I was reading the last topic about ROE and I was curious if anyone had stats for a typical HS season. How many on average in a year.
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quote:Originally posted by Doughnutman:
I was reading the last topic about ROE and I was curious if anyone had stats for a typical HS season. How many on average in a year.
quote:Originally posted by Doughnutman:
On the offensive side, if you have a fast guy, he SHOULD reach base more often due to ROE due to the fact that he puts a lot more pressure on the infield on a ground ball. Same thing if you have a kid that crushes it. Faster balls are harder to handle.
quote:Originally posted by Doughnutman:
A few things. ROE is such a vague reference. I know we do not need more stats, but ROE can mean many different things to a coach. You can have 2 fielders. Competely differnt styles. One can be technique perfect and never take a chance on an off balnce throw and never dive for a ball. THe other can take a chance to get the guy every time and if the throw beat the runner but was off line the fielder gets an error even though he might make many more put outs over the course of a season. Your team might have more ROE but your defense is actually better because of it.
quote:It would be a tough stat for a coach to use to evaluate his team after the season.
quote:On the offensive side, if you have a fast guy, he SHOULD reach base more often due to ROE due to the fact that he puts a lot more pressure on the infield on a ground ball. Same thing if you have a kid that crushes it. Faster balls are harder to handle. It seems that a player that CAUSES more ROE should be rewarded. Is there any MLB stat that tracks who gets the most ROE in a season and could we correlate that to what kind of hitter he is?
quote:The stat question is because I saw kids with 500 averages last year who had 0 ROE. Scorekeeper might like them a bit more.
quote:Originally posted by Doughnutman:
Stats, Just took a quick look at your stuff. WOW! It is going to take a few days for me to wade through it. Thanks. Have you ever seen the movie, "A Beautiful Mind."? Not saying your crazy, but that is some mind boggling stats. I will get back to you later when I am not at work.
quote:Originally posted by JMoff:
Stats, I've looked at your stuff as well, but I didn't necessarily understand all of it. Some of the nomenclature I found confusing. I meant to PM you and ask more questions, but I never got to it.
quote:The more I think about it, publishing BOTH the "times reached base by any means" along with the more traditional OBP would normalize HS stats if everyone did it. It would get rid of the .500 hitters with no ROE and I'd be all for that, especially when picking all district/state teams. A much more honest computation. It'd take a generation to get everyone to agree though.
quote:I've heard several scouts say the only HS stats they trust for pitchers are IP, K's and BB's. For hitters its AB's, HR's, K's and to a lesser extent BB's. Everyting else is just too random.
quote:The dad of the four year starter who's OBP was 11-254 must be rich.
quote:I wonder about the sample size in a typical (~30 game) HS season. Is it big enough to draw significant conclusions? Do you include out of season games? I don't because the difference in opponent talent can be significant, which clouds things. Obviously, the .500 hitter is better than the 11-254 kid, but is the .425 hitter better than the .450 hitter? I don't think you have enough data to tell. I've seen really good hitters who have moved to the next level and been successful have a slump for a couple of weeks that statistically "blew" their HS season (for example .500 guy becomes a .420 guy). Over a larger sample size (like a MLB season) and that is normalized out.
quote:Originally posted by JMoff:
Stats, as usual we're in pretty good agreement.
quote:My comment about the rich dad suggested a reason he stayed in the lineup with a 12 Sigma OBP. With a DH available for any player in the lineup, I think the coach could find SOMEONE to hit for that kid.
quote:
We had one player who was a 4 year starter, but he only reached 11 times in 4 years, in 254 PA’s. If I was wrong on every one of those, his average would have only been 43 points higher. I’m just sayin’ that even with the worst of scorekeeping and the height of cheating, ROEs alone isn’t gonna make all that much difference, at least at the HS level.
quote:Originally posted by JMoff:
I probably miss-read your comment. On another review you meant ROE 11 times in 4 years. I read only reached base 11 times in 4 years (by any means). Sorry for the confusion.