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Subject: Re: Hits Stolen -- Centerfield 1992
From: [email protected] (David Grabiner)
Organization: /etc/organization
Nntp-Posting-Host: germain.harvard.edu
In-reply-to: [email protected]'s message of Tue, 20 Apr 1993 23:54:08 GMT
Lines: 35

In article , Dale Stephenson writes:

> NHS -- Net Hits Stolen -- Extra outs compared to average fielder
> NEB -- Net Extra Bases --  Extra bases prevented compared to avg. fielder

> National League

> Name            HS   NHS   NEB   DCON    DOPS
> Lankford, R.    39     4   -12  -.007    .844
> Martinez, D.    21     5   -16  -.017    .660
> Butler, B.       1   -29     5  -.088    .716

> American League
> ---------------

> Name            HS   NHS   NEB   DCON    DOPS
> Wilson, W.      47    26     0   .125    .787
> Felix, J.       22     0    32   .063    .713

I suspect that splits such as these are the result of positioning.  An
outfielder who is fast and gets a good jump would be expected to catch a
lot of balls, preventing both singles and doubles, and also cut off more
uncatchable balls, turinging doubles into singles.  However, a fielder
who plays shallow will catch more short flies and fewer long flies; this
means that he will allow fewer singles but more doubles.

Has anyone seen these players' positioning?  Do Butler and Felix play
deep, and Lankford, Martinez, and Wilson shallow, or is this a park
effect?  I thought Butler liked to play shallow.

--
David Grabiner, [email protected]
"We are sorry, but the number you have dialed is imaginary."
"Please rotate your phone 90 degrees and try again."
Disclaimer: I speak for no one and no one speaks for me.




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