Follow the Money, or Maybe Not?

Based on our last post (MLB Competitive Balance Not So Much), we examined the success and failure rates of all major league clubs by creating what we term the Baseball Purist (BP) Success Rate.  We wondered though if there is a correlation between our rudimentary metric and the amount spent by each club over time.  We took the average team payroll by each team over the past 23 years (2000 – 2022) and compared that to the BP Success Metric to determine if there was a correlation between playoff and World Series success versus the average amount spent by each club on player salaries.

Our analysis showed some correlation, but it was not a slam-dunk (to borrow from another sport).  In regression analysis, the following are the meaning for the Multiple R statistic:

  • 1 means a strong positive relationship
  • -1 means a strong negative relationship
  • 0 means no relationship at all
Our Analysis – Regression Statistics
Multiple R0.6381
R Square0.4072
Standard Error17.8136
Observations30

In our regression analysis, Multiple R resulted in a 0.6381 correlation, which means a positive correlation between a club’s player payroll spend and their success rate.  This is not a huge correlation though.  In addition, the R Square value of .4072 means that club spend only explains 40% of the success rate of each team.  The Standard Error shows the average distance from the regression line, so a lower number would show the quality of fit to our regression line.

Overall, spend is a component to success, but not an absolute. While we see teams like the New York Yankees, Boston Red Sox, San Francisco Giants and LA Dodgers spending more than any other clubs and reaping the success in terms of playoff appearances, wins and championships.  We conversely, see teams such as the Texas Rangers, LA Angels, and New York Mets spending just as heavily but having little to show for it in terms of success.  In addition, teams such as the St. Louis Cardinals and Houston Astros have spent far less, but have success results within reach of the highest spenders.

Keep in mind that our analysis covered the past 23 years, so teams such as Atlanta and Tampa Bay although above the regression line, would look far better in our analysis if we examined just success rates over recent years (5-10 years).  A team like Tampa Bay, which is normally a bottom spender but a regular playoff team would be far higher on our success metric if we only took into account recent years.

Ultimately, though we can conclude that although being a top spender in terms of payrolls does help, it does not necessarily correlate to a winning team.

Here is the data we used to calculate our regression analysis and the chart above.

TeamAverage Team Payroll
(2000 – 2022)
BP Success Metric
New York Yankees $  184,540,71177
Los Angeles Dodgers $  162,863,83852
Texas Rangers $  160,919,64413
San Francisco Giants $  157,320,12464
Boston Red Sox $  155,287,22183
New York Mets $  130,314,37915
Los Angeles Angels $  127,179,71727
Chicago Cubs $  120,790,85032
Philadelphia Phillies $  115,857,80534
St. Louis Cardinals $  109,055,69070
Detroit Tigers $  106,359,99817
Atlanta Braves $  103,811,47136
Toronto Blue Jays $  103,732,74410
Seattle Mariners $  100,033,7239
Houston Astros $    98,281,58064
Washington Nationals $    95,698,53823
Chicago White Sox $    92,894,96921
Colorado Rockies $    90,213,82710
Arizona Diamondbacks $    87,397,19225
San Diego Padres $    85,674,22010
Baltimore Orioles $    85,486,0677
Cincinnati Reds $    81,066,6054
Minnesota Twins $    79,259,91911
Cleveland Guardians $    77,877,09216
Kansas City Royals $    74,668,18424
Milwaukee Brewers $    71,650,68310
Oakland Athletics $    62,743,78915
Pittsburgh Pirates $    58,905,3665
Miami Marlins $    54,040,42720
Tampa Bay Rays $    52,795,37722

Comments

One response to “Follow the Money, or Maybe Not?”

  1. […] been one of the bottom spenders in all of baseball during his time at the helm.  In our prior post Follow the Money, or Maybe Not? – Baseball Purist, we examined the payroll salary level of each team going back to 2000.  In that analysis, the Reds […]

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