gehringer_2 Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 43 minutes ago, Tiger337 said: I'm not sure how you want to fix that. Do you want to get rid of positional adjustments and ignore position in evalualting a player or do you think that the positional adjustment for first basemen in particular is too harsh? I can't really justify the former, but the latter is possible. I suppose there is no need to 'fix' as long as one understands what it's actually telling you (nor not telling you! ;)) Quote
Tiger337 Posted 2 hours ago Author Posted 2 hours ago 30 minutes ago, chasfh said: I get how it can be difficult to understand just how much positional adjustments should matter because we can't see under the hood how they are done. I generally trust the hundreds of baseball minds who have been (and presumably continue to be) working on establishing and honing the valuation, but I do grant that it's possible there's a huge blind spot afflicting the entire informed-outsider analytical community about it. Speaking only for myself, I wouldn't let that possibility lead me to reject outright the current calculations, though. I do understand that WAR has not been communicated well and I think it may be more complex than it needs to be if it's going to be presented to a wide audience. Perhaps, they could have one WAR for people doing research and one simpler WAR for average fans. Joe Posnanski has been suggesting something like that for years. It might piss off some sabers to see other fans using an inferior stat, but I could live with that. It would be like using OPS rather than wOBA. I don't think it's difficult to understand why a shortstop contributes more to his team than a first baseman just by being a shortstop though. And I know you understand that. Maybe, it could just be presented better. Quote
gehringer_2 Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago (edited) On 1/16/2026 at 7:57 PM, Tiger337 said: Flaherty and Cobb both made more than Skubal last year. any player in the MLB who is worried about himself or other guys being paid what they are actually worth in the years they are worth it is going to be having a very hard time emotionally. I'm sure any pro baseball player who hasn't already lost his mind over it has made his peace with the fact that what guys are being paid at any given time in MLB has almost nothing to do with how much they are contributing to the team or whether the guys he sees when he looks down the dugout bench are being paid for more or less 'value' to the club than he is. Edited 2 hours ago by gehringer_2 Quote
Tiger337 Posted 2 hours ago Author Posted 2 hours ago 1 minute ago, gehringer_2 said: any player in the MLB who is worried about himself or other guys being paid what they are actually worth in the years they are worth it is going to be having a very hard time emotionally. I'm sure any pro baseball player who hasn't already lost his mind over it has made his peace with the fact that what guys are being paid at any given time in MLB has almost nothing to do with how much they are contributing to the team or whether those players are more or less 'value' to the club than they are. It's not different from other jobs in that respect. It's just that there is a lot more money involved and the results are public. Quote
gehringer_2 Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago Just now, Tiger337 said: It's not different from other jobs in that respect. It's just that there is a lot more money involved and the results are public. right - and also the ratios involved are so huge. If you are working for Amalgamated Widget, and the guy in the next cubicle doing a similar job gets a bigger raise then you do, it's not likely to be to 30x what you are making like it is between a future HOF player in his rookie yr versus a washed up unproductive player that got lucky like Cobb. Quote
Tiger337 Posted 2 hours ago Author Posted 2 hours ago 5 minutes ago, gehringer_2 said: right - and also the ratios involved are so huge. If you are working for Amalgamated Widget, and the guy in the next cubicle doing a similar job gets a bigger raise then you do, it's not likely to be to 30x what you are making like it is between a future HOF player in his rookie yr versus a washed up unproductive player that got lucky like Cobb. True, but the difference in the amount of money you and your co-worker gets would probably have a bigger impact on the lives of average people than the difference in the amounts that Cobb and Skubal get. 1 Quote
chasfh Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago (edited) 1 hour ago, gehringer_2 said: any player in the MLB who is worried about himself or other guys being paid what they are actually worth in the years they are worth it is going to be having a very hard time emotionally. I'm sure any pro baseball player who hasn't already lost his mind over it has made his peace with the fact that what guys are being paid at any given time in MLB has almost nothing to do with how much they are contributing to the team or whether the guys he sees when he looks down the dugout bench are being paid for more or less 'value' to the club than he is. I could see where, if Skubal loses the arb case and gets the $19 million the Tigers imply he’s worth, and then they turn around and bring in Chris Bassitt for something more, Tarik might be at least a little annoyed. Edited 1 hour ago by chasfh Quote
chasfh Posted 59 minutes ago Posted 59 minutes ago 1 hour ago, Tiger337 said: I do understand that WAR has not been communicated well and I think it may be more complex than it needs to be if it's going to be presented to a wide audience. Perhaps, they could have one WAR for people doing research and one simpler WAR for average fans. Joe Posnanski has been suggesting something like that for years. It might piss off some sabers to see other fans using an inferior stat, but I could live with that. It would be like using OPS rather than wOBA. I don't think it's difficult to understand why a shortstop contributes more to his team than a first baseman just by being a shortstop though. And I know you understand that. Maybe, it could just be presented better. The thing about WAR I don’t particularly like is how under the hood the calculation is. I have always wanted to know it so I could tinker with myself. Maybe they hide it by design to prevent that. Who knows. I do trust it to be accurate at least within reason. Quote
Tiger337 Posted 46 minutes ago Author Posted 46 minutes ago 3 minutes ago, chasfh said: The thing about WAR I don’t particularly like is how under the hood the calculation is. I have always wanted to know it so I could tinker with myself. Maybe they hide it by design to prevent that. Who knows. I do trust it to be accurate at least within reason. I am not entirely sure what's under the hood myself, because they update it without publicly documenting it all the time. I think it is has gotten so messy that few people would really understand it anyway. That mioght be why they don't publicize it much. It is very hard to find official documentation on positional adjustments but I know it's based on an analysis of players who played multiple positions (I think in the same year or adjacent years). I don't know the details. Tango did it and it was peer reviewed, so the method is most likely sound. I can see problems with such an analysis, but there is probably no good way to do it if you are trying compare players historically. Quote
chasfh Posted 26 minutes ago Posted 26 minutes ago (edited) 19 minutes ago, Tiger337 said: I am not entirely sure what's under the hood myself, because they update it without publicly documenting it all the time. I think it is has gotten so messy that few people would really understand it anyway. That mioght be why they don't publicize it much. It is very hard to find official documentation on positional adjustments but I know it's based on an analysis of players who played multiple positions (I think in the same year or adjacent years). I don't know the details. Tango did it and it was peer reviewed, so the method is most likely sound. I can see problems with such an analysis, but there is probably no good way to do it if you are trying compare players historically. Perhaps another reason they don’t publicize their work on WAR is that with at least three different versions of it out there, each proprietor might have a proprietary interest in keeping their versions secret from the other two? Edited 26 minutes ago by chasfh Quote
Tiger337 Posted 6 minutes ago Author Posted 6 minutes ago 17 minutes ago, chasfh said: Perhaps another reason they don’t publicize their work on WAR is that with at least three different versions of it out there, each proprietor might have a proprietary interest in keeping their versions secret from the other two? I don't believe so. They have been pretty open about most of it and they seem to honestly answer questions when asked about it. Quote
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