Bingorbirules wrote: ↑22 Sep 2025 12:54 pmNo worries rocko.rockondlouie wrote: ↑22 Sep 2025 12:48 pmYes it does indeed have some crazy defensive values, I've never been able to figure out how they value defense.rbirules wrote: ↑22 Sep 2025 12:39 pmFrom 2010 to 2015 these are the two best seasons by a Cardinals OF according to fangraphs WAR model, fWAR . . .rockondlouie wrote: ↑22 Sep 2025 11:51 am Who would you want in your OF/LIneup?
2015
J. Heyward
7.0 bWAR
13 HR
60 RBI's
.293 .359 .439 .797
OR
2010
M. Holliday
5.9 bWAR
28 HR
103 RBI
.312 .390 .532 .922
I know who I'd want and it isn't the guy w/the "higher" bWAR.
Holliday 2010 - 6.2 fWAR
Heyward 2015 - 5.6 fWAR
bWAR has some crazy defensive values sometimes, but for some reason it's still the more widely used WAR model (probably because ESPN carried it for a while, maybe they still do). I did a deep dive into Heyward's 2015 season a while back and showed as much (I think it was in comparison to another OF in 2015, Bautista maybe).
FYI, Zeile's 1993 season was worth 1.6 fWAR.![]()
(ESPN) probably why I (foolishly) keep using bWAR instead of fWAR as I just got use to going to BR.
About 90% of the time when I see a thread titled "so and so-s WAR in XXXX" I know it's going to a post about how "the WAR total doesn't make sense at all, especially when compared to this other player's WAR in XXXX, and can somebody explain this to me?" Then I look at it and they are inevitably using bWAR and I show the fWAR values and say "does that look closer to what you expected?" The answer is almost always "yes", sometimes it's still not quite what they were expecting but it's still closer. And usually the original WAR value in question had an outlier dWAR due to bWAR's use of DRS, or whatever they used prior to DRS, like in Ziele's case.
I just got to comfortable using BR, even though I almost always still look at fWAR too.