
The reality is that there is a lot more parity in baseball than we are led to believe, especially since it is a sport where it is a major accomplishment to have a winning percentage over .600 (98 wins). In the NFL, that’s the equivalent of 10-6. We’ve all seen the dollars per wins statistic before, usually to show the Yankees gross overspending versus an overachieving small market team, but those sort of numbers obviously do not reflect anything that could be realistically expected out of 2 baseball teams, because no team ever wins 5-10 times as many games as another team, or even on a smaller scale, spending twice as much never actually promises twice the wins.
So I decided to create the Bang for the Buck ratings, which is set up to compare a team’s win total in a season compared to what their expected win total should be based on their salary and 
Let’s take a look at the results, starting with the top and bottom 5 for 2007:
Here are the results for 2006:
Now we’ll take a look at 2005:
And now, the first year I started looking at this, 2004:
Going into today’s games, so far in 2008 the Rays are getting the most bang for the buck, 12.5 games better than what would currently be expected of their salary, followed by the Angels, Cubs, Marlins, and Twins. The worst bang for the buck is the Mariners, followed by the Natonals, Padres, Giants, and last year’s best bang for the buck team, the Indians.
As I mentioned above, I have noticed a pretty significant trend from 2004-2007 that seems like it could continue in 2008:
1. Big market teams are increasingly (and stupidly) overpaying superstar players, because their salaries keep climbing while the small market teams are catching them in the standings.
2. Being a small market team is no excuse for being a bad team, which has been proven several times in the past 5 years by teams with very low salaries, but a small market team may need to increase its spending to lock up a spot in the playoffs every year.
We’ll see how the rest of 2008 goes. I may post an update with some better 2008 numbers as we head into the September stretch run.
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