I think I may be grossly misunderstanding the Ballpark Tendencies page...
This came about from a comment by KEP on the SF Giants thread:
It was a thought that struck me as I saw the Mighty Giants give up 3 HRs in a park that, by popular perception, gives up 3HR's a week max.
So trying to establish how this was possible I asked some questions of my friend (Google) and tried to reconcile that with the data I found on the BHQ Ballpark Tendencies page.
Looking at that page, what I believe I see is that Camden Yards (for example) has a 22% advantage for LHB HRs and a 11% advantage for RHB HRs. So surely it has a 33% advantage of all HRs - or should it be the mean: 16.5% advantage?
Anyway, on the basis of my first assumption (33% advantage total HRs) I lobbed the data into a spreadsheet and came up with a best five:
and a worst five:
And there, 3rd worst ballpark for HRs, is the St Louis Cards' home, Busch Stadium.
I've misunderstood the data, haven't I...
However, using a combination of readily available stats and ESPN's Home Run Tracker for distance (http://www.hittrackeronline.com/index.php) I reckon that if I set the distance required to get over the left field wall of PETCO as being 377 feet (distance 367 feet plus, say, 10 foot to clear the wall), then 3,492 of the 4,552 HRs scored in the majors during the 2011 season would have gone over there; 1,607 HRs would have cleared centre field (396 ft + 10ft to clear the wall) and 2,515 would have cleared the right field wall (382 feet + 10ft). The 10ft is arbitrary and is based on the presumption that a 367 ft homer would land exactly at the point where the left-field wall meets the ground and therefore would be an easy () catch for the left-fielder.
Obviously I haven't compared the point each homer crossed the wall with the corresponding point at PETCO, but the statistical suggestion that at least 35% and at most 77% of all home runs scored last season would have cleared the wall at PETCO. So how is it that the park has the reputation of being a hitters horror-show?
The simple answer is that the stats show that fewer HRs are scored at PETCO than MOST other ballparks but could that not be a reflection of the quality of who is standing in the batter's box rather than the park itself? What I'd like to see is the Padres borrow Albert Pujols, CarGo, Adam Dunn (yes, this year!), Masher Stanton, Josh Hamilton and Jose Bautista for a month and see how they get on..
There's probably a simple answer to this that I've missed so I'm all ears as to what it is.
This came about from a comment by KEP on the SF Giants thread:
Originally posted by KEP@HQ
So trying to establish how this was possible I asked some questions of my friend (Google) and tried to reconcile that with the data I found on the BHQ Ballpark Tendencies page.
Looking at that page, what I believe I see is that Camden Yards (for example) has a 22% advantage for LHB HRs and a 11% advantage for RHB HRs. So surely it has a 33% advantage of all HRs - or should it be the mean: 16.5% advantage?
Anyway, on the basis of my first assumption (33% advantage total HRs) I lobbed the data into a spreadsheet and came up with a best five:
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I've misunderstood the data, haven't I...
However, using a combination of readily available stats and ESPN's Home Run Tracker for distance (http://www.hittrackeronline.com/index.php) I reckon that if I set the distance required to get over the left field wall of PETCO as being 377 feet (distance 367 feet plus, say, 10 foot to clear the wall), then 3,492 of the 4,552 HRs scored in the majors during the 2011 season would have gone over there; 1,607 HRs would have cleared centre field (396 ft + 10ft to clear the wall) and 2,515 would have cleared the right field wall (382 feet + 10ft). The 10ft is arbitrary and is based on the presumption that a 367 ft homer would land exactly at the point where the left-field wall meets the ground and therefore would be an easy () catch for the left-fielder.
Obviously I haven't compared the point each homer crossed the wall with the corresponding point at PETCO, but the statistical suggestion that at least 35% and at most 77% of all home runs scored last season would have cleared the wall at PETCO. So how is it that the park has the reputation of being a hitters horror-show?
The simple answer is that the stats show that fewer HRs are scored at PETCO than MOST other ballparks but could that not be a reflection of the quality of who is standing in the batter's box rather than the park itself? What I'd like to see is the Padres borrow Albert Pujols, CarGo, Adam Dunn (yes, this year!), Masher Stanton, Josh Hamilton and Jose Bautista for a month and see how they get on..
There's probably a simple answer to this that I've missed so I'm all ears as to what it is.
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