Chance Throws Curve Balls in Game of Baseball
BOWLING GREEN, O.-- In the just-ended World
Series, the venerable N. Y. Yankees teetered on the edge of
greatness, with the possibility of being four-time series
winners, for the third time in their history. Their challengers,
the upstart Arizona Diamondbacks, sought successfully to prevent
that from happening. Yet the Seattle Mariners, with the best
record in baseball this year, had already been eliminated.
So did the "best team" really win?
A recent book by Dr. Jim Albert, a professor
of mathematics and statistics at Bowling Green State University,may
help fans determine whether the winner is indeed the best
team in baseball, and looks at the likelihood that an average
team will excel in the post-season.
Albert's book, Curve Ball: Baseball, Statistics
and the Role of Chance in the Game, which he wrote with
co-author Jay Bennett, has made quite a hit in the media and
with baseball fans. The book has been featured in the Wall
Street Journal, on WGN in Chicago and on a Dayton National
Public Radio station, and is doing well on Amazon.com. Curve
Ball was published in June by Copernicus Books, an imprint
of Springer-Verlag.
"We were very happy with how well received
it's been. For us, the excitement was just in writing it,"
Albert said.
Albert and Bennett, both statisticians and
loyal Philadelphia Phillies fans, have endeavored to make
baseball statistics more understandable and to enable people
to use statistics to learn about the game, which has had a
long and storied use of statistics to describe teams and players.
Yet, Albert said, many people don't have a good grasp of how
statistics work, or may misinterpret them. They also tend
to overlook the role chance plays in the game.
When a player follows an outstanding month
with a so-so period of play, for example, people tend to believe
he is in a slump, when in actuality he is simply following
a natural tendency to go toward the average, according to
Albert. "People tend to focus on the extremes,"
he said.
Likewise, if someone gets 10 hits out of
20 times at bat, he appears to have a very good batting average.
But in statistical terms, 20 at-bats is not nearly enough
upon which to base a sound judgment.
"Even an entire season, of 500-600 at-bats,
is not quite enough in statistical terms," Albert said.
Another goal in writing the book, Albert
said, was to promote statistics as a major field of study
for American students.
"Most of our Ph.D. students in statistics
today are from other countries. We wanted to show people how
statistics can be used in life and that it's an interesting
career," he said.
Both Albert and Bennett, who is principal
scientist with Telcordia Technologies and editor of Statistics
in Sport, have served as chair of the Sports Section of
the American Statistical Association.
Albert is at work on a resource book for
statistics faculty designed to help them "spice up their
statistics class" using baseball as a teaching tool.
(Posted:11/09/2001)