SOEFA Sunday: Reliever Rankings Update (August 25, 2013)
You’ll recall earlier this year we introduced our very own reliever rankings called SOEFA, which you can read about in detail here. For a brief refresher, it combines inherited runner strand rate, expected OBP against, ERA-, and FIP- into a deviation from league average. This is a measure of performance, not necessarily ability, and seeks to provide a single number to judge relievers that balances context neutral and context dependent numbers. Certain pitchers, such as Craig Kimbrel, cannot be credited for stranding runners because they are never put into those situations. They are not penalized either, however. Zero is average, and will generally range between -2.5 to 2.5 with -1 to 1 being most common. This includes all pitchers who have thrown at least 20 IP in relief as of this morning, so the average score on this list is closer to 0.12 and the inherited runner threshold has been increased from 5 to 8. Should you wish to know the SOEFA for any other reliever, or on a day that isn’t Sunday, hit us on Twitter or in the comments section.
| Rank | Name | Team | SOEFA |
| 1 | Neal Cotts | Rangers | 0.99 |
| 2 | Kenley Jansen | Dodgers | 0.95 |
| 3 | Greg Holland | Royals | 0.93 |
| 4 | Drew Smyly | Tigers | 0.88 |
| 5 | Koji Uehara | Red Sox | 0.85 |
| 6 | Chris Withrow | Dodgers | 0.84 |
| 7 | Mark Melancon | Pirates | 0.80 |
| 8 | Jesse Crain | White Sox | 0.78 |
| 9 | Kevin Siegrist | Cardinals | 0.78 |
| 10 | Nick Vincent | Padres | 0.78 |
| 11 | Joaquin Benoit | Tigers | 0.77 |
| 12 | Craig Kimbrel | Braves | 0.76 |
| 13 | Javier Lopez | Giants | 0.72 |
| 14 | Jason Grilli | Pirates | 0.71 |
| 15 | Jim Henderson | Brewers | 0.71 |
| 16 | Alex Torres | Rays | 0.70 |
| 17 | Jordan Walden | Braves | 0.70 |
| 18 | Edward Mujica | Cardinals | 0.69 |
| 19 | Sergio Romo | Giants | 0.68 |
| 20 | Sam LeCure | Reds | 0.63 |
| 21 | Paco Rodriguez | Dodgers | 0.62 |
| 22 | Louis Coleman | Royals | 0.61 |
| 23 | Shawn Kelley | Yankees | 0.59 |
| 24 | Manny Parra | Reds | 0.58 |
| 25 | Casey Fien | Twins | 0.57 |
| 26 | Gonzalez Germen | Mets | 0.57 |
| 27 | Glen Perkins | Twins | 0.56 |
| 28 | Brandon Kintzler | Brewers | 0.55 |
| 29 | Sean Doolittle | Athletics | 0.55 |
| 30 | Luke Hochevar | Royals | 0.54 |
| 31 | Preston Claiborne | Yankees | 0.54 |
| 32 | Brian Matusz | Orioles | 0.51 |
| 33 | Trevor Rosenthal | Cardinals | 0.51 |
| 34 | Dan Otero | Athletics | 0.50 |
| 35 | David Robertson | Yankees | 0.50 |
| 36 | Juan Perez | Blue Jays | 0.50 |
| 37 | Tommy Hunter | Orioles | 0.50 |
| 38 | Will Harris | Diamondbacks | 0.50 |
| 39 | Antonio Bastardo | Phillies | 0.49 |
| 40 | Brett Cecil | Blue Jays | 0.48 |
| 41 | Junichi Tazawa | Red Sox | 0.48 |
| 42 | Matt Belisle | Rockies | 0.48 |
| 43 | Andrew Miller | Red Sox | 0.47 |
| 44 | Grant Balfour | Athletics | 0.47 |
| 45 | Jason Frasor | Rangers | 0.47 |
| 46 | Josh Collmenter | Diamondbacks | 0.47 |
| 47 | Randy Choate | Cardinals | 0.47 |
| 48 | Seth Maness | Cardinals | 0.47 |
| 49 | Carlos Torres | Mets | 0.45 |
| 50 | Bobby Parnell | Mets | 0.44 |
| 51 | J.P. Howell | Dodgers | 0.44 |
| 52 | Caleb Thielbar | Twins | 0.43 |
| 53 | Joel Peralta | Rays | 0.43 |
| 54 | Joe Thatcher | – – – | 0.42 |
| 55 | Matt Reynolds | Diamondbacks | 0.42 |
| 56 | Addison Reed | White Sox | 0.41 |
| 57 | Brad Ziegler | Diamondbacks | 0.41 |
| 58 | Darren O’Day | Orioles | 0.41 |
| 59 | Jonathan Papelbon | Phillies | 0.41 |
| 60 | Aroldis Chapman | Reds | 0.40 |
| 61 | Luis Avilan | Braves | 0.40 |
| 62 | Robbie Ross | Rangers | 0.39 |
| 63 | Tony Watson | Pirates | 0.39 |
| 64 | Boone Logan | Yankees | 0.38 |
| 65 | Casey Janssen | Blue Jays | 0.38 |
| 66 | Jared Burton | Twins | 0.38 |
| 67 | Ross Ohlendorf | Nationals | 0.38 |
| 68 | Chad Qualls | Marlins | 0.36 |
| 69 | Vin Mazzaro | Pirates | 0.36 |
| 70 | Francisco Rodriguez | – – – | 0.35 |
| 71 | Jake Diekman | Phillies | 0.35 |
| 72 | Tyler Clippard | Nationals | 0.35 |
| 73 | Donovan Hand | Brewers | 0.34 |
| 74 | Tom Gorzelanny | Brewers | 0.34 |
| 75 | David Carpenter | Braves | 0.33 |
| 76 | Scott Downs | – – – | 0.33 |
| 77 | Josh Outman | Rockies | 0.32 |
| 78 | Steve Cishek | Marlins | 0.32 |
| 79 | Dale Thayer | Padres | 0.31 |
| 80 | Alfredo Figaro | Brewers | 0.30 |
| 81 | Cody Allen | Indians | 0.29 |
| 82 | Neil Wagner | Blue Jays | 0.29 |
| 83 | Ryan Cook | Athletics | 0.28 |
| 84 | Steve Delabar | Blue Jays | 0.28 |
| 85 | Bruce Rondon | Tigers | 0.27 |
| 86 | Nate Jones | White Sox | 0.27 |
| 87 | Craig Breslow | Red Sox | 0.26 |
| 88 | Jean Machi | Giants | 0.26 |
| 89 | Rex Brothers | Rockies | 0.25 |
| 90 | Heath Bell | Diamondbacks | 0.24 |
| 91 | Jerome Williams | Angels | 0.24 |
| 92 | Tanner Scheppers | Rangers | 0.24 |
| 93 | Danny Farquhar | Mariners | 0.23 |
| 94 | Joe Smith | Indians | 0.23 |
| 95 | Santiago Casilla | Giants | 0.23 |
| 96 | Chad Gaudin | Giants | 0.22 |
| 97 | Alfredo Simon | Reds | 0.21 |
| 98 | Anthony Varvaro | Braves | 0.21 |
| 99 | Jamey Wright | Rays | 0.21 |
| 100 | Jose Veras | – – – | 0.20 |
| 101 | Tim Collins | Royals | 0.20 |
| 102 | Ernesto Frieri | Angels | 0.19 |
| 103 | Wilton Lopez | Rockies | 0.19 |
| 104 | Aaron Loup | Blue Jays | 0.17 |
| 105 | J.J. Hoover | Reds | 0.17 |
| 106 | Rafael Betancourt | Rockies | 0.17 |
| 107 | Charlie Furbush | Mariners | 0.16 |
| 108 | J.C. Gutierrez | – – – | 0.16 |
| 109 | Jeanmar Gomez | Pirates | 0.16 |
| 110 | Blake Parker | Cubs | 0.15 |
| 111 | Craig Stammen | Nationals | 0.15 |
| 112 | Justin Wilson | Pirates | 0.15 |
| 113 | Matt Thornton | – – – | 0.15 |
| 114 | Brian Duensing | Twins | 0.14 |
| 115 | Carlos Villanueva | Cubs | 0.14 |
| 116 | J.J. Putz | Diamondbacks | 0.14 |
| 117 | Kevin Gregg | Cubs | 0.14 |
| 118 | Fernando Rodney | Rays | 0.13 |
| 119 | Jesse Chavez | Athletics | 0.13 |
| 120 | Bryan Shaw | Indians | 0.12 |
| 121 | Luke Gregerson | Padres | 0.12 |
| 122 | Sandy Rosario | Giants | 0.12 |
| 123 | Anthony Swarzak | Twins | 0.11 |
| 124 | Luis Ayala | – – – | 0.11 |
| 125 | Ross Wolf | Rangers | 0.10 |
| 126 | Scott Rice | Mets | 0.10 |
| 127 | Andrew Bailey | Red Sox | 0.09 |
| 128 | LaTroy Hawkins | Mets | 0.09 |
| 129 | Pat Neshek | Athletics | 0.09 |
| 130 | Aaron Crow | Royals | 0.08 |
| 131 | Cesar Ramos | Rays | 0.08 |
| 132 | Mike Dunn | Marlins | 0.08 |
| 133 | Oliver Perez | Mariners | 0.08 |
| 134 | Mariano Rivera | Yankees | 0.07 |
| 135 | Joe Kelly | Cardinals | 0.06 |
| 136 | Matt Lindstrom | White Sox | 0.06 |
| 137 | Yoervis Medina | Mariners | 0.05 |
| 138 | Joe Nathan | Rangers | 0.04 |
| 139 | Ryan Webb | Marlins | 0.04 |
| 140 | Tim Stauffer | Padres | 0.04 |
| 141 | Tyson Ross | Padres | 0.04 |
| 142 | Michael Kohn | Angels | 0.03 |
| 143 | Rafael Soriano | Nationals | 0.03 |
| 144 | Carter Capps | Mariners | 0.02 |
| 145 | Dan Jennings | Marlins | 0.02 |
| 146 | Burke Badenhop | Brewers | 0.01 |
| 147 | Matt Guerrier | – – – | 0.01 |
| 148 | Adam Ottavino | Rockies | 0.00 |
| 149 | Ryan Pressly | Twins | 0.00 |
| 150 | Chris Perez | Indians | -0.01 |
| 151 | Dane de la Rosa | Angels | -0.01 |
| 152 | Fernando Abad | Nationals | -0.01 |
| 153 | Josh Edgin | Mets | -0.01 |
| 154 | David Aardsma | Mets | -0.02 |
| 155 | Edgmer Escalona | Rockies | -0.02 |
| 156 | Jake McGee | Rays | -0.02 |
| 157 | Jerry Blevins | Athletics | -0.02 |
| 158 | Troy Patton | Orioles | -0.02 |
| 159 | Adam Warren | Yankees | -0.03 |
| 160 | Kevin Jepsen | Angels | -0.03 |
| 161 | Ronald Belisario | Dodgers | -0.03 |
| 162 | Bryan Morris | Pirates | -0.04 |
| 163 | James Russell | Cubs | -0.04 |
| 164 | Jim Johnson | Orioles | -0.04 |
| 165 | Joe Ortiz | Rangers | -0.05 |
| 166 | Darren Oliver | Blue Jays | -0.06 |
| 167 | Logan Ondrusek | Reds | -0.08 |
| 168 | Brad Brach | Padres | -0.10 |
| 169 | Huston Street | Padres | -0.10 |
| 170 | Manuel Corpas | Rockies | -0.10 |
| 171 | Tony Sipp | Diamondbacks | -0.10 |
| 172 | Jared Hughes | Pirates | -0.11 |
| 173 | Rob Scahill | Rockies | -0.11 |
| 174 | Darin Downs | Tigers | -0.12 |
| 175 | Esmil Rogers | Blue Jays | -0.12 |
| 176 | Tyler Thornburg | Brewers | -0.12 |
| 177 | Rich Hill | Indians | -0.13 |
| 178 | Phil Coke | Tigers | -0.16 |
| 179 | Tom Wilhelmsen | Mariners | -0.16 |
| 180 | Luke Putkonen | Tigers | -0.17 |
| 181 | Josh Roenicke | Twins | -0.18 |
| 182 | Cory Gearrin | Braves | -0.19 |
| 183 | Raul Valdes | Phillies | -0.19 |
| 184 | Al Alburquerque | Tigers | -0.20 |
| 185 | Jose Mijares | Giants | -0.20 |
| 186 | Kelvin Herrera | Royals | -0.20 |
| 187 | Ramon Troncoso | White Sox | -0.20 |
| 188 | Justin De Fratus | Phillies | -0.21 |
| 189 | Nick Hagadone | Indians | -0.21 |
| 190 | Jonathan Broxton | Reds | -0.23 |
| 191 | Scott Atchison | Mets | -0.24 |
| 192 | Joba Chamberlain | Yankees | -0.25 |
| 193 | Mike Adams | Phillies | -0.26 |
| 194 | Drew Storen | Nationals | -0.27 |
| 195 | Matt Albers | Indians | -0.27 |
| 196 | Vinnie Pestano | Indians | -0.27 |
| 197 | A.J. Ramos | Marlins | -0.28 |
| 198 | Blake Beavan | Mariners | -0.28 |
| 199 | Wesley Wright | – – – | -0.28 |
| 200 | Michael Bowden | Cubs | -0.29 |
| 201 | Brad Lincoln | Blue Jays | -0.30 |
| 202 | Greg Burke | Mets | -0.30 |
| 203 | Garrett Richards | Angels | -0.31 |
| 204 | Josh Fields | Astros | -0.31 |
| 205 | Pedro Strop | – – – | -0.31 |
| 206 | Fernando Salas | Cardinals | -0.33 |
| 207 | David Hernandez | Diamondbacks | -0.35 |
| 208 | George Kontos | Giants | -0.36 |
| 209 | Paul Clemens | Astros | -0.37 |
| 210 | Kyle Farnsworth | Rays | -0.39 |
| 211 | Michael Gonzalez | Brewers | -0.40 |
| 212 | T.J. McFarland | Orioles | -0.40 |
| 213 | Clayton Mortensen | Red Sox | -0.41 |
| 214 | Donnie Veal | White Sox | -0.41 |
| 215 | John Axford | Brewers | -0.42 |
| 216 | Alex Wilson | Red Sox | -0.44 |
| 217 | Travis Blackley | Astros | -0.45 |
| 218 | Brandon Lyon | Mets | -0.48 |
| 219 | Ian Krol | Nationals | -0.50 |
| 220 | Ryan Mattheus | Nationals | -0.51 |
| 221 | Bruce Chen | Royals | -0.54 |
| 222 | Jose Cisnero | Astros | -0.58 |
| 223 | Carlos Marmol | – – – | -0.59 |
| 224 | Lucas Luetge | Mariners | -0.59 |
| 225 | Jeremy Horst | Phillies | -0.60 |
| 226 | Hector Ambriz | Astros | -0.62 |
| 227 | Dallas Keuchel | Astros | -0.63 |
| 228 | Jeremy Affeldt | Giants | -0.65 |
| 229 | Henry Rodriguez | – – – | -0.71 |
| 230 | Michael Kirkman | Rangers | -0.74 |
| 231 | Hector Rondon | Cubs | -0.78 |
| 232 | Brandon League | Dodgers | -0.88 |
| 233 | Anthony Bass | Padres | -0.92 |
| 234 | Shawn Camp | Cubs | -1.04 |
How Was The Game? (August 24, 2013)
All about Max.
Tigers 3, Mets 0
Max Scherzer (26 GS, 178.1 IP, 2.73 ERA, 2.62 FIP, 5.6 WAR) turned in a strong performance against the Mets, twirling 6 scoreless innings featuring 11 K and a nice two-step around a bases-loaded jam in the 6th. But if you ask Max, the big story was his RBI double off the great Matt Harvey who doesn’t allow many extra base hits (.073 opponents ISO) and had allowed just one extra base hit to a pitcher in his career entering the day. The Tigers grabbed another run in that inning and would hold the line the rest of the way despite a couple of poor coaching choices at third base and a bad call at 2B during a threat in the 7th. The win pushes the Tigers 23 games over .500 and gives them the series victory. They’ll send Rick Porcello (23 GS, 135.1 IP, 4.52 ERA, 3.46 FIP, 2.5 WAR) to the mound Sunday looking to sweep.
The Moment: Scherzer doubles in a run off Harvey in the 2nd.
The Nine Pitchers Who Slowed Their Pace The Most in 2013
That’s a long headline but a simple topic. Which pitchers have increased their average time between pitches the most this year? Below I will present the The Nine pitchers with the largest increases from 2012 to 2013 among those who have thrown 100 innings in both seasons. I will also provide some descriptive stats about the entire sample because for whatever reason, I find “Pace” to be very interesting. Pace is housed over at FanGraphs and here is a link to the current rankings. For 2013, the slowest qualifying starter is Jeremy Hellickson who takes 25.7 seconds between pitches. RA Dickey is the quickest at 17.8, with league average at 22.6.
You can see that Pace is pretty consistent and that last year’s pace is a pretty good predictor of this year’s pace with an r squared of .72, meaning that about 72% of the variation in 2013 Pace can be explained by 2012 pace. Below are the players who most buck that trend.
| Rank | Name | Pace Diff | K/9 d | BB/9 d | ERA d | FIP d |
| 9 | Jerome Williams | 1.8 | -0.6 | 0.9 | 0.22 | 0.69 |
| 8 | Dillon Gee | 1.9 | -1.2 | -0.1 | -0.50 | 0.25 |
| 7 | Kyle Kendrick | 2.0 | -1.4 | -0.7 | 0.55 | -0.34 |
| 6 | Madison Bumgarner | 2.0 | 0.3 | 0.7 | -0.53 | -0.26 |
| 5 | Adam Wainwright | 2.1 | -0.1 | -1.2 | -1.36 | -0.77 |
| 4 | Anibal Sanchez | 2.1 | 2.1 | 0.4 | -1.41 | -1.19 |
| 3 | Jarrod Parker | 2.3 | -0.6 | -0.2 | 0.24 | 0.82 |
| 2 | Joe Blanton | 2.7 | -0.5 | 0.5 | 1.41 | 1.21 |
| 1 | David Price | 3.0 | -1.5 | -1.2 | 0.73 | 0.26 |
Positive numbers indicated an increase in 2013 over 2012. For example, Anibal Sanchez’s K/9 is up 2.1 and his FIP is down 1.19. What’s interesting is some pitchers who have slowed down have improved and some have gotten worse. Some have added Ks and BBs, some have cut both, and some have gone in opposite directions. Pretty much, this doesn’t seem very useful in predicting performance.
It’s interesting, though, that on this list we have some elite pitchers and some back end guys. I’m not sure if there is a clear take away from this other than that Pace probably doesn’t correlate that much with anything that has to do with performance on a broad scale and that it matters a lot to each pitcher but it matters in different ways. Let’s just take a quick look at FIP- up against Pace for 2013 qualifiers to illustrate that point:
Oh well, I’m still going to pretend it matters. It matters to fans, at least.
How Was The Game? (August 23, 2013)
A good start to the trip.
Tigers 6, Mets 1
It shouldn’t come as too much of a shock to anyone that the Tigers unloaded on Dice-K in his Mets debut, jumping out to a 5-1 lead early thanks to a bomb by Hunter and another one by Cabrera. It was never really in doubt and Jackson added an extra run for good measure, but once they got a lead, Doug Fister (26 GS, 167.2 IP, 3.54 ERA, 3.26 FIP, 3.7 WAR) had it all figured out. It’s not terribly impressive to silence the Mets’ bats, but Fister held them to 1 run over 6.1 innings and handed it over to the bullpen to polish off the rest. The Tigers got one to open the series and will look to get another against Matt Harvey with fellow ASG starter Max Scherzer (25 GS, 172.1 IP, 2.82 ERA, 2.66 FIP, 5.3 WAR) getting the ball on Saturday
The Moment: Cabrera crushes a 3 run HR to put this one away early.
Scouting the Tigers Pitchers…At the Plate
With a three game series beginning tonight against the Mets in New York, the Tigers pitchers will be asked to bat for just the third time all season (they’ll get one more shot in the season’s final series). Through some amazing quirk of scheduling, Fister and Sanchez pitched in the two game stints in Washington and Pittsburgh, so we’ve only see them at the dish this year. We know, through science, that Justin Verlander is likely the worst hitter currently in the major leagues and he won’t get a shot to redeem himself this time around, but we will get a look at Scherzer and Porcello in addition to Fister. The question that you’re likely asking, along with the Mets’ pitchers (especially Harvey) is clear. How in the world can we pitch to these guys?
Let’s start with some basic offensive numbers for these pitchers in their careers. For what it’s worth to you, I’ll include Fister’s 2013 numbers separately as well:
| Player | PA | AVG | OBP | SLG | K% | wRC+ |
| Scherzer | 86 | 0.162 | 0.205 | 0.189 | 25.6 | -3 |
| Porcello | 16 | 0.214 | 0.214 | 0.214 | 37.5 | -3 |
| Fister | 15 | 0.308 | 0.308 | 0.385 | 26.7 | 111 |
| Fister ’13 | 4 | 0.667 | 0.667 | 0.667 | 0 | 286 |
Max Scherzer
Scherzer’s numbers aren’t good, but he’s the only one of the group to take a walk and he limits the strikeouts compared to the group as well. He’s definitely the Tigers pitcher who works counts the best and he does have a BABIP that’s a good deal below average (.231). I’m not saying he’s going to break out, but he hits a lot of ground balls and doesn’t chase bad pitches too often. Some of those hits should start to fall in.
You can see that he works the middle of the field nicely and doesn’t get pull happy:
The real key to getting Scherzer out is to avoid his hot spots up and out over the plate. If you put one there, he’s likely to smack it to right for a hit. You need to come middle in or low and away to get him to roll over one to the SS.
Rick Porcello
Porcello burst onto the scene in his rookie year, but has really gone down hill at the dish since then. He doesn’t take his walks and he strikes out too much to have a ton of value at the plate. Just check out his year to year wOBA so far:
Porcello has shown the ability to use the whole field, but he doesn’t make enough contact for the bat control to play up.
Really the key to Porcello is to pitch him inside. You don’t want to miss away because he will make you pay.
Doug Fister
Fister is a much different story. Fister can really hit, even if he doesn’t have a patient approach, and he seems to be getting better with age. In 2011 he had a wRC+ of 133 and this year it’s 286. He’s made the leap from top 30 hitter to all-time great. He’s Babe Ruth and then some!
To get Fister out, you have to make him put the ball on the ground because if he gets it in the air, he’s going to get on base.
And you really don’t want to miss low and over the plate, because that is where Fister eats.
You have to make sure you go up and in or get the ball away from him. Remember, Fister bats left-handed. In fact, Fister seems to have some really nice opposite field gap power based on that spray chart. Take a look at this great swing from 2011. Hey, look who’s pitching!
Fister got an 0-2 fastball down and away from Anibal Sanchez and drove up the gap. Here’s an approximate shot of the ball splitting the fielders.
Fister has become more of a singles hitter as he’s aged, but he’s shown this type of power in the past so you have to be careful.
Scherzer and Porcello are pitchable, but you have to be careful with the big slugging lefty. If you miss to Fister, he’ll make you pay. For a pitcher who is 9 feet tall, this is pretty good form. Notice how he has his head on the ball and isn’t off balance at the point of contact:
Followed by an important discussion:
Next came an interview with Fister about why he bats left-handed. “I’m kind of screwed up in a lot of ways,” is the direct quote.
Then Sanchez gave up a hit to Ichiro and Brendan Ryan to score Fister. Fister had a better day than Sanchez, but we’re getting off track. This isn’t a Marlins and Marines game recap.
The key here is that Fister is the Cabrera of the Tigers pitchers and is the one to watch for. Matt Harvey is probably really happy he won’t have to face him on Saturday because Fister has shown the ability to hit the best arms in the game.
Dynamic Standings Projection (August 22, 2013)
In case you missed it, in April 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. You’ll notice a series of graphs below the standings section that track how the projections have evolved over the course of the year.
This Dynamic Standings Projection is updated through the August 21 games. Note that DSP posts have been moved to Thursday accommodate something that won’t interest you.
| 22-Aug | W | L | PreDiff | |
| TB | 93 | 69 | 0.574 | 2 |
| BOS | 91 | 71 | 0.562 | 14 |
| NYY | 86 | 76 | 0.531 | 1 |
| BAL | 86 | 76 | 0.531 | 4 |
| TOR | 76 | 86 | 0.469 | -11 |
| W | L | PreDiff | ||
| DET | 95 | 67 | 0.586 | 1 |
| CLE | 84 | 78 | 0.519 | 13 |
| KC | 81 | 81 | 0.500 | 5 |
| CWS | 70 | 92 | 0.432 | -13 |
| MIN | 70 | 92 | 0.432 | 5 |
| W | L | PreDiff | ||
| TEX | 94 | 68 | 0.580 | 3 |
| OAK | 90 | 72 | 0.556 | 6 |
| SEA | 76 | 86 | 0.469 | 1 |
| LAA | 75 | 87 | 0.463 | -13 |
| HOU | 54 | 108 | 0.333 | -6 |
| W | L | PreDiff | ||
| ATL | 97 | 65 | 0.599 | 7 |
| WSH | 83 | 79 | 0.512 | -12 |
| NYM | 76 | 86 | 0.469 | -2 |
| PHI | 75 | 87 | 0.463 | -9 |
| MIA | 62 | 100 | 0.383 | -1 |
| W | L | PreDiff | ||
| STL | 93 | 69 | 0.574 | 5 |
| CIN | 92 | 70 | 0.568 | 0 |
| PIT | 92 | 70 | 0.568 | 10 |
| MIL | 72 | 90 | 0.444 | -7 |
| CHC | 69 | 93 | 0.426 | 1 |
| W | L | PreDiff | ||
| LAD | 94 | 68 | 0.580 | 6 |
| ARZ | 84 | 78 | 0.519 | 2 |
| SF | 76 | 86 | 0.469 | -15 |
| SD | 74 | 88 | 0.457 | -4 |
| COL | 72 | 90 | 0.444 | 9 |
How Was The Game? (August 21, 2013)
The bats came late, but were worth the wait.
Tigers 7, Twins 1
Anibal Sanchez (22 GS, 139.2 IP, 2.45 ERA, 2.34 FIP, 4.8 WAR) did his job with the usual magnificence as he gave the Tigers 6.2 innings of 1 run baseball featuring 8 strikeouts and 2 walks. He pitched in a bit of traffic early but escaped with ease and then got rolling in the middle innings before handing it off to the capable hands of Drew Smyly. Trailing 1-0 entering the bottom of the 7th, the Tigers bats got rolling and chased Correia after scoring two runs and placing two more on base. Then, of course, Fielder swung and missed at strike three but got to first on the passed ball while Hunter scored. Get all that? Martinez doubled to add another and then the Tigers piled on in the 8th when Cabrera cleared the bases. The Tigers will do their best to take the series Thursday afternoon with the resurgent Justin Verlander (26 GS, 166.2 IP, 3.51 ERA, 3.42 FIP, 3.6 WAR) on the hill.
The Moment: Hunter puts one up the gap to drive in the tying and go-ahead run.
Can Phil Coke Be Fixed?
After failing to get the lefty he was called in to face, Jim Leyland took the ball from Phil Coke. He had seen enough. Coke, who struggles mightily against RHH, has to be able to get lefties out or he doesn’t have a whole lot of on field value. He’s always a good interview, but they pay you to perform on the field and not for the cameras. After last night, the Tigers had seen enough and sent Coke to Toledo to work on his issues while the big club calls on the services of Jose Alvarez to be the second lefty out of the pen.
Coke has had a bit of an up and down career with the Tigers. He’s been worth 3.8 WAR (what’s WAR?) over his four seasons with the club which included 14 starts in 2011. He’s generally had a FIP (what’s FIP?) between 3.20 and 3.80, but his ERA has consistently been worse, topping out at 5.00 in 2013. In the bullpen, Coke has consistently hovered around 7.3-7.5 K/9 and somewhere between 3.0-4.0 BB/9 with a high-ish BABIP and no real issue with the long ball.
That isn’t a stud reliever, but it’s definitely a big league reliever, especially if you throw with your left hand. Worse pitchers have survived longer with worse numbers. Coke has always had issues with RHH however and this year is no different. Let’s just talk about wOBA (What’s wOBA?) against to get a basic idea of the problem.
| Season | wOBA v L | wOBA v R |
| 2010 | 0.309 | 0.315 |
| 2011 | 0.267 | 0.351 |
| 2012 | 0.298 | 0.441 |
| 2013 | 0.298 | 0.345 |
Coke did fine work against RHH in 2010 and has never had trouble with lefties. He’s not a lockdown arm, but he’s solid. This year, he’s actually back on pace with his 2011 numbers. He’s better against RHH this year but the overall results are worse. The strikeout and walk numbers tell the same story. His batted ball profile isn’t that different. His pitch mix is a bit interesting. He’s throwing more changeups this season and fewer breaking balls. His velocity is also not a problem.
One thing that stands out to me is that batters aren’t chasing pitches out of the zone against him nearly as much (down almost 6%) and they are swinging more often at his strikes (up 5%), according to BIS data on FanGraphs. What is interesting about those numbers is that Pitch F/X, which doesn’t include the human corrections from BIS show much smaller year to year differences. To me, that says hitters are swinging at a lot of pitches on the edges of the zone. The people reading the data don’t think these are strikes, but the system does.
If you look at his zone profile, you should be able to see a difference from last year.
When he leaves the strikezone, he’s leaving by a lot less. He chase pitches are too close. This is a location problem. The actual pitches don’t look much different. Velocity is fine. His release point has moved ever so slightly toward the center of the diamond. He’s getting the same bite on his pitches and they are moving at the same speed. He’s just not putting them in the right spot.
And that’s much easier to fix. He’s healthy and isn’t losing his stuff. He’s just missing his spots. If anything, his slider looks better, he’s just not putting it in the right place and for a reliever, a few bad misses is all you need to go from very good to very bad.
So yes, I think Phil Coke can be fixed and I don’t think it will be that hard. He’s a hard working guy and open to instruction. It shouldn’t be long before he’s back in the big leagues sprinting out of the pen and pointing at anything that moves.
How Was The Game? (August 20, 2013)
Nothing worth writing home about.
Twins 6, Tigers 3
Rick Porcello (23 GS, 135.1 IP, 4.52 ERA, 3.46 FIP, 2.5 WAR) did some good things on Tuesday, but three infield hits and two poorly timed pitches cost him 5 runs in 4.1 innings despite 6 strikeouts and only 2 walks. Those things will happen when you induce a lot of ground balls and while you don’t love the result – especially Coke’s inability to get a lefty out – the process was mostly solid for Porcello who continues to be head and shoulders about baseball’s other #5 starters. The bats were able to score on a Fielder bomb and pushed across two other runs but failed to cash in with the tying run at the plate in the 8th inning. They had another shot in the 9th, with Cabrera at the dish no less but couldn’t make it happen. The Tigers have two more chances to get to the Twins this week and will turn around and give the ball to Anibal Sanchez (21 GS, 133 IP, 2.50 ERA, 2.39 FIP, 4.5 WAR) on Wednesday.
The Moment: Prince hits one a mile.
The Cy Young Case For and Against Max Scherzer
Let’s get the basics out of the way early. We love Max Scherzer. He’s one of our favorites. We like his stuff and his work ethic and his intelligence. He’s one of us and his eyes are different colors. We’re rooting for him to help the Tigers win and for him to be individually successful. He’s awesome. In fact, we’ve written of his awesomeness quite often:
- Three Reasons He Dominated
- Two Reasons He Got Better
- On Becoming an Ace
- On Falling in Love with Max
- And Why You Can Believe in Him (via Gammons Daily)
But here are New English D, we don’t put a lot of stock in wins and losses for pitchers. In fact, we put exactly zero stock in them, so the fact that Max is 18-1 means nothing to us in terms of postseason awards. I’m glad the Tigers win a lot in Max’s starts and it’s nice that he gets credit, but it’s a useless statistic when it comes to actually evaluating individual performance. Which means we need to consider more accurate stats when considering who the Cy Young should be in the AL. Let’s start with the candidates. To do so, I’m going to use Wins Above Replacement (what’s WAR?) as a starting point. I’m going to look at WAR only to determine who should be in the conversation.
Eight AL pitchers currently have 3.5 WAR or higher while the leader has 5.3. WAR isn’t precise, but I don’t believe there is a case to be made that it’s more than win off the mark. Like I always do on the site, those numbers come from FanGraphs WAR because I think it is a better reflection of performance than something like Baseball-Reference’s WAR (rWAR) or a basic runs allowed WAR (RA9-WAR). Remember, I’m only using WAR to draw the boundaries, not to make a decision.
The candidates are:
| Name | Team | WAR |
| Felix Hernandez | Mariners | 5.3 |
| Max Scherzer | Tigers | 5.3 |
| Derek Holland | Rangers | 4.8 |
| Chris Sale | White Sox | 4.6 |
| Anibal Sanchez | Tigers | 4.5 |
| Yu Darvish | Rangers | 4.3 |
| Hiroki Kuroda | Yankees | 3.8 |
| Justin Verlander | Tigers | 3.6 |
It’s worth noting that each starter has a different number of starts and innings based on their current spot in the rotation and how many games their team has played, in addition to any injuries. I will not penalize a pitcher because of his team’s schedule, but they will lose credit for injury time. Let’s see starts, innings, innings per start, and WAR per 200 innings:
| Name | Team | GS | IP | IP/GS | WAR/200IP |
| Anibal Sanchez | Tigers | 21 | 133 | 6.33 | 6.77 |
| Max Scherzer | Tigers | 25 | 172.1 | 6.89 | 6.15 |
| Felix Hernandez | Mariners | 26 | 178.2 | 6.86 | 5.94 |
| Derek Holland | Rangers | 25 | 168 | 6.72 | 5.71 |
| Chris Sale | White Sox | 23 | 165.1 | 7.19 | 5.56 |
| Yu Darvish | Rangers | 24 | 161 | 6.71 | 5.34 |
| Hiroki Kuroda | Yankees | 25 | 160.1 | 6.41 | 4.74 |
| Justin Verlander | Tigers | 26 | 166.2 | 6.40 | 4.33 |
Sanchez is clearly the best pitcher inning for inning by WAR and Sale is easily going the deepest into games. Scherzer and Felix are currently tied in WAR despite Scherzer being a start behind based on his team’s schedule and Scherzer leads in WAR/200 IP while having nearly identical IP/GS. WAR gives us these 8 candidates, and the early returns look good for Scherzer. Let’s go deeper.
Here are their ERA, FIP, and xFIP (what’s FIP and xFIP?):
| Name | Team | ERA | FIP | xFIP |
| Hiroki Kuroda | Yankees | 2.41 | 3.17 | 3.47 |
| Felix Hernandez | Mariners | 2.47 | 2.55 | 2.72 |
| Anibal Sanchez | Tigers | 2.50 | 2.39 | 2.95 |
| Yu Darvish | Rangers | 2.68 | 3.05 | 2.67 |
| Chris Sale | White Sox | 2.78 | 2.86 | 2.91 |
| Max Scherzer | Tigers | 2.82 | 2.67 | 3.08 |
| Derek Holland | Rangers | 2.95 | 2.99 | 3.49 |
| Justin Verlander | Tigers | 3.51 | 3.43 | 3.73 |
Kuroda, Felix, and Sanchez are all basically allowing the same number of earned runs per nine innings. Sanchez, Felix, and Max are clear the leaders in FIP. Darvish and Felix are your leaders in xFIP. But as you all know, park adjustments are really important. So let’s check out ERA/FIP/xFIP- stats that adjust for ballpark. Remember that 100 is average and everything below that is a percent better than average (ex. 85 ERA- is 15% better than average):
| Name | Team | ERA- | FIP- | xFIP- |
| Anibal Sanchez | Tigers | 61 | 59 | 74 |
| Felix Hernandez | Mariners | 62 | 65 | 68 |
| Max Scherzer | Tigers | 69 | 66 | 77 |
| Chris Sale | White Sox | 66 | 69 | 73 |
| Derek Holland | Rangers | 69 | 70 | 87 |
| Yu Darvish | Rangers | 63 | 72 | 67 |
| Hiroki Kuroda | Yankees | 59 | 77 | 87 |
| Justin Verlander | Tigers | 86 | 84 | 93 |
With park adjustments, we have a whole lot of guys between 59 and 70 for ERA-. Remember, this doesn’t even factor in defense. Only Verlander is outside of this window. By FIP-, we have Darvish and Kuroda falling back. By xFIP-, Darvish, Felix, Anibal, and Sale are your leaders.
Let’s now take a look at K and BB%, just for some added context:
| Name | Team | K% | BB% |
| Yu Darvish | Rangers | 33.20% | 8.50% |
| Max Scherzer | Tigers | 28.10% | 5.80% |
| Anibal Sanchez | Tigers | 26.60% | 7.20% |
| Chris Sale | White Sox | 26.20% | 5.40% |
| Felix Hernandez | Mariners | 25.70% | 5.40% |
| Derek Holland | Rangers | 22.60% | 7.10% |
| Justin Verlander | Tigers | 22.50% | 8.30% |
| Hiroki Kuroda | Yankees | 18.20% | 4.60% |
And I won’t take the time to break these stats down, but if you care about Win Probability Added and Run Expectancy 24, here you go:
| Name | Team | WPA | RE24 |
| Hiroki Kuroda | Yankees | 4.19 | 34.56 |
| Chris Sale | White Sox | 2.87 | 29.45 |
| Max Scherzer | Tigers | 2.84 | 26.63 |
| Derek Holland | Rangers | 2.81 | 29.75 |
| Yu Darvish | Rangers | 2.69 | 34.62 |
| Felix Hernandez | Mariners | 2.36 | 20.61 |
| Anibal Sanchez | Tigers | 0.83 | 23.83 |
| Justin Verlander | Tigers | 0.28 | 11.89 |
So let’s make first cuts. It’s obvious we can get rid of Verlander. I’m also getting rid of Holland because he isn’t a leader in anything. That leaves us with six choices. All of which could win the award based on the final month and a half, but who is in the lead right now? That depends on what you value in a pitcher. Since this is a Tigers site, we’re going to look at this through the prism of #37.
The Case for Scherzer
Pitchers can only control certain aspects of the game. They can’t control their defense. They can’t control their run support. They have some control over where the ball is hit, but only in broad terms. They can induce ground balls, but they can’t decide if it’s directly at a player or ten feet to his right. They control strikeouts, walks, and homeruns. Their ballpark matters.
Scherzer is tied for the league lead in fWAR which is based on FIP. Adjusting for park and league average, based on Scherzer’s Ks, BBs, HRs, and innings, he’s tied with Felix for the best WAR in the AL. If we assume that they would both pitch at this level over the course of an entire season, Scherzer is on a better pace, as seen through WAR/200 IP. Only Sale goes deeper into games than Scherzer. Max and Felix are essentially tied in FIP- and Scherzer throws more innings per start just barely. Only Sanchez is above them in FIP- and he missed starts due to injury, so he takes that hit. Looking at which pitchers induce the fewest hard hit balls, Scherzer and Sale are the two leaders among AL starters on this list at about 13%.
If you care about what a pitcher can actually control, the award belongs to Scherzer. He has a higher K% and is only a touch behind in BB%. His WPA and RE24 are higher as well. Batters hit fewer balls hard against him. Right now, the worst you could say about Scherzer is that he and Felix are basically even when it comes to the FIP side of things. In my mind, it’s razor thin, but I’m voting for Scherzer if I’m voting based on what a pitcher can control.
The Case Against Scherzer
Five pitchers on this list have lower ERAs. Including Felix, and including the leader, Kuroda. We should at least adjust for park using ERA-, but the message is the same. Scherzer allows more earned runs. Let’s take that a step further, because if we’re talking about earned runs, let’s just talk about all runs. If you’re arguing that a pitcher is responsible for his earned runs, then they are responsible for their unearned runs as well. The argument for FIP is the argument that defense and batted balls are fluky. If you don’t buy that, you have to accept errors too. Let’s see Runs Allowed Per 9 and then let’s convert it to a WAR number based on innings and park.
| Name | Team | RAA |
| Hiroki Kuroda | Yankees | 2.58 |
| Anibal Sanchez | Tigers | 2.77 |
| Yu Darvish | Rangers | 2.80 |
| Felix Hernandez | Mariners | 2.82 |
| Max Scherzer | Tigers | 2.92 |
| Chris Sale | White Sox | 3.16 |
| Derek Holland | Rangers | 3.27 |
| Justin Verlander | Tigers | 3.94 |
| Name | Team | RA9-WAR |
| Hiroki Kuroda | Yankees | 5.7 |
| Felix Hernandez | Mariners | 5.5 |
| Yu Darvish | Rangers | 5.5 |
| Max Scherzer | Tigers | 5.3 |
| Derek Holland | Rangers | 4.7 |
| Chris Sale | White Sox | 4.7 |
| Anibal Sanchez | Tigers | 4.3 |
| Justin Verlander | Tigers | 2.9 |
| Name | Team | RA9-WAR/200 IP |
| Hiroki Kuroda | Yankees | 7.1 |
| Yu Darvish | Rangers | 6.8 |
| Anibal Sanchez | Tigers | 6.5 |
| Felix Hernandez | Mariners | 6.2 |
| Max Scherzer | Tigers | 6.2 |
| Chris Sale | White Sox | 5.7 |
| Derek Holland | Rangers | 5.6 |
| Justin Verlander | Tigers | 3.5 |
So if you care about runs allowed, other numbers be damned, the case for Kuroda gets pretty strong. Darvish shows up too. Max and Felix are still in the conversation, but a step down. If you just care about the outcomes and not the process, Kuroda has a solid case.
My Vote
I’m not saying this because I’m a Tigers fan, but at this moment, Scherzer has my vote over Felix by an eyelash. You can’t go wrong with either. Everything you’ve seen at this site supports a FIP style approach that factors out defense and luck. We only care about what a pitcher controls and those two guys are the class of the AL based on that. Sanchez falls out because he missed time with an injury, otherwise he’d likely be the guy. The case against Max is also a case against Felix. If you are going to talk about his ERA or RAA, you have to then credit Kuroda. The argument for Max is that he’s limited walks and homeruns while striking out a lot of guys across a lot of innings and going deep in games. He’s allowing more runs, but runs are a team stat. The pitcher takes some responsibility, but not all of it. Some is luck, some is defense.
Today, I would vote for Scherzer, but with 7-8 starts left, lots of these guys have a shot. Max is going to win because he’s 18-1, but I couldn’t care less. His record doesn’t tell you anything of value. He’s the Cy Young for me in spite of his record, not because of it.
























