The Z Files: The Effect of Temperature on Park Factors

The Z Files: The Effect of Temperature on Park Factors

This article is part of our The Z Files series.

The MLB season will likely be delayed at least two months. One of the repercussions is that the coldest two months will be excluded from the schedule. Granted, if the regular season extends past September, cooler weather will return. That said, one of the possibilities is for the extended schedule to be contested at neutral sites. Not to mention, there's a chance the whole season (whatever that ends up looking like) is played in warm weather sites. Regardless of what happens, losing April and May has a potentially big impact on park factors when they're broken down on a monthly basis.

The park factor calculation is designed to flesh out all biases, so the sole factor being measured is how the venue plays. As has been discussed previously, the bias isn't eliminated, but until alternate means of computing park indices are perfected (they're coming, likely based on Statcast data), using the indices as conventionally determined is better than not using them.

Park factors for any metric can be calculated. Runs, hits and homers are the most common examples, with strikeouts and walks underrated in their utility. Many assume runs and homers track proportionally. As will soon be illustrated, homers and runs are mutually exclusive. Hits and runs correlate better and many venues favor homers but suppress hits, and vice versa.

In order to reduce the variance from the residual bias, park factors are expressed as a three-year average. When a venue undergoes a major renovation, or a team moves to

The MLB season will likely be delayed at least two months. One of the repercussions is that the coldest two months will be excluded from the schedule. Granted, if the regular season extends past September, cooler weather will return. That said, one of the possibilities is for the extended schedule to be contested at neutral sites. Not to mention, there's a chance the whole season (whatever that ends up looking like) is played in warm weather sites. Regardless of what happens, losing April and May has a potentially big impact on park factors when they're broken down on a monthly basis.

The park factor calculation is designed to flesh out all biases, so the sole factor being measured is how the venue plays. As has been discussed previously, the bias isn't eliminated, but until alternate means of computing park indices are perfected (they're coming, likely based on Statcast data), using the indices as conventionally determined is better than not using them.

Park factors for any metric can be calculated. Runs, hits and homers are the most common examples, with strikeouts and walks underrated in their utility. Many assume runs and homers track proportionally. As will soon be illustrated, homers and runs are mutually exclusive. Hits and runs correlate better and many venues favor homers but suppress hits, and vice versa.

In order to reduce the variance from the residual bias, park factors are expressed as a three-year average. When a venue undergoes a major renovation, or a team moves to a new ballpark, only the seasons incorporating the change are included in the applied indices.

For reasons to be explained in a bit, a six-year review will be deployed here. Over that span, five venues have undergone changes: Angels Stadium (2018), Minute Maid Park (2017), Marlins Park (2016), Citi Field (2015) and PETCO Park (2015). Chase Field started using a humidor in 2018, while SunTrust Park opened in 2017. As such, data for those parks is used beginning with the above campaigns.

As detailed in 2020 Park Factor Notes, two venues -- Marlins Park and Oracle Park -- underwent renovations this offseason, while the Rangers will move into the brand new Globe Life Field. Since the ensuing discussion focuses on the variability of park factors in general, the data from this trio of venues will still be included.

Before delving into some park factor data, let's break down MLB cities in terms of average monthly temperature, as lower thermometer readings have been shown to suppress fly ball distance, producing fewer homers. The cities are divided into four groups: Cool, moderate, high and domes.

Cool Temperature Cities

 

April

May

Jun

July

Aug

Sept

Minneapolis

48

59

69

74

71

62

Denver

48

58

67

74

72

63

Boston

48

58

68

74

72

65

Chicago

49

59

69

74

72

65

Detroit

49

59

69

73

72

64

Cleveland

49

60

69

73

71

65

Pittsburgh

51

60

69

73

72

64

 

Moderate Temperature Cities

 

April

May

Jun

July

Aug

Sept

New York City

53

63

72

77

76

68

Philadelphia

54

64

73

78

77

69

Baltimore

54

64

73

78

76

68

Kansas City

55

65

74

78

77

68

Washington D.C.

57

66

75

80

78

71

Oakland

57

59

64

68

71

71

Cincinnati

57

66

75

78

77

70

San Francisco

57

59

61

61

63

64

St. Louis

57

67

76

80

79

70

Warm Temperature Cities

 

April

May

Jun

July

Aug

Sept

Atlanta

62

70

77

80

80

74

San Diego

62

65

67

71

72

71

Arlington

66

74

81

85

85

78

Los Angeles

63

66

69

73

74

73

Miami

76

80

83

84

84

83

Domes

 

April

May

Jun

July

Aug

Sept

Milwaukee

46

56

67

72

71

63

Toronto

46

57

67

72

71

63

Seattle

50

56

61

66

66

61

Houston

69

77

82

84

84

79

Tampa

72

78

82

83

83

82

Phoenix

73

82

91

95

94

88

Let's begin with some basic data, home run and runs indices for the past six seasons, followed by the average and standard deviations for each venue.

2014 – 2019 Home Run Indices

Venue

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

Average

StDev

Chase Field (ARI)

 

 

 

 

94

88

91

3.0

SunTrust Park (ATL)

 

 

 

94

80

104

93

9.8

Camden Yards (BAL)

94

136

104

119

112

124

115

13.6

Fenway Park (BOS)

72

96

104

80

96

86

89

10.8

Wrigley Field (CHC)

94

131

84

100

107

89

101

15.4

Great American Ballpark (CIN)

129

110

118

110

136

109

119

10.4

Progressive Field (CLE)

108

96

117

98

102

107

105

7.0

Coors Field (COL)

130

114

120

118

125

119

121

5.2

Guaranteed Rate Field (CWS)

103

110

113

118

96

126

111

9.7

Comerica Park (DET)

106

80

116

110

86

105

101

13.0

Minute Maid Park (HOU)

 

 

 

109

106

120

112

6.0

Kauffman Stadium (KC)

85

82

75

83

89

73

81

5.6

Angels Stadium (LAA)

 

 

 

 

115

101

108

7.0

Dodgers Stadium (LAD)

122

101

96

102

109

114

107

8.7

Marlins Park (MIA)

 

 

83

86

64

82

79

8.6

Miller Park (MIL)

117

140

113

103

113

107

116

11.9

Target Field (MIN)

99

105

98

114

92

86

99

8.9

Citi Field (NYM)

 

101

111

82

92

104

98

10.1

Yankees Stadium (NYY)

148

124

138

132

116

91

125

18.2

RingCentral Coliseum (OAK)

92

78

74

104

76

86

85

10.5

Citizens Bank Park (PHI)

118

114

114

139

120

116

120

8.7

PNC Park (PIT)

70

109

82

84

86

87

86

11.6

PETCO Park (SD)

 

110

92

81

96

88

93

9.7

T-Mobile Park (SEA)

110

92

116

94

100

94

101

9.0

Oracle Park (SF)

69

61

70

60

75

69

67

5.2

Busch Stadium (STL)

96

85

91

86

86

85

88

4.1

Tropicana Field (TB)

81

99

89

93

91

92

91

5.4

Globe Life Park (TEX)

96

104

104

110

123

101

106

8.5

Rogers Centre (TOR)

128

104

100

97

110

129

111

12.8

Nationals Stadium (WSH)

69

102

102

103

115

124

103

17.0

2014 – 2019 Runs Indices

Venue

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

Average

StDev

Chase Field (ARI)

 

 

 

 

106

98

102

4.0

SunTrust Park (ATL)

 

 

 

98

112

100

103

6.2

Camden Yards (BAL)

93

123

95

103

98

109

104

10.2

Fenway Park (BOS)

107

119

120

103

108

100

110

7.5

Wrigley Field (CHC)

93

95

87

113

108

93

98

9.2

Great American Ballpark (CIN)

96

112

99

102

113

103

104

6.3

Progressive Field (CLE)

95

126

121

97

113

97

108

12.4

Coors Field (COL)

150

144

137

133

127

139

138

7.4

Guaranteed Rate Field (CWS)

105

90

93

100

94

97

97

4.9

Comerica Park (DET)

100

90

102

117

95

111

103

9.1

Minute Maid Park (HOU)

 

 

 

83

99

108

97

10.3

Kauffman Stadium (KC)

101

102

117

93

106

107

104

7.2

Angels Stadium (LAA)

 

 

 

 

97

99

98

1.0

Dodgers Stadium (LAD)

91

92

81

97

87

90

90

4.9

Marlins Park (MIA)

 

 

83

85

75

109

88

12.7

Miller Park (MIL)

100

110

97

109

101

98

103

5.1

Target Field (MIN)

112

99

104

110

103

98

104

5.2

Citi Field (NYM)

 

87

99

86

73

89

87

8.3

Yankees Stadium (NYY)

94

102

104

102

113

82

100

9.6

RingCentral Coliseum (OAK)

102

94

83

110

84

89

94

9.7

Citizens Bank Park (PHI)

93

104

84

107

105

105

100

8.4

PNC Park (PIT)

98

93

101

95

88

101

96

4.6

PETCO Park (SD)

 

93

101

83

109

86

94

9.6

T-Mobile Park (SEA)

82

88

94

92

85

95

89

4.7

Oracle Park (SF)

92

85

101

85

101

80

91

8.1

Busch Stadium (STL)

110

93

92

89

93

92

95

6.9

Tropicana Field (TB)

100

94

89

93

93

89

93

3.7

Globe Life Park (TEX)

105

114

116

122

135

124

119

9.3

Rogers Centre (TOR)

104

91

116

95

96

103

101

8.2

Nationals Stadium (WSH)

107

100

96

106

113

110

105

5.8

The standard deviations are helpful when assessing risk. Projections are already best viewed as a range. The larger standard deviations add even more variance to the associated venues. It's just something else to consider when building your risk portfolio.

Let's break down the 30 venues into their home run and run correlation. The following doesn't say anything about hitting and pitching venues, simply how the parks compare in terms of homers and runs.

Home run index greater than run index

Venue

HR

Run

Diff

Yankees Stadium (NYY)

125

100

25

Citizens Bank Park (PHI)

120

100

21

Dodgers Stadium (LAD)

107

90

18

Minute Maid Park (HOU)

112

97

15

Great American Ballpark (CIN)

119

104

15

Guaranteed Rate Field (CWS)

111

97

15

Miller Park (MIL)

116

103

13

T-Mobile Park (SEA)

101

89

12

Camden Yards (BAL)

115

104

11

Citi Field (NYM)

98

87

11

Rogers Centre (TOR)

111

101

11

Angels Stadium (LAA)

108

98

10

Similar Home run and run indices

Venue

HR

Run

Diff

Wrigley Field (CHC)

101

98

3

PETCO Park (SD)

93

94

-1

Comerica Park (DET)

101

103

-2

Tropicana Field (TB)

91

93

-2

Nationals Stadium (WSH)

103

105

-3

Progressive Field (CLE)

105

108

-4

Target Field (MIN)

99

104

-5

Home run index less than run index

Venue

HR

Run

Diff

Oracle Park (SF)

67

91

-23

Kauffman Stadium (KC)

81

104

-23

Fenway Park (BOS)

89

110

-21

Coors Field (COL)

121

138

-17

Globe Life Park (TEX)

106

119

-13

Chase Field (ARI)

91

102

-11

SunTrust Park (ATL)

93

103

-11

PNC Park (PIT)

86

96

-10

Marlins Park (MIA)

79

88

-9

RingCentral Coliseum (OAK)

85

94

-9

Busch Stadium (STL)

88

95

-7

Some of the more intriguing venues are Yankees Stadium, Citizens Bank Park, Minute Maid Park, Great American Ballpark, Guaranteed Rate Field, Miller Park and Camden Yards. They all are favorable home run venues, but either suppress runs outright or only feature a slight increase in runs (no more than five percent). Many fantasy GMs avoid pitchers who call these venues home, but if an individual hurler isn't significantly home run prone, he can be effective in that park.

On the other hand, Kauffman Stadium, Fenway Park, Chase Field and SunTrust Park all inhibit long balls, but embellish run scoring. Pitchers with home run issues are even riskier in these yards.

To be honest, there's nothing new here; everything has been covered previously. However, looking at park factors by month is a novel approach. If the data proves actionable, it could help adjust expectations once the 2020 plan is revealed. The problem is, there's ample noise already in yearly factors when applying them via three-year averages. How useful is what's essentially 1/18th of that sample?

While it doesn't completely mitigate the noise, using monthly numbers from the past six seasons creates a data set on a par with one season's worth of statistics. Partial data is used for the seven clubs listed previously.

Here are the aggregate monthly park factors from 2014-2019 with the standard deviation.

Home Runs

Venue

Apr

May

Jun

Jul

Aug

Sep

StDev

Chase Field (ARI)

94

83

80

90

104

95

8.7

SunTrust Park (ATL)

101

108

85

73

99

103

13.2

Camden Yards (BAL)

105

112

115

121

129

102

10

Fenway Park (BOS)

81

94

77

78

108

95

12.3

Wrigley Field (CHC)

83

107

96

90

112

98

10.7

Great American Ballpark (CIN)

130

128

130

106

95

121

14.6

Progressive Field (CLE)

94

121

106

111

106

87

12.1

Coors Field (COL)

132

110

127

125

110

124

9.2

Guaranteed Rate Field (CWS)

98

100

115

112

112

127

10.6

Comerica Park (DET)

101

102

95

100

96

112

6.1

Minute Maid Park (HOU)

116

113

103

114

110

121

6

Kauffman Stadium (KC)

86

70

79

88

84

81

6.4

Angels Stadium (LAA)

183

78

99

99

102

104

36.6

Dodgers Stadium (LAD)

125

105

107

99

96

113

10.5

Marlins Park (MIA)

81

89

79

70

73

82

6.8

Miller Park (MIL)

133

120

107

120

95

108

13.3

Target Field (MIN)

82

94

101

116

102

96

11.2

Citi Field (NYM)

85

85

97

127

102

97

15.4

Yankees Stadium (NYY)

120

144

132

97

108

124

16.8

RingCentral Coliseum (OAK)

74

80

104

85

84

84

10.1

Citizens Bank Park (PHI)

132

106

114

124

135

111

11.8

PNC Park (PIT)

87

79

80

82

97

88

6.7

PETCO Park (SD)

87

92

115

104

76

86

14

T-Mobile Park (SEA)

90

99

100

101

111

102

6.7

Oracle Park (SF)

62

69

57

70

76

71

6.8

Busch Stadium (STL)

78

89

73

93

88

107

11.9

Tropicana Field (TB)

106

85

93

82

95

88

8.6

Globe Life Park (TEX)

114

105

110

110

107

101

4.5

Rogers Centre (TOR)

130

103

117

120

96

103

12.9

Nationals Stadium (WSH)

83

112

97

120

110

103

13

Runs

Venue

Apr

May

Jun

Jul

Aug

Sep

 

Chase Field (ARI)

92

82

95

114

131

106

17.5

SunTrust Park (ATL)

98

130

93

83

114

105

16.6

Camden Yards (BAL)

92

102

98

111

114

101

8.2

Fenway Park (BOS)

115

107

93

108

121

109

9.4

Wrigley Field (CHC)

83

101

91

104

114

96

10.8

Great American Ballpark (CIN)

104

106

110

100

91

115

8.3

Progressive Field (CLE)

116

119

107

100

104

98

8.5

Coors Field (COL)

151

136

152

126

126

138

11.5

Guaranteed Rate Field (CWS)

94

96

102

94

95

98

3.1

Comerica Park (DET)

104

115

94

99

96

106

7.7

Minute Maid Park (HOU)

89

83

95

90

100

124

14.5

Kauffman Stadium (KC)

104

93

110

118

100

104

8.5

Angels Stadium (LAA)

119

86

92

111

112

73

17.9

Dodgers Stadium (LAD)

94

91

89

87

86

90

2.9

Marlins Park (MIA)

101

85

86

86

92

77

8

Miller Park (MIL)

102

120

94

105

95

99

9.5

Target Field (MIN)

91

103

108

116

98

111

9.1

Citi Field (NYM)

91

88

91

99

70

88

9.6

Yankees Stadium (NYY)

101

105

107

84

101

94

8.5

RingCentral Coliseum (OAK)

88

85

98

98

89

104

7.4

Citizens Bank Park (PHI)

101

91

91

106

111

96

8.2

PNC Park (PIT)

101

101

98

93

87

95

5.4

PETCO Park (SD)

95

98

104

93

92

82

7.3

T-Mobile Park (SEA)

87

103

86

88

93

83

7.2

Oracle Park (SF)

97

80

87

92

100

87

7.3

Busch Stadium (STL)

98

100

80

83

104

100

10

Tropicana Field (TB)

92

90

108

83

89

96

8.5

Globe Life Park (TEX)

111

104

126

127

130

124

10.4

Rogers Centre (TOR)

105

103

93

103

96

101

4.7

Nationals Stadium (WSH)

76

107

106

123

104

125

17.6

Keeping in mind the primary purpose of investigating monthly factors is to determine if the climate affects how the venue plays, here's the data grouped by the four subsets provided earlier. It doesn't matter if each group contains hitting and pitching venues, the overall trend is the key component.

Home Runs

 

Apr

May

Jun

Jul

Aug

Sep

StDev

Cool

95

101

100

102

105

103

3.4

Moderate

96

100

100

103

101

100

2.3

Warm

115

96

99

93

92

98

8.4

Dome

112

101

100

105

102

103

4.4

Runs

 

Apr

May

Jun

Jul

Aug

Sep

StDev

Cool

107

110

106

105

105

106

1.9

Moderate

95

96

98

101

98

101

2.5

Warm

103

99

98

98

104

92

4.3

Dome

95

97

95

97

101

102

3.0

The primary advantage of combining the data in this manner is the samples now are composed of at least five teams, helping to flatten the variance even more than the standard three-year average.

To reiterate, a mixture of hitter's and pitcher's venues comprise each group, so there's nothing actionable by noting the aggregate home run and run factors are highest in cool temperature venues. Both are skewed by Coors Field being in the sample. The important observation is the home run factors in the cool and moderate temperature cities are indeed significantly lower in April. After that, they level off.

It's interesting to point out the warm weather venues and domes play most favorably for homers in April. This is likely real and not a sample size artifact. One explanation is batters are more comfortable in warm weather than cold weather as the denominator is away games which include cold weather data. That is, the "comfort" bias is not fleshed out in April. Of course, it also exists for pitchers, but one plausible explanation is pitchers eventually acclimate to the conditions, working multiple innings while batters only emerge from the dugout four or five times.

The runs data is less interesting since the standard deviations are lower and applying the results to a full season won't render much of a difference. That said, it is relevant to note run scoring doesn't dip in the cool venues in April, perhaps debunking the myth that streaming pitchers in the cold is advantageous. However, further investigation of the monthly runs data is necessary, as there may be something to the degree of cold which could affect utility with respect to streaming pitching and DFS matchups.

Conclusions

This may seem like a lot of work to corroborate something intuitive – cold weather parks suppress home runs. However, seeing warm weather venues and domes boost homers even more in April is actionable. Obviously, these venues naturally aid homers compared to cool and moderate climates, but the point is proportionately. The more comfortable conditions are even better than normal. This is worth noting in leagues with daily moves and DFS, and drafting fringe players on these teams and perhaps looking to sell high as the mercury climbs could also be a viable strategy.

With respect to 2020, if some of the season is played in standard MLB venues, projections should be adjusted to reflect the lack of influence of the early months. However, if the schedule is contested in spring training facilities, devoid of trustworthy park factors, current projections should flesh out the home field adjustment, rendering them all park neutral. As an example, Jacob deGrom and Gerrit Cole are ranked virtually the same. However, deGrom works in a superior pitching venue, so on paper, Cole benefits more if games aren't played in the team's regular venues. Similarly, Christian Yelich would be penalized more than Mike Trout since Miller Park is a better hitting venue than Angels Stadium.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Todd Zola
Todd has been writing about fantasy baseball since 1997. He won NL Tout Wars and Mixed LABR in 2016 as well as a multi-time league winner in the National Fantasy Baseball Championship. Todd is now setting his sights even higher: The Rotowire Staff League. Lord Zola, as he's known in the industry, won the 2013 FSWA Fantasy Baseball Article of the Year award and was named the 2017 FSWA Fantasy Baseball Writer of the Year. Todd is a five-time FSWA awards finalist.
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