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Thursday, July 20, 2017
Tuesday, July 18, 2017
Joey Bullpen and Chase Headley
Two quick hitters for you today:
Never change, Joey Bullpen:
I’ve covered this before, so I’m going to pass over the
numbers that say it’s insane to use your best relief pitcher in a game where
your team is either leading or trailing by 3 runs or more (that’s a game whose outcome will be the same with 99% of MLB pitchers, 99% of the time).
However, it is absolutely crucial to have him in games where you’re
leading or trailing by 2 runs or less, as he gives you a significantly greater advantage than an average pitcher does in that case.
So I’ll get right to some more information with the aforementioned
as a back drop and frame of reference:
Yankees manager Joe Girardi recently said that the “extra
wear and tear” of pitching for the Cubs in the World Series last season may be
a reason Chapman is struggling this season.
“…sometimes it does catch up to you…”, Joey Bullpen explained.
In fairness, even with missing last April, Chapman did log a
career high in innings last year when the regular season and post season were
combined.
But whether or not he’s fatigued as a result is an
irrelevant question. The question is, if
you believe that to be the case, how do you handle it ongoing?
I’ll tell you how I would NOT handle it, if I believed he
were struggling as a residual side effect of over use:
I would not use him in meaningless games. I know, I’m a crazy person, right?
In 42% of Chapman’s appearances THIS season, Chapman has
been used in games where one team led the other by 3 runs or more.
Essentially, in almost half of his appearances, Chapman - the $86 million dollar man - has been used in mop up duty.
This includes his first 3 appearances of the season in April
where he was called on to “close out” games with 5-0, 7-3, and 8-4 leads.
This includes, when after being used against
the first place Red Sox on July 14th, and 15th he was called on to protect a three run lead on the 16th. They had another game against Boston later that night, for which he was unavailable.
Maybe it isn’t how Joe Maddon used him. Just a thought.
I was wrong:
Chase Headley is, in fact, as bad as everyone has told me he
is. Among 19 Major League 3rd
baseman (or, 3rd “basemens” as Paul O’Neill says) who have qualified
for the batting title and have played 80% of their games at 3rd
base:
Headley is 11th in OBP, 17th in SLG,
18th in OPS+, 18th in WAR, and 18th in dWAR.
I’m not going to try to do Brian Cashamn’s job for him, but
I will say the prognosis is bad if you’re looking to upgrade. Todd Frazier, Nick Castellanos and Yunel
Escobar aren’t much better – definitely not worth giving up a breathing body
for.
Thanks to NJ.com and Baseball Reference.
Sunday, July 16, 2017
Some "in person" scouting today
I’m going to the Lakewood Blueclaws game this fine, sunny,
July Sunday afternoon. For those of you
out of the loop, the ‘claws are the South Atlantic League’s A ball affiliate of
the Philadelphia Phillies. I’ve seen Cole Hamels,
Ryan Howard, Carols Carrasco and Michael Bourn among others, go through the
ranks. And for what it’s worth, Carrasco
was a sight to see at this level – other A ballers didn’t have a chance against
him. But more importantly than that, the
‘claws let you bring your dog to the game on Sundays, and my wife and I don’t
go anywhere without our dogs.
Seriously.
Today, Lakewood are playing the Charelston River Dogs, the
Yankees A ball affiliate. So I figured I’d
lose my keyboard expert tag for the day and give you some good ole’ scout
sitting in the stands, with a brew, cigar and radar gun perspective. Even if the reality will be sitting in the
grass with my wife and dogs…and a brew and a pizza slice.
So here’s who’ll I’ll be watching, with some general
thoughts first:
For pitchers, I (and the people at Baseball Prospectus and Fangraphs)
like the ability to miss bats and throw good strikes – in other words, succeed
in areas that are somewhat within their control. So I look at strikeouts per 9 innings,
strikeout to walk ratio and independent fielding pitching.
For batters, I tend to agree with the Billy Beane Money ball
philosophy that batters either stay in the strike zone or they don’t from the
very first time they step in the box as children. Guys who didn’t when they were kids, never
will, even as adults. So as with the big
leaguers, I like on base percentage as a measuring stick. And generally, because power numbers are much
lower in the minors than in the majors, a player with power in the minors is
indicative of a power hitter – that may be obvious and/or repetitive, but it’s
very true in this case. If you can hit
home runs in A ball, you have power. So again, not unlike how I evaluate the
big leagues, slugging percentage, on base plus slugging and weighted runs
created plus* are what I look at.
And one more thing of note, thanks to the Baseball
Prospectus group: Player’s age relative
to the average age of players in the league is a huge indicator of future
performance. I.e., if the average age of
the South Atlantic League players is 21.5, and a 19 year old is dominating the
league, that’s an enormous boost to his value as it indicates he’s very likely
to see the show at some point. (As
opposed to a player who is 23 and doing well at the same level…)
With that in mind:
Brandon Wagner
Wagner is an infielder from New Jersey’s own Immaculata high
school who was a 6th round pick of the Yankees. He’s 21 which is -.5 years under average for
the SAL. Brandon leads the South
Atlantic League in OBP, and he’s 11th in weighted runs created plus (wRC+). In other words, he’s one of the better
players in the SAL.
Estevan Florial
Florial is a 19 year old (very young for the level) outfielder
with power, direct from Haiti. He’s 7th
in the SAL in slugging percentage and wRC+, 6th in OPS, and 10th
in OBP. This is the kid to watch on this
team.
Other players of note:
Although I’ll have my eyes on Wagner and Florial, there are
some other interesting players here…
Hoy Jun Park is a middle infielder who’s 6th in
the SAL in OBP. We are now all
conditioned to see a player who can play multiple positions with a high OBP and
think of Ben Zobrist and Marwin Gonzalez.
Brian Keller is the River Dog’s best pitcher, as he’s top
ten in the SAL in K per 9, K/BB ratio and K%.
But he is 23 (old for the level) and was a 39th round draft
pick. In other words, it’s very unlikely
we’ll ever see him in the Bronx.
Thanks as usual to Baseball Reference and Fangraphs for the
numbers.
*Weighted runs created plus is another stat I like. It takes into account every offensive event,
weights them, and factors in the league and park contexts in which they took
place.
Friday, July 14, 2017
Michael Pineda - what you're missing:
With Michael Pineda being diagnosed with an ulnar collateral
tear in his elbow, his immediate future is up in the air*. None of us know what the length of his
absence will be, but for the sake of discussion, let’s assume the worst: If he’s gone for an extended period, what exactly
do you the Yankees need to replace?
Almost all references from Simpleton Summer Camp (the Yes
Network), mass media and fans refer to his inconsistency. Lots of strikeouts, but lots of home runs and runs
allowed. Of course, because of the
nature of Simpleton Summer Camp and the fans, the very significant and relevant
issues of his body language and how he wears his hat arise.
(Pinches bridge of nose…)
If you are indeed among the camp of not liking his body
language, how her wears his hat, or his inconsistency, here’s what you need to
know:
Three and a half seasons, in my mind anyway, is a good
enough sample size to judge what a player is going to give you, inconsistencies
aside. In Pineda’s case, here’s what he’s
given you – in other words, here’s what you need to replace:
Among American League starting pitchers between 2014 and
2017, with 500 innings pitched over that span, Pineda is:
- 9th in Fielding Independent Pitching (FIP) among 27 who fit the criteria.
- 5th in strikeout percentage (only behind Chris Sale, Corey Kluber, Chris Archer, and David Price – ever hear of those guys?).
- 2nd in strikeout to walk ratio, behind Chris Sale only.
On an open market, his performance over those 3 and a half
seasons would be worth $78 million.
The Yankees have paid him $14 million over that time.
And it should go without saying, if you’re one of 27
pitchers who are good enough to be run out there every 5th day for 3.5 years,
that alone makes you one of the best in the league.
So great, you don’t like Pineda. Replace him.
Find an available pitcher who’s going to be among the best
in the league in categories over which he has control: Missing bats and not putting anyone on base
himself. And oh, by the way, that
pitcher needs to play for $64 million under market value.
In other words, get Tampa to trade Archer or Cleveland to
trade Kluber to the Yankees for the equivalent of Jesus Montero. Remember him?
The guy for whom the Yankees acquired Pineda, who isn’t in baseball
anymore.
I get it. As a fan,
Pineda can be frustrating. But as fans
we tend to believe our eyes, which are poor judges of performance – follow the
numbers, and Pineda is a very tough player to replace.
Thanks to Fangraphs and Baseball Reference for the stats.
*UCL issues do not have a standard treatment. Short term rehabilitation may work, sometimes
Tommy John surgery and a long recovery is required.
Tyler Wade for Garrett Cooper
Yankee General Manager Brian Cashman has traded left handed
relief pitcher Tyler Webb to the Milwaukee Brewers for first baseman Garrett
Cooper. In doing so, Cashman has reduced
the number of “Tylers” on the Yankee 40 man roster to seven. And because it happened on the same day the
defending champion Chicago Cubs made a trade of their own, acquiring a
frontline pitcher, the Yankees/Brewers move flew under the radar. Nonetheless, it’s an interesting move for
both teams.
Before we get to Webb and Cooper, we can assume that Cashman
believed 142 major league plate appearances between the LA Angels and the
Yankees from Ji-man Choi were enough to establish that he wasn’t the answer the
Yankees sought at first base. John
Sterling somewhere is disappointed as his “Ji-man is he-man” call was going to
be a keeper.
On the surface, this may seem to be a low level, under the
radar trade – a minor leaguer for a guy with 6 innings pitched in the major
leagues. But what makes this an
interesting gamble for both teams, is how both players went from good/slightly
above minor leaguers to having stand out, look at me 2017 seasons.
Cooper was a slightly better than average minor leaguer
before this season, when in 2017, he appears to have turned a corner and then some. With a .428 on base percentage and a .652
slugging percentage in 320 AAA plate appearances, he’s a guy ready for the
show. Eric Thames having the season he’s
having in Milwaukee is going to keep Cooper from playing first in Brew town for
the time being however, hence their desire to roll the dice and let Cooper go.
Webb always missed bats as a minor leaguer – 9.5 strikeouts
per nine innings was his lowest season
average – but this season he found his groove.
He posted 12.7 K per 9 in AAA with a 15 to 1 K to BB ratio.
Bottom line? I like
this move for the Yankees. Losing Webb
is a dice roll as well, as numbers like his are hard to ignore. He has promise, but was a 48th
round pick and is about to be 27 years old.
That doesn’t read like someone who’s going to go on to really big
things.
Cooper’s situation is similar in that he’s 26 and hasn’t hit
the big time yet. But he was a 6th
round amateur draft pick so he was seen as having some promise, but more
importantly, .428/.652 is impressive.
That’s someone who deserves a shot.
You know the expression “replacement player”? As in, your high salaried major leaguer is
only better than “X” wins over an AAA player?
Well with his performance thus far, Cooper appears to be better than a
replacement player, as he’s killing AAA.
Nobody needs reminding the Yankees have received sub-replacement level
production from their first basemen this year.
In addition to being able to play first he can also play the
outfield, meaning he can spell Brett Gardner and/or Aaron Judge
occasionally. And again, if we’re being
frank, any outfielder that keeps Jacoby Ellsbury on the bench makes the Yankees
a better team by doing so. A harsh
reality, but a reality nonetheless.
And despite the clamoring among the unwashed masses for
pitching, the Yankees are hurting offensively without Hicks, Holliday and
Castro. The Yanks led the league in runs
scored not that long ago but are a mile behind Houston in that department
now. A big part of that is injuries to
the aforementioned – a huge part is getting absolutely no production from 1st
base. Adding a guy with a .428/.692
slash line (albeit in triple A) should help.
Good move for both teams. Some risk on both ends, but high upsides as
well on both ends.
Thanks again to Baseball Reference and Fangraphs for the
stats.
Wednesday, July 12, 2017
All Star Game thoughts:
I really wanted to avoid the tired tradition of 2nd
half predictions and 1st half recaps, so this may seem a little
random, but I think it’s better for all if we stay off the beaten path and
think about things as they arise. Let
the tabloids do the 1st half MVPs, Cy Youngs and Rookies of the Year…yawn…
Watching the FOX broadcast of the actual game reminded me of
why I started this blog in the first place:
Listening to the same questions posed to the same players then the same
talking heads discussing the same topics can be mind-numbing. You can parade A-Rod around the field all you
want and you can have Joe Buck talk to Bryce Harper during actual play all you
want – it won’t change the tedium.
So for the sake of keeping it random, these two things
occurred to me Tuesday night during the game:
Billy Beane is going to fleece another GM at the trade
deadline with Yonder Alonso…
…and Brian Cashman recently said he’s looking to upgrade
first base for the Yankees. Put a pin in
that, I’ll come back to it.
Other than having a great slugging percentage this season and
being a free agent at the end of it, here’s what you need to know about Yonder
Alonso:
His 2017 slugging percentage is .562. His previous single season high is .397.
His ’17 OPS+ is 151.
His previous single season high is 110.
He’s on pace for 2.7 wins above replacement. His previous single season high was 1.8.
Additionally, there is pretty solid reasoning that suggests
that the baseballs this year are different than in the past, resulting in an
increase in power numbers for batters.
Currently, Alonso is in a 1 year, $4 million contract,
making him a free agent at the end of the season.
Needless to say, Billy Beane will be looking to move him.
So, question for you, if you were another GM:
How much would you be willing to give up for a player a) who
may only be with you for 2 months, b) who will command $16 million per season
at the end of the season, c) whose power over the past three months is an
aberration, in a season full of aberrations, and d) who at his best, isn’t even
a 3 win player?
Is it possible, like Daniel Murphy and Ryan Zimmerman, he
changed his swing and 2017 is the real thing?
Possible, but unlikely, I say.
I’ll say this: I
would tread lightly if I were a GM. I
wouldn’t give up anything I liked. Call
me a skeptic, but I get the vibe in two years, the A’s will be winning 90
something games with prospects Beane gets for Alonso in two weeks.
Back to Cashman:
What got me thinking about this, was as I was watching the
game Tuesday night, I wondered aloud what team is going to get suckered and
over pay for Yonder Alonso?
The last time I had that thought? During the 2013 world series, when I was
watching Jacoby Ellsbury.
The Los Angeles Dodgers have 61 wins. The Houston Astros have 60. The next best team has seven fewer.
Both the Dodgers and Astros are run by General Managers who
did not have experience in baseball prior to being hired as GM’s. This is not a coincidence.
Andrew Friedman of the Dodgers was an extremely successful
Wall Street analyst who took his analytical skills to the Tampa Bay Rays,
leading them to a World Series appearance in ’08 before moving on to the
Dodgers. (Say that again for effect: a World Series appearance from the Rays.)
Jeff Luhnow of the Astros is so smart I don’t even
understand the job titles of his previous jobs.
He earned two degrees from the University of Pennsylvania in economics
and engineering, before moving on to get an MBA. Only then did he move on to the St. Louis Cardinals
where he not only helped turn them into a perennial contender and multiple
World Series winner, but was so effective the Cardinals thought it was worth
cyber- hacking the Astros player data base once Luhnow went to Houston.
Why am I sharing this?
Just as a reminder that every time you hear an ex-jock speak
into a microphone about how statistics are ruining the game, and sabermetrics
this and the statisticians never played that…and every time you hear Paul
O’Neill, John Flaherty and Al Leiter saying things like they’re “old school”,
and you need to “make something happen, put pressure on the defense” and how
the “Win” statistic is important, remember:
They have already lost the argument, and are either hugely
ignorant, or just plain bitter that they know little about the game they played
for decades.
Insert Brad Pitt voice from Moneyball: You think you know,
but you don’t. YOU. DON’T.
There are people who are exponentially smarter, who have
done exponentially more work on subject matters relevant to winning baseball
games than they have. The war is
over. The nerds won.
Parenthetically, the Philadelphia Phillies at 29 wins, were
the last team to hire analytical statisticians.
Sunday, July 9, 2017
Frazier was a side effect, credit Girardi.
I’ve been as critical of Joe Girardi as anyone. But yesterday (drumroll), he had a great – not
good – great game and he’s the reason the Yankees won.
Don’t get me wrong – I jumped off the couch and wind milled
my arm like Pete Townsend when Clint Frazier* hit the ball over the wall in the
9th, followed by many fist pumps and “F yeah!”s.
*Or as Simpleton Summer Camp (Yes network) member Paul
O’Neill says “Fray-zer”. Deep breath…
Because this game is about fun, and that was fun to watch.
That being said, Clint Frazier’s home run was residual side
effect. The Yankees won that game
because Joe Girardi put them in a position to win that game.
Joe’s great move #1 – putting Dellin Betances in when down by a run in the 8th inning.
Joe’s modus operandi this season has been to use the
Yankee’s 10th or 11th pitcher in spots like this, saving
Betances and Chapman for potential mop-up duty later on. Joe used one of his best guns and it worked –
scoreless 8th.
Joe’s great move #2 – putting Aroldis Chapman in to pitch
the 9th inning, still trailing by a run.
See above. This is
where Joe normally trusts a one run, late game deficit to the Jonathan Holders,
Tyler Clippards and Domingo Germans of the world. He went to his “closer” (I use that term
sarcastically, as it’s a nonsensical term) and it worked – scoreless 9th.
Joe’s great move #3 – not having Chase Headley bunt in the 9th
inning.
Didi Gregorius led off the 9th with a 4 pitch
walk and up came Chase Headley.
Immediately Simpleton Summer Camp queried as to whether or not Headley
should bunt. As discussed here
previously, that notion is so nonsensical it’s not even worth further
examination.
Headley did not bunt.
Headley struck out.
You may think that means he should have bunted. I would disagree.
First, you don’t use the result to justify the means (unless
you have a disinclination to logic).
Secondly, a strikeout there isn’t that bad when compared to
a sacrifice bunt. Yes, seriously.
A runner on 2nd and 1 out has a run expectancy of
.72. A runner on first with one out has
a run expectancy of .57. Whether or not
that’s a big enough difference to justify the risk of bunting is debatable. For starters, that doesn’t factor in the
close to 50/50 chance that the bunt wouldn’t be successful. It also doesn’t consider that a strikeout
there isn’t THAT harmful – at least there’s no double play.
But this is conjecture based on the benefit of
hindsight. What we know is that a runner
on first with no one out has a run expectancy of .95. A runner on 2nd and one out has a
run expectancy of .72 and a runner on 1st with one out has a run
expectancy of .57 (the latter two being bunt attempt outcomes). Therefore, a bunt in this situation would
have been ridiculous – and Joe made the right choice.
As you probably know, Jacoby Ellsbury walked and Clint
Frazier homered and the Yankees won.
Yes, the players won the game, but Joe Girardi gave them the opportunity
to do so and deserves a ton of credit for the win.
Postscript: On
another note, I found another reason to love Clint Frazier in addition to
yesterday’s performance and the overall sense of hope he brings: When Simpleton Summer Camp’s Chris Shearn asked
Frazier after the HR if Clint’s hair was OK, Clint looked at him with a look of
“WTF kind of question is that, bro?” A similar
look followed when Shearn asked Clint “How did it feel…” blah, blah, blah… Maybe
this is an upside to the younger generation.
They seem less tolerant of dumb ass questions.
Friday, July 7, 2017
Milwaukee who?
So the Yankees are playing the Brewers this weekend. I’m assuming you know next to nothing about
the Brewers because nobody outside the families of the team members does. So I did some checking and here’s what you
need to know, in no particular order:
The Brewers are an average team. They’re 4th in the NL in run
differential, they’re 5th in the NL in simple rating system
(strength of schedule plus run differential), 5th in the NL in runs
scored, 11th in on base percentage, 4th in ERA+, 8th
in fielding independent pitching, 10th in strikeout to walk ratio,
and 11th in team defensive efficiency.
Like I said, average.
According to Fangraphs projections, they have a 12% chance
to win their division, an 8% chance of getting a wild card, and .04% chance of
winning the world series.
So why are they in first place in the NL Central?
Two reasons:
1. They play in a shitty division. They’re the only team over .500.
2. They have power.
They’re 2nd in the NL in slugging percentage.
When you play against bad teams who tend to throw the ball
down the middle, power comes in handy.
We’ll come back to that.
A few more specifics:
- Keep your eyes on Eric Sogard, he’s a very underrated player. He’s been battling an ankle issue and is day to day, but anyone that can play all infield positions and has a .438 on base percentage can play on my team any day – hope I get to see him this weekend.
- The Brewers best two pitchers, Chase Anderson and Jimmy Nelson, aren’t scheduled to pitch this weekend.
- The Brewers can hit fastballs. Sogard, Eric Thames, Keon Broxton and Travis Shaw are all above average fastball hitters. On the whole, they’re OK against sliders, but they have nobody who’ll scare you against changeups or splitters.
Add this up and what does it mean?
The Yankees should win two out of three this weekend. Even with Hicks, Holliday and Castro out –
whose collective absence is killing the team even more than commonly discussed
– the Yankees are still a better team.
Factor in, as noted, two of three of Milwaukee’s Best (like what I did
there?) aren’t pitching.
If Severino, Tanaka and Montgomery can a) command the
changeups and splitters and b) avoid conceding to batters with mediocre
fastballs down the middle when behind in the count, the Yankees will be just
fine this weekend.
That’s assuming Girardi doesn’t bunt or mismanage a bullpen
the Yanks to more losses…
As usual, thanks to Fangraphs and baseball reference for the
statistics and information.
Thursday, July 6, 2017
Scraper, meet barrel bottom
I’ve mentioned it before, so for brevity’s sake, I’ll avoid
a long introductory, obsequious ode to Joe Girardi. Joe has some strengths as a manager. Keeping a few dozen egos on the same page for
six months without drama isn’t easy.
Avoiding on camera melt downs while answering some of the dumbest
questions human beings have ever uttered takes some skill. Having what has essentially been a crappy
franchise for a long time and keeping them in contention in September every
year takes some skill.
Now that I’m finished with the preamble that may limit some
of the “But what about…” responses I’ll receive, let’s get to the bottom line:
Joe Girardi is an awful in game strategical manager. Awful.
He constantly misuses his bullpen, leaving his best pitchers watching as
the team’s 9th, 10th and 11th best pitchers
pitch in crucial situations. His players
continue to attempt bunts and stolen bases in situations where the risk/reward
situation is so heavy leaning risk side that it’s nonsensical to even discuss.
Also I’ve written before, this has gone on all season
with the Yankees and very may well cost them the division as many games this
season, that have been close late, have been lost.
Despite a half season of Joe’s insistence on ignoring logic, facts and data in favor of toeing the line and doing what all the other
ex-jocks would do, because you know, that’s what we’ve always done…the 7th
inning in yesterday’s game was managed more poorly than any rational fan
watching could think possible.
At least we hope. We
collectively hope that the scraper has indeed met the bottom of the barrel. Joe has had a rough season. Hopefully this was rock bottom.
In case you missed it:
After trailing 5-0, the Yankees came back to take a 6-5 lead
heading into the top of the 6th, with help in part from another
Aaron Judge home run. More on this
later…
Let’s add more context:
Dellin Betances and Aroldis Chapman had not pitched the previous
day. The following day was a day off for
the team.
As has been previously discussed here:
- The 6th inning is as important as the ninth.
- Games in July count just as much as games in September.
- Your best players need to be used in the most crucial situations to maximize their value.
- Asking your best relievers to get six outs when sandwiched around off days is not asking too much of them (to think starters get criticized for being "coddled")
Therefore, Dellin Betances should have started the 6th
inning. Expecting 12 outs from he and
Chapman combined would not only be reasonable, but would create the highest
percentage chance of your team winning the game – by FAR.
Should the game situation change past the top of the 6th –
should the Yankees add significantly to their lead, or should Betances pitch
poorly, you can change course with regards to who’s pitching then. What you don’t do is play “let’s wait and see
if a REALLY important situation comes up later in which I might need my best
players - I'll save them until then”.
Instead Girardi went to Chad Green, the Yankees’ 10th
best pitcher (literally). Chad Green
pitched a scoreless 6th, then gave up a home run to Russel Martin –
who was batting 2nd in the lineup – to tie the game in the 7th. Why is his spot in the order
significant? Because you may – MAY –
have been able to justify Green pitching the 6th with batters 8, 9
and 1 coming up so Betances could pitch to batters 2,3 and 4 – but Luddite Joe
blew that opportunity too.
But hold on, because Joe play it like it’s 1991 Girardi, as we would soon find
out, was just getting warmed up.
So here we go. Tie
game, bottom of the 7th. Tyler
Wade, a promising rookie with a .390 on base percentage in AAA leading off,
then top of the order – Brett Gardner, then Aaron Judge (the best player in
baseball) then Gary Sanchez (the best hitting catcher in baseball) coming up
next. This is as good a chance the Yankees
could have to have a multi-run inning that would all but put the game away.
You literally couldn’t ask for a better environment in which
to score multiple runs. Because Toronto
manager John Gibbons, not to be undone by Girardi, didn’t put his best pitcher
in either.
Tyler Wade walked to leadoff. Great start.
At this point (runner on first, nobody out) the Yankees have an average
run expectancy of .953 runs per inning.
That’s an average.
With a good baserunner (Wade), a batter with 15 HR by the break
(Gardner), the best hitter in baseball (Judge), and a guy with a career .584
slugging percentage coming up (Sanchez), that average goes MUCH higher. This inning should have worn a sign: This is going to be a big inning.
Of course, the members of simpleton summer camp (the Yes
network) immediately began discussing the merits of bunting in this position.
Eye roll.
They didn’t get into detail, so they did not mention, that a
sacrifice bunt attempt is “successful” only about half the time. Just over 50% actually.
They also did not mention that if Gardner bunted “successfully”
and Wade moved to 2nd, their average run expectancy would drop to .725. That’s a pretty significant drop from .95.
Of course, it wasn’t mentioned the other approximate half of
the time, the bunt attempt is not successful and an out is just given
away. This would drop the run expectancy
to .573. For the mathematically challenged,
that’s a huge drop in run expectancy.
They also did not mention what was on the mind of quite
likely, every reasonable person watching who can think more than one consecutive
thought: If Gardner bunts “successfully”
and Wade moves to second base, Toronto would counter by intentionally walking
Aaron Judge. In other words, the best
player in baseball, who happens to be on your team, and who happens to be
coming up in a crucial situation, would lose a chance to swing the bat –
because of YOUR CHOICE.
Rubs temples…
Spoiler alert:
Gardner bunted “successfully”, Judge was walked intentionally, Sanchez
and Didi Gregorius popped out. Betances took
the mound in the 8th and proceeded to embarrass himself. The Yankees lost.
I understand, as I’ve written publicly before, that the team
with the players who play the best will win 9 times out of ten regardless of strategical
maneuvers by the managers.
I understand Betances hasn’t pitched well recently.
If either of those thoughts were the first things to pop
into your head, you are missing the point.
First, managerial decisions may not factor into most games,
but they do factor into some. And in a
162 game season that is often decided by three games or fewer, winnable games
can’t be managed into lose-able games if you expect to play in October. Girardi has made a habit of that this year –
anyone who doesn’t see that hasn’t been watching.
Secondly, Betances not pitching well is irrelevant with
regards to this game. Saying he shouldn’t
have been used anyway because he hasn’t pitched well or that Girardi’s decision
didn’t matter, is silly logic if we’re being frank. That’s like saying I had 6 beers, got in the
car to drive home but another car crashed into me, so it wasn’t my fault.
BS. It was a stupid
decision whether you go hit or not. The
same as not using your best players when the game is on the line is a stupid
decision whether you ultimately win or lose the game.
Does the Yankee bullpen need to pitch better? Of course.
But there was a time they were pitching pretty damn well,
and Girardi still managed the same way:
use lesser players in an immediate and important situation because there
might be an important situation later in which they can be used.
It’s nonsense. It’s
already cost the Yankees wins and will cost them more.
Tuesday, July 4, 2017
Judge and Sanchez in the HR Derby. Worried?
With the MLB Home Run Derby coming up, the usual questions
about whether or not players should participate also arises. The concern, held by many, is that the derby,
through causing fatigue or a change of swing and/or batter philosophy would
have a negative impact on the players’ game performance for the rest of the
season.
Question: Is this a
legitimate concern? For example, should
the Yankees be concerned that their best two players, Aaron Judge and Gary
Sanchez are participating in the derby?
Their value to the Yankees over the second half of the season can’t be
understated, so anything that may jeopardize their performance needs to be
considered thoroughly.
Answer: I don’t know.
I don’t think anyone does. There
are too many variables to consider.
However, I did a little digging, and some interesting pieces
of information arose.
I looked at the winners of the past 10 derbies. (Here’s the first problem – small sample
size. One would really have to look at all participants going back to the 1980’s).
I compared their season performances prior to the all-star
break and after winning the HR derby.
I used tOPS+ to measure their performance. Why?
I’m not really interested in HR as a player evaluation
tool. It tells you that the ball was hit
in the air, sometimes hard, then a whole bunch of randomness occurred. Not much else.
I’m more concerned with how they played. I.e., did their performance and value to their
team decrease after participating in the derby.
I like OPS+ (on base percentage plus slugging percentage
with adjustments for run scoring environments such as era and ballparks)
because it encompasses offensive performance as a whole pretty well. But again, my method isn’t comprehensive as other
performance factors would have to be considered.
‘t” OPS+ compares a player’s individual partial season
number to his total season number with 100 being average. For example, Vladimir Guerrero’s 2nd
half tOPS+ in 2007 was 96. With 100
being average, that means his 2nd half was slightly below his own
average performance that season.
Here’s what I found:
Among the last 10 winners of the HR derby the average was
104 tOPS+ in the first half season, 96 tOPS+ in the 2nd half.
I.e., the players on average, generally performed a little
better before winning the home run derby than they did after. 104/96 isn’t a huge difference over which we
should panic, but it probably shouldn’t be ignored either. Again, we’re dealing with a small sample of
one measurement, so there’s no need to overreact, but if I were a player (or if
I were writing a paycheck to players) I would definitely look into it further.
However, there is one exception that complicates things a
bit. But first the numbers:
The individual player’s performance with their 1st
half tOPS+ then their 2nd half tOPS+.
2007 Vladimir Guerrero 103/96
2008 Justin Morneau 108/90
2009 Prince Fielder 109/90
2010 David Ortiz 110/90
2011 Robinson Cano 96/105
2012 Prince Fielder 88/114
2013 Yoenis Cespedes 95/108 (but hit fewer 2nd
half HR despite hitting better, strengthening my theory about HR not being a
good performance measure)
2014 Yoenis Cespedes 98/103
2015 Todd Frazier 126/67
2016 Stanton 102/96
Again, nothing definitive, but worth keeping an eye on in
totality.
However, Todd Frazier’s performance grabbed my attention and
begs further questions.
It easily could be argued he was an outlier and the drastic
difference in his 1st and 2nd half performances can be
ignored as a fluke. Remove his numbers
and the other players’ numbers become more even, making this issue a non-issue.
However, his decline was so precipitous – he was Mike
Schmidt until mid-July, then Enrique Wilson after – that it had to have
affected his team’s performance, which ultimately is what we’re asking here.
Before the all-star break in 2015 the Reds (Frazier’s team)
had a .453 winning percentage. In the 2nd
half of ’15 the Reds’ winning percentage was .329.
Three. Twenty. Nine.
Now I’m not going to say the Reds’ drastic decline was
Frazier’s fault, although it clearly was a big part of the picture. And I’m not going to say Frazier’s decline
was due to his participation in the HR derby.
But I certainly would understand the concern about your
favorite players on your favorite team…
…although I wouldn’t worry too much.
Monday, July 3, 2017
My "reverse" all star ballot
I lost interest in the MLB all-star game a while ago. Somewhere around the time it became the
bro-fest, little league, everyone has to play nonsense I was out. Then, you know, having to incentivize
professional players to try to win – I was way out then.
But I loved it when I was a kid. There was no inter-league play so seeing Jim
Palmer against Joe Morgan was fun.
Seeing Roger Clemens against Tony Gwynn was fun.
I was actually at the ’77 game with my father. I didn’t turn 7 years old until the next day (or
later that night depending on which way you look at it) but I remember very
clearly:
Dave Parker, Ellis Valentine, Dave Winfield and Reggie Smith
having an impromptu pre-game throwing contest from deep right field to home
plate. Those gentleman, could throw – it was a sight to see.
Then Reggie Jackson, being Reggie Jackson went out and did
the same – by himself when the AL took warm ups.
The game wasn’t much of a game. That’s what happens when guys like Morgan,
Bench, Garvey, Foster, Parker, Rose and Griffey play against guys like Zisk,
Burleson, Wynegar, Fairly, Gross and Hisle.
I remember Dave Parker hit two line drive foul balls right
by our seats and thinking that someone might die if they put their body in
front of those balls they were hit so hard.
I remember how frigging HARD Goose Gossage, Tom Seaver,
Dennis Eckersley and Jim Kern threw.
Years later this still makes me wonder about how many starters, if given
the opportunity to throw one inning at max velocity against players who hadn’t
seen them yet, how dominant could they have been?
That game (speaking of motivation and wanting to win) had
Mike Schmidt who couldn’t play because of a thumb injury. Schmidt showed up anyway in case Tommy
Lasorda needed him to pinch run or stand in the on deck circle as a decoy. I don’t see the Bryce Harpers of the world
doing that.
But those days are gone.
And to me, so are the days of debating with your friends, who was more
deserving of a vote – the guy having a career season or the guy who’s good
every year. Hanging chads are gone too.
So because of the above ramblings, I’m going in a different
direction. I’m going “reverse
all-stars”. These are the worst players
at their position in each league.
Criteria: 175 plate appearances and 80% of your games played
are at that position.
Caveats: I get you have to be good enough to be better than
guys that can’t play regularly in order to be a regular player. I get just by being in the major leagues
means you’re a ridiculously good baseball player. I’m just saying if you’re on this list, you
may want to consider that your job security isn’t real solid.
Here are the worst players in baseball:
AL catcher: Jonathan Lucroy.
After all the trade deadline nonsense last year, a 0 (ZERO) WAR and .302
OBP this season.
NL catcher: Matt Wieters.
He’s the NL Lucroy. Zero WAR, .302 OBP.
AL 1B: Carlos Santana.
Used to be an impact offensive player.
Now is a weak link.
NL 1B: Adrian Gonzalez.
Can’t believe I’m writing this, as he was a bad dude back in the
day. He’s awful now. Awful.
AL 2B: Danny Espinosa.
Wow. Just wow. Get the AAA 2B up
now.
NL 2B: Jonathan Villar.
Another guy who used to be good but isn’t anymore.
AL 3B: Close – lots of choices here but I’m going with Nick
Castellanos.
NL 3B: Maikel Franco.
Only 3B with a negative WAR and a .281/.376 OBP/SLG. Is he even trying?
AL SS: Alcides Escobar.
To paraphrase Brock Lesnar: This guy had a rabbit’s foot stuck up his
ass for a long time. Luck runs out.
NL SS: Aldemys Diaz.
An all-star last year, the worst in baseball this year.
AL OF: Rajai Davis, Norichika Aoki, and Ezequiel
Carrera. Stiff competition from Alex
Gordon, but…
NL OF: Carlos Gonzalez, Ian Desmond and Yasmany Tomas. Still can’t believe people thought Desmond’s
first 6 weeks last season were what he really was. Tomas because I’ve seen him play twice and
thought, “Wow, he might be the worst player I’ve ever seen.” Turns out I’m close to being correct. And Hunter Pence did his best to get his
vote, but fell a little short.
Did I miss someone?
Tell me your vote…
Sunday, July 2, 2017
Who should bat 2nd? (Easy answer)
I recently wrote about who should be leading off for the
Yankees. Due to all the injuries the
Yankees have endured I had to write based on the assumption that all were
healthy. The result it was more of a “what
if” piece and less a “Joe’s to do list” piece.
The topic of who should be batting second in the order
thankfully does not fall under the umbrella of “what if” as both the player who
should be batting second every day and the person who has been are both
healthy. This, therefore, is another Joe
must do list.
Your best offensive player needs to be batting 2nd. Not should be, not you’d like it if… Your
best offensive player needs to bat 2nd in the order.
Therefore, Aaron Judge needs to bat 2nd every
time he’s in the lineup.
Therefore, Jacoby Ellsbury, somewhere between your 9th
and 11th best offensive player, should never see any of the first
five spots in the batting order.
Never.
My best probably won’t be good enough, but I’ll do my best
to give you the short version of what Tom Tango, Mitchel Lichtman and Andrew
Dolphin came up with*:
Each spot in the batting order is more or less likely to be
in certain situations than other spots in the order. The leadoff hitter is more likely to be up
with no outs and no one on than any other spot.
The number 5 spot is most likely to come up with runners on base.
Each batting outcome has more or less value depending on the
situation. A walk is more valuable than
a single with nobody on base. A single
is more valuable than a walk with runners on 2nd and 3rd. A triple and a home run have similar values
leading off an inning. With runners on
and 2 outs, a homerun is far more valuable.
These are just examples, but the point is, when you see what
spots in the order are likely to see which situations, you can match up your player’s
skillsets with those lineup spots.
And obviously, batters will bat more often the higher in the
order they are.
When out and baserunner situations are factored in, combined
with the frequencies of plate appearances of each spot in the order, the number
two spot in the order will see the most at bats with the most baserunners on
with the most outs, most often.
i.e., your best offensive player needs to bat second.
I’m hoping there is no dispute that Aaron Judge is the
Yankees best batter.
Now on to beating a dead horse:
As I noted in my previous post about the leadoff spot,
Ellsbury has two skills: He’s fast and
he makes contact. Both of those skills
can be utilized lower in the order as he can attempt stolen bases with less
risk and is more likely to drive someone in with a single with two outs.
Order spots one through five however, more impactful skills
are needed – particularly the abilities to get on base, hit, and hit with
power. Ellsbury has none of those
skills. He’s 7th on the
Yankees in OBP, 8th in SLG, 8th in OPS+. That’s not factoring in new additions like
Tyler Wade and Clint
Frazier.
So give this some thought today when simpleton summer camp
(the Yes network) attempts to explain Girardi’s lineup selections.
Thanks to baseball reference for the stats.
*They authored “The Book”.
In the discussion of the best baseball book I’ve read.
Thursday, June 29, 2017
Who should lead off? Not who you think.
I started to write about the Yankees lineup in general, in terms
of who should be batting where in the order.
Then a wave of injuries and physical issues occurred forcing the Yankees
to have different players in the lineup pretty much every day, so I held off.
But I did notice something else: The Yankees don’t have a
leadoff hitter. At least not one that
you would say, this guy is our best leadoff hitter, run him out there in the #1
spot every day.
The Yankees best leadoff hitters, obviously would be Aaron
Judge, Matt Holliday and Gary Sanchez, in that order. But their value in the #2 spot (Judge) and
either 3 and 4 or 4 and 5 (Sanchez/Holliday) is too great to have them lead
off. More on this later, but Aaron Judge
needs to bat second every game. Not
doing this isn’t far behind only using your closer with a lead in the 9th
inning logic, which isn’t very solid logic.
But injuries, you say.
OK, understood. Let’s assume
everyone is healthy. Who is your best
leadoff hitter? The answer is still the
same – you don’t have one who stands out on your roster.
Let’s start by defining what skills a good leadoff hitter
needs. For 100 years, being the fastest
guy on the team made you the leadoff hitter – this is rather misguided.
A leadoff hitter gets a lot of at bats with no one on base,
due to leading off the game and batting after the worst hitters. With no one on base a walk is more valuable
than a single, due to forcing the pitcher to throw more pitches. So we need a player who gets a lot of base on
balls, and sees a lot of pitches.
A leadoff hitter needs to be a good baserunner. Not a fast baserunner necessarily, and definitely
not a base stealer. An efficient baserunner. One who won’t run into an out. One who knows when to try for 3rd
vs. holding at 2nd or trying to score vs. holding at 3rd. This is crucial as the 2nd, 3rd
and 4th batters presumably will have high slugging percentages and
will being getting hits that provide the opportunity to advance multiple bases
in one play.
You do not want a base
stealer here. With your best hitters
coming up it is not worth the risk of running into an out. Additionally, and quite obviously to most of
us, even a successful steal affords the opposing pitcher the opportunity to
pitch around your best hitter. Frankly,
I’m OK with water boarding for anyone who gets caught stealing when Judge is at
the plate, as Aaron Hicks did in the Los Angeles series.
And it goes without saying, the primary job of a leadoff
hitter is to get on base. On base
percentage is a significant factor when choosing. But again, a player who’s high OBP that comes
from many walks is a better leadoff option than a player who’s high OBP comes
from many singles. The singles hitter
has more value later in the lineup with guys on base. Think Wade Boggs, not Ichiro.
So let’s look at the Yankees options, again assuming all are
healthy.
Aaron Hicks, Chase Headley, Jacoby Ellsbury, Brett Gardner. Yes, Chase Headley. I’ll mention Tyler Wade
later as an interesting option.
Hicks has by far
the highest OBP. He sees the second most
pitches in the group and walks the most of the group. Problem? He’s the worst baserunner by
far. Also, having the most power among
those names makes him valuable elsewhere in the lineup.
It should also be noted that Hicks is the best overall
offensive player of the group. This is
significant – the leadoff hitter will get more plate appearances than anyone
else so being an impact offensive player is a big factor.
Headley, along
with Gardner, are the best baserunners of the group. But Headley’s OBP and walk percentage are
better than both Gardner’s and Ellsbury’s.
Gardner sees the
most pitches and is a good baserunner.
But his OBP, which has been plummeting, is the lowest of the group and
he doesn’t get many walks – only 11% of his at bats.
Ellsbury has an
average OBP, he’s an average baserunner, he’s average with regards to pitches
seen and he’s average at getting bases on balls. In other words, he’s the worst option of the
four.
So what do I think?
I think Chase Headley
should be leading off. It’s a coin
flip between he and Gardner, but a) Headley’s OBP and walk percentage are
higher, b) Gardner’s power edge and base stealing edge make him more valuable
than Headley is lower in the order.
Obviously, pitching matchups would factor in, as would
Headley’s switch hitting ability depending on the other 8 guys playing that
day. It’s a toss up, but put a gun to my
head and it’s Chase.
It would not be Hicks
for me. His power and switch hitting
ability would suit the team better somewhere between 3, 4, and 5. Plus, as noted, he is not a good base runner.
Ellsbury should never
lead off a game. His only upsides
are a) his base stealing ability, and b) he swings more and makes contact more
than the others. Both of those skills
have much more of an impact lower in the lineup than they do at the top. Frankly, putting him in front of players like
Castro and Gregorius in the lineup would be the best way to maximize his
skills.
I left Tyler Wade
out because 70 games in AAA isn’t enough to go on for me yet, but…
He did have a .390 OBP (very good, but atypical for his
career) and he’s average at seeing pitches, base running, and walk rate. It’s also worth noting, he’s been young for
each level at which he’s played in the minors – may indicate he’s more advanced
than his stats suggest. Depending on how he performs over the next few weeks,
he may be worth a look see.
Thanks to Fangraphs for the stats, and to Tom Tango, Mitchel Lichtman, and Andrew Dolphin, authors of "The Book" for the background information.
Monday, June 26, 2017
The real reason the Yankees lost yesterday
You’re correct: Michael Pineda allowing 3 HR in 4 innings
created a big problem. But the Yankees
got past that with a great bullpen performance and offense. They were in a position to win despite
Pineda.
Chase Headley being thrown out attempting to steal with one
out in the 6th inning when trailing 7-4 didn’t help either. (More on this later, because that wasn’t a bad
play on Headley’s part in my mind…)
Of course, the masters of the obvious over at Simpleton
Summer Camp (the YES network) obsessed on those two points both during and
after the game.
But I’m here to tell you the real reason the Yankees lost
yesterday was because of the best defensive play you saw all year, that to my
knowledge, wasn’t mentioned or acknowledged on the live broadcast or on the
post-game activities at Simpleton Summer Camp.
With the Yankees trailing 7-5 with two outs and runners on 1st
and 2nd base (Gary Sanchez and Aaron Judge, respectively) and Didi
Gregorius at the plate, the game was decided by a phenomenal multi-part defensive
play.
Gregorius lined a single to right field, fielded by Texas
right fielder Shin Soo Choo. Judge
rounded 3rd and was on his way to scoring, Sanchez rounded 2nd
headed for 3rd. Choo, knowing that a)
Judge runs well and was going to score anyway, and far more importantly b)
Sanchez was the tying run, and does not run well, threw to 3rd.
Very unscientifically, I would guess that outfielders throw
home 9 times out of 10 in that situation.
And almost invariably, the runner scores and the other two runners
advance to 2nd and 3rd.
What would’ve happened then?
With runners on 2nd and 3rd with 2
outs, teams score an average of .634 runs.
That’s average. The
Yankees had a player coming to the plate who was in the middle of a 3 for 4 day
(Headley) against a Texas pitcher (Alex Claudio) who doesn’t strike many
batters out. So there was a better than
average chance there that the Yankees either tie or take the lead, if Choo had
thrown home.
But that’s not what he did.
Choo threw a laser to Adrian Beltre at 3rd, and Gary Sanchez
was out.
And with that, the Yankees run expectancy went from .634 or
better runs to ZERO. Inning over.
And to make the play even more impressive, Choo’s throw was
slightly off line and slightly short, forcing Beltre to make a back hand short
hop play on a throw from right field before making a tag. He did, and that’s one of many reasons Adrian
Beltre is somewhere between #5 and #10 on the best third baseman of all-time
list. Yes, that’ll be another blog.
Now, I’m admittedly overstating the importance of a single
play on a game’s outcome. There are
innumerable variables and dozens of plays that combine to factor in to who won
and who lost – this game was no different.
But this was a great dammed play by Choo and Beltre. Heads up, great decision making and awesome
athletic skills made it a sight to see.
And although it wasn’t the only reason the Yankees lost, it was a vastly
understated part of why they lost.
Sometimes the other team is just better. As I’ve said before, the team that plays
better is going to win 9 times out of 10, regardless of Xs and Os strategy.
Speaking of which…
Postscript: Chase Headley
is the best baserunner on the Yankees and one of the better ones in the league. If he thinks he can get to 2nd
base with the bottom of the order up, where it’s a significantly lower risk,
you have to let him go. It’ll help more
often than not. This time it didn’t. Like I said above, the other guys get big
paychecks too.
Postscript part II: Somewhat
out of character, Joe Girardi had a great game and as a result, the Yankees
still had a chance to win a game that they had virtually no chance to
earlier. When Austin Romine came to the
plate in the 5th, the Yankees had a 1.9% chance of winning according to
Fangraphs – in the bottom of the 8th, it was up to 48%. This was due in part to Girardi using Dellin
Betances in the 8th with the Yankees down a run – i.e., Joe used one of his best when the game was on the
line. This is something he hasn’t done
in the past, typically leaving those situations to be handled by the Yankees’
10th or 11th best pitchers, or a AA pitcher, depending on availability. Joe made an even gutsier – and smarter – move
by bringing in Chapman in to pitch the 9th, still down a run. That gave the Yankees a real opportunity to
win in the bottom of the 9th.
*Thanks to Baseball Reference, “The Book” by Tom Tango and
Fangraphs for the #’s.
Friday, June 23, 2017
June 23rd update:
I like to add to my blog pretty consistently, but lately
there’s been more of the same old. Not
too much I haven’t covered already and/or anything I thought required 1,000 of
my words. Basically, we’ve been watching
the Yankees deteriorate in large part because of their manager’s complete
inability to discern important situations from the unimportant, and to choose
his pitcher(s) accordingly.
Like I said, nothing I haven’t covered before.
But I do like to contribute consistently, so here are some
thoughts of less depth, in no particular order:
Al Leiter
I need to remind myself, as I implore you to, that Al Leiter could throw a baseball 95 miles per hour 30 something years
ago. It is this trait – and this trait
only – that allows him to speak into a microphone, to an audience in 2017. Knowledge - about anything – has nothing to do
with his current position. I don’t mean
to pick on him, he’s hardly alone in that regard. But I think I’d rather stick pencils in my
eyeballs than listen to him defend the “win” stat by saying he’d like to see pitchers “gut out a win”. Implication being,
the pitcher who took the “loss” didn’t have enough guts. This, in addition to numerous other
departures from what would be considered logical thought.
Rizzo
Anthony Rizzo should have been suspended. What he did is exactly what the rule is
designed to prevent.
Gardner
Without much notice, Brett Gardner is slumping pretty
badly. On May 19th his on
base percentage was .381. Today it’s .340, which is below his career
average. Given his history of slow
second halves and the fact the Aaron’s have never played a full major league
season, I wouldn’t mind seeing Dustin Fowler get some time to give these guys a
breath.
Torres
The slide on which Gleyber Torres injured himself was not a
head first slide. Everyone can stop
talking about it. That is all.
I think Aaron Judge is more fun to watch than any player in
my lifetime. I write “I think” because
I’m not sure, I may be forgetting somebody.
Dwight Gooden in ’85 comes to mind as the only one close. I’m thinking Guidry in ’78, Reggie, Winfield,
Mattingly, Rickey and Jeter were all something to see – but this kid is a
SHOW.
All Star game
Despite Judge, along with a handful of other players who
have emerged as stars who I don’t get to see too often (Arenado, Blackmon,
Bellinger, Jansen, among others) who I’d like to, I still can’t get into the game
and the bro-fest it’s become. Gone are
the days when Ted Williams won an all-star game in the 9th inning
with a home run. Or when Mike Schmidt, who couldn’t throw or hit because of an
injured thumb was available anyway in case Tommy Lasorda needed him to pinch
run or stand in the on deck circle as a decoy.
Ever since players needed to be incentivized to you know, compete - I tuned out.
(Yes, I’m aware, that’s no longer a “thing”.)
Girardi #3
Recently, Joe Sheehan, a writer I follow, listed who he felt
were the best mangers in baseball, #1-#30.
This led the MLB network to do a similar list. Sheehan had Joe Girardi at #4, the MLB
network had him at #3, ahead of Joe Maddon.
What’s scarier:
A) The possibility that these “experts” don’t actually watch
Joe Girardi manage, and have zero clue about which they speak. Or…
B) They’re correct, and by definition, there are 20 something
managers in baseball worse than Girardi.
I think it’s “B” which is disconcerting.
Two caveats: One, I don’t think this is possible to do. In order to grade managers, you’d have to watch
literally every game, every day.
Secondly, they were only factoring in game strategy, not the ability to
manage humans and keep their shit together over 162 games. This makes the list more ridiculous, as Girardi
is great at the latter, amateurish at the former.
Thanks for reading and thanks as usual to baseball reference
for the stats.
Thursday, June 15, 2017
Remember these two games:
On June 13th and 14th, the NY Yankees,
one of the best teams in baseball in one of the best divisions in baseball (i.e.,
they aren’t going to run away and hide from the rest of their division, like
the Washington Nationals will – these games count) took on the red headed step
children of the city of lights. The Los
Angeles Angels of Anaheim, owners of a 33-34 record at the time, were playing
without Mike Trout, essentially making them a AA team.
Short version of events:
On June 13th, the Yankees held a 2-1 lead
entering the bottom of the 7th.
They gave up one run in the 8th and another in the 11th
in a 3-2 loss.
On June 14th, the game was square at 5 runs each
entering the 7th, in an eventual 7-5 loss.
In those two games combined there were 7 innings where the
game was tied and/or the Yankees had a 1 run lead in the 7th inning
or later.
Giovanny Gallegos, Adam Warren, Tyler Clippard, Jonathan
Holder, Chasen Shreve, Dan Chaliss, Ben Heller and Ronald Herrera all pitched. Seriously - only one of those names is
fictional.
Dellin Betances did not.
After the game on the 14th, Joe Girardi said “I can’t
ask Dellin to give me nine outs.” I’ll
come back to that…
I’ve already discussed this when Girardi was misusing his
previous “closer” (I’m disliking that term more every day) Aroldis Chapman, so
I won’t rehash. If you’re interested, you
can scroll down to the blog where I discussed it.
But I will reiterate:
Games in June count just as much as games in September. The 7th inning counts just as much
as the 9th.
Leaving your best pitcher in the bullpen when you’re in the
situations the Yankees were in is bat…shit…crazy.
Joe can’t get 9 outs from Dellin? OK – how about 6? How about 3?
We’ll never know if it would’ve made a difference in the
won/loss record because bullets from our best gun are still sitting in the
chamber, while a kid just up from AA (literally) was thrown into what was a crucial
situation for this team.
If the Yankees lose the AL East by less than 2 games,
remember these two games, and the games when Chapman wasn’t used in similar
situations earlier this season.
And also remember this when your local Luddite sports
writer, announcer, or talk show host tells you “Joe knows how to manage a bullpen”.
Rubs temples…
Wednesday, June 14, 2017
Need pitching? Or got pitching?
More than a few people have mentioned their concerns to me about what, if
anything, the Yankees should do regarding their starting pitching. I.e., should they make a move at the trade
deadline to bolster the rotation for a playoff run?
Obviously, we have to see how this plays out as there’s a
long way to go with regards to both team and individuals’ performance that
would dictate who’s available come July.
That being said, I’ll going to tackle this in two parts:
One – Are we trying
to solve a problem that doesn’t exist?
First, let’s look at team performance: As a team, the Yankees are 3rd in
MLB in ERA+, 5th in strikeout to walk ratio and 6th in
fielding independent pitching. If you
want to look at the team’s performance as a whole with regards to run
prevention, the Yankees are 2nd in baseball – 1st in the American League - in runs allowed per game.
But you’re concerned about the rotation, not the bullpen and
defense? OK, I’ll play along…
Out of 82 MLB pitchers who currently qualify for the ERA
title, the Yankees have 4: Luis Severino, Michael Pineda, C.C. Sabathia and MashiroTanaka. (I’ll get to Jordan Montgomery, who falls
just short of qualifying, in a moment…)
- In ERA+, Severino, Pineda and Sabathia are all in the top third of MLB. Actually Severino is in the top 10%, sitting at #7 overall.
- In fielding independent pitching the same three are all in the top half of MLB, with Severino leading the way again at 14th overall.
- In strikeout to walk ratio, all 4 are above league average, with Severino coming in at 9th overall and Pineda 11th overall.
So, when league run scoring environment and park factors are
considered, they don’t allow many runs, they are successful at the factors they
control, and they miss bats without putting runners on.
Here are some additional things to consider:
- Jordan Montgomery is above league average in all the above statistics.
- They pitch in the American League – the above ranks factor in pitchers who regularly face other pitchers.
- You can certainly say Tanaka is a problem. But we can also say Severino is the legitimate ace that Tanaka is not thus far this year. It’s fair to be both half full and half empty: Tanaka may stink and Severino may return to earth, but Tanaka may improve and Severino may be this good, as well.
And before we discuss looking at other starting pitchers outside
the pinstripe world, remember Chance Adams and Adam Warren. Adams is dominating AAA after dominating AA,
and Warren is still on your team. And as
I’ve previously pointed out, Adam Warren has succeeded in whichever role he’s
been placed, including starting.
But let’s assume we’re still talking about the Steinbrenner’s
and panic will set in. The mindset of “let’s
do something” even if doing nothing is the better option will always be around
this crew.
Part II – there’s isn’t
a good fit out there.
Of starting pitchers in MLB who a) have enough innings to
qualify, b) play for teams we can reasonably assume will be out of contention in
July, and c) are in the top half of pitchers in ERA+, there are none who are
good fits, and only one I would consider if the cost involved a serious
prospect. Don’t even ask me – Dustin Fowler,
Clint Frazier, Chance Adams, Jorge Mateo, both Tylers (Wade and Austin), aren’t
going anywhere.
There’s Jason Vargas, age 34, 12 year vet. Has pitched well for 2 months of that 12
years.
Jamie Garcia will be a free agent at the end of this
season. We ain’t renting for a prospect.
Danny Duffy currently has elbow problems.
I like Edinson Volquez but would have too high an asking price
given his resume and contract.
Derek Holland is unreliable and only has one good season on
his resume.
Dan Straily is interesting, but I’m not giving up any of the
aforementioned prospects for him.
And for those who’ve specifically asked about Gerrit Cole
and Jeff Samardzija: neither are upgrades over your current staff.
Ivan Nova is interesting, if you can get past the
irony. Very good pitcher with a very
team friendly contract. My guess is
Pittsburgh would hang on to him or ask for the moon in return.
Other things to keep in mind when contemplating a deal like
this:
- The above pitchers are worth about 2 to 3 wins per season. The prospect position players mentioned should be better, and…
- …for a longer period. Starting pitchers are fragile. Not that long ago Anthony Rizzo for Matt Harvey or Mookie Betts for Noah Syndergaard wouldn’t have even been considered.
Again, things need to play out more, but I like where the
Yankees are.
Thanks to Baseball Reference as usual for the numbers.
Sunday, June 11, 2017
Tanaka vs. Gausman - what to watch:
Many eyes will be on Masahiro Tanaka today. As we all know, we don’t need an exhaustive
statistical review to know the ace of the staff hasn’t been performing as
such. In mid-June with the Yankees in
first place it’s a mild concern. But
again, the Yankees are thinking October this year, and it’s hard to picture
them succeeding in October without Tanaka pitching like one of the best
pitchers in the American League as he was last season.
Here are a few things to watch for today against Baltimore:
Unlike most pitchers, Tanaka doesn’t rely on one pitch predominantly. For the most part, Masahiro throws the
fastball, slider and splitter about the same percentage of the time.
Although Tanaka’s performance with his fastball this season
has been awful – 39th among 41 qualifying American League pitchers -
he may want to utilize it today along with the splitter, more so than the
slider. (Unlike his fastball
performance, the results of his splitter have been average compared to other AL
starting pitchers so far this season.)
Among 89 qualifiers, Baltimore doesn’t have any batters in
the top 25 vs. fastballs or splitters. As
a team they are 11th in the AL vs. fastballs and 8th
among AL teams vs. the splitter. Their scariness, which hasn’t been that scary
this year (11th in AL in runs scored) has shown itself on breaking
balls, predominantly sliders. Mark
Trumbo and Adam Jones specifically, are two of the better slider hitters in the
American League.
If Tanaka can limit the number of sliders and/or keep them
out of the strike zone for show, watch for him to bounce back with a good start
today. Assuming quality command - which admittedly
is a huge assumption based on recent history - being aggressive with the
fastball and splitter should reap dividends.
Unlike Tanaka, today’s starter for Baltimore Kevin Gausman
throws fastballs predominantly, and ranks 30th out of 41 qualifiers
with the fastball. That combination has
resulted in him having a season similar in unpleasantness to Tanaka.
Problem for the Birds is, the Yankees are the best fastball hitting
team in the big leagues. More specifically,
Aaron Judge, Starlin Castro, Matt Holliday and Aaron Hicks are all among the
top 15 fastball hitters in the American League.
If Gausman follows his typical plan, he’s probably in for a short
afternoon.
However, the Yankees’ kryptonite this season has been the
slider. They rank 13th among
AL teams vs. the slider and have no one player in the top 30 against slider.
It would behoove Gausman to go to his 2nd most
frequent, but still rarely used pitch against the AL’s leading run producers.
Keep an eye out today and let me know what you think.
As usual, thanks to fangraphs for the stats.
Wednesday, June 7, 2017
Yankees offense - good news, bad news.
It's approximately the 1/3 mark of the MLB season and
the Yankees have one of the best offenses and one of the best teams overall, in baseball. This affords us the pleasant opportunity to
think about what holes and/or problems may hold them back from October success. Again, a fun problem and discussion to have,
since clearly the positives far outweigh the negatives on this team.
I’ve discussed this recently, so I won’t re-hash too much,
but the Yankee outfield is not only the best in baseball this season, but would
be one of the best of all time if they continue to perform over the final 2/3
of the season as they have thus far.
Yes, seriously – one of the best ever.
For some perspective, the 1961 Yankees with Mantle, Maris
and Berra in the outfield (ever hear of those guys?) had a combined 17.4 wins
above replacement. Aaron Judge, Aaron
Hicks and Brett Gardner are on pace for 25 wins above replacement this season.
Among active AL outfielders, Judge is 1st in WAR,
Hicks 4th and Gardner 5th. Yes, not counting the disabled Mike Trout the
Yankees have 3 of the best 4 outfielders in the American League. (Bonus points if you can tell me who the
other is without checking…)
Although I do believe that Judge, Hicks and Gardner are not
flukes and will continue to play well, believing they will continue to perform
at THAT high a level is unrealistic.
So the real question is can the infielders pick it up? Because the problem with the OF being as
dominant as they’ve been, is that it’s masked how awful the Yankee infield is.
Infielders – the good,
the bad and the ugly…
The Good: Didi.
Didi Gregorius is a slightly better than average major
leaguer, meaning he’s a good shortstop.
Among the 27 major league shortstops with as many plate appearances as
Didi, he’s 8th in OPS and on base percentage and 7th in
slugging percentage. If you factor in
the time he missed, he’s about a three win player. If he’s the best player on your team, you
have a crappy team, but with this outfield, Didi will do fine, as long as his
career arc still leans towards improvement.
The Bad: Starlin Castro.
Castro spent one month playing like Rogers Hornsby. Since then he’s been Starlin Castro, which
also previously discussed, is a below average player. Since May 7th, his on base
percentage has dropped 52 points, his slugging percentage has dropped 66
points, his OPS+ has dropped 40 points.
Expect him to continue the downward trend to his career norms.
The ugly: Headley,
Carter, Torreyes.
Let’s get Ronald Torreyes out of the way first, as he’s the
non-regular. He has a .298 OBP, .363
SLG, and a 76 OPS+. 100 OPS+ is league
average. So no, Torreyes is not a major
league player however much you root for the little guy, figuratively or
literally.
Chase Headley has a negative .1 WAR. Negative.
As a reminder, the measuring stick term of “replacement player” means Joe
Average AAA player. So yes, Headley is
worse than a minor leaguer at this point.
He has an OPS+ of 71 (worse than Torreyes, somehow) and he’s a train
wreck defensively.
Chris Carter, if you can imagine, is worse than Torreyes and
Headley. Among 28 Major League 1B with
as much playing time as he, he’s 27th in OBP, SLG and dead last in
OPS+. A man who led the NL in HR last
year currently has a 68 OPS+.
So under the assumption that Judge, Hicks and Gardner will
come back to the pack a little, can the Yankees make that up with their
infielders?
Possible. If we’re
talking about Gleyber Torres, Rob Refsnyder and Greg Bird.
Is Torres ready to play in the big leagues? Maybe, maybe not, but it’s hard to believe he
wouldn’t be better than Headley. Remember,
Headley is worse than Joe minor leaguer.
Refsnyder may have limitations, but unlike Headley, Carter
and Torreyes, he gets on base.
And Bird is the question mark on which much of this
hinges. But again, hard to believe he
won’t be better than Carter upon his return.
If the Yankees can get any production from those three they
should be able to stay among baseball’s leaders in runs scored. But I’m going to be the glass half full guy
and say they all will produce, and the Yankee’s “O” will be just fine.
As usual, thanks to baseball reference for the numbers.
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