How Was The Game? (May 10, 2013)
A demonstration of offense.
Tigers 10, Indians 4
In the first meeting of the season between the Tigers and the Indians, the Tigers unleashed an offensive assault that would make the hard-hitting Tribe proud. Fielder, Cabrera, and Dirks homered as part of nine Tigers extra base hits and 15 total. The Tribe, for their part, did get 4 runs off Max Scherzer (5-0, 47.1 IP, 3.61 ERA, 1.85 FIP, 2.0 WAR) in 8 innings, but he held them to 5 hits and struck out 7 while walking none. Scherzer’s pitch count was low enough that Leyland could have sent him out there for a shot at his first career complete game, but instead had to settle for his 13th career outing of 8 innings or more. Any of the big homeruns might stand out, but Torii Hunter delivered a baserunning miscue in the second inning that cost the Tigers a run. With two outs, he singled to right field and Avila scored ahead of Infante who was right behind him. However, Hunter rounded the bag carelessly and was tagged out by the cutoff man, Mark Reynolds, before Infante could score. That isn’t the kind of mistake you usually see from a veteran like Hunter. The victory gives the Tigers their 20th win on the season and they will look to take the series tomorrow night behind Justin Verlander (4-2, 46.1 IP, 1.55 ERA, 1.94 FIP, 2.0 WAR).
The Moment: Prince Fielder’s 3rd inning homerun travels ~460 feet to right center.
How Was The Game? (May 9, 2013)
Came up short.
Nationals 5, Tigers 4
Doug Fister (4-1, 43 IP, 3.14 ERA, 3.01 FIP, 1.2 WAR) must be a creature of habit. He was out of sorts today in a big way after the extra day off, allowing 5 runs (4 earned) on 8 hits in just 3 inning of work. But the Tigers didn’t go quietly as the bullpen allowed the Nationals to go no further, getting zeros from Downs, Putkonen, Smyly, and Valverde as they waited for the offense to come. They got a single run in the 2nd on a Fister single, but the big hit came from Tuisasosopo as he delivered a pinch hit 3 run homerun in the 6th inning to get the Tigers within a run. They wouldn’t be able to push the equalizer across in the final three, but they made it close. The loss drops the Tigers to 19-13 on the season and they will head home to face the Indians this weekend with Max Scherzer (4-0, 39.1 IP, 3.43 ERA, 1.99 FIP, 1.6 WAR) set to take the hill in the opener tomorrow night at Comerica Park.
The Moment: Tuiasosopo delivers the Tigers’ first pinch hit homerun of the year in the 6th.
How Was The Game? (May 8, 2013)
A pitcher’s duel.
Nationals 3, Tigers 1
For the first time, the Detroit Tigers played the Washington Nationals. They tried to play yesterday and started late today, but it finally happened. And many believe it is a World Series preview, the present author included. Fans of effective pitching were hardly disappointed as Anibal Sanchez (3-3, 45.2 IP, 1.97 ERA, 1.47 FIP, 2.2 WAR) and Jordan Zimmermann, two of the best arms going at the moment, faced off. Zimmermann surrendered a run in the third inning and held the Tigers to 7 hits over 7 innings while Sanchez gave the Tigers six strong innings, allowing just 3 runs (2 earned) while striking out 8 and walking none. They both exited with the Nats leading 3-1 and the bullpens kept it that way. With the loss, the Tigers lose for just the 2nd time in their last 11 games and fall to 19-12 on the season. They will attempt to split the series during tomorrow’s make up game behind Doug Fister (4-0, 40 IP, 2.48 ERA, 3.07 FIP, 1.1 WAR), who as a recent photograph indicates, is nearly as tall as the fence that protects the nation’s president.
The Moment: Bryce Harper hits a rather impressive homerun.
Swinging 3-0: Rod Allen’s Go To Topic
Tonight’s Tigers game has been postponed until Thursday on account of rain in D.C., so I thought I’d take this opportunity to consider one of Rod Allen’s favorite topics of conversation: swinging on a 3-0 pitch. This is a topic of interest for me because it exists at the intersection of two things I think are really important in baseball: plate discipline and strategy.
Let’s set the stage for a moment. Generally speaking in baseball, when a hitter gets himself into a 3 balls, 0 strikes count, the manager gives him a “red light” indicating that he is instructed not to swing at the next pitch because the pitcher has recently had trouble finding the zone and the batter should accept a free pass if the pitcher is offering it. If you take a strike on 3-0, you still have two pitches to choose from while the pitcher still has no margin for error. It’s a good percentage play. A quality major league player will recognize the value in accepting a free pass and will take the pitch.
But 3-0 pitches are very often fastballs right down the middle because pitchers are trying not to walk you and that pitch is presumably the easiest to throw for a guaranteed strike. That makes sense, except that it makes no sense at all. If the pitcher had the ability to control his pitches that well, he shouldn’t have gotten behind 3-0 in the first place and even if he grooves one on 3-0, he’s going to go back to nibbling at the strike zone on the next pitch. Either the pitcher shouldn’t have gotten into a 3-0 count or he shouldn’t care about issuing a four pitch walk if he is just going to issue a five pitch walk twenty five seconds later.
It’s a pretty standard paradigm. If you get behind a hitter 3-0, you usually groove a fastball. If a hitter is ahead 3-0, he usually takes. Except when he doesn’t.
Rod Allen, the Tigers TV color man, has made a lot of this during the first few weeks of the season because he thinks really good hitters should attack the 3-0 pitch more often because it’s usually such a good pitch. His logic makes sense. If you know a straight fastball is coming, you can probably do significant damage that might be better than a walk. There is a risk in swinging, in that you might make an out, but if you get exactly what you are expecting, it could be beneficial to swing. Rod tells us Cabrera and Fielder have the green light 3-0, but don’t like to swing too often when they get it. Which makes sense given the risk while also knowing if they get ahead 3-0, they’re probably getting walked soon anyway.
But maybe we have this wrong. I’m a huge proponent of plate discipline and taking the base on balls, but maybe hitters should be more aggressive on 3-0 pitches. After all, so many of them are batting practice fastballs waiting to get crushed. Is there an inefficiency here that hitters can exploit?
Let’s start with some basic data. Tigers hitters have been in 65 3-0 counts so far this season and 39 have ended in walks. Of those 65 plate appearances, 28 ended after the fourth pitch. 25 of those were walks. What this indicates is that Tigers hitters have put the ball in play just three times in a 3-0 count. I don’t have access to the data, but I think we can probably assume the Tigers haven’t swung an missed at a 3-0 pitch this year, but there may be a foul ball in there somewhere and we have to ignore those away.
In those 3 plate appearances in which the Tigers went for it 3-0, here are the numbers. Obviously, they are gaudy: .667 batting average, 1.667 slugging percentage (.964 OBP when you leave the walks in). A three run homerun by Cabrera, a single by Peralta, and an out by Prince.
Notice the pitch sequence during the HR at bat to Cabrera (I mean, what do you expect here?):
But let’s take this a little further and go back to the 65 3-0 counts in general. If they walked 25 times on 4 pitches and put the ball in play on 3 others, then there are 37 at bats that got to 3-0 and then went at least 5 pitches. So 37 times, the Tigers took a 3-0 pitch for a strike. What happened after they did that?
After the Tigers got to 3-0 and took the fourth pitch for a strike, they went on to hit .391/.595/.609. Not bad at all. It’s not better than when they swing on 3-0, but obviously a sample size of 3 in the first analysis isn’t that predictive. What I think is interesting is the on base percentage. If you get to a 3-0 count, your odds of getting on base at any time during the at bat are .769. If you take the next pitch for a strike, it drops to .595. In other words, if you take a 3-0 strike, you’re sacrificing a ~17% change of getting on base to avoid the risk that you’ll make an out. That’s an interesting trade off to make given that you have a .667 batting average swinging 3-0 so far this year. (If you take out the intentional walks, which you obvious aren’t swinging at, the point holds)
So this means we should think about swinging on 3-0 more often because taking a 3-0 strike, which should be easy to hit, reduces your chance of getting on base pretty substantially, right?
Well, not exactly. This could be a small sample illusion. Last year, the Tigers hit .250 swinging on 3-0 and .192 in at bats that started 3-0. In 2011, it was .250, .232. What’s going on there?
I’m not really sure. The Tigers put 3-0 pitches in play just 4 times in 2012 and 8 in 2011, so it’s not like the sample size is much different than this season. The number of ABs that got that far is much bigger in the two complete seasons however. But the on base pattern does hold in larger samples. It’s around .700 when you get to 3-0, but it drops down substantially when you take a strike.
Essentially, if you get into a 3-0 count, taking a strike substantially changes your odds of getting on base. If you see a strike on 3-0, maybe you should swing. If you’re looking for exactly what you get. There is a chance to out fox your opponent. Pitchers expect you to take, so they groove it. If you swing, there is an above average change you will get a base hit because you know it’s a fastball, but there is also a good chance it will give pitchers pause when throwing you 3-0 pitches in the future because they don’t want to throw a meatball if you’re swinging. Which means in the future, they won’t do that so much and you’ll get more walks 3-0 and won’t have to continue the at bat into counts in which you have worse odds.
It’s kind of fun to think about. There is an optimal rate at which you should swing 3-0 and I don’t think we’re there. You can’t swing too much or you’ll end up on base less overall, but swinging too little also huts you because your odds of reaching base 3-1 are much worse than 3-0 and you’ve also sacrificed a chance at a 3-0 hit.
So next time Rod talks about Cabrera or Fielder swinging 3-0, think about it a little more carefully. There is probably good reason to swing 3-0 at a higher rate. Of course, no one wants to make an out on a 3-0 pitch, so hitters probably won’t be doing this any time soon.
How Was The Game? (May 5, 2013)
Almost.
Tigers 9, Astros 0
It’s hard to imagine that on a day in which the Tigers jumped out to a big early lead behind four homeruns and completed a four game sweep that pushed their record to 9-1 in their last 10 and 19-11 on the season that we would feel slightly unfulfilled. That lack of fulfillment comes at the faunt of Justin Verlander (4-2, 46.1 IP, 1.55 ERA, 1.96 FIP, 2.0 WAR) who taunted us again with his brilliance and held the Astros hitless through 6.1 inning before allowing a single to erstwhile Tiger Carlos Pena. Just four major league pitchers have thrown 3 no-hitters in the modern era and Verlander was making yet another run to join that club. In failing to do so, he still managed to throw 7 shutout innings and struck out 9 Astros. His pitch count was slightly elevated all afternoon, but the uncomfortable moments for Leyland were avoided as Verlander allowed a hit before he crosses into 120+ pitch territory. The Tigers will take tomorrow off to bask in their victorious weekend and will head to DC to face the Nats behind Anibal Sanchez (3-2. 39.2 IP, 1.82 ERA, 1.31 FIP, 2.0 WAR) on Tuesday.
The Moment: Verlander takes a no-hiiter into the 7th inning.
How Was The Game? (May 4, 2013)
Just a domination.
Tigers 17, Astros 2
To give you an indication of how this one played out, Jim Leyland pulled both Prince Fielder and Miguel Cabrera in the late innings and the Tigers scored 5 more runs after they left the game. It was a thorough annihilation the likes of which we haven’t seen yet this year. The Tigers jumped out to a 4-0 lead before Scherzer threw a pitch and added runs in every inning except the 3rd. Jackson, Hunter, Martinez, Peralta, Avila, and Infante all had multi-hit games, but Cabrera (.390/.467/.627, 196 wRC+, 1.7 WAR) stood out at the plate with 4 hits, 2 massive homeruns, and 6 runs batted in and added a dandy diving play in the field for good measure. The Tigers finally treated the Astros pitchers like the Astros and Max Scherzer (4-0, 39.1 IP, 3.43 ERA, 2.01 FIP, 1.6 WAR) treated the Astros hitters the same way. The offense may have stolen your attention, but he was not to be outdone. He went 8 innings and allowed just a single run while striking out 8, walking 2 and allowing 3 hits.. With the win, the Tigers take the series and improve to 18-11 on the season and will go for the sweep tomorrow behind Justin Verlander (3-2, 39.1 IP, 1.83 ERA, 2.09 FIP, 1.6 WAR).
The Moment: Cabrera crushes a 2nd inning homerun to extend the lead early.
How Was The Game? (May 3, 2013)
Late blooming.
Tigers 4, Astros 3
The Tigers jumped out to an early lead in this one, scoring single runs in the 2nd and 4th to take a 2-0 lead, but the Astros came back and got to Doug Fister (4-0, 40 IP, 2.48 ERA, 3.09 FIP, 1.1 WAR) for 3 runs (2 earned) in a very strange 7th inning that featured scoring plays on an error and a peculiar infield hit. Otherwise, Fister was strong, striking out 4 and walking 1 in 6+ innings of work. Norris limited the Tigers on the other side and Smyly (2-0, 20 IP, 1.35 ERA, 1.67 FIP, 0.7 WAR) shut down the Astros in relief of Fister in the 7th and 8th. It was uneventful as far as close games go aside from an iffy homerun review in the 4th inning, until Alex Avila strode to the plate in the 9th inning with the team down a run with Don Kelly standing on first. He worked the count to 3-0 and then took a strike before smashing the 3-1 pitch over the left centerfield fence for a much needed go-ahead homerun (Avila has 4 HR this year but only a 56 wRC+). The win improves the Tigers to 17-11 on the season and 2-0 on the roadtrip and they’ll be back at it tomorrow behind strikeout artist Max Scherzer (3-0, 31.1 IP, 4.02 ERA, 1.68 FIP, 1.4 WAR) trying to lock in a series win.
The Moment: Avila knocks a go-ahead 2 run homer in the 9th.
How Was The Game? (May 2, 2013)
Late, but worth the wait.
Tigers 7, Astros 3
The Tigers traveled to Houston today to play an AL team for the first time and the small number of fans (16,000) who attended were treated to a close game. Rick Porcello (1-2, 26.1 IP, 7.18 ERA, 4.92 FIP, 0.1 WAR) gave the Tigers 7 solid innings, surrendering 3 runs on two homers while striking out 7 and walking none, while also allowing just 5 hits. He wouldn’t factor in the decision as he left the game down 3-2 before Martinez drove in Fielder in the 8th inning to tie the game at 3. Ortega, Benoit, and Putkonen held the Astros at bay while the Tigers threatened but didn’t score in innings 9 through 13, which set up an Austin Jackson lead off double in the 14th which begat two intentional walks followed by a go -ahead single by Don Kelly to make it 4-3 and a Matt Tuiasosopo double to make it 6-3 and a Jhonny Peralta sac fly to make it 7-3 and put the game out of reach. With the victory the Tigers improve to 16-11 on the season and have now won 7 of their last 9, not to mention their impressive 2-0 record in 14 inning games. They’ll be back at it later today behind Doug Fister (4-0, 34 IP, 2.38 ERA, 3.17 FIP, 0.9 WAR) in search of their 17th win.
The Moment: Kelly drives in Jackson to give the Tigers the lead in the 14th.
How Was The Month?: Detroit Tigers April Report
Right on track.
15-11
This piece comes a day late, forgive me, but I had four or five posts yesterday and didn’t want to clog up the feed, so May 1st is part of April for one year only. It’s hard to be upset about anything after a 15-11 month which puts the team on pace for 93-94 wins and a third straight AL Central title, but there are always negative voices. Ignore them.
The Tigers offense is 8th in baseball with 104 wRC+ so far this year and have scored the 6th most runs of any team (127). They are 2nd in batting average (.279), 4th in OBP (.345), and 12th in slugging (.410), giving them the 6th best wOBA (.329) in the league. I don’t generally subscribe to the idea of clutch hitting with runners in scoring position, but if you’re interested, their OBP in those situations is .341, which is roughly what they’re doing across the board.
The defense, as you might suspect, hasn’t been great so far with the team posting a collective -12 Defensive Runs Saved (DRS) good for 27th in baseball and a -9.6 UZR which ranks the same. Early defensive numbers should always be taken with a grain of salt given the small sample size and Austin Jackson probably won’t post negative numbers over the course of the season, but Cabrera is already at -4 DRS this season and I think that’s probably true. I don’t think he’s necessarily gotten worse, but he is missing more close plays that he did last year. Hopefully that evens out.
Individually, as one would expect given the collective numbers, lots of Tigers are performing well early. Cabrera is off to a great start .371/.446/.571, 175 wRC+, and 1.2 WAR. Remember too that most of these WAR numbers are suppressed due to poor defensive numbers. Hunter has been a standout hitting .365/.405/.490, good for 145 wRC+, and 0.8 WAR. Peralta is hitting like a top 10 shortstop, turning in a .293/.336/.404 line during the first month of play and Jackson is doing well after a torrid opening week, delivering a .284/.352/.397 April.
Prince Fielder is also punishing the ball in 166 wRC+ fashion thanks to 7 HR and a .302/.420/.583 slash line. Infante is doing well for himself too with a 100 wRC+, making him a top 10 second basemen so far.
Alex Avila has started slowly, posting a wRC+ of just 50 so far, but that is at least partially driven by a very low .213 BABIP which should regress upward and erase some of the problem. Victor Martinez has been someone a lot of people were worried about as he is hitting .212/.279/.263 so far but his .236 indicates that luck will change. He’s hit a lot of balls hard that haven’t found holes.
But even if that didn’t impress you, the pitching will. The Tigers pitchers lead baseball with a 7.0 WAR, which is 1.5 WAR ahead of 2nd place. They have a league best 2.71 FIP and are striking out 9.84 batters per 9. Lots of people are worried about the bullpen, but thanks to a lot of strikeouts, they’re 6th best in the league in FIP.
The top four starters are delivering. Sanchez (1.34 FIP, 2.0 WAR), Verlander (2.11 FIP, 1.6 WAR), Scherzer (1.69 FIP, 1.4 WAR), and Fister (3.17 FIP, 0.9 WAR) are all top 20 starters so far and Drew Smyly is performing at relief ace levels (1.64 FIP, 0.6 WAR).
The Tigers lost a couple extra inning games that could have gone either way, so their 15-11 record doesn’t even reflect the quality of play. If the Tigers keep this up, they’ll be playing October baseball once again.
The Moment: Brayan Pena absorbs a collision from Justin Smoak to finish off a 14 inning win in Seattle.
How Was The Game? (May 1, 2013)
It had to end sometime.
Twins 6, Tigers 2
Despite a 40+ pitch first inning in which he allowed 2 runs and a 2nd inning in which he allowed another, Anibal Sanchez (3-2, 39.2 IP, 11.34 K/9, 1.82 ERA, 1.33 FIP, 2.0 WAR) settled in and turned in a solid pitching performance against the Twins allowing just 7 baserunners and 3 runs to go with his 9 strikeouts over 6 innings. Unfortunately, just as the Tigers were rallying after a slow start in the bottom of the 6th, the bullpen erased the progress as Rondon allowed 2 in the 7th and Downs allowed 1 in the 8th to extend the deficit to four runs. With Dotel and Coke on the DL and Smyly and Alburquerque getting the day off, the Tigers didn’t have a lot of options in the ‘pen, but it’s likely that Rondon will head back to Toledo after today’s outing in which he couldn’t find the plate or get anyone to miss his fastball, especially considering how easily Ortega handled the Twins in the 9th. The Tigers still won the series and finish the homestand 6-2 and 15-11 overall as they hop on a plane for Houston to start a four game set on Thursday behind Rick Porcello (1-2, 19.1 IP, 8.84 ERA, 4.98 FIP, 0.0 WAR).
The Moment: Sanchez retires the last 11 batters he faces to get through 6 despite a 41 pitch first inning.


