Nate Silver

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Nate Silver (b. January 13, 1978, East Lansing Michigan; now residing in Chicago, Illinois) is Executive Vice-President of Baseball Prospectus. He is best known for inventing PECOTA, a system for forecasting the performance and career development of minor league and major league baseball players.

Since 2003 he has written a weekly column for BaseballProspectus.com under the heading Lies, Damned Lies, in which he applies sabermetric techniques to a broad range of topics in baseball research -- from evaluating and forecasting the performance of individual players, to the economics of baseball, to developing metrics for the valuation of players in the marketplace, and many other topics.

He is also a co-author of the Baseball Prospectus (ISBN 0-761-13995-8) annual book of Major League Baseball analysis and forecasts as well as other books published by Baseball Prospectus, including Mind Game: How the Boston Red Sox Got Smart, Won a World Series, and Created a New Blueprint for Winning (New York: Workman Publishers, 2005) (ISBN 0-761-14018-2) and Baseball Between the Numbers (New York: Basic Books, 2006) (ISBN 0-465-00596-9).

He has been an occasional contributor to ESPN.com, Sports Illustrated, Slate, and the New York Sun.

Silver was the 1996 Michigan John S. Knight High School Debate Champion. While in college he served as an expert on Scoresheet Baseball for BaseballHQ.

In 2000, Silver graduated from the University of Chicago, where he studied economics. He then worked for three years as an economic consultant with KPMG.

In his spare time, Silver uses his analytical approach at the poker table where he plays semi-professionally.