I agree, but the sense that I have is that it's a credibility issue for the networks. There is a sense of credibility (for most people) in hearing from some ex- player, coach, or GM.
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I agree, but the sense that I have is that it's a credibility issue for the networks. There is a sense of credibility (for most people) in hearing from some ex- player, coach, or GM.
I'm not asking for a sabermetric show. I'm just asking for a show that actually does break down the games. A show that actually does give solid information about the what's and why's of the games, instead of just showing the highlights and yelling cliches.
Also, how do you know I'm in the minority? I don't think anyone could say that one way or the other.
You're in the minority. Baseball attempts to appeal to the mainstream fan, for the most part. Casual fans (even many rabid fans) dont care about WHIP, DICE, WARP, etc. Not only do they not care, or know, about these stats, they never will. It just isn't going to happen.
For decades, athletes and ex-athletes talk about the "secret" part of baseball... the things that you can't measure with stats. They use this logic to explain why player A is really better than player B. Player A is better because he is a "clutch" hitter. Or he has "experience". Or he keeps the clubhouse "loose". These things cannot be measured by numbers.
On another thread a poster claims that its the "intangibles" that make one player have greater value than the stats show. He cites the "fact" that he gives his teammates "confidence". This makes them better, evidently.
Casual fans will never embrace the sabermetrics of baseball, IMO. Another poster, I think it was AllOutWar, made a comment to the effect of....."Just what we need, another stat in baseball". Many, many people, even avid baseball fans, agree with that. Baseball has too many stats already, in the opinions of most baseball fans.
Personally, I like stats. But I tend to agree that every year... maybe every week, someone comes out with a new stat. The better way to evaluate... something. If ESPN, or other networks believed that a show spouting all the latest sabermetric numbers would make money (have an audience), I'm certain that they would gladly do so. The average fan just isnt interested in that.
I do not think I am at all asking for anything like that, Swampdog. In fact, I know I'm not. I'm simply asking for some level of analysis, rather than repeated, meaningless cliches.
I haven't expressed any interesting in turning mainstream analysis into a sabermetric statfest, because I know that isn't happening anytime soon, nor do I think that a nightly highlight reel would be interesting to watch if it was nothing but numbers.
Look at the examples myself and others have used in this thread:
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Originally Posted by gryfn1
THOSE are things I think should be on such programs like Baseball Tonight. Simple, yet meaningful, analysis that provides information. I'm not asking that John Kruk recite the VORP of Hanley Ramirez, or tell how many Win Shares Jake Peavy had last season. I'm not talking about in-depth statistical analysis. I'm talking about simple analysis of what a player is doing, what made a game go a certain way, why a player is succeeding, etc. I don't think that's too much to ask, nor do I think that I'm in a minority for wanting to hear decent, simple analysis.Quote:
Originally Posted by HoustonGM
Also, as I said earlier, there is some of that. The example of the analysis of Travis Hafner's swing was an example of solid, simple analysis. I'd just like to see MORE of that and LESS of the meaningless, overused statements of nothing.
I have read every word in this thread. I understand everything you're saying. I just don't see things changing anytime soon, thats all. You are in a severe minority in your views, for starters. Even with casual fans, what one thinks is dumb, the next thinks is an incredible insight. Analysts, experts, announcers..... they attempt to appeal to what is "average", and, for the most part, thats what they do.
I don't see things changing anytime soon, either, but not because I think I'm in a minority, but rather because baseball, as a whole, has always been the hardest sport to institute any type of change in.
I don't think wanting to hear some simple analysis puts me in a severe minority. Just look at the other sports, as multiple people have pointed out in this thread. The other major sports feature analysts who actually analyze the games, and not necessarily statistically. They spend whole 5 minute segments on Sportscenter dedicated to analyzing one football game.
Are baseball fans dumber than the fans of other sports? Does the average baseball fan prefers to hear meaningless drivel over simple analysis, while the average fan of the other major sports likes to hear simple analysis over meaningless drivel? I have a hard time believing that.
How can anyone think the phrase "he knows how to play" is insightful? Why is asking to much for someone whose sole job it is to provide analysis on baseball to quantify those statemnts with at least one other line!
Watch the Football analysts ESPN they do a very credible job with guys like Ron Jawarski, Tom Jackson, and even Ditka (if you can understand him) give very good reasons for why a guy "knows how to play"
Barry Melrose did EXACTLY that last night saying Osgood "really knows how to play" and then quantified it by saying That Osgood "dosent get rattled by giving up goals and controls rebounds"
It really isn;t asking much for these guys to educated people on what the **** is going on! I mean if you are watching Baseball Tonight ( a show devoted solely to baseball) then chances are you already have a knowledge of whats going on, treating the viewer like they are 4 years old and pretending they can't grasp advance theories like defensive postioning, balance and and pitch selection is pathetic.
They often explain their position when they say that a player "knows how to play" the game. I watch ESPN nearly every day, but I must be missing something, I guess. I also think that a few posters here are making way too much of that. As several have already stated, it simply means that a player is basically a smart player, doesnt make mental errors, etc. Is that difficult to grasp?
Expecting baseball analysts to change suddenly is unrealistic, in my view. I really dont see what the issue is.....this is nothing new, and hardly one of the worlds greatest problems.
I wouldn't say often. I'd say rarely.
Nobody's expecting them to change. We just wish they would at least attempt to. It's not anything new, but that doesn't mean we can't want better from our "experts", nor is it "one of the world's greatest problems", but that doesn't mean we can't discuss it or have opinions on it.Quote:
Expecting baseball analysts to change suddenly is unrealistic, in my view. I really dont see what the issue is.....this is nothing new, and hardly one of the worlds greatest problems.
You can have an opinion on anything, certainly. As far as seeing a problem here, though, you are in a small minority.
I don't know how we can say that one way or the other. I'd wager that if we asked a large amount of baseball fans if they'd prefer to hear simple, yet effective, analysis about baseball games and players over cliches sprinkled with a tiny bit of analysis, most off them would prefer the simple analysis.
Very possibly. Then you would never get those people to agree on what "simple, yet effective" analysis is. Thats the thing.
I guess what I wonder about .....is why does this seem to bother you so much? If given some time....I could probably think of about a thousand things I have heard in my life that were supposed to pass for wise, insightful, information. Yet, so often this intelligence is erroneous, exaggerated, oversimplified, etc, etc. Often what you hear, or read, from "experts" in all areas of life, is downright false. Its the way of the world.
I suppose that I have been listening to sports drivel from ex-jocks for so many years (twice as many as you have been alive) that it seems normal to me. There are so many things more important than worrying about baseball analysts cliche's and trite observations.
I think everybody could agree that "he knows how to play" isn't.
It is the way of the world, and it pisses me off.Quote:
I guess what I wonder about .....is why does this seem to bother you so much? If given some time....I could probably think of about a thousand things I have heard in my life that were supposed to pass for wise, insightful, information. Yet, so often this intelligence is erroneous, exaggerated, oversimplified, etc, etc. Often what you hear, or read, from "experts" in all areas of life, is downright false. Its the way of the world.
Well, yeah, and?Quote:
There are so many things more important than worrying about baseball analysts cliche's and trite observations.