I've brought this up to a few people before, including Swift and more recently Rabb and CrimsonCane, but I've long since thought about why OPS doesn't include SBs. Mind you, this is ignoring stuff like WAR and the more "hip" SABR numbers.
Similarly, CS would have to factor into it, but where. Logically, SB are bases a batter would get, so why not factor it into SLG and CS is basically negating a hit, so why not subtract from OBP.
So, that'd wind up being something like this:
[{H+BB+HBP}-CS]/{AB+BB+HBP})] + [(TB+SB)/AB]
Excuse the formatting, but you get the gist.
The perfect example to test it on, in my opinion, is Rickey Henderson
Unadjusted career OPS:
.279/.401/.419 - .810 OPS
Now, everyone knows you could "split Rickey in half and have two HOFers" (excuse the paraphrasing) but that .810 OPS really isn't indicative on quick glance of what he's done.
"adujusted":
.279/.377/.547 - .924 OPS
Now that's more reasonable for an easy HOFer like Henderson, aesthetically.
So, what about this year? What kind of impact does it have here?
Well, this year's OPS leaders were:
Hamilton
Cabrera
Votto
Pujols
Bautista
Konerko
Carlos Gonzalez
Tulowitzki
Matt Holliday
Jayson Werth
Now, if we use this "OPSB", if you will, not much changes... Votto takes the lead and the others more or less shake up the top 10, unsurprising... But Some names do make some big jumps. Hanley's .835 OPS suddenly turns into a .935 and puts him 13th, Carl Crawford takes a similar jump to being a top 10 player and Shin-Soo Choo falls in 12th.
Anywho, just something I found interesting
Similarly, CS would have to factor into it, but where. Logically, SB are bases a batter would get, so why not factor it into SLG and CS is basically negating a hit, so why not subtract from OBP.
So, that'd wind up being something like this:
[{H+BB+HBP}-CS]/{AB+BB+HBP})] + [(TB+SB)/AB]
Excuse the formatting, but you get the gist.
The perfect example to test it on, in my opinion, is Rickey Henderson
Unadjusted career OPS:
.279/.401/.419 - .810 OPS
Now, everyone knows you could "split Rickey in half and have two HOFers" (excuse the paraphrasing) but that .810 OPS really isn't indicative on quick glance of what he's done.
"adujusted":
.279/.377/.547 - .924 OPS
Now that's more reasonable for an easy HOFer like Henderson, aesthetically.
So, what about this year? What kind of impact does it have here?
Well, this year's OPS leaders were:
Hamilton
Cabrera
Votto
Pujols
Bautista
Konerko
Carlos Gonzalez
Tulowitzki
Matt Holliday
Jayson Werth
Now, if we use this "OPSB", if you will, not much changes... Votto takes the lead and the others more or less shake up the top 10, unsurprising... But Some names do make some big jumps. Hanley's .835 OPS suddenly turns into a .935 and puts him 13th, Carl Crawford takes a similar jump to being a top 10 player and Shin-Soo Choo falls in 12th.
Anywho, just something I found interesting
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