Baseball is the sport that most appeals to the dreamers
among us, those who lack the talent to play the game at a high level but who
have such a deeply felt love of the sport that we are willing to take just
about any baseball related job that comes along. Until recently, such dreamers were limited to
jobs in the front office or to positions that could never even remotely impact
what was happening down on the field.
But then along came Money Ball, and
everything changed. It hasn’t been easy,
but baseball’s statistical nerds are finally in position to contribute to the
game in ways that used to be impossible.
Ben Lindbergh and Sam Miller are two of those dreamers – and
they managed to make their own dream come true by convincing the owner of a
small-time professional baseball team to hand them the keys to his team for an
entire season. As Lindbergh and Miller
describe them, the Sonoma Stompers, members of a four-team league known as the
Pacific Association, are pretty much astride the bottom rung of the
professional baseball ladder. But that
doesn’t matter.
What does matter is that the Stompers and the three teams
they play over and over again are comprised of real, living and breathing
baseball players – young men who grew up dominating the baseball fields of
their youth, all the while believing that one day they would make it to the
major leagues. But although that hasn’t
happened for any of them so far, and probably never will, they are not ready
yet to call baseball a day. And as long
as they can afford to play the game for the $500 a month or so that the
Stompers can offer, Ben Lindbergh and Sam Miller want to help them make their
dreams come true.
Lindbergh and Miller are baseball writer/editors (Lindbergh
for FiveThirtyEight and Miller for Baseball Prospectus) with lots of
theories about how best to play the game.
They use intricately designed spreadsheets to identify players that may
have slipped through the cracks of major league baseball’s comprehensive player
draft system. They dream of using a five-man
infield against players who almost never hit a fly ball, and they wonder what
would happen if they ask their hitters not to swing the bat any time they jump
in front on a two-ball, no strike count.
They wonder why managers insist upon saving their “closers” exclusively
for ninth inning save situations instead of using them in critical situations
that happen an inning or two earlier when a game is so often lost.
(Review Copy provided by Publisher)
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