veganfan21 wrote:
Sure, I agree that 1-0 losses do not happen all the time, but I assume you wouldn't attach much seriousness in hanging a loss on a pitcher who lost a 1-0 decision. Or would you?
I guess this comes down to your criteria for a "quality start." To me, it seems like you're overstating the centrality of a pitcher to any given game. A pitcher is in control of what type of offense his nine opponents generate or fail to generate, but that control obviously does not extend to the type of offense his own teammates are able to generate. An opponent's final run score may reflect the pitcher's performance, but the final game score, on which the W-L record is based, does not.
Your earlier example of pitchers deliberately conceding a run to the opposition is well taken, but that still does not undermine the overarching objective of any pitcher: facilitating three outs per every inning he starts while facing the lowest amount of batters as possible. If you agree with that objective, and given the lack of control a pitcher has over the final game score, then I'm not sure how W-L record encapsulate the totality and quality of a pitcher's performance.
As far as the 1-0 decision, I think it depends on the situation. If it's a crucial game and you're facing off with another good pitcher, you win it or you lose it. You gave up a single run if you lost it. I guess you can tell yourself you pitched very well relative to all the pitchers who have ever thrown a game, but you've thrown poorly relative to the one guy who actually counts.
Like any other statistic, you need a large enough sample. A single season isn't it. I don't think there is a pitcher who has spent a career playing with inferior offenses. People like to talk about Nolan Ryan as a guy who "played on bad teams". Except he didn't. And his own percentage was often worse than those of his teams. His 1987 season when he led the league in ERA with an 8-16 record was not good. The guys he was facing were producing a lower ERA in the games he faced them and the Astros didn't have a bad offense. It was limited by the park which isn't unrelated to Ryan's own low ERA.
I agree that a player can have an unlucky season as I believe is the case with Sale. But when a guy consistently puts up enough strong numbers while losing games, something is probably wrong with him.
Aaron Sele was far from a great pitcher but wherever he went his teams threw up giant scores when he pitched. Eventually, I'm not going to argue with it. I don't care why or how the guy is getting those runs behind him, but he is. I'll take the luck. I'm results oriented.
I think fantasy baseball is responsible to some degree for people worrying about things that don't really matter because they do matter to them. If you're leading your league in ratio (WHIP), you're going to put a premium on ratio. In the real world it's insignificant. We've gotten so deep into stats we want to judge teams on these different things like run differential which generally correlates, but not always. If run differential were important, teams would play the game differently. But contrary to popular belief, the object is not for the offense to score as much as possible and not for the pitcher to prevent as many runs as possible. It just isn't.