The only pitcher to record a save without throwing a pitch – Mitch Williams with this gem in 1989. He picked off Carmelo Martinez before throwing a pitch to a batter.
Wild Thing, I think I (used to) love you, but you gave me an ulcer watching you pitch.
Next up – post number 100. I will leave that honor to Coltrane.
This is the first in what I expect to be a series of posts, featuring former athletes that for one reason or another captured my attention and never really went away.
—
Bill Buckner is a player who always gets talked about when the Red Sox are in town. He’s well-known, but it occurred to me that I didn’t really know how valuable he was over the course of his career. I decided it would be fun to do a little digging…
Exhibit One–
Bill Buckner played four decades in the major leagues, from 1969 (one AB) up through his age 40 season in 1990. When he was young he played for the Dodgers, in mid-career the Cubs, and in the twilight of his career he played for the Red Sox (and the Royals and the Angels.) He played 22 years in total, mixing some big seasons in with years that were less than great.
Buckner totalled 24.6 career WAR, good for 735th all-time among position players. As the chart illustrates, he would have had a great career, rather than a really good one — had his production just resembled a bell curve a little more than it did.
Exhibit Two– Hitters that rank just ahead of Buckner on the Career WAR list:
Mike Bordick
The future was wide open..
Irish Meusel
Sammy Strang
Johnny Kling
Charlie Hollocher
Gus Suhr
Joe Cunningham
Ed Charles
Jeff Conine
Bill Buckner
Bordick, Conine, and Buckner were all “good” players for a long time. Catcher Johnny Kling had a more sustained peak but shorter career. Kling played from 1900 to 1913, his good years coming with the Cubs.
Exhibit Three– The 10 most similar hitters to Buckner (using career totals) from Baseball-Reference.com:
The sky was the limit..
1. Mickey Vernon (876)
2. Al Oliver (866)
3. Steve Garvey (855)
4. Mark Grace (853)
5. Willie Davis (850)
6. B.J. Surhoff (839)
7. Buddy Bell (838)
8. Vada Pinson (833)
9. Jose Cruz (828)
10. Julio Franco (826)
This one is fun. I had guessed Steve Garvey and Mark Grace would be comps — they shared many traits with Buckner: marginal speed, middling power, and no patience at the plate. Buckner’s career highs were 18 HRs and 39 walks. He’d usually hit around .300, finishing his career with a .289/.329/.408 slash line, 174 career HR. Buckner could run when he was young, topping out at 32 stolen bases. As he got older his legs abandoned him.
Interestingly, Buckner and Garvey both had their fist cup of coffee with the Dodgers in 1969. They remained teammates through the 1976 season. Buckner was traded to the Cubs in the winter of 1977, along with Jeff Albert and Ivan De Jesus. In return the Cubs sent back Mike Garman and Rick Monday.
Exhibit Four– Hall of Fame Voting:
Buckner became eligible for the Hall of Fame in 1996. In order to remain on the ballot a player must receive at least 5% of the vote. The results:
Finish
Name
Year on Ballot
Votes
Percent
22
Fred Lynn
1st
26
5.50%
23
Bobby Bonds
10th
24
5.10%
24
Rusty Staub
6th
24
5.10%
25
Keith Hernandez
1st
24
5.10%
26
Frank White
1st
18
3.80%
27
Dan Quisenberry
1st
18
3.80%
28
Bill Buckner
1st
10
2.10%
29
Jerry Reuss
1st
2
0.40%
30
John Tudor
1st
2
0.40%
31
Chet Lemon
1st
1
0.20%
32
Jeffrey Leonard
1st
0
0.00%
33
Johnny Ray
1st
0
0.00%
34
Claudell Washington
1st
0
0.00%
35
Bob Knepper
1st
0
0.00%
There’s a first baseman who was a contemporary of Buckner’s on the list — “I’m Keith Hernandez“. (Link is to the Youtube “JFK” Seinfeld episode.) It’s an interesting peer group. Seattle Mariners fans will remember the revolving door in LF, starring such players as Jeffrey Leonard.
Frank White really got the shaft in the voting that year.
Other Bill Buckner facts:
Buckner won the batting championship while playing for the Cubs in 1981. He led the league in doubles twice.
Buckner retired with 2715 hits. He had nearly as many career walks (450), as strikeouts (453.) These are both incredibly low totals for a 22-year career.
He was once traded for Mike Brumley and Dennis Eckersley.
I believe the picture above was taken at a sports memorabilia show — Buckner and Mookie Wilson were signing pictures together at the event. Beats working I guess.
..finally appears to be over. The Angels have traded for a 3B, putting to bed one of the worst seasons I can remember for a guy who got 184 plate appearances. It was so bad that it made Griffey’s 2010 season look like Babe Ruth in his prime. In 2010, Brandon Wood posted a line of 168/185/225 (BA/OBP/SLG). Folks, that is an OPS+ of 10 (!!), lowering his career OPS+ to 26 (!!!!) in 420 plate appearances (Wood is a guy with a career 888 OPS in the minors).Wood was so bad that his OPS+ this season is the same as CC Sabathia’s and the only player with at least 150 PA that is anywhere close to Wood is Gerald Laird with an OPS+ of 41. Wood is easily the worst semi-regular in the AL this season.
I really was hoping that he would join the TTO club with Jack Cust, Mark Reynolds and Adam Dunn, I guess it just wasn’t meant to be. (If you want to know what TTO is, check back tomorrow).
Wood is still only 25, but he looks like the new poster child for a 4A player.
On March 14th, I made my prediction about the Mariners 2010 season:
I am skeptical about 2010 Mariners team. They downgraded their offense, so 640 runs in 2010 might be a stretch, they still have too many free swingers in the lineup, and I am not sure that the pitching (starting and relieving beyond Lee and Felix) will repeat their 2009 performances. My prediction – 77 to 80 wins for this team IF Felix and Lee are healthy and pitch a full season with the team.
Well, Felix has been health (and quite dominant over the last 2 months) and Lee, well, we know what happened to him. The Mariners have played slightly more than half a season, and currently sit in 4th with a winning percentage of .398 and a 35-53 record. Not quite the season that most pundits expected. Without Lee, I would revise my final estimate for the Mariners win total to be between 66 and 70 wins, which would mean the Mariners would need to win at about a 42% clip. Do I think this team is better without Lee that they would be able to win more regularly than with him – not at all? This is simple case of regression to the mean – it is hard to maintain a very below average place with an average team.
Let’s break down my statements.
Offense – I said that they would be lucky to score 640 runs this season. That total means they need to average about 3.95 runs per game. Through 88 games in 2010, the Mariners have scored 298 runs an average of 3.38 per game – a pretty significant difference. Even with improvement that generally comes with the weather warming up, I just don’t see this team averaging 4.62 runs a game the rest of the way. I would say that I called this one.
Starting Pitching – I thought this would be a no brainer – you added Lee, but you still had Rowland-Smith, Vargas and Snell in the rotation (not to mention Fister), none of whom I thought would be anywhere close to their 2009 numbers. I was somewhat right on this:
2009
2010
W-L
ERA
WHIP
K/9
ERA+
W-L
ERA
K/9
WHIP
ERA+
R-S
5-4
3.74
1.18
4.9
116
1-9
5.89
3.4
1.64
70
Vargas
3-6
4.91
1.33
5.3
89
6-4
3.09
5.7
1.19
133
Snell
5-2
4.20
1.55
5.2
104
0-5
6.41
5.1
1.84
64
Fister
3-4
4.13
1.28
5.3
105
3-4
3.09
4.2
1.07
133
Rowland-Smith has been a disaster and Snell is in Tacoma. Fister started off hot and has turned back into a pumpkin in his last 4 starts, posting an ERA over 6. Vargas has been a nice surprise – he might actually be living up to the potential that made him a top prospect for the Marlins a few years ago. With a rotation of Felix, Vargas, Rowland-Smith, Fister and (maybe) Bedard, I think this team will be hard pressed to match the starting pitching stats from last season. There are too many guys who don’t make batters swing and miss in this rotation.
Relief Pitching – Relief pitching is notoriously hard to predict year over year. In 2009, you had a bullpen that had a guy who had been terrible over his entire career suddenly find himself (Aardsma), a couple of young guys pitch much better than expected (Lowe and Kelley) a soft-tosser who was strangely tough to get hits off (White) and a washed up started who found himself (Batista). Not really a recipe for long-term success. Z did essentially replace Batista with League (a good move I thought), but did nothing else to upgrade the pen. Well, 2010 has not been as kind to these guys:
2009
2010
W-L
BS%
IRS%
WHIP
ERA+
W-L
BS%
IRS%
WHIP
ERA+
Aardsma
3-6
10%
0%
1.16
172
0-6
20%
0%
1.34
77
Lowe
2-7
77%
31%
1.25
133
1-3
—
0%
1.55
122
Kelley
5-4
100%
40%
1.17
97
3-1
—
36%
1.52
105
White
3-2
67%
27%
1.08
156
0-0
100%
39%
2.91
61
Batista/ League
7-4
80%
67%
1.65
108
5-6
71%
40%
1.26
107
Note – BS% is the percentage of save opportunities blown by a pitcher and IRS% is the percentage of Inherited Runners that a reliever allowed to score.
The bullpen in 2009 was horrible at keeping inherited runners from scoring and blew a bunch of leads but did manage to keep the hitters they faced off base and were bailed out by the offense when they blew the lead. In 2010, none of those apply. The bullpen has been a mess – Lowe was bad, then got hurt, and then got traded. Aardsma regressed, and Kelley and White have been horrible (and pitching closer to what I think their career norms would be). As much maligned as League has been, he has actually been one of the few bright spots in the pen, but he runs the risk of being horribly overworked. Don’t be surprised if he is the closer for 2011. Overall, the relief corps has been much worse in 2010 than in 2009, so I would say I called this one.
On a side note – something interesting about Aardsma – at no point in the 2009 did he come into a game before the 9th inning and only twice did he come into a game with runners on base. Might be worth looking at how Wak uses his pitchers.
Fielding – Didn’t really make a statement on this, but the defense has been good, just not as good as 2009 (the Sunday game non-withstanding). The M’s defense was +91 runs better than average in 2009 and has been 27 runs better than average in 2010. Still pretty good, but not great like last season.
To summarize: Nobody likes an “I told you so,” but I told you so.
In Saturday’s pitching matchup between Felix Hernandez and Javier Vazquez, both pitchers had the exact same pitch distribution after their 99th pitch – 33 balls, 66 strikes. It is always neat to see 33 66 99 on the pitch count board, really cool to see it twice in one game.
Note: I wrote this post earlier in the week and then forgot to post it. It looks like I made the correct call at the end.
How magnanimous of him – Stephen Strasburg “understands” why he was left off the All-Star team. Did Strasburg deserve to be considered an All-Star with the whole of 6 MLB starts under his belt? The only way I could justify it would be if he was bordering on unhittable in all 6 of those starts. Let’s look and see how they broke down:
IP
ER
H
BB
SO
ERA
WHIP
Avg Game Score
Starts 1-4
25.333
5
19
5
41
1.78
0.94
68
Starts 5-6
11.333
5
10
5
12
3.97
1.32
52.5
If you are not familiar with Game Score, it is a measure of how well a starter does, with 50 being a good start and 60+ being great. I know it is not realistic to believe that he could maintain his stats in the first 4 starts over the course of the season, but why the difference? It is simple; the level of competition changed and the league has had a chance to scout him.
Here are his opponents with their current MLB ranking in Runs Scored:
Opponent
Lg Rank RS
Result
Start 1
Pirates
30
W 5-2
Start 2
@ Indians
23
W 9-4
Start 3
White Sox
20
W 2-1
Start 4
Royals
18
L 1-0
Start 5
@ Braves
11
L 5-0
Start 6
Mets
9
W 6-5
Notice a trend here? Not surprisingly, his numbers have declined as the competition improves. His next start is against another offensively challenged team – the Giants, who are 21st in scoring. I do expect a good start out of Strasburg. As far as I am concerned however, based on his performances against the Mets and Braves, he is not quite an All-Star yet. I think his true value lies somewhere in between his splits.
For those who have already sized him up for his plaque in Cooperstown, just remember, no #1 overall draft pick has ever won 200 games in the majors. A lot can happen on the road to Cooperstown over the next 20 years.
According to ESPN, it seems like New York is the likely destination for Cliff Lee. If that is the case, I would expect him to be pulled from tonight’s start against the Yankees sometime before the game. If that deal falls through and his destination is elsewhere, I suspect he will pitch tonight.
Either way, hang onto your hats folks!
Updated 3:15 PM – It is official, Cliff Lee is no longer a Mariner. He is headed to Texas with Mark Lowe and Cash for Justin Smoak and 3 minor leaguers.
OK – If you had to guess at who is the all-time wins leader for the Houston Astros, you would probably guess Nolan Ryan, JR Richard or Mike Scott, right? Well, you would be wrong as they rank 6th, 5th and 4th respectively, significantly behind #3 Larry Dierker (who was vastly underrated), #2 Roy Oswalt and #1…wait for it…Joe Niekro. Raise your hand if you had a clue that Niekro won 38 more games as an Astro than Nolan Ryan.
If you gave me 10 guesses on the answer to this one, there is no way I would have ever gotten it.
OK, quick, who should be the All-Star starter on this list:
AVG
HR
RBI
OPS
OPS+
WAR
Player A
.341
12
53
.922
141
2.9
Player B
.294
12
56
.868
132
3.2
Player C
.278
12
61
.842
129
2.2
All 3 of these players were named to the American League All-Star team today. Depending on what you look at, you can probably make a case for all 3 guys to be the starter, and keep in mind one is a Yankee and one is a Red Sox, so you have the popularity factor to include. Personally, based on the stats, I would go with Player B, and, it appears, the fan voting agrees with me on this one, by quite a margin.
Player A is Adrian Beltre, Player B is Evan Longoria and Player C is Alex Rodriguez.
Despite the M’s first base issues, why trade for a 32 year old slugger with back problems when you are sitting 14 games back of first place in your division half way through the season? Me thinks that Z is not ready to give up on the season, which is probably going to lead to at least one other stupid deal and possible the M’s not trading Cliff Lee. I also suspect that this will mean that either Mike Carp or Mike Saunders (or possibly both) will see a significant reduction in playing time or a trip back to Tacoma. Wak does love to play his veterans.