February 9, 2010
Order NowGet "The world champ of baseball annuals." The Hardball Times Baseball Annual 2010 features articles by THT's staff as well as Bill James, Tom Tango and Craig Wright and contains much, much more. Please support THT and use this link to purchase the Annual. Get the fantasy book that everyone's raving about! Edited by THT Fantasy's Rob McQuown and Michael Street, and featuring our own Matt Hagen on prospects. Shipping now from ACTA! ![]()
Pat Andriola
Rich Barbieri John Barten Brian Borawski Craig Brown Evan Brunell Chuck Brownson Kevin Dame Joshua Fisher David Gassko Jeremy Greenhouse Brandon Isleib Chris Jaffe Max Marchi Bruce Markusen Dan Novick Harry Pavlidis Alex Pedicini Jeff Sackmann Nick Steiner Dave Studeman Steve Treder Bryan Tsao Tuck! Geoff Young John Brattain And here's the full roster.
Or you can search by:
Gear up for baseball season with Chicago White Sox tickets and New York Yankees tickets. LA Angels tickets, Houston Astros tickets, and Atlanta Braves tickets are hot sellers! You can get Boston Red Sox tickets, San Diego Padres tickets or Chicago Cubs tickets for your favorite baseball fan. Coast to Coast Tickets has the best MLB tickets like Minnesota Twins tickets, LA Dodgers tickets, Milwaukee Brewers tickets, New York Met tickets and St. Louis Cardinals tickets. Find premium Chicago Cubs tickets and other Chicago tickets at JustGreatTickets.com. Chicago Cubs Tickets Chicago Tickets ![]() All content on this site (including text, graphs, and any other original works), unless otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons License. |
Ten things I didn’t know last weekby Dave StudemanJuly 10, 2008 The Cubs and Brewers are engaged in an arms raceThe stakes get higher and higher as the year rolls along, don't they? I have no idea if the Cubs were planning to trade for Rich Harden, but the Sabathia trade certainly forced their hand. I won't comment about the trades—there's already plenty of good material on the Internets—but I do want to throw a little stat into the mix. A favorite "toy stat" of mine is something I call DOM (for dominance). It is the percentage of plate appearances in which a pitcher forces either a strikeout or an infield fly. Strikeouts are obviously good, but so are infield flies. They're caught for outs 99 percent of the time (which means they're just about as good as a strikeout), and pitchers definitely have different levels of "infield fly talent." Here's a list of the top 10 pitchers in DOM this year, minimum of 70 innings pitched (asterisks for lefty pitchers). Take a gander at the leader: Player Team IP ERA FIP IF/F K/9 DOM Harden R OAK 77.0 2.34 2.71 18% 11.3 34% Kazmir S * TB 77.0 2.69 2.94 11% 10.3 29% Peavy J SD 87.7 2.67 3.26 25% 9.4 28% Vazquez J CHA 115.3 4.37 3.78 19% 8.8 27% Billingsley LAN 109.3 3.38 3.38 15% 9.4 27% Volquez E CIN 110.7 2.36 3.08 13% 9.7 27% Beckett J BOS 107.0 3.70 3.25 11% 9.2 27% Sanchez J * SF 107.0 3.87 3.59 12% 9.2 26% Sabathia C * CLE 122.3 3.83 3.31 10% 9.3 26% Cain M SF 119.3 4.30 3.71 17% 8.6 26%Harden not only leads the list, he almost laps it. He's been that good. Sabathia is there too, at No. 9. Not too shabby either. RC/PRC leadersAs long as I'm talking about favorite statistics, let me bring up Pitching Runs Created. Pitcher Runs Created was invented by David Gassko as a way of directly comparing pitchers and batters. Here's the list of top 10 "run creators" in the majors this year, including both pitchers and position players: Year Last First Tm POS RC/PRC 2008 Berkman Lance HOU 1B 84 2008 Kinsler Ian M TEX 2B 82 2008 Jones Chipper ATL 3B 73 2008 Hamels Cole PHI P 71 2008 Lincecum Tim SF P 71 2008 Lee Cliff CLE P 70 2008 Ramirez Hanley FLA SS 70 2008 Sizemore Grady CLE CF 70 2008 Halladay Roy TOR P 69 2008 Utley Chase PHI 2B 69Four pitchers and six position players, a pretty decent mix. I knew Ian Kinsler was having a great year, but I didn't realize how great. He's not only second on this list, he's right up there (and far ahead of others) with Lance Berkman. And Ian KinslerSo I decided to break out Kinsler's batted ball profile for the year (another one of my favorite little stats tools). Here's what it says about the kid:
Kinsler is getting a lot more out of his fly balls this year (0.05 runs more per outfield fly). Not more home runs, but more doubles (he already has 31 doubles this year—he had 22 all of last year) and some triples. He's also hitting a few more line drives and fewer ground balls, striking out and walking less (actually a negative factor overall), and hitting a few less infield flies. In other words, most of the profile doesn't show a big difference, except for those outfield flies. Fliner leadersBIS actually tracks a different kind of batted ball that I didn't mention. It's called a "fliner." A fliner is that batted ball that isn't quite a line drive but isn't really a fly ball, either. It's the tough-to-call zinger that still has a big run impact. For our regular stats, we divide them into line drives and fly balls, but I thought a list of the players who have hit the most fliners this year might tell us a little more about Kinsler: Player Fliners Hart C 62 Reyes J + 61 Kinsler I 58 Sanchez F 57 Guzman C + 56 Atkins G 56 Young M 55 Pedroia D 54 Johnson K * 52 Damon J * 51A very similar mix of players, though I'm not quite sure how to describe them. These batters aren't mashers, they're sort of on the next level. Line drive batters with an extra oomph. Man, Cristian Guzman has been having a good year. Crazy. What a fliner is worthWell, doesn't that make you curious? What's a fliner worth, eh? How does it compare to an outfield fly and ground ball? Well, here's a little chart of the number of runs each type of batted ball has generated this year, compared to average (RAA is Runs Above Average): Ball RAA LD .329 Fliner .233 OFFly .020 GB -.099 Bunt -.101 IFFly -.244This table is based on the specific outcomes of each type of batted ball and weighted by the run value of each outcome. And look at that: Fliners are pretty powerful flights, closely trailing line drives and far ahead of outfield flies. Most home runs are still outfield flies, but most doubles and triples are fliners and line drives. And most outfield flies that aren't home runs are outs; line drives and fliners are much less likely to be outs. Maybe we've discovered something new here. The fliner batter. Sounds like another good column idea. Back to KinslerAdd in his .403 batting average with runners in scoring position, and you've got the best AL hitter of the first 90 games. Speaking of clutch hitting, the fans are leading Tango's "best hitters" at this stage of the contest. Kinsler isn't in either group. The Rays are the YankeesI expected the Red Sox and Yankees to once again battle for the AL East lead this year. Oh, I knew the Rays would be good, but I still expected the major markets to provide the high drama. And they still might. But it hasn't happened yet. Instead, the Rays have given the Red Sox a run for their money (and then some!). Yet by my reckoning, the Rays and Yankees are the two most similar teams in the majors this year. Really. As of yesterday, here are some of their key stats:
Well, the key difference between the two appears to be their Defense Efficiency Ratio, which is a fancy way of saying that the Rays are fielding more batted balls successfully. Why doesn't that show up in their fielding stats? Because it's the pitchers' fault. Yankee pitchers have allowed line drives at a 20 percent clip (i.e., 20 percent of batted balls are line drives) vs. 18 percent for the Rays. Our batted ball numbers give Yankee pitchers a -12 ranking (12 plays below average because of all the line drives they've allowed) whereas the Rays rate a very strong +32. That, and a little pythagorean variance, are the only major differences in these two teams. This is just frustratingLast Wednesday, the Mets' Jerry Manuel pulled off one of my pet peeves. With the score tied 7-7 and the Cardinals coming to bat in the bottom of the ninth, he brought in Carlos Muniz to pitch. Closer Billy Wagner had pitched the day before (throwing just 13 pitches), but he has pitched consecutive days 11 times this year. In other words, Wagner was available. But Manuel brought in Muniz, who gave up a game-winning home run to Troy Glaus. Now, it's easy to second-guess managerial decisions, but this is an irritating one. When will managers recognize that a tie game in the ninth inning is one of the most critical points in a game? You want your best pitcher on the mound in those situations. But do managers bring their closers into those situations? No!!! It's the stupid save's fault. Managers allocate save situations to their closers and ignore the true criticality of the situation. Here's a look at how Wagner was used last year (the situation when he entered the game), thanks to the always fabulous Baseball Reference. Inn <-4 -4 -3 -2 -1 tie 1 2 3 4 >4 Tot +-----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+ 4- 0 5 0 6 0 7 0 8 1 1 1 3 9 1 1 1 7 14 8 13 5 9 59 10+ 1 1 1 1 4 +-----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+ Total 1 1 1 0 1 8 16 10 13 6 9 66 +-----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+ Inn <-4 -4 -3 -2 -1 tie 1 2 3 4 >4 TotTo recap, when Wagner entered the beginning of the ninth in a save situation, the Mets had a one-run lead 14 times, a two-run lead eight times and a three-run lead 13 times. Wagner entered the game more often when the Mets had a three-run lead than when the game was tied! Makes no sense. Here is the Leverage Index (measures the criticality of a situation) in the beginning of the top of the ninth, according to Tangotiger:
This isn't a new development. I've talked about it before. But it is mystifying how entrenched a bad idea can become. Baseball Reliquary Induction DayThe Baseball Reliquary will be inducting Buck O’Neil, Emmett Ashford, and Bill Buckner into its Shrine of the Eternals on July 20 in Pasadena. The Shrine honors individuals who have impacted the baseball landscape in ways that do not necessarily have anything to do with numbers. And I'd love to visit the place someday. If you're near Pasadena on the 20th, drop by. Foul ball catchingA little while ago, I wrote a few notes about the probability of one person catching two foul balls in a row. Using straight probability, it seemed nearly impossible, though I did note that specific batter/pitcher matchups changed the math dramatically. To drive home the point, reader Mike Johnson sent me this story: I was at a game in 1996 where a single guy caught two foul balls within the same at-bat, though I think there was one or two pitches in between his catches. I remember it vividly because it was so odd. Dave was called a "national treasure" by Rob Neyer. Seriously. Comments about this article can be sent to him through the miracle of e-mail. Commenting is not available in this weblog entry. Do you have a general question or comment for one of THT's writers? Send it in to our weekly mailbag We also welcome unsolicited op-ed pieces of approximately 500 words for consideration. We reserve the right to edit for length, clarity and consistency of style. Please include your whole name and location to be considered. If you have a comment about this specific article, please email the writer. Next Article: Breaking down the draft: Picks 27-35>> <<Previous Article: TUCK! sez: Another one for the kids in Holbrook | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||