Sunday, November 1, 2020

MMDA Manager Register After 2020 Season

This post includes a complete statistical record for MMDA managers going back to 1995.

Managers are ranked by Fibonacci win points. This concept was introduced by Bill James in his book Whatever Happened To The Hall Of Fame? It balances teams' win totals with their winning percentage to arrive at one pleasing number.

Key to categories: 90W and 100W are 90-win and 100-win seasons. DIV stands for division titles and POST for postseason appearances. FIB is Fibonacci win points.

Regular Season Manager Register

RKMANAGERWLPCT
YRS90W
100W
DIV
POSTFIB
1 John Tresca 2398 1814 .569 26 19 11 12 19 1949
2 Ray Ross 2338 1874 .555 26 14 6 9 16 1762
3 Steven Tresca 2277 1935 .541 26 18 9 2 19 1573
4 James Bailey 2225 1987 .528 26 9 5 7 14 1413
5 Matt Eddy 1618 1460 .526 19 8 4 8 11 1009
6 Steve Frediani 2064 2148 .490 26 8 3 8 10 927
7 Jim Baker 1979 2235 .470 26 4 2 2 3 673
8 John Lamanna 1095 1011 .520 13 5 1 4 7 653
9 Jim Derer 795 663 .545 9 4 1 4 5 565
10 Tim Ednoff 780 678 .535 9 3 0 1 4 519
11 George O'Connor 777 681 .533 9 4 2 3 6 510
12 Mike Siddon 1517 1723 .468 20 2 0 0 3 504
13 Clyde Elkins 651 645 .502 8 4 2 1 4 333
14 Jim Gruttadauria 707 751 .485 9 0 0 0 2 299
15 Ryan McCabe 771 849 .476 10 1 0 1 2 289
16 Bill Huffman 71 91 .438 1 0 0 0 0 11
17 Patrick Tougas 113 211 .349 2 0 0 0 0 -59
18 Bret Williams 42 120 .259 1 0 0 0 0 -67
19 Kevin Kasunich 302 508 .373 5 0 0 0 0 -93
20 Mike Renick 359 613 .369 6 1 0 0 1 -121

Remember, this data covers the 1995 through 2020 seasons.

Managerial thresholds crossed in 2020: Steve Frediani passed 2,000 wins and Mike Siddon cleared 1,500.

MMDA Team Report Cards For 2020

Context is so important to analysis. 

Numbers take on new meaning when presented in such a way that they can be interpreted quickly and accurately. Toward that end, I created a league report card that grades each MMDA team in terms of its proficiency across basic categories of component performance.

Grades were determined by standard deviation Z-scoring and then mapping those scores to the familiar report card grading tiers of A, B, C, D and F. A true grade point average could be developed by weighting each of the categories based on significance, but I elected to keep things simple for the first draft.

The TOTAL column places the same weight on each category, i.e. it's an average, and is more of a sorting tool than accurate portrayal of overall quality.   


Run-Creation Report Card

TEAM AVG ISO SPD BB% SO% TOTAL
Mohawk Valley A A- C- A- A B+
Northwest B+ B A B+ B+ B+
Death Valley B+ A- B- C A- B
Brooklyn A- C+ C B+ B+ B
Wilmington B C+ B- B- A- B
California B A B- C C B-
Little Rock B- A+ C+ B+ D+ B-
Northeast C+ C C A B B-
Murrieta C+ A C+ B+ D+ B-
Rochester C C+ B- B+ C+ B-
Rosehill B+ C+ C C- B C+
Spokane B- D+ B- C+ B C+
West Side B- C- A- C+ C- C+
Willamsport B- B- A C D- C+
Goldenrod B D B+ F B C+
Fighting D+ B+ D B C- C
Cape Cod D- C C A- B- C
Elysian Fields D D+ C- C+ B- C
Sudbury C- C- D- C A- C
Georgian Bay F C+ A+ D- D- C-

The listed run-creation categories attempt to capture the spirit of each team's ability to hit for average, hit for power, run, take patient at-bats and make contact.

2020 Final Power Ranking

 
The final poll for the 2020 season. Teams sorted by wins. Ties broken by run differential.

OPS+ and ERA+ are adjusted for ballpark context.

RD run differential
PF park factor multiplier
BB% does not include intentional walks
SPD speed score
BABIP is a rough estimate of team defensive quality

Power Ranking 


No Team WLPCTDivisionR/GOPS+RA/GERA+PFRD
1 Mohawk Valley 111 51 .685 Kranepool
5.69 112 4.25 119 1.037 +234
2 Spokane 104 58 .642 McBride
4.80 99 3.44 131 0.977 +220
3 Death Valley 97 65 .599 Doyle
5.30 98 4.60 113 1.085 +114
4 Rosehill 95 67 .586 Fidrych
5.15 115 4.28 103 0.894 +142
5 Little Rock 94 68 .580 Fidrych 5.48 106 4.74 107 1.003 +119
6 Northeast 93 69 .574 Doyle 5.00 115 4.25 102 0.871 +122
7 California 92 70 .568 McBride 5.14 110 4.32 108 0.947 +133
8 Northwest 91 71 .562 McBride 5.61 101 5.19 104 1.076 +68
9 West Side 86 76 .531 Doyle 5.11 92 4.96 108 1.070 +25
10 Wilmington 83 79 .512 Kranepool 5.03 105 4.65 104 0.971 +61
11 Fighting 80 82 .494 Doyle 4.91 92 4.72 112 1.047 +30
12 Brooklyn 79 83 .488 Fidrych 5.59 108 5.50 93 1.002 +15
13 Rochester 77 85 .475 Kranepool 4.99 97 5.20 98 1.015 -33
14 Goldenrod 72 90 .444 Fidrych 4.66 89 5.38 97 1.065 -117
15 Willamsport 71 91 .438 Fidrych 4.98 94 5.25 102 1.067 -44
16 Georgian Bay 65 97 .401 Kranepool 4.20 87 5.19 92 0.963 -160
17 Sudbury 64 98 .395 Kranepool 4.56 89 5.47 93 1.021 -147
18 Cape Cod 63 99 .389 Doyle 4.46 99 5.72 71 0.898 -205
19 Elysian Fields 61 101 .377 McBride 4.36 93 5.33 88 0.949 -157
20 Murrieta 42 120 .259 McBride 5.09 97 7.69 58 1.075 -420

Saturday, October 31, 2020

MMDA League Records (2002-2020)


A summary of individual and team records covering the past 18 seasons of MMDA play.


Individual Batting Records 

2002–2020


No Batting AverageYearTeamAVG
1 Albert Pujols2009Northern Lehigh.403
2Chipper Jones2009Northern Lehigh.390
3Joe Mauer2010Bethlehem.386
4Robinson Cano2007Northeast.383
5Jason Giambi2002Port City.360
6Albert Pujols2008Northern Lehigh.358
7Mike Sweeney2003Port City.356

Miguel Cabrera2010Bethlehem.356
9Todd Helton2005Chicago.355
10Hanley Ramirez2008Northern Lehigh.354

No Home RunsYearTeamHR
1 Barry Bonds2002Rochester82
2Sammy Sosa2002Cape Cod71

Giancarlo Stanton2018Elysian Fields71
4David Ortiz2007Bethlehem70
5Luis Gonzalez2002Jersey69
6Jim Thome2003Newton68
7Alex Rodriguez2008Cape Cod65

Albert Pujols2011Northern Lehigh65
9Chris Davis2014Goldenrod64
10Travis Hafner2007Wilmington61

Monday, October 26, 2020

2020 Wrap: Award Winners & League Leaders

 A recap collecting important—or at least interesting—tidbits from the 2020 season.

Postseason Awards

Here are the MMDA end-of-season award winners, as selected by the Strat-O-Matic game engine. 

MVP
PlayerTeamAB2B3BHRRBIAVGBBSOSBOBPSLG
C.Bellinger
Drivers
608
46
3
54
134
.337
80
103
14
.413
.689
M.Semien
Lions
667
41
8
35
104
.289
95
122
3
.379
.532
G.Cole
Drivers
See Cy Young results below
C.BlackmonLions
634
58
4
31
140
.322
56
105
3
.384
.573
N.ArenadoHornets
654
36
1
45
112
.306
44
104
1
.352
.570

Cody Bellinger led the MMDA with 54 home runs, 205 hits, 419 total bases and a .689 slugging percentage. He ranked second with a .337 average, .413 on-base percentage and 134 RBIs. He placed third with 132 runs.

CY YOUNG
PitcherTeamWLERAGSSVIPHBBSOHRAVGBB9SO9
G.Cole
Drivers
20
6
3.55
33
0
233
180
58
348
34
.209
2.2
13.4
Z.GreinkeLions
22
2
2.65
33
0
224
186
41
186
22
.225
1.7
7.5
J.VerlanderLions
18
7
3.40
33
0
233
170
52
308
52
.199
2.0
11.9
K.YatesLions
5
2
2.67
0
41
67
42
17
90
5
.178
2.3
12.0
F.VazquezDrivers
1
3
1.77
0
43
61
39
8
87
5
.181
1.2
12.8

Death Valley claimed the top league hardware with Bellinger and Gerrit Cole taking the MVP and Cy Young awards. Cole led the MMDA with 348 strikeouts and 233.1 innings. He placed second with 20 wins and a 6-to-1 strikeout-to-walk ratio and eighth with a .209 opponent average

Sunday, January 5, 2020

Active MMDA Manager Register 2019

A complete statistical record for the MMDA goes back to 1995. That's the line of demarcation I used to create our league's all-time managerial register.

Managers are ranked by Fibonacci win points. This concept was introduced by Bill James in his book Whatever Happened To The Hall Of Fame? It balances teams' win totals with their winning percentage to arrive at one pleasing number.

The formula is simply wins (times) winning percentage (plus) wins (minus) losses. So rather than rank managers by total wins or by winning percentage, I chose to rank them by Fibonacci win points to balance quality (winning percentage) and quantity (career wins).

Note that Kyle Glaser and Jeff Olson stepped away after the 2019 season, the former after only one season.

NoManagerWLPctYrsPlayoffMaxWMaxLFibonacci
1. John Tresca 2305 1745 .569 25 18 120 124 1872
2. Ray Ross 2247 1803 .555 25 15 117 98 1691
3. Steven Tresca 2214 1836 .547 25 19 108 123 1588
4. James Bailey 2148 1902 .530 25 14 105 102 1385
5. Matt Eddy 1507 1409 .517 18 10 113 113 877
6. Steve Frediani 1960 2090 .484 25 9 106 116 819
7. John Lamanna 1023 921 .526 12 7 108 96 640
8. Jim Baker 1896 2156 .468 25 3 112 117 627
9. Tim Ednoff 701 595 .541 8 4 99 89 485
10. Jim Derer 700 596 .540 8 4 101 87 482
11.Mike Siddon 1425 1653 .463 19 2 98 103 432
12. George O'Connor 680 616 .525 8 5 103 95 421
13. Clyde Elkins 590 544 .520 7 4 113 102 353
14. Ryan McCabe 691 767 .474 9 2 93 108 251
15. Jeff Olson 891 1053 .458 12 4 109 118 246
16. Jim Gruttadauria 621 675 .479 8 2 89 98 244
17. Kyle Glaser 75 87 .463 1 0 75 87 23
18. Patrick Tougas 48 114 .296 1 0 48 114 -52
19. Kevin Kasunich 238 410 .367 4 0 65 111 -85
20. Mike Renick 265 545 .327 5 0 67 124 -193

Remember, this data covers the 1995 through 2019 seasons.

Managerial thresholds crossed in 2019: John Tresca passed 2,300 wins, Ray Ross and Steven Tresca eclipsed 2,200 wins, James Bailey moved past 2,100 wins.

Friday, January 3, 2020

Top 10 Managers Of The 2010s

Just as every journey begins with a single step, a successful season is the culmination of several small achievements that equal a larger accomplishment.

This post celebrates the MMDA managers who achieved the most in the 2010s, both small and large.

To assess managers’ greatness, I borrowed a scoring system from Bill James.

Teams receive one point each for having a winning season, for winning 90 games and for winning 100 games.

Teams receive two points for winning a division, three points for winning a pennant and four points for winning a World Series championship.

Thus the highest score via this six-tiered scoring system is 12 points. There were four “perfect” teams in MMDA in the 2010s. These teams won 100 games, a division title and a World Series championship.

• 2013 Northeast Huskies
• 2015 Mohawk Valley Lions
• 2018 Elysian Fields Flying Dutchmen
• 2019 Spokane Hooded Crows

Now let’s see how MMDA managers stack up for the years 2010 to 2019.