Baseball Errors
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David E Kalist
and Stephen J Spurr
This paper examines the factors that determine the rate of errors called in major league baseball, and changes in the error rate over time. We find that (1) the rate of errors depends on the quality of play and characteristics of the field, but that (2) these do not fully explain variations in the error rate. With regard to point 1, we find that the error rate is higher when the quality of fielding is suspect, i.e., the performance of an expansion team in its first year, or the fielding done by replacement players during World War II, and lower when playing conditions are better, e.g. on artificial turf and during night games. With regard to point 2, we find evidence that official scorers are biased toward the home team, but that the bias declined when the stakes involved increased, with the advent of arbitration and free agency.
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Article
- Parity and Predictability of Competitions
- Using Variable Reduction Techniques and Tolerance Intervals to Summarise a Fitness Testing Battery in Soccer
- Baseball Errors
- Review of Wages of Wins: A Reply
- Letter from the Editor
- The Passing Premium Puzzle
Articles in the same Issue
- Article
- Parity and Predictability of Competitions
- Using Variable Reduction Techniques and Tolerance Intervals to Summarise a Fitness Testing Battery in Soccer
- Baseball Errors
- Review of Wages of Wins: A Reply
- Letter from the Editor
- The Passing Premium Puzzle