During the Twins visit to Canada a few weeks ago, you may have noticed two Umpires sitting in the front row in Toronto emulating all of the motions of a real umpire on the FSN broadcast. Baseball Digest Daily's Matt Sisson reports that the duo, Tim Williams and Joe Farrell, have had quite a bit of success with their bit. As a day job, the pair work as traders on the Toronto Stock exchange but acquired the official umpire equipment after running into real umpires at a steakhouse. Since then, they've been guests at Yankee Stadium, Dodger Stadium and now, Fenway.
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
OtB Quick Links (09.30.09)
During the Twins visit to Canada a few weeks ago, you may have noticed two Umpires sitting in the front row in Toronto emulating all of the motions of a real umpire on the FSN broadcast. Baseball Digest Daily's Matt Sisson reports that the duo, Tim Williams and Joe Farrell, have had quite a bit of success with their bit. As a day job, the pair work as traders on the Toronto Stock exchange but acquired the official umpire equipment after running into real umpires at a steakhouse. Since then, they've been guests at Yankee Stadium, Dodger Stadium and now, Fenway.
Friday, September 25, 2009
Starting with strikes big for Twins
Month of September |
First Pitch Strike % |
Baker |
69.7 |
Pavano |
68.4 |
Duensing |
60.3 |
League Average |
58.2 |
For those that are unfamiliar, the difference between starting 0-1 and 1-0 is night-and-day. Nah, that’s not even a good comparison. It really should be two incomparable items, like night-and-pants. For instance, when American League hitters fall behind in the count 0-1, they tend to hit .640 OPS. That turns hitters essentially in Tigers’ offensively inept Gerald Laird (.637 OPS). That is a manageable prospective. Meanwhile, when the pitch flints outside the strike zone, hitters average a .863 OPS after the count starts with a ball. This gives hitters the opportunity to hit like Jim Thome did for the Sox (.864 OPS).
Baker, Pavano and Duensing have excelled in this arena, jumping on hitters and holding them to a .270 batting average this month thanks to their strike zone aggression. Conversely, part of the reason Jeff Manship scuffled so much in his four September starts was his inability to get ahead of hitters (a 43.2 first-strike percent) and wound up posting a .950 OPS. His most recent outing was brutal in that context. This has left the door open for the return of Francisco Liriano, who since his August start in Texas, has struck out six in 5 2/3 innings. Fear not, as Liriano, in his limited duties, is right behind Baker and Pavano in first pitch strikes in September (his 68 percent this month is far better than his year average of 55 percent). If the lefty can maintain this control, he gives the Twins a fourth strong starter to enter the final week with.
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
The Igniter.
While his early season struggles with runners-in-scoring-position have been exhaustively debated, Cuddyer produced well as the first Twin to bat in an inning for the duration of the season. In 135 leadoff plate appearances, Cuddyer is hitting .328/.378/.720 with 12 HRs, 11 2Bs and 1 3B by far one of the best hitters on the team under this situation. In addition being on base in 38 percent of those plate appearances and driving himself in 12 times, he has come around to score in 16 other occasions. Understandably, leading off an inning presents less of an opportunity for scrutiny then folding under an RBI-condition but beginning a scoring drive should be no less celebrated then eventually scoring the run itself.
What do we make of this in understanding Cuddyer’s contributions? For the better-half of the season, Cuddyer had floundered when faced with an RBI situation (although he has improved threefold since the beginning of the month) but managed to sustain a rather torrid output when there were no runners on base (.962 OPS). What’s more is that he did even better starting an inning (1.098 OPS). Are we to believe that Cuddy folds under pressure?
Baseball happens in a series of vacuum situations that we like to analyze, evaluate and segment. We do so even with the foreknowledge that these events happen in such a tiny statistical bubble that it is nearly impossible to properly label the results as anything other than a sample-size fluke. For instance, Delmon Young has hit .268/.292/.385 for the balance of the season. However, position a runner in scoring position for him (which has happened 97 times in 2009) and Young suddenly has turned into a .310/.333/.437 hitter. How did that happen? Does he thrive under pressure? Did testosterone and endorphins overtake his body and helped him concentrate all that much more in order to plate that all-important ribbie? Is there an aroma that Young could smell when a runner was on base, as Mike Redmond suggested in 2006, that alerted him to try more? Or does Delmon Young just enjoy getting his name in the paper and therefore tries just a little bit harder when he can be the hero?
Some of that could be true, I suppose. I’ve never taken a whiff from the batter’s box at the Metrodome with Joe Mauer dancing off of third. The reality is that the outcome of such small sample sizes fluctuates wildly from year-to-year and the element of luck is ever-present. In The Book, the analysts concluded that it takes 600 plate appearances to appropriately conclude a trend to be true. These 30-to-150 plate appearances a year with a runner in scoring position or leading off an inning does not provide an accurate depiction of the hitter. Yes, better hitters might hold a better batting line with RISP but in the same vein, a bad hitter can dink-and-doink a handful of hits and become a .300 hitter in those circumstances as well. That said it is far more probable that Delmon Young is a .677 OPS hitter overachieving by 100 points with RISP because of his plate appearance totals rather than the other way around.
Going back to Cuddyer’s explosive performance as a leadoff hitter, his condition is much of the same as Young’s RISP numbers. The right fielder is hitting a massive 243 OPS points higher when he begins an inning. His real performance resides between his vacuum numbers – a roughly .900 OPS hitter.
Thursday, September 17, 2009
The 'Neau Morneau Effect
It is hard to consider that the Twins would have a gnat’s ass chance of slipping past the Detroit Tigers without their All Star first baseman in the lineup. The truth, however, is we have not had him in the lineup since mid-July. Up until July 22nd, Justin Morneau shot lasers and rainmakers around the nation’s ballparks, hitting .316/.398/.588 with 23 HRs and driving in 78 runs. From the 22nd on it was like a parasitic-likeness of Alexi Casilla on creatine inhibited his body, guiding him to eke out a .175/.281/.351 batting line with 7 HRs and 22 runs batted in. This was not Justin Morneau. This was Matt Tolbert interloping in the heart of the order.
The question is how many games did this second-rate Morneau’s bat situated in the middle of the lineup cost the Twins? Could it be worth three in the win column over the course of 48 games? When the Grande Canadian was chugging on all cylinders, he was driving in runs with ease, hitting .354/.473/.659 with 12 extra base hits with runners in scoring position (RISP) from the beginning of the year until July 21st. In 45 at-bats with runners in scoring position from the 22nd on, Morneau had hit .178/.283/.200 with just a solitary extra base hit. Getting out 53 percent of the time versus 72 percent of the time is a significant difference – especially in the context of what should be your RBI man (and the guy who comes to the plate in RBI situations most frequently). In that same span of games, the rest of the lineup hit .292/.360/.453 with runners in scoring position. His continued presence undoubtedly hurt the kinetic efficiency of the lineup.*
*Naturally, you can lump the stubborn insistence on using Orlando Cabrera at the two spot as well. Since coming over to the Twins, Cabrera has hit .244/.275/.372 in the two hole. So, the Twins had sandwiched the game’s best hitter in Joe Mauer – who is retired in a major league low of 56 percent of plate appearances – with two hitters that have been out in 73 and 72 percent of their plate appearances respectively. (blink, blink). It would seem only a season-ending back injury will get Ron Gardenhire to reconsider the lineup structure…then again, as some in the game would say, baseball isn’t played on a calculator.
From July 22nd until September 12th, when he last played, the Twins went 17-25 the games Morneau was in and 5-1 the games he was out (either for the dizzies or a mental break). In that 48 game stretch of substandard offense from their cleanup hitter, the Twins scored 4.66 runs per game, roughly 0.25 runs less than they would when he was healthy in the first 94 games. Since his removal from the lineup, the squad has averaged 6.5 runs per game and has gone 3-0 (bringing the ‘Neau Morneau record to 8-1 since July 22nd).
This is not about Morneau per se, rather it about getting the most efficiency out of your lineup: A healthy Morneau is a superior choice for cleanup (or third, for that matter) than just about everyone else on the roster (save for Kubel against a righty who favors fastballs). The injured version was simply a detriment. It is a shame that it took a season-ending injury for the manager to react.
Sunday, September 13, 2009
OtB Twins Notes: 09.14.09
Friday, September 11, 2009
The Fan's Scouting Report
M.G. |
Overall Position-Neutal |
Instincts |
First Step |
Speed |
Hands |
Release |
Strength |
Accuracy |
UZR/150 |
2008 |
59 |
65 |
54 |
38 |
68 |
77 |
46 |
72 |
5.3 |
2007 |
64 |
71 |
53 |
39 |
81 |
83 |
52 |
80 |
10.9 |
2006 |
65 |
71 |
49 |
41 |
80 |
85 |
58 |
81 |
16.1 |
As you can deduce, fans who watched him day-in, day-out in Missouri noted that his arm strength had been diminishing (dropping from 58 to 52 to 46), along with his release (85 to 83 to 77) and accuracy (81 to 80 to 72). To be sure, this is still a very good report in 2008 in spite of decreasing skillset. As we compare with some of the defensive metrics, we find that Grudzielanek did convert fewer double plays after 2006, possibly (but not necessarily) a byproduct of his deteriorating arm. The Twins of course brought Grudzielanek along slowly in the minors and eventually reached the same conclusion as the Scouting Reports' trends suggested - he's no longer capable of holding down a job at second base.
Certainly with any attempts at cultivating the crowd for knowledge, there does exist the possibility of collective ignorance or indifference or both. Consider Orlando Cabrera, who at 34 years old, has been a target of accusations claiming he is no longer capable of playing a demanding position like short. In 2006 he turned in what could be considered one of his worst fielding seasons. His fielding percentage was at the second-lowest it had been since becoming a starter, his UZR was -1.4 and his range was reduced. The citizens of SoCal raked him over the coals in their ballots. The following year, the LA fans were infatuated with the OC and his third-best fielding percentage of his career, giving him much improved marks. He did demonstrate the ability to cover more ground which may be indicative of better first step or instincts - but how is it that his arm strength suddenly improved? Or that his release was that much better? Could those fans have been voting on Cabrera's fewer errors instead of his actual talents? This past year, Chicago fans were given what was Cabrera's best UZR/150 year (13.1) since 2005 and they lambasted his skils. What fans at the Cell saw was an aging product -- nevermind the statistical numbers.
O.C. |
Overall Position-Neutal |
Instincts |
First Step |
Speed |
Hands |
Release |
Strength |
Accuracy |
UZR/150 |
2008 |
66 |
69 |
64 |
63 |
67 |
78 |
49 |
77 |
13.1 |
2007 |
78 |
78 |
72 |
64 |
83 |
89 |
67 |
87 |
8.9 |
2006 |
67 |
66 |
70 |
61 |
69 |
73 |
61 |
68 |
-1.6 |
Tuesday, September 08, 2009
OtB Twins Notes: 09.08.09
The Twins lauded Jesse Crain's development and work done at Rochester during his demotion in June to improve his approach. Since his return to the big club, Crain as thrown in 18 games and has worked 21 innings while striking out 19 and walking eight. At the time of his demotion I detailed several issues Crain had in his repertoire against left-handed hitters who had a 1.000 slugging percent against him. Crain had futilely attempt to retire lefties with his curveball (22 percent) but hitters simply laid off. They waited for his fastball and crushed it (.500 BA, 3 HRs). My recommendation was that for him to succeed, he would need to work on his secondary offerings and perhaps reinstate his slider which he had used more often in the earlier portion of his career. Since his return, Crain has redeployed the use of his slider to left-handed batters (22 pct) while throwing his fastball far less frequently and has held them to a .731 OPS since July 23rd.
Twins fans unable to make the trip to the Cleveland series missed a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to witness Indians outfielder, Shin-soo Choo, dancing with South Korea's musical sensation, Wonder Girls. According to Korea Times prior to the game, Choo, several Indians players and the girls danced to their hit song "Nobody". Judging from the attendance at the Prog that series, that is exactly how many fans saw that performance. (In case you are curious, this is what the song sounds like. "Half in English, half in squiggly".)
Friday, September 04, 2009
Nathan's Slider
Manager Ron Gardenhire, faced with a barrage of questions about Nathan's sudden struggles, said Nathan "dropped his arm" throwing a nothing slider to Konerko for the tying homer. That means Nathan released the pitch lower than the normal apex of his delivery, a common mistake that reduces the sharpness of the break. A slider with little break, thrown to a power hitter like Konerko, often ends up in the seats. Gardenhire said when he removed Nathan, catcher Mike Redmond told him Nathan was dropping his arm.
This decrease has led to more horizontally breaking sliders with less vertical break. Not only was this flatter slider was proven to be more hittable -- thanks Mr. Konerko -- but it became increasingly more difficult to locate for a strike.
Nathan's Slider Movement |
Number of pitches |
Horizontal Movement on Average (in inches) |
Vertical Movement on Average (in inches) |
July 18th |
4 |
0.75 |
3.61 |
Sept 2nd |
16 |
1.19 |
2.78 |