Saturday, March 2, 2019

Baseball - Head-To-Head Versus Category

Head-to-head leagues pit teams against each other on a weekly basis. The team that has better numbers in the greater number of applicable categories for seven days is declared the winner of the game that week. Each week of the season counts as one game, and standings are recorded over the course of five to five and a half months. The teams with the best records make the playoffs, which are usually contested over the final two weeks of the season.

In category leagues, teams do not go head-to-head in individual weeks; they accumulate statistics and earn points based either on ranking in each individual category or by points awarded for each statistical accrued (for example, a home run is worth 10 points, a stub base 5 points, and so on). Most of the standard categories are aggregate totals like home runs, stuben bases, wins, and saves, so it's of the utmost importance to have players who actually play. Ratio categories like earned run average (ERA), which is the number of earned runs allowed per nine innings (earned runs times nine divided by innings pitched), WHIP (walks plus hits divided by innings pitched), and batting average (hits divided by at-bats) give more value to players who do not see as much action as others but are especially effective when they're in the game (like platoon players, pinch hitters, and middle relievers).

Most category leagues fall into two different groups: the 4 × 4 leagues and the 5 × 5 leagues. The main difference is that the 4 × 4 leagues use two fewer statistics-one offensive and one pitching: most often runs scored and strikeouts. The more categories a league uses, the more realistic the game looks. With the advent of Moneyball, the Michael Lewis book about the statistics-heavy inner workings of the Oakland A's, more fantasy leagues are including more esoteric and ratio statistics such as OPS (on-base plus slugging percentages) and strikeout-to-walk ratio . Some leagues just go all out and use as many categories as they can.

I was the silent partner for novelist Michael Jaffe (owner of the Big Hoss Posse fantasy franchises) in a Yahoo! MLB league run by members of the legendary rock band REM That league used 20 different categories, including innings pitched, losses, triples, complete games, and shutouts-the latter two being some of the rarest occurrences in baseball in this era of specialized bullpens and closers. There were too many categories, and the rare ones that have become devalued in real baseball had too much importance placed upon them. That was also the only league I've ever been part of where errors was a category. It was an interesting twist because the thing that fantasy baseball usually ignores is defense, and it's something that I'd like to try in another league. While errors are not the best judge (sometimes you're penalizing players for getting to balls others would not have even reached), I'm in favor of some kind of defensive component to fantasy baseball.












  • Money Attraction - How to Attract Money in Your Life Some people attract more more money than other people. Why is this so? The primary cause for this is in the way we think. You are what you think you are. Usually, you have an estimate of how much money you can realistically expect to earn. …
  • Comments: Make Money Selling Hair Online
  • Computer Rental - A Basic View Benefits that businesses of any kind can get from computer rental services are not already new because they have long been known for quite a long time. However, what on earth can stop the popularity of computer rental industry in the internet? …
  • Top Money Jobs If America is going to recover from this recession and ever produce top money jobs it's going to come from the people, not from the government. America needs a new productive capacity if it is to again become the shining light of innovation…
  • How To Paint the Furniture To Retain Its EleganceWhen I was chatting with my friends about home renovation, many of them felt that painting the furniture is a waste of money. I argued against that point by drawing an analogy between human beings and furniture pieces. I compared human dressing with…