51 thoughts on “December 16, 2013: We Sing it Out Loud, We Sing it Out Loud”
There seems to be a problem with mlb.com's winter baseball site this morning, and I can't get at the box scores or recaps. I'll keep trying and will get to it if it clears up at a time when I have time to work on it.
I found a page at espn.com that gives box scores, but no recaps. I'll do the best I can.
The mlb.com page seems to be back now.
Looks like spooky might have a little difficulty adapting his game to the bigscreen, like Clue.
In every shot of Levy in the stands yesterday, he looked extremely displeased.
I don't like it as of 7:16 EST on Monday, December 16th. I will now spend the next four hours reading about possible replacements and make judgement later.
BRING BACK 'ARRY!
Stop it.
This is more than 5 years old, but with minor changes could be very applicable.
What an embarrassing state of affairs for what's supposed to be a museum, not a gentleman's club.
My favorite part of the HoF trip I took this summer was the museum aspect - all the various bats, balls, gloves, cleats, hats, scorecards, etc from great moments in baseball history. The room with the plaques was the lamest part.
I think part of it is just bad luck. You could see this coming a mile away--when these retirements were happening 5-6 years ago, it was obvious there would be a glut of qualified candidates, but a lot of the "small Hall" voters artificially tie themselves to voting for very few candidates per year.
I generally feel like I'm on the "small Hall" side of things, but I could even see a case for voting 9-11 guys on the current ballot into the Hall and seeing the standards for the Hall rise as a result.
so, his credentials are that he's been "predicting" outcomes for 30 years, and last year was almost right?
And:
I think the acid test of prognostication performance lies in guessing the fate of men who finish within 10% either way of being elected (i.e., who receive between 65-85% of the vote). Among such candidates, I have gone 50-12 (.806) in correctly predicting who would or would not make it over the years.
and what would be the percent correctly predicted if one simply predicted "no" on all 62 of those cases?
Here are the predictions for the 2012 election. Tallying that year and 2013 has him at 6-0. Predicting no would be 5-1.
He does include percentages in his predictions.
2012:
Dude
Predicted
Actual
Larkin
79
86.4
Morris
66
66.7
Bagwell
51
56.0
Smith
51
50.6
Raines
47
48.7
Trammell
26
36.8
Martinez
40
36.5
Got the 'yes' right on Larkin, but quite low on the percentage predicted. Even worse prediction on Trammell.
2013:
Dude
Predicted
Actual
Biggio
72
68.2
Morris
63
67.7
Piazza
58
59.6
Bagwell
56
57.8
Raines
46
52.2
Smith
45
47.8
Clemens
44
37.6
Schilling
41
38.8
Bonds
35
36.2
Martinez
31
35.9
Trammell
30
33.6
6.4 off on Clemens and 6.2 off on Raines.
It would be nice if there was a historical record to compare, but this is the best I have.
point predictions on the percentages are pretty ambitious. I would also be more impressed if he were getting really close on the first-timers, since anyone with a ballot history has lots of public information available about likely vote shares (last year's vote share certainly strongly predicts this year's; and having multiple years of data surely provides the ability to predict even more accurately).
But my generic point is confirmed by sean's quick-and-dirty. Getting one more "right" over the no-information prediction of zero elected is not all that impressive. My prediction (see what I did there) is that a lot of us could have duplicated his prediction of ins/outs.
still, these kinds of things are fun to mess around with over a hot stove.
I'd also add that I'd really like to see a bit more about how he determines who goes in his "acid test". Post-hoc observation of which guys fell within +/- 10 percent of the threshold? Or guys whom he predicted would fall within that range?
the reporting on his "method" leaves a bit to be desired, but I guess that's not all that surprising, given that he's selling his "expertise" to the media.
The way Deane does his analysis is to look at how many votes are freed up by a previous year’s election – Roberto Alomar and Bert Blyleven were elected in 2010 – and then estimating how that might impact the candidates in-waiting.
Voters get to check up to 10 names on the ballot. How many ballots, on average, are saturated? My guess is very, very few (the average ballot has 6.6 votes).
Or guys whom he predicted would fall within that range?
We can figure that out. He predicted Morris would have 63% but he got 67%. For the 2013 election, he states his record as 48-12. This year he states his record as 50-12. Assuming he's been consistent, his record is on players that received +/- 10%.
The ballots are not technically saturated, but many voters have self-imposed limitations on how many votes they are willing to cast, just like some voters will basically never vote for a player on the first ballot.
The worst thing for the Hall of Fame is for too few or no people to be elected. Without all that free press, the Hall loses a lot of traffic. If the trend is for less and less players to be elected, I wouldn't be surprised to see the methods for voting changed to encourage more Hall of Famers.
like, say, a new committee to select veterans from the Expansion Era! They should totally do that.
I was reading up on the protests in Brazil during the Confederations Cup and now I'm really interested in the history of South American dictatorships in the 20th Century. Just look at this graphic!
Click to embiggen
Does anyone by chance know of a decent overview of the region as a whole?
Diaz - Mexico
Cabrera - Guatemala
Varga - Brazil
Trujillo - DR
Jimenez - Venezuela
Pinilla - Colombia
Matiauda - Paraguay
Duvalier - Haiti
Somoza - Nicaragua
Suarez - Bolivia
Arocena - Uruguay
(Pinochet) Ugarte - Chile
Videla - Argentina
Montt - Guatemala
Noriega - Panama
No Pinochet?
I wasn't bothering to type out full names, so I just took the last word on each line and the country. Pinochet's full name is Augusto José Ramón Pinochet Ugarte. I just got going too fast and didn't register that the index said "Pinochet Ugarte". I saw two words and wrote the second one down blindly.
The 70s were a great decade for dictatorships.
Someone forgot to invite Columbia to that party.
Edit: and Venezuela.
There's a very lonely Movie Day post up, if anyone saw anything.
I know I shouldn't be surprised, but I just got emails with photos pasted into word documents and sent as attachments instead of the photos themselves.
Apparently because the person doing my job before me told her to do it that way. Of course, there's a much faster way to do things that my previous counterpart didn't bother to learn.
Nope, we're back to the sender being a moron too.
I like that you at least gave the sender the benefit of the doubt, though.
Rudolph the Red-nosed Reindeer has a baseball-reference page. This was only slightly amusing until I got to Rudolph's similarity scores and saw who was 10th.
Well done all around.
Yep- I particularly enjoyed the stat line from his 2008 season.
I've never hunted deer, but 375 pounds seems huge. And is 5-3 to the top of his skull, his ears or his antlers?
Nevermind about the weight. According to Wiki, reindeer males are between 350 and 400 lbs, so Rudy is right in the middle.
I'm assuming to the withers, like with a horse. [which would make him freakishly tall for a reindeer]
Wiki describes shoulder height and the range tops out at 59 inches (4-11) so definitely taller than the normal range.
He must be the Cal Ripken, Jr. of reindeer shortstops build-wise.
Got my copy of Gravity's Rainbow today. I forgot how big that book is.
I don't think I'm gonna get it read anytime soon, unfortunately. I have to return all my library books here before I go home for Christmas.
Maybe DG will add it to his WGOM Book Exchangef, and you can borrow it from him?
Get your minds out of the gutter, they are geoducks.
There seems to be a problem with mlb.com's winter baseball site this morning, and I can't get at the box scores or recaps. I'll keep trying and will get to it if it clears up at a time when I have time to work on it.
I found a page at espn.com that gives box scores, but no recaps. I'll do the best I can.
The mlb.com page seems to be back now.
Looks like spooky might have a little difficulty adapting his game to the bigscreen, like Clue.
I called this yesterday.
http://prosoccertalk.nbcsports.com/2013/12/16/spurs-in-hunt-for-new-boss-after-sacking-andre-villas-boas/
In every shot of Levy in the stands yesterday, he looked extremely displeased.
I don't like it as of 7:16 EST on Monday, December 16th. I will now spend the next four hours reading about possible replacements and make judgement later.
BRING BACK 'ARRY!
Stop it.
This is more than 5 years old, but with minor changes could be very applicable.
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VzvtpzuCVtk
(Language warning)
The guy that correctly predicted no one being elected to the Hall of Fame last year released his predictions for this year. Conclusion: only one person makes it.
What an embarrassing state of affairs for what's supposed to be a museum, not a gentleman's club.
My favorite part of the HoF trip I took this summer was the museum aspect - all the various bats, balls, gloves, cleats, hats, scorecards, etc from great moments in baseball history. The room with the plaques was the lamest part.
I think part of it is just bad luck. You could see this coming a mile away--when these retirements were happening 5-6 years ago, it was obvious there would be a glut of qualified candidates, but a lot of the "small Hall" voters artificially tie themselves to voting for very few candidates per year.
I generally feel like I'm on the "small Hall" side of things, but I could even see a case for voting 9-11 guys on the current ballot into the Hall and seeing the standards for the Hall rise as a result.
so, his credentials are that he's been "predicting" outcomes for 30 years, and last year was almost right?
And:
and what would be the percent correctly predicted if one simply predicted "no" on all 62 of those cases?
Here are the predictions for the 2012 election. Tallying that year and 2013 has him at 6-0. Predicting no would be 5-1.
He does include percentages in his predictions.
2012:
Got the 'yes' right on Larkin, but quite low on the percentage predicted. Even worse prediction on Trammell.
2013:
6.4 off on Clemens and 6.2 off on Raines.
It would be nice if there was a historical record to compare, but this is the best I have.
point predictions on the percentages are pretty ambitious. I would also be more impressed if he were getting really close on the first-timers, since anyone with a ballot history has lots of public information available about likely vote shares (last year's vote share certainly strongly predicts this year's; and having multiple years of data surely provides the ability to predict even more accurately).
But my generic point is confirmed by sean's quick-and-dirty. Getting one more "right" over the no-information prediction of zero elected is not all that impressive. My prediction (see what I did there) is that a lot of us could have duplicated his prediction of ins/outs.
still, these kinds of things are fun to mess around with over a hot stove.
I'd also add that I'd really like to see a bit more about how he determines who goes in his "acid test". Post-hoc observation of which guys fell within +/- 10 percent of the threshold? Or guys whom he predicted would fall within that range?
the reporting on his "method" leaves a bit to be desired, but I guess that's not all that surprising, given that he's selling his "expertise" to the media.
Voters get to check up to 10 names on the ballot. How many ballots, on average, are saturated? My guess is very, very few (the average ballot has 6.6 votes).
We can figure that out. He predicted Morris would have 63% but he got 67%. For the 2013 election, he states his record as 48-12. This year he states his record as 50-12. Assuming he's been consistent, his record is on players that received +/- 10%.
The ballots are not technically saturated, but many voters have self-imposed limitations on how many votes they are willing to cast, just like some voters will basically never vote for a player on the first ballot.
The worst thing for the Hall of Fame is for too few or no people to be elected. Without all that free press, the Hall loses a lot of traffic. If the trend is for less and less players to be elected, I wouldn't be surprised to see the methods for voting changed to encourage more Hall of Famers.
like, say, a new committee to select veterans from the Expansion Era! They should totally do that.
I was reading up on the protests in Brazil during the Confederations Cup and now I'm really interested in the history of South American dictatorships in the 20th Century. Just look at this graphic!
Click to embiggen
Does anyone by chance know of a decent overview of the region as a whole?
This one looks promising: Latin American Dictators of the 20th Century
ToC:
Diaz - Mexico
Cabrera - Guatemala
Varga - Brazil
Trujillo - DR
Jimenez - Venezuela
Pinilla - Colombia
Matiauda - Paraguay
Duvalier - Haiti
Somoza - Nicaragua
Suarez - Bolivia
Arocena - Uruguay
(Pinochet) Ugarte - Chile
Videla - Argentina
Montt - Guatemala
Noriega - Panama
No Pinochet?
I wasn't bothering to type out full names, so I just took the last word on each line and the country. Pinochet's full name is Augusto José Ramón Pinochet Ugarte. I just got going too fast and didn't register that the index said "Pinochet Ugarte". I saw two words and wrote the second one down blindly.
The 70s were a great decade for dictatorships.
Someone forgot to invite Columbia to that party.
Edit: and Venezuela.
The Politics of Latin American Development, 2nd ed
There's a very lonely Movie Day post up, if anyone saw anything.
I know I shouldn't be surprised, but I just got emails with photos pasted into word documents and sent as attachments instead of the photos themselves.
Apparently because the person doing my job before me told her to do it that way. Of course, there's a much faster way to do things that my previous counterpart didn't bother to learn.
Nope, we're back to the sender being a moron too.
I like that you at least gave the sender the benefit of the doubt, though.
Is it baseball season yet?
they're starting to get ready for it:
Jeremy Guthrie finds throwing partner on Twitter
i thought this was a pretty cool story, actually.
Rudolph the Red-nosed Reindeer has a baseball-reference page. This was only slightly amusing until I got to Rudolph's similarity scores and saw who was 10th.
Well done all around.
Yep- I particularly enjoyed the stat line from his 2008 season.
I've never hunted deer, but 375 pounds seems huge. And is 5-3 to the top of his skull, his ears or his antlers?
Nevermind about the weight. According to Wiki, reindeer males are between 350 and 400 lbs, so Rudy is right in the middle.
I'm assuming to the withers, like with a horse. [which would make him freakishly tall for a reindeer]
Wiki describes shoulder height and the range tops out at 59 inches (4-11) so definitely taller than the normal range.
He must be the Cal Ripken, Jr. of reindeer shortstops build-wise.
Got my copy of Gravity's Rainbow today. I forgot how big that book is.
I don't think I'm gonna get it read anytime soon, unfortunately. I have to return all my library books here before I go home for Christmas.
Maybe DG will add it to his WGOM Book Exchangef, and you can borrow it from him?
Get your minds out of the gutter, they are geoducks.