Originally Posted by rynoattack:
You posted a question that was relatively simple, and has no factual right or wrong answer. There is absolutely no way to definitively quantify which is more valuable. There are so many variables, and I mentioned some of them.
You are correct about there being so many variables there is no viable way to say one is more valuable than the other which is exactly why I posted the question. A poster on another board said he looked at “QAB percentage” to get information about his players. I wanted to see what it would look like for our team so I asked him to give his QAB definition in order to try it. Here’s his definition.
Quality At Bats can have various definitions. Generally I say:
There are 8 ways that we can have a quality at-bat.
Executing a hit/run – SAC bunt/Sac-Drag/Squeeze
Executing a bunt for a hit
Taking a walk, getting hit by a pitch or a catchers interference
Moving a runner from 1st Base to 2nd Base or from 2nd base to 3rd base
Driving in a run from 3rd base with less than 2 outs
Any RBI (Sac fly, 2 out RBI, etc.)
All hard hit balls on the line or on the ground (NOTE: All base hits are not QAB’s, Ex. Bloop hits – We want HARD contact)
8 pitch at-bats
To me a player hitting a hard grounder for an out would getting a positive credit, but a player getting a bloop hit wouldn’t be getting jack is a system out of kilter, so I asked the question to see how many others had the same view as him.
I believe this is just another one of your "stats only matter", not the perceptions of how they came about.
Like I said, believe what you want, but stats had nothing to do with my question.
Since you said it, please point out anywhere I’ve said "stats only matter". Don’t bother looking because I’ve never said it! You and others PERCIEVE what I say as that stats are all that matters and nothing else does, implying I think coaches are dullards, because I have the temerity not to believe exactly the way you do.
I do find your posts humorous, and I enjoy reading them...
Great!