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Grant Marn's avatar

Both strike me as valuable in understanding the value of careers. However, I recall years back Bill James looked at two metrics in his Historical Baseball Abstract - Peak Value and Career Value. In other words, who was the best at their peak (even if their career was unexpectedly short) and who was the best over the course of their career?

Career Value seems adequately covered by WAR, either total or per-game...but Peak Value strikes me as something very interesting and different to stare at. Much of this gap in appreciating Peak Value today feels driven in part by baseball's early counting stats obsession, where talent was viewed myopically as simply the accumulation of raw stats.

Talent is a function of both level and duration. James' Peak Value insight - like so many great insights - is not limited to baseball. For example, you could use that talent framework anywhere - the business world, music, TV shows, books, technology etc. Some elements of our culture are enormously impactful, even if they only last a few years, while others are appreciated for their longevity.

Anywhere achievement can be witnessed and assessed, understanding the difference between Peak Value and Career value - both of which are valuable - creates deeper understanding. Peak greatness - even if for short periods - is an insight I feel we are missing today that James tried to capture. Perhaps something to focus on again.

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