TheSociety for American Baseball Research (SABR) is a membership organization dedicated to fostering the research and dissemination of the history and statistical record ofbaseball. The organization was founded inCooperstown, New York, on August 10, 1971, at a meeting of 16 "statistorians" coordinated by sportswriterBob Davids.[2] The organization now reports a membership of over 7,500 and is based inPhoenix, Arizona.
While the acronym "SABR" was used to coin the wordsabermetrics (for the use of sophisticated mathematical tools to analyze baseball), the Society is about much more thanstatistics. Well-known figures in the baseball world such asBob Costas,Keith Olbermann,Craig R. Wright, andRollie Hemond are members, along with highly regarded "sabermetricians" such asBill James andRob Neyer.
Only a minority of members pursue "number crunching" research. Rather, the SABR community is organized both by interest and geography:
Research Committees study a particular issue
Regional Chapters link members by proximity. The latter are frequently named after baseball personalities relevant to their region.
SABR members keep in touch through online directories and electronic mailing lists set up through the SABR headquarters. The headquarters also maintains a number of research tools on its website, including a lending library, home run and triple play logs, and course syllabi related to the game.
SABR holds annual conventions in a different city each year. The conference generally includes panel discussions, research presentations, city-specific tourism, a ballgame, and an awards banquet. The 2017 convention inNew York City, set the attendance record with 806 registered attendees out of approximately 7,000 SABR members.[3] The organization also hosts an annualbaseball analytics conference in Phoenix and aNegro Leagues conference, which is held in a different location each year.[4][5]
Biography Project, with members authoring well-researched and engaging biographies of a growing list of former big league ballplayers and other notable contributors to the game.[6]
Games Project, where members research, write, and publish accounts of the major league regular season, postseason, and All-Star Games, including Negro Leagues games, along with other games of historical significance such as in the minor leagues or international or exhibition contests.[7]
Oral History Collection, a collection of interviews conducted with ballplayers, executives, scouts, authors, writers, broadcasters, and other figures of historical baseball significance.[8]
SABR-Rucker Archive, an extensive collection of baseball photographs which contain nearly 80,000 images dating from the 19th century to modern-day baseball.[9]
The Baseball Research Journal (BRJ) is SABR's flagship publication since 1972 for members to publish and share their research with like-minded students of baseball.The National Pastime is an annual, published from 1982 to 2008 asThe National Pastime: A Review of Baseball History, when it was intended as a more literary outlet than the stats orientedBRJ; since 2009 it is a convention-focused journal, with articles about the geographic region where the convention is taking place that year.[10] Other Society publications are an increasing variety of books (since 1976) and ebooks (since 2011);[11] 8–10 new e-books published annually are all free to members.[12]
Bob Davids[13] Award: for exceptional SABR members who have made contributions to SABR and baseball that reflect ingenuity, integrity, and self-sacrifice. It is SABR's highest honor, and was established in 1985.[14]
Henry Chadwick Award: for baseball researchers—historians, statisticians, annalists, and archivists.[15][16][17]
McFarland-SABR Baseball Research Award: for authors of the best articles on baseball history or biography completed during the preceding calendar year (published or unpublished).[25]
Sporting News-SABR Baseball Research Award: for projects which do not fit the criteria for The Seymour Medal or the McFarland-SABR Award.
Jerry Malloy Book Prize: best book-length nonfiction manuscript submitted by a member of SABR.[24]
Doug Pappas Research Award: best oral research presentation at the Annual Convention.
Lee Allen Award: for the best baseball research project at the annual National History Day competition.
Jack Kavanagh Memorial Youth Baseball Research Award: research paper by a researcher in grades 6–8 (middle school category), grades 9–12 (high school category), or undergraduates 22 and under (College Category).
Dorothy Seymour Mills Lifetime Achievement Award: awarded to any person with a sustained involvement in women's baseball or any woman with a longtime involvement in baseball in any fashion — player, umpire, writer, executive, team owner, scout, etc.[26]
In 2013, SABR began collaborating withRawlings on theGold Glove Award.[27] Rawlings changed the voting process to incorporate SABR Defensive Index, a sabermetric component provided by SABR, which accounts for approximately 25 percent of the vote for the defensive award.[28]
^Retrosheet is a research and archives organization independent of SABR which holds its annual meeting in conjunction with the society's annual convention.
SABR has regional chapters located across mainland United States. Additionally, there are also a number of international chapters. Majority of chapters are named in honor of a player or person with a close connection to or after something associated with the chapter's location.[29]
^Established in November 2009, theHenry Chadwick Award was first presented in 2010."Henry Chadwick Award". Society for American Baseball Research. Retrieved2011-12-17.
^TheSeymour Medal was first awarded in 1996, at the SABR national convention. SABR held the first Seymour Medal Conference in 1999, at Cleveland State University, in conjunction with the presentation of the medal."The Seymour Medal". Society for American Baseball Research. Archived fromthe original on 2011-12-27. Retrieved2011-12-19.
^TheMcFarland award was "previously named TheMacmillan-SABR Baseball Research Award (1987–1999)", according to"McFarland-SABR Baseball Research Award". Society for American Baseball Research. Retrieved2012-02-17.