorities. However, the brothers E.G. and H.D. Mills devised a very clever and irrefutable measure[1]. The probable outcome of a baseball game was determined by computer play for every one of the almost 8000 possible situations (two out, none on, score tied, top of 2nd; runners at 2nd and 3rd, bottom of 6th, home team trailing by two; etc.) at the average level of hitting for a particular season. Then each participant in every play in every game of the season is given a certain number of "Win" or "Loss" points, according to how much his involvement in the play advances or reduces his team's chance of winning the game.

For example, a solo home run in the ninth inning of a game in which one team is leading by six runs is worth only about 5 "Win" points; but Bobby Thomson's home run (in a very important game) increased the Giants' chances of victory from 25% to 100% and was worth 1470 "Win" points. A player's "Win" and "Loss" points are accumulated over a season to yield his "Player Win Average". PWA's for 1969 varied from Versalles' .330 to McCovey's .677 and for 1970 from Doyle's .374 to McCovey's .648. Of course hitting a Thomson-timely home run in any game has a substantial effect on a player's whole season's PWA, increasing it by 40 points even for an everyday player.

The Player Win Average is without doubt a perfect measure of which hitters (and pitchers) are winning and losing games. But its computation, with the requirement of an accounting for every situation in every game, is forbiddingly expensive even when the data are available, and quite impossible in general since play-by-play information is not saved by the major leagues.

As a measure of the quantity of hitting for players in 1969 and 1970, I will use the Batter Win Average (BWA), a further refinement of the BRA concept discussed in the 1974 Baseball Research Journal. The BWA and BRA depend on a fundamental empirical relationship in baseball play; the number of runs scored in league play is nearly equal to the product of league plate appearances, league slugging percentage, and league on-base average, provided that the on-base average takes appropriate account of reached on errors and grounded into double plays:

(where the sub L refers to league totals and applies to the individual items in the on-base average).

Therefore for any individual player one can also use the above equation to compute the number of runs the league would have scored if the player had been replaced in all his plate appearances by an average hitter. The difference in the two league run totals, + or -, reflects the batter's above- or below-average skills in producing runs for his team. A further correction is needed for "indirect runs"-runs resulting from extra plate appearances contributed or denied to his team by a player's higher- or lower-than-average on-base average. The total + or - "offensive run production" (OffR) of a batter is divided by his plate appearances and a normalizing factor reflecting the level of hitting in that season to yield his BWA. The validity of this whole procedure is shown from its improved ability to account for team run-scoring and victories.

To make these new statistics somewhat tangible, the following table showing the highest and lowest BWA players in each league in 1969 and 1970 is given:

Season

Player

B.A.

HR

BRA*

BFP

RC**

OffR

BWA








 

1969

McCovey

0.32

45

0.277

623

172

76.00

0.130

1970

McCovey

0.289

39

0.248

638

158

63.70

0.099

1969

Killebrew

0.276

49

0.244

709

173

73.10

0.109

1970

Yastrzemski

0.329

40

0.247

697

172

73.50

0.110

1969

Garrido

0.22

0

0.048

251

12

-16.40

-0.071

1970

Lanier

0.231

2

0.049

463

23

-36.70

-0.079

1969

Cullen

0.209

1

0.039

277

11

-21.60

-0.086

1970

Thompson

0.219

0

0.049

318

16

-22.10

-0.074

* BRA computed with a -2xGDP term in the numerator of the OBA. But the ½Er term is excluded, as no individual player totals exist.

** Runs Contributed (RC) = BRAXBFP. Indicates the runs the batter would contribute to a lineup of equally skilled batters, not the runs he would contribute to a typical lineup.

The BWA is tedious to compute with a slide rule or ordinary calculator but is almost as accessible as a batting average with a programmable calculator such as the Hewlett-Packard HP-65.

To summarize the discussion so far, both the PWA and the BWA are measures of overall batting skill. The PWA is a pure measure of clutch hitting. As its inventors say: "We have made the when the dominant factor, with no regard for the kind of what that happened." The BWA is a pure measure of hitting quantity. Whether a particular home run is meaningless or Thomson-timely, it will still raise the everyday player's BWA by an identical three points. Thus a comparison of the PWA's and BWA's of players in the 1969 and 1970 seasons should provide considerable insight into the importance of clutch hitting.

My first comparison was to confirm a study by Pete Palmer, who had found that PWA's and BWA's are highly correlated. In fact, if one knows a player's BWA, one can predict his PWA with high accuracy using the following equation:

This means that most-about 80%-of the differences among player's PWA's are really attributable to differences in the quantity of their hits, not to differences in the timeliness of their hits. For example, McCovey had the highest NL PWA's in both 1969 and 1970 because, as his highest BWA's indicate, his chances of hitting a home run were unusually high in any situation, important or not, and because his chances of making an out and thereby reducing the Giant's chances of winning were unusually low, clutch situation or not.

However, there were numerous players in 1969 and 1970 who had much higher or lower PWA's than would be predicted using their BWA and the above equation. These deviations from prediction, known technically as residuals, vary from +.067 for Carlos May's 1969 season to -.068 for Fuentes' 1970 season. If one believes in clutch and non-clutch players, the clutch players must be the May's, the ones with higher than predicted PWA's, and the non-clutch players must be the Fuentes', the ones with lower than predicted PWA's. If one does not believe in clutch players, then Carlos May was lucky (along with the White Sox) in 1969 in the timeliness of his hits, and Fuentes was unlucky in 1970. And essentially our central problem "Do clutch hitters exist?" becomes one of "How can you distinguish between skill and luck?"

Statisticians (the professionals) have devised several ways to decide whether such a set of-differences is "significant"-in this case, caused by skill-or "insignificant"-caused by luck. Often one can place an outside limit on the differences that might reasonably be attributed to luck; if the differences are larger than this limit, then there must be other factors involved. In our problem such a limit cannot be rigorously established. Recalling however, that a single Thomson-timely home run will raise a season PWA by +.040, it is my opinion that the

observed residuals for 350 player-seasons can scarcely be much larger than what might be expected to result from luck. Furthermore, the overall distribution of residuals is "normal", that is, in a fashion far more consistent with luck than with a pattern in which a few players hit in especially timely fashion.

There remains one more test which is particularly clear-cut and easy to understand. If clutch hitters really exist, one would certainly expect that a batter who was a clutch hitter in 1969 would tend also to be a clutch hitter in 1970. But if no such tendency exists, then "clutch hitting" must surely be a matter of luck. After all, the only means of ever identifying a clutch hitter would be by his consistency, if not from situation to situation at least from season to season.

Such a test is easily performed, by trying to correlate the residuals for players in 1969 with residuals for the same players in 1970. Not even a hint of such a correlation exists (r2 for 60 National League players was .038 and for 62 American League players was .055). This means that there is no tendency for players who were clutch hitters in 1969 to be clutch hitters in 1970. True, a few of the "clutch hitters" in 1969 were also "clutch hitters" in 1970; but as many became "unclutch" and most became average, exactly as would be expected if "clutch hitting" is really a matter of luck.

Although I have established clearly that clutch-hitting cannot be an important or a general phenomenon, a stubborn believer might still ask about the few players who appeared to be "clutch hitters" in both 1969 and 1970. As a challenge for such diehards, I present a scrambled list of the most consistent "clutch" and the most consistent "unclutch" hitters in 1969 and 1970. (To be considered, a player had to have more than 400 BFP's and be either "clutch" or unclutch" in both 1969 and 1970.) Remembering that sheer guesswork will make you about half right, can you unscramble the list?

1. Yastrzemski 5. Andrews 9. Blair

2. Cleon Jones 6. T. Davis 10. Rader

3. Sanguillen 7. Freehan 11. Javier

4. Kaline 8. Billy Williams 12. Alex Johnson

To give away the first answer in advance, Yaz was the most consistently untimely hitter in the majors in 1969 and 1970. But no one who saw Yastrzemski play in September 1967 would ever believe that "Carl is a good hitter, but not quite as strong when a game or the pennant is on the line"! The full answer to the quiz above is that the odd-numbered batters are the untimely hitters and the even-numbered batters are the timely hitters.

Good hitters are good hitters and weak hitters are weak hitters regardless of the game situation. But there is no reason why a weak hitter shouldn't be fortunate enough to get a series of fat pitches or good swings in crucial situations. Given enough time, this might even happen over some player's whole career. Maybe luck was the basis of the reputation of a Henrich or a Reese as a clutch hitter-but let me hasten to add that Henrich and Reese were certainly exceptionally good hitters simply on the basis of the quantity of their hits, as well as, perhaps, the timeliness of their hits.

So fades a legend-but after all, what was really meant when someone was called a "clutch hitter"? Was he really a batter who didn't fold under pressure-or was he a lazy batter who bothered to try his hardest only when the game was on the line?


[1] "Player Win Averages", E. G. Mills and H. D. Mills, A. S. Barnes, Cranbury, N.J., 1970, describes the method and their 1969 results. Pete Palmer supplied me with their 1970 season results. To our knowledge, no further results exist.

 

© 2005 - 2018 Society for American Baseball Research - Research Journal Archives. Designed by JoomlArt.com

- dc official App

추천 비추천

0

고정닉 0

0

댓글 영역

전체 댓글 0
등록순정렬 기준선택
본문 보기

하단 갤러리 리스트 영역

왼쪽 컨텐츠 영역

갤러리 리스트 영역

갤러리 리스트
번호 제목 글쓴이 작성일 조회 추천
설문 직원으로 채용하고 싶은 '일머리' 있는 것 같은 스타는? 운영자 24/08/19 - -
1401462 영원한 삼성의 내야사령관 김상수! ㅇㅇ(223.39) 18.11.14 23 0
1401461 김상수가 운이 좋은건가? ㅎㅎㅎㅎ 스큐류갤로그로 이동합니다. 18.11.14 27 0
1401460 꼴)이야 너희 개꿀이네 노시환픽 [5] ㅇㅇ(110.70) 18.11.14 238 0
1401459 인사 박아라 [9] asd1(119.67) 18.11.14 2938 114
1401458 오피셜 ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ ㅇㅇ(180.81) 18.11.14 33 0
1401457 정황상 이학주가 아닐수가 없음ㅋㅋㅋㅋ ㅇㅇ(223.39) 18.11.14 44 0
1401456 1차로 안뽑은건 신의 한 수네 ㅇㅇ(110.10) 18.11.14 30 0
1401455 칩전드 상-수 오피셜 떳다 ㅇㅇ(221.145) 18.11.14 68 0
1401454 영리한 투수는 상대에게 읽혔을때 그걸 역이용할줄 알아야한다 ㅇㅇ(116.212) 18.11.14 24 0
1401453 칩성 엿 제대로 쳐먹음 ㅋㅋㅋㅅㅂ ㅋㅋㅋㅋ ㅇㅇ(211.36) 18.11.14 30 0
1401452 솩태우오피셜)음주 이학주 ㅇㅇ(175.223) 18.11.14 79 0
1401451 류현진 폭망하고 내후년에 한화 복귀 시나리오 아니냐.... 스큐류갤로그로 이동합니다. 18.11.14 31 0
1401450 학ㅡ주ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ ㅇㅇ(223.62) 18.11.14 17 0
1401449 음주운전 뜸 ㅇㅇ(116.37) 18.11.14 31 0
1401448 [오피셜] 이학주 확정! [3] 툴타툴타갤로그로 이동합니다. 18.11.14 222 13
1401447 갤 지금 왔는데 상황설명좀 갑자기 왜 노시환이랑 이학주 언급됨? [1] ㅇㅇ(223.39) 18.11.14 67 0
1401446 이학주 오피셜 ㅋㅋ ㅇㅇ(211.36) 18.11.14 36 0
1401445 칩학주 맞대 ㅋㅋㅋㅋ ㅇㅇ(112.153) 18.11.14 14 0
1401444 형사 처벌이 있으면 진작 처리됐겠지 ㅇㅇ(118.36) 18.11.14 15 0
1401443 이학주확정 [1] ㅅㅍ(210.123) 18.11.14 26 0
1401442 류딸 그냥 퐈해서 총액더받아내는게 낫을텐데. 어차피 내년 ㅇㅇ(106.102) 18.11.14 27 0
1401441 아...이학주 구만 ㅎㅎㅎㅎ 스큐류갤로그로 이동합니다. 18.11.14 27 0
1401440 제 정신이면 헤일 한시즌 풀로 봐야한다는거 동의함 [3] ㅇㅇ(118.33) 18.11.14 90 0
1401439 세이콘작년에 몇월에 한국떴냐 ㅇㅇ(118.220) 18.11.14 23 0
1401436 그냥저냥 마시다 걸린것도 아니고 길 한복판에서 [1] ㅇㅇ(223.33) 18.11.14 63 0
1401435 관상...과학...jpg [2] ㅇㅇ(175.198) 18.11.14 171 1
1401434 반전각 ㅇㅇ(221.145) 18.11.14 70 1
1401433 어금니애비랑 함마돌눈이랑 비슷하게생겼음 ㅇㅇ(118.220) 18.11.14 35 0
1401432 극 혐 똥 칰 ㅇㅇ(223.62) 18.11.14 17 0
1401431 사회 분위기상 음주운전 용납 못받을텐데.. [3] ㅇㅇ갤로그로 이동합니다. 18.11.14 121 0
1401430 칰상수 보상으로 오선진 줄려고 했는데 아쉽구만 ㅇㅇ(211.200) 18.11.14 25 0
1401429 노시환은 야구잘할거다 ㅇㅇ(223.39) 18.11.14 44 0
1401428 칰관상가가 노시환이나 변우혁 관상은 안보고갔냐? [1] ㅇㅇ(223.39) 18.11.14 109 0
1401426 노시환 떠어어어어어어억상ㅏㅏㅏㅏㅏㅏㅏㅏㅏㅏㅏㅏㅏㅏㅏㅏㅏㅏㅏㅏㅏㅏㅏㅏㅏㅏㅏ asd1(119.67) 18.11.14 35 0
1401425 여친이랑 맥주먹고 운전하려다 욕먹음 [8] ㅇㅇ(115.91) 18.11.14 234 5
1401424 학주거리다가 타팀에서 국대최진행하면 카라멜팝콘각인데 [1] ㅇㅇ(223.62) 18.11.14 56 0
1401423 근데 이머은일리가 ㅋㅋ [1] ㅇㅇ(175.223) 18.11.14 111 0
1401422 용병수는 그대로하더라도 용병출전수는 2명에서 3명으로 늘려야함 ㅇㅇ(175.223) 18.11.14 16 0
1401420 음주운전 저런 것도 스카우터들은 다 알고 있어야 되나? [3] ㅇㅇ(223.39) 18.11.14 113 0
1401419 예전에 칰갤에서 술학주얼굴보고 관상이 쎄하다충 등판했었는데 [4] ㅇㅇ(118.220) 18.11.14 144 0
1401418 칩갤에 송명기충 노시환충 고승민충 다 튀어나오네ㅋㅋㅋ ㅇㅇ(175.223) 18.11.14 45 0
1401417 근데 음주운전 한번한사람은 또 그러던데 ㅇㅇ(185.125) 18.11.14 16 0
1401416 분위기뭐냐 뭔일임 [3] ㅇㅇ(14.51) 18.11.14 116 0
1401415 테임즈는 음주운전 징계 얼마 받았냐? [2] ㅇㅇ(1.251) 18.11.14 85 0
1401414 류현진 메이저 데뷔시즌에 신인왕 누가먹었냐?? 13년도성적 신인왕급아님? ㅇㅇ(175.223) 18.11.14 27 0
1401413 역시 칩갤 갤주는 김상수가 해줘야지ㅋㅋ ㅇㅇ(223.39) 18.11.14 23 0
1401411 이학주.. 6월.. 한국.. ㅇㅇ(39.7) 18.11.14 121 8
1401410 칩갤 나바로 드립 개웃깈ㅋㅋㅋ [9] ㅇㅇ(220.116) 18.11.14 3924 71
1401409 칩갤에 학ㅡ주 국내 6월에 있었단 거 떴다 [2] ㅇㅇ(180.81) 18.11.14 159 0
1401408 이짤 왜이리 웃기냐 ㅇㅇ(121.119) 18.11.14 74 0
갤러리 내부 검색
제목+내용게시물 정렬 옵션

오른쪽 컨텐츠 영역

실시간 베스트

1/8

뉴스

디시미디어

디시이슈

1/2