Andy | D3DataScience

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Andy | D3DataScience

Andy | D3DataScience

@D3DataScience

A D3 data science major (and math and sport management) who really likes baseball data | Juniata Student Manager | [email protected] | @4ngelnessa ❤️

Citi Field Joined Temmuz 2020
770 Following373 Followers
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Andy | D3DataScience
Andy | D3DataScience@D3DataScience·
I am excited to announce Hall Ledger. It’s a relatively simple site but it should be a more comprehensive hall of fame. You can find it here Hall-Ledger.com
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Andy | D3DataScience
Andy | D3DataScience@D3DataScience·
@TheWARmonger_ I haven’t watch him enough but smith seems to be better by metrics then the eye test not that he’s bad by the eye test but he’s been crazy good with OAA at points
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The WARmonger
The WARmonger@TheWARmonger_·
Current leaderboard of a top-secret proprietary defensive metric that doesn't have a name yet. (it's early and many fielders just don't have the opportunities for any defensive metric leaderboard. Can't fake your way to the top 10, though.)
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Tangotiger 🍁
Tangotiger 🍁@tangotiger·
Statcast: Tatsuya Imai Mollweide Projection + Spin Axis Report His famous Fadeout-Slider is indeed spinning opposite of gyro-slider. Ive marked where gyro-slider spins for everyone His splitter/changeup are 1 seamers, but his splitter closer to his slider in seam orientation
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Andy | D3DataScience
Andy | D3DataScience@D3DataScience·
@TheWARmonger_ That’s been my assumption and what’s always made me prefer FRV since it’s such a descriptive stat compared to FRV.
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The WARmonger
The WARmonger@TheWARmonger_·
@D3DataScience My understanding is that's what they base their play values on, so a lot
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The WARmonger
The WARmonger@TheWARmonger_·
One of the reasons I recommend always looking at both DRS and FRV (uses OAA), at least, is that defensive metrics aren't trying to measure the same things. How well each does their job is up for debate, I believe they're both excellent but with limitations. So many are too quick to say one is great and the other is garbage, and that's far from the truth. Jo Adell career metrics with last night... DRS: -14 to -9 (+5) FRV: -24 to -25 (-1)
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The WARmonger
The WARmonger@TheWARmonger_·
@D3DataScience It's context based for sure, but I'd say not nearly as subjective as many people think.
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Ben Resnic
Ben Resnic@BenResnic_·
Hitting fly balls further than expected is actually a repeatable skill. A ton of variance goes into how far a batted ball goes (wind, spin, elevation, etc), so the posterior is wide. In 2025, Javier Sanoja led all of MLB averaging 10.6 feet further than expected on his fly balls.
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Andy | D3DataScience
Andy | D3DataScience@D3DataScience·
@BenResnic_ Posterior in the title then is just saying it’s predictive I assume? That’s where I got confused because I saw it said predicted on the axis as well.
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Ben Resnic
Ben Resnic@BenResnic_·
@D3DataScience Park effects, the distributions on the right are the same batted ball (100 mph EV, 30° LA hit to dead center) and at Coors the ball goes way further than at Fenway. Bottom left shows the park random effects
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Fel
Fel@whothatfel·
@TreIindor20 In this YouTube interview, this guy (who is obnoxious btw) mentions him leaving and you can see all 3 of them freeze and then Gary gives credit to the people still there 😂 you can tell it’s real lmao youtu.be/e3SbnWJxYlw
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Sam
Sam@TreIindor20·
I was kind of skeptical of the rumor going around of why he got fired but the fact that nobody on the broadcast has even uttered a word about him or his departure makes me think it was true sadly
Sam@TreIindor20

SNY broadcasts since J*** D******** left

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Robert Stock
Robert Stock@RobertStock6·
MLB statistics are heavily skewed by selection bias, so at the MLB level a hitter's spray angle isn't very informative. It matters much more at every level below. And for a singular play, if you know the spray angle you have WAY more of an idea of what happened. That just doesn't inform you how things will shape up for the player over the whole season.
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Robert Stock
Robert Stock@RobertStock6·
Brandon Lowe with a homerun that's gone in 50% of MLB parks but only goes for an expected batting average of .030 lol. (I'm going to assume xBA disregards spray angle, which is unintuitive for 99% of fans)
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Andy | D3DataScience
Andy | D3DataScience@D3DataScience·
@RobertStock6 @own_the_libs_ I looked it up as well really quick and the reason it gave was because batters don’t truly control the spray angle of the ball so including it starts allowing for luck to be included into the number but I also do feel like I’ve heard the above reason as well.
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