Monday, May 30, 2011

Fili's GOD for May 30th 2011: Toronto Blue Jays vs Cleveland Indians

Jo-Jo Reyes gets the start tonight for the Toronto Blue Jays.  Reyes is 0-4 this season.  Normally Reyes wouldn't be the type of pitcher who would be involved in the Game Of the Day.  But today is different.  


Reyes' career record is 5-19, including:
2011: 0 - 4
2010: 0 - 0
2009: 0 - 2
2008: 3 - 11

Reyes' last win was June 13th 2008 against the Angels.

Since then he has made 27 starts without a victory.

The major league record for consecutive starts without a victory is 28, held by Matt Keough

He has 13 consecutive losses which is about halfway to the 27 consecutive losses that Anthony Young put up.

But he is nowhere near the record for the most consecutive appearances without a victory, 153 games by John Smoltz




Sunday, May 29, 2011

Boob and Dick (Fowler)

Boob and Dick Fowler have sophomorically funny names.

Boob (aka Joseph Chester, aka Gink), an infielder, played for the Reds and Red Sox between 1923 and 1926.

He has a career .326/.348/.406 line in 181 plate appearances, add in his defensive contributions and he was worth .7 WAR over his career. Perhaps he should have been given a shot.

Dick (aka Richard John), was a pitcher for the Philadelphia A's from 1941-1952. He has a career 66-79 record with a 4.11 ERA in 221 games and 170 starts covering 1303 innings. He led the league in losses in 1946 with 16. On September 9th 1945 he pitched a no-hitter against the St. Louis Browns. Dick had 7.7 WAR over his career.

He's also the grandfather of Khalid Ballouli

Boob and Dick do not appear to be related. 







Interesting it will be to see how many Google hits this post gets.  

Friday, May 27, 2011

Fili's GODs for May 27th 2011: Rockies v Cardinals and Mariners v Yankees

Two games tonight that I'm especially interested in.  The first is the Colorado Rockies vs the St. Louis Cardinals.



Rockies' rookie Juan Nicasio makes his major league debut against the Cardinals.  Nicasio is a 24 year old right-hander making his first major league start.   Nicasio is 5 - 1 with a 2.22 ERA in AA thus far.  More importantly he has 10.01 K/9 and just 1.59 BB/9.  Nicasio does a decent job of getting ground balls but his percentages have been decreasing at each level:
A - 49%
Hi A - 45%
AA - 42%
Nicasio throws a mid-90's fastball, slider and change up.

Pitching in the bigs against a potent Cardinals offense (117 wRC+; 2nd in baseball) is a big jump for a guy who was pitching in High A Ball last season.


The second game features another young pitcher, Michael Pineda.  I reviewed Pineda's review here.  Pineda was very good that day, and has been even better since.  Pineda is 6 - 2 with a 2.16 ERA for Seattle in 9 starts.  He's striking out 9.41/9 and walking just 2.16/9.  His 2.26 FIP is better than every starter's in baseball not named Roy Halladay or Matt Garza.

He is showing the left/right split that I was concerned about:
vs L: K/9=8.78, BB/9=2.36, HR/9=.68
vs R: K/9=9.95, BB/9=1.99, HR/9=.28
He's just been so good that it hasn't mattered.

I was concerned about his change up not being good enough to get out left-handed batters.  He's responded by only throwing it 6% of the time.  His run value per 100 change ups is slightly negative, but only -.22.

He's thrown his fastball (62%) and slider (32%) much more often.  Both of those pitches have been excellent.  His fastball has been worth 1.69 runs per 100 pitches while the sider has been worth 2.93 runs per 100 pitches.  That's the 8th best fastball and 12th best slider amongst starters.

Tonight he faces a challenge.  The New York Yankees and their #1 (118 wRC+) offense.  He gets a bit of a reprieve though, as the game is in cavernous SAFECO field and not New Yankee Colosseum.  SAFECO is particularly hard on left-handed batters, which the Yankees have plenty of (Granderson, Cano, Gardner and switch hitters Teixeira, Swisher and Posada), with an 86 park factor for home runs according to StatCorner.    

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Yakety Sax: Toronto Blue Jays

Not as encompassing as the Chicago Cubs' Yakety Sax, but the Toronto Blue Jays pulled off a Yakety play today.

Play this video as you behold:


*SBnation
*H/T to OD

Video from the MLB website




Posey's leg Busted

By now you've probably heard the Buster Posey broke his leg on this play against the Marlins.

Ouch.

For you masochists out there, you can watch this one too.

Well, Posey's leg is broken and he may miss the season
SAN FRANCISCO -- Catcher Buster Posey has a broken bone in his lower left leg, the Giants revealed on Thursday, meaning the worst has happened: The National League's reigning Rookie of the Year will likely be sidelined for the entire season.
Posey has 1.8 WAR thus far on the season. That gives him an expected WAR of about 6 for an entire season. With the injury the Giants will miss out on about 4 Wins

The Giants will try to replace him Eli Whiteside. Whiteside has 1.1 WAR in 315 career plate appearances. That's a close enough approximation for the number of PA's he'll get the remainder of the season. So, we add a Win to the Giants' total.

Now they are down 3 Wins.

The new back up catcher, Chris Stewart, is terrible, so he gives them 0 Wins.

The Giants are 2.5 games up on the Rockies right now. I had the Rox and Giants about equal coming into the season. If they were equal and the Giants are to lose 3 Wins over the rest of the season, the loss of Posey could cost them the division.

That's not even counting the fact that the Giants have given up more runs than they've scored this season (170-172) while winning 56% of their games while the Rox have scored 17 more runs than they've allowed while only winning 50% of their games.



The Giants will certainly want to make a move to shore up the position.  So whom might be available?


Astros: JR Towles and Jason Jaramillo. Houston is going nowhere and Castro (on the DL) is the catcher of the future.
Blue Jays: Jose Molina is a free agent after the season, and JP Arencibia looks like the real deal.
Brewers: Wil Nieves could be available as LuCroy and Kottaras are 1&2 in Milwaukee
Cubs: might move Koyie Hill if Wellington Castillo convinces them he can play
Dodgers: wouldn't mind them trading Barajas away and letting Ellis show if he can play
Mariners: Adam Moore deserves a shot to play. Miguel Olivo could be offered up
Mets: Love themselves some Josh Thole, so Ronny Paulino could go

Nationals: Wilson Ramos is the new #1 catcher in DC so Pudge might make sense
Pirates: They would let Ryan Doumit go for cheap
Yankees: Sabean loves him some old dudes-Posada?


Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Debut Review: Rubby de la Rosa

Rubby de la Rosa burst onto the Dodgers' prospect list last year when his fastball velocity started regularly hitting 95+.

He spent 2010 in A and AA where he posted the following numbers

A: 8.34 K/9, 2.58 BB/9, 3.12 FIP, 59.1 innings
AA: 6.88 K/9, 3.71 BB/9, 3.22 FIP, 51 innings

Despite his explosive fastball he wasn't able to strikeout a huge number of batters.

In 2011 he started off again in AA

AA: 11.70 K/9, 4.28 BB/9, 2.50 FIP, 40 innings 

Today he was called up to help out a Dodger bullpen that has Jon Broxton, Hong-Chi Kuo, Vicente Padilla and Blake Hawksworth on the DL.

Don Mattingly summoned de la Rosa for the first time to face Hunter Pence, Carlos Lee and Brett Wallace.  How'd he fare?

1 perfect inning with 2 strikeouts.  How'd he get there?  Let's take a look.

He started off Hunter Pence with a 95 MPH fastball at the knees that was called a ball.  He followed that up with a similar pitch that Pence fouled off.  The third pitch was a change up that missed low.  Behind in the count 2-1 de la Rosa cranked up a 96 MPH fastball down the middle that Pence hit foul.  The next pitch was a slider that missed very high.  Facing a full count de la Rosa blew a 96 MPH fastball past Pence.  First strikeout of de la Rosa's career comes against a pretty good hitter.

Next up was Carlos Lee.  De la Rosa started Lee with a curveball that missed high.  He came back with a fastball down and in that caught a lot of plate.  Lee swung and grounded out.

The third batter was Brett Wallace.  The first pitch was de la Rosa's fastest of the night.  A 97.3 MPH fastball for a called strike.  Wallace swung through a change up off the plate and fouled off another fastball away.  De la Rosa came high and inside with a fastball that was called ball one.  The 97 MPH fastball was followed by an 81 MHP curve down and in the Wallace swung through for strike 3.

All in all on the night
De la Rosa threw 13 pitches, 8 for strikes.
8 fastballs averaging 95.6 MPH
2 change ups averaging 87.4 MPH
2 curve balls averaging 78.3 MPH
and a slider at 83.4 MPH

He got swinging strikes on 3 of 13 pitches (23%)

The only ball put in play against him was a ground ball.

3 batters faced isn't a lot, but 2 strikeouts and a groundout is about as good as you can get.

Good luck to Rubby

*Stats from FanGraphs and Brooks Baseball

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Fili's GOD for May 18th 2011: Texas Rangers at Kansas City Royals

A fun game today with two young pitchers going at it.

The Texas Rangers send Alexi Ogando, whom I reviewed here, up against just promoted Royals prospect Danny Duffy.   

Ogando is 4 - 0 with a 2.06 ERA so far...so he's been fantastic right?  No, that honor would go to Pineda.  Ogando looks great, but there's a lot of reason to think that there have been some smoke and some mirrors involved.  Ogando is only striking out 6.6 per 9 innings thus far.  He does have a very good walk rate (2.06/9) though.  He's giving up a lot of fly balls (34% ground ball rate) and home runs (1.24/9).  That all adds up (and multiplies and divides up) to a FIP of 4.21.  That means, we should expect his ERA to be closer to 4 than to 2.

So, how does a guy who's below average at striking batters out, getting ground balls, and giving up homeruns have a 2.06 ERA?

Ogando's BABIP against is .193.
Batted Ball Type: Ogando's BABIP, League BABIP
Ground Ball: .140, .229
Fly Ball: .091, .138
Line Drive: .600, .716

He's well below average on each type of ball.  The Rangers' infield defense (think Beltre and Andrus) is pretty good, so the ground ball BABIPs might stay low, but not this low.  The outfield is...not as good...that is unlikely to stay low...and line drives...those are hits (and, yes, I love ellipses).

As a result of Ogando's low BABIP he is also stranding 95% of the runners that get on base against him.  He also stranded 93% last season, but when the major league average is 72%, 90% plus looks unsustainable.

Ogando has been better as a starter than I expected, but he's not as good as that 2.06 ERA might lead some to believe.    


In my last Game Of the Day, I wrote about the KC Royals prospects.  One that I didn't write about is making his major league debut tonight.  That's Danny Duffy.

*MLB.COM

Duffy is an interesting guy.  He took about a year off from baseball.  But he's come back about as good as can be.

Duffy has been a beast in the minor leagues.  In 344 innings across all levels, Duffy has struck out 10.5 batters per 9 whilst walking 2.9 per 9.  He's a pretty neutral fly ball/ground ball guy (40% ground ball rate).

Duffy throws 4 pitches:  A fastball in the lower to mid 90's, change-up, curve and slider.

He's not likely to be a star, but he's the second most talented starting pitcher (behind Jeff Francis) on the Royals right now.

*Stats from FanGraphs, Baseball-Reference, and StatCorner