How the heck did Tommy Edman earn 6.2 bWAR?

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ScotchMIrish
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Re: How the heck did Tommy Edman earn 6.2 bWAR?

Post by ScotchMIrish »

rockondlouie wrote: 19 Mar 2026 13:13 pm
ScotchMIrish wrote: 18 Mar 2026 10:42 am There is more nuance to the game of baseball than can be calculated by these sabermetrics stats. The top bWAR on the 1982 Cardinals:

Keith Hernandez (1B): 6.5

That's a world series championship team. Which of those players is not better than Edman in 2025?
1982 K. Hernandez
94 RBI's
.299 .397 .413 .810
Gold Glove (G.O.A.T. defensively at 1st base!)
MVP voting #17
4.6 bWAR

2022 T. Edman
57 RBI
32 SB's
.265 .324 .400 .725
6.2 bWAR

ON NO PLANET was 2022 T. Edman a superior player to 1982 K. Hernandez yet he's got +1.6 more bWAR? ::crazya::
Exactly.
Cardinals1964
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Re: How the heck did Tommy Edman earn 6.2 bWAR?

Post by Cardinals1964 »

Carp4Cy wrote: 19 Mar 2026 13:17 pm
Cardinals1964 wrote: 18 Mar 2026 12:57 pm
Melville wrote: 18 Mar 2026 09:15 am
Cardinals1964 wrote: 17 Mar 2026 23:40 pm
ClassicO wrote: 17 Mar 2026 21:28 pm
Melville wrote: 17 Mar 2026 19:50 pm
Cardinals4Life wrote: 17 Mar 2026 09:51 am
Carp4Cy wrote: 17 Mar 2026 09:32 am in 2022. 107 OPS+, no GG, only 57 RBIs, .324 OBP. .265 BA, career high of 111 SOs. Nothing eye popping in the stats line.
Probably because WAR is made up and is essentially pointless.
Absolutely.
Nothing but a short cut parlor game, which only those who do not understand the game place any credence in.
Smart people know better.
Do you even know how either fWAR or bWAR is calculated?
If so, explain how it’s a parlor game.
And for the umpteenth time, what is your best measure for a player’s overall value? RBIs! Ha ha ha
You have no clue. A smart person should know better than to make such an uninformed statement.
They don’t understand. I used to not understand. I used to think it was stupid. Then I decided to spend 30 minutes researching and it now makes perfect sense. It that simple.
I know "WAR" better than the fantasy baseball folks who created it.
I break down data and interpret it for a living
I know my client's businesses better than they do - because that is what I am paid to do.
Reality is, "WAR" is a reverse engineered scheme which is wildly inaccurate, extremely subjective, and should never be used to compare players or establish actual contribution value.
It is a toy for the lazy and uniformed who know little about the game
Would you rather have a 10 war player or a 1 war player?
That’s not the right question. Rather would you take a 6 WAR 1B with 120 RBIs or a 6 WAR SS with pedestrian hitting? Which is more likely to win a pennant for you?
That’s not the right question.
I’d rather have a high War SS and a High War 1B. The positions aren’t really comparable.
Your #3 Hitter, Hernandez, better have more RBI’s.
Edman had more HRs.
ClassicO
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Re: How the heck did Tommy Edman earn 6.2 bWAR?

Post by ClassicO »

Carp4Cy wrote: 19 Mar 2026 13:17 pm
Cardinals1964 wrote: 18 Mar 2026 12:57 pm
Melville wrote: 18 Mar 2026 09:15 am
Cardinals1964 wrote: 17 Mar 2026 23:40 pm
ClassicO wrote: 17 Mar 2026 21:28 pm
Melville wrote: 17 Mar 2026 19:50 pm
Cardinals4Life wrote: 17 Mar 2026 09:51 am
Carp4Cy wrote: 17 Mar 2026 09:32 am in 2022. 107 OPS+, no GG, only 57 RBIs, .324 OBP. .265 BA, career high of 111 SOs. Nothing eye popping in the stats line.
Probably because WAR is made up and is essentially pointless.
Absolutely.
Nothing but a short cut parlor game, which only those who do not understand the game place any credence in.
Smart people know better.
Do you even know how either fWAR or bWAR is calculated?
If so, explain how it’s a parlor game.
And for the umpteenth time, what is your best measure for a player’s overall value? RBIs! Ha ha ha
You have no clue. A smart person should know better than to make such an uninformed statement.
They don’t understand. I used to not understand. I used to think it was stupid. Then I decided to spend 30 minutes researching and it now makes perfect sense. It that simple.
I know "WAR" better than the fantasy baseball folks who created it.
I break down data and interpret it for a living
I know my client's businesses better than they do - because that is what I am paid to do.
Reality is, "WAR" is a reverse engineered scheme which is wildly inaccurate, extremely subjective, and should never be used to compare players or establish actual contribution value.
It is a toy for the lazy and uniformed who know little about the game
Would you rather have a 10 war player or a 1 war player?
That’s not the right question. Rather would you take a 6 WAR 1B with 120 RBIs or a 6 WAR SS with pedestrian hitting? Which is more likely to win a pennant for you?
This post brings to mind the line from My Cousin Vinny: “it’s a bullshort question.”
You can’t get a 6 WAR shortstop who has pedestrian hitting.
Case in point Winn last year - 3.5 WAR with a gold glove but he met the definition of “pedestrian hitting.”
He was 3.6 WAR in 2024 with much better hitting (104 wRC+ vs 91 in 2025).
Lindor was a 6.Z3 WAR player in 2024 when he had a 129 wRC+ with 30 HR, 103 RBI and played very good defense.
Last edited by ClassicO on 19 Mar 2026 18:48 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Cardinals1964
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Re: How the heck did Tommy Edman earn 6.2 bWAR?

Post by Cardinals1964 »

Carp4Cy wrote: 19 Mar 2026 17:18 pm
mattmitchl44 wrote: 19 Mar 2026 14:22 pm
Carp4Cy wrote: 19 Mar 2026 13:17 pm
Cardinals1964 wrote: 18 Mar 2026 12:57 pm
Melville wrote: 18 Mar 2026 09:15 am
Cardinals1964 wrote: 17 Mar 2026 23:40 pm
ClassicO wrote: 17 Mar 2026 21:28 pm
Melville wrote: 17 Mar 2026 19:50 pm
Cardinals4Life wrote: 17 Mar 2026 09:51 am
Carp4Cy wrote: 17 Mar 2026 09:32 am in 2022. 107 OPS+, no GG, only 57 RBIs, .324 OBP. .265 BA, career high of 111 SOs. Nothing eye popping in the stats line.
Probably because WAR is made up and is essentially pointless.
Absolutely.
Nothing but a short cut parlor game, which only those who do not understand the game place any credence in.
Smart people know better.
Do you even know how either fWAR or bWAR is calculated?
If so, explain how it’s a parlor game.
And for the umpteenth time, what is your best measure for a player’s overall value? RBIs! Ha ha ha
You have no clue. A smart person should know better than to make such an uninformed statement.
They don’t understand. I used to not understand. I used to think it was stupid. Then I decided to spend 30 minutes researching and it now makes perfect sense. It that simple.
I know "WAR" better than the fantasy baseball folks who created it.
I break down data and interpret it for a living
I know my client's businesses better than they do - because that is what I am paid to do.
Reality is, "WAR" is a reverse engineered scheme which is wildly inaccurate, extremely subjective, and should never be used to compare players or establish actual contribution value.
It is a toy for the lazy and uniformed who know little about the game
Would you rather have a 10 war player or a 1 war player?
That’s not the right question. Rather would you take a 6 WAR 1B with 120 RBIs or a 6 WAR SS with pedestrian hitting? Which is more likely to win a pennant for you?
By themselves - neither. It depends on what you have on the rest of your roster.

In 1988, Will Clark was 5.7 fWAR as a 1B and O. Smith was 5.8 fWAR as a SS. Why would you definitively choose Clark over Smith without knowing the rest of your roster?
All else equal the market says Clark. He signed a $3.75M AAV contract in 1990 while Ozzie topped out under 2M not that much earlier in 1987. Over the long run the market get these things right more often than not.
People keep comparing a SS to a 1B. It’s wins above replacement. Ozzie would replace a shortstop. Will Clark would replace a first baseman. It’s easy for me to believe that Ozzie was superior to other short stops.
Cardinals1964
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Re: How the heck did Tommy Edman earn 6.2 bWAR?

Post by Cardinals1964 »

In MLB, WAR (Wins Above Replacement) varies by position due to "positional adjustments" that account for the relative difficulty of playing each spot on the field. Defensive-heavy positions like Shortstop and Catcher receive a WAR boost, while offensive-heavy positions like First Base and Designated Hitter receive a penalty.

Position Baseball-Reference (Runs) FanGraphs (Runs)
Catcher +9. +12.5
Shortstop By B+7 +7.5
Second Base +3 +2.5
Third Base +2 +2.5
Center Field +2.5 +2.5
Left Field -7 -7.5
Right Field -7 -7.5
First Base -9.5 -12.5
Designated Hitter -15 -17.5
ClassicO
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Re: How the heck did Tommy Edman earn 6.2 bWAR?

Post by ClassicO »

rockondlouie wrote: 19 Mar 2026 13:13 pm
ScotchMIrish wrote: 18 Mar 2026 10:42 am There is more nuance to the game of baseball than can be calculated by these sabermetrics stats. The top bWAR on the 1982 Cardinals:

Keith Hernandez (1B): 6.5

That's a world series championship team. Which of those players is not better than Edman in 2025?
1982 K. Hernandez
94 RBI's
.299 .397 .413 .810
Gold Glove (G.O.A.T. defensively at 1st base!)
MVP voting #17
4.6 bWAR

2022 T. Edman
57 RBI
32 SB's
.265 .324 .400 .725
6.2 bWAR

ON NO PLANET was 2022 T. Edman a superior player to 1982 K. Hernandez yet he's got +1.6 more bWAR? ::crazya::
WAR is an estimate. It is clearly not perfect, but again, what do others propose as an all-encompassing value? You need stats for ALL components of being a great ballplayer, including positional value.
Edman was clearly overvalued, but let's look at the top players in WAR every year and tell me how far they are off -- versus the dopes who use a slash or RBI total and don't pay attention to all facets of the game.
ClassicO
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Re: How the heck did Tommy Edman earn 6.2 bWAR?

Post by ClassicO »

Goldfan wrote: 19 Mar 2026 13:07 pm
Goldfan wrote: 19 Mar 2026 13:02 pm
mattmitchl44 wrote: 19 Mar 2026 12:20 pm
Goldfan wrote: 19 Mar 2026 10:45 am
WaltsSuccessor wrote: 19 Mar 2026 09:37 am
Goldfan wrote: 18 Mar 2026 17:07 pm
WaltsSuccessor wrote: 18 Mar 2026 16:52 pm
RamFan08NY wrote: 18 Mar 2026 08:05 am
WaltsSuccessor wrote: 17 Mar 2026 10:46 am
Goldfan wrote: 17 Mar 2026 10:44 am
mattmitchl44 wrote: 17 Mar 2026 10:24 am I think everyone pretty much agrees that defense remains the hardest component of productivity to value in a WAR methodology.

However, defensive value IS real and needs to be accounted for. If someone has a better way of valuing EVERY PLAY made by EVERY PLAYER than DRS, UZR/150, OAA, FRV, etc., we'd all like to hear it.
I hear ya Matt, so why not just stop using WAR as some kind of fact based stat. It’s not….it’s flawed…..and yet its thrown out there right along with BA, OBP, OPS, ERA, WHIP
Literally all those other stats have flaws too...
Really? Over the course of a full season, what flaw is there in BA? Give me 5 guys on the same team who hit .290+ over 150 games in a season and you'll have a good team. It's a factual stat, that has no debate.

Likewise ERA. If your team ERA is in the low 3s, youre going to win more than you lose. How is it flawed?

WAR on the other hand? Let's imagine how many wins this player results in vs if he didnt play. How is that even quantified without knowing what the "replacement " player did?
Seriously? Batting average treats all hits as equal. A single counts the same as a home run in batting average. A .290 pure singles hitter is no where near as valuable as a well rounded slugger (like vintage Pujols) who hits .290.

ERA is literally EARNED run average. A run being deemed earned is completely subjective on the official scoring on errors. Plus, a pitcher with a better defense behind them will be default have a lower ERA than a pitcher on another team with a (bleep) defense (all else being equal).

You arguing ERA isn't flawed is mind blogging.
Batting Avg>>>>hits/ab’s. Very simple equation. You now exactly how often a players hits the ball safely.
WAR>>>Start with fantasy AAA player baseline>>>>adjust for position>>>>adjust for Park>>>>compare against all other at position>>>gives you a 2 digit number with decimal>>>
So by viewing that number how do you know if the player has Power, hits for avg, great on D, runs bases well??? It doesn’t tell you anything. You need to go back to the basic stats for any detail
1. Hits/ABs - where hits are subjectively determined by the official scorer on whether the fielder should have converted into an out or not.
2. Everything you said about WAR was correct. However, it doesn't make the point you think you're making. WAR is like any other stat. It should be used in conjunction with other stats. Just like BA, OBP, SB, Errors, etc. by themselves in a vacuum doesn't tell you the whole story on a player.

Yes it's meant to take everything and boil it down to one number of value. And it does a reasonably good job. If you want to argue it overrates defense, that's fine. I agree with you. But overall, it pretty accurately reflects/differentiates who is replacement level (< 1), solid regular (1.5-3), all star level (4-5), and superstar (6+). Which is it's goal.

Yeah you can find some oddball outliers like a Tommy Edman or Jason Heyward every now and then. But it's not coincidence that the year end WAR leaders also dominate the MVP and CY leaderboards.
How many player hits are determined by the official scorer over the course of the season. And those that are fall under MLB rules
Point out the MLB rule to determine Fantasy AAA player used as the baseline……MLB rule for positional adjustment….etc
And as I’ve stated many times in this thread you need to look at the standard stats anyway to figure out what the WAR# represents…..so why not just begin there?
You can begin, end, or stop off in the middle wherever you want - no one is arguing against looking at more reliable information. But WAR values are part of that reliable information, along with all of the stats you prefer.

I've noted before - WAR is a GM-level statistic, a useful summary of how many more "wins" a player might bring if acquired, and therefore how much money the GM might want to offer to spend on that player.

But WAR isn't going to tell a manager how to use a particular player - what position they should play, where they should hit in the order, etc. The manager has to look at other information to decide that.
Do you think that number correlates to actual WINS? Bob Gibson in ‘68 had 13 SHO, now I don’t know anything more vital and specifically related to a SP and the game than the Pitcher throwing a SHO that would determine the WIN for his team. And he achieved a 11.2WAR. He was 22-9 1.12 ERA for the year.
In those 13 games there was no way the other could win because they didn’t score specifically because of him……
Pujols
‘09
.327, .443, .658, .1.101 , 189OPS+, 47HR, 135RBI, 374TB
9.7WAR
Is there anyone here who thinks AP playing 160games was only responsible for not even 10wins?
Pujols led MLB with that bWAR in 2009. Is that a problem?
Goldfan
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Posts: 14198
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Re: How the heck did Tommy Edman earn 6.2 bWAR?

Post by Goldfan »

ClassicO wrote: 19 Mar 2026 19:02 pm
Goldfan wrote: 19 Mar 2026 13:07 pm
Goldfan wrote: 19 Mar 2026 13:02 pm
mattmitchl44 wrote: 19 Mar 2026 12:20 pm
Goldfan wrote: 19 Mar 2026 10:45 am
WaltsSuccessor wrote: 19 Mar 2026 09:37 am
Goldfan wrote: 18 Mar 2026 17:07 pm
WaltsSuccessor wrote: 18 Mar 2026 16:52 pm
RamFan08NY wrote: 18 Mar 2026 08:05 am
WaltsSuccessor wrote: 17 Mar 2026 10:46 am
Goldfan wrote: 17 Mar 2026 10:44 am
mattmitchl44 wrote: 17 Mar 2026 10:24 am I think everyone pretty much agrees that defense remains the hardest component of productivity to value in a WAR methodology.

However, defensive value IS real and needs to be accounted for. If someone has a better way of valuing EVERY PLAY made by EVERY PLAYER than DRS, UZR/150, OAA, FRV, etc., we'd all like to hear it.
I hear ya Matt, so why not just stop using WAR as some kind of fact based stat. It’s not….it’s flawed…..and yet its thrown out there right along with BA, OBP, OPS, ERA, WHIP
Literally all those other stats have flaws too...
Really? Over the course of a full season, what flaw is there in BA? Give me 5 guys on the same team who hit .290+ over 150 games in a season and you'll have a good team. It's a factual stat, that has no debate.

Likewise ERA. If your team ERA is in the low 3s, youre going to win more than you lose. How is it flawed?

WAR on the other hand? Let's imagine how many wins this player results in vs if he didnt play. How is that even quantified without knowing what the "replacement " player did?
Seriously? Batting average treats all hits as equal. A single counts the same as a home run in batting average. A .290 pure singles hitter is no where near as valuable as a well rounded slugger (like vintage Pujols) who hits .290.

ERA is literally EARNED run average. A run being deemed earned is completely subjective on the official scoring on errors. Plus, a pitcher with a better defense behind them will be default have a lower ERA than a pitcher on another team with a (bleep) defense (all else being equal).

You arguing ERA isn't flawed is mind blogging.
Batting Avg>>>>hits/ab’s. Very simple equation. You now exactly how often a players hits the ball safely.
WAR>>>Start with fantasy AAA player baseline>>>>adjust for position>>>>adjust for Park>>>>compare against all other at position>>>gives you a 2 digit number with decimal>>>
So by viewing that number how do you know if the player has Power, hits for avg, great on D, runs bases well??? It doesn’t tell you anything. You need to go back to the basic stats for any detail
1. Hits/ABs - where hits are subjectively determined by the official scorer on whether the fielder should have converted into an out or not.
2. Everything you said about WAR was correct. However, it doesn't make the point you think you're making. WAR is like any other stat. It should be used in conjunction with other stats. Just like BA, OBP, SB, Errors, etc. by themselves in a vacuum doesn't tell you the whole story on a player.

Yes it's meant to take everything and boil it down to one number of value. And it does a reasonably good job. If you want to argue it overrates defense, that's fine. I agree with you. But overall, it pretty accurately reflects/differentiates who is replacement level (< 1), solid regular (1.5-3), all star level (4-5), and superstar (6+). Which is it's goal.

Yeah you can find some oddball outliers like a Tommy Edman or Jason Heyward every now and then. But it's not coincidence that the year end WAR leaders also dominate the MVP and CY leaderboards.
How many player hits are determined by the official scorer over the course of the season. And those that are fall under MLB rules
Point out the MLB rule to determine Fantasy AAA player used as the baseline……MLB rule for positional adjustment….etc
And as I’ve stated many times in this thread you need to look at the standard stats anyway to figure out what the WAR# represents…..so why not just begin there?
You can begin, end, or stop off in the middle wherever you want - no one is arguing against looking at more reliable information. But WAR values are part of that reliable information, along with all of the stats you prefer.

I've noted before - WAR is a GM-level statistic, a useful summary of how many more "wins" a player might bring if acquired, and therefore how much money the GM might want to offer to spend on that player.

But WAR isn't going to tell a manager how to use a particular player - what position they should play, where they should hit in the order, etc. The manager has to look at other information to decide that.
Do you think that number correlates to actual WINS? Bob Gibson in ‘68 had 13 SHO, now I don’t know anything more vital and specifically related to a SP and the game than the Pitcher throwing a SHO that would determine the WIN for his team. And he achieved a 11.2WAR. He was 22-9 1.12 ERA for the year.
In those 13 games there was no way the other could win because they didn’t score specifically because of him……
Pujols
‘09
.327, .443, .658, .1.101 , 189OPS+, 47HR, 135RBI, 374TB
9.7WAR
Is there anyone here who thinks AP playing 160games was only responsible for not even 10wins?
Pujols led MLB with that bWAR in 2009. Is that a problem?
“For instance, if a team has 80 wins, substituting a 5.0 WAR player for a replacement-level player theoretically brings the team to 85 wins,
as explained by Baseball Reference”

Does anyone think that with AP stats in his MVP year playing 160g that the difference if the Cards were an 80win team playing a slug “Replacement Player” vs Albert Pujols was only 89-90wins? Accounting for his 9.7WAR. This at it’s core is a ridiculous estimation and is exactly what WAR is declaring.
Melville
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Re: How the heck did Tommy Edman earn 6.2 bWAR?

Post by Melville »

WeeVikes wrote: 18 Mar 2026 14:26 pm
Melville wrote: 18 Mar 2026 13:20 pm
Cardinals1964 wrote: 18 Mar 2026 12:57 pm
Melville wrote: 18 Mar 2026 09:15 am
Cardinals1964 wrote: 17 Mar 2026 23:40 pm
ClassicO wrote: 17 Mar 2026 21:28 pm
Melville wrote: 17 Mar 2026 19:50 pm
Cardinals4Life wrote: 17 Mar 2026 09:51 am
Carp4Cy wrote: 17 Mar 2026 09:32 am in 2022. 107 OPS+, no GG, only 57 RBIs, .324 OBP. .265 BA, career high of 111 SOs. Nothing eye popping in the stats line.
Probably because WAR is made up and is essentially pointless.
Absolutely.
Nothing but a short cut parlor game, which only those who do not understand the game place any credence in.
Smart people know better.
Do you even know how either fWAR or bWAR is calculated?
If so, explain how it’s a parlor game.
And for the umpteenth time, what is your best measure for a player’s overall value? RBIs! Ha ha ha
You have no clue. A smart person should know better than to make such an uninformed statement.
They don’t understand. I used to not understand. I used to think it was stupid. Then I decided to spend 30 minutes researching and it now makes perfect sense. It that simple.
I know "WAR" better than the fantasy baseball folks who created it.
I break down data and interpret it for a living
I know my client's businesses better than they do - because that is what I am paid to do.
Reality is, "WAR" is a reverse engineered scheme which is wildly inaccurate, extremely subjective, and should never be used to compare players or establish actual contribution value.
It is a toy for the lazy and uniformed who know little about the game
Would you rather have a 10 war player or a 1 war player?
Neither exist.
Both are fictional characters.
Now, now... one can apply the equations to someone and calculate their WAR as "10", if the inputs so dictate. The same equations could be applied to a different player, and the results might equal "1". They would be quite real, non-fictional people.

Now, whether you put any stock in the outputs of those equations and the interpretation one might make is a different story!
Appreciate your patience while my time has been consumed by meetings this week.
Allow me a few perfect points.
One, with respect, you are using the word "equation" rather loosely, which is not your usual practice.
An equation is a statement of value based on the known and established values of each included component.
For example: 12 + x = 15.
X, obviously, is "3".
All 3 components have a known and established value, which is required in order for any equation to be valid and useful.
Since the fiction of "WAR" is based on thousands of completely subjective and unverifiable components, by definition is can never be an equation.
Therefore, since there is no equation, logically there can be no outcome.
Two, since there is no equation, and no outcome, there is in fact nothing "to be applied to different players".
At best, the result is nothing other than a litany of assumptions which can be applied to different players simply for the purpose of amusement and theoretical debate - no different, nor more useful, than children trading baseball cards two generations past and debating the value of each when trading said cards (while chewing the included stick of gum).
Was a Johnny Bench card worth more than a Yastrzemski and a Carbo?
Or was it worth a Jim Palmer and a Davey Johnson?
No different than "WAR".
Neither real.
Three, even though I know this game better than anyone I have ever met or ever will, I would never claim the ability to apply a "score" each player in the game and accurately compare his relative contribution to that of every other player.
And if I cannot do so, it cannot be done (and would gladly explain further why that is indisputably a fact).
As you know, I am only as always about the game.
And no value will ever come anywhere near doing justice to this unmatched game.
Any attempt to do so is an exercise in both futility and vanity - and I practice neither of those two behaviors.
Last edited by Melville on 19 Mar 2026 20:06 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Goldfan
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Posts: 14198
Joined: 30 Mar 2019 07:58 am

Re: How the heck did Tommy Edman earn 6.2 bWAR?

Post by Goldfan »

Goldfan wrote: 19 Mar 2026 19:56 pm
ClassicO wrote: 19 Mar 2026 19:02 pm
Goldfan wrote: 19 Mar 2026 13:07 pm
Goldfan wrote: 19 Mar 2026 13:02 pm
mattmitchl44 wrote: 19 Mar 2026 12:20 pm
Goldfan wrote: 19 Mar 2026 10:45 am
WaltsSuccessor wrote: 19 Mar 2026 09:37 am
Goldfan wrote: 18 Mar 2026 17:07 pm
WaltsSuccessor wrote: 18 Mar 2026 16:52 pm
RamFan08NY wrote: 18 Mar 2026 08:05 am
WaltsSuccessor wrote: 17 Mar 2026 10:46 am
Goldfan wrote: 17 Mar 2026 10:44 am

I hear ya Matt, so why not just stop using WAR as some kind of fact based stat. It’s not….it’s flawed…..and yet its thrown out there right along with BA, OBP, OPS, ERA, WHIP
Literally all those other stats have flaws too...
Really? Over the course of a full season, what flaw is there in BA? Give me 5 guys on the same team who hit .290+ over 150 games in a season and you'll have a good team. It's a factual stat, that has no debate.

Likewise ERA. If your team ERA is in the low 3s, youre going to win more than you lose. How is it flawed?

WAR on the other hand? Let's imagine how many wins this player results in vs if he didnt play. How is that even quantified without knowing what the "replacement " player did?
Seriously? Batting average treats all hits as equal. A single counts the same as a home run in batting average. A .290 pure singles hitter is no where near as valuable as a well rounded slugger (like vintage Pujols) who hits .290.

ERA is literally EARNED run average. A run being deemed earned is completely subjective on the official scoring on errors. Plus, a pitcher with a better defense behind them will be default have a lower ERA than a pitcher on another team with a (bleep) defense (all else being equal).

You arguing ERA isn't flawed is mind blogging.
Batting Avg>>>>hits/ab’s. Very simple equation. You now exactly how often a players hits the ball safely.
WAR>>>Start with fantasy AAA player baseline>>>>adjust for position>>>>adjust for Park>>>>compare against all other at position>>>gives you a 2 digit number with decimal>>>
So by viewing that number how do you know if the player has Power, hits for avg, great on D, runs bases well??? It doesn’t tell you anything. You need to go back to the basic stats for any detail
1. Hits/ABs - where hits are subjectively determined by the official scorer on whether the fielder should have converted into an out or not.
2. Everything you said about WAR was correct. However, it doesn't make the point you think you're making. WAR is like any other stat. It should be used in conjunction with other stats. Just like BA, OBP, SB, Errors, etc. by themselves in a vacuum doesn't tell you the whole story on a player.

Yes it's meant to take everything and boil it down to one number of value. And it does a reasonably good job. If you want to argue it overrates defense, that's fine. I agree with you. But overall, it pretty accurately reflects/differentiates who is replacement level (< 1), solid regular (1.5-3), all star level (4-5), and superstar (6+). Which is it's goal.

Yeah you can find some oddball outliers like a Tommy Edman or Jason Heyward every now and then. But it's not coincidence that the year end WAR leaders also dominate the MVP and CY leaderboards.
How many player hits are determined by the official scorer over the course of the season. And those that are fall under MLB rules
Point out the MLB rule to determine Fantasy AAA player used as the baseline……MLB rule for positional adjustment….etc
And as I’ve stated many times in this thread you need to look at the standard stats anyway to figure out what the WAR# represents…..so why not just begin there?
You can begin, end, or stop off in the middle wherever you want - no one is arguing against looking at more reliable information. But WAR values are part of that reliable information, along with all of the stats you prefer.

I've noted before - WAR is a GM-level statistic, a useful summary of how many more "wins" a player might bring if acquired, and therefore how much money the GM might want to offer to spend on that player.

But WAR isn't going to tell a manager how to use a particular player - what position they should play, where they should hit in the order, etc. The manager has to look at other information to decide that.
Do you think that number correlates to actual WINS? Bob Gibson in ‘68 had 13 SHO, now I don’t know anything more vital and specifically related to a SP and the game than the Pitcher throwing a SHO that would determine the WIN for his team. And he achieved a 11.2WAR. He was 22-9 1.12 ERA for the year.
In those 13 games there was no way the other could win because they didn’t score specifically because of him……
Pujols
‘09
.327, .443, .658, .1.101 , 189OPS+, 47HR, 135RBI, 374TB
9.7WAR
Is there anyone here who thinks AP playing 160games was only responsible for not even 10wins?
Pujols led MLB with that bWAR in 2009. Is that a problem?
“For instance, if a team has 80 wins, substituting a 5.0 WAR player for a replacement-level player theoretically brings the team to 85 wins,
as explained by Baseball Reference”

Does anyone think that with AP stats in his MVP year playing 160g that the difference if the Cards were an 80win team playing a slug “Replacement Player” vs Albert Pujols was only 89-90wins? Accounting for his 9.7WAR. This at it’s core is a ridiculous estimation and is exactly what WAR is declaring.
“205 / .270 / .320, 1b replacement level player”…..The core foundation of WAR originates here and through all its assumptions and hoops rationalizes that this slash line playing 1b wins 80 and if replaced by AP stats above…..the same team only wins 9-10 more games that season.
WeeVikes
Forum User
Posts: 507
Joined: 23 May 2024 14:06 pm

Re: How the heck did Tommy Edman earn 6.2 bWAR?

Post by WeeVikes »

Melville wrote: 19 Mar 2026 19:57 pm
WeeVikes wrote: 18 Mar 2026 14:26 pm
Melville wrote: 18 Mar 2026 13:20 pm
Cardinals1964 wrote: 18 Mar 2026 12:57 pm
Melville wrote: 18 Mar 2026 09:15 am
Cardinals1964 wrote: 17 Mar 2026 23:40 pm
ClassicO wrote: 17 Mar 2026 21:28 pm
Melville wrote: 17 Mar 2026 19:50 pm
Cardinals4Life wrote: 17 Mar 2026 09:51 am
Carp4Cy wrote: 17 Mar 2026 09:32 am in 2022. 107 OPS+, no GG, only 57 RBIs, .324 OBP. .265 BA, career high of 111 SOs. Nothing eye popping in the stats line.
Probably because WAR is made up and is essentially pointless.
Absolutely.
Nothing but a short cut parlor game, which only those who do not understand the game place any credence in.
Smart people know better.
Do you even know how either fWAR or bWAR is calculated?
If so, explain how it’s a parlor game.
And for the umpteenth time, what is your best measure for a player’s overall value? RBIs! Ha ha ha
You have no clue. A smart person should know better than to make such an uninformed statement.
They don’t understand. I used to not understand. I used to think it was stupid. Then I decided to spend 30 minutes researching and it now makes perfect sense. It that simple.
I know "WAR" better than the fantasy baseball folks who created it.
I break down data and interpret it for a living
I know my client's businesses better than they do - because that is what I am paid to do.
Reality is, "WAR" is a reverse engineered scheme which is wildly inaccurate, extremely subjective, and should never be used to compare players or establish actual contribution value.
It is a toy for the lazy and uniformed who know little about the game
Would you rather have a 10 war player or a 1 war player?
Neither exist.
Both are fictional characters.
Now, now... one can apply the equations to someone and calculate their WAR as "10", if the inputs so dictate. The same equations could be applied to a different player, and the results might equal "1". They would be quite real, non-fictional people.

Now, whether you put any stock in the outputs of those equations and the interpretation one might make is a different story!
Appreciate your patience while my time has been consumed by meetings this week.
Allow me a few perfect points.
One, with respect, you are using the word "equation" rather loosely, which is not your usual practice.
An equation is a statement of value based on the known and established values of each included component.
For example: 12 + x = 15.
X, obviously, is "3".
All 3 components have a known and established value, which is required in order for any equation to be valid and useful.
Since the fiction of "WAR" is based on thousands of completely subjective and unverifiable components, by definition is can never be an equation.
Therefore, since there is no equation, logically there can be no outcome.
Two, since there is no equation, and no outcome, there is in fact nothing "to be applied to different players".
At best, the result is nothing other than a litany of assumptions which can be applied to different players simply for the purpose of amusement and theoretical debate - no different, nor more useful, than children trading baseball cards two generations past and debating the value of each when trading said cards (while chewing the included stick of gum).
Was a Johnny Bench card worth more than a Yastrzemski and a Carbo?
Or was it worth a Jim Palmer and a Davey Johnson?
No different than "WAR".
Neither real.
Three, even though I know this game better than anyone I have ever met or ever will, I would never claim the ability to apply a "score" each player in the game and accurately compare his relative contribution to that of every other player.
And if I cannot do so, it cannot be done (and would gladly explain further why that is indisputably a fact).
As you know, I am only as always about the game.
And no value will ever come anywhere near doing justice to this unmatched game.
Any attempt to do so is an exercise in both futility and vanity - and I practice neither of those two behaviors.
Thank you, Mel. I understand “real life” trumps CT!

I will stand by my use of the term “equation” as I was only thinking in terms of the arithmetic involved, each term stripped of its “definition”, simply a numerical value, nothing more. If you will permit me, were I to take that formula, void of definition of terms, input numerical values (that could be random, for all intents and purposes), it will yield a numerical output — in fact a purely “mechanical”, arithmetic process. Would that output have meaning? Not necessarily, other than the simple output value. Given that strict definition, I contend that it is an indeed an equation.

Given that, let’s examine the (for lack of a better term), “philosophy” behind the input values, the scalars in the formula, and the intended use of the formula. I readily grant you your interpretation of what each value represents, (or doesn’t) and whether each term is valid or not. Clearly, statistics such as batting average, slugging percentage, etc. are well-defined and accepted metrics, and therefore indisputable. Other terms that adjust for position, ballpark, era in which they played, etc., are subjective in nature and could be open for debate, therefore the crux of your argument. So given that, I gladly grant your interpretation that you eloquently explained.

As an engineer, I am fascinated by the concept of a single model that could succinctly quantify the “value” of each and every player, allowing them to be accurately compared. However, as a wise person once said, “All models are wrong. Some are useful.” As I’ve seen in my career, the results of even the most sophisticated, physics-based, industry-accepted models have to be constantly questioned and interpreted, and their results validated by intelligently selected test results. To put it in CT terms, the “eye test”. One must always ask the question, “Does what the model tell me make sense and can its result be supported by objective reality?”

So while WAR might provide some useful comparative values, I don’t think it should be considered as the single “source of truth” on player value. It’s a potentially useful tool, however, it and other formulae like it are based on subjective inputs, therefore their outputs are undeniably subjective as well. To me, as long as that is kept in mind, the value of WAR is up to the user. I readily accept your interpretation and valuation of WAR, and the grounds on which your conclusion is based.

As always, I enjoy our conversations. The fact that you are indeed, “only and always about the game” makes them fun for me.
mattmitchl44
Forum User
Posts: 3312
Joined: 23 May 2024 15:33 pm

Re: How the heck did Tommy Edman earn 6.2 bWAR?

Post by mattmitchl44 »

WeeVikes wrote: 20 Mar 2026 01:20 am
Melville wrote: 19 Mar 2026 19:57 pm
WeeVikes wrote: 18 Mar 2026 14:26 pm
Melville wrote: 18 Mar 2026 13:20 pm
Cardinals1964 wrote: 18 Mar 2026 12:57 pm
Melville wrote: 18 Mar 2026 09:15 am
Cardinals1964 wrote: 17 Mar 2026 23:40 pm
ClassicO wrote: 17 Mar 2026 21:28 pm
Melville wrote: 17 Mar 2026 19:50 pm
Cardinals4Life wrote: 17 Mar 2026 09:51 am
Carp4Cy wrote: 17 Mar 2026 09:32 am in 2022. 107 OPS+, no GG, only 57 RBIs, .324 OBP. .265 BA, career high of 111 SOs. Nothing eye popping in the stats line.
Probably because WAR is made up and is essentially pointless.
Absolutely.
Nothing but a short cut parlor game, which only those who do not understand the game place any credence in.
Smart people know better.
Do you even know how either fWAR or bWAR is calculated?
If so, explain how it’s a parlor game.
And for the umpteenth time, what is your best measure for a player’s overall value? RBIs! Ha ha ha
You have no clue. A smart person should know better than to make such an uninformed statement.
They don’t understand. I used to not understand. I used to think it was stupid. Then I decided to spend 30 minutes researching and it now makes perfect sense. It that simple.
I know "WAR" better than the fantasy baseball folks who created it.
I break down data and interpret it for a living
I know my client's businesses better than they do - because that is what I am paid to do.
Reality is, "WAR" is a reverse engineered scheme which is wildly inaccurate, extremely subjective, and should never be used to compare players or establish actual contribution value.
It is a toy for the lazy and uniformed who know little about the game
Would you rather have a 10 war player or a 1 war player?
Neither exist.
Both are fictional characters.
Now, now... one can apply the equations to someone and calculate their WAR as "10", if the inputs so dictate. The same equations could be applied to a different player, and the results might equal "1". They would be quite real, non-fictional people.

Now, whether you put any stock in the outputs of those equations and the interpretation one might make is a different story!
Appreciate your patience while my time has been consumed by meetings this week.
Allow me a few perfect points.
One, with respect, you are using the word "equation" rather loosely, which is not your usual practice.
An equation is a statement of value based on the known and established values of each included component.
For example: 12 + x = 15.
X, obviously, is "3".
All 3 components have a known and established value, which is required in order for any equation to be valid and useful.
Since the fiction of "WAR" is based on thousands of completely subjective and unverifiable components, by definition is can never be an equation.
Therefore, since there is no equation, logically there can be no outcome.
Two, since there is no equation, and no outcome, there is in fact nothing "to be applied to different players".
At best, the result is nothing other than a litany of assumptions which can be applied to different players simply for the purpose of amusement and theoretical debate - no different, nor more useful, than children trading baseball cards two generations past and debating the value of each when trading said cards (while chewing the included stick of gum).
Was a Johnny Bench card worth more than a Yastrzemski and a Carbo?
Or was it worth a Jim Palmer and a Davey Johnson?
No different than "WAR".
Neither real.
Three, even though I know this game better than anyone I have ever met or ever will, I would never claim the ability to apply a "score" each player in the game and accurately compare his relative contribution to that of every other player.
And if I cannot do so, it cannot be done (and would gladly explain further why that is indisputably a fact).
As you know, I am only as always about the game.
And no value will ever come anywhere near doing justice to this unmatched game.
Any attempt to do so is an exercise in both futility and vanity - and I practice neither of those two behaviors.
Thank you, Mel. I understand “real life” trumps CT!

I will stand by my use of the term “equation” as I was only thinking in terms of the arithmetic involved, each term stripped of its “definition”, simply a numerical value, nothing more. If you will permit me, were I to take that formula, void of definition of terms, input numerical values (that could be random, for all intents and purposes), it will yield a numerical output — in fact a purely “mechanical”, arithmetic process. Would that output have meaning? Not necessarily, other than the simple output value. Given that strict definition, I contend that it is an indeed an equation.

Given that, let’s examine the (for lack of a better term), “philosophy” behind the input values, the scalars in the formula, and the intended use of the formula. I readily grant you your interpretation of what each value represents, (or doesn’t) and whether each term is valid or not. Clearly, statistics such as batting average, slugging percentage, etc. are well-defined and accepted metrics, and therefore indisputable. Other terms that adjust for position, ballpark, era in which they played, etc., are subjective in nature and could be open for debate, therefore the crux of your argument. So given that, I gladly grant your interpretation that you eloquently explained.

As an engineer, I am fascinated by the concept of a single model that could succinctly quantify the “value” of each and every player, allowing them to be accurately compared. However, as a wise person once said, “All models are wrong. Some are useful.” As I’ve seen in my career, the results of even the most sophisticated, physics-based, industry-accepted models have to be constantly questioned and interpreted, and their results validated by intelligently selected test results. To put it in CT terms, the “eye test”. One must always ask the question, “Does what the model tell me make sense and can its result be supported by objective reality?”

So while WAR might provide some useful comparative values, I don’t think it should be considered as the single “source of truth” on player value. It’s a potentially useful tool, however, it and other formulae like it are based on subjective inputs, therefore their outputs are undeniably subjective as well. To me, as long as that is kept in mind, the value of WAR is up to the user. I readily accept your interpretation and valuation of WAR, and the grounds on which your conclusion is based.

As always, I enjoy our conversations. The fact that you are indeed, “only and always about the game” makes them fun for me.
Also speaking as an engineer, what about a WAR methodology are you considering "subjective?"

Subjective - def. - based on or influenced by personal feelings, tastes, or opinions.

There are a lot of elements that go into a WAR methodology which are derived from statistical regression analyses - park factors, for example, have to be derived based on looking at players performance and statistically determining the effect that each park has on the universe of players who played in that park for a particular season.

The entire "linear weights" system that is the backbone of evaluating the run producing value of any particular event - a walk, single, double, etc. - has been statistically derived.

In fact, entire WAR methodologies have to be statistically evaluated against their ability to ultimately model team WAR vs. actual team wins (or maybe expected team wins).

But deriving weighting factors, model coefficients, etc. through statistical modelling is not "subjective".

You can call some of the choices a WAR methodology developer has to make about which underlying statistics to use to capture player performance - for example, bWAR using pitcher ERA vs. fWAR using K/9, BB/9, HR/9 to model pitcher performance; or which defensive metrics (UZR, DRS, etc.) to use - a "subjective" choice. But even those subjective choices have to be grounded by the ability of the overall WAR methodology to give results that track team WAR with actual team wins (or maybe expected team wins).

Any WAR methodology (fWAR, bWAR, etc.) which is going to be generally recognized as accurate simply can't subjectively give any random answer because of the developer's personal feelings, tastes, or opinions.

The "positional adjustments" might be the only part of a WAR methodology I could really call "subjective" - but even those relate to what has been known as the "defensive spectrum", the notion of which positions it is simply more difficult for a player to be average defensively at.

C, SS, CF, 2B, 3B, RH, LF, 1B

Given that it is hard to find an athlete playing baseball who can be an average defensive catcher, catcher is assigned a higher positional value. 1B is the easiest position to find players who can be average defensively - if players don't start out at 1B, corner OF and 3Bs frequently move to 1B when they can't be good enough defensively at their original positions.
WeeVikes
Forum User
Posts: 507
Joined: 23 May 2024 14:06 pm

Re: How the heck did Tommy Edman earn 6.2 bWAR?

Post by WeeVikes »

mattmitchl44 wrote: 20 Mar 2026 04:34 am
WeeVikes wrote: 20 Mar 2026 01:20 am
Melville wrote: 19 Mar 2026 19:57 pm
WeeVikes wrote: 18 Mar 2026 14:26 pm
Melville wrote: 18 Mar 2026 13:20 pm
Cardinals1964 wrote: 18 Mar 2026 12:57 pm
Melville wrote: 18 Mar 2026 09:15 am
Cardinals1964 wrote: 17 Mar 2026 23:40 pm
ClassicO wrote: 17 Mar 2026 21:28 pm
Melville wrote: 17 Mar 2026 19:50 pm
Cardinals4Life wrote: 17 Mar 2026 09:51 am
Carp4Cy wrote: 17 Mar 2026 09:32 am in 2022. 107 OPS+, no GG, only 57 RBIs, .324 OBP. .265 BA, career high of 111 SOs. Nothing eye popping in the stats line.
Probably because WAR is made up and is essentially pointless.
Absolutely.
Nothing but a short cut parlor game, which only those who do not understand the game place any credence in.
Smart people know better.
Do you even know how either fWAR or bWAR is calculated?
If so, explain how it’s a parlor game.
And for the umpteenth time, what is your best measure for a player’s overall value? RBIs! Ha ha ha
You have no clue. A smart person should know better than to make such an uninformed statement.
They don’t understand. I used to not understand. I used to think it was stupid. Then I decided to spend 30 minutes researching and it now makes perfect sense. It that simple.
I know "WAR" better than the fantasy baseball folks who created it.
I break down data and interpret it for a living
I know my client's businesses better than they do - because that is what I am paid to do.
Reality is, "WAR" is a reverse engineered scheme which is wildly inaccurate, extremely subjective, and should never be used to compare players or establish actual contribution value.
It is a toy for the lazy and uniformed who know little about the game
Would you rather have a 10 war player or a 1 war player?
Neither exist.
Both are fictional characters.
Now, now... one can apply the equations to someone and calculate their WAR as "10", if the inputs so dictate. The same equations could be applied to a different player, and the results might equal "1". They would be quite real, non-fictional people.

Now, whether you put any stock in the outputs of those equations and the interpretation one might make is a different story!
Appreciate your patience while my time has been consumed by meetings this week.
Allow me a few perfect points.
One, with respect, you are using the word "equation" rather loosely, which is not your usual practice.
An equation is a statement of value based on the known and established values of each included component.
For example: 12 + x = 15.
X, obviously, is "3".
All 3 components have a known and established value, which is required in order for any equation to be valid and useful.
Since the fiction of "WAR" is based on thousands of completely subjective and unverifiable components, by definition is can never be an equation.
Therefore, since there is no equation, logically there can be no outcome.
Two, since there is no equation, and no outcome, there is in fact nothing "to be applied to different players".
At best, the result is nothing other than a litany of assumptions which can be applied to different players simply for the purpose of amusement and theoretical debate - no different, nor more useful, than children trading baseball cards two generations past and debating the value of each when trading said cards (while chewing the included stick of gum).
Was a Johnny Bench card worth more than a Yastrzemski and a Carbo?
Or was it worth a Jim Palmer and a Davey Johnson?
No different than "WAR".
Neither real.
Three, even though I know this game better than anyone I have ever met or ever will, I would never claim the ability to apply a "score" each player in the game and accurately compare his relative contribution to that of every other player.
And if I cannot do so, it cannot be done (and would gladly explain further why that is indisputably a fact).
As you know, I am only as always about the game.
And no value will ever come anywhere near doing justice to this unmatched game.
Any attempt to do so is an exercise in both futility and vanity - and I practice neither of those two behaviors.
Thank you, Mel. I understand “real life” trumps CT!

I will stand by my use of the term “equation” as I was only thinking in terms of the arithmetic involved, each term stripped of its “definition”, simply a numerical value, nothing more. If you will permit me, were I to take that formula, void of definition of terms, input numerical values (that could be random, for all intents and purposes), it will yield a numerical output — in fact a purely “mechanical”, arithmetic process. Would that output have meaning? Not necessarily, other than the simple output value. Given that strict definition, I contend that it is an indeed an equation.

Given that, let’s examine the (for lack of a better term), “philosophy” behind the input values, the scalars in the formula, and the intended use of the formula. I readily grant you your interpretation of what each value represents, (or doesn’t) and whether each term is valid or not. Clearly, statistics such as batting average, slugging percentage, etc. are well-defined and accepted metrics, and therefore indisputable. Other terms that adjust for position, ballpark, era in which they played, etc., are subjective in nature and could be open for debate, therefore the crux of your argument. So given that, I gladly grant your interpretation that you eloquently explained.

As an engineer, I am fascinated by the concept of a single model that could succinctly quantify the “value” of each and every player, allowing them to be accurately compared. However, as a wise person once said, “All models are wrong. Some are useful.” As I’ve seen in my career, the results of even the most sophisticated, physics-based, industry-accepted models have to be constantly questioned and interpreted, and their results validated by intelligently selected test results. To put it in CT terms, the “eye test”. One must always ask the question, “Does what the model tell me make sense and can its result be supported by objective reality?”

So while WAR might provide some useful comparative values, I don’t think it should be considered as the single “source of truth” on player value. It’s a potentially useful tool, however, it and other formulae like it are based on subjective inputs, therefore their outputs are undeniably subjective as well. To me, as long as that is kept in mind, the value of WAR is up to the user. I readily accept your interpretation and valuation of WAR, and the grounds on which your conclusion is based.

As always, I enjoy our conversations. The fact that you are indeed, “only and always about the game” makes them fun for me.
Also speaking as an engineer, what about a WAR methodology are you considering "subjective?"

Subjective - def. - based on or influenced by personal feelings, tastes, or opinions.

There are a lot of elements that go into a WAR methodology which are derived from statistical regression analyses - park factors, for example, have to be derived based on looking at players performance and statistically determining the effect that each park has on the universe of players who played in that park for a particular season.

The entire "linear weights" system that is the backbone of evaluating the run producing value of any particular event - a walk, single, double, etc. - has been statistically derived.

In fact, entire WAR methodologies have to be statistically evaluated against their ability to ultimately model team WAR vs. actual team wins (or maybe expected team wins).

But deriving weighting factors, model coefficients, etc. through statistical modelling is not "subjective".

You can call some of the choices a WAR methodology developer has to make about which underlying statistics to use to capture player performance - for example, bWAR using pitcher ERA vs. fWAR using K/9, BB/9, HR/9 to model pitcher performance; or which defensive metrics (UZR, DRS, etc.) to use - a "subjective" choice. But even those subjective choices have to be grounded by the ability of the overall WAR methodology to give results that track team WAR with actual team wins (or maybe expected team wins).

Any WAR methodology (fWAR, bWAR, etc.) which is going to be generally recognized as accurate simply can't subjectively give any random answer because of the developer's personal feelings, tastes, or opinions.

The "positional adjustments" might be the only part of a WAR methodology I could really call "subjective" - but even those relate to what has been known as the "defensive spectrum", the notion of which positions it is simply more difficult for a player to be average defensively at.

C, SS, CF, 2B, 3B, RH, LF, 1B

Given that it is hard to find an athlete playing baseball who can be an average defensive catcher, catcher is assigned a higher positional value. 1B is the easiest position to find players who can be average defensively - if players don't start out at 1B, corner OF and 3Bs frequently move to 1B when they can't be good enough defensively at their original positions.
Thank you, Matt. I clearly spoke from a position of ignorance. I was unaware of how the coefficients were developed. I withdraw the term “subjective” for them.

I gladly admit I was wrong, thank you for the correction, and realize I need to do some homework. I still stand by the thought that one can’t blindly use WAR without analyzing whether the results make sense, but I also don’t think it’s useless if used thoughtfully. I think there must be a middle ground between SABR-heads and “WAR-deniers”.
mattmitchl44
Forum User
Posts: 3312
Joined: 23 May 2024 15:33 pm

Re: How the heck did Tommy Edman earn 6.2 bWAR?

Post by mattmitchl44 »

WeeVikes wrote: 20 Mar 2026 04:58 am
mattmitchl44 wrote: 20 Mar 2026 04:34 am
WeeVikes wrote: 20 Mar 2026 01:20 am
Melville wrote: 19 Mar 2026 19:57 pm
WeeVikes wrote: 18 Mar 2026 14:26 pm
Melville wrote: 18 Mar 2026 13:20 pm
Cardinals1964 wrote: 18 Mar 2026 12:57 pm
Melville wrote: 18 Mar 2026 09:15 am
Cardinals1964 wrote: 17 Mar 2026 23:40 pm
ClassicO wrote: 17 Mar 2026 21:28 pm
Melville wrote: 17 Mar 2026 19:50 pm
Cardinals4Life wrote: 17 Mar 2026 09:51 am

Probably because WAR is made up and is essentially pointless.
Absolutely.
Nothing but a short cut parlor game, which only those who do not understand the game place any credence in.
Smart people know better.
Do you even know how either fWAR or bWAR is calculated?
If so, explain how it’s a parlor game.
And for the umpteenth time, what is your best measure for a player’s overall value? RBIs! Ha ha ha
You have no clue. A smart person should know better than to make such an uninformed statement.
They don’t understand. I used to not understand. I used to think it was stupid. Then I decided to spend 30 minutes researching and it now makes perfect sense. It that simple.
I know "WAR" better than the fantasy baseball folks who created it.
I break down data and interpret it for a living
I know my client's businesses better than they do - because that is what I am paid to do.
Reality is, "WAR" is a reverse engineered scheme which is wildly inaccurate, extremely subjective, and should never be used to compare players or establish actual contribution value.
It is a toy for the lazy and uniformed who know little about the game
Would you rather have a 10 war player or a 1 war player?
Neither exist.
Both are fictional characters.
Now, now... one can apply the equations to someone and calculate their WAR as "10", if the inputs so dictate. The same equations could be applied to a different player, and the results might equal "1". They would be quite real, non-fictional people.

Now, whether you put any stock in the outputs of those equations and the interpretation one might make is a different story!
Appreciate your patience while my time has been consumed by meetings this week.
Allow me a few perfect points.
One, with respect, you are using the word "equation" rather loosely, which is not your usual practice.
An equation is a statement of value based on the known and established values of each included component.
For example: 12 + x = 15.
X, obviously, is "3".
All 3 components have a known and established value, which is required in order for any equation to be valid and useful.
Since the fiction of "WAR" is based on thousands of completely subjective and unverifiable components, by definition is can never be an equation.
Therefore, since there is no equation, logically there can be no outcome.
Two, since there is no equation, and no outcome, there is in fact nothing "to be applied to different players".
At best, the result is nothing other than a litany of assumptions which can be applied to different players simply for the purpose of amusement and theoretical debate - no different, nor more useful, than children trading baseball cards two generations past and debating the value of each when trading said cards (while chewing the included stick of gum).
Was a Johnny Bench card worth more than a Yastrzemski and a Carbo?
Or was it worth a Jim Palmer and a Davey Johnson?
No different than "WAR".
Neither real.
Three, even though I know this game better than anyone I have ever met or ever will, I would never claim the ability to apply a "score" each player in the game and accurately compare his relative contribution to that of every other player.
And if I cannot do so, it cannot be done (and would gladly explain further why that is indisputably a fact).
As you know, I am only as always about the game.
And no value will ever come anywhere near doing justice to this unmatched game.
Any attempt to do so is an exercise in both futility and vanity - and I practice neither of those two behaviors.
Thank you, Mel. I understand “real life” trumps CT!

I will stand by my use of the term “equation” as I was only thinking in terms of the arithmetic involved, each term stripped of its “definition”, simply a numerical value, nothing more. If you will permit me, were I to take that formula, void of definition of terms, input numerical values (that could be random, for all intents and purposes), it will yield a numerical output — in fact a purely “mechanical”, arithmetic process. Would that output have meaning? Not necessarily, other than the simple output value. Given that strict definition, I contend that it is an indeed an equation.

Given that, let’s examine the (for lack of a better term), “philosophy” behind the input values, the scalars in the formula, and the intended use of the formula. I readily grant you your interpretation of what each value represents, (or doesn’t) and whether each term is valid or not. Clearly, statistics such as batting average, slugging percentage, etc. are well-defined and accepted metrics, and therefore indisputable. Other terms that adjust for position, ballpark, era in which they played, etc., are subjective in nature and could be open for debate, therefore the crux of your argument. So given that, I gladly grant your interpretation that you eloquently explained.

As an engineer, I am fascinated by the concept of a single model that could succinctly quantify the “value” of each and every player, allowing them to be accurately compared. However, as a wise person once said, “All models are wrong. Some are useful.” As I’ve seen in my career, the results of even the most sophisticated, physics-based, industry-accepted models have to be constantly questioned and interpreted, and their results validated by intelligently selected test results. To put it in CT terms, the “eye test”. One must always ask the question, “Does what the model tell me make sense and can its result be supported by objective reality?”

So while WAR might provide some useful comparative values, I don’t think it should be considered as the single “source of truth” on player value. It’s a potentially useful tool, however, it and other formulae like it are based on subjective inputs, therefore their outputs are undeniably subjective as well. To me, as long as that is kept in mind, the value of WAR is up to the user. I readily accept your interpretation and valuation of WAR, and the grounds on which your conclusion is based.

As always, I enjoy our conversations. The fact that you are indeed, “only and always about the game” makes them fun for me.
Also speaking as an engineer, what about a WAR methodology are you considering "subjective?"

Subjective - def. - based on or influenced by personal feelings, tastes, or opinions.

There are a lot of elements that go into a WAR methodology which are derived from statistical regression analyses - park factors, for example, have to be derived based on looking at players performance and statistically determining the effect that each park has on the universe of players who played in that park for a particular season.

The entire "linear weights" system that is the backbone of evaluating the run producing value of any particular event - a walk, single, double, etc. - has been statistically derived.

In fact, entire WAR methodologies have to be statistically evaluated against their ability to ultimately model team WAR vs. actual team wins (or maybe expected team wins).

But deriving weighting factors, model coefficients, etc. through statistical modelling is not "subjective".

You can call some of the choices a WAR methodology developer has to make about which underlying statistics to use to capture player performance - for example, bWAR using pitcher ERA vs. fWAR using K/9, BB/9, HR/9 to model pitcher performance; or which defensive metrics (UZR, DRS, etc.) to use - a "subjective" choice. But even those subjective choices have to be grounded by the ability of the overall WAR methodology to give results that track team WAR with actual team wins (or maybe expected team wins).

Any WAR methodology (fWAR, bWAR, etc.) which is going to be generally recognized as accurate simply can't subjectively give any random answer because of the developer's personal feelings, tastes, or opinions.

The "positional adjustments" might be the only part of a WAR methodology I could really call "subjective" - but even those relate to what has been known as the "defensive spectrum", the notion of which positions it is simply more difficult for a player to be average defensively at.

C, SS, CF, 2B, 3B, RH, LF, 1B

Given that it is hard to find an athlete playing baseball who can be an average defensive catcher, catcher is assigned a higher positional value. 1B is the easiest position to find players who can be average defensively - if players don't start out at 1B, corner OF and 3Bs frequently move to 1B when they can't be good enough defensively at their original positions.
Thank you, Matt. I clearly spoke from a position of ignorance. I was unaware of how the coefficients were developed. I withdraw the term “subjective” for them.

I gladly admit I was wrong, thank you for the correction, and realize I need to do some homework. I still stand by the thought that one can’t blindly use WAR without analyzing whether the results make sense, but I also don’t think it’s useless if used thoughtfully. I think there must be a middle ground between SABR-heads and “WAR-deniers”.
And I agree with your statement.

Even people who develop and believe in WAR methodologies would say that, at the player level, WAR differences over a full season of ~600 PA which are within +/~ 0.5 (or maybe a bit less these days) can be considered effectively equivalent.

You can't really say that a 2.5 fWAR player was definitively "more valuable" than a 2.2 or 2.3 fWAR player, there is enough uncertainty in the modelling that you have to allow for some uncertainty bands.

So, yes, you do have to look at other information to put how a player achieved their WAR into context. We can all agree on that.

There are just a lot of people who don't understand the rigor involved in linear or non-linear statistical regression analyses, so they write all of that off as "subjective voodoo" when that is the furthest thing from what it actually is. I just don't want us to misunderstand what is really going on in the background to support all of these WAR methodologies.
WeeVikes
Forum User
Posts: 507
Joined: 23 May 2024 14:06 pm

Re: How the heck did Tommy Edman earn 6.2 bWAR?

Post by WeeVikes »

mattmitchl44 wrote: 20 Mar 2026 05:06 am
WeeVikes wrote: 20 Mar 2026 04:58 am
mattmitchl44 wrote: 20 Mar 2026 04:34 am
WeeVikes wrote: 20 Mar 2026 01:20 am
Melville wrote: 19 Mar 2026 19:57 pm
WeeVikes wrote: 18 Mar 2026 14:26 pm
Melville wrote: 18 Mar 2026 13:20 pm
Cardinals1964 wrote: 18 Mar 2026 12:57 pm
Melville wrote: 18 Mar 2026 09:15 am
Cardinals1964 wrote: 17 Mar 2026 23:40 pm
ClassicO wrote: 17 Mar 2026 21:28 pm
Melville wrote: 17 Mar 2026 19:50 pm

Absolutely.
Nothing but a short cut parlor game, which only those who do not understand the game place any credence in.
Smart people know better.
Do you even know how either fWAR or bWAR is calculated?
If so, explain how it’s a parlor game.
And for the umpteenth time, what is your best measure for a player’s overall value? RBIs! Ha ha ha
You have no clue. A smart person should know better than to make such an uninformed statement.
They don’t understand. I used to not understand. I used to think it was stupid. Then I decided to spend 30 minutes researching and it now makes perfect sense. It that simple.
I know "WAR" better than the fantasy baseball folks who created it.
I break down data and interpret it for a living
I know my client's businesses better than they do - because that is what I am paid to do.
Reality is, "WAR" is a reverse engineered scheme which is wildly inaccurate, extremely subjective, and should never be used to compare players or establish actual contribution value.
It is a toy for the lazy and uniformed who know little about the game
Would you rather have a 10 war player or a 1 war player?
Neither exist.
Both are fictional characters.
Now, now... one can apply the equations to someone and calculate their WAR as "10", if the inputs so dictate. The same equations could be applied to a different player, and the results might equal "1". They would be quite real, non-fictional people.

Now, whether you put any stock in the outputs of those equations and the interpretation one might make is a different story!
Appreciate your patience while my time has been consumed by meetings this week.
Allow me a few perfect points.
One, with respect, you are using the word "equation" rather loosely, which is not your usual practice.
An equation is a statement of value based on the known and established values of each included component.
For example: 12 + x = 15.
X, obviously, is "3".
All 3 components have a known and established value, which is required in order for any equation to be valid and useful.
Since the fiction of "WAR" is based on thousands of completely subjective and unverifiable components, by definition is can never be an equation.
Therefore, since there is no equation, logically there can be no outcome.
Two, since there is no equation, and no outcome, there is in fact nothing "to be applied to different players".
At best, the result is nothing other than a litany of assumptions which can be applied to different players simply for the purpose of amusement and theoretical debate - no different, nor more useful, than children trading baseball cards two generations past and debating the value of each when trading said cards (while chewing the included stick of gum).
Was a Johnny Bench card worth more than a Yastrzemski and a Carbo?
Or was it worth a Jim Palmer and a Davey Johnson?
No different than "WAR".
Neither real.
Three, even though I know this game better than anyone I have ever met or ever will, I would never claim the ability to apply a "score" each player in the game and accurately compare his relative contribution to that of every other player.
And if I cannot do so, it cannot be done (and would gladly explain further why that is indisputably a fact).
As you know, I am only as always about the game.
And no value will ever come anywhere near doing justice to this unmatched game.
Any attempt to do so is an exercise in both futility and vanity - and I practice neither of those two behaviors.
Thank you, Mel. I understand “real life” trumps CT!

I will stand by my use of the term “equation” as I was only thinking in terms of the arithmetic involved, each term stripped of its “definition”, simply a numerical value, nothing more. If you will permit me, were I to take that formula, void of definition of terms, input numerical values (that could be random, for all intents and purposes), it will yield a numerical output — in fact a purely “mechanical”, arithmetic process. Would that output have meaning? Not necessarily, other than the simple output value. Given that strict definition, I contend that it is an indeed an equation.

Given that, let’s examine the (for lack of a better term), “philosophy” behind the input values, the scalars in the formula, and the intended use of the formula. I readily grant you your interpretation of what each value represents, (or doesn’t) and whether each term is valid or not. Clearly, statistics such as batting average, slugging percentage, etc. are well-defined and accepted metrics, and therefore indisputable. Other terms that adjust for position, ballpark, era in which they played, etc., are subjective in nature and could be open for debate, therefore the crux of your argument. So given that, I gladly grant your interpretation that you eloquently explained.

As an engineer, I am fascinated by the concept of a single model that could succinctly quantify the “value” of each and every player, allowing them to be accurately compared. However, as a wise person once said, “All models are wrong. Some are useful.” As I’ve seen in my career, the results of even the most sophisticated, physics-based, industry-accepted models have to be constantly questioned and interpreted, and their results validated by intelligently selected test results. To put it in CT terms, the “eye test”. One must always ask the question, “Does what the model tell me make sense and can its result be supported by objective reality?”

So while WAR might provide some useful comparative values, I don’t think it should be considered as the single “source of truth” on player value. It’s a potentially useful tool, however, it and other formulae like it are based on subjective inputs, therefore their outputs are undeniably subjective as well. To me, as long as that is kept in mind, the value of WAR is up to the user. I readily accept your interpretation and valuation of WAR, and the grounds on which your conclusion is based.

As always, I enjoy our conversations. The fact that you are indeed, “only and always about the game” makes them fun for me.
Also speaking as an engineer, what about a WAR methodology are you considering "subjective?"

Subjective - def. - based on or influenced by personal feelings, tastes, or opinions.

There are a lot of elements that go into a WAR methodology which are derived from statistical regression analyses - park factors, for example, have to be derived based on looking at players performance and statistically determining the effect that each park has on the universe of players who played in that park for a particular season.

The entire "linear weights" system that is the backbone of evaluating the run producing value of any particular event - a walk, single, double, etc. - has been statistically derived.

In fact, entire WAR methodologies have to be statistically evaluated against their ability to ultimately model team WAR vs. actual team wins (or maybe expected team wins).

But deriving weighting factors, model coefficients, etc. through statistical modelling is not "subjective".

You can call some of the choices a WAR methodology developer has to make about which underlying statistics to use to capture player performance - for example, bWAR using pitcher ERA vs. fWAR using K/9, BB/9, HR/9 to model pitcher performance; or which defensive metrics (UZR, DRS, etc.) to use - a "subjective" choice. But even those subjective choices have to be grounded by the ability of the overall WAR methodology to give results that track team WAR with actual team wins (or maybe expected team wins).

Any WAR methodology (fWAR, bWAR, etc.) which is going to be generally recognized as accurate simply can't subjectively give any random answer because of the developer's personal feelings, tastes, or opinions.

The "positional adjustments" might be the only part of a WAR methodology I could really call "subjective" - but even those relate to what has been known as the "defensive spectrum", the notion of which positions it is simply more difficult for a player to be average defensively at.

C, SS, CF, 2B, 3B, RH, LF, 1B

Given that it is hard to find an athlete playing baseball who can be an average defensive catcher, catcher is assigned a higher positional value. 1B is the easiest position to find players who can be average defensively - if players don't start out at 1B, corner OF and 3Bs frequently move to 1B when they can't be good enough defensively at their original positions.
Thank you, Matt. I clearly spoke from a position of ignorance. I was unaware of how the coefficients were developed. I withdraw the term “subjective” for them.

I gladly admit I was wrong, thank you for the correction, and realize I need to do some homework. I still stand by the thought that one can’t blindly use WAR without analyzing whether the results make sense, but I also don’t think it’s useless if used thoughtfully. I think there must be a middle ground between SABR-heads and “WAR-deniers”.
And I agree with your statement.

Even people who develop and believe in WAR methodologies would say that, at the player level, WAR differences over a full season of ~600 PA which are within +/~ 0.5 (or maybe a bit less these days) can be considered effectively equivalent.

You can't really say that a 2.5 fWAR player was definitively "more valuable" than a 2.2 or 2.3 fWAR player, there is enough uncertainty in the modelling that you have to allow for some uncertainty bands.

So, yes, you do have to look at other information to put how a player achieved their WAR into context. We can all agree on that.

There are just a lot of people who don't understand the rigor involved in linear or non-linear statistical regression analyses, so they write all of that off as "subjective voodoo" when that is the furthest thing from what it actually is. I just don't want us to misunderstand what is really going on in the background to support all of these WAR methodologies.
Well I readily admit to being one of those who hadn’t investigated WAR deeply enough to understand from where the weighting coefficients came. I made some faulty assumptions. I sincerely appreciate the thoughtful correction.
rockondlouie
Forum User
Posts: 15244
Joined: 23 May 2024 12:41 pm

Re: How the heck did Tommy Edman earn 6.2 bWAR?

Post by rockondlouie »

ClassicO wrote: 19 Mar 2026 18:55 pm
rockondlouie wrote: 19 Mar 2026 13:13 pm
ScotchMIrish wrote: 18 Mar 2026 10:42 am There is more nuance to the game of baseball than can be calculated by these sabermetrics stats. The top bWAR on the 1982 Cardinals:

Keith Hernandez (1B): 6.5

That's a world series championship team. Which of those players is not better than Edman in 2025?
1982 K. Hernandez
94 RBI's
.299 .397 .413 .810
Gold Glove (G.O.A.T. defensively at 1st base!)
MVP voting #17
4.6 bWAR

2022 T. Edman
57 RBI
32 SB's
.265 .324 .400 .725
6.2 bWAR

ON NO PLANET was 2022 T. Edman a superior player to 1982 K. Hernandez yet he's got +1.6 more bWAR? ::crazya::
WAR is an estimate. It is clearly not perfect, but again, what do others propose as an all-encompassing value? You need stats for ALL components of being a great ballplayer, including positional value.
Edman was clearly overvalued, but let's look at the top players in WAR every year and tell me how far they are off -- versus the dopes who use a slash or RBI total and don't pay attention to all facets of the game.
Don't take this example as me "hating" on WAR, I've liked, used it since it's inception and am a huge supporter.

But when I see something silly like T. Edman/2022 having a higher WAR than the G.O.A.T. defensively at 1st base who also has superior offensive numbers, then I have to cry "WRONG"! :wink: