Showing posts with label Hawk Harrelson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hawk Harrelson. Show all posts

Thursday, August 14, 2014

"Experimental" rule key to unlock Giants offensive high


On the left, the play in Tuesday's game. On the right, the play today. The one on the right was overturned.


The Giants find the secret to offensive success!! 
  • Find a loophole in a rule, like MLB Rule 7.13 perhaps...
  • Delay game due to replay 10 minutes
  • Listen to Hawk Harrelson slippery slope snap analysis about players wearing skirts
  • Watch opponent fall apart at seams 
Maybe the WSox shouldn't have walked a .196 hitter on four pitches, or turned Pagan around to the left side where he's a much better hitter and maybe you get out of the inning with AT WORST, a tie game. From there you force the Giants to score another whole run by their own selves, which they have struggled to do lately in case you haven't noticed.

The way this game was going the Gigantes wouldn't have scored on the Sox lefty if they extended the game until Sunday.

BWDIK?? 

MERCY!!!!


Bruce Bochy pushed hard for this rule, but this isn’t exactly what he had in mind. Bochy, a former catcher, wanted to keep catchers from getting blown up at the plate. Major League Baseball did the right thing, presenting a rule that’s supposed to protect guys who have little chance on bang-bang plays. But it’s vague, and there are loopholes, and we saw one of them today.
By the letter of the law, Gregor Blanco was safe. But Blanco didn’t think he was safe. He slid across the plate and then walked slowly back to the dugout, squinting as he looked back at the scoreboard. He didn’t know the plate had been blocked until he went back to the clubhouse to watch the replay. Bochy didn’t think Blanco was safe. He dropped his head and looked down at the seeds at his feet. And then …

It's nicknamed "The Buster Posey Rule" but it should be more aptly named "The Eliminate Egregious Collisions at Home Plate Rule". That just doesn't roll off the tongue as well, so I see why they they named it after Buster.

This is what the rule change was supposed to take out of the game. 


 




It shouldn't have necessitated an "experimental" rule change, which allowed a committee to go to work and make decisions. A committee of one should have decided this and "experimental" should only refer to drug use. 

Somebody must have been smoking weed before they introduced this rule change on Major League Baseball


So a backup OF for the Marlins is still deciding the outcome of games and the fortunes of teams seasons many years down the road. Way to go Scott Cousins!!!

As for Hawk Harrelson's analysis, if the Hawk thinks putting a skirt on players is going to dampen interest then perhaps he hasn't watched A League of their Own. Mercy!!!

Thursday, December 26, 2013

A bunch of players were claimed off waivers today | HardballTalk




Soooo.....we lose Surkamp to make room on the roster for Morse, when we still have Brett Pill on the roster, even though we've sold his contract to a Korean team? It's good to be the Giants GM!! The White Sox seem to be more enamored with Giants spare parts than the Giants have been of late. Surkamp joins Conor Gillaspie at the Second Chance Saloon that is the South Side of Chicago. It beats getting shipped off to Korea......maybe.....Do they have a Hawk Harrelson equivalent in Korea? That would be sweet.

from Hardball Talk:
A bunch of players were claimed off waivers today | HardballTalk:

The White Sox claimed left-hander Eric Surkamp off waivers from the Giants
Surkamp was hit hard in his lone start with the Giants this season, but he had a 2.80 ERA and 71/23 K/BB ratio in 86 2/3 innings over 16 starts between High-A San Jose and Triple-A Fresno. This was his first year back from Tommy John surgery. He’s not a hard-thrower, usually sitting in the 85-89 mph range, but has averaged 10.0 K/9 and 2.5 BB/9 in the minors.

'via Blog this'

Monday, May 20, 2013

With a quarter of the season in the books, time to review


From one of the coolest baseball sites out there coolstandings.com we are beginning to see how the MLB races might shape up.


from coolstandings.com
http://www.coolstandings.com/baseball_standings.asp?i=1


2013 AL Standings What are these?
EastWLPCTGBRSRAEXPWEXPLDIVWCPOFF
New York2716.628-18415992.769.334.226.460.6
Boston2717.6140.521717993.268.835.527.062.5
Tampa Bay2320.535421019787.474.617.924.041.9
Baltimore2320.535421319584.377.712.019.431.4
Toronto1726.3951017722267.294.80.41.72.1
CentralWLPCTGBRSRAEXPWEXPLDIVWCPOFF
Cleveland2517.595-20817392.669.439.022.061.0
Detroit2319.548222217593.069.040.721.762.4
Kansas City2020.500417115783.079.013.015.528.5
Chicago1923.452615517074.887.23.76.310.0
Minnesota1822.450618019174.587.53.56.29.8
WestWLPCTGBRSRAEXPWEXPLDIVWCPOFF
Texas2915.659-212158100.961.183.15.788.8
Oakland2322.5116.520720482.179.911.114.025.2
Seattle2024.455916018076.385.74.27.411.6
Los Angeles1727.3861218922770.391.71.52.74.2
Houston1232.2731717326154.0108.0<0 .1="" td=""><0 .1="" td=""><0 .1="" td="">

Previous Day
2013 NL Standings
EastWLPCTGBRSRAEXPWEXPLDIVWCPOFF
Atlanta2518.581-18615297.065.076.26.983.0
Washington2321.5232.515517281.580.514.313.928.2
Philadelphia2123.4774.515619074.787.36.05.811.8
New York1724.415717420270.891.23.53.46.9
Miami1232.27313.511719051.7110.3<0 .1="" td=""><0 .1="" td=""><0 .1="" td="">
CentralWLPCTGBRSRAEXPWEXPLDIVWCPOFF
St. Louis2815.651-20115098.263.850.630.581.1
Cincinnati2618.5912.521016194.068.032.636.769.3
Pittsburgh2618.5912.517615786.975.114.230.044.2
Chicago1825.4191017317674.187.91.98.210.1
Milwaukee1725.40510.517720769.392.70.63.74.3
WestWLPCTGBRSRAEXPWEXPLDIVWCPOFF
Arizona2519.568-18015589.572.537.118.255.3
Colorado2420.545122118989.672.437.518.355.7
San Francisco2420.545120220782.879.216.714.731.3
San Diego2023.4654.517618876.685.47.48.215.6
Los Angeles1725.405714218066.995.11.31.73.1

Baseball statistics
x: Clinched Division   y: Clinched Wild card
W: Wins  L: Losses  PCT: Winning percentage
GB: Games Back (Number of games behind the Division leader)
RS: Runs Scored  RA: Runs Against
Baseball "coolstats"   What are these?
EXP W: Expected season Wins  EXP L: Expected season Losses
DIV: % chance of winning the Division  WC: % chance of winning the Wild Card
POFF: % chance of making the Playoffs




In the AL it's back to the Yankees and the Sawks, with the Rays and the Orioles battling to see who will be the 3rd wheel. Toronto invested miserably in the ex-Marlins (TREND ALERT) and are about to have an early fork stuck in them.

The Tigers and Indians are battling it out for the AL Central with the Royals battling the Chi-Sox for third wheel status. The Twins have fallen on hard times.

In the AL West the Rangers have adjusted to life without Josh rather nicely and Oakland is doing it's usual thing. The Angels invested lavishly, but not well (2ND REFERENCE). The Astros are battling to not get relegated to AAA.

In the NL East, the Braves are threatening to run and hide from the Nats. The Phillies are battling the Mets for most mediocre status and the Marlins should be relegated to AAA status.

In the NL Central, the Cardinals are doing what the Cardinals always do, WIN. The Reds and Pirates are battling to stay in view. The Cubs and the Brewers are AAAA teams at best right now.

In the NL West. the D-Backs, Rockies and Giants are playing footsie with the 1-3 spots. San Diego and the Dodgers are battling for the basement and the Dodgers are furiously calculating how they could spend so lavishly and get so little in return (3RD REFERENCE). I guess even with all the Harvard MBA's and SABR-metricians on staff that Magic's money can buy, a negative Return on Investment (ROI) is possible.

You can put that in your SABR pipe and smoke it. Round two goes to the Hawk-eroo.






Sunday, May 19, 2013

TWTW!! Maybe Hawk Harrelson has it right



After listening to the recent debate between the Hawk and ESPN's Brian Kenney (YouTube below), I couldn't help but think that maybe the Hawk has a point, maybe two. Whether you call it TWTW or GRIT or whatever, intangibles are a quality that by definition do not lend themselves to being quantified by definition, but you know them when you see them.

from thefreedictionary.com:
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/intangible
3.intangible - hard to pin down or identify; "an intangible feeling of impending disaster"
unidentifiable - impossible to identify
Some guys have that quality of making the other guys around them better. They make the total of the team greater than the sum of its parts. They are leaders and chemistry builders. And some guys are the opposite.

Winners have the intangibles!!! And like many things, you don't appreciate what you've got until after it's gone. Then you realize the hard to quantify value-added that these guys provide after they are missing from the equation. Then the team is equal to ( mediocrity ) or maybe even less than the sum of its parts ( under-achievers ).  Of course, then it's too late.

That's what Hawk is trying to explain to the geek squad here, IMO.

from The Big Lead:



The first example that came to my mind was Tim Tebow in 2011 with Denver.

Artistically, not a QB work of art.
Statistically, not a work of art.
But his teams win consistently.

It took the Jets to break the streak and that says more about the Jets than it does Tebow.  The Jets have been
a cesspool of bad personnel decisions and Tebow was supposed to come in and be the team plunger how?
By holding a clipboard?

Anyway, I thought I would take a look at the 2011 year in quarterbacking in the NFL and began with the
premise that the better the QB statistically, the better the teams record would be.

So,  I wanted to see the correlation between the ESPN total QB rating and winning.

In addition, I wanted to see if there were any examples like Tebow of QB's who violated the statistical model,
so to speak. Who won sometimes in spite of their liabilities as a QB as defined by the statistical metric.
They were "bad" QB's who just won ball games.

Here is the metric and how they determine the QB rating.

There were some interesting results (shown below).

from ESPN:

Glossary

  • * Season Leaders: On pace for 250 action plays.
  • * All-time data reflects 2008 onwards.
  • PASS EPA: Clutch-weighted expected points added on plays with pass attempts.
  • RUN EPA: Clutch-weighted expected points added through scrambles, designed rushes and fumbles/fumble returns on running plays.
  • SACK EPA: Clutch-weighted expected points added (lost) on sacks.
  • PEN EPA: Clutch-weighted expected points added on penalties.
  • TOTAL EPA: Total clutch-weighted expected points added.
  • ACT PLAYS: Plays on which the QB has a non-zero expected points contribution. Includes most plays

  • that are not handoffs.
  • QB PAR: Number of points contributed by a quarterback over the season, accounting for QBR and

  • how much he plays, above the level of a quarterback who plays very rarely and is on the fringe of the NFL.
  • QB PAA: Number of points contributed by a quarterback over the season, accounting for QBR and how much he plays, above the level of an average quarterback.
  • TOTAL QBR: Total Quarterback Rating, which values quarterback on all play types on a 0-to-100 scale.


A quick primer on the fundamentals of Total Quarterback Rating:
Scoring: 0-100, from low to high. An average QB would be at 50.
Win Probability: All QB plays are scored based on how much they contribute to a win. By determining expected point totals for almost any situation, Total QBR is able to apply points to a quarterback based on every type of play he would be involved in.
Dividing Credit: Total QBR factors in such things as overthrows, underthrows, yards after the catch and more to accurately determine how much a QB contributes to each play.
Clutch Index: How critical a certain play is based on when it happens in a game is factored into the score.

For the W-L data for each QB, I used CBS Sports NFL data. The W-L data includes only games where the
QB started and includes playoff games if the team advanced that far. (TWTW)

from CBSSports.com:



The correlation between the Total QBR and the QB winning percentage (W_Pct) as a starter was 0.64.

No surprise, the NFL is a QB driven league nowadays.

Based on this small sample, the correlation number implies that about 40% of a teams winning percentage is
derived from the play of their quarterback.


The first thing that jumps out are the names at the top of the list are WINNERS. The creme de la creme of
the NFL. Aaron Rogers, Drew Brees, Tom Brady, Tony Romo and Matt Ryan are the top five and win at
about the rate that their stellar play implies

The bottom of the list gives us Blaine Gabbert, Curtis Painter, Sam Bradford, Tim Tebow and Mark Sanchez.
Painter and Gabbert won at about the level of play their QBR would indicate. Sam Bradford seemed to just
have one of those miserable season where everything went wrong for him and his team. But Tebow and Sanchez
both out kicked their coverage so to speak.

Sanchez had a QBR of 33.6 and an W_Pct of 50.0% for a plus 16.40 score.
Tebow came in with a 29.9 QBr and a W_Pct of 61.5% for a plus 31.64 score.

The list of over-achievers, possessing dare I say TWTW, were:

John Skelton @ +39.90
Alex Smith @ +31.98
Tim Tebow @ +31.64
Mark Sanchez @ +16.40
Joe Flacco @ +12.52
Tom Brady @ +10.63
Jay Cutler @ +10.20

The interesting name on the list was Skelton who out-performed a more highly regarded QB in Kevin Kolb
( 34.4 QBR - 33.33 W_Pct) for the same Arizona Cardinal team. Apparently, Skelton may have had had
that je ne sais quoi, the TWTW that Hawk is alluding to and he was able to rally the team around him as
Tebow did the Broncos in relief of Kyle Orton.

Skelton and Tebow are interesting because they took over the same team, with the same defensive squad
and rallied them from depths to heights. That result defines what Hawk is speaking about. We're just not
certain how to identify it in advance, but we can generally spot it after the fact pretty well.

The rest of the overachiever names you can generally say had good to excellent defensive teams around
them. How much of the teams performance can be attributed to good defense and how much of the
defensive performance is aided by good QB play (keeping them off the field, playing from ahead more
often than from behind, etc.) is fodder for another post.

Hindsight and many forms of statistical analysis are always 20/20.  I think that is the Hawk's frustration
with the SABR crowd and it is well placed in some instances.

Looking at the other end of the scale, the under-achievers yields some interesting names. These guys
QBR was significantly higher than their team record for whatever reason. Maybe they were stat
gatherers and not team motivators. maybe they were on bad teams.

 Kyle Orton @ -29.80
Tony Romo @ -21.40
Josh Freeman @ -18.63
Sam Bradford @ -18.60
Carson Palmer @ -18.16
Matt Schaub @ -17.50
Cam Newton @ -17.50

Some of these guys were on good teams, with good defenses, soooooooooo.......IDK.

Lets just say I would score this one in favor of Hawk Harrelson over Brian Kenney
and Harold Reynolds by a TKO.
STOP THE FIGHT!!

And they can roll their eyes and snicker amongst themselves all they want.







TWTW
Total QBR W-L W_Pct W_Pct Diff Player
86.2    15-2 88.2%        88.24        2.04 Aaron Rodgers
84.0            14-4 77.8%        77.78       (6.22) Drew Brees
72.7       15-3 83.3%        83.33      10.63 Tom Brady
71.4      8-8 50.0%        50.00     (21.40) Tony Romo
69.1    10-6 62.5%        62.50       (6.60) Matt Ryan
67.5             5-5 50.0%        50.00     (17.50) Matt Schaub
65.5    10-6 62.5%        62.50       (3.00) Matt Stafford
64.4      7-6 53.8%        53.85     (10.55) Michael Vick
63.6    11-5 68.8%        68.75        5.15 Ben Roethlisberger
62.8      9-7 56.3%        56.25       (6.55) Matt Hasselbeck
62.7      8-8 50.0%        50.00     (12.70) Philip Rivers
62.6      4-5 44.4%        44.44     (18.16) Carson Palmer
59.8      7-3 70.0%        70.00      10.20 Jay Cutler
59.7    13-5 72.2%        72.22      12.52 Joe Flacco
59.4    12-7 54.5%        54.55       (4.85) Eli Manning
56.6      6-6 50.0%        50.00       (6.60) Matt Moore
55.0    6-10 37.5%        37.50     (17.50) Cam Newton
51.2      4-5 44.4%        44.44       (6.76) Matt Cassell
50.5    6-10 37.5%        37.50     (13.00) Ryan Fitzpatrick
49.8      1-4 20.0%        20.00     (29.80) Kyle Orton
45.8      9-7 56.3%        56.25      10.45 Andy Dalton
45.8    14-4 77.8%        77.78      31.98 Alex Smith
45.3    4-11 26.7%        26.67     (18.63) Josh Freeman
43.9      5-8 38.5%        38.46       (5.44) Rex Grossman
40.1      4-9 30.8%        30.77       (9.33) Colt McCoy
37.7      7-8 46.7%        46.67        8.97 Tarvaris Jackson
35.1      6-2 75.0%        75.00      39.90 John Skelton
34.4      3-6 33.3%        33.33       (1.07) Kevin Kolb
33.7      2-9 18.2%        18.18     (15.52) Christian Ponder
33.6      8-8 50.0%        50.00      16.40 Mark Sanchez
29.9      8-5 61.5%        61.54      31.64 Tim Tebow
28.6      1-9 10.0%        10.00     (18.60) Sam Bradford
22.5    2-12 14.3%        14.29       (8.21) Curtis Painter
20.6    4-11 26.7%        26.67        6.07 Blaine Gabbert
0.641328597   Correl OBR - W_Pct
 GUILFORD’S SUGGESTED INTERPRETATION FOR CORRELATION COEFFICIENT VALUES
Value  Interpretation
Less than .20    Less than .20 Slight, almost negligible relationship
.20 - .40  .20 - .40 Low correlation; definite but small relationship
.40 - .70  .40 - .70 Moderate correlation; substantial relationship
.70 - .90  .70 - .90 High correlation; marked relationship
.90 - 1.00  .90 – 1.00 Very high correlation; very dependable relationship

Giants Top Minor League Prospects

  • 1. Joey Bart 6-2, 215 C Power arm and a power bat, playing a premium defensive position. Good catch and throw skills.
  • 2. Heliot Ramos 6-2, 185 OF Potential high-ceiling player the Giants have been looking for. Great bat speed, early returns were impressive.
  • 3. Chris Shaw 6-3. 230 1B Lefty power bat, limited defensively to 1B, Matt Adams comp?
  • 4. Tyler Beede 6-4, 215 RHP from Vanderbilt projects as top of the rotation starter when he works out his command/control issues. When he misses, he misses by a bunch.
  • 5. Stephen Duggar 6-1, 170 CF Another toolsy, under-achieving OF in the Gary Brown mold, hoping for better results.
  • 6. Sandro Fabian 6-0, 180 OF Dominican signee from 2014, shows some pop in his bat. Below average arm and lack of speed should push him towards LF.
  • 7. Aramis Garcia 6-2, 220 C from Florida INTL projects as a good bat behind the dish with enough defensive skill to play there long-term
  • 8. Heath Quinn 6-2, 190 OF Strong hitter, makes contact with improving approach at the plate. Returns from hamate bone injury.
  • 9. Garrett Williams 6-1, 205 LHP Former Oklahoma standout, Giants prototype, low-ceiling, high-floor prospect.
  • 10. Shaun Anderson 6-4, 225 RHP Large frame, 3.36 K/BB rate. Can start or relieve
  • 11. Jacob Gonzalez 6-3, 190 3B Good pedigree, impressive bat for HS prospect.
  • 12. Seth Corry 6-2 195 LHP Highly regard HS pick. Was mentioned as possible chip in high profile trades.
  • 13. C.J. Hinojosa 5-10, 175 SS Scrappy IF prospect in the mold of Kelby Tomlinson, just gets it done.
  • 14. Garett Cave 6-4, 200 RHP He misses a lot of bats and at times, the plate. 13 K/9 an 5 B/9. Wild thing.

2019 MLB Draft - Top HS Draft Prospects

  • 1. Bobby Witt, Jr. 6-1,185 SS Colleyville Heritage HS (TX) Oklahoma commit. Outstanding defensive SS who can hit. 6.4 speed in 60 yd. Touched 97 on mound. Son of former major leaguer. Five tool potential.
  • 2. Riley Greene 6-2, 190 OF Haggerty HS (FL) Florida commit.Best HS hitting prospect. LH bat with good eye, plate discipline and developing power.
  • 3. C.J. Abrams 6-2, 180 SS Blessed Trinity HS (GA) High-ceiling athlete. 70 speed with plus arm. Hitting needs to develop as he matures. Alabama commit.
  • 4. Reece Hinds 6-4, 210 SS Niceville HS (FL) Power bat, committed to LSU. Plus arm, solid enough bat to move to 3B down the road. 98MPH arm.
  • 5. Daniel Espino 6-3, 200 RHP Georgia Premier Academy (GA) LSU commit. Touches 98 on FB with wipe out SL.

2019 MLB Draft - Top College Draft Prospects

  • 1. Adley Rutschman C Oregon State Plus defender with great arm. Excellent receiver plus a switch hitter with some pop in the bat.
  • 2. Shea Langliers C Baylor Excelent throw and catch skills with good pop time. Quick bat, uses all fields approach with some pop.
  • 3. Zack Thompson 6-2 LHP Kentucky Missed time with an elbow issue. FB up to 95 with plenty of secondary stuff.
  • 4. Matt Wallner 6-5 OF Southern Miss Run producing bat plus mid to upper 90's FB closer. Power bat from the left side, athletic for size.
  • 5. Nick Lodolo LHP TCU Tall LHP, 95MPH FB and solid breaking stuff.