Category: Uncategorized
Must. Bat. Kendall. Ninth.
by Ken Arneson
2006-02-21 12:40

Ryan has a post about optimizing the A’s lineup over on The Pastime, using PECOTA projections and a formula from Cyril Morong over at Beyond the Boxscore.

Ryan didn’t have the programming nerdiness to work through all 362,800 lineup permutations. But I happened to be cursed with such geekdom, so I wrote a perl script to churn out the calculations. I ran it twice, once with Frank Thomas in the lineup, and once with Jay Payton in place of Thomas.

Here are the best and worst lineups. The number is runs/162 games.

Five best lineups with Thomas:

853.45: Bradley Chavez Ellis Thomas Johnson Crosby Swisher Kotsay Kendall
853.44: Bradley Chavez Ellis Thomas Johnson Swisher Crosby Kotsay Kendall
853.13: Bradley Johnson Ellis Thomas Chavez Crosby Swisher Kotsay Kendall
853.12: Bradley Johnson Ellis Thomas Chavez Swisher Crosby Kotsay Kendall
852.90: Ellis Chavez Bradley Thomas Johnson Swisher Crosby Kotsay Kendall

Five best lineups with Payton:

834.91: Bradley Johnson Ellis Chavez Swisher Payton Crosby Kotsay Kendall
834.80: Bradley Johnson Ellis Chavez Crosby Payton Swisher Kotsay Kendall
834.78: Bradley Swisher Ellis Chavez Johnson Payton Crosby Kotsay Kendall
834.63: Bradley Crosby Ellis Chavez Johnson Payton Swisher Kotsay Kendall
834.50: Bradley Chavez Ellis Swisher Johnson Payton Crosby Kotsay Kendall

A few interesting notes:

  • This formula insists on batting Kotsay eighth and Kendall ninth. The other players switch around a lot at the top of the list, but that configuration is solid. If there is one conclusion to draw from this exercise, this is it.
     
  • The A’s are about 20 runs/year better with Thomas in the lineup than Payton.
     
  • It likes Bradley leading off and Ellis batting third. That’s probably not going to happen in real life, but the presumed order with Ellis leading off also works pretty well.
     
  • Given that Ellis is probably going to lead off, and Chavez will bat either third, fourth, or fifth, the ideal lineups with that configuration are:
    With Thomas:  852.58: Ellis Johnson Bradley Thomas Chavez Crosby Swisher Kotsay Kendall
    With Payton:  834.36: Ellis Johnson Bradley Chavez Swisher Payton Crosby Kotsay Kendall
    

Providing evidence that Zachary’s preference for Ellis and Johnson at the top of the order is a good one.

  • When Thomas is in the lineup, it tends to like Chavez batting second. When Thomas is out of the lineup, it tends to like Chavez batting cleanup.
     
  • Crosby and Swisher are pretty much interchangeable. Swapping them between any two lineups spots produces almost exactly the same result.
     
  • Now for some fun: the worst lineups…

    With Thomas:

    816.79: Crosby Kotsay Johnson Kendall Swisher Ellis Bradley Chavez Thomas
    816.84: Swisher Kotsay Johnson Kendall Crosby Ellis Bradley Chavez Thomas
    816.92: Crosby Kotsay Johnson Kendall Swisher Bradley Ellis Chavez Thomas
    816.97: Swisher Kotsay Johnson Kendall Crosby Bradley Ellis Chavez Thomas
    817.05: Kotsay Ellis Swisher Kendall Crosby Bradley Johnson Chavez Thomas
    

    With Payton:

    799.02: Payton Kotsay Swisher Kendall Crosby Ellis Bradley Johnson Chavez
    799.11: Payton Kotsay Crosby Kendall Swisher Ellis Bradley Johnson Chavez
    799.15: Payton Kotsay Swisher Kendall Crosby Bradley Ellis Johnson Chavez
    799.24: Payton Kotsay Crosby Kendall Swisher Bradley Ellis Johnson Chavez
    799.59: Payton Kotsay Swisher Kendall Crosby Ellis Bradley Chavez Johnson
    

    The perl code is below, for those of you with the Unixness for these things…

    Continue…

    Ow!
    by Ken Arneson
    2006-02-20 12:07

    Evolution tries some crazy experiments sometimes. Sickle cell anemia: that’s a bad thing, unless there’s lots of malaria around you. Then it’s a good thing.

    Or crying: everybody hates it. Hates it! But it’s a wickedly effective means of communication. More babies were saved by this odd form of communication than were killed by irritated parents. Therefore, crying gets to stay in our genes instead of being selected out of them.

    When you become a parent, you quickly learn to recognize the different types of cries. There’s the “I’m hurt” cry, the “I’m hungry” cry, the “I’m bored” cry, the “I’m tired and anything that goes wrong is going to make me cry” cry, and of course, the “cry of injustice” a/k/a the “hey, that’s mine!” cry.

    Somewhere around first or second grade, those cries start turning into other forms of behavior. If you’re lucky, the cries turn socially accepted behaviors: the “I’m hungry” cry becomes the sentence “What’s for dinner?”. Sometimes, it turns into something else: the “I’m bored” cry becomes the “kick your sister in the shin for no reason” behavior.

    My kids, ages five and eight, are almost over the crying thing now, although the younger one still does cry on occasion. But we have visitors at my house now who have a two-year-old girl, and I’m getting to relive those cries all over again.

    The interesting thing is that this little girl, who can only speak a handful of words, and who still has her full complement of cries, has learned to imitate the post-crying behavior to manipulate her environment. If she wants attention, she simply screams “Ow!” as loud she can, and everyone around her stops what they’re doing to make sure she’s all right. OK, now that I have your attention…can I have a cookie?

    So what does this have to do with Frank Tanana the A’s? Just an observation. Camps have opened, and the fluffy puff pieces have started to flow from the tap. The most interesting one so far has been this story by Joe Roderick about Milton Bradley. Bradley seems by all accounts a very intelligent person, who has one very big flaw: he overreacts to injustice.

    Overreacting to injustice: anyone who has ever had a two-year-old has seen that before. The “cry of injustice” is probably the loudest, most piercing cry of all. And the hardest one to deal with as a parent: you often can’t fix the problem. Sorry kid, you can’t have cookies for dinner. I don’t know why you expected that you could, but you can’t. Life is unfair sometimes. Sorry.

    Most of us eventually resign ourselves to the fact that life sucks, give up the temper tantrums, and learn to deal with the pure injustice of being alive. There’s a reason the Terrible Twos only lasts about one year, instead of five or ten. In prehistoric times, the kids that had their Terrible Twos last longer than that probably didn’t make it through puberty very often to pass down their genes.

    So I wonder, perhaps Milton Bradley is one of evolution’s strange counterintuitive experiments. One of those things where a bad trait has a benefit in a particular context. Perhaps Bradley’s inability to shed his cries of injustice, his refusal to accept not getting what he wants, is exactly the trait that drives him to be a better baseball player than 99% of the human population. In an environment where pro athletes can have all the sex they’d ever want, and being the child of a pro athlete is a great predictor of becoming one yourself, perhaps the question to ask isn’t “Why is Milton Bradley so unusual?”, but “Why aren’t anti-social athletes much more common than they already are?”

    Offseason Anagram Rap: Rangers
    by Score Bard
    2006-02-19 16:59

    Yo, Toaster, Let’s Kick It!

    All right stop, collaborate and listen
    Old In Jeans has a brand new invention
    Something grabs a hold of me, trades just flow.
    All chump playas just have to go.
    No Grouchy Sin, Nor Green Sky,
    Old In Jeans hits the bull in the eye,
    Quick to the point, I’ll give you proof,
    We gonna blow the Onion Salsa Roof,
    If there was a problem, Yo, I’ll solve it,
    Check us out: Vanilla Ice Dept.

    Vanilla Ice Dept. Vanilla Ice Dept.
    Vanilla Ice Dept. Vanilla Ice Dept.

    Take heed, ’cause I’m a lyrical poet
    We’re animal fierce in case you didn’t know it
    Last year’s chumps were far too nice
    Now Rangers got some Jeers Not Lice.
    We add Mink Wool Devil, plus A Mean Toad,
    Join Bearskin World, kick tail on the road,
    I Abuse Rhinos, I Air A Skunk, Too.
    Make the other team stink instead of you
    After they lose, they’ll have Cried For Raccoons.
    Now we Look Meaner, not a moment too soon.

    If there was a problem, Yo, I’ll solve it,
    Check us out: Vanilla Ice Dept.

    Vanilla Ice Dept. Vanilla Ice Dept.
    Vanilla Ice Dept. Vanilla Ice Dept.

    Yo man — Let’s get out of here! Word to your mother.

    40-man roster:

    Continue…

    Offseason Anagram Wrap: Athletics
    by Score Bard
    2006-02-18 12:12

    It was an unusual offseason in Oakland. For a change, GM Baby Nellie wasn’t digging deep to replace a traded Humid Snot, or an Ideal Team Jug lost to free agency. Their primary free agents–Better Cat Ghost, Violated Coot, and Buried Our Zeal–added little excitement to the A’s 88-win season in 2005, and will hardly be missed.

    The A’s had the unusual luxury of not only keeping their Ritzy Boar, but setting Estonia Ablaze alongside him. The rotation is now incredibly deep: Drench Hair is a whisker away from superstardom, Near Hand‘s stardom is also nearly at hand, while Elton Banjo rocketed through the second half of 2005 as one of the AL’s top pitchers. And I think it’s going to be a long, long time ’til the A’s explore a new closer again. If you have Utter Hotness, what else do you need?

    With the pitching staff well-baked, Baby Nellie turned his attention to spicing up offense. If the fiery personality that is Notably Milder can stay cool and not boil over, the A’s attack will be far less bland in 2006. I can understand the skepticism about Fathom Snark‘s health, but any contribution he can make would be icing on the cake.

    All these ingredients make a volitile mix. Things could sour quickly if A Panty Joy becomes unhappy about scanty playing time, or if Sick Whiners can’t keep his motormouth shut and complains likewise. However, the A’s think that having too much talent is more a recipe for success than disaster.

    40-man roster:

    Continue…

    Offseason Anagram Wrap: Angels
    by Score Bard
    2006-02-16 22:55

    Argued Evil Mirror only walked 61 times last year. That astounds me. He should have been intentionally walked 61 times. I’d much rather face Arrogant Sender or Boiling Enema than stare into the Evil Mirror.

    Now Enema has packed his bags, and left behind an even larger hole in the lineup than before. Plan A was to fill that hole with A Punk Looker, but Looker preferred the rockin’ scene in Chicago. Plan B: hope the kids grow up soon.

    If Evil Mirror is going to see any pitches at all in 2006, youngsters like Charmless Poland will need to come through with a far more charismatic performance than last year. If Checks Anatomy can find some muscle, it will go a long way. Otherwise, they may find their offense swimming upstream, and be forced to turn to Dreamy Snorkel and Drown and Boo earlier than expected.

    Moving Dandier Arts back to center field is wise, but will he continue to dance second on the program, while Damned Kenya is cursed with the ninth slot? This offense can’t afford to waste any more outs. The more people are on base for Evil Mirror, the more chances he’ll have to cause damage.

    On the pitching ledger, letting the overhyped Brash Juror Dawn leave was a wise move. Losing Lady Burp, on the other hand, seemed like a more noxious decision, until a bargain VJ Wafer Fee fell into their laps. Now with five solid starters, including No Local Robot and Enjoy Chalk, the rotation smells like a rose.

    The relief corps ran out of steam at the end of 2005. Hitless Cods became more hitful, while Cursing Crazier Food tasted bitterness more often than usual. Adding Carrots Coacher and/Or Come, Jr. may help some, but the key to the Angels bullpen success may just be getting more innings out of their starters.

    40-man roster:

    Continue…

    Clear Skies
    by Ken Arneson
    2006-02-15 13:16

    A strong wind blew through the Bay Area yesterday and cleared out the air. I’m sitting here staring across the bay, and it’s quite distracting. The visibility is absolutely perfect. The colors are vivid, the edges are sharp. It’s Mother Nature’s own HDTV.

    I can see individual cars driving on the freeway past Candlestick Park. I can see the individual aisles of Pac Bell SBC AT&T Park. I can see individual windows on individual buildings on the San Francisco skyline. There’s a sailboat about 300 yards out, slowly drifting southward in the breeze. The sailor is wearing a light blue shirt, and a white visor. It feels like I should be able to just leap out and hop onboard from here. Warning: objects may be farther away than they appear.

    It’s spectacular. I can feel the winter doldrums being lifted right off my shoulders, and the winter fog being cleared from my mind. It feels like spring again. I’m ready for some baseball. Let’s go.

    More Geographic Centering
    by Score Bard
    2006-02-15 9:13

    Following up on my mean geographic center story, lboros from Viva El Birdos has a couple of follow-up stories regarding Tuscumbia, Missouri, MLB’s geographic center.

    A self-proclaimed “physics geek” commenter in the first story says that I did not account for the curvature of the earth in my calculations, which could make the actual center off by up to 10 miles. Perhaps. But Cooperstown isn’t the actual birthplace of baseball, but everybody agrees to play along with the idea, because it’s a nice story. So regardless of what the facts actually happen to be, let’s all let Tuscumbia have its fun, OK?

    Heavyweights: 2002
    by Ken Arneson
    2006-02-13 21:12

    We’re looking at baseball like boxing: if you beat the champ, you’re the champ. Today: a look at the 2002 season. Previously: 2003 2004.

    The 2002 Heavyweight baseball season was dominated by the St. Louis Cardinals. They won over twice as many games as any other team. They also ended up holding the title at the end of the regular season. Ordinarily, for a team that doesn’t win the World Series, that might be something of significance to remember your season by. But the 2002 Cardinals had anything but an ordinary season, as Cardnilly so poignantly points out.

    Heavyweight of the Year: St. Louis Cardinals
    Final 2002 Regular Season Champ: St. Louis Cardinals

    2002 Heavyweight Standings

    team w l
    SLN 39 16
    HOU 19 21
    SDN 15 19
    SFN 14 11
    ARI 12 10
    LAN 13 15
    CHN 13 20
    SEA 8 5
    MIL 7 7
    COL 7 9
    FLO 5 7
    PIT 4 5
    CIN 3 10
    TEX 1 2
    PHI 1 2
    OAK 1 3

    Game by game:

    Continue…

    Humbugardy Final Scores
    by Score Bard
    2006-02-13 13:22

    Our winner is: For The Turnstiles!

    Congrats, Turnstiles. You win a PTBNL (prize to be named later).

    Just so you don’t have to check, nobody got the Final Humbugardy question right, which was: Who is Mark Grant? I’ll leave it as a puzzle for you to figure out why.

    Here are the final standings:

    For The Turnstiles: 2203
    T J: 1101
    Humma Kavula: 1100
    argosy: 800
    graciebarn: 600
    Dan Lucero: 500
    Rorschach: 500
    TFD: 500
    Jacob L: 400
    Baby Maddux: 300
    cynic: 300
    Ryan Wilkins: 300
    Cliff Corcoran: 0
    MatPat11: 200
    Sam DC: 100
    metfaninalaska: 100
    Vishal: 80
    deadteddy8: 29
    Bob Timmerman: 1

    Market Dynamics
    by Ken Arneson
    2006-02-10 19:59

    Marine Layer has a fabulous essay over on his A’s ballpark blog about the relationship between the amount of personal income in a metropolitan area, and the number of sports teams in that market. Money quote:

    Many outsiders and the Bay Area’s own media blame the market’s fickle, fair-weather fans for attendance woes. In the end, does this have more to do with simple market dynamics?

    Read the whole thing.

    Final Humbugardy: Riddle
    by Score Bard
    2006-02-10 8:59

    Eligible players should email their questions to scorebard AT yahoo dot com.

     

    Circle me birthplace
    Speaking of worst:
    When a blogger was third
    This ex-pitcher was first.

     

    A’s Prospects: PECOTA vs. Baseball America
    by Ken Arneson
    2006-02-09 13:05

    I had been getting pretty bored with Baseball Prospectus lately, but BP has suddenly awakened with a vengeance. Will Carroll’s 2006 Team Health Reports are starting soon. But I really dig the new PECOTA cards. Before, my eyes would mostly glaze over when I looked at all the numbers. Now there are some nice graphs along with the numbers. The five-year “Stars and Scrubs” chart for each player is really cool: you can visualize at a glance how a player is likely to perform over the next five years. Will he be a star, a regular, or a scrub? Just look at the chart!

    Along with the new cards is Nate Silver’s new method for ranking prospects. Each player gets a score, based on objective measurements only (no scouting involved). What the score means is a little unclear to me, but from what I gather, a score over 300 is pretty much a can’t-miss prospect, someone who is very likely to be a star. From 200-300 is a good prospect, probably will be a regular, with a modest chance to be a star. 100-200 is someone who will likely make the majors, possibly as a regular, but probably not a star.

    According to PECOTA, the A’s have no top-level prospects. It likes Daric Barton as a good, solid contributor, but doesn’t think he’s likely a superstar. An A’s Top 10 prospect list from PECOTA would like this (if my math is right):

    1. Daric Barton: 239.4
    2. Kevin Melillo: 203.5
    3. Chad Gaudin: 192.6
    4. Dallas Braden: 159.1
    5. Javier Herrera: 153.4
    6. Matt Watson: 129.9
    7. Kurt Suzuki: 122.1
    8. Cliff Pennington: 120.4
    9. Mike Rouse: 112.5
    10. Travis Buck: 107.4

    There are some names missing from PECOTA’s list, like Jason Windsor, Shane Komine, and the three high-school arms drafted last year: Italiano, Mazzaro, and Lansford. And is Watson still a prospect? Compare this list to Baseball America’s list (for the Los Angeles Athletics according to the title bar…), there are some holes:

    1. Daric Barton, 1b
    2. Javier Herrera, of
    3. Cliff Pennington, ss
    4. Travis Buck, of
    5. Kevin Melillo, 2b
    6. Santiago Casilla, rhp
    7. Craig Italiano, rhp
    8. Shane Komine, rhp
    9. Vince Mazzaro, rhp
    10. Kurt Suzuki, c

    There are some interesting notes here. PECOTA loves Kevin Melillo more than any other prospect site I’ve read. Chad Gaudin looks like the guy to step in for Barry Zito when he leaves for free agency: his score is almost identical to Joe Blanton’s. (I’m not sure if Gaudin was with the A’s when BA made its list, or where he’d fit on it.)

    On the negative side, PECOTA thinks Richie Robnett is a flop, and will be out of baseball within two years. It isn’t much kinder to Danny Putnam. It’s lukewarm on Santijairo Garcasilla and Juan Cruz, who each scored just below 100.

    As for the existing core of young A’s players, there are two tiers. Eric Chavez, Bobby Crosby, and Rich Harden are the big stars, all scoring over 400. Mark Ellis, Dan Haren, Nick Swisher, Huston Street, and Dan Johnson all score in the 200’s, with Joe Blanton just behind at 194.4.

    What all this means, I’m not quite sure yet. You have to get used to these new measurements, compare them to other teams and players, learn its strengths and weaknesses, and absorb them. But it’s fun to have a new tool to play with. I’m looking forward to the rest of Silver’s series on using PECOTA for measuring prospects. Welcome back, BP!

    The A’s that Time Forgot
    by Ken Arneson
    2006-02-07 21:21

    I recently browsed through the A’s rosters of the last ten years, and found 14 players in the last decade that I have absolutely no recollection of them ever appearing in an A’s uniform.

    Most of them were from 1996-98, which makes sense, because (a) there have been plenty of time for those brain cells to evaporate, (b) the A’s weren’t very good in those years, and (c) I was working about 100 hours a week in them crazy dot-com days, so who had time to pay close attention to anything important like baseball?

    Some of the names are familiar to me, but I don’t remember them playing in Oakland. Here’s the list:

    For a sec, I thought I remembered watching Tim Kubinski, but then I realized I was thinking about the guy who married a monkey.

    Anybody remember these guys?

    What players have you forgotten from your favorite team? Or is that like asking what you look like in a mirror with your eyes closed?

    Final Humbugardy: Place Your Bets
    by Score Bard
    2006-02-07 21:05

    OK, I’m finally ready for Final Humbugardy. Sorry for the delay.

    Here are the rules:

    1. The category is: “Riddle”

    2. Only players who have positive points are eligible to play. Those players are:

    For The Turnstiles: 6300
    Bob Timmerman: 2600
    T J: 1200
    Humma Kavula: 1100
    argosy: 800
    graciebarn: 600
    deadteddy8: 550
    Dan Lucero: 500
    Rorschach: 500
    TFD: 500
    Jacob L: 400
    Vishal: 400
    Baby Maddux: 300
    cynic: 300
    Ryan Wilkins: 300
    Cliff Corcoran: 200
    MatPat11: 200
    Sam DC: 200
    metfaninalaska: 100

    2. You may bet as many of your points as you like in the comments below. I will close the betting just before I post the answer.

    3. On Friday, February 10, 2006, at 9AM Pacific Time, I will post the answer.

    4. The first three people to email the correct question to scorebard At yahoo dot com will win points. The others will lose their bets. Only the first answer submitted by each player will count.

    5. The first correct answer will win triple the bet. The second will win double the bet. The third will win the amount of the bet.

    6. If there aren’t three correct answers by noon PT on Monday, February 13, the game is over.

    I’m Taking Steroids!
    by Ken Arneson
    2006-02-03 12:22

    OK, it’s just a topical corticosteroid cream for an allergic rash, but I dig catchy titles. Take that, Will Carroll!

    I’m also taking a strong antihistamine for the rash, so if I act oddl
    y or fall as
    leep in
    the middle of th

    zzz

    zzz

    …mmm…huh? where was i? oh february. i hate it. might as well sleep through it anyway. billy beane said at the fanfest that after signing mark ellis he’s going to take a month off. zito trade: not happening. so what better time to be zonkkndkeided. i’ll be coked to the gills when I bump that old buzzard off.

    did you know the super bowl and i are twins? I was born first. I turn XL tomorrow, Supe turns on Sunday. we’re having a combined party. I’d invite you over, but I’ll probably just be a

    zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz

    ombie, and you could probably have more fun elsewhere. Maybe I’m a barrel of laffs when I be souped up on antihistamines and corticosteroids, but I doubabtttttttt it.

    hehhhh i said tttttt it.

    speaking of drugs you gotta wonder if the amphetamine ban is an ever bigger advantage for the a’s this year. billy beane has constructed a very deep team, with quality replacements at practically every position. without their uppers, players may need more time off this year, and the a’s will be in better position to exploit that than probably every other team. as joe sheehan said

    When you consider the depth of the bench and bullpen, the A’s may have the strongest 16-25 roster in the game. That matters over 162 games.

    and especially ove r 162 greeniefree games?

    of course if the green team relied on a lot of greenies in the past, they may suffer more than most, too. won’t know til august september what am i saying we probably wont even know then. pay no attention to me im’m on the oppositittie of greenies.

    hehhhh i said oppositittie

    i listened to vince cotroneo on mlbradio yesterday, decent voice, a bit of a chatterbox, can probably give ray fosse a run for his runonsentence money if you know what i mean but i think he’ll be at least inoffensive which is all i am relaly hoping 4

    punctuatio nis too mcuh work who needs it anywys nd spacebar isawaste

    saygoodnightkengoodnightken

    FanFest: Three Things Learned
    by Ken Arneson
    2006-01-28 22:50

    I feel about FanFests the way I feel about trade conferences: you spend all day at the thing, and if you’re lucky, you find one or two useful pieces of information. Are those one or two things worth a day of your life? I’m never quite sure.

    I spent five and a half hours today at the Coliseum today, and came out with about five minutes worth of interesting stuff. I keep thinking there could be a more efficient use of my time, but for some reason, I keep going. At least the entrance fee is free, with my season ticket package. Plus, it provides a nice little emotional baseball fix in the middle of winter, if nothing else. Or so I tell myself.

    I think the emotional fix would have been stronger if I had walked into the Coliseum today and seen a plush green field under a bright blue sky. Unfortunately, the grass had been completely removed. There was only drab gray dirt under a drab gray sky. Baseball still seemed to be deep in hibernation.

    On the bright (or at least less drab) side, I had actually never seen the field completely bare like this, so I was provided with a new experience, even if it wasn’t exactly a beautiful one.

    * * *

    Another new experience was seeing some tarp installed over the third deck sections behind home plate. I wonder, are they going to install tarp over the whole third deck, or just those four sections? I hope it won’t just be like this. The tarp layout looked off-center: they covered one middle section, one section on the first base side, and two sections on the third base side. Those of us who have even some minor Adrian Monk tendencies will be left haunted by the unevenness.

    Seeing the third deck even partially covered makes me wonder something: if you’re not going to use the third deck, could you move home plate a few feet closer to the seating bowl? Isn’t it the angle of the third deck the main reason home plate needs to be so far away from the seats? Are there any other seats that would be obstructed by moving home plate back a foot or three? If one of the reasons for closing the third deck is to create a more intimate atmosphere, wouldn’t effectively making everyone’s seat one row closer to the action be more intimate?

    You’d have to fiddle with the fences, and there’s only about three feet of wiggle room in the corners, but the position of the outfield fences is already arbitrary.

    * * *

    I used to always enjoy the Billy Beane Q&A sessions, but my interest is starting to wane. I’ve seen his act enough now to know pretty much what he (isn’t) going to say. This year was particularly uninteresting, because he didn’t have to defend any controversial moves.

    And yet…there was one new tidbit he dropped, almost in passing. He claimed that young players usually play quite inconsistently until sometime midway through their second season (Huston Street being a rare exception). He fully expects Nick Swisher and Dan Johnson to struggle at times in the first half of the year, and then sometime around midseason, things should start to click for them.

    I’d never heard of that one-and-a-half-year rule of thumb before. I wonder if that idea is merely observational on Beane’s part, or if he has some statistics backing that idea.

    * * *

    The player Q&A sessions never really teach you anything about the game itself, but sometimes it can be fun to learn a little bit about the clubhouse chemistry. For example, who knew that Dan Haren was such a tease? Or that Kirk Saarloos is quite the wit? I had always imagined Frank Thomas as rather surly, but he seemed downright jovial in his Q&A session. Esteban Loaiza, who played with Thomas in Chicago, called Thomas “a big man, but a big teddy bear”. Those were the most interesting words out of Loaiza’s mouth, as otherwise he was a fountain of baseball cliches.

    Which brings us to the second interesting point of the day: that Thomas and Loaiza each said that they chose to sign with Oakland because they wanted to play for a winner. Normally, those are words reserved for teams like the Yankees and Red Sox–I can’t ever recall anyone saying it about the A’s before. Usually, the A’s get free agents who are just happy to have a job. The A’s have reached a new level of respect within baseball. If done right, it could be the start of a virtuous cycle: good players want to play for you, which makes you a good team, which makes more good players want to play for you.

    * * *

    In the afternoon, I eschewed the crowded player Q&As, and attended some more intimate seminars with A’s coaches. There were a couple of “Baseball 101” sessions that dealt with how hitters and pitchers use video to maintain their mechanics and prepare for their opponents. Hitting coach Gerald Perry and catcher Adam Melhuse spoke about hitters, while pitching coach Curt Young and bullpen catcher Brandon Buckley talked about pitchers.

    It was the combination of these two separate sessions that led to the third interesting thing I learned today: there is a sort of unspoken Hippocratic Oath that (A’s) coaches follow: first, do no harm.

    The mechanics of both hitting and pitching are subconscious–you want the hitter concentrating on the pitcher, and you want the pitcher concentrating on his target. You don’t want a player thinking about his mechanics, because then he isn’t concentrating on the thing he needs to concentrate on to succeed.

    So there is a very real risk that by talking to a player about his mechanics, you can actually make things worse, because you can turn a subconscious act into a conscious one, and interrupt the automatic mechanism that brought them the success to reach this level.

    Gerald Perry and Curt Young each spoke independently about not telling their pupils everything they notice. They choose what they talk to players about with great care. If they make a suggestion, they make sure to keep it a small and simple one, so that their conscious mind doesn’t have too much information to hold. If you give a batter three different things to think about, by the time he thinks about those things, a fastball has gone right past him.

    Earlier in the day, Dennis Eckersley was asked in a Q&A session why he was not a coach. Eck replied that it takes a special kind of person to coach, someone with a passion for it, and someone with patience. Eckersley admitted he did not have the patience to be an effective coach.

    Coaching involves understanding technique, tactics, and psychology. You may see something that needs fixing, but you need the patience and understanding to know when and how to try to fix it, and when not to. Coaching is a delicate craft, and I don’t think I fully appreciated that until today.

    Jairo Garcia Van Winkle
    by Ken Arneson
    2006-01-27 8:28

    Clunk! Bam! Crash! What’s that sound?

    It’s the sound of an A’s prospect plummeting down the rankings of top A’s prospects, that’s what it is. For it turns out the name Jairo Garcia is not spelled “Jairo Garcia”, it’s only pronounced that way. It’s actually spelled “Santiago Casilla”. Oh, and this Santiago Casilla fellow is nearly three years older than “Jairo Garcia”.

    What are we going to find out next, that Dan Haren isn’t actually Dutch? Oh, yeah, that too.

    Frank Thomas, meet Steve Jobs
    by Ken Arneson
    2006-01-25 13:21

    Can’t help but think about the Pixar-Disney deal. It’s not a huge surprise, and it seems to make sense for everyone involved.

    Everybody is saying how this deal can help Disney get back to its glory days of great animation. Perhaps. I’m more curious about how it affects baseball. A few facts of note:

    • The National TV contract is expiring. The contract could shift from Fox to NBC or ABC/ESPN.
    • ESPN is selling cellphones with video highlights and scoreboard updates
    • Apple is rumored to soon have a iPod-phone.

    So with Steve Jobs as the largest individual shareholder in ESPN’s parent company…will we soon see an ESPN iPod cellphone? If Disney owned the exclusive rights to all MLB national broadcasts, would that help Apple sell more iPods?

    I don’t know…I’m just askin’.

    * * *

    Back in Disney’s glory days, one of Walt Disney’s main animators was a man named Frank Thomas. So is it a coincidence that the day after the Disney deal is announced, ESPN.com issues a scoop that a Frank Thomas deal is imminent?

    I don’t know…I’m just askin’. Even if this isn’t confirmed yet, it’s not a huge surprise, and it seems to make sense for everyone involved.

    If Frank Thomas stays healthy…well, we all have imaginations. I’m hoping having Frank Thomas on in their lineup will restore the A’s to their glory days, just as the Pixar deal can help bring Disney back to its glory days when Frank Thomas was in their lineup.

    Crosby – Scutaro = x
    by Ken Arneson
    2006-01-24 14:52

    More goodies from David Pinto’s Probabilistic Model of Range series on Baseball Musings: the 2005 shortstop rankings.

    The point of interest for A’s fans is the defensive falloff from Bobby Crosby to Marco Scutaro when Crosby was injured. Crosby’s numbers for 2005 were among the top 10 defensive shortstops in the majors, while Scutaro’s were the second-worst, ahead of only Derek Jeter.

    Now keeping in mind that we have to take these defensive numbers with a healthy grain of salt, as Dave Cameron so eloquently explains at USS Mariner, it’s a fun exercise to try to roughly quantify how much Crosby’s injuries impacted the A’s last year.

    Scutaro made 229 outs at shortstop. If you replace his opportunities with Crosby’s rate numbers, you’d get 257.4 outs. So replacing Crosby with Scutaro cost the A’s about 28.4 outs on defense.

    How many runs is that? Using Chris Dial’s run value per play at shortstop of .753, that means those extra outs costs the A’s about 21.4 runs.

    Using the rule of thumb that 10 runs is worth about one win, we can then estimate that Crosby’s injuries cost the A’s about two games in the standings, just on defense alone.

    * * *

    On offense, Crosby had 50.8 Runs Created in 84 games (.605 RC/game), while Scutaro had 47.1 Runs Created in 118 games (.399 RC/game). That’s a difference of .206 RC/game. If you give Crosby 162 games instead of 84, and subtract out Scutaro, you’d get an extra 16 runs.

    Again, going by the 10 runs/win rule of thumb, the A’s lost about a game and a half on offense from Crosby’s injuries.

    So in total, replacing Crosby with Scutaro for half the season cost the A’s about three or four games in the standings. That’s not enough to make up the seven games they missed the playoffs by, but judging by these (admittedly rough) numbers, it is roughly half the story.

    Loaiza Justification
    by Ken Arneson
    2006-01-23 11:52

    There are some interesting things to note about the A’s from David Pinto’s latest defensive report, where he shows (a) which pitchers had the best defensive support behind them in 2005, and (b) which pitchers produced the easiest balls for fielders to turn into outs.

    First to note is that the A’s had a great defense last year. All of the A’s starting pitchers from 2005 show up in the upper half for best defensive support:

    • Rich Harden led the majors
    • Barry Zito was 10th
    • Kirk Saarloos was 12th
    • Joe Blanton was 26th
    • Dan Haren was 44th

    The result was more mixed with regards to which pitchers gave their fielders the easiest balls to turn into outs:

    • Joe Blanton was 5th
    • Barry Zito was 10th
    • Dan Haren was 91st
    • Kirk Saarloos was 106th
    • Rich Harden was 109th

    For Haren and Harden, this probably doesn’t hurt them much, because they’re strikeout pitchers. They don’t rely on their fielders as much as other pitchers. But for Saarloos, who strikes out very few batters, the fact that the balls he allowed into play weren’t particularly easy to field is not, I would think, a good sign of things to come.

    This brings us to Saarloos’ replacement in the rotation, Esteban Loaiza. How were his numbers?

    Easy to field: 13th best.
    Defensive support: Next to last.

    Of all the major league pitchers who had over 300 balls in play last year, only Carl Pavano had worse defensive support. Let’s compare Zito to Loaiza:

    Pitcher Balls in play Expected outs Actual outs Difference
    Zito 654 460.30 486 +25.70
    Loaiza 661 462.19 444 -18.19

    The numbers look awfully similar: they both pitched about the same number of innings, and produced similar levels of easy-to-field balls, but there’s one big difference: Zito’s defense turned about 44 more balls into outs than Loaiza’s.

    It should be quite interesting to see what happens when Loaiza gets put in front of the A’s defense come April.

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