Great read. Love to hear all the nuances that the average fan never knows about.
Great read. Love to hear all the nuances that the average fan never knows about.
Excellent discussion. Thanks for posting.
"Rounding 3rd and heading for home, good night everybody"
This should be in the Broxton thread
DL: Can you talk a little more about Broxton’s cutter?
RH: We worked on it. I hadn’t caught him much, so I said, “Try some stuff, do a few different things.” He pulled out the cutter and I was like, “Dude, you have to use that.” The next outing he used it once or twice, and then a few more times the next, and after awhile it was probably his second-best pitch. He throws it in the low 90s. Not in the 80s, but the 90s. It’s hard. We were getting a lot of broken bats with it.
He’s nasty. He’s a veteran guy who’s been around and has pitched in some big games. He’s pitched in some big situations as a closer. He’s a professional with a big arm, and it’s hard to go wrong with a guy like that.
I always find it interesting when people talk about Sean Marshall and how he doesn't have dominating stuff. It's like, ok... well then... I know it's not conventionally dominant stuff, but we're not talking about a low K, low BB guy here. He's not Bronson Arroyo. While he may go about it differently, he strikes out more than a guy per inning and does a fantastic job of keeping the ball in the yard.
I really want to understand why Marshall's dominant results somehow won't hold up in the 9th inning simply because his stuff is different. I totally get not wanting to have a guy who is effective in the way most soft tosser's are, inducing lots of weak contact. But Marshall is a strikeout pitcher with plus command and extreme groundball tendencies. And while he has a platoon split, he's still very effective effective against RH.
Is it a function of his stuff being effective because it takes advantage of a lack of concentration instead of a deficit in physical ability, meaning that when a guy who comes to the plate with greater focus he can be more effective against Marshall whereas that focus won't give him an extra advantage against Broxton? That's the only thing I can think of. Because the whole "Guys aren’t really going to worry about getting beat, so they can take advantage of his mistakes a little better." doesn't actually seem to show up in his results.
Games are won on run differential -- scoring more than your opponent. Runs are runs, scored or prevented they all count the same. Worry about scoring more and allowing fewer, not which positions contribute to which side of the equation or how "consistent" you are at your current level of performance.
I don't know why, but Marshall has logged enough 9th inning numbers to demonstrate he is pedestrian in that inning. What's weird is that his K rate is double what it is elsewhere, but he's clearly getting hit harder by batters in the 9th inning. http://www.baseball-reference.com/pl...ear=Career&t=p My guess is has something to do with batter's approach in that final inning than it does Marshall's stuff. Anecdotally, observing the 9th inning of hundreds of games over the past several years, I am convinced the 9th inning is a different animal than the rest of the game. There is a mystical element, which I think leads to there being some "artistry" to the closer, so the "scientific" answer that "any above average reliever could pitch the 9th inning with similar results as A, B or C closer" doesn't adequately explain away the mystery.
Last edited by traderumor; 12-20-2012 at 02:10 PM.
"Rounding 3rd and heading for home, good night everybody"
Marshall has only pitched 55 innings in the 9th inning in his career -- which is not nearly enough of a sample size to prove anything. His .387 BABIP in the 9th inning is freakishly unlucky and highly unlikely to continue.
That's not far from the equivalent of a full season of closing, so I don't think it is easily written off as too small a sample size. It is also nearly a quarter of his total innings pitched in innings 7-9. I'm also not sure how you can claim "too small a sample size for conclusions," then claim BABIP is "freakishly unlucky"???????
There appears to be something going on.
Just for grins, define an adequate sample size for this analysis, then explain your rationale.
Last edited by traderumor; 12-20-2012 at 02:12 PM.
"Rounding 3rd and heading for home, good night everybody"
Well, it's hard to take this as 100% gospel, but I recall after Marshal was pulled from closing that he said he was more comfortable with being a setup guy, because the curve was a "feel" pitch and he could throw it better when he was in a more regular role as a setup guy (as opposed to a closer that might go 4 days without pitching).
Marshall did seem to pitch a lot better after he was removed from the closer role. I'm not saying that he couldn't handle closing, but it's possible that Dusty and him did have a talk that put Marshall on an optimum schedule and his results improved.
I think Marshal could close, the potential problem is that if he does benefit from a normal schedule, you'd have to pitch him in non-save situations. You'd also have to have a 2nd guy to close to maintain Marshall's schedule too.
Maybe this conclusion is way off base (Sample size), but based on what Marshall said, I think it's plausible.
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I think Marshall would be fine as a secondary closer, when the primary closer is not available. Otherwise, I think his L/R splits work against him in an everyday role. He is not a LOOGY, but there is a significant dropoff against righties. In the closer role of Dusty, you pitch the 9th regardless of batter hand. It just seems like Marshall's value is higher with Dusty's bullpen usage patterns to have him available to get out tough lefties in the late innings. Where Marshall is more valuable than a LOOGY is that he is not awful against righties and can stay in the game when the lefties are split up.
And we can debate whether Dusty uses his bullpen properly until the cows come home, but this is where the GM earns part of his keep--to give his manager guys that fit the way he uses the bullpen.
"Rounding 3rd and heading for home, good night everybody"
Marshall's 9th inning problems are related to the days where his command of his curve isn't there. If he doesn't have the command of the hook right handers OWN him. The problem with the ninth inning situation and Marshall in Cincinnati is that Dusty uses the dedicated closer model. He doesn't like to make changes in the ninth inning. If Marshall is struggling in the eighth you pull him and bring someone else in. In the ninth, the options, if there isn't a Chapman or Broxton sitting down there, suddenly look like Jose Arredondo and Logan Ondrusek. Dusty will stick with his guy. Suddenly Marshall is standing there without his only true plus pitch, trying to make do on an average fastball.
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That's always been my impression. I still think he would do just fine at closer, but he's probably more effective if he gets regular work. Leaving him available earlier also allows Dusty to match him up a bit more. Marshall's no loogy, but it's nice having him available to mow down some tough lefties late in the game.
Awesome interview overall. I wanna see what Mez can do, but that interview seems to back up the anecdotal evidence that Hanigan is a vital part of the pitching staff's success. That's definitely gonna be a tough situation to manage.
I'm right there with you.
He's a ground ball pitcher, and as a matter of sheer coincidence some of those grounders had eyes while he was slotted as the closer. The chorus of "He can't close!" rang out, Redszone proclaimed the deal to acquire him too steep, and by early May he was ousted.
Baffling.
"Baseball players are smarter than football players. How often do you see a baseball team penalized for too many men on the field?" ~ Jim Bouton
Hanigan is one of those guys that some Reds fans won't truly appreciate until he's gone. He has The Scott Rolen Effect on this team, but the difference is Hanigan is still in his prime. He's a "young" 32 for an MLB catcher since there's not that much wear and tear on his body. The guy is a complete difference-maker as a leader and especially defensively (including handling the pitching staff). Also a solid offensive weapon.
He is the "Scott Rolen" of catchers. Not with the offensive power of Rolen, but everything else is similar.
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