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Paperback Baseball Prospectus: The Essential Guide to the 2007 Baseball Season Book

ISBN: 0452288258

ISBN13: 9780452288256

Baseball Prospectus: The Essential Guide to the 2007 Baseball Season

The 2007 edition of the most authoritative guide to professional baseballAmerica?s favorite pastime has never been more popular and, for over a decade, Baseball Prospectushas been the ultimate guide... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Paperback

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

box scores and beer

I've seen phonebooks smaller than this book, but no phonebook ever dialed up the amount of statisical fun and brash criticism that this book does. Baseball Prospectus is easily the most annoying and refreshing reading you can have during the day. With acronyms like WHIP and OBP you gotta want to know more about baseball to read the book. What is most refreshing and annoying is that every team covered in the book is criticized for their failures and not hyped for past accomplishments or potential. The writers of Baseball Prospectus tear down obscure data and make it relavent. Never mind that the internet has made something two days old, old news, the stats and data collected are used as a guidline to what is to be expected from players. Don't take the predictions so seriously, or else your hate the book, just take the imformation and remember key formulas during the months of April through October. The game of baseball will reward you with culture and tradition, this book just adds to the knowledge of it.

Baseball Prospectus is the Best

I get this book every year, and have for 9 years. The best written, insightful tome on baseball and baseball statistics available anywhere.

Hog heaven for baseball statistics buffs

This is like a Bill James moment. This volume looks at each major league team and key players for the coming campaign. It provides neat statistics like a SPEED score (a takeoff on what Bill James has created), Marginal Lineup Value estimate (MLVr--the estimated value of a player), and so on. My favorite team is the Chicago White Sox. Let's take a look at this team, to get a sense of what this volume contributes. One neat feature of the volume is its prediction of what might happen for each player in the coming year--a breakout year, improvement, collapse, and attrition. For instance, the book suggests that, for Joe Crede, the odds of a breakout year are 33%, for improvement 59%, for a collapse 15%, and for attrition (severe decline in plate appearances or innings pitched) 9%. For Chisox fans, sounds good. What about Jim Thome? Breakout=14%; improvement=37%; collapse=37%; attrition=28%. Oops. makes me nervous if there is over 1/3 likelihood that his performance collapses. Pitchers? Mark Buehrle is projected as having the following odds: Breakout=14%; Improve=50%; Collapse=16%; Attrition=0%. There are also data on managers' decision making. Despite his reputation as a hot head, Ozzie Guillen looks pretty good in his handling of starting pitchers, relievers, and the basics of sacrifice bunts. Nice appendices at the end, too. One of these is a listing of the top 100 minor league prospects. For those who are interested, the top prospect is Alex Gordon (in the Royals' farm system), a 23 year old 3rd baseman. Next is Yankee prospect Philip Hughes, a 21 year old pitcher. And so on. This is manna from heaven for baseball addicts. It complements the Bill James' works nicely.

If you love Bill James (and can stand the typos) ...

For those of us who remember the old Bill James Baseball Abstract, Baseball Prospectus is about as close as you can come these days. Nothing, of course, can match the pioneering articles James published in the Abstract, but the Prospectus provides the most comprehensive, informative, and amusing player comments you are likely to find along with a few interesting research articles. I can't give any book whose publication I look forward to so eagerly anything less than five stars, but I agree with one of the other reviewers that the editing is very shaky and has been for years. This year the editing seems to have improved a bit, but there are still some player comments, and even team overviews, that don't appear to have been proofread, much less edited. This year's most significant glitch: Each player comment lists the four most comparable players, using the PECOTA system. Unfortunately, when the comparables are mentioned in the body of the comment, the players mentioned don't usually match the players listed. Apparently, they changed how the comparables were calculated and came up with new lists after the comments were written. Every year I end up wishing they had delayed publication for a week or two to allow time for some final editing. One other problem this year is that the book is printed on grade zzz paper with the result that the printing on some pages is blurred. p.s. to another reviewer: The author of Moneyball is Michael Lewis, not Billy Beane.

Not as inventive as last year's, but there's no better informational tool than Baseball Prospectus.

If you are interested in bettering your knowledge in sabermetrics, baseball, fantasy sports, or just as a guideline for expectations for this upcoming year, BP 07 is the 600-page, easy-to-read resource you need. The main improvements: - Manager section - Statistical overlay that shows BABIP for pitchers - Much more accurate PECOTAs than year past IMO - Top 100 Prospect List - Wider variety of different perspectives The bad: - Some editing errors, but, for a 600-page book that was shipped out ASAP, not nearly as many as the review below me would have you believe. And they left out four players, only two of which (Beltre and Wickman) should be meaningful this season. - Inexplicably no BABIP for hitters That's the only "bad," really. There are not as many new ideas introduced in this book as in the last book; rather than new ideas, old ones have been much improved, so, depending on your perspective, it more than balances out. For such a low price, it would be foolish of you to pass up this book.
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