Category Archives: MLB Posts

Dynamic Standings Projection (May 22, 2013)

In case you missed it, last month we launched our Dynamic Standings Projection feature on New English D. A full explanation of the methodology can be found here or by clicking the tab at the top of the page. This project seeks to provide a reasoned and cautious approach to updating our beliefs about the baseball future. You can find a summarization of the original projections here. You’ll notice a column on the far right that indicates the difference in projected wins from the preseason prediction. Positive numbers mean teams are now projected to win more games and negative numbers mean a team is now projected to win fewer games.

This Dynamic Standings Projection is updated through the May 21 games.

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The Morning Edition (May 22, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

 

From Last Night:

  • Mike Trout hits for the cycle
  • Leake strong as the Reds beat the Mets 4-0
  • McClouth walks off against the Yanks
  • Garza sharp in his season debut, but Snider slams the Cubs pen to give the Bucs the W
  • Greinke gets roughed up over 4 innings in Milwaukee

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Harvey versus Latos at Citi (1p Eastern)
  • Gio and Bumgarner throw from the left side in SF (330p Eastern)
  • Cliff Lee faces the Marlins (7p Eastern)
  • Buchholz gets the White Sox (8p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • Is a 4th AL 3B trying to get involved in this race?

Last week I talked about how Miguel Cabrera, Evan Longoria, and Manny Machado led the AL in WAR, but a new AL 3B has moved into the #4 spot: Josh Donaldson. As I write this, he’s hitting .315/.391/.530 with a 152 wRC+ an 2.1 WAR, which is 9th in MLB. He’s flashed solid potential before, but nothing quite like this. In 300+ previous big league at bats he was a below average walker and above average strikeout guy who didn’t hit for average of power. In the minors he had some reasonable success, but it wasn’t anything spectacular. Now in 2013, he’s crushing. His BABIP (.353) is elevated, but he’s shown a higher BABIP in various minor league stints so it’s not like it is guaranteed to regress dramatically. I left him out of my top 9 3B to start the year and I think I’m sticking with that, but for now, the best 3 players in the AL play 3B and one of them is Josh Donaldson.

A Brief Note on Miguel Cabrera and Matt Tuiasosopo

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

In studying the Tigers offensive statistics so far, I spent some time looking into Jhonny Peralta, whom I have generally defended, but decided that his extremely good numbers so far (3rd in SS WAR) are driven somewhat by a high BABIP which isn’t very interesting.

Then I thought about writing about why Matt Tuiasosopo, the Tigers RH platoon OF, should play a little more but realized there isn’t really any extra PA for him unless you’re willing to bench Victor Martinez, whom I’m not giving up on at all.

Yet in the course of this perusal of Tuiasosopo’s numbers, something very amazing caught my eye. He’s crushing the ball, but that’s not what I mean. There is a belief, one which I share, that a baseball player can do pretty much anything across 60 plate appearances, or a 10 to 14 day stretch. Tuiasosopo has 51 PA at this moment in time. So I’m not shocked that he’s doing well. I’m shocked at how it compares to someone else on the team. First, for reference, he’s Tui’s line:

.366/.490/.561, 189 wRC+ (51 PA, 2 HR, 7 R, 15 RBI, 19.6% BB)

That’s excellent. It’s a small sample, but it’s excellent. He’s 89% better than league average at the plate so far this year. It won’t continue, but that isn’t the point. The point is that Tuiasosopo’s best 51 PA – his small sample peak – still don’t measure up to Miguel Cabrera’s entire season.

Cabrera’s line, despite covering 197 PA or a quarter of a season rather than 10%, is better. Here it is:

.387/.457/.659, 199 wRC+ (197 PA, 11 HR, 34 R, 47 RBI, 10.7% BB)

Cabrera isn’t getting on base at the same rate as Tuiasosopo, but he’s outslugging him by a lot. Cabrera is 99% better than league average at the plate this year. This post is meant to illustrate how awesome that is. Tuiasosopo is crushing the ball over a small sample and he still isn’t on Cabrera’s 200 PA pace (In Cabrera’s last 55 PA, he’s at 220 wRC+ BTW). That’s nuts.

Miguel Cabrera’s wRC+ for the season is better than Babe Ruth’s career wRC+. Now obviously that won’t continue. He won’t be Babe Ruth (although for a second I did actually think about removing the word “obviously”). But right now he’s outhitting everyone. Even great hitters. Even players who are having the best couple weeks of their lives.

Chris Davis is the next closest qualifier to Cabrera with a 182 wRC+. If you drop the threshold from qualified to 50 PA, Tuiasosopo is as close as anyone gets. To find someone with a higher wRC+ than Cabrera, you have to find your way to Matt Adams’ 43 PA.

And just for fun, even though it isn’t a meaningful number, over the last week Miguel Cabrera leads baseball with a 344 wRC+. It’s a small sample, but that’s just silly.

Miguel Cabrera has the 29th best career wRC+ of all time at 150. This is his peak. It has to be. The last three seasons have been his best three and this one looks like it might top them all. We may be watching one of the best dozen or so hitters of all time at his absolute best.

The Morning Edition (May 21, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

 

From Last Night:

  • The Mariners blow two saves and the Indians only blow one in a wild one in Cleveland
  • Dickey beats Odorizzi north of the border
  • Hamels Ks 10 and walks none in a losing effort
  • The White Sox get to Lester in Chicago
  • Kershaw goes the distance, allows just one run against the Brewers
  • Corbin dazzles at Coors with a CG, 10 Ks

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Garza makes his season debut against the Pirates (7p Eastern)
  • Alex Cobb goes for the Rays in Toronto (7p Eastern)
  • Darvish welcomes the A’s to Arlington (8p Eastern)
  • Greinke returns to Milwaukee (8p Eastern)
  • Wainwright comes to Petco (10p Eastern)
  • Strasburg and Cain face off at the bay (10p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • When do we start to notice Partick Corbin?

As I write this, Patrick Corbin is plowing through the 7th inning in Colorado and hasn’t allowed a run and has surrendered just a single hit (He finished with a CG, 3 H, 1 R, 10 K line). Entering the night, he was 6-0, 53.1 IP, 1.52 ERA, 3.10 FIP, 1.2 WAR and those numbers are going to get better. Granted, this level isn’t sustainable, but he’s pretty good and is throwing a gem in one of the hardest places to pitch. Also, Clayton Kershaw, just stop it. Another CG tonight.

The Morning Edition (May 20, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

From Last Night:

  • Chapman gives up 2 HR in the 9th to Katz and Galvis and blows it in Philly
  • Moore twirls 7 innings of 1 run ball, gets help from a Joyce homerun that was reviewed for 9 minutes to win 3-1
  • Locke and Harrell duel to a 1-0 Pirates victory
  • Ozuna backs Nolasco’s 11 Ks to take one from Arizona
  • The Indians rough up Felix, Masterson Ks 11 in 7 innings for a 6-0 win

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Under the radar Iwakuma tries to salvage one in Cleveland (12p Eastern)
  • Odorizzi makes his Rays debut against Dickey and the Jays (1p Eastern)
  • Cueto returns versus the Mets (7p Eastern)
  • Lester faces the White Sox (8p Eastern)
  • Kershaw comes to Milwaukee after dominating his last time out (8p Eastern)
  • Corbin on the mound in Colorado (830p Eastern)
  • Shelby Miller heads to Petco (10p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • How will you divide up your MLB viewing today?

The Marlins are just above the Tigers 43-119 pace from 2003 and are currently tracking toward 44 wins. Their team slash line is an incredible .221/.284/.317. In 2012, four players hit between .220 and .230 and slugged between .310 and .320. Here’s the list: Peter Bourjos (195 PA), Anthony Gose (189 PA), Jose Lobaton (197 PA), and Carlos Triunfel (24 PA). Put it this way, the Marlins as a team are hitting like four players who couldn’t get 200 PA on another team. The average Miami Marlin couldn’t even platoon in the majors. The 2013 Marlins are worse than Don Kelly’s career line, who has made a career being a defense first 13th man who can play many positions. The Marlins are fielding a team that is below replacement level (-1.6 WAR). That’s happening.

The Morning Edition (May 19, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

From Last Night:

  • Jordan Zimmermann gives up 1 ER in 8 innings…and loses…to the Padres
  • Gattis and Simmons go back to back to back Medlen in his duel with Capuano
  • Parra hits a leadoff homer and then McCarthy delivers a CGSO as the Dbacks beat the Fish 1-0
  • Tampa Bay gets 6 runs in the 9th to beat the Orioles 10-6
  • The Indians win on a walk off fielder’s choice (what?!)

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Felix faces Masterson in Cleveland (1p Eastern)
  • Dickey and CC try to regain Cy Young creds (1p Eastern)
  • Matt Moore looks to complete the sweep in Baltimore (130p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • Are McCarthy’s peripherals finally lining up with the results?

I made a comment on Twitter last night that Carlos Gomez was impressively leading the league in WAR (2.7) and was 9th in the league in wRC+ (170) despite just a 3.9% walk rate. Since I wrote that, those numbers have fluctuated just a bit, but the idea holds up. So I was curious, who had the best low walk season in the last ten years? Since 2004, the best qualifying seasons for players who walked 5.0% of the time or less are:

5. Freddy Sanchez 2006 – 4.9% BB, 4.5 WAR

4. Brandon Phillips 2007 – 4.7% BB, 4.7 WAR

3. Carl Crawford 2005 – 3.9% BB, 4.8 WAR

2. Ichiro 2009 – 4.7% BB, 5.1 WAR

1. Adrian Beltre 2011 – 4.8% BB, 5.3 WAR

Each of those seasons feature a strong defensive effort and low K%, but if you’re curious the best <5% BB season since 2004 with a negative UZR belongs to Adam Jones (2012) who walked 4.8% of the time and posted a 4.4 WAR (7th overall). Also, apparently walking didn’t used to be as cool as it is today, because I then queried a search back to 1980 and Beltre’s 2011 season turned up to be 15th in the last 34 years. Kirby Puckett’s 1988 reigns with 3.9% BB and 7.1 WAR. I’m serious. He hit .356/.375/.545. That’s crazy. Puckett’s 1988 is the best <5.0% BB season, not just since 1980, but also since 1932.

The Morning Edition (May 18, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

 

From Last Night:

  • Upton slams the Braves past the Dodgers
  • Goldschmidt’s 2 bombs back Cahill’s 8 inning gem
  • Kuroda blanks the Jays over 8, wins 5-0
  • Hellickson gives up 8 runs in 7.2 innings…and gets a win in a 12-10 affair over the O’s
  • Kipnis walks off in extras over the M’s
  • Phillies bullpen tries to spoil a nice outing by Lee, but the offense bails them out against the Reds
  • Harvey twirls 7.2 strong innings and drives in the winning run against the Cubs

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Quietly strong Zach McAllister faces the Mariners in an attempt to pad his stats (1p Eastern)
  • Burnett gets the Astros at home, watch for Ks (7p Eastern)
  • McCarthy looks to follow his strong outing against the Marlins 7p Eastern)
  • Zimmermann faces the Padres at Petco (830p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • How do people still take pitcher wins seriously after Hellickson gave up 8 runs and still earned one on Friday?

If I gave you 5 guesses as to who baseball’s best hitter is so far (as of 11:21pm Friday night), would you get it? Miguel Cabrera might be your guess and that’s close, but he’s percentage points behind the leader. Maybe Upton? Or Longoria? Or Choo? All good guesses, but it’s actually Paul Goldschmidt. The Dbacks slugging first baseman has a nice season and a half to his name in the big leagues, but he’s taken a step forward so far this season. His plate discipline is improving and his power is better, while also buoyed by a little good luck. Right now his 185 wRC+ is a fraction of a point ahead of Cabrera and his .338/.421/.656 line is a thing of beauty.

The Morning Edition (May 17, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

 

From Last Night:

  • Chapman blows Latos’ gem, but the offense bails him out
  • Middlebrooks knocks in 3 in the 9th to beat Rodney and the Rays
  • The Mets get 4 runs on Wainwright and Niese pitches them to victory

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Matt Harvey faces the Cubs (2p Eastern)
  • Cingrani and Lee hook up in Philly (7p Eastern)
  • Buchholz takes on the Twins (8p Eastern)
  • Bumgarner takes on Coors (830p Eastern)

The Big Question:

It’s happening again. Mike Trout has climbed to 3rd in MLB in Wins Above Replacement (as I write this at 11p 5/16). Some attention was called to his slow start, but here he is on May 16 hitting .291/.365/.545 good for 148 wRC+ and 2.3 WAR. For what it’s worth, in May, he’s hitting .358/.426/.792. I’m feeling better about MVP pick – except for the fact that he’s on a terrible team, so no one will vote for him. And in case it comes up later, he’s .333/.380/.619 with runners in scoring position, not that I’m big on that stat but some people are.

The Morning Edition (May 16, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

 

From Last Night:

  • Choo gets 4 hits, 2 homers as the Reds beat the Fish
  • Mariners crush the Yanks, Alberto Gonzalez pitches, Vernon Wells plays 2B
  • Price leaves with an injury as Lester and the Sox roll over the Rays
  • Greinke returns to the mound against the Nats

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Adam Wainwright welcomes the Mets to St. Louis (130p Eastern)
  • Cobb tries to last longer, but strikeout just as many against the Sox (7p Eastern)
  • Verlander and Darvish (8p Eastern)
  • Strasburg takes to Petco (10p Eastern)

The Big Question:

The Rays are being the Rays. After a rough start they are back in the thick of the division race and they are doing it with…offense? They have the 3rd best offense by wRC+ (109) and the 23rd best pitching by WAR. Cobb (3.76 FIP), Price (4.00 FIP), and Moore (4.41 FIP)  are a formidable top 3, but they aren’t really pitching like aces even if they have the stuff. They’re playing good defense and hitting well. No matter what people say about the Rays, always expect them to play better than the expectations. Just always.

Doug Fister and Something We’ve Never Seen Before

MLB: Spring Training-Detroit Tigers at Washington Nationals

Doug Fister is doing something kind of amazing so far this season. He’s hitting more batters than he is walking. Through 8 starts and 50 innings, Fister has hit 10 batters and walked 8 for a HBP-BB = 2. This is remarkable just because it’s a crazy thing, but it’s also remarkable because it has never happened before. (Editor’s Note: As of 9/2, Fister has hit 16 and walked 37 in 179.2 IP, he currently ranks 3rd all time and is 5 behind the leader. As of August 7th, this is the BB% to HBP% of every season in MLB history. Fister is in red).

pic1

Granted, Fister is only about a quarter of the way through his season and this can’t possibly keep up, but it’s worth noting how crazy this is. Over the course of an entire season, for qualified pitchers, no one has ever hit more batters than they have walked. The MLB record holder is Carlos Silva in 2005 who hit 3 batters and walked 9 in 188.1 innings. That walk rate itself is just fun to look at, but it’s beside the point. No one has ever complete a full season in which they have hit more batters than they have walked and the closest anyone has ever come is a differential of 6.

Now certainly, you will call attention to a small sample size and that over 50 innings pretty much anything can happen. And that’s true, but it doesn’t escape the fact that in 2013, no one else is hitting more batters than they are walking. Not Wainwright, not Colon, not Haren. None of the great control artists of our time are doing this even in the same small sample as Fister. I’m sure there are instances of pitchers doing this over similarly small stretches in history, but they would be very hard to find.

Think of it this way, from 1900-2013, the average pitcher hits 5 batters a season and walks 68. Even in the smallest of samples, it’s pretty extraordinary to find a period in which a pitcher is hitting more than he is walking, and these statistics include eras in which walks were much less common. Even in data that includes the 2013, which will bias the data away from these results, I calculate a chance that a pitcher would finish a season with more HBP than BB between 0.5 and 2 percent if this process played out at random. Here is a graph of HBP-BB with 2013 included, which will include pitchers like Wainwright this year who just haven’t walked many batters because they are good and it’s only been six weeks:

fister plot

For now, Fister is on pace for a record all his own.