GDT 4/18/18 vs Phiiiies

So how does catch probability work on that? Does it take the fielder into account like the booth was suggesting or nah?
I looked it up, and it doesn't take the fielder into account at all, just the distance traveled, hangtime, and direction.

Also supposedly takes the outfield wall catches into account, which seems like it may need a little more adjusting. That catch seemed a little harder than it was given credit for
 
So how does catch probability work on that? Does it take the fielder into account like the booth was suggesting or nah?

Not sure what the booth was talking about but it was probably nowhere close to being right.

Taken directly from mlb.com


Outs Above Average starts with Catch Probability, which takes the distance an outfielder must go, the time he has to get there, and the direction he travels to put a percentage of catch likelihood on each individual batted ball. Outs Above Average is the season-long cumulative expression of each individual Catch Probability play. For example, if an outfielder has a ball hit to him with a 75 percent Catch Probability -- that is, one an average outfielder would make three-quarters of the time -- and he catches it, he'll receive a +.25 credit. If he misses it, he'll receive -.75, reflecting the likelihood of that ball being caught by other outfielders.
 
I know the numbers for Ender are bad, but the worst part is actually having to watch him hit. He takes some of the worst swings in hitter’s counts. 3-1 fastball up and he’s late to it, weak pop up. So much weak contact from him this year. I hope our next manager is smart enough to stick him ninth where he belongs.
 
It feels like Philadelphia might have inadvertently found a hole for Albies on his left side swing. It seems like he has a hard time covering pitches that are very away on that side.
 
Chip fooled me into thinking Suzuki's contact was going to be something more than a routine fly out...ugh
 
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