In 1991, I was fortunate enough to be part of a very special college baseball team. We were the Cal State Northridge (aka “Cal State Nowhere”) Matadors. The previous year, we were a Division II team, but by the end of the ’91 season we were (maybe still are) the only team in NCAA history in any sport to finish ranked in the top 10 of Division I schools the first year playing at that level.

In May of that year, we were in Fresno for the NCAA Division I Western Regionals. There was no Super Regional back then. You played a double-elimination tournament with six teams, and whoever came out of that alive was going to Omaha for the College World Series.

As you might have guessed, we were not a typical club. Our entire roster was 19 guys. We had a three-man starting rotation, and we led the country in complete games. You started the game, you finished it. So, in a double-elimination tournament that lasted four days, we knew we were going to have to do some pitching on short rest.

After losing our first game, the road map to Omaha looked like this:

Beat Miami (led by Charles Johnson, Jorge Fabregas, and company) Beat Portland University Win two games on Sunday against either Stanford or Fresno State (whoever came out of the winner’s bracket).

I got to pitch the game against Miami on a Friday. Fortunately, we scored 13 runs that day and were able to keep going. We then defeated Portland on Saturday, and the stage was set – a Sunday doubleheader against Fresno State for a chance to play in Omaha. Our Game One starter, Craig Clayton, pitched a complete game on two days’ rest and we defeated Fresno in Game One. I would pitch Game Two on a single day of rest, and if you’re still reading this (thank you), this is where The Little Things come in.

It’s the bottom of the ninth inning of Game Two and somehow, by the grace of God, we’re ahead 5-4, and I am still pitching. Three outs to go. The sun is starting to set just over the first base side of the Fresno State grandstands. That was actually significant because Little Thing No. 1 that inning was when Fresno’s first batter hit a high one-hop ground ball to third base. Easy play. We were about to begin this inning with a leadoff out, and that was huge. I looked back to our third baseman, who was shielding his eyes as best he could, but was absolutely blinded by the sun. He fell to a knee and dropped the ball. It was a sun-aided base hit.

Runner on first, no outs. I am still kicking myself over Little Thing No. 2 to this day. It was a walk to a hitter trying to bunt.

First and second, no outs. The Bulldogs’ next hitter is bunting. Our first baseman charged hard and had a play on the lead runner at third base, but the throw was wide and we couldn’t get the force out. Little Thing No. 3 is an “E-3.”

Bases loaded, no outs. We have allowed three baserunners without a base hit. I don’t remember much about the pitch that ended the game, but I do remember coming inches shy of fielding it as it was grounded just past me and into center field. Two runs scored, and our dream was crushed.

My Northridge teammates, coaches and I were trying to find some meaning in all of this. I left out many of the details surrounding how hard we had worked, how well we were coached, and so on — that’s another story in itself. There must have been a reason for it to end with the complete heartache we all had that day in Fresno. We all would have preferred the Cinderella story, but none of us would trade the experience of being on that team for anything in the world. So, that is probably the biggest life lesson we learned from it – a championship is not required to prove greatness.

But there was a baseball lesson in it, too. Everything matters. The game is not just hits and outs. There are many other factors involved in who wins and who loses – most within your control, and some not within your control at all.

At Inside Edge, we track every nuance of the game, and we do so very meticulously. The experience I just mentioned helped us develop a new report – one that would measure the fundamental soundness of a club by summing and organizing “The Little Things” — which, when combined with each other, sometimes become very big things.

Box scores help us recall who went 2-for-4 and who struck out 10 batters. But what about that great diving play by the third baseman in the fifth inning? What about that terrible call on the bases that wasn’t overturned? Or, how about the wild pitches, passed balls, balks, fielding errors, lucky hops, bad baserunning plays, good baserunning plays and everything else that contributed to the game’s outcome that wasn’t a base hit or routine out?

Let’s take a closer look at how all of those “Little Things” affect the game using an actual game from Sept. 27 to illustrate. This is what the scoreboard tells us:

A Hardball Times Update by Rachael McDaniel Goodbye for now.

Rockies vs. Dodgers, 9/27/14

Team R H E COL 5 12 1 LAD 6 11 0

In this game, the Rockies out-hit the Dodgers 12 to 11, and they had 21 total bases from hits compared to the Dodgers’ 17. But, the Rockies did not win the game. In terms of Little Things, the Dodgers won that battle 14 to 8. This is the high-level summary of the game from our LT Report:

You may be thinking: “Turnover ratio? Positive plays? Luck? What are these new metrics? You’re really attempting to measure these things?” Well, why not? Let’s unfold a few layers here and see what you think.

Turnover Ratio

In sports like football and basketball, turnover ratio is a common statistic. It’s easy to calculate because there are very few ways to give something away to your opponent – basically fumbles, interceptions, and penalties in football; steals, defensive rebounds, and fouls in basketball. It’s a pretty important number, though. In football, the team that wins the turnover battle wins the game 79 percent of the time.

In baseball, there are 11 ways to give something away. Before we discuss them, we should clarify that the term “turnover ratio” isn’t literally applicable to baseball in the way that it applies to other sports, where a giveaway means you turned the ball over. We’re using turnover ratio simply because it sounds better than “mistakes/giveaways ratio.” Here are the 11 giveaways we mentioned:

Walk

Wild pitch

Hit by pitch

Balk

Error

Fielders choice without an out

Passed ball

Poor play (not an error)

Caught stealing (offense)

Runner picked off (offense)

Baserunning mistake (not pickoff or caught stealing)

All of these things result in a free base, a free out or both (in the case of reach on error). Notice the ordering of these plays. You can put the first four in the pitching category, the next four fall under defense and the last three are in the baserunning category. Here is that Rockies-Dodgers game again to illustrate how the turnover ratio worked out to Dodgers +3:

Positive plays

Teams also have many ways to gain an extra base on offense, and they can take away a base or earn an extra out on defense. Here are 12 of them:

Exceptional play

Putout after hit or catcher block

Double- and triple plays

Stolen base (offense)

Heads-up baserunning play

Went first-to-third on single

Scored from first on double

Sacrifice bunt (offense)

Bunt hit (offense)

Sacrifice fly (offense)

Hit and run success (offense)

Move runner two bases without an out (offense)

In our sample game, the Dodgers had five positive plays, while the Rockies had two, resulting in a +2 for the Dodgers.

Luck

Luck is an uncontrollable element that impacts one team inversely from its opponent. Good luck for one team is bad luck for the other. The following six events fall into the luck category:

Hard-hit out

Cheap hit

Called strike three out of zone

Called ball four in zone

Bad base ump call favoring

Other intangibles favoring

Where “other” includes the following:

Ball hit someone or something,, affecting result of the play

Broken bat interfered with fielder’s ability to make play

Extreme wind or other elements affected the play

Fan interference took away or added a base

Fielder fell down or was injured allowing runner advance

Fielder lost ball in sun, lights or stadium background

Missed sign by hitter or runner caused out

In our sample game, the Dodgers had a hard-hit out (Andre Ethier scorched a ball to the first baseman for a 3-6 fielder’s choice). That was the only luck event in the Rockies’ favor that day. The Dodgers had a weakly hit (cheap) single by A.J. Ellis, and Dodgers starting pitcher Dan Haren received a generous strike three call on a pitch off the outside part of the plate. The net result is Dodgers +1 in the luck category.



Note: It may look like a calculation error, but the totals are calculated in terms of luck in the team’s favor. The hard-out by the Dodgers benefited the Rockies. So, what looks like it should be a total of zero on the left and three on the right, is really one on the left and two on the right. The graphic is correct.

When you put it all together, the Little Things ratio ended up Dodgers +6, calculated simply this way:

Now that we’ve explained the report on a single-game basis, let’s look at some full-season data from 2014. We’re going to do this in a question/answer format, starting with five questions we had (and that we’re guessing you might have as well). Please use the comments section to suggest more studies you’d like to see, and we’ll do our best to post the results either on our metrics site or our Twitter page.

Question No. 1

How often does the team win when it has have more Little Things in its favor than the opponent?

Answer to Question 1: 70 percent of the time

LT Ratio W L Win Pct +1 191 157 54.9% +2 218 132 62.3% +3 190 111 63.1% +4 or more 965 270 78.1% Total 1564 670 70.0%

Note: There were 196 games in which the Little Things ratio was a tie. Those games are excluded.

Question No. 2

What about each component of the Little Things broken down that same way?

Answer 2A: Turnover Ratio Winner wins game 65% of time

Turnover Ratio W L Win Pct +1 303 261 53.7% +2 273 195 58.3% +3 261 124 67.8% +4 or more 571 180 76.0% Total 1407 761 64.9%

Note: There were 262 games in which the turnover ratio was a tie. Those games are excluded.

Answer 2B: Positive Play Ratio Winner wins game 66% of time

Positive Play Ratio W L Win Pct +1 405 274 59.6% +2 338 214 61.2% +3 278 126 68.8% +4 or more 357 99 78.3% Total 1,378 713 65.9%

Note: There were 339 games in which the positive play ratio was a tie. Those games are excluded.

Answer 2C: Luck Ratio Winner wins game 55% of time

Luck Ratio W L Win Pct +1 474 401 54.2% +2 291 262 52.6% +3 148 125 54.2% +4 or more 141 59 70.5% Total 1,054 847 55.4%

Note: There were 529 games in which the luck ratio was a tie. Those games are excluded.

Question No. 3

How often does the team with the higher net total bases from hits win the game? For example, if Team A has 15 total bases from its hits, and allows 12 total bases from its hits, how often does Team A win?

Answer 3: 82%

TB from Hits Ratio W L Win Pct +1 135 114 54.2% +2 150 84 64.1% +3 168 63 72.7% +4 or more 1426 149 90.5% Total 1879 410 82.1%

Note: There were 141 games in which the total bases from hits ratio was a tie. Those games are excluded.

Question No. 4

If a team wins all three elements of the Little Things (turnover ratio, positive play ratio and luck ratio), how often does it win the game?

Answer: 81 percent. This happened 367 times in 2014.

Question No. 5

Who led the league in the Little Things ratio this season?

Answer: The Washington Nationals. Despite being one of the unluckiest clubs, the Nationals led the league with 1.6 Little Things in their favor per game. All numbers are on a per game basis.

Other observations from the above graphic:

A team’s ability to hit and prevent hits (in tandem) is the most important component to winning. The better teams in the league get it done at the plate and on the mound. The Angels, Orioles, Pirates and Tigers are examples of clubs whose deficiencies in the Little Things department were overcome by their ability to hit and not allow hits. However, you can’t always get by on hitting and pitching alone. The Mariners are an example of this. They posted +8 total bases from hits, yet fell short of the playoffs, perhaps due to their fifth-worst ranking in the Little Things (-0.7 per game). The Cubs and Rockies both posted positive total bases from hits ratios, but were near the bottom of the league in Little Things. The Royals are the Little Things poster team. They broke even on the total bases gained and allowed from hits. They ranked fifth in the league in LITTLE Things ratio with +0.7 per game. They were also tied for the luckiest team this season.

For more information, please visit our website and/or follow us on Twitter. We have been posting the results from every 2014 postseason game, and will continue to do so through the end of the World Series.