News

Analytics or heart: Can old-school baseball reclaim sport’s soul?

For once, New York Yankees fans wish their team were more like the Texas Rangers.

It’s not just that the Rangers are one win away from clinching the World Series. It’s also that, in an era when baseball is increasingly defined by statistical analysis, the Rangers seem to be a testament to old-school thinking. They still have, as many see it, a soul.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Analytics have taken over everything from sports to shopping. But do numbers always have the answer? Baseball fans point to the Texas Rangers as an example that prioritizing heart over data can lead to big wins – and more joy.

The portrait is admittedly simplistic. Everyone uses statistical analysis to guide decision-making – even the Rangers. But some fans are starting to worry that the relationship between America’s pastime and statistics has gone too far.

“The idea is that the Yankees’ use of analytics has failed them because analytics cannot take ‘heart’ and ‘clutch’ into account,” says Michael Quinn, a professor of sports media. “The Rangers have heart and that propelled them, whereas the Yankees just have calculators and by-the-numbers accountants.”

Baseball is no stranger to statistics. But since the Oakland Athletics pioneered the modern “sabermetrics” movement, teams have relied on formulas that are increasingly complex – and, to some, incomprehensible.

“There’s a feeling that some of the people who used to watch don’t really belong in the game anymore,” says Professor Quinn.

For once, New York Yankees fans wish their team were more like the Texas Rangers.

It’s not just that the Rangers are one win away from clinching the World Series. It’s also that, in an era when baseball in particular is increasingly defined by statistical analysis, the Rangers seem to be a testament to steady, old-school thinking. They still have, as many see it, a baseball soul.

The portrait is admittedly simplistic. Everyone uses statistical analysis to guide their decision-making – even the Rangers. But as the season draws to a close, it’s the time for an annual reset. And some fans are starting to worry that the relationship between America’s pastime and on-field statistics has gone too far.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Analytics have taken over everything from sports to shopping. But do numbers always have the answer? Baseball fans point to the Texas Rangers as an example that prioritizing heart over data can lead to big wins – and more joy.

The Yankees are only the most convenient target. Their commitment to distilling baseball into advanced metrics didn’t work; they missed the playoffs. But the sense that the sport has essentially been overtaken by mutual fund managers is widespread.

“The idea is that the Yankees’ use of analytics has failed them because analytics cannot take ‘heart’ and ‘clutch’ into account,” says Michael Quinn, a professor of sports media at Manhattan College. “The Rangers have heart and that propelled them, whereas the Yankees just have calculators and by-the-numbers accountants.”

Rick Scuteri-USA TODAY Sports NPSTrans toppic

Texas Rangers left fielder Travis Jankowski hits a single against the Arizona Diamondbacks during Game 4 of the 2023 World Series in Phoenix Oct 31, 2023. The Rangers are one game shy of winning the championship.

Should fans be content with game-time decisions made in the name of risk aversion, and free agent signings made in the name of sustainability?

“[Some feel] it’s trying to take the mystery out of the sport,” says Professor Quinn. “It’s trying to take the heroes and the heart out of the sport.”

Previous ArticleNext Article