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Thursday, August 17, 2017

No, the Google manifesto isn’t sexist or anti-diversity. It’s science - The Globe and Mail






...and this from the ilk that worships at the altar of science and prattles on about how wise and tolerant and good they are. Good Grief.

How about sprinkling in a little dose of common sense once in a while, that shouldn't be too much to ask given that you guys are such freaking geniuses, right?

This is more about altering viewpoints and public opinion i.e. controlling the narrative to control the masses. Always has been, always will be. 

Let's see how long this blog post lasts.
No, the Google manifesto isn't sexist or anti-diversity. It's science - The Globe and Mail

No, the Google manifesto isn't sexist or anti-diversity. It's science

By now, most of us have heard about Google's so-called "anti-diversity" manifesto and how James Damore, the engineer who wrote it, has been fired from his job.

Titled Google's Ideological Echo Chamber, Mr. Damore called out the current PC culture, saying the gender gap in Google's diversity was not due to discrimination, but inherent differences in what men and women find interesting. Danielle Brown, Google's newly appointed vice-president for diversity, integrity and governance, accused the memo of advancing "incorrect assumptions about gender," and Mr. Damore confirmed last night he was fired for "perpetuating gender stereotypes."

Despite how it's been portrayed, the memo was fair and factually accurate. Scientific studies have confirmed sex differences in the brain that lead to differences in our interests and behaviour.

As mentioned in the memo, gendered interests are predicted by exposure to prenatal testosterone – higher levels are associated with a preference for mechanically interesting things and occupations in adulthood. Lower levels are associated with a preference for people-oriented activities and occupations. This is why STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) fields tend to be dominated by men.

We see evidence for this in girls with a genetic condition called congenital adrenal hyperplasia, who are exposed to unusually high levels of testosterone in the womb. When they are born, these girls prefer male-typical, wheeled toys, such as trucks, even if their parents offer more positive feedback when they play with female-typical toys, such as dolls. Similarly, men who are interested in female-typical activities were likely exposed to lower levels of testosterone.

As well, new research from the field of genetics shows that testosterone alters the programming of neural stem cells, leading to sex differences in the brain even before it's finished developing in utero. This further suggests that our interests are influenced strongly by biology, as opposed to being learned or socially constructed.

Many people, including a former Google employee, have attempted to refute the memo's points, alleging that they contradict the latest research.
I'd love to know what "research done […] for decades" he's referring to, because thousands of studies would suggest otherwise. A single study, published in 2015, did claim that male and female brains existed along a "mosaic" and that it isn't possible to differentiate them by sex, but this has been refuted by four – yes, fouracademic studies since.

This includes a study that analyzed the exact same brain data from the original study and found that the sex of a given brain could be correctly identified with 69-per-cent to 77-per-cent accuracy.

Of course, differences exist at the individual level, and this doesn't mean environment plays no role in shaping us. But to claim that there are no differences between the sexes when looking at group averages, or that culture has greater influence than biology, simply isn't true.

In fact, research has shown that cultures with greater gender equity have larger sex differences when it comes to job preferences, because in these societies, people are free to choose their occupations based on what they enjoy.

As the memo suggests, seeking to fulfill a 50-per-cent quota of women in STEM is unrealistic. As gender equity continues to improve in developing societies, we should expect to see this gender gap widen.

This trend continues into the area of personality, as well. Contrary to what detractors would have you believe, women are, on average, higher in neuroticism and agreeableness, and lower in stress tolerance.

Some intentionally deny the science because they are afraid it will be used to justify keeping women out of STEM. But sexism isn't the result of knowing facts; it's the result of what people choose to do with them.

This is exactly what the mob of outrage should be mobilizing for, instead of denying biological reality and being content to spend a weekend doxxing a man so that he would lose his job. At this point, as foreshadowed in Mr. Damore's manifesto, we should be more concerned about viewpoint diversity than diversity revolving around gender.

Debra Soh writes about the science of human sexuality and holds a PhD in sexual neuroscience from York University.


Image result for google echo chamber\

Tuesday, August 15, 2017

The Best Post Game Speech of the Year





...and this after a season-ending 19-0 loss to Florida State. Amazing. This is what it's all about. 


Lance Miles on Matt Deggs



Heath Donica on Matt Deggs





Pablo Sandoval is back where he belongs



This is a really good first step. The upper deck HR off Scherzer doesn't hurt either. 
A sincere, heart-felt apology always helps and Pablo really owned his actions here.
Who doesn't love a good redemption story?

Welcome back, Panda. 





"Before I continue, I want to take a moment to apologize to the Giants and to the fans. I know I already have, and I probably will again, but I don't think I can apologize enough for the way I left — for some of the things I said. I said things I didn't have to say. Things I don't want to repeat. Things I didn't mean. I was just so emotional when I left San Francisco, and I didn't handle it the right way.
I made a mistake.
I'm very sorry.
And I understand how fortunate I am to be back with this organization. It's just such a blessing for me to be back in San Francisco — back with the team that has been there for me through so many ups and downs in my career. The Giants gave me my first chance to be in the big leagues.
Now they have given me the opportunity for a second chance."

Sent from my iPhone

38 Special - Back Where You Belong


Friday, August 11, 2017

Stretching Scholarship Dollars Key To College Success | BaseballAmerica.com


Courtesy of Stanford University

This is going to be a tough one to work out since you have two of the biggest control freaks in sports, MLB and the NCAA, struggling for control of these assets called baseball players. If MLB gives subsidies, they are going to want some measure of control in return. 

We'll see how it goes and I remain hopeful they can improve the landscape. But IDK......There should be a partnership type of arrangement and colleges currently work with the industries they serve all the time in terms of curriculum, so this should be somewhat in their wheelhouse. 

So there you go MLB, here's your to do list:
  • Subsidize RBI baseball in the inner cities
  • Subsidize women's/girls softball nationally
  • Subsidize college scholarships
  • Subsidize baseball/softball internationally via WBC tournaments to enhance or replace Olympics command and control every four years
It's an investment in your potential future players as well as expansion of the sports future audience.  See how easy it is to spend other peoples money? I should be a politician, but I don't want to shower/delouse three times a day.

from Baseball America:

Stretching Scholarship Dollars Key To College Success

Courtesy of Stanford University
In late March, Stanford announced it was raising an important financial aid threshold. Previously, any family with a yearly household income of $100,000 or less could expect to contribute nothing to a student's tuition payments. This year, that number became $125,000, which is more than twice the median U.S. household income but right in line with the median figure of Stanford's student body.

The motivation for the move was primarily academic: Removing money as an obstacle in getting the smartest, most talented high school students to Palo Alto.

The implications go further than that, though, to the sphere of athletics. Not to football and basketball, most schools' most popular sports and primary moneymakers. A scholarship in those sports has essentially the same value anywhere, and schools are can cover each position three to four times over.

Baseball, however, is different. It is limited to 11.7 scholarships for a 35-man roster, and those are doled out not in terms of yes and no, but in percentages and fractions.

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Rob Manfred joins RBI WS softball roundtable | MLB.com

Rob Manfred joins RBI WS softball roundtable | MLB.com
Manfred committed to raising softball's profile

Good for MLB and kudos to Rob Manfred for picking up the ball on this issue. I have been calling for more of a partnership between MLB and softball for many years. It seems as if Manfred also sees the opportunity for a woman to break through the minors and into MLB baseball, another issue I have written about before. There are plenty of examples of girls who have competed versus the boys at the HS level. It shouldn't have taken Monee Davis doing something at the LL level to open the Commissioners eyes. But we'll take whatever progress we can get.

I do hope the focus on the Monee Davis' of the world does not leave women's softball out in the cold. Here is one area where baseball can take the lead over the other major sports. There is no comparable league to the NFL for women, period. Nor is there one comparable to the NHL, although there could be. The NBA and the WNBA do coexist and there could eventually be a woman who could break through and play in the NBA before MLB breaks the barrier. 

I would like to see MLB beat them to the punch and I think the way to do it is to encourage participation by raising the bar for women's softball by subsidizing a professional women's softball league. I know they subsidize RBI and there are calls for them to subsidize college scholarships, here there will be a wash to expenses since presumably their minor league affiliated costs will decrease somewhat. They need to start thinking of these cash outlays more as investments in the future of the game rather than as pure expenses. 

from mlb.com  

http://m.reds.mlb.com/news/article/247390390/rob-manfred-joins-rbi-ws-softball-roundtable/?partnerId=ed-11797296-1010698173

Manfred committed to raising softball's profile

Commissioner talks to youth players during RBI World Series roundtable




CINCINNATI -- It was not a scheduling coincidence that Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred visited the RBI World Series on a day when girls softball participants were playing their semifinal games on Wednesday. Manfred came to Cincinnati specifically to talk softball and to engage with young women who play.

Manfred was part of a roundtable discussion at the Kingsgate Marriott Hotel at the University Of Cincinnati that included Reds chief operating officer Phil Castellini, Reds senior vice president of business operations Karen Forgus and Northern Kentucky University softball head coach Kathryn Gleason.

"It gave me an opportunity to put a special focus on softball," Manfred said. "Youth participation is a huge priority for Major League Baseball. I think historically we have given inadequate focus to softball in addition to baseball. We want to make sure that our efforts capture the entire population, male and female. We love the idea of making our softball programs every bit as high profile as our baseball programs."
Cincinnati, the Reds and the MLB Urban Youth Academy are hosting the 25th annual Reviving Baseball in Inner Cities (RBI) World Series baseball and softball tournaments. The semifinals were scheduled for Wednesday afternoon, and the finals are slated for Friday.

During the roundtable discussion, it was the softball players who got to ask the questions.

"What opportunities do you have for women who want to play professional baseball?" one player asked the Commissioner.

In his reply, Manfred brought up visiting the Little League World Series shortly after his 2014 election as Commissioner and meeting Mo'ne Davis, a pitcher out of Philadelphia who became the superstar of the tournament, and who helped her team from Philly win the RBI World Series Junior Championship, throwing five sold innings in the semifinals.

"She changed my view of the prospects of a woman playing professional baseball," Manfred said. "When she looked at me and I looked at the look on her face, and she told me she thought she was going to be able to be good enough to play professional baseball. ... There was a look of determination in her eye that was really inspiring to me. One of the reasons that we started the women's baseball part of our [youth] program was to recognize that some young women out there would prefer to play the same game the boys play for a longer period of time."




Mark Sheldon has covered the Reds for MLB.com since 2006, and previously covered the Twins from 2001-05. Follow him on Twitter @m_sheldon and Facebook and listen to his podcast. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.



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Thursday, August 10, 2017

Giants 2017 Starters




This is it, save for a couple of forgettable Chris Stratton starts. If the Giants knew how bad the season was going to be, do you think they would have DFA'd Clayton Blackburn? I sure would have liked to have seen him in extended meaningful action, I think he'd have developed into a keeper like Ty Blach seems to be doing. 

Believe it or not, the core problem is not here. Samardzija has to keep the ball in the yard and get finer with the strike zone. He's discovering the difference between control (throwing strikes) and command (throwing strikes with stuff and proper location). It just can't be anywhere in the strike zone. We tell twelve and thirteen year-olds with "stuff" to just throw it down the middle and dare them to hit it. That doesn't work in the show. The other guys is getting paid big bucks too.  

Nothing stops Bumgarner, except dirt-bikes and lack of run support. Not worried about him. PAY THE MAN!!

Blach pitches to contact and keeps the ball in the yard and on the ground. So he may get hit but he can get a DP limit damage. Talk to Samardzija.

Cueto has to get it back. He got exposed a little after Bumgarner went down. I don't think he's a pure #1 anymore. He needs some cover. Keep Bummer away from dirt bikes.

Matt Moore is truly vexing. I think a lot of it is between his ears. When he threw the WP and forgot to cover home recently, I though Posey should have drilled him with it. It might have knocked some sense back into him. He seems to forget how to compete when things go wrong. When the wheels come off for him, they don't go back on easily, like for Blach and Bummer. He supposedly has 3-4 pitches, none of which he can really command. Which means he really doesn't have any pitches.

Matt Cain. Hey, thanks for the memories. Here's your $7M buyout for next year. The old-timers game is in June, you think you can give us a couple of innings? Maybe get some guys out there? What do they say, if you have two Matt's in your rotation, you really don't have any? TRUTH!!

Moore has to figure it out quickly or, as long as we're into bringing back the old guard, let's just offer him back to the Rays for Matt Duffy, if he ever gets off the DL. He plays left, Parker goes to RF and Pence, IDK about Pence. He makes a lot of money so.......yeah. That's why we can never have a nice team around here.

'Tebow Effect' Paid Off For Sally League Clubs | BaseballAmerica.com

'Tebow Effect' Paid Off For Sally League Clubs | BaseballAmerica.com

No denying that there was a purely business component to this signing right from the get-go, primarily from the Mets standpoint. But when are people going to give this guy credit for his accomplishments?

He's doing even better in High-A than he was in the Sally League, showing legitimate power, even to the opposite field, after putting the game down for ten years.

Remember that was supposed to be a lark for Timmy. He was going to make a fool of himself and major league baseball. Hasn't happened. Time to give credit where credit is due.

If the Mets are out of it and bring him up in September, so what? He's earned it.

The same fools that hate this guys and ran him out of the NFL now want us to feel sorry for Colin Kaperdink.

F-you, ESPN, NFL, SJW's of all stripes and especially BLM ass-hats. You folks, and your ilk, ran Tebow out of the league for kneeling to God and now you want this POS Kapershit back in the league for kneeling to piss on the flag and this country?

Don't need y'all and don't miss y'all and apparently neither does Tim Tebow.

ESPN = garbage network
NFL = garbage league

from Baseball America:
http://www.baseballamerica.com/business/tebow-effect-paid-off-for-sally-league-clubs/#7WpjHwAexIBJC2ty.97

'Tebow Effect' Paid Off For Sally League Clubs

Tim Tebow has brought in tens of thousands of extra fans to South Atlantic League games this year.
Tim Tebow has been promoted to the Florida State League and has played his last game in the South Atlantic League. On pure baseball terms, it's fair to say that a 29-year-old outfielder who hit .220/.311/.336 is as forgettable as a prospect could be.
But at the box office, Tebow is the greatest star the South Atlantic League has ever seen.

When we first wrote about the "Tebow effect" on fan attendance a little over a month ago, we calculated that Tebow was worth roughly 2,200 fans per game whenever the Columbia Fireflies hit the road. Since then, the Tebow Effect grew.
In comparing what teams have drawn in games where they played host to Tebow teams versus the rest of their home schedule without Tebow, it now appears that Tebow was worth 2,591 fans per game when the Fireflies were on the road.
To explain it more simply, there are 14 teams in the Sally League this year, but through Tebow's final game on June 25, nearly one of every four fans who have walked through the gate at a Sally League game has done so to see Tebow's Columbia Fireflies play.

The Juiced Ball Theory Is Back


Lower seams + Less Drag = Longer Ball Flight. The  NCAA found that out. Plus it allows MLB to divert attention to "no change in COR". What they are finding out that the NCAA did not is that blisters are up, probably because MLB pitcher throw the ball more often than collegians.

Whenever they want more HR's they monkey with the ball or the strike zone. Launch angle is a ridiculous theory. If you could dial up launch angle "What coach 28 degrees, not 29 or 27?" why wouldn't just you spray line drives all over the yard and say "F- it" to grounders and fly balls"?

The Juiced Ball Is Back

New testing suggests the baseball is at least partially responsible for MLB's huge homer spike


The Juiced Ball Is Back
"The newer balls have higher CORs and lower circumferences and seam heights, which would be estimated to add an average of 7.1 feet to their distance, equivalent to the effect we would expect to stem from a 1.43 mph difference in exit speed. Although those differences don't sound enormous, Nathan has noted that "a tiny change in exit speed can lead to much larger changes in the number of home runs." Last July, he calculated that an exit-speed increase of 1.5 mph would be sufficient to explain the rise in home runs to that point, which means that the 1.43 mph effective difference that Lichtman's analysis uncovered could comport almost exactly with the initial increase in home runs. Lichtman calculates that a COR increase of this size, in this sample, falls 2.6 standard deviations from the mean, which means that it's extremely unlikely to have happened by chance."


This article is coauthored by sabermetrician Mitchel Lichtman, who also conducted the research on which it is based.




The newer balls have higher CORs and lower circumferences and seam heights, which would be estimated to add an average of 7.1 feet to their distance, equivalent to the effect we would expect to stem from a 1.43 mph difference in exit speed. Although those differences don't sound enormous, Nathan has noted that "a tiny change in exit speed can lead to much larger changes in the number of home runs." Last July, he calculated that an exit-speed increase of 1.5 mph would be sufficient to explain the rise in home runs to that point, which means that the 1.43 mph effective difference that Lichtman's analysis uncovered could comport almost exactly with the initial increase in home runs. Lichtman calculates that a COR increase of this size, in this sample, falls 2.6 standard deviations from the mean, which means that it's extremely unlikely to have happened by chance. 
With the newer balls' reduction in circumference comes a decrease in weight, although according to Robert Adair's book The Physics of Baseball, the ball's weight, independent of its other qualities, has little effect on flight distance. Similarly, while dynamic stiffness does affect the flight of balls hit by the hollow bats used in amateur ball, it doesn't play a role with the solid bats used in the big leagues. However, a dynamic-stiffness difference that large does add to the evidence of altered composition.


Wednesday, August 09, 2017

Bumgarner v. Hendricks - Tale of the Tape (and another Hendricks type pitcher?)


Image result for madison bumgarner sally leagueKyle Hendricks

https://news.dartmouth.edu/news/2012/03/kyle-hendricks-12-heads-major-league-baseballs-spring-training

Madison Bumgarner and Kyle Hendricks face off today at AT&T Park. Both stars are having what have to be considered as off years by both of their previous standards. It reminded me that, in a more obscure way, they faced off in a statistical analysis sort of way to post two of the most incredible Low-A  ball debut years that I can remember seeing, although I'm sure there are many others.

Bumaganer lit up the Sally League as a fresh faced first round draft pick out of high school and lit up his elders (relatively speaking). Hendricks lit up the Northwest League in Spokane in 2011 after leaving Dartmouth following his junior year.



These two guys couldn't be more different as pitchers, one a LH power pitcher, one a RH finesse pitcher. One a collegiate pitcher, and an Ivy Leaguer at that. The other, a high school draftee from North Carolina.

Almost nothing on Hendricks' stat line from college (as shown below) would give an indication of what was to come, which makes his draft/sign by scout Jay Heafner of the Texas Rangers in the eight round, one of the biggest bargains in recent draft history.

Unfortunately, for the Rangers, the fruits are being enjoyed by the Cubbies.


Heafner must have seen something in those nine starts from Hendricks' junior year that was not demonstrated in his freshman and sophomore years, or the light just went on for Hendricks, because as you can see, Hendricks just lit up Low-A ball, albeit a small sample size. The results continued right into the major leagues for both guys.

Bumgarner's results are more amazing from the standpoint that he was a 19 year old competing against a league average 22 year old league, a boy among men. He treated the men like boys for 141+ innings and streaked right into the Giants rotation a little over a year later.

Both guys controlled the peripheral stats, the control-ables about as good as almost anyone south of Clayton Kershaw.

The Tale of the Tape:



Both guys posted a K/BB rate ( the best single indicator of prospect status rather than suspect ) north of 7.50. As a point of reference, 3.00 or better is pretty good.

Hendricks was competing against same aged hitters ( RAE, or Relative Age Effect = 1.00 ) Bumgarner was a precocious teenager.

Both guys kept the strikeouts up, the walks down and the ball in the yard. A great formula for success. Both guys control the strike zone, they control the count, they control the hitters.

Hendricks control numbers actually appeared to go up in professional ball from his last year in collegiate ball, indicating that he made an early and easy transition from the college dorm to the low minor league lifestyle. Bumgarner obviously was not a deer in the headlights kind of guy either.

To show how incredible Hendricks number are, the line named Average is the average result of five Ivy League pitchers from this years 2017 draft. He blew the doors off the Average. However, there is one pitcher who is posting near-Hendricks like numbers in Low-A ball this year.

Keep you eye on Christian Taugner 6-2, 190 RHP drafted in the 37th round by the Milwaukee Brewers out of Brown and Roselle, IL.

http://www.thebaseballcube.com/players/profile.asp?P=christian-taugner

Taugner was the last Ivy League pitcher drafted, even though I had him as the highest ranked Ivy pitcher on my board. WDIK? Early returns and peripheral stats are very Hendrick-like, except Taugner is giving up more hits, while striking out guys at a higher rate. However he gets guys out, it must be funky.

Really, when you look under the hood and beyond the usual stats that fans pay attention to -- the uncontrol-ables like W-L, ERA, WHIP -- you can see some of these future stars rise a standard deviation or two above their peer group and prior history.