Darkside wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
The more esoteric stats (WAR, win shares, etc.) aside, what do you think is better for judging a starting pitcher? Those numbers are telling you a whole lot about a guy.
I'm not arguing that Buehrle isn't by far the guy you'd want on your team for all kinds of reasons, but on a strict basis of performance, it's a very close call between these guys. Zambrano has a better winning percentage on teams with a worse winning percentage. That does tell us something about how he performed.
I think pitchers are very hard to judge. Because what do you really use? If a great pitcher is on a bad team, he loses out on wins perhaps because he's got no offense behind him. Does Maddux have a great k/9? Not really, not when compared to Randy Johnson, but he's still one of the greatest ever, isn't he? Would Kerry Wood be a better pitcher than maddux? no, and so you can't use K/9.
Although they're still a bit skewed, I like WHIP and BB/9 as pitchet statistics. I think they're probably this most concentrated on what you're really trying to achieve as a pitcher, low hits and walks.
Yeah, it's complicated. It's a complicated game. Although Maddux isn't considered a "strikeout pitcher" and he certainly isn't a Ryan or a Johnson, his K/9 is still pretty high. I don't believe he ever led the league in Ks, but I'm pretty sure he was second at least once. He struck out more than most people think. Part of that is because he was so efficient he was able to last deep into games. He also had the advantage of facing the pitcher two or three times per game. I think that's often overlooked when comparing guys across leagues.
I think WHIP is critical for relievers. But for starters things get murkier. The current conventional wisdom is that "a pitcher's job is to prevent runs". I would say a starting pitcher's job is to allow less runs than the pitcher(s) he is facing. I watched a lot of Orlando Hernandez the year he was with the Sox. And there were often guys that he just refused to face. He wouldn't pitch to them. That resulted in a higher WHIP, but he usually got out of the inning by getting the guy he was comfortable pitching to.
I think over enough time, a starter's W/L record is going to tell you pretty much all you need to know about him. Aaron Sele might be an exception. But what difference does it make? If the guy was lucky, I'll take lucky.