Tuesday, October 31, 2023

Newsletter Excerpt, October 31, 2023 -- "Up"

This is a preview of the Joe Sheehan Baseball Newsletter, an e-mail newsletter about all things baseball, featuring analysis and opinion about the game on and off the field from the perspective of the informed outsider.

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"Corey Seager hit the hardest ball of Game Three, 114.5 mph off the bat, at an angle of 22 degrees. It went 421 feet for a two-run homer that was the decisive blow in the game.

"Ketel Marte hit the second-hardest ball of Game Three, 114.4 mph off the bat. His ball, however, came off the bat at -3 degrees, and it went about 125 feet into the glove of Seager, who started a double play that ended the Diamondbacks’ last rally.

"The lesson? Hit the ball up. I have been screaming this on Slack all month. You have to hit the ball up. Seager and Marte hit the same rocket last night. One hit it up for two runs, the other hit it down for two outs. Groundballs are death. Hit the ball up."

Monday, October 30, 2023

Joe Sheehan Newsletter, October 30, 2023 -- "Kelly, Kelly, Kelly, Kelly..."

 

This is a preview of the Joe Sheehan Baseball Newsletter, an e-mail newsletter about all things baseball, featuring analysis and opinion about the game on and off the field from the perspective of the informed outsider.

You can subscribe to the newsletter for one year for $79.95 using your PayPal account or major credit card.

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The Joe Sheehan Newsletter: Kelly, Kelly, Kelly, Kelly...
Vol. 15, No. 128
October 30, 2023

Merrill Kelly is what amounts to a junkballer in 2023, with two fastballs that average 92 mph, five pitches he throws at least 10% of the time, and a 26% strikeout rate. Drop that profile into Busch Stadium in 1988 and you’d have a perennial Cy Young Award contender. Kelly, in this century, had to be drafted three times, released once, and have four good years on the other side of the world just to get a sniff in the majors.

Since coming back Stateside in 2019, Kelly has been a good pitcher on bad teams, making almost all his starts outside the shortened 2020 season, throwing strikes, and becoming an anchor for a Diamondbacks club that has spent the last few years struggling to keep a rotation together. Kelly’s value isn’t that he’s going to wipe out the opponent on any given night, it’s that he’s going to take the ball and not give it back for five innings. Since we got back to business in 2021, Kelly is fourth in MLB with 83 starts of at least five innings. He is a classic #3 starter.

With these Diamondbacks, though, he’s had to carry more. Just as Zac Gallen is a #2 serving as a #1, Kelly is bumped up a notch because there is no true #1 here. Gallen, though, has scuffled this October, while Kelly has thrived in four starts: 24 innings, six runs allowed, a 28/7 K/BB. Saturday night in Texas, with the Snakes coming back from a crushing loss that put them behind in the Series and toasted their A bullpen, Kelly needed just 89 pitches to throw seven full innings. (As many noted, that made him the first starter to work that deep in the Series since 2019.) He threw the kitchen sink at the Rangers, throwing no pitch more than a quarter of the time, and five at least 10% of the time.

That’s a summary and a little bit abstract, so let’s look at what that means for a hitter, say one of the Game One heroes, Corey Seager. 

First PA: Two-seam, changeup
Second PA: Two-seam
Third PA: Two-seam, two-seam, changeup, four-seam, changeup, cutter

Three PAs and nine pitches deep, when it gets hairy for starters facing the top of the lineup a third time, Kelly was able to show Seager something entirely new. Seager swung at the 2-2 cutter, not coming close, for Kelly’s sixth strikeout.

Let’s so this for the other Game One hero, and growing postseason legend, Adolis Garcia:

First PA: Four-seam, changeup
Second PA: Four-seam, changeup
Third PA: Slider, cutter, four-seam, four-seam, curve, four-seam

Garcia stared at that 2-2 fastball on the outside corner, having seen four distinct offerings in the first five, he was frozen by 94 dead straight.

There’s a known effect here. A deeper repertoire can help mitigate, though not eliminate, the third-time penalty. As we’ve discussed, Kelly still gets hit for a lot of power when facing hitters a third time, so all these pitches only do so much. At a one-game level, though, you can see where having so many options, especially for hitters who didn’t see much of the toolkit the first two times up, makes a difference. 

Torey Lovullo needed innings from Kelly, and was likely prepared to ride with his starter even with less than stellar results. Instead, he got a fantastic performance that helped tie the World Series.

Now, it will be forgotten because of the final score, but Jordan Montgomery was right there with Kelly for six innings, holding the Diamondbacks to two runs. He allowed a solo homer to Gabriel Moreno for one, and a double by Tommy Pham to set up the other. He didn’t have the stuff he’d shown off for much of October, his velocity down, getting just two whiffs on the night. Still, he danced through the raindrops for a quality start.

There was some talk about Montgomery’s ALCS Game Seven relief work affecting him, but that seems like post hoc reasoning. Montgomery threw 32 pitches on his throw day and had four days’ rest before his start. I’m open to the idea that there’s some cumulative effect, though. Montgomery has thrown close to 3300 pitches this year, 500 more than he did a year ago, which was itself a career high. He’s never pitched this long into a year (a factor I think is meaningful) or thrown so many high-stress pitches in September and October. Every pitch at this point is a triumph of adrenaline over fatigue, and you won’t always win that battle.

I liked Bruce Bochy flipping Montgomery and Nathan Eovaldi because it gave Montgomery the extra day of rest for both his Series starts. After Saturday night, I’m more convinced it was the right choice.

Bochy didn’t help Montgomery much beyond that, though. While his hands were tied similar to the way Lovullo’s were, Bochy had the luxury of having two of his top relievers rested. When Montgomery escaped the sixth by picking Pham off second base, that should have been the end of his night. As mentioned: two swings-and-misses, a decline in velocity, seven hits scattered. Bochy had gotten a bit lucky for the Rangers to be down just 2-1 at that point.

I might defend leaving Montgomery in to start the seventh, as left-handed-hitting Alek Thomas was set to lead off. After Thomas doubled, his second hit off Montgomery, that needed to be the end. Letting Montgomery face Evan Longoria was a clear mistake, and it set the game on fire. Longoria singled home Thomas, making it 3-1. Bochy went to Andrew Heaney; Heaney, Dane Dunning, Chris Stratton and Martin Perez proceeded to show why Bochy wanted to leave Montgomery in, allowing five runs, plus the one they inherited, over the last three innings. 

The name not mentioned there is where Bochy screwed up. Down a run in the seventh is a high-leverage spot, and instead of messing around with Montgomery and his B bullpen, Bochy needed to get a rested Josh Sborz into the game. Bochy, remember, had lined up Sborz to face Yordan Alvarez in ALCS Game Six, so he clearly trusts him against left-handed batters. Sborz hadn’t pitched since Monday, so fatigue wasn’t the issue. Sunday is a day off, so needing him tomorrow isn’t an issue. If Bochy was saving Sborz for the ninth, having used Jose Leclerc for two innings in Game One, don’t do that. The game is in front of you, and it’s not like we don’t have a pretty recent example of how you might not need your closer in the ninth for good reasons. Saving Sborz to pitch the ninth is a good way to ensure you won’t get to use Sborz in the ninth.

Bochy’s choice was made tougher by a surprise move from Lovullo, one that worked out better than the Diamondbacks skipper could have expected. Alek Thomas isn’t in a strict platoon, but he generally sits against lefty starters. Thomas started just 15 of the 49 games this year in which the Diamondbacks faced a southpaw. He hit .143/.175/.260 against lefties this year, with 22 strikeouts and 11 hits. Thomas started against Clayton Kershaw in the Division Series, then sat against the three lefty starters the Phillies went with in the NLCS. Lovullo chose Thomas over Emmanuel Rivera, effectively, and Thomas found two hits, including that seventh-inning double. That was the direct benefit.

The indirect benefit was in complicating Bochy’s life. Rather than having six straight right-handed batters, an easy pocket for Sborz or even Stratton, the lineup with Thomas in it had better balance. Watching live, I think Bochy wanted Montgomery to get through the seventh, and failing that, wanted Heaney in the safest pocket he could find. That meant letting Montgomery face Longoria, a clear error that cost two runs.

Having Thomas in the #7 hole...look, my Strat nerd bonafides are well known, and this is the kind of thing you think about playing 10,000 games of table baseball. Do I start the defense and the lineup balance even if it means eating 2-3 terrible plate appearances? Sometimes when you do that, you roll 1-12 a few times, too.

The Rangers scored one run, so maybe they lose anyway, but Bochy mishandled his seventh-inning decision and let a winnable game get away from him. He could have opened the inning with Sborz, or even Heaney, and had a better chance of getting through the seventh unscathed.

One of the issues I have with the concept of “dealing” is that people using that term are almost always just looking at the scoreboard. Montgomery wasn’t within a time zone of his best, wasn’t “dealing,” was just surviving. Twice post-game, asked about Montgomery, Bochy said “he was pitching well,” and that’s just wrong. Bochy didn’t use his eyes to make a decision on Montgomery, and he didn’t use his gut. He used the box score. 

Montgomery’s problems missing bats allowed the Diamondbacks to join some very rare company. They struck out just two times in Game Two, the first team to strike out less than three times in a World Series game since the Rangers did it in Game Two in 2010. No team has gone an entire World Series game without striking out since the Angels did it in 2002, in that wild 11-10 Game Two. That 2002 classic, in fact, is the only time since 1960 that a team hasn’t struck out in a World Series game.

There’s a real desire to make the Diamondbacks’ success about baserunning and smallball. I guess everything has to be baseball culture war now. As for what actually happened, the Diamondbacks scored their first three runs, the decisive ones, on a homer; a double followed by a single; and a double followed by a single. For the game they hit .432 and slugged .595, in no small part because they got a look at bottom of the Rangers’ staff. They got credit for three sacrifice bunts, two of which looked to me like “bunt for a hit and settle for a sacrifice” bunts, which are...fine. They stole one base and the runner went nowhere after that.

The Diamondbacks scored nine runs because they raked. Pretending they’re the 1903 Giants is silly. You don’t have to believe me, they publish the boxscore.

 

Friday, October 27, 2023

Newsletter Excerpt, October 27, 2023 -- "World Series Preview"

This is a preview of the Joe Sheehan Baseball Newsletter, an e-mail newsletter about all things baseball, featuring analysis and opinion about the game on and off the field from the perspective of the informed outsider.

You can subscribe to the newsletter for one year for $79.95 using your PayPal account or major credit card.

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"The Rangers were the better team over six months, both in the standings and by deeper measures of quality. They’ve matched the Diamondbacks in October and have better underlying numbers. There’s no deeper matchup edge, no fatal flaw to exploit. The Bochy/Lovullo manager duel is the best one we’ve gotten in the World Series in quite some time. Both teams play good defense and run the bases well, and as has been a topic of conversation, the Diamondbacks’ high-volume basestealing hasn’t ported to the playoffs.

"This is a battle between an excellent offensive team that has continued to be one, and a middling pitching team that has succeeded for about three weeks. I just cannot see the Diamondbacks keeping up with the Rangers’ lineup enough to win four of seven. Rangers in six, even baking in at least one bullpen meltdown by Texas."
 

 

Wednesday, October 25, 2023

Newsletter Excerpt, October 25, 2023 -- "Good Enough"

This is a preview of the Joe Sheehan Baseball Newsletter, an e-mail newsletter about all things baseball, featuring analysis and opinion about the game on and off the field from the perspective of the informed outsider.

You can subscribe to the newsletter for one year for $79.95 using your PayPal account or major credit card.

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"Even with all that, the Phillies came tantalizingly close. In the bottom of the seventh, Bryce Harper came up with the tying run on first, down 4-2, against Kevin Ginkel. He worked the count to 2-1 then jumped on a four-seamer up and out over the plate, hammering it at 107.6 mph off the bat. He just missed it, though, and the ball landed in Alek Thomas’s glove, just 331 feet from the plate. The difference between F8 and pandemonium couldn’t have been an inch. It may not have been millimeters, as Eno Sarris pointed out. Harper said, “He beat my barrel by a tenth of a second.” (h/t Martin Frank)

"It’s at-bats like that why I reject all the woo we attach to the postseason. The Phillies didn’t go 7-1 to start October because of vibes and chemistry and they didn’t lose because they’re chokers. They won because the millimeters, the tenths of a second that separate F8 and HR went their way for two weeks, and then they lost when they didn’t for a week. That’s not character, and it’s barely skill. It’s just baseball."

 

Tuesday, October 24, 2023

Newsletter Excerpt, October 24, 2023 -- "Adolis"

 

This is a preview of the Joe Sheehan Baseball Newsletter, an e-mail newsletter about all things baseball, featuring analysis and opinion about the game on and off the field from the perspective of the informed outsider.

You can subscribe to the newsletter for one year for $79.95 using your PayPal account or major credit card.

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"I go through all this because dragging the Cardinals into this story is a distraction. Adolis Garcia wasn’t some hidden gem the team gave up on, he was a 26-year-old prospect with terrible plate discipline. The Rangers didn’t know something the Cardinals didn’t; they were set to part ways with him about a year later. They traded for Khris Davis, gave Garcia’s 40-man roster spot to Mike Foltynewicz, and made Ronald Flipping Guzman an outfielder instead of playing Garcia. Those are not the actions of a team that knows something.

"It’s OK to say a team got lucky. It’s OK to recognize that the Rangers didn’t have a plan for Garcia, and that they just fell into a four-win player because he was the last ambulatory outfielder in three states. The Rangers got lucky because Garcia made himself into a star. Oh, it wasn’t immediate. That 24/3 K/BB? It was 36/4 in September of that year. Garcia, though, had power and speed and an arm, what we might have called a “tools goof” in my Prospectus days."

Monday, October 23, 2023

Newsletter Excerpt, October 23, 2023 -- "Three Pitches"

 

This is a preview of the Joe Sheehan Baseball Newsletter, an e-mail newsletter about all things baseball, featuring analysis and opinion about the game on and off the field from the perspective of the informed outsider.

You can subscribe to the newsletter for one year for $79.95 using your PayPal account or major credit card.

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"The problem with Dubon became apparent on the very first pitch. Leclerc was being asked to get five outs. He was making his first appearance since allowing the series-changing homer. He’d walked Tucker on five pitches. The bases were loaded, the crowd was going nuts...

...and Dubon swung at a first-pitch cutter that was so far left you can’t read about it in Texas schools."

Newsletter Excerpt, October 22, 2023 -- "A Respite"

 

This is a preview of the Joe Sheehan Baseball Newsletter, an e-mail newsletter about all things baseball, featuring analysis and opinion about the game on and off the field from the perspective of the informed outsider.

You can subscribe to the newsletter for one year for $79.95 using your PayPal account or major credit card.

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"The NLCS now looks like a sweep interrupted rudely by Craig Kimbrel. Kimbrel has allowed four runs in two innings, taking both losses; all other Phillies pitchers have allowed eight runs in 39 1/3 frames. The Phillies have outscored the Diamondbacks 27-12, and have led for almost the entirety of the series."

Friday, October 20, 2023

Joe Sheehan Newsletter, October 20, 2023 -- "Finally"

 

This is a preview of the Joe Sheehan Baseball Newsletter, an e-mail newsletter about all things baseball, featuring analysis and opinion about the game on and off the field from the perspective of the informed outsider.

You can subscribe to the newsletter for one year for $79.95 using your PayPal account or major credit card.

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The Joe Sheehan Newsletter: Finally
Vol. 15, No. 119
October 20, 2023

After more than two weeks of games in which tension was hard to find, we finally got what we needed. The Phillies and Diamondbacks played a taut pitchers’ duel, scoreless into the sixth, 1-1 into the ninth, and won on a walk-off hit. All of those are firsts for the 2023 postseason.

The top-50-prospect version of Brandon Pfaadt showed up, the one we saw flashes of for a start or two at a time during the season. Pfaadt wasn’t overpowering, sitting 94 with his four-seam fastball, and his pitch characteristics were close to what they were all year. Pfaadt did a good job working up in the zone with a high-spin four-seamer, and then down with his sweeper and sinker. The Phillies could not touch him. They swung 36 times and put just nine balls in play, most of them unthreatening. The Phillies hit just two balls off Pfaadt at 100 mph or better. Pfaadt struck out nine of the 18 batters he faced. This, mind you, is the lineup that had been ripping up the NL bracket for two weeks. 

With all that, Pfaadt was pulled with two outs in the sixth inning, and rightly so.

See, intra-game performance isn’t predictive. It’s counterintuitive, but five shutout innings doesn’t make a pitcher more likely to throw a sixth shutout inning. In other words, everyone is dealing until they’re not.

This particular point has come up again and again in recent years, with managers who make the correct decision to bring in a pitcher more likely to get the next out absolutely ravaged by fans and media who want every playoff game to be played like it’s 1967. It’s the hardest notion to get past and it queers every conversation, because the people who see the pitcher lifted assume he would have thrown another three shutout innings in every case.

There’s a long version of this argument that dates to Game Six of the 2020 World Series and Kevin Cash’s decision to remove Blake Snell. The short version:

-- Every pitcher is subject to the third-time-through penalty (TTP). Due to a combination of familiarity and fatigue, batters hit pitchers better the more they see them on a given day. The TTP isn’t new, only our awareness of it. Your favorite workhorses from the 1960s and 1970s were subject to it as well. 

-- Reliever armies. Back in those halcyon days, bullpens were lightly populated, and mostly by pitchers not good enough to be starters. Leaving Bob Gibson or Tom Seaver or even their lessers in the game made sense because notwithstanding the TTP, they were better than the alternatives. That is no longer the case. Most teams have five or six pitchers who, brought in fresh, are more likely to get the next out than the starter is.

This is a different conversation in the regular season, of course, when you have to manage six games a week and get to 1440 innings a year. It’s also a different conversation with the top tier of starters in the game -- which is why we didn’t talk about this much when Zac Gallen was left in for the third time through in Game One.

-- The manager doesn’t get paid for losing in an aesthetically pleasing way. This is maybe the most important point. It’s not Torey Lovullo’s job to make 65-year-old ballwriters happy. It’s his job to win the game. 

Those are the table stakes for these decisions in the playoffs. Specific to last night, Lovullo was in the same place he’d been on Tuesday, when he let Merrill Kelly face the top of the Phillies’ order a third time and watched the game get away from him. At last night’s decision point, he knew that three of the next five batters would be left-handed and that he had multiple effective left-handed options at his disposal. He also knew that Pfaadt, in his rookie season, didn’t have a third-time-through penalty so much as a third-time-through flagrant foul:

Let’s Not Go, Brandon (Brandon Pfaadt’s times around splits)

          AVG   OBP   SLG
First    .268  .298  .405
Second   .243  .323  .536
Third    .397  .413  .779


Lovullo gave his team the best chance to win by not letting Pfaadt face Kyle Schwarber, Trea Turner, and Bryce Harper a third time. His bullpen gave him 3 1/3 innings of one-run ball after that, backing up his belief. 

Rob Thomson did the same thing, of course, lifting Ranger Suarez after 16 outs and using his deep bullpen to get to the ninth inning, where he made his only mistake. From Tuesday:

I said going into the Division Series that I didn’t trust Kimbrel, and while it’s worked out for the Phillies so far, I stand by the idea that using him in max-leverage spots is going to blow up on them at some point.

Craig Kimbrel doesn’t have the control or the swing-and-miss stuff he did at his career peak, and it bit him last night. He fell behind Lourdes Gurriel Jr. with three straight fastballs out of the zone, then after battling back to 3-2 could not put Gurriel away, eventually walking him on eight pitches. After a steal, Pavin Smith hit a weak grounder for an infield single. Three batters later, Ketel Marte ended the game with a single to center. Kimbrel faced five batters, walked two, got just three swinging strikes on 24 pitches, and given three two-strike counts couldn’t put a single batter away. In five playoff appearances, Kimbrel has walked four while striking out just two. 

Kimbrel is probably the Phillies’ fourth-best reliever right now, depending on how much you believe in Orion Kerkering’s stuff. (I do, a lot.) It’s one thing to give Kimbrel three-run leads with three outs to go; most pitchers, and some of you reading this, could escape safely in that spot. Asking Kimbrel to pitch in a tied ninth inning on the road, though, is taking on too much risk. I do not expect Rob Thomson to switch horses at this point, however, so Kimbrel will continue to be a problem for this team in big moments. 

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Stolen from Jayson Stark (and updated). In the NLCS, Ketel Marte has six hits. All his teammates combined have 11. Marte was stranded after hitting each of his two doubles last night, yet when given a chance with runners on in the ninth, won the game. 

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If you liked two starters being pulled with shutouts going, you’re going to love today. The Diamondbacks are using an opener, lefty reliever Joe Mantiply, an excellent choice as Rob Thomson won’t go away from Kyle Schwarber atop his lineup. Game script will dictate what happens next, but however Lovullo gets there, Ryne Nelson likely gets tasked with pitching the most innings. For the Phillies, rookie lefty Christopher Sanchez starts in what will likely be a tandem with Taijuan Walker. Sanchez, I would imagine, will go through Corbin Carroll’s second at-bat, assuming Carroll again bats second in front of six right-handed batters. 

One thing to watch tonight, given the anticipated lack of length from the starters, is that both teams used their A bullpens yesterday. You have to play to win today’s game, especially if you’re Lovullo, but any pitches today by the top relievers on either team could make them unavailable for Game Five.


ALCS

It looked like another early TKO when the Astros went up 3-0 four batters in, and then it looked like a barnburner after homers by Adolis Garcia and Corey Seager got the Rangers back to a 3-3 tie.

Jose Abreu, though, ended the drama with a three-run bomb off Cody Bradford, and that was that. The Astros got 6 2/3 innings of shutout relief from their bullpen, which struck out five and allowed just one walk. They’ve tied the ALCS and turned it into a best-of-three in which they have home-field advantage. So far, the Series has played out like the 2019 World Series, which the Astros lost to the Nationals when the road team won every game.

The difference in each team’s pitching depth showed up in Game Four. Andrew Heaney didn’t get out of the first, and he and Dane Dunning combined to allow six runs on seven hits and four walks in just 3 1/3 innings. Bradford gave up the big hit, and both Will Smith and Martin Perez were touched up late in the game. The Astros leaned on Ryne Stanek to get them out of a jam in the third, which took him a single pitch, then turned to Hunter Brown for length and got three shutout frames. The Astros just have more good pitchers than the Rangers do. 

Today’s game is a rematch of Game One, with Justin Verlander taking on Jordan Montgomery. Verlander had a quality start in the box score Sunday night. Watching him, though, he seemed reluctant to go after hitters, leaning on his slider for chases out of the zone. Verlander threw 47 fastballs, got 27 swings, but not a single swing-and-miss. The third time through the lineup Verlander was reaching back for more and it wasn’t there, with late-game fastballs struggling to reach 95 mph. The mythos of Verlander has always been that he has that extra gear in the late innings. At 40, that gear may be gone.

Dusty Baker was able to win Game Four without using Ryan Pressly, Hector Neris, or Bryan Abreu, and Stanek threw just one pitch. This may be the day to ask Verlander to go all out for 18 batters and turn the game over to the bullpen. 

The Rangers send Warren Sp...sorry, Jordan Montgomery...to the mound. Montgomery, a perfectly adequate #3 over his seven-year career, has morphed into a Hall of Famer over the last month. Since September 13, Montgomery has made seven starts. One was a clunker against the Orioles in the Division Series. In the other six, he’s allowed two runs in 40 1/3 innings, no more than one in any start. In three playoff starts, he’s walked just two of the 75 batters he’s faced.

One thing to watch is whether Montgomery brings back his four-seamer. He had gone away from it during the season, then after being traded to the Rangers used it more, including in his first two playoff starts -- about 28% of the time and pretty much equal with his sinker and curve. In Game One of the ALCS, though, he threw the pitch just 15 times while leaning on that sinker and curve to great effect. The Astros hit just two balls with an exit velocity of 100 mph against Montgomery, and they got to a three-ball count just three times in seven innings. 

The Rangers need that version of Montgomery one more time. We’ve seen what the Astros have done to the back of Texas’s staff, so Montgomery has to get Bruce Bochy to the relievers he trusts -- Josh Sborz, Aroldis Chapman, and Jose LeClerc. None of them has pitched since Monday, and there’s an offday Saturday, so if anyone but those four pitch, something’s probably gone wrong. There is no such thing as “low leverage” in a best-of-three, so Bochy has no business messing around with his weaker relievers today. 

 

Thursday, October 19, 2023

Newsletter Excerpt, October 19, 2023 -- "ALCS Notes"

This is a preview of the Joe Sheehan Baseball Newsletter, an e-mail newsletter about all things baseball, featuring analysis and opinion about the game on and off the field from the perspective of the informed outsider.

You can subscribe to the newsletter for one year for $79.95 using your PayPal account or major credit card.

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"The Rangers weren’t able to win, but their comeback did get Baker to use his A bullpen in a game his team once led 5-0, so that’s a small victory. This season, Hector Neris and Bryan Abreu were about as effective on a second day as they were the rest of the time. Ryan Pressly was considerably more hittable when working back-to-back days, allowing a .475 SLG in those 15 games, against .318 the rest of the time. Just something to file away if he’s protecting a late lead tonight."

 
 

Wednesday, October 18, 2023

Newsletter Excerpt, October 18, 2023 -- "Another Early Knockout"

 This is a preview of the Joe Sheehan Baseball Newsletter, an e-mail newsletter about all things baseball, featuring analysis and opinion about the game on and off the field from the perspective of the informed outsider.

You can subscribe to the newsletter for one year for $79.95 using your PayPal account or major credit card.

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"The team that scores first is now 4-0 in the LCS round. We haven’t seen a lead change in almost a week, and we have seen a total of two lead changes after the fourth inning in 26 playoff games. The team leading at the end of four innings is 23-2 so far. The single most remarkable statistic of these playoffs is that not a single game has been tied -- not even for one batter -- after the fifth inning."

Tuesday, October 17, 2023

Newsletter Excerpt, October 17, 2023 -- "Thinking Inside the Box"

 

This is a preview of the Joe Sheehan Baseball Newsletter, an e-mail newsletter about all things baseball, featuring analysis and opinion about the game on and off the field from the perspective of the informed outsider.

You can subscribe to the newsletter for one year for $79.95 using your PayPal account or major credit card.

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"Mostly, though, it’s because the war has been won. When I first started writing about the importance of short-sequence offense in the playoffs, back in Sports Illustrated in 2013, the dominant analysis was that you had to play small ball to win in the postseason. This was gospel, the value of productive outs, one-run strategies, going base to base. The research showed that, no, you had to play to score as many runs as possible on as few swings as possible. Hitting homers was more important, not less important, in the playoffs. The percentage of runs that score on homers goes up in October. The winning percentage of the team that hits more homers goes up in October. "