Pennant Impact of Big WAR Years

When rating careers, most folks will favor a high peak over a steady rate of accrual. They say that a fixed sum of value — like, 50 WAR over 10 years — tends to have more pennant impact if it’s unevenly distributed (say, five years of 7 WAR and five years of 3 WAR), rather than doled out as 5 WAR each year.

That view has intuitive backing. Whereas WAR is gauged against a replacement-level player, the average player is a more relevant value if you’re trying to build a contending team. If you swap Mike Trout’s 2013 value for that of Jay Bruce and Ben Zobrist, you gain WAR (10.2 to 9.2), but you lose Wins Above Average (5.8 to 7.0) — and you have one less lineup spot from which to build back that WAA.

I can’t quite refute that position, but I do have a soft spot for steady, Lou Whitaker types. (You noticed?) So I wonder how far that intuitive logic is borne out empirically, by actual pennants and championships.

 

I wish I could do a competent study of that question, but there are too many complications — the Yankees’ historical dominance, the decline of high-WAR seasons in the divisional era, the extra rounds of playoffs, etc. Any suggestions on how to approach the issue, without first earning a master’s degree in statistics, would be most welcome.

In the meantime, here are some simple arithmetic observations about big-WAR seasons, in terms of reaching and winning the World Series. First, please note:

  1. This post covers position players for the 109 years when a World Series was played (1903, 1905-93, and 1995-2013).
  2. All WAR figures herein are pro rated to a 162-game schedule, multiplying raw WAR by 162 and dividing by that season’s schedule. (Neither individual games played, nor team games lost to weather, etc., were considered.) For the 154-game schedule, WAR values were bumped up 5%, so the “7-WAR” threshold is 6.6 WAR.

 

7-WAR Seasons

Before we dive into the data pool, some recent history: In the wild-card era, 7-WAR players have figured less in the World Series than ever before. Just 14 of the last 38 WS teams had a 7-WAR player, or 37% — far below the prior norm of 53% — and those teams went 6-8. The “have-nots” went 13-11 overall, 6-4 against “haves.” Since 1995, none of the 17 teams with two or more 7-WAR players won the World Series (0-2).

Now, the plunge. In the 109 years when a World Series was played, position players had 651 seasons of 7+ WAR. Such years were more prevalent before the split to divisions and playoffs:

  • From 1903-68, there were 10.1 seven-WAR years per 30 team-years.
  • From 1969-2013, there were 7.3 seven-WAR years per 30 team-years (7.2 in the past 10 seasons).

Of those 651 seven-WAR seasons, 143 were for teams that reached the World Series, or 22%. (The four players traded mid-season were counted for the acquiring team.) They went 67-76 in those Series, counting each 7-WAR player separately even if a team had two or more such players. Counting each team just once, they went 50-60.

From another angle: About half of all World Series teams had at least one 7-WAR player. The “haves” went 50-60, while the “have-nots” went 59-49; have-nots facing haves went 32-22. That’s probably just a fluke of a small sample and the arbitrariness of a 7-WAR threshold — plus, we’re not even looking at pitching — but it still surprised me.

A quick rundown of the World Series fates of teams with any 7-WAR player(s):

  • Any 7-WAR player(s): 19% reached the Series (110/566), 50-60 record.
  • One 7-WAR player: 16% reached the Series (80/486), 34-46 record.
  • Two 7-WAR players: 36% reached the Series (27/75), 15-12 record.
  • Three 7-WAR players: 3/5 reached the Series, 1-2 record.

As with all things Fall Classical, a breakdown by Yankees and others is apt:

  • For the Yankees, 49% of 7-WAR years were for Series teams (31 of 63), with a WS record of 22-9 for those players, 15-7 for those teams.
  • For all other teams, 19% of 7-WAR years were for Series teams (112/588), with a WS record of 45-67 for those players, 35-53 for those teams.
Teams with One 7-WAR Player

Of all teams with exactly one 7-WAR player, 16% reached the Series (80 of 486), going 34-46. The rates have changed since the playoffs began:

  • Through 1968, 20% of teams with one 7-WAR player reached the Series (52/258), going 21-31.
  • Since playoffs began, 12% reached the Series (28/228), going 13-15.
  • In the two-division era (1969-93), 14% reached the Series (16/115), going 7-9.
  • In the wild-card era, just 11% reached the Series (12/113), going 6-6.

But the change is a bit less if you filter the Yankees. For all other teams with one 7-WAR player, the pennant rate went from 17% pre-playoffs to 12% since. And those that did make the Fall Classic went just 14-27 pre-playoffs, 13-15 since.

Multiple 7-WAR Players

Of the teams with exactly two 7-WAR players, 27 of 75 reached the Series, going 15-12. Again, there’s a pinstriped divide: Yankees, 7/10 made the Series, 5-2 record; others, 20/65, 10-10.

Five teams had three 7-WAR players; three reached the Series, but just one went all the way:

  • 1927 Yankees (Babe Ruth 13.0 WAR, Lou Gehrig 12.4, Earle Combs 7.5) — won WS, 4-0.
  • 1929 Yankees (Ruth 8.5, Tony Lazzeri 8.2, Gehrig 8.1) — finished 2nd, 18 games behind the A’s.
  • 1953 Dodgers (Duke Snider 9.8, Roy Campanella 7.5, Jackie Robinson 7.3) — lost WS, 2-4.
  • 1961 Tigers (Norm Cash 9.2, Al Kaline 8.4, Rocky Colavito 7.7) — 101 wins but finished 2nd, 8 games behind the Yanks.
  • 2004 Cardinals (Scott Rolen 9.1, Albert Pujols 8.4, Jim Edmonds 7.1) — lost WS, 0-4.

In all, 30 of 80 teams with multiple 7-WAR players reached the Series, going 16-14. (Yanks 12, 6-2; others 68, 10-12.) And again, there’s a big break in the rates around the wild card:

  • Through 1993, 28 of 63 teams with two or more 7-WAR players reached the Series, going 16-12. (That includes 3-4 in WS among 14 such teams in the two-division era.)
  • But since 1995, just two of 17 such teams made the Series, and both lost (the 2002 Giants and ’04 Cards); 7 of the other 15 lost in the playoffs.

By the way, just once did teams with multiple 7-WAR players meet in the World Series: The 1941 Yankees defeated the Dodgers in five games, four of them close. (Joe DiMaggio 9.6 WAR, Charlie Keller 7.0; Pete Reiser 7.8, Dolf Camilli 7.0.)

The last team with multiple 7-WAR players to win it all was the 1976 Big Red Machine (Joe Morgan 9.6 WAR, Pete Rose 7.0). Since then, 21 teams had multiple 7’s, but just three reached the Series, and they all lost: the 1980 Royals (George Brett 9.4 WAR, Willie Wilson 8.5), the 2002 Giants (Barry Bonds 11.8, Jeff Kent 7.0), and the 2004 Cardinals (see above).

Sixteen Series matched a multi-7-WAR team against one with no such players; the big stars went 6-10:

  • 1906 Cubs lost to the White Sox, 2-4
  • 1913 Athletics beat the Giants, 4-1
  • 1914 Athletics lost to the Braves, 4-0
  • 1926 Yankees lost to the Cardinals, 3-4
  • 1928 Yankees beat the Cardinals, 4-0
  • 1930 Athletics beat the Cardinals, 4-2
  • 1932 Yankees beat the Cubs, 4-0
  • 1942 Yankees lost to the Cardinals, 1-4
  • 1949 Dodgers lost to the Yankees, 1-4
  • 1953 Dodgers (three 7’s) lost to the Yankees, 2-4
  • 1970 Reds lost to the Orioles, 1-4
  • 1971 Pirates beat the Orioles, 4-3
  • 1972 Reds lost to the Athletics, 3-4
  • 1973 Athletics beat the Mets, 4-3
  • 2002 Giants lost to the Angels, 3-4
  • 2004 Cardinals (three 7’s) lost to the Red Sox, 0-4

Meanwhile, teams with multiple 7-WAR players went 9-3 against WS opponents with exactly one such player. Go figure.

A count of World Series results for all permutations of how many 7-WAR players:

  • Three vs. zero: 0-2
  • Three vs. one: 1-0
  • Two vs. zero: 6-8
  • Two vs. one: 8-3
  • Two vs. two: 1-1
  • One vs. zero: 16-22
  • One vs. one: 15-15
  • Zero vs. zero: 27-27
7-WAR Teammates

The most frequent teammates with 7+ WAR:

  • 7 years — Ruth & Gehrig (1926-32; 4 pennants, 3 WS titles)
  • 5 years — Aaron & Mathews (1957, ’59-61, ’63; 1 pennant, 1 WS title)
  • 3 years — Baker & Collins (1912-14; 2 pennants, 1 title)

Here are the top 21 teammate WAR totals within this 7-WAR pool. Nine pairs reached the Series, going 4-5. (Quick breakdown: Ruth and Gehrig, 5 years, 2-1 in WS; other pairs, 16 years, 2-4 in WS.)

  • 25.4 WAR — Ruth & Gehrig, 1927 (won WS 4-0)
  • 20.9 WAR — Ruth & Gehrig, 1930 (3rd place, 16 GB)
  • 20.5 WAR — Ruth & Gehrig, 1928 (won WS 4-0)
  • 20.4 WAR — Nap Lajoie & Terry Turner, 1906 Indians (3rd place, 5 GB)
  • 20.1 WAR — Ruth & Gehrig, 1931 (2nd place, 13.5 GB)
  • 19.3 WAR — Ruth & Gehrig, 1926 (lost WS 3-4)
  • 18.9 WAR — Home Run Baker & Eddie Collins, 1912 A’s (3rd place, 15 GB)
  • 18.9 WAR — Ty Cobb & Bobby Veach, 1917 Tigers (4th place, 21.5 GB)
  • 18.9 WAR — Ken Griffey, Jr. & Alex Rodriguez, 1996 Mariners (2nd place, 4.5 GB, missed playoffs)
  • 18.8 WAR — Barry Bonds & Jeff Kent, 2002 Giants (lost WS 3-4)
  • 17.9 WAR — Joe Morgan & Johnny Bench, 1972 Reds (lost WS 3-4)
  • 17.9 WAR — George Brett & Willie Wilson, 1980 Royals (lost WS 2-4)
  • 17.8 WAR — Baker & Collins, 1913 A’s (won WS 4-1)
  • 17.8 WAR — Lou Boudreau & Joe Gordon, 1948 Indians (won WS 4-2)
  • 17.6 WAR — Norm Cash & Al Kaline, 1961 Tigers (2nd place, 8 GB)
  • 17.5 WAR — Lajoie & Bill Bradley, 1903 Indians (3rd place, 15 GB)
  • 17.5 WAR — George Sisler & Ken Williams, 1922 Browns (2nd place, 1 GB)
  • 17.5 WAR — Hank Aaron & Eddie Mathews, 1959 Braves (2nd place, 2 GB)
  • 17.5 WAR — Reggie Jackson & Sal Bando, 1969 A’s (2nd place, 9 GB)
  • 17.5 WAR — Joe Morgan & Pete Rose, 1973 Reds (lost NLCS 2-3)
  • 17.5 WAR — Scott Rolen & Albert Pujols, 2004 Cardinals (lost WS 0-4)

 

8-WAR Seasons

If we raise the bar above 7 WAR by whole numbers, each of the next two steps drains about half the pool: 326 player-years of 8+ WAR, and 158 with 9+ WAR.

At the 8-WAR level, 76 of 326 were for Series teams (23%), with a 42-34 record for those Series players, 35-30 for those teams.

Of the teams with any 8-WAR player(s), 22% reached the Series (65/299), going 35-30. The usual caste system: Yanks 17/32, 12-5; others 48/267 (18%), 23-25.

  • 11 of 26 teams with two or more 8-WAR players reached the Series, going 7-4. But no such team has won it all since 1937. Through 1937, seven of 16 such teams reached the Series, all winning (1927-28/’32/’37 Yanks, 1913/’29 A’s, 1935 Tigers). There were no such teams from 1938-58. Since 1959, four of 10 such teams reached the Series, each losing (1961 & ’72 Reds, 1980 Royals, 2004 Cards).
  • Just the ’29 Yanks had three 8-WAR players, and they ran a distant 2nd.
  • 20% of teams with exactly one 8-WAR player reached the Series (54/273), going 28-26. (Yanks 13/25, 8-5; others 41/248, 17%, 20-21.)

Eleven World Series matched teams that each had an 8-WAR player:

  • 1909 Pirates beat the Tigers, 4-3 (Honus Wagner 9.6 WAR; Ty Cobb 10.3)
  • 1929 A’s beat the Cubs, 4-1 (Al Simmons and Jimmie Foxx 8.3; Rogers Hornsby 10.9)
  • 1936 Yankees beat the Giants, 4-2 (Gehrig 9.6; Mel Ott 8.2)
  • 1946 Cardinals beat the Red Sox, 4-3 (Stan Musial 9.0; Ted Williams 11.5).
  • 1955 Dodgers beat the Yankees, 4-3 (Duke Snider 9.0; Mickey Mantle 10.0)
  • 1956 Yankees beat the Dodgers, 4-3 (Mantle 11.9; Snider 8.0)
  • 1957 Braves beat the Yankees, 4-3 (Aaron 8.4; Mantle 11.9)
  • 1961 Yankees beat the Reds, 4-1 (Mantle 10.5; Frank Robinson 8.1 and Vada Pinson 8.0)
  • 1980 Phillies beat the Royals, 4-2 (Mike Schmidt 8.8; Brett 9.4 and Wilson 8.5)
  • 1985 Royals beat the Cardinals, 4-3 (Brett 8.2; Willie McGee 8.1)
  • 1989 A’s beat the Giants, 4-0 (Rickey Henderson 8.6; Will Clark 8.6)

 

9-WAR Seasons

At the 9-WAR level, 41 of 158 were for Series teams (26%), with a 22-19 record for those players, 20-19 for those teams.

Of the teams with any 9-WAR player(s), 26% reached the Series (39/151), going 20-19. For the Yankees, 12/22 reached the Series and went 8-4; for all others, 21% made the Series (27/129) and went 12-15.

  • 2 of 7 teams with two 9-WAR players made the Series, both sweeps by the 1927-28 Yanks. (The other five were the 1906 Indians, 1912 A’s, 1930-31 Yanks and 1996 Mariners.)
  • 37 of 144 teams with exactly one 9-WAR player reached the Series, going 18-19. (Yanks 10/18, 6-4; others 27/126, 12-15.)

Only the 1909, ’46 and ’55 Series had two teams with a 9-WAR player (see above).

 

10-WAR Seasons

Finally, at the 10-WAR level, 31% were for Series teams (23 of 74), with an 11-12 record for those players, 10-12 for those teams. Only the 1927 and ’29 Yankees had two 10-WAR players (guess who); the ’27 squad went 110-44 and then swept the Series.

Of the teams with any 10-WAR player(s), 31% reached the Series (22 of 72), going 10-12. For the Yankees, 9/14, 5-4; all others, 13/58 reached the Series, 5-8.

Pre-playoffs, 19 of 59 teams with any 10-WAR players reached the Series, going 9-10. Since 1969, there were only 12 ten-WAR years, those teams going 1-2 in the Series. Since 1962, only Joe Morgan (’75) has won the World Series in a 10-WAR year.

No World Series ever had opposing 10-WAR players.

Most 10-WAR seasons in this pool:

  • 10 — Babe Ruth, 3-2 in WS
  • 8 — Rogers Hornsby, 0-1 in WS
  • 6 — Willie Mays, 1-1 in WS
  • 5 — Ted Williams, 0-1 in WS
  • 5 — Ty Cobb, 0-1 in WS
  • 4 — Mickey Mantle, 2-2 in WS
  • 3 — Lou Gehrig, 1-0 in WS
  • 3 — Barry Bonds, 0-1 in WS

Again, the pinstripe breakdown: Ruth, Mantle & Gehrig combined, 17 seasons, 6-4 in WS. The five others listed above, 27 seasons, 1-5 in WS.

Besides those three Yankees, just five others won the World Series in a 10-WAR year: Eddie Collins (1910), Tris Speaker (1912), Lou Boudreau (1948), Willie Mays (1954) and Joe Morgan (1975).

__________

With all this, I can’t draw any conclusions. This anecdotal overview leaves me still not blown away by the pennant impact of big-WAR seasons — particularly outside of Yankeeland, and within the wild-card era — but maybe I just lack a good frame of reference.

On a parting note, for whatever it’s worth…

Greatest Teams and Their Best Players

… a look at the top 10 seasons by winning percentage, for 1901-60 and then for 1961-2013, listing all 7-WAR players, and the next-best under 7 WAR. (This includes non-WS years. All WAR figures pro rated as before.)

Pre-Expansion
  • 1906 Cubs (116-36, .763) — Frank Chance, 7.7; Harry Steinfeldt, 7.4 // Joe Tinker, 4.3
  • 1902 Pirates (103-36, .741) — Honus Wagner, 8.3 // Tommy Leach, 6.8
  • 1909 Pirates (110-42, .724) — Honus Wagner, 9.6 // Fred Clarke, 5.5
  • 1954 Indians (111-43, .721) — Bobby Avila, 7.3 // Larry Doby, 6.0
  • 1927 Yankees, 110-44 (.714) — Babe Ruth, 13.0; Lou Gehrig, 12.4; Earle Combs, 7.3 // Tony Lazzeri, 6.6
  • 1907 Cubs, 107-45 (.704) — None // Johnny Evers, 5.6
  • 1931 Athletics, 107-45 (.704) — Al Simmons, 7.9 // Max Bishop, 6.1
  • 1939 Yankees, 106-45 (.702) — Joe DiMaggio, 8.5 // Joe Gordon, 6.6
  • 1932 Yankees, 107-47 (.695) — Babe Ruth, 8.7; Lou Gehrig, 8.3 // Tony Lazzeri, 5.5
  • 1904 Giants, 106-47 (.693) — None // Bill Dahlen, 5.9
Expansion Era
  • 2001 Mariners, 116-46 (.716) — Bret Boone, 8.8; Ichiro Suzuki, 7.7 // Mike Cameron, 5.9
  • 1998 Yankees, 114-48 (.704) — Derek Jeter, 7.5 // Paul O’Neill, 5.8
  • 1995 Indians, 100-44 (.694) — Albert Belle, 7.8 // Jim Thome, 6.6
  • 1961 Yankees, 109-53 (.673) — Mickey Mantle, 10.5 // Roger Maris, 6.9
  • 1969 Orioles, 109-53 (.673) — Frank Robinson, 7.5; Paul Blair, 7.1 // Boog Powell, 5.9
  • 1970 Orioles, 108-54 (.667) — None // Paul Blair, 5.8
  • 1975 Reds, 108-54 (.667) — Joe Morgan, 11.0 // Johnny Bench, 6.6
  • 1986 Mets, 108-54 (.667) — None // Keith Hernandez, 5.5
  • 1998 Braves, 106-56 (.654) — Andruw Jones, 7.4; Chipper Jones, 7.0 // Andres Galarraga, 5.0
  • 1994 Expos, 74-40 (.649) — Moises Alou, 7.2; Marquis Grissom, 7.2 // Larry Walker, 6.7

In each set of 10 teams, there were 12 seven-WAR players and two teams with none. The average best player had 8.2 WAR in the first period, 7.9 in the second. The median best player for all 20 teams had 7.8 WAR.

Your thoughts? Anyone?

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Dr. Doom
Dr. Doom
10 years ago

So, in the early days of baseball, a team had a 1/16 (7%) chance of going to the World Series. Throw in one 7-WAR player, and that quadruples. Yeah… sounds to me like it’s pretty significant.

Dr. Doom
Dr. Doom
10 years ago
Reply to  Dr. Doom

Doubles, excuse me. I was looking at the wrong subsection. Meanwhile the initial number triples for an 8-WAR player, and quadruples for a 10-WAR player. JA, I defifinitely think that it’s pretty ridiculously significant.

no statistician but
no statistician but
10 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

JA:

Just a couple of comments:

1) If I’m reading correctly, you aren’t considering pitching here, so part of the weirdness of some of the outcomes you cite may lie there.

2) Another un-investigated issue: what was the competition like in a given year? Winning the pennant with no 6-WAR player but a bunch of 4+ players may be a more normal outcome when the other teams in the league aren’t sparkling with stars.

Mike L
Mike L
10 years ago

Nice piece. A couple of random thoughts which both relate to roster consistency. The great Yankee teams of the Reserve System and pre amateur draft era were able to assemble, pay for, and keep their great players. That included in investing in an extensive farm system. There’s an analogy to the old Montreal Canadians who used to have dibs on great players because of NHL territorial rights. With free agency, it’s increasingly expensive to acquire multiple players with the potential for high WAR without in some way compromising your ability to fill out the rest of your roster with consistent… Read more »

fireworks
fireworks
10 years ago
Reply to  Mike L

Marvin Miller knew exactly what he was doing. He wanted the reserve clause challenged but he didn’t want full-fledged free agency. He wanted arbitration before free agency and limited free agency. The owners (with few exceptions, like Charlie Finley) didn’t have to the foresight to understand how Miller was getting exactly what he wanted and that arbitration was a good means to begin to increase compensation for a player whose rights are still controlled by his team as well as helping to raise everyone’s salary, while the limited free agency created scarcity which pit owners against each other for the… Read more »

Mike L
Mike L
10 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

The six year system creates myriad opportunities for distortions in the market. One of my least favorite is holding back talented young players to game the service time clock. Salary dumps and weird late contract trades are others. I agree with John A that loosening up the scarcity just a bit (I would make FA at 4 years of service time) would tend to better equalize the market over time. If we are concerned about less well funded teams losing talent earlier than you can attach a loss of draft pick without a QO, or you can use an “embedded… Read more »

Mike L
Mike L
10 years ago
Reply to  Mike L

John A, I’m not sure how to quantify it, although the Giants also did it with Posey, if I recall. One way (very cumbersome) might be to look at first year players who attained a WAR per 162 games of at least 3 and check when they were called up. That level of performance that early would imply they should have been in the majors. I would think that the present economic system would most incentive suppressing the “can’t miss” because they would have a presumptively higher earnings potential.

fireworks
fireworks
10 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

After I posted I was thinking I forgot to add contract length being an important factor with more free agents–it would absolutely stunt length. But then I was thinking that if you had a highly competitive free agent market that makes it all the more easier for the wealthier teams to overpay for the elites because the degree of overpayment should be less, and they can just throw higher yearly values at players. Guys would get to free agency so much younger and would be more willing to take a shorter contract that doesn’t quite take them out of their… Read more »

Doug
Doug
10 years ago

To Mike L’s point @3, the difficulty today with assembling high-end talent has likely led to more competitiveness throghout the leagues and also likely a higher replacement level. Thus, even if a team can assemble a “powerhouse” team, there is less likelihood of the superstars reaching the 7 WAR level (as shown in your results).

--bill
--bill
10 years ago

I think Bill James did a study on this–maybe in Whatever Happened to the Hall of Fame? He created two pitchers with identical career stats, one modeled on Don Sutton (the low-variance pitcher) and one on Steve Carlton (the high-variance pitcher). His conclusion? A team that wins about 85 games a year would win more pennants with a high-variance type pitcher, although it would also have more below-.500 years. Which raises a question: how hard is it to put together a team that regularly wins about 85 games a year? That’s about 33 WAR; if you can get 11 players… Read more »

Richard Chester
Richard Chester
10 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

This is an aside to JA: Did you ever have a chance to look at the list of Tiger post-season WPAs that I mailed to you?

fireworks
fireworks
10 years ago

As I was looking at the post and we got to the first set of seemingly counterintuitive results I wondered about the difference between a team of above-average players with no/few real stars versus teams that aren’t as strong overall, or on the bench, but have stars. If a star player struggles come postseason time his team should be on average less able to handle his struggles than the good team that doesn’t have star players. I’m not saying the data bears that out, but it was my first thought. The greater the impact of a single player the worst… Read more »

Hartvig
Hartvig
10 years ago

If I understood it correctly Bill James’ Win Shares were based on the expected number of wins that a team should have- thus a team that should have won 100 games would have more Win Shares than a team that won 90 games and so on. It didn’t necessarily correspond exactly with the actual number of games won but it was usually pretty close.

Has anyone ever looked at WAR in the same light? Meaning does a team with X WAR usually finish with Y wins?

bells
bells
10 years ago
Reply to  Hartvig

I’ve been casually compiling some data in the last few months in my spare time, and going back the last 10 years for all of MLB, the overall correlation between Wins and expected wins based on WAR is about .91, varying from .89 in some years to .95 in others. I don’t have access right now to the file for the full breakdown (it’s on a computer in the computer lab I teach in which is closed until January), but suffice to say a) it’s a really good predictor and b) there are always outliers.

DaveR
DaveR
10 years ago

The lesson being: If you’re going to have a big WAR year, be a Yankee.

mosc
mosc
10 years ago
Reply to  DaveR

more like: If you want to win pennants, be a Yankee

BryanM
BryanM
10 years ago

JA. I think you are trying to tease out a very subtle point from very noisy data. Recognizing that the inferior team can frequently win a short series, maybe achieving some regular season standard ( say 95 wins) might show things in a clearer light. Some other thoughts that might answer related questions , if not the one you set out to answer.- What pattern of team WAR totals leads to actual wins? Of the last 40 teams with 50 team War or more , how many games did the teams with one or two stars win vs those with… Read more »

BryanM
BryanM
10 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

JA , I think your decision to classify teams by pythag wins rather than actual ( if I understand you correctly) is very sound . The chain events- predicted runs – predicted wins should compare better to Actual runs – predicted wins , than to actual wins . The 2013 Cards got more wins out of Allen Craig than his WAR would suggest – counteracting the apparent concentration in Carpenter and Molina. Hopefully , the law of large numbers will overcome such anomalies and a pattern will emerge. Again a guess – top of the order WAR is better than.… Read more »

bstar
bstar
10 years ago

I think it’s pretty easy to tear away at this whole “peak is better” thing. I’d like to comment on Bill James’ study described by bill @6 where he trades out a low-variance pitcher like Sutton for a high-variance one like Carlton. First, I think this is just one of those number-massaging exercises that James liked to do. Another example would be him creating a career for a fictitious player by using the first 10 years of one player’s career and then stapling on the last ten of another career. Stuff like that. I think it was meant more for… Read more »

Dr. Doom
Dr. Doom
10 years ago
Reply to  bstar

Hmmm… I think it’s pretty easy to tear down the whole “peak means nothing” thing. Let’s imagine two players. Both have 55 WAR. Player A plays 22 seasons, with exactly 2.5 WAR per year. Player B plays 10 seasons, with 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, and 1 WAR. Player A would literally never have been in the conversation as best player in the game. He almost certainly never would’ve been an All-Star. Player B would have been in the running for best player in the league at least 4 times, maybe 5. He would’ve played in… Read more »

bstar
bstar
10 years ago
Reply to  Dr. Doom

So now you’re using WAA as your measure of peak? That’s interesting, Doom, because if you do that John Smoltz (38 WAA) has a higher peak than Juan Marichal (30 WAA). Didn’t you conclude Marichal’s peak was higher in the COG thread based on higher WAR in his top years? This proves that you can reach different conclusions about which player can have a higher peak based on how exactly you define what peak is. So “peak” is ultimately a somewhat nebulous concept. Can you find me two players with 55 WAR and a WAA difference of 24? That’s pretty… Read more »

Dr. Doom
Dr. Doom
10 years ago
Reply to  bstar

I’m not using it that way; I’m suggesting that it’s a possible way to do it. Adam Darowski does it that way, and a lot of people seem to like what he does. The thing is, I think it’s obvious (and you’re welcome to disagree with me) that peak matters. When we’re ranking players, I’d put a lot more weight on someone being in the conversation as the best player, even if only for a year or two, than a guy who was consistently average. And since what we’re doing in the COG essentially amounts to ranking players, I think… Read more »

bstar
bstar
10 years ago
Reply to  Dr. Doom

Doom, I hope you’re not painting me as THAT GUY who looks only at career WAR and nothing else (does someone like that exist?). But if I did, how off would I actually be? Sure, you would end up picking Chuck Finley over Sandy Koufax or something like that but you would certainly do a better job of pinpointing great careers than the BBWAA has done, no? It’s really interesting that so many people poo-poo on the idea of using only WAR, but I think you could do a lot worse. While only using WAA or only using a 7-year… Read more »

Dr. Doom
Dr. Doom
10 years ago
Reply to  Dr. Doom

No, star, I don’t think you’re “that guy;” you’re WAY too thoughtful about baseball to be that guy. But “that guy” exists. I don’t think he hangs out here, but he does. And you could do MUCH worse than career WAR as your only criterion. Of course you could. I just think a career WAR that’s balanced with peak WAR is a BETTER day to go. Joe Posnanski and Tom Tango both wrote about peak value in the last couple of weeks. I’m too lazy to look the actual posts up right now. But the gist of Poz’s post was… Read more »

bstar
bstar
10 years ago
Reply to  Dr. Doom

I agree with what you say, for the most part, Dr. Doom. I just think we disagree on how much to weigh peak. I think I’ve shown it’s very possible we’re overrating it, especially considering you can reach the opposite conclusion when comparing two players side by side if you simply change your definition of peak. Here’s another example of that: Sandberg: 38.1 WAA Whitaker: 42.4 WAA Sweet Lou gets the pennant-winning peak boost. Sandberg: 46.7 WAR7 (seven best seasons) Whitaker: 37.8 WAR7 And, FWIW, there is nothing dumb about Charlie Joiner being in the NFL Hall of Fame. He… Read more »

bstar
bstar
10 years ago
Reply to  bstar

Here’s two that might work: Sandy Koufax and David Wells. They both have around 53 WAR but Wells pitched 21 seasons while Koufax pitched 11. And, yes, of course Koufax has way higher WAR peaks, but the WAA difference isn’t nearly as big as your example: 22 for Wells and 31 for Koufax. Of course I would take Koufax, but I would campaign loudly for a spot in the Hall of Darn Good for Boomer. But my post way more about tearing the idea that peak value yields more pennants. I’m VERY OPEN to being wrong about this, Doom; I… Read more »

BryanM
BryanM
10 years ago
Reply to  Dr. Doom

It’s certainly possible that peak is better than consistency, but we still need a method to demonstrate it — to cite your example , as a GM , I would much, much rather have the 2.5 WAR guarantee than the 10-9-8….1,0,0 lottery guy, who, admittedly , has shown much greater potential, but has not shown greater value. Not that WAR is the be all and end all, but the recipe of putting pieces together to create winning baseball is exceedingly complex, and whether higher peak as opposed to more consistent players leads to more wins is, I beleive, undemonstrated. Of… Read more »

mosc
mosc
10 years ago
Reply to  BryanM

Can I talk about how absurd this is for a second? Nothing personal Byran, I love your stuff, but this is really incorrect thinking. 1) You don’t sign a guy to a 22 year contract. The 10/9/8/7/6/5/4/3/2/1 guy is out of the league after 10 years and then you sign somebody else to play the other 12. Maybe he gets 12 war in 12 years, that’d be a below average pick, but that’s still 67 war vs 55 war over those 22 years. 2) low WAR does not fully indicate value. If a guy is a great defender but a… Read more »

birtelcom
Editor
10 years ago
Reply to  mosc

Mosc, here’s a point-by-point reply as to why I think the concept of WAR supports Bryan’s suggestion that a guy who produces 55 WAR steadily over 22 years is likely equally as valuable as the guy who produces the same 55 WAR over ten years and then is done: (1) You argue that “you sign somebody else to play the other 12”, and then assume you can get a guy at above-zero WAR for those other 12 years. But that assumption is inconsistent with the concept of WAR. The very essence of the WAR concept is that the default alternative… Read more »

Mike L
Mike L
10 years ago

Interesting discussion. I want to throw a few questions/points out there. With no data, one way or another, to support it. First, peak WAR as it relates to pennants has to be somewhat contextual, with players like Ernie Banks (or Carlton) being excellent examples. It’s implicit in argument that we hear made over and over (Cano)–why waste money on a guy who is going to take you from a 71 win team to an 78 win team if you don’t have other talent to surround him? The second–going back to Doom and Bstar’s argument over peak/career, I would argue that… Read more »

fireworks
fireworks
10 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

Hard to shake out how should consider peak performance vs consistent performance but we obviously have a natural bias toward peaks because they catch our attention more easily. It’s very similar to the way we have a natural bias toward exalting players that excel in one or two areas of the game versus those that are good in many facets. In that regard in terms of a player’s contribution there are also peak performance (in an area or two) versus consistent performance (in many areas). I have started and stopped on several different lines of thought trying to write my… Read more »

tag
tag
10 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

John, I think any Ryno/Lou WAR comparison needs more context. Without getting into the “Ryno led his team to two division titles” argument, which is quite unfashionable and can get one mocked in saber circles, it is undeniable that Ryno was by far the best position player on his team(s), and was needed to be or the Cubs had no chance of winning. That level of “betterness” above teammates does make a major difference, in my view. In 1984, Bull Durham was the second-best everyday Cub and posted 3.7 WAR to Ryno’s 8.5. The Cubs got within a game of… Read more »

Insert Name Here
Insert Name Here
10 years ago

I only skimmed the comments so maybe someone else pointed this out already, but I think it’s problematic to find the % that made the WS with 7-, 8-, 9-, or 10-WAR players. This is problematic because for any season where multiple teams in the same league fit your criteria, only one of them can win the pennant, driving down the % of teams that make the WS. To remedy this, you could only look at teams who were the ONLY team in their league that season to meet your criteria, OR count teams that finished behind only teams of… Read more »

Insert Name Here
Insert Name Here
10 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

Unfortunately, that’s the simple truth. As you pointed out at the beginning, this is a very tough concept to tackle. If you had the time or a lot of people to help, another possible study would be to study each season individually for some defined correlation between individual players’ WAR and teams’ success, and track how directly these correlate over time. The results would be very interesting and possibly very significant for the world of sabermetrics, but even if you evaluate since-1901 only, that’s 113 seasons to evaluate, which is a lot even if you divide them up among, say,… Read more »

Mike L
Mike L
10 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

John A, maybe you work backwards. The worst WS-bound record, if I’m not mistaken, in the 162 game era, is the 83-79 1973 Mets (who had Tom Seaver, with 11 WAR.) If you eliminate all records (teams and +7 WAR performers) below that, and create three ascending tranches of 8 wins, you might see a correlation within the tranches. And, if you start in 1962 as a starting point, you get out of most of the distorting 1923-1964 Yankee dominance.

Richard Chester
Richard Chester
10 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

Would you like a list of pennant winners with players of WAR of 7+?