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THE BAT

THE BAT

The Most Advanced MLB Projection System On The Market


THE BAT starts as a comprehensive projection system in the vein of PECOTA or Steamer, and then adds additional layers for projecting daily player, team, and game outcomes. It considers a plethora of factors relevant on a game-by-game basis, such as:

— Opposing Hitters/Pitchers
— Ballpark
— Weather
— Umpire
— Catcher (Framing, Throwing, and Intimidation)
— Bullpen
— League
— Home Field Advantage
— Platoon Splits (Hitter/Pitcher/Park/Umpire/Catcher)
— Role
— Lineup Position
— Quality of Surrounding Lineup
 — And more…

While already perhaps the most comprehensive model on the market, THE BAT is constantly being added to and upgraded with additional features and under-the-hood upgrades.  In addition to a number of daily-specific layers, THE BAT has a number of other innovative and accuracy-improving features. 


A Few Unique Components Behind THE BAT


Above we mentioned many of the stats THE BAT considers, but that barely scratches the surface. Below are details on some of the unique factors that power THE BAT’s projections.

Player Profiles: THE BAT projects players, in part, based on their profiles. For example, a speedy line-drive hitter that bats leadoff and sprays the ball all over the field will be projected for more singles and steals than a slow, overweight cleanup hitter who makes lots of hard contact.

Arm Angle and Pitch-Mix Dependent Platoon Splits: Platoon splits have a ton of variance, so to cut down on it THE BAT uses a pitcher’s arm angle and pitch mix, along with his actual data, to derive projected righty/left splits. Lower arm angles and pitches like sinkers and sliders lead to wider splits, while higher arm angles and pitches like change-ups and curves lead to smaller or reverse splits.

Catcher Intimidation: Not only does THE BAT account for the strength of a catcher’s throwing arm, but it also accounts for the catcher’s reputation, for his ability to intimidate runners into not attempting a steal in the first place. Yadier Molina throws out a high percentage of runners, but runners are often too scared to test his arm at all—and you can’t steal a base if you don’t make an attempt.

Catcher Framing: Catcher arms affect stolen bases, but THE BAT also accounts for the ability (or lack of ability) of a catcher to frame pitches—that is, to make balls look more like strikes for his pitcher, leading to more good outcomes (like strikeouts) and fewer bad outcomes (like walks and home runs).

Minor League and Foreign League Data: Increasing the accuracy of young players that don’t have a long major-league track record by incorporating their stats from minor and foreign leagues (with the appropriate adjustments, since it’s much more difficult playing in the majors).

Comprehensive Weather Factors: Weather is one of the most important yet overlooked factors that affect performance. THE BAT accounts for everything that matters, from things as obvious as temperature to things as obscure as air pressure. Wondering how much that 15-mph wind in Wrigley will affect the game? THE BAT has you covered.

Role-Adjusted Pitcher Projections: It’s much easier for a reliever to come in for a single no-hit inning than it is for a starter to go seven shutout frames. This is accounted for, and pitchers who have served in both roles have their data adjusted to represent the role they’ll be pitching in that particular day.

Batter/Pitcher Matchup-Based Defense: The daily defensive layer is applied based on the batted ball and spray tendencies of the particular batter and pitcher. A pull-heavy, fly-ball lefty will hit a lot more balls to the right fielder than he will to the shortstop. Meanwhile a pull-heavy, ground-ball righty will hit many more balls to the shortstop and fewer to right field. THE BAT accounts for this, weighting the importance of each defender for each batter individually based on where the ball is most likely to be hit. And, of course, contact tendencies are also incorporated; defense will be less important for a “Three True Outcomes” hitter like Chris Davis who doesn’t put the ball in play much than it will be for Jose Altuve who makes lots of contact.

Position-Adjusted Age Curves: Age curves are adjusted to account for the position of each player. For example, the wear and tear of the catching position will cause backstops to age more rapidly than first basemen.

Filtering Out What’s Unimportant: Studies have shown popular “analytical” crutches such as hot streaks, batter vs. pitcher data, un-regressed platoon splits, career in park, home/road, and various other slicing-and-dicing splits to be useless and downright detrimental. Thus, while THE BAT incorporates lots of things that are important, it further increases its accuracy by ignoring the things that aren’t.


THE BAT is the brainchild of Derek Carty, who spent years honing his statistical chops as the Fantasy Manager for Baseball Prospectus and The Hardball Times (now part of FanGraphs), working alongside and learning from some of the greatest sabermetric minds in the game, many of which are now making decisions for MLB clubs (including the 2018 World Champion Houston Astros).