random
FanGraphs is my new favorite baseball website. It gives you a batter-by-batter graph of an entire game, showing the chances of each team winning before and after each at-bat. And then it assigns win shares to each person. So, for example, if you're up to bat in the home half of the 7th, with your team down by 1 and no one on base and no outs, your team probably has like a 20% chance of winning, based on all teams who were in that situation over the year. If you then single, your team probably has around a 35% chance, so you just got .15 wins for that hit, regardless of how the rest of the game goes. Winning teams always have a net total of .5 wins for a game. There's also a graph of "leverage", that is, how important any given at-bat is in terms of win shares. The stats are kind of unfair to hitters, since their shares depend so much on the situational leverage, but it's great for pitchers. I think so, at least. Some examples: Game 4 of the 2004 ALCS (Dave Roberts' steal was worth about 0.1 wins), Game 7 of the 2003 ALCS (Aaron Boone's home run was about 0.35 wins), and the Phils' crazy win last night (Rollins' homer was about 0.44 wins).
My first frisbee game in two years was last night. It was awesome. I think I've actually gotten slightly better since I last played, even though that doesn't make any sense. I'm definitely more out-of-shape, though. I'm quite sore today.
Unrelatedly, I finally made a chiro appointment. Just decided that it was time to finally pick one out of the phonebook (well, out of my insurer's list of in-network chiros) that sounded reputable based on their website or whatever, and make an appointment. So I'm going a week from Wednesday. Wish me luck.
I finally underwent the formality of requesting and receiving two weeks off in August. August Of Awesomeness v. 6.0 is therefore well on track. 8 more weeks...
Anyone have any book recommendations for me? Preferably non-fiction and tending toward sciency stuff, whether physics or pop psychology/sociology/Blink-type stuff. I also like memoir-type stuff, though for some reason I didn't like David Sedaris in particular. Fiction is okay if it's good and light and either funny or teenage-angsty (which is also funny in its own way). And I'll never pass up a great sports non-fiction book.
Facebook is well on its way to taking over the world. Just you wait and see. This application platform is more powerful than most of y'all realize.
And finally, here's an awesome link from one of y'all to a story about the lighter side of facebook; parents friending teenage children and that sort of thing.
Happy Wednesday!
My first frisbee game in two years was last night. It was awesome. I think I've actually gotten slightly better since I last played, even though that doesn't make any sense. I'm definitely more out-of-shape, though. I'm quite sore today.
Unrelatedly, I finally made a chiro appointment. Just decided that it was time to finally pick one out of the phonebook (well, out of my insurer's list of in-network chiros) that sounded reputable based on their website or whatever, and make an appointment. So I'm going a week from Wednesday. Wish me luck.
I finally underwent the formality of requesting and receiving two weeks off in August. August Of Awesomeness v. 6.0 is therefore well on track. 8 more weeks...
Anyone have any book recommendations for me? Preferably non-fiction and tending toward sciency stuff, whether physics or pop psychology/sociology/Blink-type stuff. I also like memoir-type stuff, though for some reason I didn't like David Sedaris in particular. Fiction is okay if it's good and light and either funny or teenage-angsty (which is also funny in its own way). And I'll never pass up a great sports non-fiction book.
Facebook is well on its way to taking over the world. Just you wait and see. This application platform is more powerful than most of y'all realize.
And finally, here's an awesome link from one of y'all to a story about the lighter side of facebook; parents friending teenage children and that sort of thing.
Happy Wednesday!

oops! This is what I meant before my computer posted before I was done!
The Gatekeepers: Inside the Admissions Process of a Premier College
Never Let Me Go 02/05/07
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
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And, you're welcome.
Most valuable at bats
Re: Most valuable at bats
The 9th inning of Game 7 of the 2001 World Series is my favorite inning of my life. I can probably still name all the plays in the bottom of the 9th in order, but I forget many of the batters. And I have very clear memories of screaming through my TV at the guy who started Womack's at-bat on first base to run home through the coach's stop sign. (Good thing he didn't hear me.) And yeah, as soon as I found out that FanGraphs had old games, the first thing I did was look to see if it went back to October 2001. Sadly, it doesn't seem to.
I remember really enjoying the last inning in 1997 too, but I was also half asleep at the time. And I liked the Marlins a lot more then.
Re: oops! This is what I meant before my computer posted before I was done!