Tag: MLB History

15 Surefire Hall of Famers in the Game of Baseball Today

MLB icons can’t evaluate their baseball careers objectively until after retirement, but we sure can. Barring debilitating injuries, scandals or abrupt deterioration of skill, these accomplished individuals will eventually call themselves Hall of Famers.

First-ballot inductees are a very rare breed. Future members of that fraternity were identified as such.

And keep in mind that this sport wouldn’t survive without innovative coaches, umpires and executives. Many were considered for inclusion and, as you’ll read, several are undoubtedly Cooperstown-bound.

This is intended to be an exhaustive list of awesome figures who are actively involved in Major League Baseball or another professional circuit. To satisfy eligibility requirements, players must have totaled at least 10 seasons in the big leagues.

Please comment below if it appears that anybody meeting this criteria was snubbed.

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Reggie Jackson’s 1977 World Series Jersey Set to Be Sold

Mr. October’s most famous pinstripes are going on the auction block.

As first reported by Sports Collectors Daily, the jersey Reggie Jackson was wearing October 18, 1977, when he hit three homers in Game 6 of the World Series will be up for auction this spring. SCP Auctions will offer Jackson’s size 44 No. 44 home white button-down in its catalog auction in April.

Experts anticipate that it will sell for a minimum of $500,000. Some of the proceeds from the sale will go to Jackson’s Mr. October Foundation for Kids.

David Kohler, president of SCP Auctions, says he believes the Jackson jersey could bring more than any other sports jersey sold in the modern era. He wouldn’t be surprised to see the sale reach seven figures at the conclusion of the bidding. A Babe Ruth jersey worn in the 1920s was sold at an SCP Auction last year for $4.4 million, making it the most valuable piece of sports memorabilia ever sold.

SCP says the 1977 Jackson World Series jersey has been photomatched to the night in which he led the Yankees to their first post-Mantle era World Series title. Jackson had signed what was at the time a lucrative five-year free agent deal with George Steinbrenner’s team just 11 months earlier. It was Jackson who was to help deliver another title, and under immense pressure, he came through.

Jackson’s three homers came off three Dodger pitchers that night, and each came on the first pitch he saw. 

So delirious was Yankee Stadium crowd that night that Jackson had to retreat to the dugout in the top of the ninth to retrieve a batting helmet in hopes of protecting himself from fireworks landing nearby. As the final out was made, fans began pouring onto the field, and Jackson made a mad dash for the clubhouse wearing this jersey, memorably knocking over trespassing well-wishers along the way.

Jackson has promised to autograph and inscribe the jersey before it is sold.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Detroit Tigers’ Alan Trammell May Not Be a Hall of Famer, but He Has 1987

September baseball is all-or-nothing baseball. It is baseball that is played either in front of swelling crowds with palpable tension or in a cold ballpark sparsely dotted with paying customers where the peanut vendors are the loudest voices.

September baseball is either rich with meaning, where every pitch is hung on, or it’s merely an exercise of formality, played out because the schedule says so.

September baseball is either “must win” baseball or “must play,” nothing in between.

There is nothing more dreary and sad than baseball played in September when the pennant for the home team ceased being a reality in July, when the games lost meaning after the All-Star break, when the empty seats stretch for sections on end, when hot dog wrappers blow around the field, with people checking their watches more than the scoreboard.

But when it’s done right, when the playoffs are distinctly possible, when the mathematicians say so, September baseball is one of the most exciting, heart-stopping and gut-wrenching months of sport you’ll ever experience.

It’s baseball played with one eye on the pitcher and the other on the out-of-town scoreboard. It’s magic numbers and half games and a trade for a player with two weeks remaining. It’s when even a two-game losing streak seems like an eternity. It’s shouting obscenities when you find out that, out of town, the other guys came back and won with three runs in the bottom of the ninth. It’s when losing a game in the standings is on par with losing big at the casino.

September baseball is also when heroes are made, legends are furthered and legacies are cemented.

The Baseball Hall of Fame is filled with players who lived for September baseball.

It’s also filled with players who, despite their consistent greatness, seem to all have that one season that leaps off the page because of its superlative productivity.

Ted Williams had his .406. Joe DiMaggio had his 56 games. Bob Gibson had his 1.12.

Alan Trammell, the great Tigers shortstop, managed to combine his best September with his best season. Yet, he is no Hall of Famer. Not even close, according to the writers who vote.

Another Hall voting has come and gone. For the first time since 1996, there won’t be an induction ceremony in August. The writers pitched a shutout this year—a no-no of epic proportion. They not only didn’t elect anyone for enshrinement, they snubbed their noses at the three key players whose first year of eligibility had long been anticipated because of their link to performance enhancing drugs: Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens and Sammy Sosa.

The writers sent a message. None of the three exceeded 38 percent of the vote, when you need to appear on at least 75 percent of the ballots to gain entrance to the Hall with a plaque instead of an admission ticket.

Also down in the 30s, percentage-wise, was Trammell, who’s been on the ballot since 2002, but who is gaining about as much traction as a candidate as Herman Cain did for president last year.

There are many theories about Trammell’s Teflon candidacy, but let’s talk about 1987 instead.

That was the year when Tram plunked his best September into his best overall season, at a time when September baseball had all the meaning in the world for the Tigers.

On the morning of September 1, 1987, the Tigers woke up in first place in the American League East, a mere one game ahead of the Toronto Blue Jays. Both teams had 77 wins, but the Tigers had played two fewer games than the Jays and thus had two fewer losses—hence the one-game lead.

September ’87 would turn out to be the most thrilling month of baseball in Detroit since that phenomenal September twenty years prior, when four teams chased a pennant that could only be won by finishing in first place in a one-division league. Despite the Tigers’ recent foray into down-the-stretch baseball (2006, 2009 and 2012), 1987 remains the most exciting.

Trammell was hitting .323 on the morning of 9/1/87—already a phenomenal year for a shortstop, even for 1987, when baseball had long ago shucked the notion of a good fielding, no-hit shortstop as being the norm.

Trammell would play in 33 games down the stretch in 1987, starting with September 1. What he did in those 33 games was Williams-esque; DiMaggio infused; Reggie Jackson-like.

Trammell had 127 at-bats in those 33 games and sprayed 53 hits around American League ballparks, a .418 clip—an average that even Ty Cobb had to admire and look up to.

Trammell slugged seven home runs and smacked 20 runners to the plate. He had 15 multihit games, many with three or even four hits. Of those 33 games, Trammell hit safely in 29 of them, including an 18-game hitting streak when the games were ramped up in tension and importance.

Thanks to those numbers, Trammell lifted his average from the .323 it was on September 1 to a season-ending .343. For a full-time player with over 500 at-bats to improve his average by 20 points in one month is ridiculous. And Trammell did it when every night was a must-win night for the Tigers.

While Trammell was putting the Tigers on his back, his team and the Blue Jays came down the stretch like two prized race horses, neck-and-neck and jockeying for position.

Neither team could manage more than a two-game lead as the schedule drained. However, on the next-to-last weekend, the Jays took the first three of a four-game series in Toronto to forge a seemingly insurmountable 3.5-game lead.

The Tigers won a dramatic victory on Sunday in old Exhibition Stadium, thanks to Kirk Gibson’s heroics—another player who never met a clutch situation he didn’t embrace.

In the final week, the Blue Jays kept losing, even being swept in three games by the horrid Milwaukee Brewers, while the Tigers split four games in Detroit against Baltimore. By this time, the Jays’ lead was sliced to one game, with a season-ending three-game showdown scheduled at Tiger Stadium between the first- and second-place teams.

This was September baseball at its very best: a packed house, shrieking fans and the division squarely on the line. It was, for all intents and purposes, playoff baseball, for whoever came up short in the three games would be going home, while the other team would play into October.

Technically, the three games on the final weekend weren’t September baseball; they were played on October 2-4. But that was no matter; the scene had been set by the 30 days prior.

The Tigers swept the Blue Jays and won the division. In the final week, Trammell went 9-for-27 (.333), as he put the finishing touches on a glorious season—for him and for the Tigers, who started the year 11-19 yet won 98 games and the division.

Trammell’s .343 with 28 homers, 105 RBI, 109 runs scored and 205 hits weren’t enough to win the league MVP that season. In cruel irony, it was George Bell of Toronto who won the award despite a final week in which Bell went 2-for-22 as his team folded like a tent.

And, in the end, Trammell’s career totals of 2,365 hits, 1,003 RBI, 1,231 runs scored and 412 doubles to go along with his .285 batting average haven’t been deemed Hall of Fame worthy in 11 years of eligibility. Not even close, really.

Unlike teammate Jack Morris, who continues to trend upward in voting but who is running out of time (one more year of eligibility before only the Veterans Committee can save him), Alan Trammell’s candidacy continues to be suppressed. There doesn’t appear to be any way that Trammell can come anywhere near the coveted 75 percent needed for election.

But they can’t take 1987 away from him, no more than they can take away Williams and DiMaggio’s 1941 or Gibson’s 1968. For what it’s worth.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Could NY Yankees’ Trio Shatter Record Books in 2013?

Just a month and change remains before the thrilling kickoff to spring training 2013.

As the thump and thwack and crunch of cleats scurry through our imaginations, questions remain regarding what the everyday lineup for the New York Yankees will look like this campaign.

One thing fans do know, however, is that Derek Jeter, Ichiro Suzuki and Robinson Cano will be swinging at the top of the Yankees order come April.

For Yankees fans, this fact fosters mixed feelings. These feelings really come to light when fans consider that both Jeter and Ichiro lead an aging Yankees fleet, and also how Cano has not yet signed an extension.  

Blend this uncertainty with star outfielder and leadoff specialist Michael Bourn still lingering on the free-agent market, and many Yankees fans have cause for concern.  

But through this tunnel of uncertainty lies an exciting silver lining: The Pinstripes have the opportunity to bust team record books wide open this season.

Should Jeter, Ichiro and Cano each earn 200 hits this year, then this trifecta would be the first in Yankees’ history to achieve that feat.

Per MLB.com, it would also make this the 12th set of major league teammates since 1900 to do it—the fourth in the post-World War II era. 

Only the 1929 Philadelphia Phillies and 1937 Detroit Tigers have had four hitters on the same team to get 200 hits in one season.

Now, in an era of cynicism, it is easy to point to Jeter’s and Ichiro’s ages and say there is not a shot in hell this will happen. To those who support this thinking, saying “Maybe if Jeter and Ichiro were younger…”—you certainly pose a solid argument.

But it is not beyond the realm of possibility that Jeter, Ichiro and Cano achieve 200 hits in 2013 when fans ponder the following points.

While Jeter, Ichiro and Cano are not spring chickens, this outfit has shown incredible durability, especially of late. For example, last year these three men missed a total of four regular-season games—combined.

And while Ichiro is 39 and coming off a down year in 2012, he still raked in 178 hits in 162 ball games.

Perhaps a full year in pinstripes, surrounded with much better talent ( more than the Seattle Mariners) will help Ichiro get those 22 big hits required for 200.

Jeter will turn 39 this June. He is fresh from a terrific year in which he batted .316 with a nearly career-high 216 hits (he had 219 hits in 1999). Jeter also had 15 home runs and 58 RBI to his credit.

Jeter is coming off a tough ankle injury that occurred during last postseason, and some wonder if he will fully recover.

However, as per Howie Rumberg of the Associated Press, Jeter will be ready for Opening Day, and he said the following:

I feel good. It was tough first five, six weeks where you sit on your couch with your feet elevated, but now I feel as though I’m moving around pretty good. I think I’m right where I need to be.

This leaves Cano, who is in the final year of his current contract.

Cano, 30, is coming off a solid 2012, in which he batted .313 with 196 hits, 33 homers and 94 RBI in 161 regular-season games.

Barring injury or shocking trade, fans can bet Cano will be extra-motivated to have a monster year so he can get a huge payday (wherever he lands the following season).

Adding beef to this argument is the fact Jeter, Ichiro and Cano have all shared 200-hit campaigns with teammates in the past.

Jeter paired with Bernie Williams to do this in 1999 and again with Cano in 2009. Ichiro paired with Bret Boone in 2001 to do the same (per MLB.com).

The only other teammates in Yankees’ history to pair for 200 hits apiece are Earle Combs and Lou Gehrig (1927), Gehrig and Joe DiMaggio (1936/37), and Alfonso Soriano and Bernie Williams (2002).

This is some pretty impressive company.   

Even if two of three of the aforesaid got 200 hits each, they would join just 66 other pairs of big league players since 1900 to do this (also per MLB.com).

Now, realistically speaking, will it take a perfect storm for Jeter, Ichiro and Cano to become the first trio in Yankees’ history to bust the 200-hit record? Yes. To do this, these men will have to stay healthy, and they will have to slam the accelerator from the get-go and stay on it all season.  

This may sound far-fetched to the cynic.

But for three guys who have had unworldly careers already, this would make for one memorable nugget to add to resumes already overloaded with achievements.  

Even cooler, I could not imagine a better experience (besides winning the World Series) than to be a fan that gets to watch Jeter and Ichiro approach the ends of their careers in style.

For this thought alone, it is worth watching Yankees baseball in 2013. 

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


7 MLB Records That Will Change Hands in 2013

The 2013 MLB season will provide plenty of day-to-day excitement, but we shouldn’t forget about the teams and individuals who will gradually approach records as the summer wears on.

Several pursuits attest more to loyalty than skill. Challengers to the following franchise records, for example, have reached free agency multiple times during their careers, only to re-sign with familiar clubs.

Changes in the sport itself—expanded postseason format, reorganization of both leagues and increased revenue through television deals—help in other instances.

Whatever the case, seven long-standing records are about to fall.

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Rare 1948 Color Video of Satchel Paige Found on Movie Director’s Estate

For many baseball fans, catching a glimpse of diamond heroes creates happy memories that are unshakable from the human psyche.

Mine being the time I met Atlanta Braves hurler Steve Avery, I can only imagine what baseball fans fans are feeling after seeing recently released and rare video of pitching legend Satchel Paige on the hill in 1948.  

According to NESN writer Zach Stoloff, members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ Film Archive discovered a 16mm video of Paige pitching in a 1948 exhibition game. This film, found on the estate of filmmaker Richard Brooks, was taken at a minor league field in Los Angeles.

You can watch the video below. 

While footage of Paige in this film was in the twilight of his career, I wonder how great this must be for older generations (who were kids then) to see actual color footage of one of the most iconic hurlers of that time.

Even for regular baseball fans, it has to be pretty neat.

I had always heard of Satchel Paige. One of the first baseball books I ever read as a kid had a picture of the legend in his Kansas City Monarch’s uniform.

But to see color video of Paige is truly surreal. It brings this seemingly mythological being to real-life.

A tall, lanky fireballer, Paige barnstormed the western world, entertaining fans for nearly 40 years with batter-baffling pitches…pitches he often gave nicknames to. 

According to Cool Papa Bell, Paige “made a living by throwing the ball to a spot over the plate the size of a matchbook.”

A five-time Negro League All-Star and a two-time MLB All-Star, Paige was a colorful comic who trumped racism and segregation to earn a 232-89 career record.

Per Paige’s Baseball Hall of Fame Bio, he is the oldest player to make his Major League debut at age 42. This occurred with the Indians in 1948, the same year Cleveland won the World Series.

It was also the same year this historic video was filmed.  

Join Mongoose Morisette on BBSN!

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


3 Small Fixes That Could Make a Big Difference in Baseball Hall of Fame Voting

Hall of Fame season is fast descending upon us. The ballot for the 2013 was announced Wednesday, and writers are already mobilizing to build support for voting movements and ideologies.

I think most people can agree that the Hall of Fame is facing several issues, both in this election and the upcoming ones, and people are always determined to come up with solutions to the problems. Ideas like letting the players and managers vote, introducing a limit on ballots a player can appear on and banning steroid users get thrown out with alarming frequency at this time of year. 

So many of these fixes aren’t worth the trouble, though. The players and managers have a horrible track record in recognizing greatness in fellow players, whether it be All-Star Game backups or Gold Glove award winners. Limiting a player ignores the many deserving players who, for one reason or another, haven’t gone in on the first ballot. Banning steroids users ignores the long history of cheaters already enshrined.

In truth, the real fixes Cooperstown needs are much simpler.

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Detroit Tigers: Prior to Jim Leyland, They Weren’t Relevant

They each took their turns, none lasting more than three years, sometimes less than a full season. Each had, in his own mind, a fantasy that he could be the man who would bring relevance back to baseball in Detroit.

George “Sparky” Anderson left the Tigers after the 1995 season, the organization a shambles and the talent as thin as onion skin. Sparky wasn’t getting any help from the scouting guys as he steered the Tigers through the first half of the 1990s before retiring. The decision makers kept rolling the dice on draft day and those dice kept coming up snake eyes. By ’95, the Tigers’ farm system was bereft of Grade A, big league talent.

So it was for the 10 years after Sparky left that the Tigers shuffled managers in and out of town. There was a revolving door at Metro Airport for the baseball skippers.

Sparky managed in Detroit for almost 17 full seasons. He was Detroit baseball every bit as those named Whitaker, Trammell, Gibson, Morris and Parrish.

But after 1995, Sparky was gone and the brass upstairs had a devil of a time finding a suitable replacement. It wasn’t ever an easy task leading the big league impostors that management let wear Tigers uniforms in those days, but ultimately you’re judged on wins and losses, and Tigers managers post-Sparky had a lot more losses.

Finding a replacement for Sparky as manager was Randy Smith’s first task after being named general manager in December 1995. At his introductory presser, I asked Smith cold: did the next Tigers manager need to have big league experience?

Smith, tanned and looking very much the California from where he came, pursed his lips and paused.

“No,” he said, drawing the word out. “I wouldn’t necessarily say that’s a prerequisite.”

It wasn’t. Smith hired Buddy Bell, a decent ballplayer in his day, but with zero, zilch, nada big league managing experience.

Bell’s first season as Tigers manager was a disaster. Bedeviled by the shockingly bad pitchers he was provided, Bell led the Tigers to a 53-109 record in 1996. The team ERA was 6.38. It’s amazing the Tigers won even 53 games.

Bell lasted until the end of August, 1998. One of those hurried press conferences was called, where it was revealed that Bell had been given the ziggy—that Detroit word for coaches being fired—and that one of his coaches, Larry Parrish, was being elevated to manager.

Parrish was another decent big league ballplayer who had zero, zilch, nada managing experience at the major league level. But Parrish would be manager, saddled with that caveat title of “interim,” sports speak for “until we find someone better.”

The Tigers didn’t find anyone better, apparently, because Parrish was asked to come back and manage for 1999.

After an underwhelming year, the Tigers decided they needed to find someone better after all, and dumped Parrish to bring in former Milwaukee skipper Phil Garner.

Garner’s nickname from his playing days with the Oakland A’s and Pittsburgh Pirates was “Scrap Iron,” for his gritty play and tendency to play with his uniform dirty all the time.

Garner had done an OK job in Milwaukee, but he was hardly a blue chip prospect when he arrived in Detroit in 2000, the first year of Comerica Park.

Garner lasted two seasons and the first week of a third, when the new team president decided to sack his GM and manager on the same day.

The president, Dave Dombrowski, hired just five months earlier, gave both GM Smith and manager Garner the ziggy at the same time, booting them both out the door with the Tigers drowning in mediocrity.

Dombrowski named bench coach Luis Pujols the new (interim) manager. The Tigers were going backwards, it seemed. Pujols not only had no previous big league managing experience, he hadn’t even been a decent player.

Pujols finished an excruciating 55-106 season before Dombrowski had seen enough and turned a legendary player into a sacrificial lamb.

Dombrowski canned Pujols and turned the keys of his Edsel over to Alan Trammell, who had the requisite NONE next to the line that said Previous Big League Managing Experience.

But at least Trammell had been a good player.

Alan Trammell had no chance of winning with the sorry excuse for a roster that he had been provided. His hiring, and subsequent naming of Kirk Gibson as bench coach, was a public relations stunt, and no more—designed to attempt to distract the fans from the disgraceful baseball being played.

Trammell lasted three seasons, the first of which was 2003’s 43-119 debacle.

When I asked Randy Smith back in 1995 if previous big league managing experience was crucial to becoming Tigers skipper, I had no idea that the answer would be no for the next decade.

After Sparky hung up his spikes and put away his pipe in 1995, the Tigers went from Buddy Bell to Larry Parrish to Phil Garner to Luis Pujols to Alan Trammell. The Not-So-Fab Five.

Prior to Jim Leyland’s arrival seven years ago, Tigers baseball was wandering aimlessly, devoid of a personality, without relevance. They had fallen behind even the Pistons in terms of buzz.

Leyland, hired by Dombrowski in October 2005, definitely had big league managing experience, though his last taste of it was in 1999, when he did an admittedly poor job in his one year in Colorado.

Six years off rejuvenated him, and Leyland’s relationship with Dombrowski (they won a World Series together in Florida in 1997) didn’t hurt, either. So Leyland took the job, a job which had been a graveyard for managers since 1995.

In the Jim Leyland Era, the Tigers have won two division titles, appeared in three postseasons, and won two league pennants. Yet his approval rating seems to bob around the 50 percent mark; you either love him or you hate him.

That’s the price of relevance. The only worse thing than being talked about is not being talked about, a noted wordsmith once said. If you took the fans’ venom for the Not-So-Fab Five and combined it, it still wouldn’t equal that which is heaped on Leyland on a daily basis.

The price of relevance.

Whether you like him or not, Leyland will be back, managing the Tigers in 2013. It will be his eighth year at the helm in Detroit. Only Sparky Anderson and Hughie Jennings have managed the Tigers longer than that in franchise history.

Leyland hasn’t delivered a World Series championship yet, but people are talking about the Tigers like never before. Certainly more than they talked about them in the decade prior to his hiring.

The Tigers are relevant, and have been since 2006. So do with that what you will.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Major League Baseball: Sportvision and the Future of Sabermetrics

During the 1970s and 1980s, Bill James revolutionized baseball through his collection of Baseball Abstracts.  His unique perspective of evaluating players and discovering their true impact on their teams’ chances of winning was the beginning of a movement that would shake the very foundation of the sport.      

Since the last Baseball Abstract was published in 1988, baseball sabermetrics have only continued to become increasingly popular and crucial to the ways franchises construct their teams.  They even developed a presence in pop culture through the release of the Michael Lewis’ best-selling novel, and the later Hollywood film, Moneyball.       

As sabermetrics have proved through the success of teams like the Oakland A’s to be effective in terms of evaluating the value of players, the precise statistics used have continued to evolve.  Over the last ten years, sabermetrics have moved from the days of Bill James’ Runs Created, Win Shares and Range factor statistics to even more complex formulas with more specific aims.

For example, the original Runs Created statistic developed James has now been superseded by Weighted Runs Created plus (wRC+), a new equation which compares a player,s On Base Plus Slugging (OPS) against the league average and then accounts for ballpark factors and run-scoring environments.  

While sabermetrics have continued to become increasingly refined and specific, all of these detailed new statistics still only evaluate results.  These advanced statistics such as Wins Above Replacement (WAR), Expected Fielding Independent Pitching (xFIP) and Skill Interactive ERA (SIERA), as effective as they are, are results-based.  They fail to answer the question of why these results occurred. 

Introduce Sportvision, a company whose technologically advanced cameras have been placed in Major League Baseball stadiums since 2006.  Most fans probably already know Sportvision from the K-Zone cameras featured prominently by TBS and Fox this postseason.  While Sportvision cameras might be enhancing the fan experience, their real value lies in the data they collect for teams to analyze. 

Sportvision has developed services called Pitch F/X and Hit F/X, which track and record data from every single Major League Baseball game.  For example, Pitch F/X tracks the velocity, horizontal movement, vertical movement and location of each pitch thrown.  This data allows teams to analyze which pitch was most effective for a given pitcher and why that pitch was effective.  A team could also analyze the value of velocity compared to location or movement. 

Hit F/X takes a similar approach in analyzing batters.  Instead of focusing on the results of each at bat, Hit F/X tracks the contact point, speed of the ball off the bat, elevation angle and field direction of each batted ball.     

The new technology developed by Sportvision has opened the door for an endless number of new ways to evaluate the effectiveness of players, as well as help teams develop their own players. Sportvision itself has recognized the value of their data in the creation of SCOUTrax, which uses the data from Pitch F/X and Hit F/X, as well as a third creation of theirs, Command F/X, to create heat maps and charts to better display the data to fans.   

For example, teams will be able to see the value in an added half inch of movement to a pitcher’s fastball compared to extra velocity.  Or the team will be able to see that although a particular hitter might not have had the best statistical year, he actually hit the ball particularly hard a high percentage of the time and should have fared better. 

As the Sportvision data continues to be analyzed further, look for the development of future sabermetrics that are completely process-driven.  Websites such as www.fangraphs.com have already started developing these types of statistics using Pitch F/X, such as Pitch Type Linear Weights, which attempts to determine a pitcher’s run expectancy per a given type of pitch. 

Yet the data from Sportvision is still in its youthful stages and needs to be further refined.  For example cameras in certain stadiums may read pitcher’s velocity or movement slightly differently, thus altering the way the data matches up.  This issue might only create minor variances, but it is essential that it be fixed in the near future so a totally uniform data set can be collected.  

Despite these minor deficiencies, Sportvision still holds the potential to greatly affect the way coaches, player personnel directors and baseball operations professionals develop players as their careers progress.  As sabermetrics continue to evolve and become more refined, expect the data collected from Pitch F/X and Hit F/X to be a central focus and have a profound impact on the game.   

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


2012 MLB Playoffs: Why This Year’s First Round Was Best Ever

October is always unpredictable. Several events happen every fall that completely defy what the statistics predict, proving that nothing is ever guaranteed and that the baseball playoffs can provide some heart-racing entertainment.

We’ve witnessed some great series and moments in the first round before: the Angels finally beating the Red Sox in 2009; road teams winning every game in the Texas-Tampa series in 2010; St. Louis shocking the Phillies in Philadelphia, and Nyjer Morgan’s walk off in Game 5 for the Brewers in Milwaukee.

This year, however, has been special.

So many improbable things have happened in the past week, it is almost impossible to believe. Here’s a list of these unbelievable moments which made this year’s group of division series the best in history.

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