拉发

Duncan Finigan, Brian Mills, Daniel F. Stone
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引用次数: 1

摘要

我们研究了棒球运动中的一个基本战略决策:什么时候(如果有的话)该“叫牛棚”并让先发投手上场。我们首先使用一个简单的理论模型来证明,在最佳的时间拉起先发投手,投球的改变应该会对当前的投球质量产生\emph{严格的改善}(即,在当前一局中允许的得分严格减少)。然后,我们使用2008-2017赛季的详细投球水平数据来估计拉先发对当前一局的失分和获胜概率的影响。我们认为,在包含大量协变量的条件下,拉起动机决策似乎“与随机一样好”,但承认缺乏真正的随机化。我们发现拉先发对允许得分的预测影响确实是负的,但对获胜概率的影响是精确的零。然后我们研究了这些选择是如何受到游戏情境和最近游戏事件的影响,包括幸运命中表现的衡量,并发现只有零星和有限的偏见证据。我们解释的结果暗示,叫到牛棚的决定是近似贝叶斯最优的。然而,在我们的样本时间框架之前的几十年里,首发球员的平均开局有一个稳定的下降趋势。因此,即使经理们现在做出了近似贝叶斯最优选择,这可能不仅是因为他们从自己的经验中学习,还因为他们从前辈和棒球环境的长期稳定性中学习。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Pulling Starters
We study a fundamental strategic decision in baseball: when (if at all) to make the ``call to the bullpen'' and pull the starting pitcher. We first use a simple theoretical model to show that at the optimal time to pull the starter, the pitching change should yield a \emph{strict }improvement in current pitching quality (i.e., a strict decrease in runs allowed in the current inning). We then use detailed pitch-level data from the 2008-2017 seasons to estimate the effects of pulling the starter on both runs allowed in the current inning and on win probability. We argue that the pulling starter decision is plausibly ``as good as random'' conditional on the large set of included covariates, but acknowledge the lack of true randomization. We find that the predicted effect of pulling the starter on runs allowed is indeed negative, but the effect on win probability is a precise zero. We then examine how these choices are affected by game situations and recent game events, including a measure of lucky hitting performance, and find only scattered and limited evidence of biases. We interpret the results to imply that call to the bullpen decisions are approximately Bayesian-optimal. However, there was a steady downward trend in the mean inning that starters were pulled over a period of decades prior to our sample time-frame. Thus, even if managers make approximately Bayesian-optimal choices now, this is likely due to not only learning from their own experiences, but also learning from prior generations and the long-term stability of the baseball context.
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