Allan Roth
 Allan Roth (1917-1992) was the first statistician to be employed full-time by a major–league  team when he worked for the Dodgers from 1947 to 1964. He was hired by  Branch Rickey, who was receptive to Roth’s ideas that understanding  situational statistics (home/road, day/night, left-handed/right-handed  pitcher, etc.) could help win games, and that RBIs were deceptive. Like  the best sabermetricians that followed, he was known for taking bits of  baseball conventional wisdom and asking, “Is this true?” Roth wrote a  column in The Sporting News for many years, and after leaving  the Dodgers did work on national baseball telecasts for NBC and ABC. As  Bill James would later write, “He was the guy who began it all.”
Allan Roth (1917-1992) was the first statistician to be employed full-time by a major–league  team when he worked for the Dodgers from 1947 to 1964. He was hired by  Branch Rickey, who was receptive to Roth’s ideas that understanding  situational statistics (home/road, day/night, left-handed/right-handed  pitcher, etc.) could help win games, and that RBIs were deceptive. Like  the best sabermetricians that followed, he was known for taking bits of  baseball conventional wisdom and asking, “Is this true?” Roth wrote a  column in The Sporting News for many years, and after leaving  the Dodgers did work on national baseball telecasts for NBC and ABC. As  Bill James would later write, “He was the guy who began it all.”
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