Rosternomics
← Trade Database
Share on 𝕏
August 30, 1997

CLEKCR

KCR won this trade +$6.4M surplus CLE won this trade +0.2 WAR
CLECLE John Hart net −$6.4M net +0.2
received −$1.6M−$10.4M ± $14M expected surplus · −$8.0M realized received 1.3 ± 2 expected · 0.1 realized WAR
Playoff odds: this deal moved CLE's 1997 odds 59% → 60% (+0.8 pts) — how trade timing is graded ↗
receives — most valuable first
Bip Roberts2B/OF·34y·B/R
−$1.6M−$10.4M± $14M exp surplusrealized −$8.0M 1.3± 2 exp WARrealized 0.1
Prior
no pedigree — league baseline → 0.21/yr
Evidence
recent form 1.4/yr over 1.8 season
Talent
0.94/yr blended
Horizon
1.5 control yr × 0.91 age decline
KCRKCR Herk Robinson net +$6.4M net -0.2
received +$1.6M+$1.6M ± $54M expected surplus · −$1.6M realized received 1.1 ± 7 expected · -0.1 realized WAR
Playoff odds: this deal moved KCR's 1997 odds 11% → 11% (-0.3 pts) — how trade timing is graded ↗
receives — most valuable first
Roland de la MazaP·26y·R/R
+$1.6M+$1.6M± $54M exp surplusrealized −$1.6M 1.1± 7 exp WARrealized -0.1
Prior
#419 overall draft pick — at the league baseline → 0.21/yr
Evidence
no MLB track record — leans on pedigree
Talent
0.21/yr blended
Horizon
5.5 control yrs × 0.94 age decline

Each player is valued on what he was expected to produce at the time of the trade, versus what he actually produced for his new team.

Expected WAR blends a player's pedigree (Baseball America rank / draft slot, or a baseline) with his recent track record, projected over the years of team control acquired. The ± band is the uncertainty — wide for unproven prospects, tight for established veterans. Surplus values that production at the FA market price of a win (~$8M/WAR) minus salary — so cost-controlled players carry large surplus and expensive ones little, even at the same WAR. Who won is descriptive, not a skill claim: ~99% of a trade's outcome is unforeseeable at the time.

Historically these expected values are unbiased and land within ±2 WAR of reality 75% of the time — yet the side the model favors actually comes out ahead only 53% of the time. The grade is a calibrated bet, not a prediction. Why trades are an efficient market →