Posted by Ilya Somin:
Do the Recent Failures of the Oakland A's  Discredit Moneyball Strategies in 
Baseball and Academia?
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_07_26-2009_08_01.shtml#1248827099


   Like many academics, [1]I have praised the "Moneyball" strategies
   adopted by Oakland A's GM Billy Beane. Beane's innovative use of
   statistical methods for evaluating player performance built the
   small-market A's into a powerhouse that posted records as good as
   those of teams which much higher payrolls, including the Red Sox and
   Yankees. Meanwhile, in the academic world, my employer, the George
   Mason University School of Law, [2]used similar strategies to identify
   and hire undervalued scholars, an approach that enabled the school to
   rise rapidly in the US News rankings (from around 90th or so in the
   late 90s, to a peak of 34th in 2007 and 41st today). GMU's moneyball
   approach also enjoyed impressive successes on measures of faculty
   quality, such as [3]Brian Leiter's citation count study, in which we
   ranked 21st in 2007. Like the A's, GMU has outperformed competitors
   with much greater financial resources (we charge lower tuition and
   have a much smaller endowment than most of our peer schools).

   However, as ESPN writer Howard Bryant explains in [4]this article, the
   A's poor performance over the last three years has led many people to
   doubt the effectiveness of Beane's approach. Although GMU's rankings
   haven't fallen anywhere near as much as the A's place in the American
   League standings, we have fallen a few slots in US News over the last
   two years.

   In my view, the the A's recent problems in no way discredit Moneyball
   strategies. In both baseball and academia, Moneyball hiring is still a
   success. And, while the A's may not have a bright future, I am
   cautiously optimistic that GMU does. I. The A's Problems are Caused by
   Moneyball's Success.

   As [5]Daniel Drezner explains, the A's have slipped not because
   Moneyball strategies stopped working, but because other teams with
   bigger payrolls (most notably, my beloved Red Sox) successfully copied
   them. So long as the A's were the only ones rigorously applying
   Moneyball strategies, they could outperform bigger-spending rivals
   with inferior approaches. But once the Red Sox and other larger market
   teams copied the A's approach, it got much harder for Beane to keep
   up. If the A's were defeated by clubs relying pre-Moneyball
   conventional wisdom, that would indeed discredit their approach. Being
   defeated by better-heeled imitators actually vindicates it.

   Furthermore, Beane's overall record as GM is still very impressive.
   Since he took over in 1999, [6]the A's have made five playoff
   appearances and had two other seasons when they won around 90 games
   and just missed the postseason. I hate to admit it, but this is almost
   as good as the Red Sox' record over the same period (6 playoff
   appearances and one other 90 win season) - and the Red Sox spent more
   than twice as much as the A's on payroll during that time. The Red Sox
   of the last ten years are usually considered one of the best-run teams
   in baseball. Had Beane been given as much money to play with as
   Boston's GMs, the A's would probably have been a lot better than the
   Sox - or any other AL franchise. II. Implications for GMU and Legal
   Academia.

   Nonetheless, the recent decline of the A's does raise the question of
   whether GMU will suffer a similar decline as better-funded competitors
   mimic some of our hiring strategies. It certainly could happen, but I
   am guardedly optimistic that it won't. Competitive pressure in
   academia is much weaker than in professional sports, where losing GMs
   tend to get fired and owners of losing teams suffer big financial
   losses. In the academic world, faculty who perform poorly relative to
   their competitors are unlikely to lose either funding or tenure. Even
   law school deans are unlikely to lose their jobs merely because the
   school's ranking stagnates or declines.

   Thus, GMU's innovations are less likely to be copied widely than those
   of the A's. Even so, some have spread. The three undervalued faculty
   assets that we have historically pursued include 1) law and economics
   scholars, 2) conservative and libertarian academics who might have
   gone to higher-ranked schools but for ideological discrimination, and
   3) academics with strong publication records who were overlooked by
   higher-ranked schools because they didn't get a prestigious clerkship
   or didn't get their JDs at a top-5 school. I think it's clear that law
   and econ scholars are no longer undervalued by most of our
   competitors. Ideological discrimination and school/clerkship snobbery
   persist, but both are less intense than ten years ago. In particular,
   our rivals are beginning to realize that past publication record is a
   better predictor of the quality of future scholarship than who you
   clerked for or where you got your JD (this is similar to Beane's
   famous insistence on evaluating prospects based on minor league and
   college stats rather than whether they looked good to tradition-minded
   scouts).

   Overall, one of our comparative advantages has been completely
   eliminated by the market, and the other two have at least been eroded.
   On the other hand, we have several edges that the A's don't. Unlike
   the A's, we can close the financial gap that separates us from our
   rivals by building up our endowment over time (the A's resources, by
   contrast, are constrained by their status as a small-market team). The
   school's rise in the rankings and increased public profile make
   fundraising easier. In addition, ideological discrimination and
   school/clerkship snobbery are likely to persist to a significant
   degree. We can therefore continue to exploit these two shortcomings of
   many of our rivals. Finally, GMU has an important advantage stemming
   from its geographic location near Washington, DC - an attractive place
   for people interested in law, history, and public policy. I doubt that
   GMU will rise as fast in the rankings over the next ten years as it
   did over the last ten. But if we continue to follow good hiring
   strategies, we should be able to hold on to our gains and hopefully
   make some additional progress.

References

   1. http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2006_08_20-2006_08_26.shtml#1156074811
   2. http://www.nationalreview.com/flashback/miller200603270620.asp
   3. http://www.leiterrankings.com/faculty/2007faculty_impact.shtml
   4. 
http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/otl/columns/story?columnist=bryant_howard&id=4357166
   5. 
http://marketplace.publicradio.org/display/web/2008/04/18/drezner_commentary/
   6. http://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/OAK/

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