If you look at his
ERA, Wade Davis was abysmal, Kyle Davies-esque even. However, his FIP and xFIP
were in fact less than abysmal; one might say they were slightly below average,
which they were. They were actually his best FIP and xFIP as a starter since
2009, which not coincidentally is his greatest fWAR season prior to 2013. So,
why the difference? One reason, and a big reason, is that his BABIP was way out
of control. Davis had basically the highest BABIP of all starting pitchers. He
also walked a few too many guys. Beyond his BABIP and BB%, doing some research
is revealing; all data following are from Brooks Baseball.
Monday, October 21, 2013
Wednesday, July 31, 2013
Trade Deadline MADNESS!
The Royals executed a deadline trade today, giving Kyle
Smith, a pitching prospect in High A ball, to the Houston Astros in exchange
for Justin Maxwell, an outfielder. The reaction on Twitter was swift, fierce,
and scathing. I am going to try to give some perspective on the trade, and
perhaps a more calm reaction.
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
Jeremy Guthrie and the Value of Defense
Jeremy Guthrie seems to be an interesting person. His
Twitter feed is often full of shoe giveaways and other assorted things. As a
baseball player, and from a statistical perspective, he is equally interesting.
Throughout his career, he has maintained a below-average K% and yet has
remained an effective “innings eater”*. He doesn’t generate ground balls more
than other pitchers, and he doesn’t strand more baserunners than other
pitchers. He is roughly average in those categories. However, he does have a below
average (or above average, depending on your perspective) career BABIP;
essentially, fewer balls in play go for base hits against Guthrie than the
league average, which is odd because the vast majority of pitchers have little
to no control over their BABIPs.
*Innings eaters. A
nice way of saying, “You’re not very good, but you’re not bad, and you’re
healthy, which is valuable”
Monday, June 17, 2013
Revisiting Predictions
While I’ve been gone, the Royals have gone on a
rollercoaster of ridiculousness, waffling from 1st place to last
place and now, as of tonight, back to .500. I haven’t been able to keep up as much with the team as I
graduated from school and started a fantastic new job. However, today I’d like to revisit some
of my earlier posts of the season to check up on any predictions I made.
Monday, May 13, 2013
The Royals and Expected Strikeout Rate
The Royals experienced their first sweep of the season at
the hand of the Yankees over the last weekend. It is crazy that the Royals went this long into the season
(midway through May!) without being swept. After last year’s 12 game losing streak at the beginning of
the season, this is welcome.
However, the Royals have lost 6 of their last 7 games. I don’t think the Royals will sustain
this kind of losing for long, though.
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