Springing into the Regular Season (Spring Training 2010)
by the Team at SportsInsights.com, with Carlton Chin and Don LaFronz contributing.
Introduction
Spring training is in full swing and your team is red hot. Or maybe your team is stinking. But who cares? It's "just" spring training, right? Do wins and losses during spring training mean anything at all? With the help of Carlton Chin and Don LaFronz, we took a look at how spring training can potentially be an indication of how teams might perform during the regular season.
cSports investing is all about finding value in the sports marketplace. Data shows that spring training can be a leading indicator for regular season performance. In fact, some big surprises are sometimes predicted by spring training performance. Sports bettors are often looking for undervalued and overvalued teams -- and spring training can give them this edge, especially early in the season. The information on this site is for entertainment and educational purposes only. Use of this information in violation of any federal, state, or local laws is prohibited.
Spring Training Correlation to Regular Season
Lots of players are trying new things out. Split squads often represent teams, so can the games be meaningful? Players are just loosening up. Established teams have nothing to prove while less-proven teams are looking forward to the freshness and hope of a new spring. We actually expected little or no correlation between spring training and regular season records.
We took a look at results over the past seven years, or data from 2003-2009, and found that spring training records are somewhat correlated to the regular season. The actual statistical correlation is 0.21, but because this correlation statistic means little to most people, we tried to come up with meaningful ways to present the results.
Using the best and worst five teams in spring training going back to 2003, we looked at how these specific sets of teams performed. Teams that played well in spring training were three times as likely to make the playoffs as teams that played poorly (37.1% versus 11.4%). We also show the average winning percentage during the regular season for the best and worst-performing spring training teams.
Regular Season Performance of Best and Worst Spring Training Teams (2003-2009)