The irrational grudges held by writers like Dan Shaughnessy are exactly the kind of rationale bSHI is designed to emulate. |
I would like to establish that in this article, I will be evaluating hitters only, since pitching evaluation is primarily subjective. I prefer to deal in hard data, so I'll leave evaluating pitchers for another time.
To start out, we have to ask ourselves, what do BBWAA members look for when evaluating a hitter? That question's actually pretty easy. There are precisely five criteria upon which Hall of Fame candidacy is evaluated: Awards, Classiness, Grit, Fear, and RBIs. Here's how I came to define each of these five parameters:
What Class! Completely by random, Walt Dropo is tied for most Classy among all eligible players, with a 100/100 Classiness rating. |
- Awards: Everyone knows that the number of awards a player has won over his career goes a long way to signifying how dominant they were within their own era. This one was pretty easy to calculate. I just added up the number of awards a player won in his career and divided that by the amount of years he played. Simple, but powerful.
- Classiness: A perennial analytic favorite of sportswriters, the beautiful thing about evaluating the Classiness of a player is you don't need any sort of large sample when trying drawing a conclusion. Did the player asked you how your wife was doing once in the Montreal visitor's clubhouse in July of 1984? Well that's enough confirmation for a solid plus-plus Classiness rating. Did the player want to fly home after a long road trip in 1998 so he declined your request for an interview? Scum. Well below average Classiness. See how easy it is to judge the character of another human being? Since I felt that I myself was not qualified to make individual decisions on players' Classiness ratings, I opted for the next best thing, assigning each player a random number from one to one-hundred for their rating.
- Grit: When I sat down months ago to begin the design of the bSHI system, the word "Grit" was the first thing I wrote when I put pencil to paper. Grit is a key factor into how BBWAA writers evaluate players, and it's easy to see why. A player's statistical contribution is all fine and dandy, but we all know what really matters is how he plays the game. Does he play with heart, with guts? Does he play an intelligent game? Does he sacrifice his body to make the play? Does he hustle all the way to first base, and then slide head first for no reason? These are all questions that can be answered with my proprietary new Grit statistic. As I said, the statistic I developed to evaluate Grit is proprietary, so here it is:
Pound that Cuervo you Gritty son-of-a-bitch! David Eckstein ranked first among eligible post-war hitters in Grit. |
HBP+SF+SH-GIDP+3B+200 = Grit
Tim Raines is mentioned multiple times during the author's discussion of the Fear statistic. |
- Fear: This is often the most common question asked by BBWAA types in their discussions of Hall candidacy. Sure, Tim Raines was one of the greatest base stealers of all time, but was he feared? Did the pitcher quake in his shoes and poop a little every time Tim Raines stepped into the batters box? Did the father, or father like figure, in your life take you to the ballpark to when Tim Raines came to town? Sure, Tim Raines was an excellent defensive outfielder, but did the batter mutter, "Damn! Damn it all to heck!" ever time he saw his just-struck'ed fly ball arching in a futile manner in Raines' direction? I could go on. The point is, Fear is a key criteria toward determining Hall worthiness, and I have developed another proprietary statistic to accurately quantify it. Here it is:
.5*BB+IBB = Fear
Abner Doubleday had no goddam idea what he was doing. |
- RBIs: Of course, I have to throw a bone to the sabernerds. I acknowledge that there is a significant contingent of voters that does not weight the above four categories heavily during their consideration of their Hall of Fame ballots. For this reason, I have included a statistic heavily correlated towards value, as seen from the perspective of the statistically inclined. RBI's is the perfect sabermetric stat, as it tracks very well how many runs scored while a player was batting. Or, you could say, how many runs the player created? That being said, RBI's isn't a perfect stat, as a player is credited with an RBI if they walk or are hit by a pitch with the bases loaded. Whoever the fuck invented RBIs, Abner Doubleday probably, must've been having icepick lobotomy or something. The stat is literally called Runs Batted In. You don't bat in a run if you don't hit the ball, dumbass! Anyway, it's a pretty good stat other than that one fucked up part.
Now, it's time to bring it all together. First, I need my population of eligible players. My sample came from all player in the Lahman database with 10 years of playing time, and over 2,000 at bats (this filtered out the pitchers, I hope). As all five statistics are measured on their own scales, I needed a way to standardize them. To do this, I used a scale much like the one used by stats like OPS+ (aside from the park factors and shit, ain't nobody got time for that). I took each of the statistics divided them by the amount of years played (except for Classiness, which isn't a counting stat) and then divided them by the average per year of the same statistic across the entire dataset. Confused? It looked a little something like this:
Grit+ = (Grit/Years)/ pop.mean(Grit/Years)
Genius. Now all statistics were measured in percentage above or below the population mean. This resulted in the (still proprietary) stats Awards+, Class+, Grit+, Fear+ and RBI+. I then took the mean of all five of these statistics relative to each player, and voila!, bSHI is born! (It stands for Batting Specific Hall Induction, in case you were wondering).
The final thing I needed to do was define the parameters for which I will determine who is in the Hall and who's not. For this, I came up with an novel idea, predicated on a thought: The Hall of Fame is doomed, due to its irreversible upwards trend of admission. I mean eventually, if they keep going the way it is, the Hall of Fame will become infinitely big, and then it'll be mathematically impossible to see the whole thing! My idea, instead, is to keep in the top two-hundred. Two hundo, no more, no less. Yes, that means someone gets kicked out ever time someone gets in. And wouldn't that be awesome! Imagine the satisfaction if your favorite childhood hero gets in, kicking out some antiquated golden-oldie from your rival's past. So those are the parameters. Two hundred hitters. No more, no less. Ladies and gentlemen, I present your new Hall of Fame, ranked by bSHI in descending order.
Yikes! Zounds! Gadzooks! Obama could be making an illuminati sign with one hand and legalizing abortion with the other, and generate less controversy than this list. But the real question is, how well did my formula emulate the decisions of the BBWAA? Well, of the 73 hitters with over 3,000 ABs elected by the BBWAA as players, 63 of them were also elected by the bSHI system. That's 86 percent! Pretty much the best you can get, in my opinion. Let's take a closer look at who's out, who's in, and who's on the cusp.
SNUBS:
- Rickey Henderson and Lou Brock
- Carlton Fisk
- Tony Perez
- Willie Keeler, Harmon Killebrew, Harry Heilmann, Willie McCovey, Rabbit Maranville and Nap Lajoie.
CURRENT PLAYERS:
Due to the top 200 nature of the bSHI system, several current players would have already been elected. Of course, they're place in the Hall isn't guaranteed, as they could always start sucking and fall back below the threshold. The players below are presented in order of their bSHI scores.
- Albert Pujols, Alex Rodriguez, Ichiro, Miguel Cabrera, Derek Jeter
- Mark Teixiera, Ryan Howard, Joe Mauer, David Ortiz, Chase Utley, Adrian Gonzalez
- Torii Hunter, David Wright, Matt Holliday, Shane Victorino, Carlos Beltran, Alfonso Soriano
- Jose Bautista
INTRIGUING PICKS
Hmmm... Intriguing!
Regardless of the actual results, I think we can all agree that the bSHI is probably the best future option for Hall of Fame voting. At least we wouldn't have to see anything like this ever again.
Data Links:
---Complete bSHI data--- ---HOF Limited data---