Jump to content

Don't trade RLo.


wildcard

Recommended Posts

Not if you have a poor offense which the O's did last year. The guy who gives up 4 to 5 runs with the O's last year is a loser more times then not. The guy who gives up 3 or less 20 times is a 15 game winner.

But the offense has no affect on how good the pitcher is pitching, only on wether he gets the win or not. Which is why wins are meaningless.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 118
  • Created
  • Last Reply
Because the guy who gets bombed in 1/5th of his starts will win about 0% of those starts.

the guy who gets bombed 20 or 30% of the time will win almost none of those games

Hey Jon, can you tell me a single scenario in which the starting pitcher who gives up 7 ER in 3 IP gets a win? Last I checked, a starter has to go 5 IP to get a win. :P

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hey Jon, can you tell me a single scenario in which the starting pitcher who gives up 7 ER in 3 IP gets a win? Last I checked, a starter has to go 5 IP to get a win. :P

Yes, it could happen in the World Baseball Classic, or the All Star Game! :)

Also, in a rain-shortened five-inning game a starting pitcher could get the win allowing 7 ER in 4 IP.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

In most cases I would agree that a 4.90 stinks. And it is not wonderful in RLo case. But in 2005 he:

Pitched 17 games where he when at least 6 innings and allows 3 or less runs - thus the 15 wins

Plus 3 games where he went between 5 to 6 innings and allowed 3 for less runs

Pitched 15 games where he allowed 4 or more runs (sometimes as many as 10 runs)

I would say he deserved the 15 wins, he earned them.

And he deserved the 4.90 because he had 15 bad games.

All in all he was a decent starter that most teams would like to have in the bottom half of their rotation.

This is why there's a statistic known as Neutral Wins. It takes a look at a pitcher's games and assumes that the team scores a prorated league average amount of runs over the innings that the pitcher pitched. It then looks at how many earned runs the pitcher allowed and determines if the pitcher deserved a win, a loss, or a no-decision.

Rodrigo Lopez's actual record in 2005 was 15-12. His neutral record was 11-16. That tells you exactly what kind of a pitcher he was, from a wins and losses perspective, and it tells you exactly how lucky he was.

For his career, before this season, Lopez had a record of 51-43, but he had a Neutral W-L of 47-47.

I've got another one for you guys:

The pitching equivilent of Runs Created Above Average is Runs Saved Above Average. This uses the Runs Created formula to show how much better or worse than the average major leaguer a pitcher is.

To this point in the season, guess who isthe worst pitcher in the Major Leagues?

1 Rodrigo Lopez -29

2 Josh Towers -28

3 Carlos Silva -22

4T Jeff Weaver -21

4T Brian Moehler -21

6T Joel Pineiro -20

6T Mark Mulder -20

8T Seth McClung -19

8T Jason Marquis -19

8T Jeff Suppan -19

11T Bruce Chen -17

Yes, that's correct. Rodrigo Lopez has been the worst pitcher in the Majors so far in 2006. Why? Well, he continues to be given starts despite his atrocious performance. Chen might be worse in the innings he pitches, but he's not being given as many innings.

So if we had just replaced Lopez with a league average pitcher, we'd have 29 more Runs Saved, which, if I'm not mistaken, equates to about 3 more wins on the season.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think this is a dead issue. Lopez got by in the past but we're seeing him come apart. Yeah he has some good starts in him, as we've seen a few times this season but he gets shelled a lot too. Penn and Loewen each have better stuff with higher ceilings. Why would we want to deny them any longer because we want to keep Lopez? :eek:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

R. Lopez and the bullpen

Someone mentioned he was upset when he was there but if I remember it was because he was pitching pretty well and was bumped out by Bedard. He was pissed in my mind because he thought he deserved to be a starter. I think he needs to be traded, but until then or if he doesn't put him in the bullpen. How can he argue it this time with the way he has pitched?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

R. Lopez and the bullpen

Someone mentioned he was upset when he was there but if I remember it was because he was pitching pretty well and was bumped out by Bedard. He was pissed in my mind because he thought he deserved to be a starter. I think he needs to be traded, but until then or if he doesn't put him in the bullpen. How can he argue it this time with the way he has pitched?

He needs to be a SP until he is traded. If for some reason he is here after the deadline, then yes he needs to be out of the rotation so Loewen and Penn can get in.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think that's a little misleading. Because the guy who gets bombed in 1/5th of his starts will win about 0% of those starts. He'll win some percent of the others, but that percentage will be less than 100. Let's say 60. In 30 starts that's 14 wins.

Pitcher #2... let's say he wins 50% of his starts where he allows four runs, but 35% of the ones where he allows five runs. That's 14 wins.

Maybe the details of that scenerio aren't exactly right, but the point is the guy who gets bombed 20 or 30% of the time will win almost none of those games, while the guy who just allows 4-5 runs a start will win half of those. I think the 4.90 is a pretty good measure.

Plus the guy that gets bombed that often will force the bullpen into early action too often.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Stat guys are never gonna think anything good about Rodrigo. They're just not. He wins more games than the stats say he should. If you look at stats, you conclude he's a fairly rotten pitcher. The only way you can possibly think he's any good is to watch him pitch. If you do that, then what you see is that he has a few bad games, some ok-games, a some really, really good games.

Personally, I'm not all that worried about his couple bad starts since May. You lose by 1, or you lose by 6, you still lose. I like it that, since his Ramon experiment ended, he has given the team a good chance to win a whole lot more than he hasn't. Plus, he's pitched a couple of real gems too.

I like giving Loewen and Penn some starts up here. I also like having Rodrigo around as Plan B. All the stats in the world aren't gonna change my mind about that, simply because I've seen him pitch very well lately.

I believe that some of the folks who rely on stats and who don't think much of Rodrigo also watch him pitch. I'm *not* saying that anybody who doesn't like him doesn't watch baseball. But I do believe that some of the people who are blasting him usually don't even bother to watch the games, all they do is look at box scores and think they know what happened. I don't know how somebody can think they're a fan and not watch baseball games, that doesn't make any sense to me.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Stat guys are never gonna think anything good about Rodrigo. They're just not. He wins more games than the stats say he should. If you look at stats, you conclude he's a fairly rotten pitcher. The only way you can possibly think he's any good is to watch him pitch. If you do that, then what you see is that he has a few bad games, some ok-games, a some really, really good games.

Personally, I'm not all that worried about his couple bad starts since May. You lose by 1, or you lose by 6, you still lose. I like it that, since his Ramon experiment ended, he has given the team a good chance to win a whole lot more than he hasn't. Plus, he's pitched a couple of real gems too.

I like giving Loewen and Penn some starts up here. I also like having Rodrigo around as Plan B. All the stats in the world aren't gonna change my mind about that, simply because I've seen him pitch very well lately.

I believe that some of the folks who rely on stats and who don't think much of Rodrigo also watch him pitch. I'm *not* saying that anybody who doesn't like him doesn't watch baseball. But I do believe that some of the people who are blasting him usually don't even bother to watch the games, all they do is look at box scores and think they know what happened. I don't know how somebody can think they're a fan and not watch baseball games, that doesn't make any sense to me.

So, how much do you plan to offer Lopez this winter when the he's goes to arbitration for 2007 because I don't see the ballclub and Boras agreeing to terms? Keep in mind, that he made $3.75m this and his agent is Scott Boras.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Stat guys are never gonna think anything good about Rodrigo. They're just not. He wins more games than the stats say he should. If you look at stats, you conclude he's a fairly rotten pitcher. The only way you can possibly think he's any good is to watch him pitch. If you do that, then what you see is that he has a few bad games, some ok-games, a some really, really good games.

Personally, I'm not all that worried about his couple bad starts since May. You lose by 1, or you lose by 6, you still lose. I like it that, since his Ramon experiment ended, he has given the team a good chance to win a whole lot more than he hasn't. Plus, he's pitched a couple of real gems too.

I like giving Loewen and Penn some starts up here. I also like having Rodrigo around as Plan B. All the stats in the world aren't gonna change my mind about that, simply because I've seen him pitch very well lately.

I believe that some of the folks who rely on stats and who don't think much of Rodrigo also watch him pitch. I'm *not* saying that anybody who doesn't like him doesn't watch baseball. But I do believe that some of the people who are blasting him usually don't even bother to watch the games, all they do is look at box scores and think they know what happened. I don't know how somebody can think they're a fan and not watch baseball games, that doesn't make any sense to me.

I agree he has pitched better with Javy behind the plate...so, what happens when Javy is gone?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Do you get to watch every O's game? If not, generally how many? Just curious.

I receive all the ones on MLBEI, which is almost all of them. But I have this odd deal with my wife about what's on the tube during certain hours (it's a long story that goes back to a little routine we had together during some hard times, and I guess we're just not quite ready to give it up yet). This means that the games that are 7p EDT get TIVO'd, and I catch the last third of them live. The parts I don't watch live, I still follow live w/ GameDay and, usually, with the Game Thread too, while I'm semi-watching the stuff that's on TV because of my understanding with my wife. Then I go back and watch the parts I missed later using TIVO.

TIVO is great. Going back doesn't take long because the slowest fast-forward speed on TIVO is 3x (then 20x, then 60x), and I can click through commercials with a few 30-second clicks of one button. So I can pretty much watch an hour in less than 20 minutes, and slow it down for the interesting parts. For me, a lot of the interesting parts involves pitch-by-pitch AB's. I watch some of them in slo-mo. Also, I slo-mo close calls by umps. The umps are usually right, but when they're wrong I sometimes cannot understand why.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

So, how much do you plan to offer Lopez this winter when the he's goes to arbitration for 2007 because I don't see the ballclub and Boras agreeing to terms? Keep in mind, that he made $3.75m this and his agent is Scott Boras.

How controversial could this be? He's not getting a raise, that's for sure. The max he could be cut is 20%, and most teams never do that. The O's will offer what he got this year, and Lopez will take it. He lost in arbitration this year and he'll lose again if he doesn't agree to terms.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.




  • Posts

    • I thought Chisholm missed home too. They didn’t appeal tho I don’t think.
    • Now run scores and Yanks take lead. 
    • Inexcusable missed call in NY. Review Cleo at showed Chisholm out at 2nd. They upheld safe call. 
    • Well, good on posters who proved the SSS side of "Guards Ball." I just found it striking in terms of the narrative in that article, which was basically the same as what most around here were complaining the O's lacked: clutch hitting, passing the baton, aggressive running, getting runners in from third, etc. I guess the real bottom line is "whatever works." Which of course varies from case to case. The old Bill James postseason wisdom was that HRs are the ticket, since you face good pitching and get so few hits. So back to you, Elias, keep crunching those numbers...
    • First, the had a jump in 23’ given how terrible they had been previously, which conditions many fans in the marketplace not to care. They simple weren’t relevant for years. So one very good regular season will not undue years of being bad/irrelevant and treating your customers terribly. Next, I think they missed an opportunity in the offseason by not doing enough by way of big/bold attention grabbing moves. Now I acknowledge that this was most likely due to the ownership flux/transition. I believe they got an attendance/marketplace engagement boost when they changed owners and when they traded for Burnes. However, I believe we would have seen more engagement attendance with say a big Gunnar extension and/or bringing in a big time FA.   IMO this would have created more buzz before the season (say around the time people make season tix decisions - IMO before Christmas is when some people make those bigger purchases). All of this is to say, that it will take time and effort on the organizations part because of how bad of a stain that the Angeloses left. I still have friends and colleagues who refuse to support the Orioles and attend games due to the damage that was done. Rubenstien & co are not going to be able to undo 30 years of awfulness overnight. But IMO it is not enough to simply call it “a new chapter”. They have to make new/different actions to distinguish themselves from who the Orioles were/used to be under the Angelos regime.
    • Just checking in on Gameday, Yankees looking incredibly vulnerable.  Should be the Os out there.  Super lame.  Whichever team wins this series I hope gets knocked out by CLE or DET.
    • If the franchise were better, the fan base would be too.  It’s been a rough 40 years.
  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...