Baseball stat basics: identical seasons worlds apart

Sam West had a nice career playing for the Washington Senators and St. Louis Browns from the late 1920s to the early 1940s.

Check out his 1935 and 1936 seasons, which perhaps look identical:

1935:  527 AB  .388 OBP  4 triples  10 homers  70 RBI

1936: 533 AB  .386 OBP  4 triples   7 homers 70 RBI

Pretty much identical, right?

Wrong.

Here’s another illustration of why a lot of raw numbers can be deceptive, especially without context.

In 1935, West played in 138 games, getting 615 plate appearances. He walked 75 times (12.2% of the time) and struck out 46 times (7.5%).

In 1936, West played in 152 games, getting 637 plate appearances. He walked 90 times (14.8% of the time) and struck out 70 time (11.0%).

So, he bumped his walk rate up a little, but his K rate shot up by more than 40%.

His homers dropped from 10 to 7, by itself not all that meaningful. But, he also hit 11 fewer doubles (37 to 26) and lost 61 points off his slugging percentage (.442 to .381)

He also lost 22 points off his batting average (.300 to .278).  All together, despite getting more plate appearances in 1936, his total bases dropped from 233 to 203.

To make matters worse, league-wide run scoring was way up in 1936, at 5.19 runs per game, from just 4.90 runs per game in 1935.

Factoring in all of these differences, and it turns out that West’s OPS+ was 111 in 1935 but just 88 in 1936. He went from having a good above-average season to a pretty disappointing below-average one. For 2011 comps, his 1935 was similar to what Yunel Escobar and Alberto Callaspo did while his 1936 was similar to what Austin Jackson and Martin Prado did.

But, you say, he still drove in 70 runs each year, so what does it matter? Well, we don’t have his detailed batting splits but I’m guessing he hit a lot worse with runners on in 1936 than in 1935. We can see that in the earlier year, he batted a lot more in the 1 or 2 position in the lineup, whereas in 1935 he got a lot more time at the 5 and 6 holes. Almost certainly he had more RBI opportunities in 1936 and yet batted in just the same number of runners.

 

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Doug
Editor
12 years ago

It’s great when you can explain the difference upon closer inspection, but it’s frustrating when you can’t.

Here’s an example. If anything the season with the lower OPS+ looks a bit better – better BA, fewer Ks, more runs. The only things better in the other season are triples and a few more walks.

Player Year 5 Tm G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO 2 Doug Rader 1972 109 HOU 152 626 553 70 131 24 7 22 90 57 120 .237 .309 .425 .734
3 Doug Rader 1973 99 HOU 154 632 574 79 146 26 0 21 89 46 97 .254 .310 .409 .719
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 3/13/2012.

Sorry. Don’t know why that’s coming out garbled. But, it’s Doug Rader in 1972 and 1973. Same team and ballpark. Very similar stats, but a 10 point difference in OPS+.

Hartvig
Hartvig
12 years ago
Reply to  Doug

Rader also grounded into 8 fewer double plays in ’73. The answer of course is the league moved and Rader didn’t. In ’72 NL teams scored an average of 3.91 runs per game. In ’73 that figure was 4.15 which is nearly a quarter of a run per game more. To put that in context, in the 1920 offensive “explosion” AL teams scored about two-thirds of a run more per game (0.66, to be exact) than in 1919. Not as dramatic a change to be sure and not even all that uncommon but that 6+% increase in offense accounts for… Read more »

Artie Z
Artie Z
12 years ago
Reply to  Andy

And it was even more dramatic in the AL, which jumped from 3.47 RPG to 4.28 RPG. Almost a full run increase in the AL. So the owners got what they wanted – add a DH, increase run scoring.

Doug
Doug
12 years ago

Thanks guys.

I should have looked that up.

Looks like 1972 was the end of the “second dead-ball era”. Seems like a pretty abrupt end, just like the first time.

Lawrence Azrin
Lawrence Azrin
12 years ago
Reply to  Doug

1972? – try 1968 (3.42 R/G)… What we now call the “second dead-ball era” was from 1963-68, after MLB re-defined the strike zone before the 1963 season. In 1968, 21% of all games ended in shutouts. They then re-re-defined the strike zone before 1969, to make it more favorable for hitters. They also limited the maximum height of the pitcher’s mound from 15 to 10 inches (it was probably more than 15 inches, as they really didn’t pay much attention before – see Dodger Stadium). Expansion also contributed to the increase in offense. In 1969/70 scoring was up substantially, though… Read more »

Lawrence Azrin
Lawrence Azrin
12 years ago
Reply to  Lawrence Azrin

Mike D mentioned some of this in #9 below and should get credit; sorry, I didn’t scroll down.

MikeD
MikeD
12 years ago
Reply to  Lawrence Azrin

Lawrence, quite alright. I butchered that post!

Doug
Doug
12 years ago
Reply to  Lawrence Azrin

I still like 1972 as the end of the second dead-ball era. The 1969 changes really only worked for 1969 and 1970. By 1972, pitchers had adjusted and resumed their dominance – that year had the lowest MLB R/G (other than 1968) since 1918.

What’s more curious is how, even without the DH, the NL also went up a quarter-run in 1973, and stayed basically around that level really until 1992, save for upward blips in 1977 and 1987.

Lawrence Azrin
Lawrence Azrin
12 years ago
Reply to  Doug

Doug, you can call 1972 the endpoint, but I’ve always seen the second dead-ball era defined as 1963-68. 1969 was the second full year that I followed and actually understood MLB, and the contrast between 1968 and 1969 was quite dramatic.

Tmckelv
Tmckelv
12 years ago
Reply to  Doug

1969 was also an expansion year with 4 teams added. I am sure that was also a reason for the 1969-1970 bump in offense.

Richard Chester
Richard Chester
12 years ago

I just visited West’s home page on B-R. I didn’t know he had such a theatrical name.

ajnrules
ajnrules
12 years ago

Good article, but then again any article about the Pride of Longview, Texas is a good one.

Anyways, we all know that the context of league scoring is important, but the stats used to show the similarity of the seasons seem kind of arbitrary.

Paul E
Paul E
12 years ago

In my lifetime, biggest two year jump MIGHT be MLB 1968 – 1970….scoring went from 3.42/g to 4.34 – roughly a 12.5 % increase each year. But, then again, I didn’t look at 1993 – 1995,; or any of the “steroid” years.

Hey, can I say it? “Steroids work – real well”

MikeD
MikeD
12 years ago
Reply to  Paul E

Of course, as we saw when expanded the strikezone was expanded in the 1960s, which eventually leading to the year of the pitcher, and then when they lowered the pitching mound in 1969, MLB is very good at changing scoring.

There the 1919 Black Sox scandal and the 1994 strike-shortened season encouraged MLB to continue trends leading to greater offense during those times by juicing the baseballs. Fans love scoring.

MikeD
MikeD
12 years ago
Reply to  MikeD

Sorry, bad edit job on that note leading to very poor sentence structure! The message remains the same.

bstar
12 years ago
Reply to  Paul E

It wasn’t just steroids. There is almost indisputable evidence that Rawlings changed the baseball between the ’93 and ’94 season. Runs scored went up from 4.60/g to 4.92/g in ’94. AB/HR went down from one every 38.5 AB in ’93 to one every 33.3 AB in ’94.

bstar
12 years ago
Reply to  bstar

Edit: change that to “some evidence” instead of “almost indisputable evidence”. I was trying to change that when I must have hit the “submit” button.

John Autin
Editor
12 years ago
Reply to  bstar

Bstar, this is not a challenge, but — can you point me to that evidence about changes to the baseball before ’94?

MikeD
MikeD
12 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

I’ll jump into this since I attempted in my botched post above to allude to “rumors” that MLB purposely spiked the baseballs heading into the 1994 season, a year in which there would be a lot of negative stories around a potential strike, one which sadly came about. (There was a similar suggestion that MLB did the same after the 1919 Black Sox scandal.) For the record, I don’t believe either story, meaning that MLB purposely juiced the baseballs, but I do believe “something” happened in 1994 that goes beyond steroid narrative. In 1994, the two leagues witnessed a significant… Read more »

bstar
12 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

I’ll try and find the best article I’ve read about it…there certainly are some out there. I don’t necessarily consider it a conspiracy theory, though….meaning if they did it, they were trying to improve the game for fans and I’m fine with that. I don’t think it’s really that different than lowering the mound in the late 60s…..baseball saw an imbalance in the game, thought it might be detrimental to the sport, and did something about it. Just because it wasn’t openly known that they changed the ball doesn’t, to me, make it a big conspiracy. They were trying to… Read more »

bstar
12 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

Ok, here’s some, John:

http://steroids-and-baseball.com/changing-baseball.shtml

The one above points strongly to baseballs being different today than they were in the past. Two scientific studies came to the same conclusion.

Here’s one from Jay Jaffe at Baseball Prospectus that mentions yet another study:

http://www.baseballprospectus.com/unfiltered/?p=128

Here’s another pretty convincing article; not a scientific one, but a great look at how something definitely happened ’93-’94:

http://highboskage.com/juiced-ball.shtml

Lawrence Azrin
Lawrence Azrin
12 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

I’ve read that the MLB manafacturer (Rawlings?) changed the method of making the baseballs before 1994, and that they were on the high end of the tolerance for “liveliness”. So while they were still within the specs, on average the ball was indeed more lively.

John Autin
Editor
12 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

MikeD @19 — A couple of numerical points to square away first: 1. On a year-to-year basis, the biggest spike in R/G and HR/G of the steroids era occurred in 1993, not ’94. – In 1993, R/G rose about 12% and HR/G by 23%, compared to ’92. – In ’94, they rose by another 7% and 16%, respectively, compared to ’93. 2. Using your 5-year average basis of comparison, it’s true that the ’94 spike was bigger: – In ’93, R/G and HR/G rose by 10% and 17%, respectively, over the previous 5-year average. – The ’94 rates were up… Read more »

MikeD
MikeD
12 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

John, yes, I noticed my percentages were off as I hit sent. An edit button would be great addition to the site to protect to the innocent, or in my case, the guilty!

Beyond that, my message remains the same.

John Autin
Editor
12 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

bstar @20-21 — Thanks for the links. I’ll read them as soon as I can.

But to your statement that “the offensive spike is proof enough, because no such spike occurred from year to year after ’93-’94,” I would reply: That all depends on what size of spike you consider significant.
– 1996 saw an 8.2% surge in HR/G.
– In ’99, R/G and HR/G rose by 6.2% and 9.3%.
– In 2000, R/G reached a local high of 5.14, or 4.5% more than 1994.

bstar
12 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

John, to answer your question you have to consider the approximately 5-year context of what the run enviroment had been in the game. The spikes you mention in ’96, ’99, and ’00 are not as noteworthy as the ones in ’93 and ’94 because by ’96 it had already been established that this was an era where scoring and offense were on the increase. Looking at the 5-year-previous run contexts, the spikes in ’93 and ’94 stand out more since there wasn’t any previous evidence that offense would spike suddenly. The last link I gave you probably explains this better.

Bill@TPA
12 years ago
Reply to  bstar

“It wasn’t just steroids.” I’d go so far as to say it wasn’t steroids at all, or very little of it was. The data doesn’t match up with any reasonable steroids-based theory. We know steroid use was rampant starting in the 80s, and offense went all over the map in the 80s, with one big block jump forward in that 1993-94 period. And it didn’t really drop off again in a significant way until a few years *after* the testing program was put in place. They changed the ball, the parks got smaller, random fluctuation happens just like it always… Read more »

John Autin
Editor
12 years ago
Reply to  Bill@TPA

I have no idea how much impact steroids had, but it’s absolutely true that there were many other factors.

For one thing, Denver came into the league in 1993. That alone accounted for 1 percentage point of the 12% and 23% increases in R/G and HR/G, respectively, for 1993 over 1992.

Ed
Ed
12 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

I have a thought re: steroids that I’ve never seen expressed and I want to put it out there to see what people think. We always hear about the hitters. Not so much about the pitchers. But presumably there were lots of pitchers on steroids as well. Now, I started watching baseball in the mid-70s. At that time there were basically two guys who could consistently hit 95+. Gossage and Ryan. But in the steroid era there were lots and lots more pitchers hitting that level. And the one thing we know via physics is that the faster the ball… Read more »

John Autin
Editor
12 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

Ed @34 — I think that’s a very interesting theory, is what I think. I have no doubt that the percentage of pitchers using steroids was on a par with the percentage of hitters. However, I do not take for granted that today’s average fastball velocity is higher than that of 20+ years ago. I’ve read here and there that the change is more traceable to the new generation of radar guns, though I can’t cite any authority. Also, I still believe that the biggest factor in the rise in HR rate was the change in the predominant hitters’ approach,… Read more »

Ed
Ed
12 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

Well yes, obviously it’s only a theory. But that’s all any of this will ever be. A bunch of theorizing. We’ll never conclusively know what caused the jump in offense.

John Autin
Editor
12 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

P.S. to Ed — It seems that you may be taking my phrase “an interesting theory” as criticism. I meant it as praise. As you noted, most of what we deal in here is theoretical to some extent.

John Autin
Editor
12 years ago
Reply to  Bill@TPA

And, by the way — welcome, Bill from The Platoon Advantage & Baseball Prospectus!

MikeD
MikeD
12 years ago
Reply to  Bill@TPA

Bill, I agree with almost everything you said since that’s been my position for years. There were many factors that intersected to cause a rise in hitting. The spike in the ’93-’94 range is the one that’s most interesting and the one that I doubt had anything to do with steroids. I say almost because I can’t go as far as you and say “it wasn’t steroids at all.” I believe it was a contributing factor, but much smaller than most people assume. Yet, I’m open to any and all evidence that it contributed nothing, or contributed more greatly than… Read more »

John Autin
Editor
12 years ago
Reply to  Bill@TPA

FWIW, here are the largest percentage changes in HR/G since 1901 (positive or negative, measured against the previous year, rounded to whole numbers):

+72%, 1919
+50%, 1977
+49%, 1921
+44%, 1911
+38%, 1910
-32%, 1931
+31%, 1925
+29%, 1947
-28%, 1988
+28%, 1920
+27%, 1932
-27%, 1926
+26%, 1934
+26%, 1982
+24%, 1929
+23%, 1993

MikeD
MikeD
12 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

What the heck happened in 1977? Well, I know one thing that happened. That was an expansion year as was 1993. Interesing that 1961, 1969 and 1998 did not show up on the list, especially 1969 since that’s the only time in MLB history when the leagues expanded by four teams, and of course MLB was coming off of the Year of the Pitcher in 1968 and changed both the strikezone and went to a uniform pitching mound height. So many ingrediants in place for a massive increase, yet doesn’t make the list.

MikeD
MikeD
12 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

I forgot 1962, another expansion year that brought us Mets and the Colt .45s, now the Astros. So six expansion seasons, two of which make the list. The off-the-charts ’77 season making the list, and ’69 not are the two surprises to me.

bstar
12 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

MikeD, what happened in 1977 is that was the year that Rawlings reportedly first changed the ball.

Paul E
Paul E
12 years ago
Reply to  Bill@TPA

Bill: If Tim Montgomery goes from the fifth fastest man in America to the fastest man in the history of the world, then I have to believe steroids work. A friend advised me of a professional wrestler weightlifting training partner of his – 420# in the bench clean; 580#’s on the juice. One thing I certainly will agree on: If a pitcher constantly attempts to pitch around hitters, hitters will get ahead in the count and get good pitches to hit. If the strike zone goes from the top of the letters down to the bottom of the knees and… Read more »

John Autin
Editor
12 years ago
Reply to  Paul E

But Paul, the next question is, for what purposes do steroids work? Neither brute strength nor raw speed are primary components of star ability in baseball. There’s an interesting piece in ESPN:Magazine’s recent Analytics Issue on Dodgers head trainer Stan Conte (not to be confused with BALCO founder Victor Conte), who is trying to build a sort of sabermetrics of injuries. Buried within is this little nugget: “Though most teams had full strength-and-conditioning programs for the first time, injury rates had increased every season from 1989 to 1999, … peaked in 2001, dipped the following year, then plateaued in 2006.… Read more »

Steven
Steven
12 years ago

Those Browns teams, managed by Rogers Hornsby, had typical Browns seasons (bad), but plenty of good seats were available (80,000 total attendance in 1934). They also featured the first “modern” slugging third-baseman in Harlond Clift.

Lawrence Azrin
Lawrence Azrin
12 years ago
Reply to  Steven

Steven, I see 115,305 listed as the 1934 St Loius Brown attendance. Still, 1500 fans a game average must’ve been pretty depressing…

Dumb question – I can find team attendance totals, but how do I find it for the whole league in any year?

John Autin
Editor
12 years ago
Reply to  Lawrence Azrin

Lawrence — Go to the league page for the desired season. From the “Other” menu, choose “Attendance & Misc.” Here’s the 2011 MLB attendance page:
http://www.baseball-reference.com/leagues/MLB/2011-misc.shtml

Lawrence Azrin
Lawrence Azrin
12 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

OK, thanks.

It’s hard to believe that the 1934 WS champions the Cardinals drew only 4,222, 4th in the NL and 9th in MLB. OTOH, it was the middle of the Great Depression.

Richard Chester
Richard Chester
12 years ago

In 1935 the Browns drew 80922 fans. I already mentioned in another post that Clift set a HR record for third-baseman but I forgot the year , will have to look it up.

Richard Chester
Richard Chester
12 years ago

Clift’s 29 HR in 1937 set that record.

bells
bells
12 years ago

First, thanks Andy, that’s a great intro to the idea of OPS+. I’m enjoying these occasional ‘basic’ lessons, even though I’ve had a few years following the B-R blog to understand the stats. Second, I’ve wondered for awhile, and this seems like the place to ask – is OPS+ and other ‘adjusted to league’ measures adjusted to the whole of the major leagues, or is it AL-NL specific? It’s a bit more murky now with more interleague games, but for example, it seems to me that the change to the DH in the AL would affect scoring in that league,… Read more »

Tmckelv
Tmckelv
12 years ago

I have another example of seemingly similar seasons with a much different result in final evaluation. This time the difference is in WAR for a pitcher. I happened to be looking at the Cy Young results for the AL in 1974 when I noticed the top 2 players had eerily similar stats. It made me think of this post. The players are Catfish Hunter (won the Cy Young) and Fergie Jenkins (runner-up). Catfish stats – 25-12, 41 GS, 23 CG, 6 SHO, 318 IP, 46 BB, 143 K, 0.986 WHIP, 2.49 ERA, 134 ERA+ Fergie stats – 25-12, 41 GS,… Read more »

ScottT
ScottT
12 years ago

I don’t know what to think about steroids. But I do know a few things:

A substantial number of ballplayers used
Many used over a prolonged period
Many still continue to use

So, my question is, why would ballplayers continue to use something that in no appreciable way improved their ability to hit a baseball. I mean if they didn’t help AT ALL wouldn’t word have gotten out by now…”the “sh*t don’t work!”