Rosternomics
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May 22, 2019

BALNYM

BAL won this trade +$1.6M surplus BAL won this trade +0.3 WAR
BALBAL Mike Elias net +$1.6M net +0.3
received +$18.4M+$18.4M ± $32M expected surplus · +$1.6M realized received 4.6 ± 4 expected · 0.3 realized WAR
Playoff odds: this deal moved BAL's 2019 odds 0% → 0% (+0 pts) — how trade timing is graded ↗
receives — most valuable first
Keon BroxtonOF·29y·R/R
+$18.4M+$18.4M± $32M exp surplusrealized +$1.6M 4.6± 4 exp WARrealized 0.3
Prior
league baseline (track record outweighs draft pedigree) → 0.21/yr
Evidence
recent form 2.3/yr over 1.2 season
Talent
1.24/yr blended
Horizon
4.0 control yrs × 0.93 age decline
NYMNYM Brodie Van Wagenen net −$1.6M net -0.3
received +$0.0M+$0.0M ± $0M expected surplus · +$0.0M realized received 0.0 ± 0 expected · 0.0 realized WAR
Playoff odds: this deal moved NYM's 2019 odds 63% → 61% (-1.4 pts) — how trade timing is graded ↗
receives — most valuable first
cash / PTBNL
+$0.0M+$0.0M± $0M exp surplusrealized +$0.0M 0.0± 0 exp WARrealized 0.0
Cash or player to be named — no projection

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 →