Triples for HR's Topic

I don't know why the SIM can't add more triples to a deadball pitchers performance; based on avg triples hit that year; to offset no hr allowed.
And doubles,for that matter; if the league doubles are particularly high
9/28/2024 1:29 PM
Triples allowed by deadball pitchers is something I have suggested to admin on multiple occasions. The deadball hitters always underperform their real life triples, even in a low cap league.
9/28/2024 3:39 PM
Really stupid question by me here. After playing this for 20yrs, I didnt realize there is an issue. The guys like Hornsby, Cuyler and Cobb always get their fair share as well as others. Are you saying there overall is a material difference vs. RL? Ive never noticed but just asking. Its also the most rare occassion in baseball so wondering if that is the #1 priority vs. other items they have not address. Again, just a question not trying to be ignorant here.
9/29/2024 9:54 AM
Hey Creep. Good to see you're still around.
9/29/2024 12:11 PM
Posted by The_Creeper on 9/29/2024 9:54:00 AM (view original):
Really stupid question by me here. After playing this for 20yrs, I didnt realize there is an issue. The guys like Hornsby, Cuyler and Cobb always get their fair share as well as others. Are you saying there overall is a material difference vs. RL? Ive never noticed but just asking. Its also the most rare occassion in baseball so wondering if that is the #1 priority vs. other items they have not address. Again, just a question not trying to be ignorant here.
yes, its the reverse of how home run hitters from the 1910s and 1920s (Cravath, Ruth, Cy Williams) will overperform real life home run totals in open leagues.

2007 Curtis Granderson (23 real life triples) is averaging 31 triples per season in open leagues. Meanwhile 1912 Chief Wilson (major league record 36 triples in 1912) is only averaging 21 triples per season in open leagues.



9/30/2024 10:54 AM
Triples is different than home runs. A guy like Cravath wouldn't necessarily overperform his home run total if all he faced was deadball pitching.

If you played a full replay of the 1912 season (a season with one of the highest rate of triples) and used the actual teams from 1912, you would find that almost all the triples hitters would fall well below their actual totals. (A number of years ago, I actually ran a 1912-only $70M theme and proved that this was true).

The same can't be said if you replayed a season like 2000.

The difference is that the 2000 pitchers will allow homeruns to home run hitters. There is no built in era-adjusted "triples-allowed" rate for pitchers. All pitchers are essentially programmed the same for doubles/triples allowance rates (relative to their OAV).

A simple fix would be to program deadball pitchers to allow more triples. I have suggested this to admin. They don't seem to care or think it's important enough to bother with.
9/30/2024 11:17 AM
We're in season 23 of a progressive that started in 1901..it's got a few different rules than a typical prog, but we've certainly had a ton of triples.

Here are the top 25 single-season totals, through 1923:
Rank Name SN G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO HBP SB CS AVG OBP SLG OPS STRK L STRK
1 Cree, Birdie 1911 162 593 135 226 25 37 4 104 92 34 11 20 16 .381 .472 .568 1.040 3 13
2 Leach, Tommy 1902 162 668 123 230 20 37 9 119 45 17 11 6 5 .344 .393 .525 .918 4 12
3 Hornsby, Rogers 1921 162 690 173 269 43 31 17 167 72 56 7 2 1 .390 .451 .616 1.067 5 15
4 Wilson, Chief 1912 162 671 118 206 31 28 10 109 40 77 5 3 6 .307 .348 .481 .829 9 11
5 Flick, Elmer 1906 162 647 133 216 39 27 1 82 74 22 9 61 26 .334 .409 .482 .891 2 12
6 Lush, Billy 1903 150 616 113 187 21 25 1 74 92 11 1 0 1 .304 .395 .424 .819 0 19
7 Flick, Elmer 1905 158 565 120 188 32 24 9 125 104 14 6 31 34 .333 .439 .522 .961 0 17
8 Doyle, Larry 1911 157 591 102 189 22 24 13 109 86 43 5 15 15 .320 .410 .504 .914 0 10
9 Stahl, Chick 1904 162 651 118 178 25 24 2 40 111 22 7 0 0 .273 .384 .395 .779 1 11
10 Parent, Freddy 1903 162 731 117 228 30 24 6 116 17 21 11 0 0 .312 .336 .443 .780 0 15
11 Collins, Eddie 1910 160 703 154 266 24 23 3 80 77 22 6 4 1 .378 .443 .491 .934 1 24
12 Magee, Sherry 1908 159 615 83 190 28 23 2 118 65 19 9 21 14 .309 .380 .439 .819 2 12
13 Donlin, Mike 1903 160 678 123 240 23 23 11 132 61 26 4 18 14 .354 .409 .504 .914 10 14
14 Strunk, Amos 1915 160 670 118 227 40 22 4 134 61 51 4 1 2 .339 .396 .482 .878 0 29
15 Cobb, Ty 1917 162 693 161 275 37 22 9 106 60 36 6 12 9 .397 .448 .553 1.001 6 39
16 Crawford, Sam 1901 160 663 120 249 30 22 17 158 54 21 4 0 0 .376 .423 .564 .987 0 30
17 Crawford, Sam 1912 161 658 113 205 25 22 4 92 45 24 4 24 16 .312 .359 .435 .793 0 13
18 Wagner, Honus 1912 158 664 152 208 30 22 8 92 71 36 8 10 8 .313 .384 .461 .845 3 21
19 Baker, Frank 1912 156 670 165 242 33 22 22 207 62 31 7 0 0 .361 .417 .575 .992 5 15
20 Cobb, Ty 1922 152 633 182 268 62 21 6 133 61 24 4 2 1 .423 .476 .616 1.093 0 23
21 Veach, Bobby 1922 162 691 126 239 38 21 12 133 54 33 2 5 1 .346 .392 .514 .906 5 16
22 Seybold, Socks 1902 162 674 134 210 33 21 18 122 77 17 9 0 0 .312 .387 .503 .890 0 23
23 McGann, Dan 1905 156 614 111 211 22 21 2 102 70 19 12 21 27 .344 .421 .458 .879 0 12
24 Freeman, Buck 1902 162 639 89 203 37 21 7 135 57 15 1 14 22 .318 .374 .474 .848 0 14
25 Cobb, Ty 1922 152 633 182 268 62 21 6 133 61 24 4 2 1 .423 .476 .616 1.093 0 23
9/30/2024 11:20 AM
When I have time, I'll try to go through and assess the number of 3B/PA for each season, and how that compared to each actual MLB season.

A far bigger problem for me, is strikeouts in the deadball era. Strikeout totals, especially in our first few seasons were way way way off. One consequence is that with many more balls in play, we had way too many DPs. 1901 Jake Beckley hit into 50 DP, for example. I think the MLB record is something like 35...
9/30/2024 11:23 AM
That's 25 players with over 20 triples in 23 seasons, roughly one per player season. How many players hit more than 20 triples in real life over those 23 years? My guess is way more than 25 players.

How about picking a single season and do a real life vs sim stat comparison for singles, doubles, triples, home runs for batters and see which sim stat is closest and farthest from the real life number. Of course, ballpark selection could skew numbers in one direction or the other.
9/30/2024 11:31 AM
Posted by contrarian23 on 9/30/2024 11:23:00 AM (view original):
When I have time, I'll try to go through and assess the number of 3B/PA for each season, and how that compared to each actual MLB season.

A far bigger problem for me, is strikeouts in the deadball era. Strikeout totals, especially in our first few seasons were way way way off. One consequence is that with many more balls in play, we had way too many DPs. 1901 Jake Beckley hit into 50 DP, for example. I think the MLB record is something like 35...
The number of DPs is directly related to the higher propensity of A+++ range guys. Of course, these players weren't necessarily better at getting to balls than modern fielders.

My guess is that the algorithm used to calculate range does not adjust for era (or strikeouts). So, due to more strikeouts in the modern era, there are fewer great range fielders now, while there are way fewer strikeouts in the deadball era, and so guys range factors in the deadball era are artificially inflated.

I haven't done a study, but I would bet the rate of A+ range fielders is much higher in the deadball era than modern era.
9/30/2024 11:37 AM
Posted by schwarze on 9/30/2024 11:31:00 AM (view original):
That's 25 players with over 20 triples in 23 seasons, roughly one per player season. How many players hit more than 20 triples in real life over those 23 years? My guess is way more than 25 players.

How about picking a single season and do a real life vs sim stat comparison for singles, doubles, triples, home runs for batters and see which sim stat is closest and farthest from the real life number. Of course, ballpark selection could skew numbers in one direction or the other.
There may be a few more than 25 players in our league who did so...but of course our leaderboard only shows 25 players for any category...I can go back season by season and look.

According to b-r.com, there are 113 players in history who have hit 20+ triples in a season. 36 of them happened in the 1901-1923 time period. That probably understates the difference, since in WIS, all teams play 162 games vs the 154 that was the MLB norm, and of course because of the way fatigue works, our players routinely get more PA than their RL counterparts.

I'm not suggesting this is not an issue to be fixed. I _am_ suggesting that (a) it's not a dire problem...I can think of a half-dozen things more pressing in my opinion. I can understand why site staff might not see this one as a priority. Assuming they ever plan on making ANY updates, of course. WHich at this point seems an uncertain assumption.
9/30/2024 11:49 AM
Update...I just counted season by season. 37 players hit 20+ triples in a season in our league from 1901-23. Compared to 36 in MLB.
9/30/2024 11:54 AM
I would tend to agree w/ C23 on this one. There are MANY more things that in my mind are more important than if someone gets 24 or 17 triples. Just a few that I think mess with the integrity here.
  • SP fatigue - I know deadball guys pitched 350-400 innings. 45-50 starts of 8 innings on average. However, the SP fatigue algorithm (I think) does not apply a penalty until the SP pitches in 70% of games. So for example. You can have Walter Johnson starting 75 games and 6-7 innings in each. NO WAY anyone could pitch every other day and be effective. Not then, Not now. Applaud those who exploit it but a gap to be addressed.
  • SP fatigue - I once had the great Tom Seaver year (1971 I think) pitch 26 innings against me in a 4 game WS (9, 8, 9) and give up 1 ER. I dont think 3 starts in 4 games throwing 100+ pitches should be allowed without applying some penalty. Yes, he started each at 100% and I had a good offense.
  • BBs appear to be determined by hitter. I have had Eck who walked 3 in like 80 innings average 3/9ip in progressives that included Bonds, Ruth, Mantle, etc. We know Bonds walks were mostly IBB, I dont know that others were. Control pitchers wouldnt just lose their control depending on the batter but wouldnt be pitching around Ruth if Foxx, Mantle, Gehrig were hitting behind them.
OK, done whining.
9/30/2024 9:33 PM
The plate appearance outcome is weighed more in the batters favor. They released the event tree a few years ago (15?) and the hitters influence was something like 55% .
10/18/2024 7:27 PM
Triples for HR's Topic

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