Recent content by ChapelHillGlove

  1. ChapelHillGlove

    Updated WS Odds

    Looking at 112 CWS teams (season stats 2011‑2025), 88% had an ERA ≤5.00, 86% a WHIP ≤1.45, 75% fielded ≥.975, and only 34% hit .300. North Carolina shows .982 fielding, 3.86 ERA, 1.36 WHIP, .415 OBP, and a solid .293 batting average Ole Miss has 107 HR, better WHIP (1.32) and strikeout...
  2. ChapelHillGlove

    Updated WS Odds

    Jimmy is right on those posted odds shifted from the initial odds. As of now though, UNC and UGA (+275) and Texas (+300) Each three field .980+. ERA favors UNC (3.86) over Texas (4.08) and Georgia (4.92). Georgia led the nation with 174 homers (Texas 103, UNC 80). The market bought power. But...
  3. ChapelHillGlove

    From WHIP to WAR, The Numbers Driving UNC’s Omaha Push

    That 0.692 number from the WHIP, it would need 366 baserunners in one inning, so maybe a joke? Just curious how you got there. Thanks either way!
  4. ChapelHillGlove

    Polling the Heels: defense or dingers?

    Long‑time fan of UNC, not born into it. What wins for you?
  5. ChapelHillGlove

    I honestly didn't expect their hitting stats to look like this

    I thought I already posted this, not sure. If it was taken down, and is taken down again, I will abide and not post again. 2011 South Carolina: Hit 1 HR in the CWS, fielded .982, ERA 0.88. 2013–2014: UCLA (19 HR) and Vanderbilt (22 HR) won the championship with some of the lowest season home...
  6. ChapelHillGlove

    Six CWS teams. Five champions. One runner‑up. I honestly didn't expect their hitting stats to look like that.

    UNC can hit. But a .982 fielding percentage and 56 double plays are why I'm feeling good about Omaha. 2011 South Carolina – Won CWS. 1 HR in CWS, .982 FLD%, 0.88 ERA. 2013 UCLA – Won CWS. 19 HR season. 2014 Vanderbilt – Won CWS. 22 HR season. 2015 Virginia – Runner-up. .989 FLD% in CWS. 2016...
  7. ChapelHillGlove

    6 Tickets Punched - UNC Fans Have Every Reason to Be Excited

    West Virginia, Georgia, North Carolina, Troy, Ole Miss, and Texas have locked up their spots. Here’s how they fit the Omaha blueprint. The numbers have held for fourteen straight seasons. The one stat almost all of them share? Fielding percentage. Not home runs. Not ERA alone. Just catching the...