tycobb {RXshrink} | R Documentation |
Ty Cobb batting statistics for 1905–1928 with Carl Morris' 2-piece Spline term.
Description
Linear Regression models can be used to predict Ty Cobb's Expected true yearly batting averages from his observed yearly "batavg" and the 5 other variables stored in the "tycobb" data.frame. Predictions from such "models" can address the question: "Was Ty Cobb ever a TRUE .400 hitter?" Since a player's seasonal batavg is a "random variable," the fact that Cobb's batavg was 0.4196 in 1911 and 0.4105 in 1912 does not necessarily imply that his Expected Seasonal batavg was truly over .400 in either of those consecutive seasons. For example, his batavg was 0.4011 in 1922 (10 years later). However, his seasonal batavg had dipped to "only" 0.3341 in 1920.
"Cobb lived off the field as though he wished to live forever. He lived on the field as though it was his last day." – Branch Rickey, Major League Baseball Hall of Fame executive.
Usage
data(tycobb)
Format
A data frame with 24 observations (years) on the following 6 variables.
year
Ty Cobb's 24 American League Seasons: 1905 - 1928.
hits
Total number of Hits that season.
atbats
Total number of times at Bat that season.
CMspl
Carl Morris' Piecewise-Linear Spline term with "knot" in season 6 (1910).
seasons
A linear "Trend" term: 1, 2, ..., 24.
batavg
Cobb's Seasonal Batting Average ... 7 decimal places.
References
Carl Morris. (1982). "Was Ty Cobb ever a TRUE .400 hitter?" One-page Handout for his JSM Lecture on August 18 in Cincinnati, Ohio.