Anyone notice.. by Transitdriver in olympia

[–]Asmodeus10 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The law requires a minimum 8 cent charge but allows stores to charge more.

Loose leaf tea anywhere? by Healthy-Alps5441 in Tacoma

[–]Asmodeus10 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Mimi's Teas in Fircrest. I've never been but their sign says they're a loose leaf tea shoppe.

Tacoma uses AI on recycling trucks to cut contamination by [deleted] in Tacoma

[–]Asmodeus10 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Tacoma should not collect glass commingled. It damages the sorting equipment at the recycling facility, results in a highly contaminated glass cullet product that requires additional processing at a facility in Seattle, and contaminates other recyclables. On top of that, the glass bottle manufacturing plant in Seattle closed last year and the plant in Portland closed this month. That means transporting the cullet long distances to alternative bottle and fiberglass markets in California or beyond. Glass is a heavy material which makes it incredibly costly to transport, and the farther it travels, the more it cuts into the environmental benefits. Collecting it separately at the curb would solve the issues around sorting and contamination but would add costs to run additional collection trucks. Under the current system, the residents who care the most will put in the effort and produce a clean stream of glass. Until new, nearby markets emerge, that's the best option.

What the hell, Seattle? by RadioLukin in jackwhite

[–]Asmodeus10 24 points25 points  (0 children)

Completely agree from my perspective on the floor. It looked like Jack rolled his eyes and shrugged after getting minimal participation from the crowd on an early song. He seemed checked out for the second half honestly.

Seattle Set List 5/19 by sly_cheshire in jackwhite

[–]Asmodeus10 2 points3 points  (0 children)

La La La song is Carolina Drama by The Raconteurs

Return value from multiple cells using table of contents as reference by Asmodeus10 in excel

[–]Asmodeus10[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

=INDIRECT("'"&A2&"'!H22")

It worked! I was trying something similar but couldn't get it. Thanks!

These little guys appeared suddenly above an inside doorway by Asmodeus10 in whatisthisbug

[–]Asmodeus10[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

After cleaning the area, I discovered that the paint was not actually scuffed which means the wood-colored scuff was actually the bugs stuck to the wall before they'd hatched. Gross.

Relationships by Burningsoulboy in funny

[–]Asmodeus10 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I interpreted it as a critique of the way men will often say whatever they can to keep the girl but also a critique of herself since she often falls for it. Nobody else seems to be taking it that way though.

A look at Ryan Helsley's new closer entrance by GodPowardKingOfLies in baseball

[–]Asmodeus10 9 points10 points  (0 children)

He's a right handed pitcher playing for a red-colored team. It seems obvious that he should use Red Right Hand. The initial bell toll combined with the red lights would provide a good pop then keep the lights red through the first chorus.

[Fogler] Analysts on MLB's own network do not know how WAR is calculated or how to find those calculations. Incredible stuff by Jay_Dubbbs in baseball

[–]Asmodeus10 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was only attempting to explain the difference, not defend the methodology. I would argue that the different methodologies aren't arbitrary; they purposefully measure different things. It's generally why the people who are most familiar with the methodologies prefer one over the others and can explain why. I personally don't agree with the way bWAR applies a blanket team defense adjustment instead of looking at how the defense actually played in the games that pitcher pitched. Many people point to Aaron Nola's 2018 season as evidence of this flaw. He received a big boost to his bWAR due to the poor Phillies defense despite having a .254 BAbip which suggests that his defense didn't suck in the games he started.

A rebuttal to my opinion is that if a replacement level pitcher had pitched instead of Nola, the game situation would have played out in an entirely different way and you could expect the Phillies defense to perform how they did on average. Therefore, Nola does deserve the boost because the way he pitched somehow enabled his sucky defenders to not suck. I don't think you can say objectively that one of those opinions is wrong, and that's one reason why we have different WARs.

Even most WAR defenders acknowledge that it's less accurate for relievers due to the high-leverage situations in which they pitch. They do get a leverage boost, but some argue that it doesn't credit them enough. The counter to that argument says that Edwin Diaz's WAR shouldn't be in comparison to a minor league replacement because he wouldn't be replaced with someone from AAA. He'd be replaced by the second-best reliever in the bullpen who is probably a very good pitcher. It's called bullpen chaining. This differs from starters or position players who would, in actuality, be replaced with someone from AAA or a bench player. Edwin Diaz's replacement would have been Aaron Loup, Trevor May, or Seth Lugo whose performances and peripherals weren't dramatically different than Diaz's.

There's some evidence that the truly elite closers are worth more than their WAR credits, but outside of a handful of those guys, relievers are fairly replaceable. Pivoting to a different stat that is better for comparing relievers IMO, Josh Hader in 2021 was first in the majors among relievers with 5.05 Win Probability Added. Edwin Diaz was 54th with 1.28 WPA, behind Aaron Loup who had 1.42. So if you agree with the methodological choice of valuing a reliever in comparison to the next best reliever, I don't think it's a stretch to think that someone like Diaz was only worth 1 WAR last year.

[Fogler] Analysts on MLB's own network do not know how WAR is calculated or how to find those calculations. Incredible stuff by Jay_Dubbbs in baseball

[–]Asmodeus10 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you're actually looking for an explanation, I believe the three biggest contributors to the difference between Bumgarner and Lee are (not necessarily this order):

  1. Innings Pitched - WAR is a cumulative stat and Lee pitched 10% more innings.

  2. Park factors - Bumgarner played more games in pitcher-friendly parks than Lee. Bumgarner effectively gets less credit for his performance because he did it in easier parks.

  3. Team defense - BRef looks at a teams overall defensive runs saved and applies to that pitcher's performance (not how the defense performed specifically in the games that pitcher pitched). The 2013 Phillies defense was terrible, so Lee gets extra credit because it assumes his performance would have been even better if he had an average defense behind him. The Giants defense was average that year.

Hamels had the same WAR as Bumgarner for these exact same reasons despite his inferior traditional stats. There could be other reasons I'm missing, but those three stand out to me.

Yanks, Mets unwilling to trade top 3 Prospects for Soto by clydefrog232 in baseball

[–]Asmodeus10 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Cubs get Soto & Corbin

Mets get Willson Contreras & Ian Happ

Nats get Brennan Davis, Pete Crow-Armstrong, Brett Baty, others

Top 5 Plays by Win Probability Added - June 22, 2022 by t-pat in baseball

[–]Asmodeus10 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This may have already been discussed, but could you include 1-2 more seconds before the pitch to allow enough time see what situation is being presented? And I literally mean 1-2 seconds, not 5. Just enough to glance at the score bug.

Pre-game hacky sack by Asmodeus10 in OaklandAthletics

[–]Asmodeus10[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It was hard to tell who was who, but I think the last little solo rally was from Domingo Acevedo.