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1. We don't have dahlians at the Palace of Wisdom Posted: August 06, 2008 at 08:48 AM (#2892431)When the "role" was Gary Matthews Jr. as an everyday player, it took a season and a half of pathetic output to change the role Scioscia had assigned, so "Save Situation = Call Frankie immediately" is a pretty defensible role assignment in the grand scheme of Scioscia.
Ah yes, Joe "The Master of the Bullpen" Torre.
This is TJ Simers-caliber muckraking!
I'm pretty sure this is routinely done by every manager that has a well-established closer.
3-run leads with no one on, yes, that's an oddly low leverage situation for your best relief pitcher. But with runners on? Some leverage indexes:
Taking the ball with a three-run lead, none out, none on in the bottom of the ninth, that's a 1.0 LI. If the leadoff hitter reaches first, the LI is now 2.0, the same as having a two-run lead with none on, none out.
If two batters reach with one out, and a three-run lead, the LI jumps to 2.9. These are obvious, gotta-be-braindead not to, situations to call on your best relief pitcher.
But look at those innings. In the first, the previous reliever had allowed two doubles and gotten only one out. Looks like he doesn't have his good stuff - get him out of the game sooner rather than later. In the second, the previous reliever had gotten two outs, then allowed a HR and a single. Again, it seems pretty reasonable for Black not to want that pitcher to continue in the game.
Him and every other manager.
I remember one time watching John Gibbons's Jays in a road game that went to extra innings. Tie game on the road, say the 12th inning. Scott Downs, say, is warming in the pen, getting ready to come in. Then, the Jays take a one-run lead, and, with the leverage now lower, Downs sits down and the "closer" BJ Ryan starts to warm. Then the Jays score another run, and Ryan continues to warm. The Jays score a third time; Ryan continues to warm. The Jays score a fourth time, and Ryan sits down; someone else gets up.
I would have thought that once the guy had gotten warm you might as well bring him in instead of getting someone else ready, but no, now that it's a 4-run lead instead of a 3-run lead it is no longer OK to use your closer...
Save situation!
Incoming closer can give up a grand slam, a double off the fence, a couple of walks, and a liner caught by the 3B - and collect his SAVE for a job well done.
Whereas the managerial way to play it is to have that pitcher give up the grand slam and bring in the closer with the bases empty?
Sorry, I'm with MCoA on that one. Unless everyone wants to start apologizing to Grady Little about ragging him for sticking with Pedro back on the day...
That first one was a one-pitch save with a 3-run lead. Sure, Bryan Corey had just given up a homer and a single, but the next three batters were Steve Pearce (who had been called up that day), Doug Mientkiewicz, and some sort of pinch-hitter, possibly Luis Rivas. I think he had a pretty good shot at getting one out before giving up three runs in that situation.
Of course, bringing in Trevor Hoffman made sense if they knew it would only take him a couple pitches to end the game. But crediting him with a "save" is ridiculous. And my distinct suspicion at the time was that the decision was made at the very millisecond it became a save situation. I think the Padres manager called for him while LaRoche was still on his way to first base, without evercoming out to the mound.
I don't blame Scioscia for save-padding here. As others have noted, he's not doing anything that other managers don't. The difference is the insane rate at which the Angels have found themselves in save situations. Despite all the saves, it's not like K-Rod's workload has been especially high either.
There have been seasons past where the Angels would go long stretches without any save situations, and there would be a need to get the closer some extra work in. Then, all of a sudden, they've got 4-5 straight days where the situation calls for the closer, and sometimes he won't be available and Shields steps in. This year the circumstances have conspired to give K-Rod pretty much all the save opps he can reasonably handle, and the Angels either lose or blow somebody out at just the right times where K-Rod could use a rest (amazing since they don't lose or blow people out very often). Just a weird season where everything breaks right for K-Rod's opportunities.
As for save padding, my brother perfected the technique in 1993 with this guy. Still couldn't break Thigpen's record though.
Sounds like Bob Stanley for the Red Sox back in the day.
Sounds self-defeating in Baseball Mogul if you had any intention of re-signing the closer. In my experience, saves pump up the asking price quite a bit.
If my closer needs work, I'd have him start the inning.
If he needs rest, I'd give him the day off.
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