Why Aaron Judge Would Be Better with Robo-Umps

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  • čas přidán 19. 12. 2021
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Komentáře • 325

  • @RockiesSweden
    @RockiesSweden Před 2 lety +710

    I really like these types of videos. This and the Derek Jeter presentation video both really feel like they could've been fully fleshed out Baseball Bits, but they just didn't make the cut. The chill, relaxed low-production value of your Foolish Bailey videos doesn't really hurt the effect and the impact of the statistics either. I really like the narrative-driven Baseball Bits for when there's a twist or something betrays expectations, but these videos are fantastic as well and I don't want you to be discouraged on making these if another concept doesn't make the cut.

    • @thetonesstir
      @thetonesstir Před 2 lety +20

      Good take right here

    • @matthew01234
      @matthew01234 Před 2 lety +47

      I think he should just make everything like baseball bits. I don't care how long it takes. If Bailey has to spend 24 hours a day to slave away and spend the rest of his life only communicating to us in baseball bits format that's exactly what I expect. Anything else is a disappoinment. Think about it. If he spent 24 hours a day making baseball bits for the rest of his life we might be able to get a few every week. He could stop sleeping, insert a feeding tube so he doesn't have to eat and just sit in a bedpan so he won't need bathroom breaks. That's what he should do.

    • @hypetrained
      @hypetrained Před 2 lety +3

      another banger comment from famed internet savant machcharge

    • @RockiesSweden
      @RockiesSweden Před 2 lety

      @@hypetrained Am I famed? Lol I rarely comment but thank you lol

    • @hypetrained
      @hypetrained Před 2 lety

      @@RockiesSweden rockies fan always W

  • @jzk0517
    @jzk0517 Před 2 lety +181

    Joey from da bronx gonna love this one

    • @bakedtortilla3338
      @bakedtortilla3338 Před 2 lety +23

      RE2PECT

    • @jzk0517
      @jzk0517 Před 2 lety +14

      @@bakedtortilla3338 RINGSSSS 💍💍💍💍💍

    • @Thomas-eo6vs
      @Thomas-eo6vs Před 2 lety +14

      I’d trade Frazier (RIP) and Andujar for robo-umps

    • @chernandez212331
      @chernandez212331 Před 2 lety +6

      @@jzk0517 RINGZZZZZ*

    • @RecardoGuillermo
      @RecardoGuillermo Před 2 lety +3

      My name is Joe and I’m not from the Bronx, but I am from NY. Does that count?

  • @swirlingtoilets
    @swirlingtoilets Před 2 lety +276

    "Tall Chads and Short Kings should have solidarity with one another"
    Bailey dishing sabermetric stats AND wisdom

  • @brianc4695
    @brianc4695 Před 2 lety +99

    New rule per the 2022 CBA: all MLB players must be 6'2" and use the same batting stance to avoid this problem

  • @pablogutierrez5767
    @pablogutierrez5767 Před 2 lety +206

    some could even go as far as to say Judge is taller than Altuve and Tony Kemp

    • @SadMarinersFan
      @SadMarinersFan Před 2 lety +39

      You're probably right, but I need to see some data to back that up.

    • @cantguardmelo
      @cantguardmelo Před 2 lety +6

      I doubt that dude.

    • @pablogutierrez5767
      @pablogutierrez5767 Před 2 lety +27

      @@SadMarinersFan I'm sorry but I don't abide by those liberal "analytics" standards, I have these things called eyes😤😤😤👌🏼

    • @FoolishBailey
      @FoolishBailey  Před 2 lety +83

      source?

    • @pablogutierrez5767
      @pablogutierrez5767 Před 2 lety +8

      @@FoolishBailey GarySanchezRBW and Bob Nightengale ofc

  • @FrshChees91
    @FrshChees91 Před 2 lety +406

    Me: Yes, give me robo umps to buff Aaron Judge!
    Bailey: Atuve is getting screwed too
    Me: We should learn to live without the aid of artificial intelligence in fear it may conquer us one day

    • @bmac4
      @bmac4 Před 2 lety +28

      I thought it was shown that Altuve wasnt even really a beneficiary of the trash cans though

    • @gotgt500
      @gotgt500 Před 2 lety +53

      My one fear about having robo umps is that it will take away managers arguing with the real umps which is honestly one of my favorite things about baseball

    • @luuk3731
      @luuk3731 Před 2 lety +8

      @@bmac4 Yes, I heard that he REFUSED to use any tricks that told him pitches because he thought cheating was bad.

    • @mbdg6810
      @mbdg6810 Před 2 lety +3

      @@gotgt500 they still have human umps on the field in the leagues using the robo-umps tho, so maybe you don't miss out

    • @jyjjy7
      @jyjjy7 Před 2 lety +4

      Judge ended at -29, Altuve -19, the good outweighs the evil yet you would prefer Angel Hernandez, the devil in disguise. Is this not proof that we should welcome our robot overlords, for they shall save us from ourselves?
      To be honest it seems kinda clear in retrospect that humanity jumped the shark, probably actually right around when that episode of Happy Days that the phrase is from came out, and at this point things are getting a bit embarrassing.

  • @ericlawson1378
    @ericlawson1378 Před 2 lety +273

    The other aspect to consider, and I'm not sure how you'd quantify this, is the pitches below the zone that Judge takes swings at because he knows if he doesn't swing it will be called a strike anyway. Not sure how you'd differentiate between him swinging to stay alive vs being fooled though.

    • @ccjl9160
      @ccjl9160 Před 2 lety +35

      It'd be tough. I just looked at it myself and Judge swings at pitches in Bailey's given zone 6.6% of the time - roughly equal to league average. Feel like the only way to know is if you sat down with Judge himself and looked at the film.

    • @momdidntloveme8955
      @momdidntloveme8955 Před 2 lety +26

      Good point, I know for sure Altuve takes a swing at a ton of balls that are super high, but again that's also just bc the dude can get a hit on any pitch so it might be confidence more than protecting

    • @jyjjy7
      @jyjjy7 Před 2 lety +7

      Actually one of the frustrating things about what's being discussed in the video is that Judge actually *doesn't* seem to adjust for it and consistently just accepts the bad calls rather than going outside of his zone and swinging at bad pitches. This is the right thing to do but it makes all the bad calls even more egregious as it should be a known thing by now as well as that Judge has a very good eye, so that they are still doing this to him to this level after all these years is unacceptable.

    • @sergeynazaro1768
      @sergeynazaro1768 Před 2 lety

      @@jyjjy7 my guy it’s the MLB these guys are throwing nasty pitches. It’s not that easy is Triple AAA rep ball we talking about the MLB here man

  • @SadMarinersFan
    @SadMarinersFan Před 2 lety +139

    I do believe that if Aaron Judge wants to be a good baseball player he should simply become shorter.

    • @jonathanzuckerberg8850
      @jonathanzuckerberg8850 Před 2 lety +13

      He should get shorter when the pitch is coming in low and taller when it's coming in high

    • @TheChexMix
      @TheChexMix Před 2 lety +2

      if judge wants to be the highest paid position player in baseball he has to become 6’1 by next year

    • @realMal1c3
      @realMal1c3 Před 2 lety

      All else being equal, one would rather be tall when playing baseball than shorter.

  • @thetonesstir
    @thetonesstir Před 2 lety +32

    Took me too long to realize the music in the background was Christmas Music.
    “Last Christmas I gave you my heart...this year I’ll give it to someone special” - accurately describes my gradual increase in viewership to Bailey as compared to other baseball CZcamsrs this year

    • @danielkent6082
      @danielkent6082 Před 2 lety

      Yeah I was watching the video and at one point was like "...wait is that Last Christmas?" lol. It really distracted me for a bit and I had to rewind a couple minutes haha

  • @zachrobinson4324
    @zachrobinson4324 Před 2 lety +154

    Aaron Judge should simply become shorter in order to avoid getting calls below the zone.

    • @desynthed
      @desynthed Před 2 lety +17

      Incredible he hasn't thought of this yet

    • @bradwhiteuk
      @bradwhiteuk Před 2 lety +9

      Did you apply for the Yankees Hitting Coach vacancy? 😂

  • @WarrenFranceSportsNetwork
    @WarrenFranceSportsNetwork Před 2 lety +38

    Watch it every game as a Yankees fan. He and Giancarlo get some of the most ridiculous strike calls and then they press and swing at stupid pitches. The low and away strikes are outrageous

  • @babyalamo2222
    @babyalamo2222 Před 2 lety +5

    Appreciate the shout out to us red green colorblind folk nobody else ever thinks of us 🙏

  • @RogerRabbitShowdown
    @RogerRabbitShowdown Před 2 lety +80

    Hi Bailey, I'm wondering where you got these pictures of these players I've never heard of before? If I go on the team rosters I don't see any of these people??

    • @FoolishBailey
      @FoolishBailey  Před 2 lety +92

      I made them all up. It's fiction.

    • @RogerRabbitShowdown
      @RogerRabbitShowdown Před 2 lety +9

      @@FoolishBailey I knew it

    • @jacksonvelez7106
      @jacksonvelez7106 Před 2 lety +14

      @@RogerRabbitShowdown foolish Bailey likes to make his own OC characters. No ones really that tall or short, but it’s a fun idea!

    • @sneersh9107
      @sneersh9107 Před 2 lety +7

      @@jacksonvelez7106 This "Altuve" guy would have to be a dwarf to be that short. Dwarves? I don't believe they exist.

  • @Mayrink.
    @Mayrink. Před 2 lety +15

    An edited "quick version" of this video could be a pretty convincing and shareable argument for the whole baseball community.
    Good stuff, Bailey.

  • @samphilo5035
    @samphilo5035 Před 2 lety +8

    THANK YOU, those calls below his knees are an everyday occurrence. Crazy he has the composure to never get ejected too

  • @iobjection
    @iobjection Před 2 lety +10

    Socks and their consequences have been disastrous for home plate umpiring

  • @tyj6081
    @tyj6081 Před 2 lety +21

    This is such a fun video, it’s like a little behind the scenes baseball bits. I would love more in-depth stats like this on players in fleshed out videos, gives me something to be excited to watch during lockout season. THE YEAR OF OHTANI BAYBAY

  • @King_Immanuel
    @King_Immanuel Před 2 lety +12

    But Bailey what if the robot umps take over the world and then start making bad calls like the human umps

  • @maxwhite3583
    @maxwhite3583 Před 2 lety +15

    Really great video and analysis. An interesting thing I found while digging through more data on Judge and Altuve is the difference in their swing rates. Judge swings at 42% of low pitches and 62.6% of high ones, while Altuve swings at 66.8% of low pitches and 53.3% of high pitches. This is compared to MLB averages of 53.5% and 56.2% for low and high pitches respectively. Judge's swing rates make sense, he hits considerably better on high pitches than low, so he should logically swing at more high pitches to increase his productivity, but Altuve's are perplexing. Altuve has a higher OBP and wOBA on high pitches compared to low pitches, but swings at low pitches ~14% more than high ones. Why is this? Especially with the results shown in the video, Altuve should take more low pitches, since he gets more favorable calls and hits worse there, while increasing his swing rate on high pitches, where he hits better and is less likely to get a called strike if he takes. If anyone has an explanation it would be much appreciated.

    • @adamrodak6612
      @adamrodak6612 Před 2 lety

      Glad you brought up these stats. I imagine he's swinging so much more often at low pitches because many are breaking balls/changeups. I'd be curious to know the whiff rate/barrel on his low vs. high pitches, I imagine it's much better on high.

    • @sergeynazaro1768
      @sergeynazaro1768 Před 2 lety

      Interesting!

  • @bartonallenlewis6012
    @bartonallenlewis6012 Před 2 lety +1

    Lovin' the really chill lo-fi "Last Christmas." sabermetrics + Wham! is such a vibe

  • @hairyfroglegs
    @hairyfroglegs Před 2 lety +5

    Wow, stat cast is incredible. I had no idea about all these zones and pulling up actual pitches.
    Thank you for the strike zone visuals. I’m not actually a baseball watcher and they really helped me understand what you meant.

  • @johnwillis4319
    @johnwillis4319 Před 2 lety +22

    It would be interesting to see if there is a correlation between good hitters and called strikes. I feel like it’s possible that umps have an unintentional bias that forces them to give tougher calls against better hitters. Might be a comparison of ops+ or wrc+ vs strikes called outside the zone. Although even if the bias existed it could also be a sample size issue b/c of pitchers being more likely to pitch around good hitters as opposed to going right at worse hitters.
    I should probably just go do the comparison myself, but I am very lazy.

    • @stefanmaste
      @stefanmaste Před 2 lety +1

      Thats exactly what i was thinking. Someone has to make up the bad decisions Judge and Altuve get to get back to League Average, but is this done mostly by good or bad hitters or just random, i don't know and i feel like there could be arguments to both sides. I think it could be very interesting to see if robo-umps would probably the good average sized hitter or bad average sized hitter.

    • @len9518
      @len9518 Před 2 lety +1

      Absolutely. Prime example was Ted Williams. If he didn't swing, the ump would call a ball, if there was any doubt.

    • @burningphoneix
      @burningphoneix Před 2 lety

      @@len9518 Wasn't that story about Hornsby?

    • @baileylupo3156
      @baileylupo3156 Před 2 lety

      @@stefanmaste if you think about it altuve and judge are your regression to the mean for each other. Judge gets more ball calls at the top of the zone and more strikes at the bottom while altuve does the opposite (more strikes at top of zone and more balls at the bottom)

  • @bootygrease2796
    @bootygrease2796 Před 2 lety +4

    In the area Judge is getting screwed, he also has a relatively low contact %, both in and outside of the zone. The same is true for Altuve at the top of the zone, but with a less severe difference. Altuve would get a boost, but he already makes contact a good rate on pitches outside of the strike zone.
    If an accurate robo ump was implemented, Judge would put up numbers that would get him on a terrorist watchlist.

  • @bonsun4186
    @bonsun4186 Před 2 lety +1

    Glad you posted cause now I’ll have something to listen to while I’m at work tonight. Kinda podcast-esque

  • @Roysorb
    @Roysorb Před 2 lety +8

    Bailey: if your baseball brain works like mine your next question is...
    Me: If there were robo umps would Adam Dunn be in the 500 home run club?
    Bailey: Altuve short short.
    Me: Oh...

  • @PTFVBVB
    @PTFVBVB Před 2 lety +2

    I think some of the best parts of this video isn't the final analysis, but the time spent going over how to use the tools to their best ability and how information found can lead you to look into more stuff. Great stuff as always Bailey!

  • @nicholasdileonardi328
    @nicholasdileonardi328 Před 2 lety +3

    love this vid and the lofi hip hop radio - beats to study/discuss strike zones to

  • @danielgoldstein150
    @danielgoldstein150 Před 2 lety +5

    excellent video - love the way you analyze baseball! It's always really interesting, and I'm consistenly impressed with your ability to measure things that I wouldn't think to measure in the game!

  • @returnofthesacc
    @returnofthesacc Před 2 lety

    Banger soundtrack, banger video. happy holidays Bailey

  • @obscurereference6298
    @obscurereference6298 Před 2 lety +6

    So now who are the players getting the most Ump love to offset these players getting the shaft?
    Might be relevant to fantasy people who want to know which players stats might regress to the mean.

  • @metalhammerm6903
    @metalhammerm6903 Před 2 lety +3

    As a 5’7 short king myself, we stand with Altuve and Judge in demanding a robo strike zone ✊🏻

  • @sampson5324
    @sampson5324 Před 2 lety +2

    The Altuve reveal was hilarious, great video

  • @dougtyas9701
    @dougtyas9701 Před 2 lety +3

    I would love to see a video showing this with the top 10 tallest and shortest players who meet a plate appearance threshold. Would give us a much larger sample size.

  • @geezushasrisen
    @geezushasrisen Před 2 lety +1

    You could make this same exact video for Giancarlo. The amount of low balls called strikes I’ve seen for these two makes me wanna headbutt my TV everytime.

  • @samgatti3045
    @samgatti3045 Před 2 lety +4

    It’s really interesting that this seems like it’s a very niche stat that only someone like Bailey could think about, but I’m sure nearly every pitcher in the league has thought about this exact topic.

  • @trentonbossert4576
    @trentonbossert4576 Před 2 lety +1

    This is a great video. I could listen to you talk about missed strike calls for hours

  • @ns1clrk
    @ns1clrk Před 2 lety +3

    2 Bailey vids in 2 days? It IS Christmas!

  • @chargerman426
    @chargerman426 Před 2 lety

    Great background music on this video and very interesting content. Prob the best Foolish Bailey vid yet.

  • @kleshreen
    @kleshreen Před 2 lety

    Last Christmas, I gave you my heart, the very next day, you put out another fire video

  • @iunch2209
    @iunch2209 Před 2 lety

    Great video. That lo fi Last Christmas made me want to claw out my own ear drums though

  • @michaelwelch1472
    @michaelwelch1472 Před 2 lety

    I really love this channel because it’s the reverse of many “second channels”. In baseball bits you’re more sincere and here you play a more over the top character.

  • @cjolson6269
    @cjolson6269 Před 2 lety +2

    I think there's an important distinction to be made here between sensitivity and specificity as far as accuracy metrics go (i.e. which pitches are inaccurately called strikes vs. inaccurately called balls). Anecdotally, I feel like I see more Ump Scorecards where the ump has expanded the strikezone, and less strikes called balls.

  • @okgo1fan
    @okgo1fan Před 2 lety

    Great vid. Would be interesting to see across the league which individual players were most +/- compared to expected in these same top/bottom shadow zones. For instance we can see from this video extreme heights lead to more negative totals as those guys are harder to judge (pun), so their zone weaknesses get attacked relatively more than their strengths. But is there an underlying factor why someone would have a highly positive +/- here, like having a weird stance? If so, to what degree does that help them get calls? Or is it just complete randomness for average-height dudes?

  • @somethangwong1810
    @somethangwong1810 Před 2 lety

    Great add of Christmas music those little things are always great

  • @handsomesquidward121
    @handsomesquidward121 Před 2 lety +4

    It’s the tax for getting to be 6’7

  • @erikredd694
    @erikredd694 Před 2 lety

    Love the music in the background

  • @theactualtodd
    @theactualtodd Před 2 lety

    Got distracted by the Muzak version of “Last Christmas” as your talkbed.

  • @zeelofps6474
    @zeelofps6474 Před 2 lety

    I traveled from Twitter to type this comment….
    Well Done! 👌🏽👌🏽
    I don’t think the average baseball fan is aware of such an issue and you broke it down with all of the necessary information to 1) making it sound like your not just some Aaron Judge fanboy 2) that you’ve been seeing the same thing happening and have the education and courage to put this information out there!💪🏽
    Baseball 10,000% needs StatCast-Umps and I forecast that it’ll start being implemented in the next season or two, with how many EGREGIOUS calls are being dealt out this season.
    There is ZERO CHANCE the commissioners and board members don’t see what everyone tweets, posts or comments on.
    Well done mate!🔥🔥

  • @aaronbastian7572
    @aaronbastian7572 Před 2 lety

    Random and unrelated to the video, but the subtle jazzy Christmas music was a nice touch, oh and go braves

  • @RogerRabbitShowdown
    @RogerRabbitShowdown Před 2 lety +12

    Judge should just get shorter tbh

    • @jzk0517
      @jzk0517 Před 2 lety +4

      If he truly cared about the game he would

  • @bensweetra4871
    @bensweetra4871 Před 2 lety

    All I want for Christmas is another baseball bits

  • @baileylupo3156
    @baileylupo3156 Před 2 lety

    I love the content of this video and it’s something I’ve never really though about, but is there anyway you did a statistical t-test for each one? I would love to see that done and I may even do it myself seeing that you show all data in the video. Just something to see if each zone is significant mathematically through statistical tests.

  • @capraagricola
    @capraagricola Před 2 lety +1

    Now that we've done a video on the extreme height players can we get one about the extreme width players

  • @mxmschae
    @mxmschae Před 2 lety

    Me, a WWE fan, loving the Jim Ross Mick Foley v Undertaker soundbyte at the start

  • @g.anthonybenjamin281
    @g.anthonybenjamin281 Před 2 lety +5

    Do you think Altuve gets those high pitches called strikes because he swings at those pitches pretty often? I am amazed how many hits he gets on those high pitches (although this is entirely an anecdotal) - i am pretty sure I have seen him hit homers on pitches well above the strike zone

    • @jarryd8167
      @jarryd8167 Před 2 lety +1

      I'm thinking he realized those pitches would be called strikes and worked his ass off to compensate and become a good high pitch hitter

    • @g.anthonybenjamin281
      @g.anthonybenjamin281 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jarryd8167 i thought everyone has a hard time laying off the high pitch. I’ve never seen anyone hit so many pitches above the shoulders as Altuve. I figure he’s mastered it as much as possible.

  • @AndThatsBaseball
    @AndThatsBaseball Před 2 lety +43

    I showed this to my uncle Joey and he was really enjoying it until you started defending that cheater Alt*ve. For the last 40 minutes, Uncle Joey has been ranting about how Altuve will never hold a candle to legendary second basemen like Chuck Knoblauch. Thanks a lot, Bailey.

    • @FoolishBailey
      @FoolishBailey  Před 2 lety +25

      Spending another Christmas in da Bronx?

    • @AndThatsBaseball
      @AndThatsBaseball Před 2 lety +17

      @@FoolishBailey of course, it ain’t Christmas if it ain’t in da Bronx

  • @MisterKoishness
    @MisterKoishness Před 2 lety

    I do appreciate the christmas lofi

  • @franktaverna7992
    @franktaverna7992 Před 2 lety +1

    about 14 minutes ago, I audibly asked my computer screen "oh yea so what about Altuve then?"

  • @fat342
    @fat342 Před 2 lety

    This is some juicy data. I love giving meaning to the numbers. Awesome video

  • @Steenar123
    @Steenar123 Před 2 lety

    This is so incredibly nerdy and I love it. 👍

  • @Mitch._.please
    @Mitch._.please Před 2 lety

    The Christmas music was a nice touch

  • @willsafran8855
    @willsafran8855 Před 2 lety

    This is really interesting. Would the hight of the ump vs hight of the batter also have a similar effect?

  • @samoleary8385
    @samoleary8385 Před 2 lety

    The creepy Christmas music in the background makes this seem like this is gonna descend into some kinda weird horror video

  • @CubeApril
    @CubeApril Před 2 lety

    This is the ASMR of baseball videos.

  • @GeeBabyLaflare
    @GeeBabyLaflare Před 2 lety

    Okay so watching this 4 months late, but I have to know, is that “Last Christmas” jingling in the background of the second half of the video?!?!

  • @DutchVanDerLinde-sx1ox
    @DutchVanDerLinde-sx1ox Před 2 lety +1

    Yes! More foolish baseball/bailey. I need my fix. Lest I start reading random players baseball reference pages

  • @jimmysidebottom4744
    @jimmysidebottom4744 Před 2 lety +2

    Umpires on all levels should be required to watch this as part of their training.

  • @maryjohanson727
    @maryjohanson727 Před 2 lety

    as a long time pirates fan id love a breakdown of how many times they would score a run on bases loaded but get strike 3 called instead of ball 4. probably enough times to change the outcome of their games from L's to W's

  • @brentwishart6092
    @brentwishart6092 Před 2 lety

    I always wonder if, as players get better does the plate change for them. Similar to how good pitchers get a smaller plate do great batters great a larger or smaller plate.

  • @RiftRaft_
    @RiftRaft_ Před 2 lety

    May 23, 2022. Orioles @Yankees. Judge had a strike down the middle and was call a ball

  • @LudaChez
    @LudaChez Před 2 lety +3

    Judge is going to see this and be like, I knew it!!
    He's definitely known this or had someone in his agency I imagine make something like this. But since you are impartial I imagine he will actually see this. It helps his case.

  • @highlanderholyfield855
    @highlanderholyfield855 Před 2 lety +1

    The fact that hes batting over .310 despite all the bs strikes thats been called on him just shows how good of a hitter he is.

  • @CadChamberlain
    @CadChamberlain Před 2 lety

    If the pitch location circle is a solid circle, it means an automated strikezone saw it as a strike

  • @virtsie
    @virtsie Před 2 lety

    bruh this t swift in the background is boppin

  • @Norse_Code1
    @Norse_Code1 Před 2 lety

    an interesting thing to go deeper with is to see how many of those pitches came on a 3-x Count where he would have walked had the call been "accurate" and see how much that would have effected OBP/WR

  • @theleftuprightatsoldierfield

    Now I’m interested at the opposite end of the spectrum. Which hitters get the most ball/strike calls going their way at the bottom and top of the zones and is there any correlation between a player’s deviation from league average height and how many calls they get? The average position player is just under 6’1, so it would be interesting to see how umpires call strikes on a batter like Juan Soto as compared to Judge and Altuve

  • @kibbyjr1289
    @kibbyjr1289 Před 2 lety +1

    This is one hell of a thumbnail hahaha

  • @jsfbigman
    @jsfbigman Před 2 lety

    I haven’t seen this video! Great job! I’m a big Yankee but also a huge baseball fan and I love stat cast data! I know back in 2017 he was getting the most balls called strikes. I don’t want a ump that consistently calls low pitches. I don’t think ML pitchers want to pitch up in the zone against Judge. MLB pitchers are more dominant than ever. We had a lot of no hitters. If we had the robo-umps the game would have better offense. I like when hitters bat .300 and higher. A .300 batting average is great nowadays. Very few people hitting .300

  • @blantant
    @blantant Před 2 lety

    Love this format

  • @capt.slamkalski5332
    @capt.slamkalski5332 Před 2 lety

    What about swing strikes. Take those off that percentage. Pitch that the ump called. Did you add that in?

  • @briancook5828
    @briancook5828 Před 2 lety

    It'd be interesting to see the numbers if Judges and Altuves strikezones are replaced with the league average; see if there is a difference in the calls at all

  • @lowkeyvalid7130
    @lowkeyvalid7130 Před 2 lety

    I’d be curious to see if there was stat tracking the amount of calls a left handed hitter gets stolen on an outside pitch compared to right handed hitters. Just from personal experience and watching games, left handed hitters tend to get hosed on outside pitches more than right handed hitters.

  • @foshee1123
    @foshee1123 Před 2 lety

    Next time, when dealing with multi-year pitch numbers, just use the pitch frequency numbers when finding call rates to help yourself out! Love the analytical sports nerd videos!

  • @robertosantos-vx6pn
    @robertosantos-vx6pn Před 2 lety

    I am so geeked out with this. 😂 😂

  • @ashleybies1694
    @ashleybies1694 Před 2 lety

    I think you’re right to surmise that unusually short players and unusually tall hitters get height~biased umpiring as though their were at a more average height.
    However, testing this hypothesis would necessitate a regression of height to strike call rate for each of these zones.
    Most interesting to my mind would be to analyze all extreme outliers, and figure out how much height is involved and what other factors may sometimes play in.
    With regard to these two hitters, it would be important to compare their called strike rate for borderline pitcher on both the outside and inside edges of the plate to these zones you’ve analyzed, to confirm that height appears to be a factor for them.
    Finally, since you’ve brought up biased umpiring for Ohtani as both a pitcher and a hitter, it would be interesting to explore why this may be the case for him, and whether the same phenomenon can be found for other players in similar contexts or with similar characteristics.
    Thanks Foolish!
    🌳🐾

  • @korbinkristjanson8260
    @korbinkristjanson8260 Před 2 lety +4

    Does the on screen broadcast strike zone change for each player?

  • @Kartracer-pq6tl
    @Kartracer-pq6tl Před 2 lety +1

    Best foolish Bailey video ever made

  • @ripconman4265
    @ripconman4265 Před 2 lety +1

    "And if your baseball brain is anything like my baseball brain, you know what's coming next..."
    *reveals jose altuve*
    *I lose my mind*

  • @blue17echo
    @blue17echo Před 2 lety +2

    TL;DR: lots of extra stupid stats stuff-- both altuve and judge got hosed on calls this year, other hitters that are similar to judge either in approach or both approach and stature did not get hosed as hard.
    I think a more apt comparison to judge might be Jose Ramirez-- who has a more similar ISO (conventional wisdom is you pitch power hitters down, no?) and also a similar plate approach (swing% and o-swing% within 1% of judge, whereas altuve's o-swing% is about 6% higher than either) and is 5'9". Ramirez is also established enough in the league that the "book" should be out on him-- pitchers should have established their approach to him.
    For reference, Judge is ~6" taller than the average hitter, Altuve is ~7" shorter than the average hitter and Ramirez is ~4" shorter than the average hitter. There's just not a lot of really short dudes that are in the prototypical power hitter camp. (maybe Cedric Mullins is worth looking at too? His discipline profile isn't as close to Judge's as Ramirez's is though.)
    Ramirez took 169 pitches low in the zone, and 61 of them were called strikes, for a 36.1% called strike rate, giving him +18 in the bottom. Meanwhile, he took 119 pitches high in the zone and 55 of them were called strikes, for a 46.2% called strike rate, for -3 in the top.
    Notably, Altuve swung at about 66.5% of balls in the bottom zone this year, meaning that even though he saw 257 pitches in that zone, he only had an umpire decision on 85 of them. Even still, Altuve sees somewhat less than the average player in this zone-- 10.3% of all pitches. Meanwhile, Judge sees 15.8% of all pitches in this bottom zone (league average is 12.2%). Ramirez saw 12.6% of all his pitches in this zone.
    Notably, while I'd guess that conventional wisdom says to pitch power hitters down, and Ramirez did see more pitches down than Altuve, his profile isn't NEARLY as warped as Judge's. Even Giancarlo Stanton-- who is only an inch shorter than Judge, sees approximately a league average amount of pitches in that part of the plate (Stanton took 158 pitches and had 99 called strikes for a -25 in the bottom on the season, not as extreme as Judge, but very noticeable. He also got more back in the top of the zone, 10 strike calls for 73 takes, for a +22 in the top of the zone). I think Stanton is a very interesting case because he's absolutely getting hosed on calls in the bottom but is making it back in the top.
    One last interesting weird tidbit: Judge actually suffered less than Altuve on bad calls this season, but both had a bad time. The league average rate for bad calls is about 0.825% more bad strikes than bad balls. Judge had a -50 on overall bad calls for the year with an expectation of -24 on bad calls, so he had a -26 BCAA (bad calls against average). Altuve had -54 on bad calls, and only -21 on expected bad calls, so Altuve had a -33 BCAA. Ramirez had a 0 BCAA and Stanton actually had a +9 BCAA. (these were pulled off of balls on strikes in gameday zone and called strikes on balls out of gameday zone).
    boy this comment went places. would love to do some analysis on height vs average MLB and getting hosed on bad calls-- but no one has player height indexed in an easy to use way.

    • @blue17echo
      @blue17echo Před 2 lety +1

      also bailey fun fact if you click on the numbers/letters instead of the checkbox in the statcast search tool it doesn't close the current box which makes it way easier to click on a bunch of different zones.

  • @TheGLORY13
    @TheGLORY13 Před 2 lety

    I feel the true issue with robo umps is going to be a bit more extreme then people truly realize. (Mind you I haven't checked in on how it's gone in the...league that gave it go)
    But realistically a ball simply has to cross ANY portion of the plate to be a strike, there's nothing stating it has to be "this % of the ball in the zone for it to be ruled a strike" it simply has to touch it somewhere in the zone. The rule states "It must cross over the plate somewhere in the aforementioned zone to be a strike"
    So theoretically a high breaking ball could cross through the zone but be catching the back or top of the zone as it breaks down as the plate isn't just a 2D plane (that likely won't be common) but still will occur.
    I personally think a form of robo umps would likely help pitchers more than it helps hitters. Strikes become precise and a more likelihood of them having a BIGGER zone to protect than with actual umpires. Yeah catchers stole calls and umps all have different zones. This one would be consistent but new and potentially bigger

  • @darkshadow8886
    @darkshadow8886 Před 2 lety

    I haven't even watched a second and one of fav videos ever

  • @gamingmantis3162
    @gamingmantis3162 Před 2 lety

    Great video man

  • @rossl7154
    @rossl7154 Před 2 lety

    There must be players who benefit from this. I'm curious how a walk machine like Soto compares to the league average. Also, do you think there is a similar effect for guys that crowd the plate etc.

  • @ShelfyMLB
    @ShelfyMLB Před 2 lety

    Banger

  • @guitarchim
    @guitarchim Před 2 lety

    I've noticed the opposite with short players like mookie. Mookie gets the high strike call a lot because of his short stature

  • @vincentbelden2691
    @vincentbelden2691 Před 2 lety

    What’s up with the Christmas music in the background lol

  • @Vito-jr9wl
    @Vito-jr9wl Před 2 lety

    Would be interesting to See If There are Players benefiting from Referee calls overall

  • @Verlisify
    @Verlisify Před 2 lety

    12:06 Even the overlay doesn't make any sense. The top of the zone is at his belt???????

  • @ltervola
    @ltervola Před 2 lety

    Miguel Sano suffers from umpire bias too, he has good plate discipline, but is a known strikeout king, so he seems to get the call against him more often, and apparently the numbers bear it out, would be interesting to see a video breakdown on that as well.

  • @omarrobles170
    @omarrobles170 Před 2 lety +2

    The video I didn’t know I needed