Illogic 101: Argument by Distraction
Course Description: Learn cheapshots, strawmen and flat-earth rhetoric with Professor Dejan Kovacevic! This course is essential for future corporate lawyers, chairpersons of national political party committees, and cult leaders.
I have received emails from a handful of readers and read some articles in which the very existence of clutch hitting is challenged. Those who believe clutch hitting is a myth argue that it is simply a matter of luck and timing as to when a hitter delivers his hits...
But, being blunt here, I find this clutch debate to be positively laughable.
When a human being holding a bat steps to the plate and sees runners on base, he knows his team is counting on him, knows the fans could torture him if he fails, knows his livelihood might be at stake in extreme cases. Conversely, he also knows he can be the hero, that he will be respected if he comes through, that big money can be his.
Either way, there is pressure. And there is no way that is the same as a pressure-free situation.
Some handle it well. Some do not.
Only in baseball is the ridiculous concept that clutch does not exist even discussed...
And yes, there is a reason that players such as Cota -- and countless others who would provide much better examples -- perform just as well, if not better, under pressure than when there is none. It can be in their personalities, in their temperament, in their level of passion.
But it really cannot be measured by numbers, and I have a feeling that is what frustrates those who view the game exclusively through that prism.
Class TA: First of all, students, a point of clarification. Professor Kovacevic (or his readers) seems to be confused here. The debate is not over whether "clutch hitting" exists - clearly it does - but whether clutch hitting is a skill, and how much that skill matters.
Now on to the good stuff: notice what Professor Kovacevic did in that last paragraph. He implied that a number of people who read his column (and care enough about it to write him) care only about numbers, not about actual baseball. Kovacevic has done this before:
These types of arguments are very clever. On one hand, they must seem extremely patronizing and off-putting to those who care enough about baseball to read Kovacevic's writing and respond when they disagree, only to be told they don't actually watch baseball or care about anything except numbers. Also, these arguments are easy to see through for anyone who bothers to read them closely and has an IQ over 90: honestly, does anyone actually know a baseball fan who doesn't watch baseball?
But, for those that don't read them closely, these sorts of ad hominem attacks can be extremely effective - they allow Kovacevic to dismiss an entire segment of his letter-writers without actually engaging with their arguments. Brilliant.
Now, class, let's look at Kovacevic's first sentence: "Funny thing is, you are not going to have much luck in finding hard evidence to support the notion that Cota is clutch, other than, of course, watching the games."
You see, class, Professor Kovacevic really should be in trouble. In the following paragraphs - which I've spared you here - he massages the numbers this way and that, trying, and failing, to find evidence to back up his claim.
The trouble, of course, is that the numbers are really just an account of all the things that have happened on the field. If Cota really has been clutch this year, then the numbers should show it. Kovacevic's proficiency with numbers is rather limited, however, as is my own - neither of us really knows how to do anything more complex than go to espn.com and look at a player's batting average with running in scoring position or his performance in "close and late" situations. Neither of us really knows whether Cota has been "clutch" this season or not.
But this does not distract Kovacevic for long. Rather than admitting he has no idea what he's talking about, he returns to his earlier non-argument, which is that you know what he's saying if you actually watch the games - which, remember, his opponents don't do.
(Note, however, that Kovacevic is expecting the reader to remember the games he remembers, not the ones that are inconvenient, like the June 29 game the Pirates lost 3-2 against the Nationals, in which Cota went 0-3 with an HBP, left four runners on base, and popped out to end the sixth with a man on and the game tied. Or the April 20 game that the Pirates lost 6-4 against the Reds, in which Cota went 0-4 and left four men on base.)
But this, dear students, is the gem:
When a human being holding a bat steps to the plate and sees runners on base, he knows his team is counting on him, knows the fans could torture him if he fails, knows his livelihood might be at stake in extreme cases. Conversely, he also knows he can be the hero, that he will be respected if he comes through, that big money can be his.
Either way, there is pressure. And there is no way that is the same as a pressure-free situation.
"Laughable!" This is pure brilliance. Having provided no evidence for his position - or even evidence proving that Humberto Cota has been "clutch" in the first place - our fine professor simply calls the entire debate "laughable"! Kovacevic is to be praised for his flair, his swagger, his... balls.
Elsewhere in this excerpt is more gasbaggery of the highest order! Rather than engaging with the mountain of data that suggests that the "clutch hitting" skill doesn't account for much if it exists at all, Kovacevic spits up sentence after sentence of half-formed thoughts designed to appeal to the common sense of his readers. Why will his readers believe it to be common sense? Because they already believe clutch hitters exist, of course! Because any former amateur athlete has felt "pressure," and because it's easier to follow professional sports if you can assign narratives and moral qualities (courage and so on) to explain the results, most fans believe that clutch hitters exist in major league baseball. Kovacevic provides no evidence, only appeals to unproveable little chestnuts with which his readers already agree.
What actually has happened on the baseball field doesn't matter to Kovacevic, despite all the condescension about "getting out to the stands and watching" baseball. Because if clutch hitting was a skill and it had a dramatic impact on the game, it would be easy to detect from our records of the games. The same batters would do the same things in the same situations, and those patterns would persist for years. But no, or at any rate few, such patterns exist! What Professor Kovacevic has done is to create several utterly irrelevant paragraphs that distract us from these facts and manage to advance an utterly baseless, yet distracting, argument for the opposite point of view!
Students, please keep Kovacevic's tactics in mind in your future careers as used car salesmen, cable-news pundits, and public relations executives.
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12 comments
Comments
What did you expect?
I agree with Charlie - you can't argue that clutch hitting doesn't exist, but how do you define it as a skill or as a trait you can scout in players?
by Greg Schuler on Jul 13, 2005 8:10 AM EDT reply actions 0 recs
Kovacevic
by Charlie on Jul 13, 2005 3:35 PM EDT up reply actions 0 recs
Look in the mirror
"The debate is not over whether "clutch hitting" exists - clearly it does - but whether clutch hitting is a skill, and how much that skill matters."
Uhh, the NEWer debate may be that, but if you Google clutch hitting, there are many results that focus on merely proving it does. I didn't read them, but it seems like if you're proving or trying to prove something it's often in response to a premise.
If you Google the phrase, "does clutch hitting exist" you'll get even more proof of the existence of the argument. Perhaps statheads have come around, but it seems pretty clear that at one time, in less than the last 20 years, clutch hitting was clearly being held as nonexistent by someone.
I don't mean to defend Dejan, I've come to loathe the tone of his Q&A, if not his opinions. I'm saying just try to remember he's just a reporter, even though he's gone to all these games in his life and thinks he's an expert too.
But then, anyone who watched Brian Giles play and thinks he was a good OF has a suspect baseball eye.
Also, you and other statheads do seem to hold some truths as self-evident (not sure I used that phrase correctly). You've got some snobbery about you.
Oh, but I enjoy it immensely.
by azibuck on Jul 13, 2005 10:49 AM EDT reply actions 0 recs
Clutch
The anti-clutch faction is only trying to prove that this scenario doesn't prove that Rivera ISN'T a clutch pitcher.
Hey, Dejan, you doof, they call a timeout to try and ice ALL of the kickers, not just the ones suspected of being shaky in the clutch. Why is that?
by ugarte on Jul 13, 2005 11:45 AM EDT up reply actions 0 recs
Self-evident
by ugarte on Jul 13, 2005 11:52 AM EDT up reply actions 0 recs
Clutch Hitting
by Charlie on Jul 13, 2005 3:51 PM EDT up reply actions 0 recs
I don't think I misinterpreted anything
I try to understand their point (the forest, not the trees). We call players "clutch" who we remember having important hits (or passes or shots) at important times.
I think the pro-clutch faction never relied on stats. Clutch was never, nor ever intended to be, tangible, save for the anecdote about "the time {player} hit a homer in the bottom of the 9th to win it."
But again, sometime, somewhere, someone said clutch does not exist, and set out to prove it statistically. ugarte, I think you missed my point. If you, and the current anti-clutch faction are searching for "what does it mean" not "does it exist," fine. But in some factions that is not, or was not, the argument.
by azibuck on Jul 13, 2005 12:25 PM EDT reply actions 0 recs
What clutch is
That's the kind of thing that leaves a lasting impression. Clutch, I believe, is just shorthand for having one or more memorable hits.
Therefore, Cota is in fact, made of pixie dust. He's got some magic too him.
How should I phrase this? Do I really have to labor through "my personal post-hoc observation is that he is a clutch hitter." Why can't I just say, "Cota's clutch," and have you understand what I'm saying?
He has at least two game-winning or tying hits. The number of opportunities he's had is irrelevant.
by azibuck on Jul 13, 2005 12:41 PM EDT reply actions 0 recs
What it isn't
I'm not denying that you saw Cota get clutch hits; obviously he did. I am denying that you actively remember the times that he didn't (because the incidents were unremarkable) and it clouds your perception.
by ugarte on Jul 13, 2005 1:01 PM EDT up reply actions 0 recs
Clutch Hitting
To you, maybe. To Kovacevic, it is not - otherwise he would not have gone off on that long bit about players being under pressure and being heroes and making money and so on. He is arguing that it is a skill. ("Some handle it well. Some do not.")
I have no problem with your use of the word "clutch." Clearly, over the last two weeks or whatever, Cota has been clutch. It's the notion that it's a skill that I find problematic, and that is clearly what Kovacevic is trying to argue.
by Charlie on Jul 13, 2005 3:58 PM EDT up reply actions 0 recs
Yeah, romanticism
by azibuck on Jul 13, 2005 2:24 PM EDT reply actions 0 recs
Romanticism
by ugarte on Jul 15, 2005 11:38 AM EDT up reply actions 0 recs

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