Re: Mike Leake may be running on fumes...
Quote:
Originally Posted by
jojo
Not sure why you'd keep giving Arroyo credit due the defense behind him because you've certainly been shown multiple times so as to know better.
I give Arroyo credit for being a smart enough pitcher to know how to optimize the defense behind him. The Reds had plenty of pitchers who didn't know how to do that during his tenure.
Re: Mike Leake may be running on fumes...
Quote:
Originally Posted by
dougdirt
If Arroyo could optimize the defense behind him why would he ever give up a hit that wasn't a home run?
Arroyo turned things around because he stopped walking guys. That was on him and it was a very good step for him to take. But he doesn't have some way of getting guys to hit the ball at his defenders.
Thank you Mr. Literal.
Re: Mike Leake may be running on fumes...
Arroyo made an adjustment to increase the number of Ground Balls he allows and reduce the number of fly balls right around the time the Reds started putting more emphasis on defense, but the formula doesn't account for it, so it must be something out of his control and nothing he did. It was actually a rather stark reversal of those rates with the only exception being the year he was sick. I think Arroyo has a lot more to do with it than anyone who is a slave to the math wants to give him credit for.
Re: Mike Leake may be running on fumes...
Quote:
Originally Posted by
mth123
Arroyo made an adjustment to increase the number of Ground Balls he allows and reduce the number of fly balls right around the time the Reds started putting more emphasis on defense, but the formula doesn't account for it, so it must be something out of his control and nothing he did. It was actually a rather stark reversal of those rates with the only exception being the year he was sick. I think Arroyo has a lot more to do with it than anyone who is a slave to the math wants to give him credit for.
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Re: Mike Leake may be running on fumes...
I think it's a combination of regression and fatigue.
The thing about regression is that a player should not regress so much that his overall numbers balance out with his career averages. If a career 4.00 ERA pitchers has a 3.00 ERA in the first half of the season, he should not be expected to pitch a 5.00 ERA in the second half so that his numbers wind up around 4.00. He would, rather, be expected to pitch around a 4.00 ERA in the second half, giving him something like a 3.50 ERA.
Leake's August numbers certainly are, in part, attributed to regression. But the rough patch he's going through indicates probably some fatigue as well. He's a much better pitcher than his August numbers indicate.
Re: Mike Leake may be running on fumes...
Quote:
Originally Posted by
mth123
Arroyo made an adjustment to increase the number of Ground Balls he allows and reduce the number of fly balls right around the time the Reds started putting more emphasis on defense, but the formula doesn't account for it, so it must be something out of his control and nothing he did. It was actually a rather stark reversal of those rates with the only exception being the year he was sick. I think Arroyo has a lot more to do with it than anyone who is a slave to the math wants to give him credit for.
Re-examine the 2008/2009 seasons and reconsider whether such a narrative actually fits. Arroyo didn't begin to outperform his peripherals until the Reds defense was dramatically reshaped-this after the timeline envisioned through a prism of a slavish rejection of things other than era.
Re: Mike Leake may be running on fumes...
Quote:
Originally Posted by
jojo
Re-examine the 2008/2009 seasons and reconsider whether such a narrative actually fits. Arroyo didn't begin to outperform his peripherals until the Reds defense was dramatically reshaped-this after the timeline envisioned through a prism of a slavish rejection of things other than era.
Not looking at ERA nor am I slave to the hypothetical facsimile. Look at his batted ball types and note how fly ball percentages dropped from mid to low 40s to mid 30s and how Ground Balls increased from mid 30s to low to high 40s. Heck, he even said at the time he was working on increasing his ground ball rate.
http://www.fangraphs.com/statss.aspx...n=P#battedball
Re: Mike Leake may be running on fumes...
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Brutus
I think it's a combination of regression and fatigue.
The thing about regression is that a player should not regress so much that his overall numbers balance out with his career averages. If a career 4.00 ERA pitchers has a 3.00 ERA in the first half of the season, he should not be expected to pitch a 5.00 ERA in the second half so that his numbers wind up around 4.00. He would, rather, be expected to pitch around a 4.00 ERA in the second half, giving him something like a 3.50 ERA.
Leake's August numbers certainly are, in part, attributed to regression. But the rough patch he's going through indicates probably some fatigue as well. He's a much better pitcher than his August numbers indicate.
Your point about regression is one that I think people miss. It is exactly like you said, expected regression is pitching to your career numbers and your ability, not simply the opposite of how good/bad one has been.
Re: Mike Leake may be running on fumes...
Quote:
Originally Posted by
mth123
Not looking at ERA nor am I slave to the hypothetical facsimile. Look at his batted ball types and note how fly ball percentages dropped from mid to low 40s to mid 30s and how Ground Balls increased from mid 30s to low to high 40s. Heck, he even said at the time he was working on increasing his ground ball rate.
http://www.fangraphs.com/statss.aspx...n=P#battedball
I know what you were looking at and they (batted ball tendencies) changed before his ERA did and his ERA didn't change until Wayne radically altered the defense behind Arroyo.
And do you think it just might be possible that someone could argue that arroyo's ERA is significantly impacted by the Reds defense without being slavish?
Re: Mike Leake may be running on fumes...
Quote:
Originally Posted by
jojo
I know what you were looking at and they (batted ball tendencies) changed before his ERA did and his ERA didn't change until Wayne radically altered the defense behind Arroyo.
And do you think it just might be possible that someone could argue that arroyo's ERA is significantly impacted by the Reds defense without being slavish?
You mean 2008, the year when his walk rate, his HR/FB rate and his Line Drive rate all went to his Cincy highs (2011 health driven outlier excepted). Yeah, I'd say he made more bad pitches that year when he was changing his style and it showed up in his ERA. Once he figured it out, those rates stabilized.
Re: Mike Leake may be running on fumes...
Quote:
Originally Posted by
kaldaniels
Your point about regression is one that I think people miss. It is exactly like you said, expected regression is pitching to your career numbers and your ability, not simply the opposite of how good/bad one has been.
No one argued that regression meant his numbers would be equally skewed in a negative way beyond his peripherals in such a way as to balance out his unsustainably positively skewed numbers.
The argument is that as his luck metrics normalize back to his career norms, his era will fall in line with what one might expect from his peripherals. Sometimes it actually does balloon negatively because variation is a wild ride while sometimes it just takes a longer time of "normal" performance to dilute a few months of really good or really bad. The argument was simply that given a large enough sample size his numbers will regress to expected ones.
That's exactly what we're seeing. As his LOB% has tracked back toward the mean, and his HR/FB% and BABIP climb back to normal Leake, his ERA is moving toward the 4+ range that characterizes his history.
Re: Mike Leake may be running on fumes...
Quote:
Originally Posted by
mth123
You mean 2008, the year when his walk rate, his HR/FB rate and his Line Drive rate all went to his Cincy highs (2011 health driven outlier excepted). Yeah, I'd say he made more bad pitches that year when he was changing his style and it showed up in his ERA. Once he figured it out, those rates stabilized.
No. I meant the two seasons in which the Reds went from 24th worst defense in the majors to the 4th best defense in the majors and Arroyo's ERA dropped almost a run despite one of his worst K/BB ratios of his career.
Re: Mike Leake may be running on fumes...
Quote:
Originally Posted by
jojo
No. I meant the two seasons in which the Reds went from 24th worst defense in the majors to the 4th best defense in the majors and Arroyo's ERA dropped almost a run despite one of his worst K/BB ratios of his career.
Sure, the defense got better and Arroyo adjusted and became more of a ground ball pitcher. You don't think that adjustment mattered?
Re: Mike Leake may be running on fumes...
Quote:
Originally Posted by
mth123
Sure, the defense got better and Arroyo adjusted and became more of a ground ball pitcher. You don't think that adjustment mattered?
He adjusted to become more of a ground ball pitcher before the defense got better. It didn't impact his ERA until the defense got better. I think when a pitcher's game is predicated on inducing contact, the defense behind him matters a lot. And again, there is nothing slavish about that is there?
Re: Mike Leake may be running on fumes...
Quote:
Originally Posted by
jojo
I know what you were looking at and they (batted ball tendencies) changed before his ERA did and his ERA didn't change until Wayne radically altered the defense behind Arroyo.
And do you think it just might be possible that someone could argue that arroyo's ERA is significantly impacted by the Reds defense without being slavish?
Of course the better defense helped, but to argue that that explains everything is overly simplistic. There was a lot more to it.
1. Arroyo adjusted his pitching style to take advantage of the better defense, as mth123 has stated. Other Reds pitchers didn't benefit from that same defense, which supports this notion. Bailey underperformed his peripherals over those three seasons from 2009-2011. As did Harang his two years with the Reds during that period. Cueto didn't improve with the defense, until he adjusted his pitching style in 2011. And Volquez got much worse, despite the better defense. So it clearly wasn't just the defense, or else all the other starting pitchers would have benefited as well.
2. If you look closer, except for 2008 and 2011, Arroyo really didn't improve all that much. He was very similar in terms of how he compared to the rest of the league. Meaning his ERA went down as scoring went down across the league. From 2007-now, Arroyo has produced between a 105-111 ERA+ every year except for 2008 and 2011. So he hasn't improved that much, compared to the league. Scoring has just gone down everywhere.
So yeah, the Reds improved defense has helped Arroyo, but that's not the whole story, not even close.