About High Boskage House Baseball Operations

Our Credentials

(Although the editorial "we" is used throughout on this site, it is pretty much a one-man operation. Till recently, I have been rather evasive, not because I'm naturally modest but because I am not, and a resumé--always a difficult balancing act between modesty and vanity--is a place where it's easy to seem pretentious. But I've decided to heed Sherlock Holmes' admonition to Dr. Watson, that it is just as great an error to understate one's qualifications as to overstate them, and to finally say some few things about myself.)

The Short Resumé

My name is Eric Walker. I have a degree in engineering (electrical) from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

About three decades ago, in the late 1970s, I began an intensive study of baseball that I still pursue. That study was twofold: theoretical analysis using the mathematical techniques described throughout this site, and practical, meaning spending hours virtually every day down in major-league clubhouses, dugouts, press boxes, and front offices. To manage that second part, I drew on prior experience in radio broadcasting and made myself into a duly credentialed sports journalist. Based in the San Francisco Bay Area, I had daily access to two teams (and thus both leagues), meaning a home game to cover almost every day.

I soon came to have a daily five-minute "module" on baseball that was syndicated to interested public-radio stations around the country; during its heyday, it was carried on about two dozen stations, roughly half in what the trade calls "major markets". I also did the occasional free-lance magazine piece.

Cover, The Sinister First Baseman In 1982, my book The Sinister First Baseman and Other Observations, a diverse collection of essays on baseball, was published; Hall-of-Famer Frank Robinson (then manager of the San Francisco Giants) was kind enough to write the foreword to that book.

Meanwhile, my theoretical studies (based originally on the pioneering work of the now-underappreciated Earnshaw Cook) had advanced to the point where I felt they were capable of practical use by a ball club. In the late 1970s, the San Francisco Giants took me on as a consultant.

(I am for the moment obliged to be a little vague on exact dates because my memory is leaky and all my papers from that period are still to be retrieved from a journalist who used them in writing a book about baseball's fascination with statistics; right now, he probably knows my history better than I do.)

Soon after Frank Robinson left the Giants, so did I. Shortly thereafter, I was taken on by the Oakland Athletics, in particular by then-GM Sandy Alderson (now CEO of the Padres and a former VP of major-League Baseball), to whom I subsequently reported direct. I remained on contract with the Athletics from then till I moved out of California in the late 1990s.

When Billy Beane was appointed AGM of the Athletics, Sandy asked that I prepare some material for Billy that would explain what I do and, in the larger sense, explain to Billy the A's front-office philosophy, which was largely based on the analytic approach. Billy has subsequently remarked (to, I believe it was, Michael Lewis, author of Moneyball) that in reading that report it was as if the scales fell from his eyes (those words are as Michael reported them back to me). I do know that Billy subsequently had that report copied and sent out to all of the A's minor-league staff and scouts as an explanation of the A's philosophy.

(I am, to be honest, not happy with the discussion in Moneyball; I don't think a somewhat technical 62-page report is best described by the term "pamphlet", and there is something ranging from little to nothing to suggest that I ever did anything for the A's beyond prepare that one document. Sigh. That, I suppose, is what comes of keeping a low profile.)

There is another history in which much more discussion of that period appears, Alan Schwarz's book The Numbers Game; Alan was rather kinder in evaluating my role. I do think it is neither vain nor exaggerating to say that I had a large share in establishing the principles by which the A's reached the immense success they did--as documented in Moneyball--and which success has in turn spawned other progressive front offices whose impact is beginning to be felt. Put more simply, I think I have, in my modest way, helped transform the game.

(Let me be clear that I was neither the first nor the last analyst employed by a major-league club, and most of the others have been exceedingly well-qualified people who have contributed much to the field, among them Eddie Epstein, Craig Wright, and now, of course, Bill James, the first whose presence has been openly recognized, and indeed touted, by the club in question; but I was, I think, the one who had the good fortune to be in the right place at the right time--a sympathetic and intelligent front office--to have an enduring effect.)

The Longer Version

Prior to Baseball

I was born and raised in New York City. I attened the Bronx High School of Science, then took a degree in electrical engineering at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

After college, I worked for a few years in the aerospace industry designing satellite and spacecraft systems, then got tired of being another white shirt, and so went into broadcasting (I had done college radio and had worked as a studio and news engineer at a major new York City station during my college summers). I started as a DJ, then acquired a telephone-talk show on a medium-sized radio station in the northern-Virginia suburbs of Washington, D.C. Then I got tired of east-coast weather, so I and my lady--whom I had met while in Virginia--just picked up one day and drove off to San Francisco.

(As you will see, we frequently got tired of this or that and just jumped into something new; we like the phrase from one of Alexei Panshin's novels, describing an old vaudeville couple, Pickles and Daisy: they made life up as they went along.)

In San Francisco, I did the usual strange variety of things that seem necessary for anyone who will ever have a book published (so as to provide interesting jacket copy): I sold meat in bulk over the telephone, I managed a luxury apartment building on Telegraph Hill, I wrote internal procedural manuals for banks, and suchlike odd things--even put in the mandatory spell as a taxicab driver.

In 1977, with the probable sale of the San Francisco Giants to Toronto looming (which, of course, in the end never happened), my lady suggested that we catch a few games while we still had the chance. I had had a mild and passing interest in baseball in my early youth, but none since; she, though, had been a diehard Washington Senators fan ("Washington: first in war, first in peace, last in the American League"). But it sounded like good, clean, all-American fun, so we indeed went.

I was immediately captivated. But I was also immensely curious about the inner workings of the game. I had all the questions that have kept saloon conversations going for over a century: is power worth more or less than batting average? How important are stolen bases? Well, you know the routine.

I did a few preliminary numerical doodles, then decided it would be silly to re-invent the wheel, so I went to the main library branch to try to find out if anyone had as yet invented that wheel (I had dim memories of Branch Rickey's famous 1954 mathematical attempt at baseball analysis). I stumbled across what, if this were a Reader's Digest article, I'd probably call The Book That Changed My Life.

My Baseball Education

The "short-form" resumé above covers much of the ground here. Earnshaw Cook's wonderful book Percentage Baseball, (and its successors) started me, and I have built on that foundation ever since. I have made some advances that I think are mainly or wholly my own, such as recognizing the "compound interest" effect of on-base percentage and the status of the batter as a "runner at base zero", and in the area of team-fielding analysis (though that has now been duplicated by others). There are a couple of other things, at least one being extremely important, that I will not set forth here in case I ever decide to go back into actual consulting.

It has been a long march, from seemingly endless yellow legal pads covered with a gazillion hand-entered, hand-made calculations, to a "luggable" Kaypro computer, to a modern PC (which will doubtless sound in a few years as comically antique as that Kaypro does today); from ineffably tedious manual keyboarding (and checking, and re-checking, and re-re-checking) of annual stats to downloading raw data anew every night. There is still a lot to do, even just on this one site, and I hope to always be expanding what is here, but we'll see what we'll see. I do have other interests.




You loaded this page on Wednesday, 14 May 2008, at 04:24 EDT.;
it was last modified on Thursday, 3 April 2008, at 21:49 EDT.

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