Do%20Players%20Outperform%20In%20Their%20Free-Agent%20Year? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Do%20Players%20Outperform%20In%20Their%20Free-Agent%20Year?

Description:

... of Free-Agent Filing on MLB Player Performance,' Atlantic Economic Journal, Dec. ... 'Shirking or Stochastic Productivity in Major League Baseball? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:36
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 22
Provided by: Phi3
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Do%20Players%20Outperform%20In%20Their%20Free-Agent%20Year?


1
Do Players Outperform In Their Free-Agent Year?
  • Phil Birnbaum
  • www.philbirnbaum.com

2
Free Agent Performance
  • Do players outperform in the year before free
    agency ("contract year")?
  • Conventional Wisdom says "yes"
  • By "trying harder" that year, players immediately
    turn their effort into higher salaries

3
John Burkett
  • John Burkett Component ERA
  • 1999 5.44
  • 2000 5.28
  • 2001 2.86 (contract year)
  • 2002 4.95
  • 2003 4.41

4
But, Jeff Fassero
  • Jeff Fassero Component ERA
  • 1997 3.60
  • 1998 4.10
  • 1999 8.02 (contract year)
  • 2000 5.25
  • 2001 2.97

5
Jack Clark
  • Jack Clark RC27 (avg-HR-RBI)
  • 1985 7.15 (.281-22- 87)
  • 1986 5.58 (.237- 9- 23)
  • 1987 11.08 (.286-35-106)
  • 1988 5.98 (.242-27- 93)
  • 1989 7.11 (.242-26- 94)

6
But, Terry Pendleton
  • Terry Pendleton RC27 (avg-HR-RBI)
  • 1988 3.43 (.253- 6- 53)
  • 1989 4.07 (.264-13- 74)
  • 1990 2.81 (.230- 6- 58)
  • 1991 6.73 (.319-22- 86)
  • 1992 5.79 (.311-21-105)

7
Effect not obvious
  • For every example of a sudden contract-year star,
    theres a counterexample of a contract-year
    collapse
  • Need a systematic study

8
How to figure it?
  • What is evidence for a player having a better
    contract year?
  • Cant go by the raw numbers because of aging
    effects

9
Aging
  • Free agents tend to be older players
  • Older players are on the decline
  • A 35-year-old in his contract year would be
    "outperforming" just by keeping his numbers the
    same was when he was 34

10
Methodology
  • Used the "luck" algorithm
  • Calculates expectation based on two previous
    seasons, two following seasons
  • 35-year-old compared to his numbers at 33, 34,
    36, and 37
  • Takes care of regression to mean
  • Predicts fairly accurately for all ages

11
The Study
  • If players deliberately find ways to outperform
    in their contract year, they should appear to be
    "lucky" by this algorithm
  • Calculated for all contract years to 2001
  • Thanks to Retrosheet for free-agent transaction
    info

12
Results Hitters
  • All contract year hitters, 1977-2001
  • Season outperformance -0.1 runs
  • Only hitters with 300 batting outs
  • Season outperformance 1.9 runs
  • Same, normalized to 400 batting outs
  • Season outperformance 2.2 runs

13
Results Pitchers
  • All contract year pitchers, 1977-2001
  • Season outperformance -0.2 runs
  • Only pitchers with 100 innings
  • Season outperformance 0.6 runs
  • Same, normalized to 200 innings
  • Season outperformance -1.1 runs

14
No evidence of any effect
  • Results indistinguishable from zero
  • Statistical significance not met
  • For instance, standard error of pitching estimate
    1.1 runs is 0.8 runs
  • Algorithm is not 100 precise
  • but its pretty good within 1-2 runs per
    season for regular players

15
No evidence (contd)
  • Possible bias in data
  • Players who retire after contract year (because
    they lost effectiveness) are not counted, biasing
    the sample higher
  • Players who re-sign before the end of the season
    are not included in the sample
  • Including only regulars biases data in positive
    direction players who are struggling wont make
    100 IP or 300 batting outs

16
More Results
  • Batters, min. 300 batting outs, normalized to 400
    batting outs
  • Contract year 2.2 runs
  • Everyone else 1.1 runs
  • Pitchers, min. 100 IP, normalized to 200 IP
  • Contract year -1.1 runs
  • Everyone else 2.6 runs

17
Other Studies
  • "Baseball Between the Numbers," Chapter 5.3, "Do
    Players Perform Better in Contract Years?" by
    Dayn Perry
  • Found "genuine phenomenon" of about half a win
    per season (5 runs!)
  • But used "prominent free agents" not a full
    or random sample
  • "Prominent" after the fact may have biased the
    results upward

18
Other Studies
  • "The Influence of Free-Agent Filing on MLB Player
    Performance," Atlantic Economic Journal, Dec.
    2005, Evan C. Holden and Paul M. Sommers
  • Used 2003 only, but examined every player filing
    for free agency
  • Found no significant contract year effect, but
    found that performance decreased significantly in
    the year after
  • Effectively, the authors dont discuss the
    "contract year" issue so much as the decline
    following
  • " youngest players exhibit the smallest decline,
    largely because they (unlike their older
    counterparts) will have the opportunity to sign
    another contract before they retire."
  • Could the effect be simply due to player aging?

19
Other Studies
  • "Shirking or Stochastic Productivity in Major
    League Baseball?", Southern Economic Journal,
    April 1990, Anthony Krautmann
  • Checked all free agents, 1976-1983, who signed 5
    year free-agent contracts
  • Counted the number of players with significantly
    outlying performances in contract years, and
    following years
  • Found only the expected number of such players
  • Conclusion no evidence for the contract-year
    effect
  • "A Test of Additional Effort Expenditure in the
    "Walk Year" for Major League Baseball Players,"
    Benjamin D. Grad
  • Regressed performance on a bunch of variables
    including contract year
  • No effect found for contract year

20
Pitchers with best/worst free-agent years
  • 44 John Burkett, 2001
  • 39 Darryl Kile, 1997
  • 35 Danny Darwin, 1996
  • -57 Jeff Fassero, 1999
  • -39 David Cone, 2000
  • -33 Kevin Brown, 1994

21
Hitters with best/worst free-agent years
  • 40 Bret Boone, 2001
  • 38 Albert Belle, 1998
  • 37 Mark McGwire, 1992
  • -38 Delino Deshields, 1996
  • -34 Johnny Damon, 2001
  • -32 Roberto Alomar, 1998
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com