Yankees deserved worse
Predicting the baseball postseason is an annual tradition on this otherwise defunct blog, so, as busy as I am, I'll take a few minutes to do the same kind of analysis I've done the last six years, essentially factoring out each team's luck to see how good they really were this season. (Actually, I'm so busy I'm just adapting last year's post with new data but no new detailed analysis.) The Nostradamian, Pythagorean and actual win percentages for all teams in 2013:
nW% | pW% | W% | |
---|---|---|---|
Tigers | .625355 | .609571 | .574074 |
Red Sox | .599679 | .617879 | .598765 |
Athletics | .584148 | .592586 | .592593 |
Braves | .572496 | .602609 | .592593 |
Rays | .571333 | .536663 | .564417 |
Cardinals | .568902 | .622317 | .598765 |
Pirates | .565861 | .542993 | .580247 |
Dodgers | .563914 | .549686 | .567901 |
Reds | .553068 | .577061 | .555556 |
Rangers | .536918 | .562732 | .558282 |
Indians | .533376 | .553830 | .567901 |
Nationals | .533291 | .521403 | .530864 |
Angels | .503557 | .497510 | .481481 |
Orioles | .496955 | .522644 | .524691 |
Royals | .493184 | .534393 | .530864 |
Giants | .490391 | .457097 | .469136 |
Diamondbacks | .486358 | .493370 | .500000 |
Brewers | .482904 | .467624 | .456790 |
Blue Jays | .476158 | .472594 | .456790 |
Rockies | .470711 | .466332 | .456790 |
Cubs | .466649 | .438557 | .407407 |
Mets | .457462 | .454444 | .456790 |
Mariners | .456226 | .414277 | .438272 |
Padres | .449523 | .443245 | .469136 |
Yankees | .440003 | .485457 | .524691 |
White Sox | .438222 | .414021 | .388889 |
Phillies | .425329 | .407173 | .450617 |
Twins | .415268 | .387795 | .407407 |
Marlins | .394382 | .396072 | .382716 |
Astros | .350777 | .353694 | .314815 |
So this year the luckiest teams were the Yankees, Royals and Indians; the unluckiest were the Cubs, Tigers and White Sox. The Yankees were epically lucky, more than twice as lucky as the next-luckiest team; they were in the playoff race late in the season but actually deserved to finish almost six games behind the Blue Jays—amazingly, they were even worse than the lowly Cubs. The teams that made the playoffs were almost exactly the ten actually best teams; the Rangers were really slightly better than the Indians, but otherwise every team to make the playoffs was better than every team to miss the playoffs.
Based on the above results, it's reasonable to predict:
Red Sox over Rays | Tigers over Red Sox | Tigers over Braves | |
Rays over Indians | |||
Tigers over Athletics | |||
Braves over Dodgers | Braves over Cardinals | ||
Pirates over Reds | Cardinals over Pirates | ||
But what I'm rooting for is very different:
Red Sox over Indians | Athletics over Red Sox | Athletics over Reds | |
Indians over Rays | |||
Athletics over Tigers | |||
Dodgers over Braves | Reds over Dodgers | ||
Reds over Pirates | Reds over Cardinals | ||
I got all the statistics I needed for this analysis from these three pages: A B C
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