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Blog Update: Joining the Yardbarker Network

by Daniel Gettinger

Recently, we were asked to join the Yardbarker Network.

Yardbarker is a network of sports blogs.  It contains over 100 personal athlete blogs, as well as team specific and general sports blogs.  Yardbarker has recently partnered with Fox Sports/MSN to begin syndicating content from network blogs on their sites.

We have decided to join the Yardbarker Network in an effort to expand our readership. The quality of discussion that takes place on Friar Forecast has been great, and we hope that by expanding our readership, those discussions will become even richer.

Although we are joining the Yardbarker Network, Friar Forecast remains an independent blog.  The content of the site will be completely unaffected.

To conform with Yardbarker regulations, we will have to make a few design adjustments:

1) As you may have already noticed, there is now a Yardbarker navigation bar at the top of the site.

2) A Yardbarker widget has been added to the side-bar underneath the recent comments.  This widget contains links to Padres related articles on other sites and blogs.

3) We are forced to include some advertisements.  I have been assured that the ads will be unobtrusive.  The ads are not being introduced in an attempt to monetize the site. Rather, they are merely a requirement of joining the Yardbarker Network.

It may take us a few weeks to get the site design straightened out.  Please be patient as we make the necessary adjustments, and get the site looking as good as possible given the introduction of the new features.

If you have any suggestions on site-design, please let us know.  I have very little (basically zero) web-design experience, so any tips/advice would be highly appreciative.

We are hopeful that our relationship with Yardbarker will help enhance the community experience here at Friar Forecast, and are excited to be joining the network!

Behind the paywall

by Myron Logan

Okay, so I mentioned it in yesterday’s post, and I’ve been thinking more and more about re-subscribing to Baseball Prospectus, which announced some changes on Monday.

The short back story: I found out about Baseball Prospectus somewhere around 2004 after reading Moneyball. I quickly bought one of their annual books and subscribed to the online content. I was hooked. BP was essentially my Bill James, piquing my interest in sabermetrics and a deeper understanding of the game. Articles by Nate Silver, Dan Fox, and Keith Woolner (among  others) were always insightful, entertaining, and thought-provoking. Not to mention, I had access to PECOTA and the rest of the stable of solid BP writers. $40? That was a bargain.

Somewhere in the last few years, however, I realized myself visiting BP less and less often. $40 a year still was not breaking the bank, but was it worth it for something I rarely used? Nate Silver left the site for his political endeavors, Keith Woolner joined the Indians, and Dan Fox similarly found himself in an MLB front office. It is a credit to BP that about half of their stats-based authors seem to eventually get scooped up by MLB teams, but it also left an unfilled hole in their content.

Now, it seemed to me at this time, BP made a concerted effort to become more “mainstream,” to appeal to a wider audience. They had gained tremendous popularity through the years, and were now serving a broader demographic of people, with maybe only a small percent really caring about which pythagorean win estimator worked best. This was fine, and probably a good business decision, but it did not really appeal to my specific tastes.

At the same time, it seemed like sabermetric writing was popping up all over the net. The Hardball Times was as good as ever, Beyond the Boxscore had been rejuvenated, FanGraphs added a writing element to complement their great stats section, and Tango’s Inside the Book Blog was being updated daily. There were more, too, like Baseball Analysts and Statistically Speaking, not to mention countless team-based blogs.

With all that considered, I let my subscription run out, and have gone without it for a good year or so. Say, for instance, you are an avid bowler, and you have three local alleys to choose from. Two are free, and one is two bucks a game. If the one happens to be vastly superior to the other two, then maybe you will fork up the extra $2 dollars to bowl there. But if the three alleys are essentially equal, well, in time you are probably going to quit going to the one that costs money, and spend your time at the free ones. That is basically what happened. BP shifted their content away from what I wanted, and other sites emerged or improved to fill the void. And I saved $40 a year.

In Kevin Goldstein’s announcement, however, it appears that BP is going to again put a much stronger emphasis on pure sabermetrics, with the additions of guys like Russell Carleton/Pizza Cutter (whose work has been featured primarily at StatSpeak) and Colin Wyers (StatSpeak and The Hardball Times). Both guys are super active in the saber-community; they are smart, creative, and they write well. BP has also brought in Tommy Bennett (Beyond the Boxscore) and Jeff Euston (proprietor of Cot’s Contracts), adding to a group of saber writers that also includes recently hired Eric Seidman (graduating from about eight different baseball sites) and Matt Swartz.

To get back to my original question, is the subscription worth $40, when I can still get a bunch of analysis, research, and stats for free at the above-mentioned sites? That is certainly an individualized question; personally, I am not sure yet, but the decision is harder than it was a few days ago. What is your take?

Ducksnorts is back!

by Myron Logan

Geoff Young’s Ducksnorts, after being down for a few months due to hosting problems, is back online! Geoff is abandoning the long, feature length articles he tried last year, and is returning to shorter, more frequent posts. I think that is a good idea, but I am glad Geoff’s Padres blog is back, no matter what form his writing comes in.

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Sdpads, who ran the aptly named Sdpads1 blog, has created a new Padres blog called RJ’s Fro. He has added a couple of partners and a real nice setup. I am looking forward to reading more of his stuff.

Also, I recently came across another new Padres blog – the Friarhood. Check it out.

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Finally, the last thing I wanted to mention was the recent changes announced at Baseball Prospectus. Joe Sheehan, one of BP’s most prolific writers for a long time, is gone. Added to the fold, however, are talented folks like Colin Wyers, Russell Carleton (Pizza Cutter), Tommy Bennett, and Jeff Euston (Cot’s Contracts).

About a year ago, I let my BP subscription run out, after subscribing to the site for four or five years. The combination of great research and writing, from guys like Nate Silver, Keith Woolner, and Dan Fox, was gone. It appeared to me like BP was pretty clearly trying to shift to become a more mainstream site, with smart analysis but little new research. While that still has its appeal, it did not seem worth the cost, with so much free stuff out there.

However, if Baseball Prospectus is going to return to its roots, and again foster innovative ideas and methodologies behind guys like Wyers and Carleton, then I may definitely have to consider re-subscribing.

Friar Forecast Going Forward

by Daniel Gettinger

Recently, Myron announced he will no longer be frequently contributing to the blog, and that I will take on the role of “adminstrator” of Friar Forecast.

Myron’s decision to take a much more passive role is a huge blow not only to Friar Forecast, but also to analytically minded Padres (and baseball) fans who, over the past few years, have become accustomed to reading his astute commentary on a regular basis.

While Myron will obviously be missed, I am confident Friar Forecast will continue to house engaging commentary and analysis (at least we will try).  Win or lose, we will be here with you throughout the Padres’ ’09 season (and hopefully beyond).

Going forward, I would like to bring on some new voices.  A larger stable of bloggers will help re-energize Friar Forecast by allowing us to provide more regular, quality content.  If you are interested in contributing to the site, please send me a quick email (danielgettinger@gmail.com), and we will figure something out.  (Please note: I don’t care if you have not had your own baseball blog, or have never been a frequent commenter.  Even if you have always just been a reader, but feel you have insight you would like to share, I would love to hear from you).

In a bit of unfortunate timing, I am currently traveling, and will only have limited Internet access through late April.  I plan to offer brief thoughts on the Padres’ season whenever possible, but extensive analysis from me will be minimal.  I look forward to resuming a more regular posting schedule when I return in a few weeks.

Okay, enough boring blabber.  It’s the start of the baseball season.  The slate is clean, and anything can happen.  San Diego Padres-Your Next World Series Champions!

The (blog) ownership transition

by Myron Logan

Hello, folks. This is my final post here at Friar Forecast – or at least my final post as the owner of the site. Daniel Gettinger has agreed to take over the blog and – much like the Padres – we’ll be working on the transition over the coming days/weeks.

You are probably curious as to why, after nearly two years of blogging (and with the start of the season on the doorstep), I am giving it up. The short answer is simply that I feel it’s time to go in another direction. Real life has caught up to me, I guess. The long answer is, well, far too long and boring for me to share here. I’m tremendously grateful that Daniel has decided to keep this thing going, though. Trust me, I’m as interested in continuing to read his stuff as anybody, and I’m eager to follow the progress of the blog over the coming months.

I hope that my writing here has entertained and educated you a bit. I really hope so. But I know that through this whole blogging experience I have certainly learned a lot, both about baseball and myself. You can’t put a dollar figure on how much it’s been worth to me (my now defunct Adsense account can testify to that : ).

Before I sign off, I’d like to say thanks to some people. Thanks to Geoff Young for basically exposing this blog to the public, and for becoming a good friend in the process. Thanks to the guys at Gaslamp Ball, The Sacrifice Bunt, and all the other blogs out there that stopped by and linked here. Thanks to Chris Long, Tom Tango, Rich Lederer, and John Conniff. Thanks to Mike Rogers, Daniel Gettinger, and Ben Davey. And, perhaps most importantly, thanks to all of the Friar Forecast readers, whether you stumbled upon this place once (and likely never returned) or you visited everyday and were a frequent commenter.

Seriously, it’s been a lot of fun. And I promise, I won’t just disappear. I’m sure you’ll see me commenting at various blogs (including this one, of course) and maybe I’ll even write a guest post or two from time to time.

I’ll see ya around … and go Padres!
–Myron

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