What a series. Great to see Dan Winkler activated, and the same with AJ Minter. But bad hitting with RISP, bad baserunning, and at times, bad bullpen and work.
I want to join people in blaming Snitker, but it might be helpful to give some background on the condition of the bullpen last night. Our bullpen currently consists of Arodys Vizcaino, Jose Ramirez, Sam Freeman, Jason Motte, Dan Winkler, AJ Minter, Matt Wisler, and Jim Johnson. Vizzy, Ramirez, and Freeman seem to have become the late inning trio over the last couple weeks. Accordingly, they had been used the two previous nights. Motte, Winkler, Minter, Wisler, and Johnson were seemingly available. But Motte pitched the 6th, Winkler has pitched one out this year, Wisler is being used in a mostly long role right now (he pitched three innings 3 days ago), and Minter had just pitched the night before in AAA and has not pitched in back-to-back days in his pro career. So what do you have? Jim Johnson. So Snitker pulled that strong, and that’s what you got. What’s interesting is that Snitker put Winkler in the game next, then Minter, making that his first back-to-back. Clearly Snitker was trying to protect the young players, and as long as Jim Johnson is on the roster, eventually he’s going to get used. And if the FO doesn’t like it, then take him off the roster.
Which leads me to a quick pitcher won-loss discussion. People say pitcher won-loss doesn’t mean anything, or at the very least, it’s a suboptimal way of evaluating pitcher performance. But go with me for a second. Let’s say you have two pitchers, and I’m speaking in generalities here. One pitcher tends to give you a 5 IP, 1 ER, 7 K, 3 BB outing. One run, five innings, 1.80 ERA. Fantastic, right? But you have to go to 4+ relievers to get the game completed. So he makes his 30 starts, and he pitches about 150-160 IP on average. The next pitcher is an Ace(TM). He makes his 30 starts, and he pitches about 200-220 IP. He will give you a lot of 7 IP, 2 ER or 8 IP, 3 ER starts. But you have a pretty good idea that your pen is going to get a rest, you’re not going to burn a lot of pinch-hitters, and he’s going to factor into a lot of decisions because the games are decided more often when he’s in the game. The first guy wins 10 games, and takes 2 losses. The second guy wins 20 games, and takes 7 losses. Wouldn’t you say that the guy winning 20 games is significantly more helpful to his team? You may not need an 8-man pen if you have a couple guys who factor into a lot of decisions; they pitch deep into games. You don’t have to have as many plus bats off the bench because you’re not pinch-hitting nearly as often. You have positional and bullpen flexibility, and there’s less chance of combustion by bringing so many different relievers in the game. I would argue that if you accumulate a lot of wins (and maybe even a lot of losses), you’re very valuable to your team and that won-loss record tells you something.
Back to the game. RA Dickey didn’t have his best stuff. He gave up two hits to the pitcher, including a run-scoring single, and a wild pitch set up a big inning. But he did well enough for the Braves to win. And in perhaps the most noteworthy thing, Minter, as mentioned, got into the game, striking out two (though one was a reliever) and otherwise looked like the Minter we had been told he was. I don’t envision him being as electric as Craig Kimbrel in the sense that he worked quickly, had an entertaining delivery, etc. I hope Minter mows down hitters in the late innings for many years, but I think it will be in a more workmanlike fashion. Dan Winkler also pitched that inning Johnson vacated, but he did give up a wall-scraping home run to dead center that was just out of Ender Inciarte‘s reach but also put the game out of reach. I will spare you a discussion on inherited runners.
It’s not Snit’s fault Acuna hasn’t been called up.
Nor is it mine. A while back when there were 50 games left i forecast 15/35 if Acuna was left where he is. So far, spot on. Sadly. Haven’t we been losing a run of 3 game series lately 1/2…that’ll do it. And it’s obviously not primarily what his individual numbers would produce but the fact that his appearance every night would give all the players a lift and generate renewed interest in the fan base/attendance etc. The FO must be tone deaf not to see this.
Love me or leave me
and let me be lonely
I’m still at Gwinnett
still talking to Olney
The business of baseball, to paraphrase, is business. I understand why young lads languish on the farm, but I don’t have to like it. 30 days in September would be a nice introduction, but business … .
My question is why Jim Johnson, God love him, is still here. He is neither a part of the present or future.
Nice pondering, Rob. Thank you.
If we are serious about winning next year, Acuna needs to come up and play.
Test comment
Jim Johnson is on the books for about $4.5M next season. I’d bench him the rest of this season though. However, he’s getting appearance incentives which makes me wonder why Snitker keeps throwing him almost daily. He gets $250k for finishing 30 games and then another $250K for each of the 35, 40, 45, 50, 55, and 60 game thresholds.
Stop using him.
csg he actually already got the second bonus for finishing his 35th game recently, but as you said it’s games finished. I highly doubt he will get to 40.
Anyone think Chuck Hernandez will be back?
From last thread re: minor league won-loss records
The Braves have accelerated just about every prospects development timeline vs. an average organization. So you could assume guys would perform better at the lower level other orgs might have them. So there’s that. Plus, we’re only talking 30-40 prospects across 125 players at 5 levels, so when they’re so spread out, I don’t think it’s going to move the needle on overall team performance.
In response to John R. in the redundant recap’s comments:
Sean Newcomb comes to mind when I think of the first pitcher. His line the other night was indicative of why ERA can also be equally misleading: 5 IP, 5 H, 0 ER, 5 BB, 2 K. 94 pitches. Fortunately, FIP gets it right over a long stretch. But the next day, Folty went 5.2 IP, then Sims goes 6 IP, Dickey goes 6 IP, and whaddaya know, you’ve got Johnson pitching in a one-run game.
That’s why I think Justin Verlander makes a lot of sense for this team financially and based on need. He’s a horse. He’s averaged almost 7 IP per start his entire career. There’s just too much volatility in the rotation that we really need someone who’s a lock to pitch 200 IP. With that said, Old Man Dickey will get really close to 200 IP this year, and maybe he can be counted on to do the same next year on the cheap. But Coppy said he hoped Garcia/Colon/Dickey could have pitched 550-600 IP this year, and it looks like it’ll end up being around 475 IP, even with the innings pitched for other teams is considered. But you almost have to back out some of Colon’s innings for Minnesota because, had he been effective, he’d have pitched some of those innings for us, and since he didn’t, that kinda worked against the strategy. But those missed innings are like needing a couple more relievers or another starter, and that’s even more strain on the talent pool.
http://www.espn.com/mlb/story/_/id/20434823/stop-everything-doing-watch-los-angeles-angels-andrelton-simmons
Well this is getting depressing, but hey Sean Newcomb threw 5 innings the other night!
Get Medlen in. He has been throwing relatively deep into games – alright with limited success – but he’ll give us 7IP with 4ER or so. I admit, I have a very soft spot for him. Get him in and manage Folty’s innings. Free Medlen!
@11: he’s the best this old man’s ever seen.
New off day post up