The New Bill James Historical Baseball Abstract
by Bill James
Reviewed by Paul Wysard
How does one describe Bill James? How do we evaluate the
evaluator? He cringes when the term "statistical guru" is applied to
him. He is too informal to be called a "baseball intellectual" and he
is yet young enough not to be a "diamond sage." He teaches
and informs, but is also constantly learning and experimenting. Let's
leave it at "master analyst," although his new contribution
could well qualify him for some other, loftier title. Yes, the book is
that good. To many of us who follow and write about baseball, it
has to be the most important work in the field in recent memory.
The first of three parts is an updated version of "The Game,"
reviewed by decade from the 1870s. Almost all of this appeared in
his first, 1985 Abstract, but he has added examinations of the 1980s and
1990s. The standard recipe suggests all-star teams for
each decade, lists statistical leaders in both familiar and off-beat
categories, and fills us in on all manner of "bests" and "worsts."
We also learn about the pastime's good guys and curmudgeons; its
boozers, abusers and crooks. His spouse, Susan McCarthy,
chips in with amiable opinions on the handsomest and ugliest players and
the see-saw evolution of the uniforms. It was fun to
re-visit this material after 15 years.
The last part of the book consists of names and numbers related to
his recent and primary tool used in evaluating players over
time - His "Win Shares" system. This is complicated stuff, essentially
involving: 1. The number of runs a team scores above the
league season average, "Marginal Runs Scored." 2. The number of runs
allowed under the league season average, "Marginal Runs
Saved." 3. These run differentials translated into games Won.
And, finally, 4. The amount of Shares of these Wins (1/3) earned
by individual players through Runs Created (another formula) and Runs
Saved (recognizing pitching and defense). Within these
numerical gymnastics, he tries to provide some wiggle room for
intangibles. My first thought in that regard was: How in the world do
we quantify the flip-toss assist to the plate by Derek Jeter in the 2001
AL playoffs? And other athletic, intelligent, instinctive moves,
recalled over the past century. The Jeter play was made after
publication, but James hints that sort of thing is considered. There is
also a commendable concern about fairness - to, for example, hitters in
pitchers' eras, fine players on poor teams, relievers in these
times of specialization. It probably won't surprise you to learn that
the man with the most Career Win Shares is Babe Ruth, with
758. Beyond that, I won't go, instead deferring to James himself to
explain all of this to you in a related book just out - Win Shares,
from STATS, Inc.
The heart and soul of this remarkable piece of work is the 600-page
Part 2 - Player Ratings. After enumerating Win Shares,
James presents his rankings of the 100 best players at each position.
This may appear to be fairly routine, with Name, Years,
Teams, Average, etc., but it is far more than that. There are comments
on all the players, including, when applicable, heroics,
foibles, special stats, popularity(or lack thereof), personality, human
kindness, and even debauchery and criminal activity.
Another attractive aspect is the use of a given player profile as a
springboard to discussion of a broader issue of interest to the
author. To cite just a few of these, with Ernie Lombardi we revisit
athletic decline, loss of identity, and personal pain; in Hal Chase,
it is a story of charm and slime; through Arky Vaughan we look at
offense vs. defense at shortstop; with Augie Galan a sidebar
entitled "Great Seasons by Leftfielders;" through Wille Davis, we look
at hitting in a pitchers' park during a pitchers' era; and from
Bucky Walters, connections to pitching "families," such as "Blow 'em
away Lefties"(Grove and Randy Johnson), "Easy Motion
Lefties"(Spahn and Glavine), "Right-handed Power Pitchers," some who
will give walks(Feller), and others who won't(Seaver).
Walters is in a "family" with Bob Lemon. All of the above barely
scratches the surface of a pleasant mass of interesting insights.
James' style is a blend of candor, sarcasm, humor, diffidence,
curiosity, and respect. It is also almost always reasonable. When
he believes the numbers are on his side, he can be adamant:
Norm Cash, 1961. The most famous fluke season
in history.
or
George Kelly was a good ballplayer. So
were(others). He was
not a Hall-of-Famer on the best day of his
life. What put him
(there) was a Veterans' Committee salted with
old teammates
. . .and General Manager.
The Kelly comment hearkens back to his earlier book, Whatever
Happened to the Hall of Fame, reviewed here a couple of
years ago. However, when the stats are closer or more nebulous, he will
leave decisions to the reader:
So if you want to argue it's Thornton over
Mayberry, you may
well be right.
And sometimes he admits he simply isn't sure:
The ranking of second basemen past spot 35 is
almost impossible. I've done the best I could, but there
are just a lot of players
who are the same.
Among current and very recent performers, James feels ready to rate
Piazza, Bagwell, Bonds, Henderson, Griffey, Gwynn,
Biggio, and Roberto Alomar within the top 10 at their positions. This
is flattering to the modern game, about which some old-timers
scoff. All of these particular choices make sense to this reviewer
except Biggio.
James is enamored with the Astro second baseman as to Win Shares, but I
don't see any pennant, World Series, MVP, or more
than the one "Black Ink" entry(James' own term for leading a league) -
NL steals in 1994. I just can't agree that the Houston hustler
is better than Ryne Sandberg, Charlie Gehringer, or Joe Gordon.
It was gratifying to see the #10 ratings for two very underrated
players: Darrell Evans at 3rd Base and Minnie Minoso in Left Field.
You'll remember the former as a 400-homer man in the '70s and '80s who
was a solid fielder at 3rd and later at 1st. Younger readers
may not be too familiar with the latter, an exciting player and
personality who was a rarity - the kind of slash hitter who could drive
in
100 or more runs with fewer than 20 homers, which he did three times.
It was also good to see honorable mention for Bob
Elliott(most RBI in the '40s), Charlie Keller(five powerful seasons),
and Bill Nicholson(underrated power hitter because the earlier War
Year of 1943 has been underrated).
Earlier players are rated and discussed. There's Anson and
Brouthers and Nichols from the 1800s, the Mathewsons, Cobbs, and
Lajoies from the first part of the 20th Century. This fan's interest
has always been centered on folks from the first twenty years of
my life, the '30s, '40s, and '50s. I followed them religiously and saw
many of them play. When I first picked up the book this past
January, I thought I'd take a month or so, read portions here and there
at leisure. No way; couldn't put it down. Just
as it seemed time to close it, who would show up but Andy Pafko, Tommy
Holmes, Don Newcombe, Sid Gordon, Granny Hamner,
Del Ennis, and Joe Adcock. The Hall-of-Famers are there too, of course,
but these other guys are as familiar as my Uncle Billy -
and they were good. To fellow fans and readers: Miss this book at your
loss and peril. To Bill James: Thanks for the memories.
February, 2002
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