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Avg # of pitches per K vs. Avg number of pitches for other outs. Then you'd probably want to do something to account for additional runners on and scoring that comes along with it.
Anyone done this? Do you have a link?
Seriously? is there anyone out there suggesting that strikeouts are unimportant?
Yeah, I think there are, especially among the hack sportswriter and olde-tyme baseball men. People who think that strikeouts are fascists.
They are always talking about how young guys need to "learn to pitch, not just throw" which usually means for them to throw softer and let your defense back you up.
The quote is from the Hardball Times link.
There's a couple of Moose stories linked to here in BTF, so it's probably a good idea to mention that BOTH Mussina's K/9 and BB/9 have decreased this season (I'm comparing to 2006, his most recent good year, and his horrid 2007. Since Mussina seems to have lost some speed, it's probably not a good point of reference to go back before 2006).
Moose's K/9 in 2006 was 7.84 and his BB/9 that year was 1.59 (really, 1.60 if you round it out).
Moose's K/9 in 2007 was 5.38 (5.39 if you round) and his BB/9 that year was 2.07.
Moose's K/9 in 2008 is 6.15 (6.16 if you round out) and his BB/9 is 1.18.
So Moose has sacrificed one and a half strike out per game vs. 2006 (he's actually striking more batters than in 2007 after changing his style and getting healthy this year), but he's improved his control (Moose's K/BB is 5.19, which is very good, and slightly better than his 4.91 from 2006 and MUCH BETTER than his 2.60 from 2006).
The one proviso I'd make is that while Ks are good, not walking batters is better. However, not all pitchers have the same stuff (indeed, sometimes fireballers end up becoming control types). While you have to make lemonade out of the lemons that life gives you, you'll get better lemonade if you don't walk too many batters.....
If kazmir were to consciously try to be more pitch-efficient by pitching to contact, he would also see a decline in walks that might offset the increase in hits and HR allowed. It will be possible to measure this using pitch/fx strikezone data...but gassko's method is just plain wrong.
In kazmir's case, I'd expect that he might not benefit from throwing strikes because he is the 'effectively wild' type...being left-handed and all over the place makes him tough to make contact on. Other pitchers, like brandon webb, saw big improvements when they threw more strikes. Webb led the league in walks when younger, but gets so much movement that he can throw in the zone and still get most guys out without giving up lots of homers like a javvy vazquez or shawn marcum.
Or maybe with more stuff like Pitch FX data out recently someone could do something with that.
Actually, I think the hack sportswriter and "olde-tyme" baseball men usually inflate the importance of strikeouts. I think you're more likely to see sabermetric types downplay strikeouts, although this is usually to defend TTO guys like Dunn.
Speaking of which, the Angels starters' FIPS are not good, I just noticed today. What significance that has for the playoffs, I don't know; probably none at this point.
And they do more or less the opposite for walks.
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