From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Win probability added
(
WPA
) is a sport statistic which attempts to measure a player's contribution to a win by figuring the factor by which each specific play made by that player has altered the outcome of a game.
[1]
It is used for
baseball
and
American football
.
[2]
Explanation
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Some form of win probability has been around for about 40 years; however, until computer use became widespread, win probability added was often difficult to derive, or imprecise. With the aid of
Retrosheet
, however, win probability added has become substantially easier to calculate. The win probability for a specific situation in baseball (including the inning, number of outs, men on base, and score) is obtained by first finding all the teams that have encountered this situation. Then the winning percentage of these teams in these situations is found. This probability figure is then adjusted for
home-field advantage
. Thus win probability added is the difference between the win probability when the player came to bat and the win probability when the play ended.
Win probability and win shares
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Some people confuse win probability added with
win shares
,
[
citation needed
]
since both are baseball statistics that attempt to measure a player's win contribution. However, they are quite different. In win shares, a player with 0 win shares has contributed nothing to his team; in win probability added, a player with 0 win probability added points is average. Also, win shares would give the same amount of credit to a player if he hit a lead-off solo home run as if he hit a walk-off solo home run; WPA, however, would give vastly more credit to the player who hit the walk-off homer.
Baseball
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MLB postseason
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In Game 6 of the
2011 World Series
, St. Louis Cardinals' third-baseman
David Freese
posted the best WPA in Major League Baseball postseason history, with a 0.969, which was 0.099 better than the now-second-best WPA of .870, posted by the Los Angeles Dodgers'
Kirk Gibson
in Game 1 of the
1988 World Series
. The third- and fourth-best WPAs are .854 (by the San Diego Padres'
Steve Garvey
in Game 4 of the
1984 National League Championship Series
) and 0.832 (by the Cardinals'
Lance Berkman
in Game 6 of the 2011 World Series).
[3]
References
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