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kagami
@kagami
what is statcast and how does it capture massive amounts of baseball data? a few casts on the history of statcast and how it works note: ohtani's swing data and visualization is all courtesy of statcast data and the most recent public feature released by the mlb
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kagami
@kagami
statcast is a system of 12 hawk-eye cameras placed within each mlb stadium. there are five cameras (300 fps) dedicated to bat and pitch tracking and the other seven dedicated to tracking players and batted balls. this system allows statcast to track ~99% of batted balls and produce that data for epic visualizations of players swings.
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kagami
@kagami
the origins of statcast begin with "the flip" where derek jeter flips the ball to jorge posada to tag out jeremy giambi (who should've slid) at home in the 2001 alds a debate ensued the next day within mlb offices about what if paul o'neill was in rf instead of shane spencer, what if howe used eric byrnes as a pr. this all led one exec to ask why they couldn't measure all of that. that question led the advanced media arm of mlb to begin working on statcast–a technology that could identify and track the position and path of all players on the field and compress, code, and organize that data for use by broadcasters, analysts, and coaches. https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/5627303/2024/07/10/mlb-statcast-10-year-anniversary/
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kagami
@kagami
personally, i think the coolest part about statcast is how mlb made the decision to publish all this data via baseball savant (https://baseballsavant.mlb.com/) this allows journalists, fans, and entire sites (like fangraphs) to create content that surfaces data-driven insights about their favorite players and capture attention from non-traditional sports fans.
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MJC
@mjc716
incredible context
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