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The underlying concept of XRD is that year-to-year player performance does not inherently follow a smooth trend. Rather, surges are followed by declines, and declines by surges, even as overall growth may still occur. What this means for us is that we need to significantly downgrade players coming off of peak or career years, and carefully target those who are coming off of down years. In fact, we might want to build our entire draft strategy around that. So did it work?
Oct 7 2011 1:08pm
Looking back at the Tout Wars saga and a surprise appearance in the Moneyball movie.
Sep 30 2011 1:04pm
We cannot predict the future; all we can do is provide a sound process for constructing a "most likely expectation for future performance." All we can control is the process. As such, if we've captured as much information as is available, used the best methodology and analyzed the results correctly, that's about the best we can do. We simply can't control outcomes. What we can do is analyze all the misses to see why they occurred.
Sep 23 2011 12:58pm
2011 updates to the Mayberry Plan
Feb 11 2011 12:00am
Feb 11 2011 12:00am
2010 introduction to the Mayberry Method (Part 4 of 4)
Feb 5 2010 12:00am
2010 introduction to the Mayberry Method (Part 3 of 4)
Jan 29 2010 12:00am
2010 introduction to the Mayberry Method (Part 2 of 4)
Jan 22 2010 12:00am
2010 introduction to the Mayberry Method (Part 1 of 4)
Jan 15 2010 12:00am
The title of this week's column is also the title of an essay from the 1990 Baseball Forecaster. Nearly two decades ago, we did not know nearly as much as we do now, so our forecasting efforts were far more rudimentary. We were in no position to make grandiose claims about projective accuracy (though some did anyway). The touts at the end of the last century lived in a world of imprecision.
Sep 10 2009 11:00pm
Here are some recent facts about the LIMA Plan: It has been around for a long, long time (11 years in fantasy time is forever) The more popular it has become, the less effective it has become. With each year that passes, memory fades and more people get it wrong I have not used the LIMA Plan, as written, for at least four years.
May 19 2009 11:00pm
The underlying concept of XRD is that year-to-year player performance does not inherently follow a smooth trend. Rather, surges are followed by declines, and declines by surges, even as overall growth may still occur. What this means for us is that we need to significantly downgrade players coming off of peak or career years, and carefully target those who are coming off of down years. In fact, we might want to build our entire draft strategy around that. So did it work?
Oct 7 2011 1:08pm
Looking back at the Tout Wars saga and a surprise appearance in the Moneyball movie.
Sep 30 2011 1:04pm
We cannot predict the future; all we can do is provide a sound process for constructing a "most likely expectation for future performance." All we can control is the process. As such, if we've captured as much information as is available, used the best methodology and analyzed the results correctly, that's about the best we can do. We simply can't control outcomes. What we can do is analyze all the misses to see why they occurred.
Sep 23 2011 12:58pm
2011 updates to the Mayberry Plan
Feb 11 2011 12:00am
Feb 11 2011 12:00am
2010 introduction to the Mayberry Method (Part 4 of 4)
Feb 5 2010 12:00am
2010 introduction to the Mayberry Method (Part 3 of 4)
Jan 29 2010 12:00am
2010 introduction to the Mayberry Method (Part 2 of 4)
Jan 22 2010 12:00am
2010 introduction to the Mayberry Method (Part 1 of 4)
Jan 15 2010 12:00am
The title of this week's column is also the title of an essay from the 1990 Baseball Forecaster. Nearly two decades ago, we did not know nearly as much as we do now, so our forecasting efforts were far more rudimentary. We were in no position to make grandiose claims about projective accuracy (though some did anyway). The touts at the end of the last century lived in a world of imprecision.
Sep 10 2009 11:00pm
Here are some recent facts about the LIMA Plan: It has been around for a long, long time (11 years in fantasy time is forever) The more popular it has become, the less effective it has become. With each year that passes, memory fades and more people get it wrong I have not used the LIMA Plan, as written, for at least four years.
May 19 2009 11:00pm

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