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#1 |
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NetShrine All-Century Team
Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: NJ
Posts: 14,584
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As many of you already know, Bill James included an endorsement of the sabermetric baseball encyclopedia in an ESPN.com chat yesterday.
While I'm not a fan of James's current work, for everything he's done in the past, I still have a very high opinion of his overall writing career. So, I was flattered to see that endorsement. Meanwhile, my pile of encyclopedia CDs just about ran out, so I burned some new CDs late last night, in anticipation of a potential flood of new orders. Past history told me I would need them. To put the following numbers into context, version 2.0 has averaged just under 12 sales a week. Peter Gammons and Jason Stark both included good writeups of the encyclopedia in ESPN.com articles in January. Sales were overwhelming and immediate. When Gammons's ran, there were 15 sales that day and 37 within the next week. Those 37 sales in a week came after a 5 week slump in which total sales didn't even reach 37. When Stark's article ran, there were 26 sales that day and 70 within the next week. I don't want to draw any conclusions between those 2 writers. Stark's included the URL, Gammons's didn't. Stark included many examples of charts that could generated, Gammons included it on a list of 3 items that were good post-Christmas presents. Also, having Stark's come 8 days after Gammons probably meant there was some kind of coattail effect. We're now more than 24 hours since James's chat. During that time, I've received the whopping total of 1 order, with that order including a message saying the person was a long time reader of the ATM reports and he's not sure what took him so long to order. I definitely am not turning my back on James's endorsement and when I come up with the page of endorsements (which I'll make a this week project), his will be prominently featured. But, I have to wonder whether this means James's reputation has fallen so far that an endorsement coming at the same exact site as the others doesn't carry anywhere near the same weight? I don't know. But, can we just summarily dismiss this data?
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Lee Creator, Complete Baseball Encyclopedia. It's powerful, yet extremely easy to use. Features extensive sorting and stat display options. The CBE has many features that are not available in online and printed sources. Has 2006 stats and daily update service for 2007. |
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#2 |
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NetShrine's Historian
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Lee -
I had trouble accessing the chat today on ESPN.com from work. I always read chats after the fact. perhaps the link was bad for a while? |
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#3 |
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NetShrine Creator & Curator
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: NetShrine WHQ
Posts: 999
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I have to somewhat echo Smed.
ESPN.com's MLB coverage is one of the few sites (outside of NetShrine.com ) that I visit daily.I just about always read Neyer. Sometimes I read Gammons. Occasionally, I read Stark. I never read the chat highlights. I think it's more a matter of where it was said, than who (James) said it in this case. Had BJ plugged it in the WS book, or the NHBA, I think the orders would have been flooding.
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Steve, Forum Administrator PLEASE READ: Community Standards . : ~ : PLEASE SHOP: Our Stuff! : ~ : HOW CAN YOU: Help? : ~ : BE NICE: To Your Fav Baseball Person. : ~ : ARE YOU: Posting Correctly? |
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#4 |
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NetShrine's Historian
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I finally read the James chat highlights.
Some of the questions remind me of the questions "The Comic Book Guy" would ask the Itchy and Scratchy voices. And I'm sure they are expressing their contempt of James on the internet this very second. The damn thing was so long, too. You can lose track of who said what. |
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#5 |
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NetShrine MVP
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Twin Cities, MN
Posts: 232
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I agree that it is probably more about the venue than the person. Its also likely that the other two are more widely read by people who aren't either already owners of the product or something similar since James likely only attracts the hard core Sabrmetricians of the world.
I recently bought Win Shares and am reading it. Although I generally agree that the 1980s James books were more entertaining to me at the time, I am probably in the miniority in that I am not sold that he's fallen as far as some others think. The new HBA isn't the first but honestly I'd have been blown away if he could top or match the first. I also think that the Win Shares book and method has more potential than some others do. Obviously, the only thing that is "really new" is his take on fielding which I find pretty persuasive...although maybe not as significant as previous methods of James and others on offense and pitching. The biggest flaw I see, in the context of what has been said here, is that James assumes a fairly high level of knowledge on the part of the reader and in doing so he leaves some of the philosophical questions unanswered. In some ways it seems that he feels he's on to something and decided to do the book now rather than 5-8 years from now when the system is more mature.
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There is only one MLB franchise with division championships in the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 1990s and 2000s. |
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#6 |
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NetShrine All-Century Team
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I was actually sitting in on the chat but never ask questions. Bill James is one of those guys like Washington or Jefferson - he pioneered a field, but if you dig really hard, you find out that all the stuff your history teacher said probably wasn't true and there's some bad things in there too. His Bagwell pass really screwed things for me on the New Abstract. BUT, like Lee said, having Bill James mention your name and product is damn cool. That Lee has a product that no one else has says a LOT. I think the problem is that James didn't give the URL. I googled "Lee Sinins" and the SBE doesn't come up until about 7 and even then is kind of opaque. "Sabermetric encyclopedia" is dead on, but I have a tendency to spell "saber ..." or "sabre..." alternately, so maybe that throws people. I'm dead on surprised that STATS, Elias, or even SABR hasn't snapped up Lee's work for a nice fee. My Total Baseball is collecting dust and my SBE is almost always on.
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UTK available only at www.baseballprospectus.com "I was pulling for Pete and agreeing with (commissioner) Bud Selig that Pete should be eligible for the Hall of Fame," said Giles, now chairman of the Phillies. "Bud was close to making him eligible right after his meeting with Pete (November 2002). Right after that, Pete got into tax trouble (in California), and that delayed the process." - Phillies Chairman Bill Giles in the Dayton Daily News, January 25th, 2004. |
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#7 |
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NetShrine MVP
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Twin Cities, MN
Posts: 232
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It may have been mentioned elsewhere, but James also mentions Lee's encyclopedia in a piece that is up on Diamond Mind's web site now. He notes that he used it for digging up teams for a study and follows with a statement about how much easier his research is now than when he started.
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There is only one MLB franchise with division championships in the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 1990s and 2000s. |
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#8 |
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Guest
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: washington dc
Posts: 2,625
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If someone had'nt given me the link, I would have never found it. I had been to espn.com/mlb several times and never saw it. In my opinion James hasn't fallen a bit. Why are people saying this - due to his limited publication schedule over the past few years?
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#9 | |
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NS Omnipresent Brasilian
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Quote:
the link will be on the main MLB page for maybe 24 hrs, then they get banished to the very bottom of the page (which i rarely look at) and to the 'chat' subsection, which i never go to. Lee, I think that might be part of the reason why SBE hasn't been selling as much post-james chat. Also, many of those (statheads) who frequented the BJ chat may have already seen it previously plugged in Gammons/Stark.
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Gustavo NDF ModeratorThose who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety. - Benjamin Franklin |
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#10 |
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NetShrine All-Century Team
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Home of the T-Bones
Posts: 11,116
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Bill James is the gold standard. All others are measured against him. Seems kind of trendy now to take shots him when we disagree with his work but no one is remotely close to him when it comes to popularizing the study of baseball.
As a combination of historian/statistician/writer he is without equal. To charge that he isn't what he once was because his current work isn't as good as his best is presumptious.
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KCBOOMER Buck O'Neil: The Monarch of Baseball |
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#11 | |
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Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Socs
Posts: 3,400
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Quote:
[ - Agreed on all counts] |
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#12 |
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Netshrine Cleanup Hitter
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Yeah, Bonds hasn't hit a homer for hours.
I have pondered the parallels between James' career and Albert Einstein's, and for that matter a lot of other researchers. Most scientists who record famous breakthroughs do the work for which they are forever remembered in their 20s, at the time of their masters/doctoral work. This is after they have studied and learned the basics, but before they have acquired all the prejudices of older men and become set in their ways. Einstein's incredible work that opened the field of "modern physics" was almost all published in 1905-06, when he was working in that Swiss patent office. James is the foremost baseball researcher ever. Even the publication of the first MacMillan encyclopedia, an incredible feat before the personal computer, does not equal James' output, although it set the stage for sabermetrics. Now, the Win Shares work strikes me as similar to Einstein's life-long search for a "Unified Field Theory" that would unite the four force equations into one, which the great Dr. E spent the last 40 years of his life working on. Einstein never made such a breakthrough. It strikes me that this is what James is attempting to do, to summarize all of a player's contributions into one number, a "unified theory" of baseball, a task he has been attempting since the "Approximate Value" of the old Abstracts. We will spend the next few years debating his success or failure. Love him or hate him, it's dangerous to ignore him. |
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#13 |
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NetShrine's Historian
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I do wonder, though, and this is coming from a stat guy, is whether some of these guys are over-analyzing, and trying to break down the game too much. Voros' work, for one.
The fielding part of win shares, while it's a great concept, and it may work, is what lost me, because it takes way too many machinations to get to the result, as accurate as it may be. Maybe it's just me, but some of the newer statistical analysis leaves me real cold, mainly because it's not fun to read. It's like reading my Real Number Analysis text book. |
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#14 | |
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Netshrine Cleanup Hitter
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#15 |
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NetShrine's Evangelist
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Living by faith, and not by sight!
Posts: 2,194
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I'm still a Bill James fan.
Bill James impresses me, more than most sabermatricians, as a guy who is connected to what goes on in the stadium as well as in the stats. He has been able to statistically confirm for me things I always suspected, but were always contradicted by announcers and sportswriters. Bill James confirmed, in my mind, the importance of walks and OBP, while showing how "speed" is overrated as a leadoff hitter's quality. Throughout the 1960s and 1970s I'd hear the Tommyrot about how Aparicio was a "great leadoff hitter" because he stole bases. (Looie always seemed to make an out when I watched him on TV.) I would see manager after manager lead off guys who couldn't hit, like Rodney Scott, Tony Scott, Lee Mazzilli, etc., but had "speed", and could "steal bases" (except first ).Just last night I saw Rickey Henderson singlehandedly generate a run by getting on base, stealing, and getting around to score, that won the game for the Bosox. Rickey has gotten more unwarranted criticism than any other HOFer I know, but he won the game. Why? He got on base, and got around the bases, with minimal help from others. Bill James understood that basic truth of baseball, and his analyses are based on that; that baseball is a game of getting around the bases to score, and of not making outs (which reduce your present opportunities to score). He challenged the shibbleoths that I always knew in my gut were garbage (e.g. "making productive outs wins games", "let's lead him off and take advantage of his speed") while injecting new concepts for fans to think about (e.g.: A walk is something the batter does, not something the pitcher does.) Bill James is no longer alone in his field, and there are others to critique and tinker, and that's OK. Me, I still look for his work first. He challenged garbled baseball thinking in ways we take for granted now. |
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