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hofautos said:Chris Levy said:hofautos said:Forget anything else...forget how many runs, how many hits, how man wins....just forget it all for 10 minutes.
Is the catcher one of the more important positions or is it like Chevy suggests:
CHEVY>> Historically catchers have just been a bunch of fat guys that squat there and throw the ball to the pitcher.
That's what a catcher is
If you believe that, then you are not worth debating with anymore.
The catcher is one of the most important positions, and if you don't agree, perhaps you can agree that it is at least more important than LF.
But do your WAR comparisons between LF and CATCHERS.
Sure Chevy says they subtract x points for LF, and add 99 points for catchers, and that the math they used is scientific.
Come on...don't make me laugh so hard.
Chevy also told me he is a salesman in his real job...so calculate that in the equation.
Sorry, I am not buying.
Rpos is a component of RAR that I had no part in creating.
It is designed to adjust the positions in terms of RAR, which plays a role in the formation of WAR.
99 'points' are not added for Catchers. Johnny Bench' career Rpos is 99, meaning over the course of his career he received 99 bonus runs because he was a catcher.
This number was not chosen by me. It was not 'chosen' by anyone. It was determined by statistics. Statistics I played no role in developing.
99 points, runs, whatever .....
it was a variable given because he was a catcher. There was a formula "created" that derived that number 99, which no one can suggest is "scientific".
How can you make a statement when you have not even seen the formula that determines Rpos!
It is ridiculous for you (or anyone) to make a judgement on something you have never seen and never used.