Saturday, March 8, 2014

New Season, New Blog... sort of

This blog has been slow to start and infrequently updated. I recently looked over my previous posts and decided that I would take a bit of a different approach to this season. I’m starting over. Many of my readers are casual fans (or non-fans in the case of my mother) so I’ve decided to start from scratch. I’m going to write about players on my beloved Giants without the inside jokes, stay light on the stats and put them into context when I do. I think a part of the reason why I tried so hard to be funny and incorporate advanced statistics goes back to my earliest fandom. Ever since my first ballgame at Candelstick I’ve been into baseball’s mathematical beauty. You could look at the back of a baseball card and the relative merits of that player were written in black and white. My dad used to bet his friends that I knew more stats than they did. I wish I still had that rotating solar system lamp I won off his friend Jim. But even more than obsessing over the backs of my baseball cards, I loved the players the most. I took special pride in finding the “glue” guys that held the team together. I rooted for stolen bases over home-runs. This fundamental core hasn’t changed. The stats and approach to analytical thinking has evolved over the past 25 years, but the spirit of it remains the same. The popular heroes are the home-run machines, but the character guys that keep my interest are the zany characters that are even more accessible since the dawn of the interwebs.

Since I’m starting over, I decided to write bios for all of the Giants players. I want to share my point of reference going forward into the 2014 season. I plan on doing this without looking up any information on the internets other than for fact verification. Example: I want to be accurate that so-and-so was an All-Star in 2009 instead of 2010. Other than that this will be a good way to find out how full of crap I am, or just how much baseball flotsam is floating around inside my noggin. I’ll break this post into 4 sections, one each for the starting line-up, starting pitchers, relievers/bullpen, bench-guys/other interesting players and coaches.

Starting Pitchers:

Madison Bumgarner: 
Bumgarner is one of 4 starting pitchers that was drafted by the Giants. He made his MLB debut as a September call-up in 2009, but was called up to the team on June 26th 2010 against the Boston Red Sox. I remember hearing about him as a prospect that off-season but didn’t know that much about him other than that the front office was a little upset with his off-season conditioning. They blamed him for spending too much time on his wedding and not enough time on baseball. The ironic part is that now Giants marketing makes little jokes every so often about him giving his bride a bull calf as a wedding gift. He hails from a very small town in North Carolina that has the nickname “Bum-town” because of all the Bumgarner’s in the area. Last year he earned his first All-Star appearance of many and will turn 25 in August.

The most important things you need to know about him are that he is a very tall lefty with good power and movement to his pitches. The same analysis goes for his famous snot-rockets on the mound. I have no idea how one person can generate that much mucus. He was probably that big kid in elementary school that always had a runny nose and was given the nickname snot-nose until he concussed a kid with a baseball, thus ending the unfortunate nickname and beginning a bright and lucrative career.

One of the stats that most intrigues me about Bumgarner is that he signed a lengthy contract 2 years ago to stay with the Giants. This was an interesting move by both the organization and Bumgarner because normally a young player will only sign one year contracts to maximize their earning potential. To sign early for him means that he doesn’t have to worry about an off year and has more stability. The Giants got him to sign early so that they give him more money upfront, and don’t have to pay out the snot nose later.

Matt Cain:
Matt Cain’s nickname is “The Horse.” I’ve been too afraid to find out if that nickname comes from the locker room  or from people referring to him as a “workhorse”. He hasn’t pitched fewer than 200 innings since he was called up to the big leagues for good. He is also the only current Giant who played on the same team as Barry Bonds. He is 2 years into a 7 year 135 million dollar contract.

An interesting thing about Cain is that he was an outlier statistically for such an extended period of time that he helped change conventional wisdom. In the past pitcher success was based on ERA (earned run average) and wins. Cain’s early years were spent pitching for miserable teams and as such they gave him little help in earning the all important “W”. Cain also is an outlier when it comes to success based on the number of fly-balls versus ground-balls. Numbers suggest that pitchers who give up a large number of fly-balls are less successful than pitchers who keep the ball on the ground. Cain is far outside the mean in terms of success vs. statistical models. He is considered an extreme fly-ball pitcher and yet has kept the number of home-runs given up to league average or below (these numbers all regressed towards the mean last year, but he has 6 years of history that keeps him an outlier).

Cain is also the only Giant pitcher to ever pitch a perfect game. In the same year he came within one batter of a perfect game. Against the Pirates he allowed a single to their pitcher in the 5th or 6th inning. It takes more than a little bit of luck to get the perfect game. Many pitchers will go down in history as better than Matt Cain without ever throwing a perfect game, but then again, none of them were Giants!

Tim Lincecum:
Big Time Timmy-Jim/The Freak/Timmay was the face, or more accurately the hair, of the franchise in the post-Barry Bonds era. When Timmay entered the league many scouts questioned his durability and chances to dominate in the ways he did at the collegiate level. At 5’10” and 165lbs dripping wet the conventional wisdom was that his body would breakdown. This analysis was exasperated by the fact that he has a totally unique delivery. Despite the questions entering the league Lincecum came out of the gates like gang-busters. He won back to back Cy-Young awards, which is given to the best pitcher in baseball, in 2008 and 2009. Once considered on of the most dominate and promising young pitchers in the majors, his status has fallen over the past two seasons.

The funky delivery system, where he explodes off the mound towards the batter, nor his slender frame seem to be the culprit. Over the past 3 seasons Lincecum has lost 3-4 mph off his fastball, yet he is still striking batters out at relatively the same rate as his Cy-Young seasons. What has seemed to affect his ability to dominate is his pitch location. Even without statistical analysis many casual observers have noticed that he leaves more pitches toward the top of the strike zone which is more conducive to batters hitting for power.

Despite his struggles over the past few years the Giants just extended his contract for two more seasons at a rate that is slightly higher than the Giants would pay someone from another team. I believe a part of this is the organizations confidence that he still “has the stuff”, and part is paying him as a fan favorite.

Ryan Vogelsong:
What can be succinctly said about Vogey? Vogey was drafted by the Giants in 1998. He was developed into great trade-bait and was traded to the Pittsburgh Pirates for Jason Schmidt. Schmidt became the Giants Ace-Pitcher for the next half decade, while Vogelsong went on to become the worst pitcher in baseball. In the mid 2000s he was out of baseball and went to resurrect his career in Japan. In 2010 Vogelsong decided to try one last shot at being a big-league pitcher. By 2011 he had earned enough credit in the minors for one last shot by the Giants. In April/May of the year Zito went down with an injury and Vogelsong got his long awaited shot. 3 months later he was named to the National League All-Star team.

I’m still trying to wrap my head around that story. Out of options, one last ditch hope to becoming one of the best pitchers on the planet within 6 months. On the mound he is all spit and fire, to the point that it can be scary. One of these days I’ll post the video of him getting pitched inside and his going bezerk. His flared nostrils may not contain the magical mucus of Bumgarner, but they do contain the chasm of chaos. Despite his inhuman ferocity on the mound he is widely considered the best when it comes to recognizing the fans within games. The old fashioned tip-of-the-hat is an art form for Vogelsong. He will always extend the hat tip just enough to recognize the fans without showing up an opponent. His pitching is even worth watching for this ability alone.

Tim Hudson:
Hudson comes to the Giants as a free agent who is coming off of ankle surgery. The past few seasons Hudson has pitched for the Atlanta Braves. He is a sinkerball pitcher, which means that his fastball drops as it crosses the plate and induces more ground balls. This bodes well for his increasing age and loss of velocity. A pitcher with good sinker movement has the ability to pitch longer and more effectively than pitchers without the same dynamic movement.

He is the only new starting pitcher for the Giants, replacing the much maligned and disappointing era of Barry Zito. The ironic thing is that both Zito and Hudson were teammates on the “Moneyball A’s” of the early 2000’s. Michael Lewis’ book made waves in popular culture about the importance of statistical analysis in team building. The one problem I had with the book is that it had a clear agenda and did give credit to the “three aces” of Hudson, Zito and Mulder (alas no Scully). Each of them was a great pitchers in their prime and used those Moneyball seasons to lead them to their subsequent free-agency signings.

I have few anecdotal memories of his pitching; I just remember being really annoyed when we had to play against him. Hopefully now that he is on the Giants others will be as annoyed at facing him as I was. I’m specifically hoping that my roommate John, a Dodgers fan, feels that sting of 4 hit, 1 run and weak grounders all afternoon. It can seriously feel like an eternity.

………………………………..
That pretty much sums up the starting pitching; Mucas, Horse, Hair, Hats and the New Guy.

Sometime in the next week keep an eye out for the starting lineup.

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