Guys, the Orioles have pitching prospects not named Dylan Bundy!
Read More...The Baltimore Orioles hope this year’s high-profile midseason call-up is as good as last year’s high-profile midseason call-up.
The Orioles will promote right-hander Kevin Gausman from Class-AA Bowie to make his major league debut Thursday against Toronto, major league sources told FOXSports.com.
Gausman is reaching the majors less than one year after the Orioles selected him in the first round of the 2012 draft. He is 2-4 ...
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1. ShoeGrit posted on December 28, 2012 at 07:29 AM # hit 0 | hit 0Orioles should have sold high.
he also allowed very few walks and very few SBs, which in combination with the lack of XBHs, gave him a very large margin for error in any given appearance.
out of all of that, none of the above is factored into BABIP, and only walks are factored into FIP.
as for how much of that is repeatable, none of what he did was really out of line with his career averages, and even his ERA wasn't all that different from what he'd done the previous 4 years.
Pretty sure the lack of extra base hits is factored into FIP (at least home runs). Double plays and stolen bases are a legit point, but those aren't huge factors. Johnson has a career 3.14 ERA, so yeah I'm guessing he'll have a tough time repeating his 2012 season. Also the fact that he's a reliever means he could easily fall into a ditch next year.
Now, he might have gotten lucky so far in his career (only 300+ innings or 1.5 starter seasons) but he's been consistently quite good as a RP and closers get a structural ERA benefit from pitching at the end of games (on the road, the runs they give up are capped). I wouldn't be surprised if he repeats last year, or close to it.
I'll bet he's a fan of "saves."
As a reliever, Jim Johnson has a career 148 ERA+ combined with a .280 BABIP. There's absolutely nothing weird about a pitcher - especially a relief pitcher - limiting hits against by a margin of .015 BABIP or so, and a 150 ERA+ is a good cut-off for "true relief ace". He had a 170 ERA+ last year, so you expect some regression, but Johnson' looks like an excellent pitcher any eam would be happy to have.
Am i mis-remembering or wasn't this the plan going into last season? Whatever happened to that idea?
I think they realized Kevin Gregg was the alternative at closer.
Has anyone actually commented on the article? It seems that all the comments so far have been about Johnson and his ability to replicate 2012. The only reference to the article is Shoewizard's very brief reference to Johnson as a "super closer."
No, there's absolutely no data on the role of luck and a team's record in one run games.
Park factors? Luck? Regression to the mean? True talent level and small sample size?
His aspiration is to join the BBWAA and vote Jack Morris into the HOF.
You mean the blue stuff?
Lets try this again.
Through 2011 in 261 career innings, Johnson had a 133 ERA+ and a .291 BABIP against. Good but certainly not great or "ace" reliever numbers.
In 2012, in 69 innings, he had a 170 ERA+ and a .252 BABIP against.
Ok, some might want me to just compare last year to 2008-2011, and lop off 2006-2007 callups. Fair enough.
That does make his 2012 closer to his "career" numbers, if you make believe his career started in 2008.
08-11 256 IP 145 ERA+ .286 BABIP against
2012, 69 IP 170 ERA+ .252 BABIP against
Johnson cut his walks dramatically in 2010 and has maintained really good walk rates since then. And over the last 2 years he has replaced a lot of line drives with ground balls. I think you are right MCOA, in that he is a very good reliever at this point in time. BUT I think I am also right that he is a very likely regression candidate with his BABIP, and that will likely mean more baserunners, and runs allowed, and 51 saves is also a number thats very unlikely to be repeated, I think you would agree.
He's already 3rd year arb eligible because he was a super two, and he'll make a lot of money the next two years. I guess it's better to hold on to him, but I think it would be interesting to see what some teams might be willing to trade for a guy like this.
"I've thought about it more. Even though I was an All-Star last year, put up strong numbers, and helped lead my team that has been hapless for two decades to an inch of the ALCS, I've realized that my year was simply an overperformance of my true talent. I've been striving for this type of success for my entire life, and now that I've achieved it, I'm announcing to the world that my entire life's pursuit was a waste of time. I'm just not that good. The Orioles would be wise not to sign me to a lucrative contract, and should consider cutting me or trading me for pennies on the dollar."
I'm not bashing Johnson's pitching performance, just his analysis of statistics. He's channelling Unfrozen Caveman Lawyer. :-)
Just for fun:
(With apologies to SNL)
The most overpaid position in baseball is the MR.
It's always cool to have players like Brian Bannister (did he go to Japan?) and Brandon McCarthy engage with sabermetric analysis, does it improve their play? Will Jim Johnson be a better pitcher in 2013 if he sat down with someone and went through the principles of DIPS and projection systems?
I'm actually curious as I have no idea what the answers to those questions might be. If I had to guess I'd say it would help in some small, specific ways, but not in others, but I don't know. It's an interesting question to me. Sabermetrics so often seam geared towards the decision-making processes of managers or general managers rather than players. I suppose it's never a bad thing to be as educated as possible about the work you do...but even if Johnson knew that his peripherals suggest a decline in 2013, is there anything he could do about it on the field?
Plus the knowledge that they have a really low BABIP and are lucky rather than good might stop some pitchers from getting oversized egos.
Ask John Rocker about that.
I think it would, likely in one of two ways: 1) A Michael Jordan "any slight" motivation sense, or 2) realization that maybe they aren't as good as they think they are, so they should work harder (study their mechanics more, new pitch, etc).
If you turn the situation around to a pitcher who was "unlucky" according to saber analysis, becoming aware of regression might be helpful to the player. It might prevent them from losing confidence in their ability. As a practical matter, I suspect that players are aware that a lot of what goes on is a reflection of good or bad luck, but they just don't use terms like "regression."
I recall a young starting pitcher mentioning the advice that Roy Oswalt gave him. It was something like "You will have games where you do everything right, but still give up a lot of hits. Don't let that get to you, because it doesn't mean you are pitching badly." That's a paraphrase, but I remember thinking at the time that Oswalt's advice was a pretty good description of BABIP variance, though he doesn't call it that.
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