quote:
Originally posted by maniacmommy:
luv baseball: THANK YOU! That same thing was told to me by a few people and it's a good general rule to go by. TRhit: I wish I could not worry about it....but I have PARENTS who throw fits if I don't give their kid the "credit" they deserve! So glad my son plays 1st base and doesn't pitch.
But I really do want to be as accurate as possible and follow the rules. Thanks everyone! Appreciate it.
There’s usually only gonna be 1 or 2 games during any given season where you’ve actually gonna need to decide which of the relievers had the “best” performance, but it does happen. That’s why, even as long as I’ve been doing this, whenever I have any question about anything like this, I just open the book and step through it one line at a time until it gives me the answer.
As for worrying about it, don’t let people demean what you do or diminish its importance. All you’re trying to do is a good job, rather than just throwing some BS numbers up there that really are meaningless. You’ll usually find that folks who disparage you for that, have kids they think are great, but can’t support with numbers, can’t figure out why other kids who aren’t as good have better numbers than theirs, or who simply don’t have the capacity to use number to analyze anything about the game.
I’ve found that the easiest way to keep the parents from having conniptions, is to invite them to find errors in the numbers so I can get them corrected. Then, when they do that, it gives me a chance to communicate with them one on one and either explain to them why I did what I did, using the scoring rules, or thank them for pointing out where I’d made an error, which happens to everyone.
IOW, I try to make them part of the solution rather than the problem. I was a parent of an athlete once myself, and I understand how the emotions can run high when it comes to parents and their kids. Its only of the last chances parents get to be proud of their kids for something they’re directly connected with and able to participate in.
And to those who constantly claim the uselessness of the numbers, I don’t care what they think! They don’t have to look at them if they think they’re so useless. But I suspect that when their kid does something special, they can quote every number having anything to do with it, and they make sure the 1st thing they look at in the paper the next day, is the line score in the sports pages!
My hat’s off to you. You’re doing the coach, the team, and the parents a service.