Originally posted by biskits
During the regular season Cleveland and Boston had identical records - 96-55. They compiled those records playing all teams in baseball.
Now let's grant for a moment that Boston may have a tougher schedule, so their 96-win season is more significant than Cleveland's. But what if Boston and Cleveland had played only each other.
Since the competition would have been tougher, neither team would have won as many games. And if Boston were arguably better, we would expect them to win more than half the games. How many more - maybe in stead of winning 96 games maybe Boston wins about 88 games instead, a swing of e total wins (and I think that's being generous to Boston).
Eighty-eight wins is a .543 winning "percentage". If your run the odds, that means that in any five game series, the odds of the Red Sox winning the series is only 58%, which isn't that far from an even situation.
The fact that one team might have compiled a good record against another team during the season really doesn't mean that much. Boston went 5-2 against Cleveland during the season, which is a winning percentage of .714. I don't think anyone would conclude from that that Boston would have won 71.4 of their games had they only played Cleveland during the season.
IOW - we all know that in a small number of games anything can happen statistically.
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What is more important, though, is how the roster is constructed. A mediocre team with two great starting pitchers will fare better in the playoffs than during the regular season because a short series maximizes their strengths and minimizes a characteristics that is a big weakness during the season.
And despite all of the talk about veteran presence, I believe that teams that are younger perform better in the playoffs because younger bodies hold up better over the strains of a long season. Also, young players are in a stage of their career in which their skills are improving, even over a season.
A 24-year old who compiles a .300 batting average over a season is likely to have been a .290 hitter at the start of the season, but a .310 hitter at the end of the season. The reverse is often true of veterans.
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