Playoff Odds (ESPN/Fangraphs): 96.2% (46.0% Division, 50.2% Wild
Card)
Playoff Odds (Baseball
Prospectus): 87.6%
(18.1% Division, 69.4% Wild Card)
Playoff Odds (ESPN/Fangraphs): 99.6% (47.9% Division, 51.7% Wild
Card)
Playoff Odds (Baseball
Prospectus): 98.6% (17.4%
Division, 81.2% Wild Card)
99.6%.
There’s a world of pain and suffering in the gap between
99.6% and 100%, and anyone who thinks this race is over needs to brush up on
their recent history. Three years ago, the Atlanta Braves were in exactly the
same situation the Royals are in right now – up three games on the St. Louis
Cardinals with five to go.
The Braves were 89-68 and the Cardinals were 86-71, and that
was the last year under the One Wild Card format, so the prize was even higher –
a spot in the LDS round. But the Braves then lost their last five games. The
Cardinals won a couple of one-run games, 3-2 and 2-1, then lost 5-4 in ten
innings to stay one back with two to play. But the Cardinals closed by winning 13-6,
and then 8-0, and not only had they beaten the Braves for the Wild Card spot,
they did so without even needing a tiebreaker game. The Cardinals, who had less
than a 1% chance to even reach the postseason with five days left, went on to
win the World Series. The Cardinals are the original wizards of #DevilMagic,
which makes sense, because they are evil.
So don’t assume anything, folks. At the same time, know
this: if the Royals don’t make the
playoffs at this point, it would be one of the biggest last-week collapses in baseball
history. At least the Braves had the excuse that they were losing to the
Nationals (who finished 80-81) and then got swept by the Phillies, who led the
majors with 102 wins. Meanwhile, the Cardinals took two games from the Cubs
(71-91) and then two of three from the Astros (56-106).
The Royals don’t have that excuse. They face the Indians
today, and then finish with four games against the 72-85 White Sox – without
having to face Chris Sale, who conveniently starts against Detroit today. The
Mariners still have two games against Toronto (80-77) and then finish with the
Angels, who have the best record in baseball, although the Angels may have
clinched the #1 seed and have nothing left to play for at that point.
So really, at this point there are no excuses if the
Royals don’t end the longest playoff drought in North American sports sometime
between now and Sunday. Everything is set up perfectly for them to clinch at
some point during their series with the White Sox. I am sorry that they won’t
have a chance to clinch at home. I am not sorry that they have a chance to
clinch about 25 minutes from my home.
(If you’re going to the games this weekend, check my Twitter feed and let’s all
meet up.)
And with Sale going today, the AL Central race could be
tied by tomorrow, setting up a furious four-game finish and very possibly a
tiebreaker game in Detroit Monday night. It’s baseball with everything on the
line. I’ve waited for this for so long.
- The Royals are in this position because, after missing
three weeks with a sore shoulder that seemed almost certain to end his season,
Danny Duffy returned Monday night with six scoreless innings, working out of a
bases-loaded, no-out jam in the first inning; and because Yordano Ventura threw
seven scoreless innings last night, his 11th consecutive start of six innings
or more allowing no more than three earned runs, the longest streak by a rookie
in Royals history.
Danny Duffy now has a 2.32 ERA. With Felix Hernandez
getting crushed last night, there is one qualifying pitcher in the AL with a
better ERA than Duffy – Chris Sale, who for obvious reasons I hope will still have a better ERA than Duffy at
the end of today. But Duffy, if he had ten more innings to qualify for the ERA
title, could very well have ended up with the second-best ERA in the AL.
There are some enormous caveats there, of course. More than
20% of Duffy’s runs allowed are unearned, which is unusual; with a normal ratio
of unearned runs his ERA would be around 2.70 or 2.80. And he’s benefitted from
some tremendous BABIP luck this year; his BABIP this year is .238, and his career
mark coming into the season was .324. But still: a 2.32 ERA. From a guy who could have wound up spending most of the
year in Omaha with command issues and none of us would have blinked. Duffy’s
development is the single biggest reason why the Royals are where they are
today, and Ventura’s development is probably second.
And to think, six months ago the inability to develop a
starting pitcher from within was the biggest black mark on Dayton Moore’s
administration. At this point, given the struggles of Eric Hosmer and Mike
Moustakas, and the resources expended in the draft (four top-five picks used on
hitters, just one on pitchers not counting Luke Hochevar), I would argue that at
this point, the administration has done a better job of developing pitchers
than hitters.
There will be time to talk about how to set up the
playoff rotation soon enough; Soren Petro and I broached that subject on 810
WHB today. First off, the Royals need to guarantee themselves more than one
playoff game. If the Royals don’t win the division, James Shields is set up to
pitch the Wild Card game on regular rest next Tuesday, probably against Jon
Lester. The last two words of the last sentence are just one reason why the
Royals still need to do everything they can to win the division.
In the event of a tiebreaker game – against the Tigers
for the division in Detroit Monday night – it would be Jason Vargas’ turn to
pitch. You could bring back Shields on short rest, but that’s an extreme
solution to a non-extreme situation. In the event the Royals play in Detroit Monday
night, they would only have to win one of their next two games – against Detroit
Monday or against Oakland Tuesday – to advance to the next round. The Monday
night game is analogous to a Game 6, not a Game 7. In a Game 7, there is no
tomorrow, and all hands are on deck. But Monday night there is a tomorrow, and tomorrow might well
be an elimination game, so best to hold Shields back to pitch that game on full
rest if he’s needed. And if he’s not needed, then he’s fully rested to start
Game 1 (and even more important, Game 5) of the ALDS.
Jason Vargas against Detroit with the division on the
line wouldn’t be my first choice, but let’s be honest: aside from Jeremy
Guthrie, the Royals’ starters are almost indistinguishable in terms of quality.
Here are their FIPs: 3.55 (Shields), 3.58 (Ventura), 3.64 (Duffy), and 3.72
(Vargas). What distinguishes the Royals’ rotation this year isn’t one or two
aces, but the depth of having four above-average starters and one guy who is
blessedly average.
And as it turns out, you need only four starters in the
playoffs. We’ll address that issue later, but moving Guthrie to the bullpen is
the obvious move to make from an analytic standpoint. However, there are
non-analytic issues that have to be addressed as well.
- I can’t end without at least raising the question of
why on earth Ned Yost let Ventura throw 117 pitches last night, allowing him to
load the bases in the seventh inning of a 7-0 game before striking out the
final batter.
Pitch counts have come a long way in a short time, and
this doesn’t qualify as abuse under any pre-2005 definition of the term. I
brought up the cautionary tale of Mark Prior on the radio today, who was
slagged down the stretch in 2003 and then ran out of gas in the eighth inning
of Game 6 of the NLCS with his team five outs away from their first World Series
in 58 years. (And then, of course, tore his rotator cuff and ended one of the
most promising pitching careers of his generation at age 25.)
I realize that comparison is a bit of a stretch; Prior,
after all, had pitch counts of 131, 129, 124, 131, 133, and 133 just from
September 1st on. Prior had four 130-pitch outings in six weeks in 2003; every pitcher in baseball this year has
combined for two 130-pitch outings. This isn’t remotely the same. But
still: what was the point? What was to be gained from having Ventura set his
career high for pitches in a game that you were leading 7-0?
Ventura is scheduled to start the last game of the
season. Hopefully the Royals will still have a shot at the division title going
into that day, and his start will be meaningful. But if it isn’t, and Liam
Hendricks gets the start today while Ventura – and the entire starting lineup –
gets some much-needed rest, well, there might be a silver lining.
I'm still having trouble accepting the fact that we're (probably) going to be in the playoffs. My brain rejects it. I need to get over it quick, too, because I'm gonna need some time of from work. Seriously thinking about flying down to KC for at least some of it. Strange days indeed.
ReplyDeleteYes, me too - I realize that I've been protecting myself from disappointment by thinking the playoffs to be unlikely. But that won't work anymore and it definitely feels like being on a ledge without a net right now. Playoffs, here we come!
ReplyDeleteCouldn't agree more on the Ventura pitch count. Though not as egregious, I thought letting Duffy throw 95 in his first outing back was also dubious. Ned needs to be more mindful of protecting the long term value of young pitchers--as well as the long term value of one S. Perez.
ReplyDeleteFangraphs had the A's at 100% playoff odds like 4 weeks ago. So, yeah.
ReplyDeleteJust a heartfelt thanks from Oz for your blog. At last, after years when one Royals game or fewer was shown on Australian TV, we are getting to see them, and I get to share the excitement of the Royals resurgence. In the years since I fell in love with the Royals (1996, my first sabbatical at KU), your blogs have been my best contact with what goes on at KC.
ReplyDeleteFor years I have been arguing with the good folk at FanGraphs that the percentage is never 100% until a team has clinched and is never 0% until a team has been mathematically eliminated.
ReplyDeleteTo no avail.
They even handed the National League West to the Giamts back in June, claiming that the Dodgers had no chance to overcome their 9 1/2 game deficit.
Unfortunately, they are much too arrogant to listen. Not to mention, totally ignorant when it comes to statistics.
Since they are too stupid to understand how percentages work, I simply laugh at the validity of any of the other statistics FanGraphs tries to foist onto us, such as fWAR and ZIP projections.
What a bunch of clowns.
The BP method is a much more reliable indicator of playoff prospects, because it plays the rest of the season a million times and also factors in the results of actual in-season performance as it determines the results. The Fangraphs' method is based on their metrics on what they believe should have happened (FIP, etc.) and don't consider what really has happened.
ReplyDeleteIf I were a GM and was considering signing a free agent, I'd look at the Fangraphs data to see if a player may have had an inordinate amount of luck in a big season, but for anything else, it doesn't have much value.
Thomas Burton,have you ever tried to sign up for a paid subscription on MLB.com to watch all of the games? I don't see why it wouldn't be possible in Australia. I live outside the US and watch all of the games but I was in the US when I subscribed so perhaps that's the difference.
ReplyDeleteHey Rany, when's the post where you rip the Royals for not signing Phil Hughes like you suggested?
ReplyDelete