Jump to content

TT: Dean Kremer - Why is he having success, what's different, is it sustainable?


Tony-OH

Recommended Posts

4 minutes ago, Sports Guy said:

His first pitch str% is 61.6%.  It was 55.7% in 2021 and 42% in 2020.  League average is 54.2%.
 

His P/PA are also better than league average.  He is under 3.8.  He has been above 4 the previous 2 years.

Of course we have to bear in mind that we are under 100 IP in total in his career, so these stats have to be taken with a grain of salt.

Word, good research.  Fangraphs, I'm assuming?

Yep, it's all still a small sample size but at least things are trending in the right direction for him.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, Moose Milligan said:

Word, good research.  Fangraphs, I'm assuming?

Yep, it's all still a small sample size but at least things are trending in the right direction for him.

Baseball reference.  

And yea, that’s what we are looking for.  Improvements.  The improvements are showing, both in traditional and non traditional numbers.

There are also reasons to think he will regress but at least progress is being shown and that’s great to see.

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I like seeing that much red on the Savant page!  Looks like the pitch mix changes has helped us FB be more effective.

15 hours ago, PHRESH said:

Ok, so it's up a little, but probably a negligible amount. 

A change from 60% to 65% is an 8+% improvement.  8+ more strikes per 100 pitches.  2ish per IP.  In a game were failure 7 out of 10 at bats is HOF material that type of “marginal” improvement/variance on the most pivotal piece of the game (throwing strikes) moves the needle on a lot of downstream stats.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, btdart20 said:

A change from 60% to 65% is an 8+% improvement.  8+ more strikes per 100 pitches.  2ish per IP.  In a game were failure 7 out of 10 at bats is HOF material that type of “marginal” improvement/variance on the most pivotal piece of the game (throwing strikes) moves the needle on a lot of downstream stats.

take-it-easy-relax.gif

Lol yeah, at first glance, a 5% increase didn't seem like much, but it's actually a pretty nice jump. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, Matt Bennett said:

Another great start from Kremer, although seems like the defense helped him out quite a bit. I’m wondering if Dean is Bruce Zimmermanning us right now. 

Getting a little 2012 Chris Tillman + Miguel Gonzalez vibes to Tyler Wells + Dean Kremer??

Wells and Kremer are certainly the top two starting pitchers in the rotation right now. Nice to have guys in the rotation that you kind of expect to have a good start, not hope to have a good start.

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Pitching is endlessly fascinating.   The pitchers who are consistently good are few and far between, and even those guys can throw a stinker once in a while.

Kremer looked very good in 2020 in his first few major league starts, closed the year with a stinker, sucked all last year and was even shaky in the minors, and now looks like the guy we saw in his first few starts in 2020.   Will it continue?   Beats me, but I hope so!   I appreciate Tony’s attempt to break it down with pitch analysis, but in the end, we don’t know if the guy will keep executing his pitches or not.   Crossing my fingers!
 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It seemed like he got a little lucky last night, but at the end of the day 7 scoreless is 7 scoreless. However I am refusing to let myself believe that "he's good now" or anything like that. Just hope it lasts as long as possible, because we really need him right now. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

23 hours ago, PHRESH said:

Lol yeah, at first glance, a 5% increase didn't seem like much, but it's actually a pretty nice jump. 

So we're talking about going from 60% to 65% strikes, a 5% difference. But the balls also decrease from 40% to 35%, another 5% improvement. Is this double counting? If so, it's like playing head to head with an opponent, and any win or loss has double the impact. Or is this math twist off base??

 

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Kremer is a great example of that a pitcher can go back down to AAA and work on things.  It's not all or nothing when they first come back.  I think we'll see the same from Zimmerman.  We should keep this in mind with Bradish as well, and possibly with inserting Akin back into the rotation.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

56 minutes ago, now said:

So we're talking about going from 60% to 65% strikes, a 5% difference. But the balls also decrease from 40% to 35%, another 5% improvement. Is this double counting? If so, it's like playing head to head with an opponent, and any win or loss has double the impact. Or is this math twist off base??

 

It’s fair enough.  And I think one has to consider that in the majors this year, nobody throws more than 75.7% or less than 58.4% strikes (30 inning minimum).  So, you’re not really working on a 100-point range, it’s more like 18% top to bottom.     65% strikes is about a top 35% strike-thrower, 60% is a bottom 20% strike-thrower.   So, that’s a very big difference, relative to other pitchers.  

  • Upvote 1
  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, Frobby said:

It’s fair enough.  And I think one has to consider that in the majors this year, nobody throws more than 75.7% or less than 58.4% strikes (30 inning minimum).  So, you’re not really working on a 100-point range, it’s more like 18% top to bottom.     65% strikes is about a top 35% strike-thrower, 60% is a bottom 20% strike-thrower.   So, that’s a very big difference, relative to other pitchers.  

Good research, milking that 5% improvement for even more value added! :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 6/29/2022 at 10:11 AM, sportsfan8703 said:

Kremer is a great example of that a pitcher can go back down to AAA and work on things.  It's not all or nothing when they first come back.  I think we'll see the same from Zimmerman.  We should keep this in mind with Bradish as well, and possibly with inserting Akin back into the rotation.  

Just an aside: When we look at how much pitching talent we have in AAA or AA and are checking stats and “success” at those levels, it could be wise to consider how much they’re often working on things rather than trying to just pitch a good game.

I mean, pitching success is often based on pitch sequences, on knowing what to throw to a hitter, etc. Whereas when you’re working on things, you might be ignoring that quite a bit in order to get the desired reps in of a given pitch or set of pitches that aren’t your strength at that moment, hence trying to work on them.  Right?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 hours ago, justD said:

Just an aside: When we look at how much pitching talent we have in AAA or AA and are checking stats and “success” at those levels, it could be wise to consider how much they’re often working on things rather than trying to just pitch a good game.

I mean, pitching success is often based on pitch sequences, on knowing what to throw to a hitter, etc. Whereas when you’re working on things, you might be ignoring that quite a bit in order to get the desired reps in of a given pitch or set of pitches that aren’t your strength at that moment, hence trying to work on them.  Right?

It also unfortunately goes the other way were success at hose levels may not mean success at the major league level. That's why you gotta scout them and look at how they are being successful. I wish statcast data was available for the general public on minor leaguers. Not sure why those are held as state secrets!

  • Upvote 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Posts

    • This has to be one of the funniest posts in the entire thread, maybe of all time.  
    • I've never been a big Stowers believer but I'd be happy to be wrong.  Dude deserves more at bats...I get it, it's a crowded situation but he's made the most of his at bats so far this year and has been mashing.   Going to be par for the course if he sits today after hitting a homer yesterday so I won't be surprised.  Gotta find out what you have in this dude though and so far he hasn't disappointed during this stretch in Baltimore.
    • You stopped just shy of Hunter Harvey (2013) and Marcus Stroman (2012).   The fact is, going back to 2000, of those 24 picks at #22, 16 were pitchers.  Not many success stories.  Kolten Wong is the only notable college position players.  Colson Montgomery (22) is a top prospect but hitting .223 at AAA and far from a sure thing.  Colton Emerson, a HS SS chosen last year gets rave reviews but he’s got a long way to go.    So, not many success stories no matter which demographic you go with.  Position players are always going to be safer.
    • It's  hard to say what Cowser or Stowers is or will be but I think Stowers deserves at least a couple of weeks of consistent ABs at this point. Cowser looks like he can't hit a breaking ball to save his life right now and after seeing a couple of those he swings right through the fastball. Stowers could be similar but let's find out. 
    • I wasn’t able to watch all of his first start but in his second start, Povich was really, really good at locating his fastball at or above the top of the zone and his curve at or below the zone. I think the fact that it’s not a great fastball may get hitters to still swing at it at a high rate there, and even though it’s not going to get the same whiffs as a better fastball he’s been super effective getting pop-ups with it (which are actually an even better outcome than a whiff!). That’s why his hard hit rate, barrel rate and xERA are so low - similar to Suarez (although Suarez gets whiffs up there too). If Povich can consistently do that, work in the cutter for strikes and get whiffs on the curve, I think he can be successful even if the fastball is lacking.  So far I’ve only really seen Povich use his sweeper against lefties, and that’s just fine. Even if the league is getting better at hitting them, that’s always going to be an effective pitch against leftie and it’s his only pitch with a heavy platoon advantage. He just needs some combination of the cutter and change to be effective in-zone pitches for him against righties because he’s going to need to live at the top border with his 4-seamer and that will make it harder to reliably get strikes that way.  (Btw, I don’t put too much stock on the Stuff+ grades for changeups. Anecdotally, there are really very few changeups that grade well by Stuff+, the ones that do are more the screwball variety than a classic straight change without the forceful pronation. They’re very reliant on location and IMO that’s easier when you’re just trying to deaden the pitch rather than pronante for movement.)
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...