Bill James on Fielding, Part 4

Bill James on Fielding, Part 4

Published Jan. 22, 2015 3:27 p.m. ET

From a bit in Bill James' recent article about Win Shares and Loss Shares, on a subject so dear to my cold heart:

Of the 243 Win Shares and Loss Shares which are attributed to pitchers and fielders on a team, 162-game schedule, about 60 to 70 typically are assigned to fielders. The percentage used to be much higher, because fielding used to be more central to the game.  The split between pitchers and fielders depends on the team’s strikeouts, walks, hit batsmen, home runs, errors and double plays. Strikeouts, walks and home runs make the fielders irrelevant; there is nothing the fielder can do about those things.   As those things increase, the "pitcher’s percentage" increases. Similarly, errors and double plays are actions essentially of the defense, to an extent outside the control of the pitcher, so as those things increase, the "fielding percentage" increases.

In modern baseball strikeouts are, of course, at a historic high, and errors are (always) at historic lows.   Home Runs are not at the level of ten years ago, but they’re not at the level of the 1920s, either; in 1925 the average major league team hit 73 home runs, whereas in 2014 the average team hit 139 home runs.  The three-cornered battle between hitter, pitcher and fielder is gradually being smushed into a two-man battle between pitcher and hitter, with the fielders increasingly taking on the role of innocent bystanders.

Innocent bystanders. There's the pitcher, there's the catcher, and there's the innocent bystanders. I think I'm going to use that. A lot. Since I'm sure the #StrikeoutScourge will get worse before it gets better.

Postscript: I'm probably annoying someone at Bill James Online with all these excerpts, and maybe I'll hear from someone soon (but probably not; we're friends and stuff). I will say this, though ... Leaving aside the quibbles people have with Win Shares, some of them more reasonable than others, one of the big reasons Win Shares doesn't hold a big place in the conversation is simple accessibility. Quick, tell me where to find Mike Trout's Win Shares on the Internet? I'll bet you can do it, but it's not easy. And as long as Bill's articles about Win Shares remain behind a pay wall, whilst WAR is everywhere, not much can change.

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