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Rocket Science vs. Barry Bonds

Ray Radlein writes "How about a good old-fashioned Sports story? With its multitude of different statistical measures, baseball has always had the highest Geek Quotient of any major sport. Alpha Geeks of Baseball have included former relief pitcher Rob Murphy, who put his Computer Science degree to good use writing software to evaluate thoroughbred race horses, and Boston Red Sox ace and probable future Hall of Famer Curt Schilling, who not only runs a company that makes hex-based war games, but once got embroiled in an on-field feud due to Everquest. However, Baseball Geeks have a new hero to look up to: Jason Szuminski, who on Sunday became the first MIT graduate to pitch in a major league baseball game. His degree in Aerospace Engineering must have stood him in good stead as he observed the ballistic trajectory of a Barry Bonds fly ball which just barely stayed inside the Padres' new stadium."

3 of 285 comments (clear)

  1. Re:sequence by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 5, Interesting

    You've got to be kidding me.
    Go.com is the 21st most trafficked site on the web. (Over half of that is for ESPN.)

    Slashdot is 1000+

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    There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
  2. Doug Glanville is THE alpha baseball geek by UVABlows · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The guy that Schilling played everquest with, Doug Glanville has got to be the reigning baseball alpha geek. Check out the articles he wrote for espn.com. I am sure they are going to hire him when he decides to hang up cleats. Stark loves to interview him.

    Trip to africa - http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=173085 1
    Astronomy club - http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=177197 8

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    <high-level position here>
    <name of stupid small company here>

  3. It ain't just the players. by endquotedotcom · · Score: 4, Interesting
    The Seattle Weekly just did cover story on amateur baseball stats geeks who claim to know more than MLB:
    "It is a wonderful thing to know you are right and the rest of the world is wrong." Bill James wrote those words nearly 20 years ago in one of his groundbreaking series of annual Baseball Abstract books. The founding father of the objective performance analysis movement came to realize that baseball is the one game in which virtually every aspect of performance can be measured and value-weighted through the compilation and analysis of statistics, in much the same way a business can use data about sales and revenue, weigh them against market-force indicators, and make quarterly projections about expected future performance. He found that the statistics can be used to predict, with reasonable accuracy, what teams will win and which players will be effective. James also found, to his surprise, that the people who ran Major League Baseball organizations didn't much give a shit.