project jimmy
2d installment in valatan's all-time card'l series is up --- 2bmen.
last spring, john sickels launched an experiment at Minor League Ball: community projections. he asked every reader to project a stat line -- avg, obp, slg, and steals -- for corey patterson, using nothing more than common sense and intuition to guide them. sickels specifically forbade his readers from relying on PECOTA, ZIPS, and other advanced forecasting methods; he wanted to know how an unscientific projection would compare to a statistically modeled one -- and even whether it might prove to be more accurate.
sickels got 64 responses on corey patterson and averaged them out. here was the community's aggregate projection:
| avg | obp | slg | sb |
|---|---|---|---|
| .275 | .333 | .475 | 27 |
not very accurate, as you're no doubt aware; patterson actually posted a .215/.254/.348 line with 15 sb. but the community's projection was no further off the mark than the "professional" forecasts published by baseball prospectus, bill james, ron shandler, and other sayers of baseball sooth.
by the end of the spring sickels had run community projections on about two dozen players, and the community's lines usually ended up in roughly the same range as the lines generated by the stat models. some were very accurate -- for example, in the case of mark mulder:
| w-l | era | inn | bb/k | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| projected | 15-9 | 3.86 | 194 | 57/135 |
| actual | 16-8 | 3.64 | 205 | 70/111 |
others were wide of the mark in varying degrees -- but, again, almost always very close to what the expert forecasters came up with.
a couple of other SB Nationeers have picked up the idea. for example, the northsiders at Bleed Cubbie Blue think kerry wood's gonna muster 149 innings and go 11-6 with a 3.79 era and 162 strikeouts. and the oriole partisans at Camden Chat projected corey patterson (the player who started this whole thing) to .261/.299/.432 with 18 homers and 19 steals.
i'm flying out of town for a conference this morning and flying back tonight, and i'll be nowhere near a computer all day -- perfect time to try this idea. if the response is good and people seem to have fun with it, we'll do some more of these; if you think it's a stupid idea say so in the comments, and if that's the consensus i'll retire the idea.
let's use jim edmonds as a test case. he'll turn 36 this year and is coming off his weakest season as a cardinal. do you think he'll bounce back in 2006, or was '05 the beginning of an irreversible decline? ground rules: assume 450 at-bats for jimmy (he has averaged about 475 over the last four seasons) and 550 plate appearances; please project totals in these six categories:
- batting avg
- on-base pct
- slugging avg
- homers
- runs scored
- runs batted in
| avg | obp | slg | hr | rbi | r | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2002 | .311 | .420 | .561 | 28 | 83 | 96 |
| 2003 | .275 | .385 | .617 | 39 | 89 | 89 |
| 2004 | .301 | .418 | .643 | 42 | 111 | 102 |
| 2005 | .263 | .385 | .533 | 29 | 89 | 88 |
and here are some potentially useful references:
edmonds' 2005 splits at espn
his baseball reference page, including his 10 most similar hitters
his davenport translations at baseball prospectus
post your projections in the comments. you are welcome -- but not obligated -- to include the rationale behind your projection. i'm hoping we can get a minimum of 50 entries; don't be shy, people.
i'll have standard & poor's tally 'em up on friday morning and post the results.
0 recs |
66 comments
Comments
i'll dive in first
i think edmonds is an old 35; always banged up, taking longer to heal. his list of comparables includes numerous guys (reggie smith, dave justice, fred lynn) who stepped down a rung at around age 35 and never stepped back up, and numerous others (dick allen, tim salmon, mo vaughn) whose careers were over by 35. i'm also mindful of what happened to bernie williams, who fell off a cliff at age 34 and never rebounded. edmonds is starting from a higher plateau, so he can lose 100+ points of ops (as he did last year) and still be a great hitter. but i don't see a rebound forthcoming. anything over a .900 ops counts as a good season, imho.
by lboros on Jan 26, 2006 6:15 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
edmonds projections
# on-base pct .397
# slugging avg .600
# homers 39
# runs scored 97
# runs battedin 109
by vikelt on Jan 26, 2006 6:28 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
jimmy e's projections
obp: .385
slg: .525
hr: 22
rbi: 95
r: 82
I think age and the larger dimensions hurt his power. However, being projected in the 4 hole could increase rbis and, contract year, if we don't pick up his option, tends to bring increased numbers. I don't think he's ready to hang'em up yet.
by legal dealer on Jan 26, 2006 7:58 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
Jimmy's projections
Mostly due to the switch in batting order.
by elderj on Jan 26, 2006 8:00 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
JED in ought-six:
obp... .378
slg... .552
hr.... 28
rbi... 91
r.... 86
by salvomania on Jan 26, 2006 8:04 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
Here goes nothin'
by Hummingbird on Jan 26, 2006 9:17 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
some rationale
by Hummingbird on Jan 26, 2006 9:26 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Jed's 2006
Batting: .260
On-base: .390
Slugging: .550
HR: 25
Runs: 90
RBI: 97
by itsalemmon1019 on Jan 26, 2006 9:20 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
edmonds
25 HR, 80 RBI, 75 r
i think he misses some games, and his lineup protection suffers because Rolen will most likely miss 10-15 games too. (assuming TLR maintains JEd 4th and Rolen 5th most of the season). he also suffers because of the lack of any serious threats in the 6-8 spots.
by VanRam on Jan 26, 2006 9:25 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
The Price is Right
I'm assuming he's hitting 4th with a healthy Rolen behind him.
by STLEdge on Jan 26, 2006 9:32 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
I'm gonna
290 avg/400 opb/600 slg/32 hr/97 rbi/92 r
I know, I know--wishful thinking. I too believe Jed to be an "old" 35. But what the hell--I feel generous and full of faith in our boys this morning (for some goofy reason).
by rockin redbird on Jan 26, 2006 9:33 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
"princess"
on-base pct .365
slugging avg .559
homers 29
runs scored 91
runs batted in 93
by TenRingsAndCounting on Jan 26, 2006 9:34 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
Still plenty in the tank...
AVG .291
OBP .393
SLG .586
HR 33
RS 94
RBI 98
by Bivouac77 on Jan 26, 2006 9:45 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
jimmy ed
Batting average: .280
On base pct: .395
Slug pct: .520
Home Runs: 25
RBI's: 85
Runs: 90
by llcolt on Jan 26, 2006 10:22 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
JEd's Catch-22
obp: .382
slg: .522
hr: 22
rbi: 92
runs: 82
by Just Rope Ball on Jan 26, 2006 10:43 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
batting #4
obp: .360
slg: .531
hr: 36
rbi: 109
runs: 88
by RB on Jan 26, 2006 10:54 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
OBP seems kind of low, given the BA
by salvomania on Jan 26, 2006 1:11 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Lets just hope
by RB on Jan 26, 2006 10:55 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
My crystal ball says:
On base pct: .400
Slug pct: .540
Home Runs: 33
RBI's: 103
Runs: 92
A bit of a rebound year with some concessions for regression (from the MVP type year of 2004). It looks like LaRussa might go with a consistent lineup with Jimmy in the 4 hole next year (though I fully expect him to flip Rolen/Jimmy with a southpaw starter on the mound).
Looking at the splits, there seemed to be one thing missing from Jimmy's 2005 (compared to his 2004): the patented JimmyStreak (TM). This is purely conjecture, but it seemed like Edmonds got injured right when he was hitting on all cylinders sometime in the June/July of 2005. I also seem to remember Albert being quoted in the paper saying something like "Look out Jimmy's about to go on a roll", or something to that effect (right before the injury). I think he hits his streak at a better time this year (when he won't be in the middle of one of his injuries), causing the numbers to go up a bit.
by MRCARD on Jan 26, 2006 10:55 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
P.S.
For all of those projecting Edmonds' BA to go up and his OBP to go down, remember that you're basically saying that his walk rate will go down without having Pujols behind him. Also, correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe walk rates usually stay the same or go up as yhis age, they don't usually regress (at least not to the extent of some of the numbers I've seen). Just some food for thought...
by MRCARD on Jan 26, 2006 11:00 AM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Spell check...
by MRCARD on Jan 26, 2006 1:03 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
Supposing #4 in order...
obp: .375
slg: .559
hr: 32
rbi: 105
r: 85
by shr3dd3r on Jan 26, 2006 11:03 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
Love this thread...
BA: .291
OBP: .402
Slug pct: .580
HR: 32
RBI's: 96
Runs: 94
Highlight film catches: 13
by cmat on Jan 26, 2006 11:09 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
Who knows???
.278/.375/.520/31/91/85
by Stony on Jan 26, 2006 11:09 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
Edmonds on the Rise
BA: .295
OBP: .387
SLUG: .570
HR: 28
RBI: 92
RUNS: 90
WALKS: 85
Golden Glove, All-Star, Key Cog to the WS title.
by aprfool79 on Jan 26, 2006 11:29 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
jimmy ballgame
ba: .290
obp: .375
slug: .565
hr: 34
rbi: 93
runs: 90
nl pennants: 1
world series rings: 1
by busch league on Jan 26, 2006 11:38 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
Here's pulling for no neaby cliffs
by lb3000 on Jan 26, 2006 11:48 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
My guess
by Valatan on Jan 26, 2006 11:51 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
Modest rebound
BA: .290
OBP: .400
SLG; .600
HR; 33
RUNS; 90
RBI; 100
I think this is an interesting idea. If these kinds of predictions continue to match the "experts", it will strengthen my skepticism of the more elaborate stats.
by oldbirdwatcher on Jan 26, 2006 11:51 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
my educated guess
.270
.376
.561
HR-36
R-80
RBI-89
Some think Jimmy's power is going down. But I think he will hit more homeruns this year then. Just in Busch stadium alone, he had 7 fly outs hit to the warning track.
I agree with Ryan, I think his runs could go down due to a weak lower part of the lineup, but if he hits second more often then not, they maybe be up or stay around the same due to Pujols.
by erik on Jan 26, 2006 3:27 PM EST up reply actions 0 recs
My prediction for Jimmy
on-base pct: .383
slugging avg: .581
homers: 33
runs scored: 103
runs batted in: 84
Mostly similar to '03 and '05 in my opinion, with a few more RBIs and slightly fewer runs scored with the switch to cleanup.
by roebirds on Jan 26, 2006 12:45 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
edmonds 2006
obp:.394
slg:.575
hr:30
rbi:103
run:92
I think Jimmy will be better than last year when he took a real hit with the loss of Rolen. His power may be somewhat higher or lower based on the new Busch, I would have guessed 34 homers at old Busch.
by bigcardsfan5 on Jan 26, 2006 2:13 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
One last go
obp: .402
slg: .588
hr: 31
rbi: 94
runs: 88
I think he's due for a drop off, but not for one, maybe two more years. I think whoever said that the fact that he's still playing CF at a very high level indicates he's not playing quite as old as some think was right on. I don't see him recovering to 2004 levels, but I'll think he'll get on one of his early season tears and ride that to what may be one last stellar season.
by punditmoi on Jan 26, 2006 2:38 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Jimmy v. 2006
OBP: .405
SLG: .548
HR: 33
RBI: 96
Runs: 91
by MrCrowesGarden on Jan 26, 2006 2:40 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Helped by Rolen
by Matt on Jan 26, 2006 2:58 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
New ballpark is a wild card
BA .272
OB .388
SL .543
HR 27
RB 91
R 88
by MdRedbirdFreak on Jan 26, 2006 3:40 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
I love this!
Jed in '06, assuming 450 ABs:
ba: .285
obp: .405
slug: .540
hr: 29
rbi: 98
runs: 88
I don't believe Jed's doomed to suffer his inevitable decline just yet - still has 1-2 solid seasons left in him. He's never getting back to the 2004 MVP-type #s; but I think he rebounds a good bit in 2006. All the injuries on the team last year, as well as hitting #2 a lot (per Hummingbird's recent analysis), hurt his 2005 #s. His age and the new park will keep his power #s down, but his good eye and hitting #4 w/Rolen healthy will help his avg, obp and rbis. I agree with everyone that the weaker 6-8 hitters hurt his run total.
by DCRedbird on Jan 26, 2006 4:22 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
comeback jimmy (sort of)
.280/.372/.610 (more XBHs coming in those new busch power alleys), with 32 dingers, 100 rbi and 86 runs. it could happen . . .
by brentonjay on Jan 26, 2006 4:42 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Interesting application.....
by Perry on Jan 26, 2006 5:17 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
rolen will help a little
by chuckb on Jan 26, 2006 5:23 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
here you go
OBP: .387
SLG: .539
HR: 31
RBI: 99
Runs: 91
by montalban on Jan 26, 2006 5:29 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
jimmy
on-base pct: .383
slugging avg: .533
homers: 27
runs scored: 80
runs batted in: 90
by 2ndprize on Jan 26, 2006 5:59 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Jimmy '06: <i>What decline??!!</i>
OBP: .390
SLG: .550
HR: 35
RS: 102
RBI: 110
Yeah, call me bullish on JEd.
by matty fred on Jan 26, 2006 7:00 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
I'll still take a decline phase Jimmy for
obp... .390
slg... .567
hr.... 32
rbi... 89
r.... 82
know many other CF's that hope to put up numbers like this in their GOOD years??? Decline or not, we are spoiled with one hell of a CF!
by azruavatar on Jan 26, 2006 7:30 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
jimmy cricket
BA: .298
OBP: .412
SLG: .497
HR: 22
R: 104
RBI: 87
My hunch is that Edmonds is fully in his decline phase. But he'll still be productive by taking more walks to get on in front of the younger hitters.
by 26thMan on Jan 26, 2006 8:06 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Jimmy's Ho-Hum Year
Dropping back into a familiar spot will help his consistency. Hopefully, it will be a consistent "good". I think his days of a .300 hitter are over though, but he'll put up solid numbers for us this year.
by poolplayer on Jan 26, 2006 8:12 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
not done yet
Roughly midway between 04 and 05. I note that many of his supposed comps are guys who peaked earlier in their careers than he did. Plenty of reasons to think last year was more aberration than sign of decline.
by DCGreg on Jan 26, 2006 9:17 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
jed 06
2006 jed
avg 0.271
obp 0.391
slg 0.552
hr 23
rbi 68
r 67
g 107
by Birds on the Bat on Jan 26, 2006 9:37 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
jed 06 cont'd
by Birds on the Bat on Jan 26, 2006 9:52 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
project Jimmy
Maybe not as good as we've gotten used to from #15, but I'll take them..
by Silent George on Jan 26, 2006 10:51 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Jimmy Jam
ba .298
obp .395
slg .585
hr 30
rbi 91
r 87
by vince eating tarp on Jan 26, 2006 11:15 PM EST reply actions 0 recs
Jimmy Predictions...
ba .281
obp .405
slg .560
hr 37
rbi 109
r 90
by BigMac545 on Jan 27, 2006 1:43 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
Numbers so far
avg. - .282
obp. - .389
slg. - .554
Hope this saves you some time, lboros...
by DCRedbird on Jan 27, 2006 7:55 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
Hope I am not too late!
by sdelek on Jan 27, 2006 8:48 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
FINAL NUMBERS
VEB Community Projection
Jim Edmonds, 2006
avg. - .282
obp. - .389
slg. - .554
hr - 31
rbi - 95
runs - 88
Again, these are averages through comment 58 - that's 46 entries (counting only one submission per person).
by DCRedbird on Jan 27, 2006 8:51 AM EST reply actions 0 recs
FINALS + sdelek
obp. - .390
slg. - .555
hr - 31
rbi - 95
runs - 88
Only number that changed was the avg. - up .001
by DCRedbird on Jan 27, 2006 9:05 AM EST reply actions 0 recs




















