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- Coming soon! - Baseball Think Factory
Updated: May 20, 2024 The site is in hiatus while I work on a redesign using a new content management system In the meantime you are welcome to contact me via email or follow me for updates on x com Thanks for your patience, Jim
- Baseball Think Factory
BasebaLLThink Factory (est 1996) is dedicated to the thoughtful analysis of baseball, both real and imagined Assistance for both sabermetricians and game players is provided here Assistance for both sabermetricians and game players is provided here
- BTFs Baseball Scholars - Baseball Think Factory
Baseball Rants from a Wild Dan - Dan Szymborski knows baseball Dan Szymborski knows math Dan Szymborski knows how to turn a witty phrase Put these facts together and what do you get? Very interesting reading Dan Levitt's Baseball Page - Dan is one of the most insightful baseball analysts that I met due to my membership in SABR I always pay
- About the Baseball Think Factory
As founder and webmaster of the BasebaLL Think Factory (BTF), I would like to welcome you to my little corner of the baseball world BTF was created to assist baseball fans, sabermetricians, and game players in the following ways:
- BTFs Baseball Scholars - Jim Furtado - Baseball Think Factory
For the second year in a row, I present a look at the best hitters' cards for the new set of the most popular baseball boardgame An Opening Day Tale - Jim Furtado I've been playing Strat-O-Matic baseball for over 25 years A few years ago, I made my first pilgrimage to SOM Headquarters with my father and my friend Bob
- Dan Szymborskis - How to Calculate MLEs - Baseball Think Factory
There are a few variations of the MLEs, depending on whether you use 1 or 3 year park effects or whether you use actual minor league park effects rather than the estimation of minor league park effects (when Bill James proposed this system in the 1985 Baseball Astract, minor league park effects were difficult to come by due to the unavailablity
- Deciphering the New Runs Created - Baseball Think Factory
OK, maybe none of this is true Maybe you didn't fork out the $79 95 to read a little about it in either of the new STATS, Inc books The All-Time Baseball Sourcebook or The All-Time Baseball Handbook Maybe, just maybe, you haven't seen anything at all about the new RC
- BTFs Baseball Scholars
The Stats Baseball Scoreboard 1996 contains a study that allows us to empirically test the validity of the above formula Stats, in an essay titled "Who Hits Who?", looked at how batters hit in 1995 against three pitcher classes: Good (top third), Average (middle third), and Poor (bottom third)
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