Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
veganfan21 wrote:
The W/L is a team statistic, not the pitcher's, since W/L never necessarily relies on a pitcher's performance.
I appreciate your position generally, but I have to strenuously object to this idea. The two starting pitchers are by far the most important two players in every game. In fact, one of the unique things about baseball is how different a team is day to day based upon who is starting the game. Playing the Sox with Chris Sale and playing them with Dylan Axelrod are two completely different experiences.
Sure, and even though I'm still not entirely convinced by your position(s), I still appreciate the nuanced approach. It's definitely food for thought.
That being said, I don't know why your contention regarding starters being the most important players in the game should undermine what I said about W/L being more reflective of team performance than an individual starter's performance. Like I mentioned previously, using the Sox and the paltry 3.8 runs averaged as only one example, I don't see how a pitcher who gives up two runs over eight innings is responsible for the 1-2 loss. He gave up the two runs that caused the loss, but he's not responsible for the failure to score more than what he gave up. That's where I'm not comfortable with the L in this case. That an opposing pitcher gave up less runs than the Sox pitcher should not, in my view, retroactively become the criteria by which the Sox pitcher is judged. I don't think performance criteria should be fluid and game-specific, although I think that's where you stand given your earlier remark, which I'm loosely paraphrasing, about pitchers pitching within the single game of record.
Put bluntly, and using some of the "quality start" criteria as a benchmark, I will always laud a pitcher who goes at least seven innings while giving up three or less runs. To me, and I know this is where you'll strongly disagree, that's always at least a good game even if the opposing pitcher gives up less runs over the same number of innings or more. Maybe my thinking fits into the more modern, watered down way of pitcher expectations you mentioned earlier - and which I find plausible - but that's just how I see it...for now.