veganfan21 wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
Frank Coztansa wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
There's no way Sale has been better this season than last
I never said or indicated otherwise.
He was an All Star last year and this year, and both times he deserved it. You have to be having a good year to make the All Star team when you are voted in by the players or picked by the manager. He's having a good year. Thats all there is to it.
Vince said it and I disagree. And I disagree with you in that I don't think he's having a particularly good year at all. It's really just philosophical. I was at that game Peavy won last Saturday. I guess you would say he had pitched better if he had lost 3-2. I just disagree with that thinking.
Over time I've come to better appreciate your position, but I think one hangup that some of us may have, I know I do, is that in this rationale you're compelled to label bailout wins as good games.
What do you mean by "bailout" wins? When a guy is taken out after giving up the lead and his teams scores the next half inning to get it back? Sure, that happens. Sometimes he'll leave with the lead and the pen will blow the game for him too. In the first case, he gets the win. In the second he gets a no decision.
To me, "game management" is illustrated perfectly by Brian McCann's grand slam at-bat against "Losing Pitcher" John Danks with two out last week. When you look at the numbers and fold them into his numbers for the entire season, it looks like he pitched a good game. I get tired of hearing "he pitched good enough to win". No, he didn't. If he had, he would have. Pitching good enough to win means allowing one less than the opposing pitcher(s). That's a starter's job. Nothing else.
But back to that McCann at-bat. That was the whole ballgame. All the "domination" of guys in different innings before and after that are immaterial. Here's the ballgame. Forget run support. This is Danks vs. McCann. And Danks managed poorly. He showed the guy all his pitches and finally put one where he could take it deep. It wasn't even a terrible pitch. Just not good enough. Danks wasn't good enough to put him away. But that's not true. We know Danks
is good enough to put him away. He's showed us that by producing ancillary numbers that are more than respectable. What he isn't good at is managing a game. Pitching with a plan.
I've seen the majority of Mark Buehrle's starts over the years. He has a curveball, but he rarely throws it. It's a decent curveball and he can locate it fairly well. It's not something like what Kershaw throws, but it's okay. If he threw it a whole lot it probably wouldn't be.
Fangraphs gives us the luxury of seeing a complete breakdown of pitch types. I've seen a game where Buehrle was in trouble late. He had thrown a lot of pitches and he got into a situation similar to the one Danks had with McCann the other night. Here's the ballgame. This batter. This pitch. Buehrle hadn't thrown a curveball all night. But he had two strikes on that hitter and the guy looked like he could go all night just fouling him off like Appling until he got one he could drive. This is the ballgame. Buehrle dropped that curve right over and walked off the mound. The batters knees buckled. That's game management. That's pitching. And that's what gets you a high winning percentage.