Author: Bill James

  • Bill James Handbook Excerpt: Baserunning In Its Own Self

    Bill James Handbook Excerpt: Baserunning In Its Own Self

    Photo: Manny Flores/Icon Sportswire

    The following is an excerpt from The Bill James Handbook, Walk-Off Edition, which is available for purchase now at ACTASports.com.

    In my youth, baserunning was mostly a field of conjecture. In 1960 those in the game and those into the game would have known that Maury Wills was very good at going from first to third on a single; Wills, or Aparicio, or Willie Mays or Bill Bruton or Jimmy Piersall or Minnie Miñoso or any other player who was observed to be a fast runner. They would have known that Joe Adcock was poor at going from first to third on a single, or Dick Stuart or Elston Howard or Jerry Lynch or Ted Kluszewski or anyone else who could be observed to be a slow runner.

    There was a general understanding, unconnected to specific facts. Billy Bruton was said to be the fastest man in baseball, perhaps. But how often did he go from first to third on a single? 90% of the time, or 50%? No one knew. How many times a year was Bruton on first base when a single was hit? 30 times, or 200? No one knew. Since Bruton was past his 20s, had his ability to go from first to third on a single declined with age? No one could know.

    What of his ability to score from second? What of his ability to move up when a pitch was in the dirt? What of his ability to score from first on a double? Unknown, unknown, unknown…. None of this was given to Heywood Hale Broun to understand. Heywood Hale Broun was a sportswriter of the time—an
    actor, songwriter, author, sportswriter and broadcaster; look him up. A randomly chosen 1960s sportswriter. He knew many things that I will never know, old HHB, but how often Orlando Cepeda might score from first on a double was not one of them. Not wanting the conversation to suffer from this oversight, the sportswriters of the time would just make stuff up to fill in the gaps. I’m not suggesting that Heywood Hale Broun would make anything up, and the sportswriters and broadcasters who did would not make up specific facts. They would not tell you that Chico Fernández was 21 for 37 at moving from first base on a single, because they had never hit the realization that there was an underlying fact there that could actually be counted.

    They would not tell you specific phony facts, but they would offer deep insights based on their experience. They might tell you, if they were broadcasting for the St. Louis Cardinals, that Julian Javier did not lead the league in stolen bases, but he was better than anybody in baseball at going from first to third on a single.

    The broadcaster from the Philadelphia Phillies might tell you that Tony Taylor was the best baserunner in the league, and the broadcaster from the Cincinnati Reds might tell you that Vada Pinson was the best baserunner in the league, and the broadcaster for the Pittsburgh Pirates might make the same claim for Bill Virdon, and all of these people were telling you the truth as they saw it. And the guy who would tell you that no one ever went from first to third against Rocky Colavito, he was telling you his truth as well, and the guy who would tell you that Joe DiMaggio was never in his career thrown out on the bases trying to stretch a hit, he was telling you what many other people had told him.

    That one was actually very common; old sportswriters from the 1940s were very fond of saying that Joe DiMaggio was never thrown out on the bases in his career. Seriously, they would say that. It was part of the DiMaggio-vs.-Willie Mays dispute. Sportswriters of the 1940s would say that Joe DiMaggio was the greatest all-around player of all time, while sportswriters of the 1950s would say the same about Willie Mays and would argue that Mays did everything that DiMag did and stole more bases in a year than DiMaggio did in his career. The 1940s guys would respond that DiMaggio didn’t steal bases, but he was never thrown out on the bases in his career. The fact that DiMaggio made four unforced outs on the bases in World Series games did not bother them, because what’s too awkward to remember, you simply choose to forget (October 2, 1936, 1st inning; October 3, 1947, 3rd inning; October 9, 1951, 7th inning; and October 10, 1951, 8th inning).

    One time I heard an announcer say that Roger Maris prevented two baserunners a game from moving to third base on a single. Who’s going to argue with him? There’s no data. There’s no facts; you can say anything you want. If you liked Ellis Burks better than Barry Bonds, you could say that Burks was a better baserunner than Bonds, and nobody could prove you were wrong. It was a Rorschach space; you could see what you believed was there.

    Our battle to replace speculation with knowledge began in the 1990s and began to get traction about 2004. A huge roadblock was getting people to let the facts speak for themselves. I started arguing for counts of how often a runner went from first to third on a single about 1996, I think, but for several years the discussion was backed by people who wanted to not count this and not count that. Obviously, they would say, you can’t count situations when the play starts with a runner on second base, because maybe the runner can’t go to third. (Actually, a runner from first goes to third a little bit MORE often when there is a runner on second, because he sometimes has an opportunity to move up on the throw home.) Obviously, you can’t count infield singles, and obviously singles to right field are very different from singles to left field. Singles that are hit directly at the fielder are obviously different; there’s no chance to move up on those, and wouldn’t the numbers be very different with no one out than they would be with two out?

    All statistics group together unlike things to a certain extent, and I agree that it is important to recognize those differences. All doubles are not the same. A ball hit down the line is different from a hustle double in shallow center is different from a ground rule double is different from a ball that hits the wires supporting the catwalk in Tampa Bay.

    But in this case, if you count EVERYTHING, count every situation in which there is a runner on first base and a single is hit, you wind up with good, meaningful data. Elvis Andrus in his career through 2022 was 74 for 111 at scoring from second base on a single, 67%, while Carlos Santana was 43 for 119, 36%.

    If you just count everything, the data will speak for itself. The process of accumulating the data will even out MOST of the “bias” problems, not all of them, of course. If you throw out cases when there is a runner on second base, and you throw out infield singles, and you throw out the cases when the ball is hit right at the fielder, and then you divide the data into subgroups of one out and two out and three out and subgroups of balls hit to left, right and center, you don’t have meaningful data, you just have a lot of 3-for-6s and 2-for-4s. In retrospect, it is obvious that the data works if you just leave it alone and let it speak for itself, but it took me several years to get past the resistance from people who didn’t think that we should count these and didn’t think that we should include those.

    Conceptual clarity. The point I am trying to make is that there is a big difference between the job of a statistician, which is to count things, and the job of a researcher, which is to figure out what should be studied, what should be counted, and how it should be counted. Conceptual clarity means that you have a clear, clean definition of what you are counting. You should be able to explain it in one simple, easily understood sentence. In studying baserunning, we had to focus on what was most helpful for us to count. Runners going from first to third on a single, but what else? We settled on seven major categories to describe baserunners, granting that those seven categories don’t get everything that makes one baserunner different from another. The things we published in this section in the past are:

    (1) Runners going from first to third on a single. The major league norm is 28%.

    (2) Runners scoring from second on a single; the norm is 59%.

    (3) Runners scoring from first on a double, the norm is 44%.

    (4) Batters making outs on the bases, of which there are two basic types, runners thrown out advancing and runners doubled off,

    (5) Grounding into a double play vs. double play opportunities, an opportunity being any time there is a runner on first and less than two out,

    (6) The Net Gain on stolen bases, meaning Stolen Bases above the level of two stolen bases per caught stealing, which is more or less a break-even percentage, and

    (7) Bases Taken

    Bases taken had to fight their way through the same kind of edge-definition issues as runners going from first to third on a single. A Base Taken is a base on which the runner moves up on a documented event. Certain baserunning occurrences are documented as defensive failures or offensive accomplishments, but not otherwise documented as a baserunning event. A Wild Pitch or a Passed Ball occurs when the pitch gets away from the catcher, but also when the baserunner is alert enough, aggressive enough and fast enough to get his butt in gear and move along to the next little white square before he is thrown out. It’s a failure by the pitcher or catcher AND a success by the baserunner. Successes and failures are like that in sports; they tend to balance. What one player does, some other player has allowed.

    A limited and specific list of documented events, because an unlimited list introduces too many problems of conceptual clarity. Wild Pitches, Passed Balls, Balks, Sacrifice Flies and Defensive Indifference are all situations in which a baserunner moves up if he has the speed and daring to move up, but which are not otherwise documented as baserunning events. OK, Balks are a little bit different, but good baserunners FORCE balks to occur. In 2022 there were 2,486 stolen bases in the major leagues, but 4,385 Bases Taken. The 2023 rules brought baserunning closer to the level of Bases Taken (3,503 steals, 4,594 Bases Taken). It doesn’t make any sense NOT to account for them, and then fill in the blank spaces with speculation.

    Nonetheless, as it did for runners going first to third on a single, it took me several years to get them added to the record because a lot of people have opinions about the subject but have no respect for conceptual clarity. We had several years of battles with people who would say “What about if a runner reaches on a single but moves to second base on a throwing error? Shouldn’t that be counted, too?”, or “What about sacrifice bunts?”, or “What about runners moving from second to third on a fielder’s choice, or first to second on a fielder’s choice, or third to home?”, or “What about runners who score from third on a double play ball?”, or “What about a runner who moves from second to third on a fly ball?” Shouldn’t those be counted, too?

    Sure; count them. But give your categories sharp edges. In the 1890s, an official scorer had discretion to credit a baserunner with a stolen base if he went from first to third on a single, or in other situations. Sometimes he or she would, sometimes he or she wouldn’t (there were female official scorers in that era, yes). That’s fuzzy-edge record keeping. Define your concepts so that you know what it is you are counting. If you start including things like runners moving from second to third on a ground ball to the second baseman, you’re not balancing the scales by crediting the baserunner’s side of an already-documented event, you’re creating a new category. You’re losing focus, losing conceptual clarity. Go ahead if you want to do that, but try to present the reader with clear concepts which have known parameters.

    Though the Handbook is coming to a close, there are resources, such as Baseball-Reference, where you can find this information. Baserunning is too important to be allowed to sink back into a tar pit of speculation. We have done what we could do to replace conjecture with understanding.

  • The World’s Best Batter

    Reprinted from The Bill James Handbook 2022

    1. Who is the best hitter in baseball?
    2. It’s still Mike Trout.

    That was easy.   Are we done here?

    We here at Sports Info Solutions have maintained a “World’s #1 pitcher” list for 10 or 15 years, which is based on Game Scores.  The ranking scores are adjusted every day.  If a pitcher pitches a good game, he moves up; if he has a poor game, he moves down.

    A year ago and some, I developed a system of Game Scores for Batters.  Well then, somebody asked, why don’t we do a World’s Number One Batter system?

    I agreed to try it, and here is the first publication of that effort.  I modified the system as necessary to make it work for hitters, and I will probably need to tweak it some more in the future.  A batter’s score is adjusted more cautiously than a pitcher’s, since batters play every day rather than every fifth day.  A pitcher’s score drops after a few days of inactivity, whereas a batter’s score does not, since batting ability is much more stable than pitching ability.  A batter’s score drops between seasons so that the batter has to re-establish his level of ability every season, but it doesn’t drop by nearly as much as a pitcher’s score drops.  The systems are the same, but different.

    To be honest, 2021 wasn’t a great year to push the Go button on the new system.  Mike Trout started the season with a big lead, followed by Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman:

    START OF SEASON
    Rank Player Score
    1 Mike Trout 591
    2 Mookie Betts 552
    3 Freddie Freeman 551
    4 George Springer 550
    5 Anthony Rendon 550
    6 Juan Soto 547
    7 Alex Bregman 547
    8 Ronald Acuña Jr. 537
    9 Christian Yelich 536
    10 Corey Seager 535

     

    Trout came out red hot, even for Mike Trout.  Through May 1 he was hitting .429 with an .805 slugging percentage and a 1.332 OPS.  He had widened his lead to 47 points, while the list behind him had already churned to a significant extent.

    May 1, 2021
    Rank Player Score
    1 Mike Trout 605
    2 Ronald Acuña Jr. 558
    3 George Springer 553
    4 Mookie Betts 553
    5 Anthony Rendon 551
    6 Freddie Freeman 550
    7 Juan Soto 550
    8 Alex Bregman 546
    9 Nelson Cruz 545
    10 Corey Seager 536

    Then, however, Trout went into a 6-for-40 slump.  By May 18 his score had dropped 16 points:

    May 18, 2021
    Rank Player Score
    1 Mike Trout 589
    2 Mookie Betts 555
    3 Freddie Freeman 552
    4 George Springer 551
    5 Alex Bregman 549
    6 Ronald Acuña Jr. 549
    7 Anthony Rendon 548
    8 Juan Soto 542
    9 Jose Abreu 537
    10 Jose Ramirez 535

     

    And then, of course, Trout’s season ended.   This locked his score in place, but it allowed plenty of time for other hitters to make a run at him.  Mookie Betts appeared at that time to be best positioned to make that run, and then Ronald Acuña did.

    On May 7 Fernando Tatis was hitting just .218, and had a ranking score of 524, which put him in 20th place.  He started blasting homers and having 4-hit games, however, and a 2-homer, 6-RBI game on May 23 lifted him into the top 10.  By June 23 Tatis was in third place.  On June 25 he hit three home runs.  This pushed him ahead of Acuña, making him the #2 man, Trout’s top competitor:

    June 25, 2021
    Rank Player Score
    1 Mike Trout 589
    2 Fernando Tatis Jr. 570
    3 Ronald Acuña Jr. 560
    4 Jose Altuve 559
    5 Mookie Betts 555
    6 George Springer 550
    7 Freddie Freeman 550
    8 Vladimir Guerrero Jr. 546
    9 Matt Olson 545
    10 Alex Bregman 542

     

    Tatis had gained 46 points in five weeks.  He needed only 19 more to claim the position as baseball’s best hitter.  He homered on June 30, pushing him to 572. He stayed in that range, moved up slowly.  By August 15 he was at 579:

    August 15, 2021
    Rank Player Score
    1 Mike Trout 589
    2 Fernando Tatis Jr. 579
    3 Mookie Betts 574
    4 George Springer 567
    5 Ronald Acuña Jr. 565
    6 Freddie Freeman 561
    7 Juan Soto 561
    8 Max Muncy 558
    9 Matt Olson 556
    10 Jose Altuve 552

    And where, you might ask, is the pitcher dude, Ohtani?   Why isn’t he on this list?  Why isn’t he #1 on the list?

    Shohei Ohtani ranked #85 on April 12 and dropped to #92 on Apr 20 before he started to rip.  He climbed into the top 80 on April 25, and into the top 70 the following day.  He was in the top 60 by May 7.  He reached the top 50 on May 18, the same day that Trout went out for the year.   On June 18 he was in the top 40; on June 20, in the top 30.  By June 29 he was in the top 20.  By July 18 we had him ranked as the #13 hitter in baseball.

    And then he stopped hitting.  He didn’t COMPLETELY stop hitting, of course, but in June and July he hit .295 with 22 homers, 42 RBI.  From August 1 to the end of the season he hit .216 with 9 homers and 18 RBI.   He started to slide down the list.  By the end of the season he had dropped back to 42nd place.

    This is just about hitting.  Being a hitter/pitcher doesn’t help you at all; this is just a hitter’s ranking.  A similar story is Vladimir Guerrero Jr.  He started the season ranked 111th, but he started out a-wallopin’.  He moved into the top 90 on April 9, into the top 80 on April 10, into the top 70 on April 15, into the top 60 on April 17.  A couple of hot weeks, and he has passed half the list of hitters who were around him, because that is all that it takes when you are in that territory.  On April 27 he hit 3 home runs and drove in 7 runs, which put him not only into the Top 50, but into the top 40. He flattened out a little, but he moved into the top 30 on May 19, and into the top 20 on May 25.  On June 12 he moved into the #10 spot, then 9, 8, 7, 6, 5.  By July 7 he was ranked as the #5 hitter in baseball.

    In that time period, I heard several reporters say that Guerrero was probably the best hitter in baseball now.  But like Ohtani, that was as high as he got in 2021; he started to slip after that, and wound up the season ranked 12th.

    Vladimir may in fact be the best hitter in baseball, or Shohei might, but I want to see them prove it before I put them there.  There is always a sensation of the moment, and there are always people who want to say that the sensation of the moment is the brightest star in the firmament.  But I look at it this way:  that the variations in performance within each player’s career are significantly larger than the actual differences in skill levels.  That means, when you think about it, that it is rarely true that the player who is playing the best right now, over the last two weeks or the last two months.…it is rarely true that the player who is playing the best right now is actually the best player.   You need to be skeptical.  If one of these men is actually the best hitter in baseball, 2022 will give them another chance to prove it.

    But Mike Trout actually did NOT hold the #1 spot until the end of the season.  There’s this young fella, Juan Soto.  Juan Soto did not start out the season in the 90s.  He started the season #6.  He drifted a little bit after that, dropping as low as the 16th spot on the list on June 28.   He was back in the top 10 by early July.  By mid-July he was 5th.   On August 30th he was 6th.

    And then he got hot.  He homered and drove in 4 runs on September 2.  He homered again on the third.   Beginning September 7 he had 29 hits in 16 games.  On September 23, he moved ahead of Trout, to be ranked as the #1 hitter in baseball.

    September 23, 2021
    Rank Player Score
    1 Juan Soto 592
    2 Mike Trout 589
    3 Fernando Tatis Jr. 574
    4 Bryce Harper 573
    5 Freddie Freeman 571
    6 Mookie Betts 569
    7 Ronald Acuña Jr. 565
    8 Vladimir Guerrero Jr. 563
    9 Matt Olson 560
    10 Jose Altuve 559

     

    And all of a sudden, out of nowhere, he was an MVP candidate.  He finished the season in a 3-for-28 slump, which put the static Mr. Trout back in first place;

    End of Season
    Rank Player Score
    1 Mike Trout 589
    2 Juan Soto 583
    3 Bryce Harper 572
    4 George Springer 566
    5 Mookie Betts 566
    6 Ronald Acuña Jr. 565
    7 Fernando Tatis Jr. 565
    8 Freddie Freeman 565
    9 Paul Goldschmidt 561
    10 Trea Turner 561

     

    By the end of 2022 any of those men may be the best hitter in baseball, or Ohtani might, or Guerrero might.  My money would be on Soto, but Mike Trout is Mike Trout.  He’s probably got a few hits in him.