The Bill James Baseball Abstracts An aspiring writer and obsessive fan, James began writing baseball articles in his mid-twenties after leaving the
United States Army. Many of his first baseball writings came while he was doing night shifts as a security guard at the
Stokely-Van Camp's pork and beans cannery. Unlike most writers, his pieces did not recount games in epic terms or offer insights gleaned from interviews with players. A typical James piece posed a question (
e.g., "Which pitchers and catchers allow runners to steal the most bases?"), and then presented data and analysis that offered an answer. Editors considered James's pieces so unusual that few believed them suitable for their readers. In an effort to reach a wider audience, James began self-publishing an annual book titled
The Bill James Baseball Abstract, beginning in 1977. The first edition, titled ''1977 Baseball Abstract: Featuring 18 categories of statistical information that you just can't find anywhere else'', presented 68 pages of in-depth statistics compiled from James's study of
box scores from the preceding season and was offered for sale through a small advertisement in
The Sporting News. Seventy-five people purchased the booklet. The 1978 edition, subtitled ''The 2nd annual edition of baseball's most informative and imaginative review
, sold 250 copies. Beginning in 1979, James wrote an annual preview of the baseball season for Esquire'', and continued to do so through 1984. The first three editions of the
Baseball Abstract garnered respect for James's work, including a very favorable review by
Daniel Okrent in
Sports Illustrated. New annual editions added essays on teams and players. By 1982 sales had increased tenfold, and a media conglomerate agreed to publish and distribute future editions. While writers had published books about baseball statistics before (most notably
Earnshaw Cook's
Percentage Baseball, in the 1960s), few had ever reached a mass audience. Attempts to imitate James's work spawned a flood of books and articles that continues to this day.
Post-Abstracts work In 1988, James ceased writing the
Abstract, citing workload-related burnout and concern about the volume of statistics on the market. He has continued to publish hardcover books about baseball history, which have sold well and received admiring reviews. These books include three editions of
The Bill James Historical Baseball Abstract (1985, 1988, 2001, the last entitled
The New Bill James Historical Baseball Abstract). James has also written several series of new annuals: •
The Baseball Book (1990–1992) was a loosely organized collection of commentary, profiles, historical articles, and occasional pieces of research. James's assistant
Rob Neyer was responsible for much of the research, and wrote several short pieces. Neyer went on to become a featured baseball columnist at
ESPN and
SB Nation. •
The Player Ratings Book (1993–95) offered statistics and 50-word profiles aimed at the
fantasy baseball enthusiast. • The Bill James Handbook (2003–present) provides past-season statistics and next-season projections for Major League players and teams, and career data for all current Major League players. Results for the
Fielding Bible Awards, an alternative to the
Gold Glove Awards voted on by a 10-person panel that includes James, are also included. • The Bill James Gold Mine (2008–2010) was a collection of new essays and never-before-seen statistics, as well as profiles of players and teams. • Playing off the name of the earlier series, ''Solid Fool's Gold: Detours on the Way to Conventional Wisdom'' (2011) was a mixed collection of both baseball-related and miscellaneous pieces, culled from the Bill James Online archives (see below). In 2008, James launched Bill James Online. Subscribers could read James's new, original writing and interact with one another—as well as with James—in a question-and-answer format. The web site also offered new "profiles" of teams and players full of facts and statistics that hoped to map what James has termed "the lost island of baseball statistics". On June 9, 2023, James wrote an article for the site announcing that it would soon be closed in order for James to "focus on other projects".
STATS, Inc. In an essay published in the 1984
Abstract, James vented his frustration about
Major League Baseball's refusal to publish play-by-play accounts of every game. James proposed the creation of Project Scoresheet, a network of fans that would work together to collect and distribute this information. While the resulting non-profit organization never functioned smoothly, it worked well enough to collect accounts of every game from 1984 through 1991. James's publisher agreed to distribute two annuals of essays and data—the 1987 and 1988 editions of
Bill James Presents The Great American Baseball Statbook (though only the first of these featured writing by James). The organization was eventually disbanded, but many of its members went on to form for-profit companies with similar goals and structure.
STATS, Inc., the company James joined, provided data and analysis to every major media outlet before being acquired by
Fox Sports in 2001. ==Innovations==