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Baseball > Baltimore Orioles > Something to mu...
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Something to munch on for the new year

by GLS <orioles@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Jan 1, 2008 at 02:37 PM

From:  http://thestilettoblog.com/

In a recent op-ed for The New York Times [
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/22/opinion/22cole.html?_r=1&th=&emc=th&pagewanted=print&oref=slogin
], sociology professor Jonathan R. Cole  at Columbia University and
statistics professor Stephen M. Stigler at the University of Chicago
analyze the Mitchell Re****t’s findings and conclude that while
performance enhancing drugs may have "pronounced effects in individual
s****ts like cycling, swimming, skiing and track, where the difference
between a gold medalist and an also-ran is sometimes measured in
hundredths or thousandths of a second" such drugs have "little or a
negative effect" in baseball and other team s****ts:  

For pitchers there was no net gain in performance and, indeed, some
loss. Of the 23 [pitchers studied], seven showed improvement after
they supposedly began taking drugs (lower E.R.A.’s), but 16 showed
deterioration (higher E.R.A.’s). Over all, the E.R.A.’s rose by 0.5
earned runs per game. Roger Clemens is a case in point: a great
pitcher before 1998, a great (if increasingly fragile) pitcher after
he is supposed to have received treatment. But when we compared
Clemens’s E.R.A. through 1997 with his E.R.A. from 1998 on, it was
worse by 0.32 in the later period.

Hitters didn’t fare much better. For the 48 batters we studied, the
average change in home runs per year “before” and “after” was a
decrease of 0.246. The average batting average decreased by 0.004. The
average slugging percentage increased by 0.019 - only a marginal
difference. So while some batters increased their totals, an equal
number had falloffs. Most showed no consistent improvement, several
showed variable performance and some may have extended the years they
played at a high level, although that is a difficult question to
answer. 

Some players improved and some declined. But the pattern for the
individuals’ averages was consistent, and the variability of players
(with the exception of home run counts) was low. There is no example
of a mediocre player breaking away from the middle of the pack and
achieving stardom with the aid of drugs. 

Whither Barry Bonds? Well, the two professors note that "Bonds’s
profile is strikingly like Babe Ruth’s high performance level until
near the end of his career, with one standout home run year - a year
in which other players on other teams also exceeded their previous
levels." There is no convincing way to demonstrate that Bonds’s
performance owed more to drugs than Ruth’s did to his prodigious use
of alcohol and tobacco.”
 




 3 Posts in Topic:
Something to munch on for the new year
GLS <orioles@[EMAIL PR  2008-01-01 14:37:45 
Re: Something to munch on for the new year
edelman@[EMAIL PROTECTED]  2008-01-01 14:02:16 
Re: Something to munch on for the new year
"David M. Nieporent&  2008-01-01 19:21:55 

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