The Harvard Crimson - Volume CL, No. 1

Page 17

SPORTS

THE HARVARD CRIMSON JANUARY 27, 2023

17

FORST

WEEKLY RECAP SCORES WOMEN’S ICE HOCKEY VS. RPI

W, 3-1

BASKETBALL VS. CORNELL

W, 66-53

SQUASH VS. NO 4 PRINCETON

W, 7-2

TENNIS VS. BOSTON COLLEGE

W, 4-3

MEN’S

ICE HOCKEY VS. YALE

W, 3-2 OT

BASKETBALL VS. CORNELL

W, 95-89

WRESTLING VS. CORNELL SQUASH VS. NO 2 PENN

L, 12-27

W, 5-4

READ IT IN FIVE MINUTES ICE HOCKEY AT FENWAY David Forst ‘98, left, the former Harvard All-American shortstop, serves as the general manager of the Oakland Athletics. JULIAN J. GIORDANO — CRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER

O’Donnell to Oakland HARVARD BASEBALL TO MONEYBALL David Forst, a former Harvard All-American, now serves as general manager of Oakland Athletics. BY JACK CANAVAN CRIMSON STAFF WRITER

F

ormer Harvard baseball captain and shortstop David Forst’s journey saw him transition from an exciting point in Harvard baseball’s success to being on the front lines of one of the most influential MLB front offices in recent memory. Let’s take a trip back in time. The day is May 23, 1998, about a week and a half after Harvard baseball claimed an Ivy League Championship at Yale. On this day, the Crimson traveled to Baton Rouge, L.A., to face California State University, Fullerton in the South II Regional round of the 1998 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. A win would push the Crimson into the regional final, where it would be one game away from clinching a spot in the College World Series for the first time in 24 years. But those aspirations faded quickly, as Cal State Fullerton demolished Harvard, with a final score of 11-3. It was a tough way to end the season, but the program was the best it had been in decades. Coming off a third consecutive trip to NCAA regionals, the Crimson capped off what was its deepest postseason run since 1983. For senior captain and short-

stop David Forst ’98, the loss marked his last time playing for the Crimson. In his final season, Forst slashed a line of .406/.437/.624, earned a third team All- American selection, and was the common denominator for the Crimson’s recent success. A year later, Forst attended the 1999 Boston Red Sox spring training camp, followed by stints in Independent League Baseball later that summer, with nothing materializing. At the end of the year, Forst’s playing career ended, but his career in the world of baseball was just beginning. “I think playing baseball at that level sort of cemented the passion that I always had for the game,” Forst said. Instead of pursuing his job search in other industries, he made a shift, just as any shortstop would, when the batter at the plate changed. But this time, instead of going from short to second, he took a slightly different route – from the playing field to the front office. “I think we all dream about playing [professionally],” Forst said. “When someone else makes it clear [that you no longer can], then the next best thing is trying to make it your everyday life.” In 2000, Forst joined the Oakland Athletics as a front office scouting executive and began a journey that would change the face of modern baseball. Under the guidance of fellow Harvard Alum and current Cleveland Browns Chief Strategy Officer Paul Depodesta and then-general manager Billy Beane, the Oakland A’s front office created the “Moneyball Approach” to baseball operations.

Moneyball is a method that incorporates sabermetrics – or a type of analysis that factors physical scouting, statistical analysis, and financial management – in baseball front office planning. The two latter aspects of sabermetrics became Oakland’s forte. By decreasing the importance of the “eye-test” and focusing on underutilized statistics, such as On Base Percentage (OBP) and walks (BBs), Oakland achieved immediate success, making the playoffs within the first two years of Moneyball’s implementation. Since 2000, Oakland has had the sixth winningest record in all of baseball. They did this all while having one of the lowest payrolls in the MLB. Moneyball’s system succeeded under tight fiscal constraints and became the blueprint for teams across the MLB. “We were sort of considered different simply for considering college stats in evaluating players for the draft, and we’re not talking advanced stats, either,” Forst recalled. “We were talking about on base percentage and walks. Whereas now, if you don’t have exit [velocities] and launch angles and spin rates on just about everybody on your draft board, you’re falling behind, so it is a totally different set of measurements and numbers that we’re calling ‘analytics’ today than we were 20 years ago.” Free-agency and the MLB draft — the two most important facets of the game related to roster construction — most heavily felt the impact of the league-wide adoption of sabermetrics. Utilizing these metrics gave smaller market teams, which do not have the same spending luxuries as bigger market teams,

Forst joined the Athletics front office in 2000, as the “Moneyball” approach, featured in the book and film of the same name, was coming to life. JULIAN J. GIORDANO — CRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER

the ability to excel in free agent signings on mid-level contracts, as well as finding a reliable, concrete drafting strategy. In many ways, the MLB draft, which scouts both high school and college athletes, is a black box, but sabermetrics provides a means to identify and acquire college players who were more likely to succeed in the MLB.

I think that playing baseball at that level sort of cemented the passion that I always had for the game Davis Forst ‘98 General Manager, Oakland Athletics

For Forst, it all started in a room with Beane and Depodesta. “The luckiest thing that happened to me was getting to work with [Beane] and the fact that he brought me in on just about everything from day one,” Forst said. “We had a small group when I first started. It was basically [Beane], [Depodesta], and myself in the front office.” The Athletics made the playoffs for the next four years, reaching the American League Division Series (ALDS) from 2000 to 2003. In 2004, Forst was promoted to Assistant General Manager to Beane after Depodesta left Oakland to run baseball operations for the Los Angeles Dodgers. For the next 11 years, Forst kept this title, acting as Beane’s second-in-command. Over that time, Beane deferred more leadership responsibilities to Forst, which positioned him perfectly to the transition into his role today as de-facto President of Baseball Operations. “[Beane] really sort of shared leadership responsibilities with me, which was incredibly generous of him and also the best way for me to learn on the job for now being the leader of our baseball operation,” Forst said. In 2015, Forst was promoted to General Manager of the Athletics, where he sat under Beane’s role as Vice President of Baseball Operations. In November 2022, Beane stepped down from the day-today baseball operations scene and moved towards an advisory role, making Forst the de-facto head of Athletics operations. Forst give much credit to Beane for guiding him throughout his career and for helping him reach this point. In the time that it took Forst

to ascend to the top of Oakland’s front office hierarchy, the baseball world completely changed as a result of the A’s strategies in the early 2000s. The introduction of technology and widespread adoption of statistical analysis revolutionized the way front offices operate. The technological revolution also affects the game’s efficiency and time management. In recent years, many fans give America’s pastime labels of “boring” or “slow,” but the MLB is actively pushing to change these associations. In favor of this, Forst cites the pitch clock as an example of a positive change that only improves the game. “Honestly, [the change that was needed] was the pitch clock, and now that we’re doing it I’m thrilled,” Forst said. “A lot of us have talked for years about wanting to speed up the pace of play. That’s a (positive). I’m really glad we’re doing it.” Minor league baseball serves as a testing ground for future changes, including the addition of base runners on second at the start of extra inning games and, potentially the biggest change of all, robotic umpires. Traditional umpires are subjects of frequent controversy, mainly due to arguments over strike zone calls, but are also considered a key part of the game and its history. Forst leans to the former and welcomes innovation in this regard as well. “I think we have an obligation to our fans to adjust the product and make it as entertaining as possible,” Forst said. “I do think automatic balls and strikes will become part of that as well. I think there’s so much emphasis now on the strike zone.” Technology as a whole has attempted to make a rather subjective sport into a quantifiable, objective endeavor. Thus, the foundation the Oakland A’s laid in the early 2000s seeped into other aspects of the game and will continue to innovate baseball in the future. Forst, who now leads the A’s into a rebuild for the first time in decades, will have his work cut out for him in winter meetings in San Diego. For the first time, he will have full reign over the A’s front office, with a difficult task at hand. “Our goal now is to build up the major league team,” Forst said. For a front office that set the precedent for these circumstances, the Athletics will get their first true test at a technologically-influenced rebuild. jack.canavan@thecrimson.com

No. 23 Harvard women’s ice hockey team competed at the 2023 rendition of Frozen Fenway Park. Just days before, the historic green park hosted the Boston Bruins and Pittsburgh Penguins in the 2023 NHL Winter Classic. Harvard faced No. 6 Quinnipiac, though the Crimson ultimately fell 3-1 to the Bobcats in a snowy contest. Harvard was one of the many local Boston-area teams to play at the frozen Fenway Park this month.

HARVARD BEATS CORNELL 95-89 In Ivy League standings, No. 4 men’s basketball defeated No. 2 Cornell in a thrilling 95-89 game at Lavietes Pavillion last Saturday afternoon. The start of Harvard’s 2022-23 Ivy League season has demonstrated that the margins are as fine as ever — four of the six games the Crimson has played against teams in the Ivy have been decided in the dying moments of the second half. The pressure is on, as now, Harvard occupies the last of four qualifying spots for the Ivy March Madness tournament.

BEANPOT LIES JUST AHEAD Harvard men’s ice hockey faces a daunting schedule in the coming weeks, with home games against No. 16 Cornell and No. 1 Quinnipiac preceding the first round of the Beanpot tournament against No. 18 Boston College. Despite returning key players to the lineup, the Crimson is still searching for consistency as it looks to move past a mixed winter break and hit its stride through a challenging schedule.


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Articles inside

O’Donnell to Oakland

6min
page 17

Harvard Keeps Pace in ECAC

6min
page 16

No. 10 Harvard Enters Key Stretch

6min
page 15

FIFTEEN QUESTIONS 14 FIFTEEN QUESTIONS: GLENDA CARPIO ON HUMOR, HUM 10, AND THE FAILURE OF “SUCCESS” STORIES

4min
pages 14-15

‘The Recruit’ Review: Confusion, Captivation, and Centineo

4min
pages 13-14

As it turns out, the elephant is ultimately used as a distraction for guests when the staff needs to carry out the body of an actress who died during the party. “Babylon” is clearly not afraid to thrust the audience into the boisterous reality it imagines, and once it brings on the noise, it refuses to quiet down.

2min
page 13

Editors’ Note: To Our Friends

9min
pages 12-13

Café Lights Up the Square

3min
page 11

Charter Commitee Discusses Elections

2min
page 11

Councilors Debate Body Cameras and Regulations

2min
page 11

Let the Tourists be Tourists

4min
page 10

Announcing The Crimson Editorial Board’s Spring 2023 Columnists

7min
pages 9-10

Students Walk Out of Professor Comaroff’s First Class of Semester

3min
page 8

Vigil Held for Mass Shootings Victims

2min
page 8

Yon Lee, 1948–2023

4min
page 7

Claudine Gay: Harvard’s Next President

14min
pages 6-7

HLS Pledges $500k Gift to Royall House and Slave Quarters

4min
page 5

‘A Little Bit Like Being at Home’: Harvard Student Groups Celebrate Lunar New Year

1min
page 5

Family Appeals Dismissal of Wrongful Death Lawsuit

2min
page 5

The Week in Photos

3min
pages 2-3

LAST WEEK 2

2min
page 2

Judge Releases Parts of Sidebar Transcripts

1min
page 1

Over 100 Students Walk Out of Comaroff Class

2min
page 1

Protesters March Into City Hall to Demand Justice for Sayed Faisal

1min
page 1

The Scholar Everyone Sought

0
page 1
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