I was reading an article about the Yankees' abysmal offensive showing thus far in the season. For one hitter in particular, it noted his atrocious stats, but went on to say that there was no reason for concern because his EXPECTED slugging percentage was above the league average. Forget that his current slugging percentage is under .200. Based on exit velocity and launch angle, his expected slugging percentage was very good. So, as opposed to the old days, when you'd just bench a crappy hitter and try someone else, you just keep trotting out the guys who aren't even hitting their weight b/c the analytics predict they'll eventually start hitting.
This is why I hate analytics. Too much emphasis is put on what a player SHOULD be doing or what they could be EXPECTED do as opposed to what they are actually doing.
This is why I hate analytics. Too much emphasis is put on what a player SHOULD be doing or what they could be EXPECTED do as opposed to what they are actually doing.