Posted by doubletruck on 5/18/2011 4:45:00 AM (view original):
Based on Team PA and Team BFP, I've calculated that a batter with 700+ PA owns about 5.7% of a team's offensive opportunity and a starting pitcher with 331 IP owns 11.4% of his team's defensive opportunity.
This appears to mean that a strong SP is twice as valuable to his team as is a strong position player who plays every game. Even a 240 IP starter owns 7.85% of his team's defensive opportunity compared to the player's 5.7%.
My underlying premise is that offense is 50% of the game and pitching defense is 50% of the game. (Fielding is not factored in.)
Agree or disagree?
Teams average 6400 PA per season.
Teams average 1450 IP per season
700/6400 = .109
331/1450 = .228
We disagree on your first statement. A batter with 700 PA accounts for ~11% of his teams offensive oportunities over a season. A pitcher with 331IP accounts for 23% of defensive oportunities (excluding fielding and range).
It is impossible to say how much more valuable a starting pitcher is over a position player since it depends how many IP that pitcher will pitch. It is true that ~4.4 PA are equal in value to 1 IP. (In theis context value refers to offensive or defensive opportunity, not actual contribution.) If an everyday player has 700PA a pitcher would have to pitch ~317 innings to account for twice the opportunity that the batter does.
I therefore agree in principle with your second statement but I think it could be stated much more acurately.
I agree that 50% of the game is offense and 50% is pitching / defense. From this and the basic rules of the game you can derive that in one inning a pitcher contributes as much to his team's win (or loss) as any single batter does through the entire game (assuming no subs or PHs). Each position in the order averages 4.4PA/ game and a pitcher faces 4.4 batters per inning on average. This is one of those great "symetries" in baseball.
5/19/2011 2:59 AM (edited)