You calling Warner a liar?
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lhoss:
...Yes. Yes, I am.
I won't argue that James' essays aren't better, they are. They are more flavorful and easy to read but BP has far more writing and player profiles than the Handbook does.
LOL.
The point I was trying to make, was James in a more engaging writer, along with his great analysis. Fed is right, the BP probably have more text. There are comments on just about every player in the league and some that arent even in the league yet.
The BP guys lost me with the Between The Numbers book, which I was very open minded about and very excited to read when it came out. But I found myself muttering to myself and shaking my head for like 75% of it, because they take so many statistical leaps using so many fuzzy formulas in order to arrive at their points.
For example, in the very first chapter, about clutch hitting, the book chastises the reader for believing in this myth, then spends several pages explaining how they measure 'clutch' using made up stats with fuzzy formulas like BLOOP. The ultimately conclude that clutch hitting
does exist, with two list of recent vintage players showing that good, disciplined hitters like Mark Grace occupy one side, while generally not as good free swinging players like Tony Armas occupy the bad list. Then, after concluding that it does in fact exists, they wrap up the article by basically saying, well, the margins in the numbers are too slim, so we still think we're right, and you just wasted 15 minutes reading this and we will still make fun of you if you think clutch ability is real (plus, at one point they refer to Matt Lawton, Jason Kendall, and Tony Armas as "obscure players", something that always bugged me, because i'm quite certain anybody who likes baseball enough to buy a book full of in depth analysis of baseball, would instantly know those players as all three were All Stars and hardly "obscure". Grrr.)
Anyway, I really, really hate that fucking book. Something about the writing style is too smug for me. Can't make everyone happy, I guess.