The amazing Darren Oliver @southpawDO28

Darren Oliver / Kelley L Cox-USA TODAY Sports

Darren Oliver / Kelley L Cox-USA TODAY Sports

Darren Oliver has re-signed with the Blue Jays for 2013 and he’ll be coming back for his 20th season in the majors. He’ll be 42 on Opening Day.

Perhaps the most incredible thing about Oliver’s career is that he isn’t simply hanging on into old age. His line for the last 5 years (2008-2012) reads like this: 304 games, 1 start, 314.1 IP, 271 H, 79 BB, 274 K, 2.52 ERA, 175 ERA+.

Take a look at that line again. Basically, he’s been an ace reliever.

Oliver’s last bad season was in 2004. He didn’t pitch in the majors in 2005, but since then has rattled off 7 straight years ranging from good to excellent. Over that period, he’s been worth 10 Wins Above Replacement as a middle reliever.

Just to give you an idea of how valuable Oliver has been, here are the leaders in WAR among non-closing relievers:

Rk Player WAR SV G From To
1 Octavio Dotel 15.4 109 752 1999 2012
2 LaTroy Hawkins 14.1 88 871 1995 2012
3 Rafael Betancourt 13.6 58 603 2003 2012
4 Matt Thornton 10.4 23 546 2004 2012
5 Scott Downs 9.9 26 496 2000 2012
6 Sean Marshall 9.4 16 365 2006 2012
7 Mike Adams 9.3 4 358 2004 2012
8 Joaquin Benoit 9.1 13 475 2001 2012
9 Jesse Crain 8.5 4 494 2004 2012
10 Jeremy Affeldt 8.4 28 621 2002 2012
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 1/17/2013.

Oliver himself didn’t qualify for this list since he was primarily a starter before his renaissance.

If we look at just 2006-2012, since Oliver has been reborn as a reliever, here are the top WAR totals among non-closing relievers:

Rk Player WAR SV G From To
1 Rafael Betancourt 11.1 52 448 2006 2012
2 Matt Thornton 10.1 23 472 2006 2012
3 Scott Downs 10.0 26 438 2006 2012
4 Darren Oliver 10.0 5 410 2006 2012
5 Sean Marshall 9.4 16 365 2006 2012
6 Mike Adams 8.0 3 299 2006 2012
7 Brad Ziegler 7.3 19 323 2008 2012
8 Grant Balfour 7.1 34 343 2007 2012
9 Darren O’Day 7.1 2 255 2008 2012
10 David Robertson 6.8 5 269 2008 2012
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 1/17/2013.

Any way you slice it, this guy is among the best middle relievers going into 2013.

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RJ
RJ
11 years ago

He’s also picked up a knack of ending up on postseason teams. Oliver made one postseason appearance in his first 13 years, but has pitched in October in six of the last seven seasons since his 2006 renaissance, with mixed results. His last appearance was a certain game 6 of the 2011 World Series.

Hartvig
Hartvig
11 years ago

This talk of setup me brought me back to 1995 and my Rotisserie league team that year. Halfway thru the draft or thereabouts I had no shot left at a halfway decent closer and there were enough openings that the few scrags that did remain would not go cheap either. And of course starting pitchers had been picked pretty clean as well. I decided to take a chance on a couple of setup guys who might have a shot at closing. Neither one actually got that chance but between Dave Veres (5-1, 2.26 ERA, 94 K’s, 1.15 WHIP) and Julian… Read more »

Mike L
Mike L
11 years ago

Here’s a quote from Bill James’ 1995 Player Ratings. “Slender left-hander, held left-handed batters to a .119 average in ’94. Has above average fastball, mixes it with a wide slider which is almost a curve. Originally a starter, he tore up his shoulder and missed almost all of the 1990 and ’91 seasons, re-emerging as a reliever. Control isn’t great, but then, most good pitchers don’t start off as control pitchers.

John Autin
Editor
11 years ago

I’ll add some more praise of Oliver:

– #5 in total reliever WAR over the last 5 years, trailing Mariano, J.Soria, J.Johnson, and (the remarkably unheralded) Sean Marshall. Oliver and Mike Adams are the *only* relievers worth 1+ WAR each of those 5 years.

– #6 in non-closer WPA over the last 5 years.

– Oliver is *not* a lefty specialist by any means. Over the past 5 years, 56% of his batters faced were righties, and he faced more RH than LH in each season. Last year, he held RH to .196/.514, with 1 HR in 107 AB.

Doug
Editor
11 years ago

Here are relievers since 1901, aged 37-41 (min. 300 IP). Rk Player ERA+ IP From To Age G GF W L W-L% SV ER BB SO ERA HR Tm 1 Mariano Rivera 220 329.2 2007 2011 37-41 322 283 16 17 .485 190 74 49 328 2.02 20 NYY 2 Darren Oliver 175 314.1 2008 2012 37-41 304 53 21 13 .618 5 88 79 274 2.52 20 LAA-TEX-TOR 3 Ellis Kinder 149 433.2 1952 1956 37-41 234 167 33 26 .559 73 133 134 210 2.76 35 BOS-TOT 4 Hoyt Wilhelm 147 617.1 1960 1964 37-41 272 206 44… Read more »

Dalton Mack
Editor
11 years ago
Reply to  Doug

And here are middle relievers in the same age range, sorted by WAR: http://www.baseball-reference.com/play-index/share.cgi?id=Y1T1s

bstar
11 years ago
Reply to  Doug

Falling through the cracks of both P-I searches above is Takashi Saito, with the following line:

Saito age 37-41 IP-247.2 ERA+ 194 WAR-7.7

Dalton Mack
Editor
11 years ago
Reply to  bstar

Good point. The only thing keeping Saito out of my search was the “middle reliever” stipulation, or GF < 1/3 G.

bstar
11 years ago
Reply to  Dalton Mack

Right. In fact, Saito WAS a closer at age 37 for LAD and picked up 18 saves at age 38 for them, but I do think he deserves a mention somewhere on here. I’m not aware if he was just injured last year or his career is over.

Dalton Mack
Editor
11 years ago
Reply to  bstar

I believe he’s back in Japan, and if memory serves, on the same team as Andruw Jones.

John Autin
Editor
11 years ago
Reply to  bstar

Saito’s career 185 ERA+ ranks 4th all-time with a 300-IP minimum.

bstar
11 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

Speaking of ERA+ for relievers, Jonathan Papelbon is sitting at 499.1 career innings. He should slip into second all-time with 500+ IP ahead of Billy Wagner (unless he gets really lit up in his first appearance this year).

Pap’s at 192 and Billy Wagner is at 187.

Artie Z.
Artie Z.
11 years ago
Reply to  bstar

I know it was his 2nd game of the season, but do you mean lit up like this: http://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/ATL/ATL200204060.shtml Smoltz’ ERA didn’t drop below 6 until May. It didn’t drop below 5 (and stay below 5) until mid-June. He had an ERA over 4 as late as August 6. And yet he still saved 55 games. His ERA, without including that game, was 2.37, meaning that one game raised his ERA almost a full run (season ERA of 3.25). This is one of those cases that makes me wonder about ERA being a good measure of value for relievers. His… Read more »

John Autin
Editor
11 years ago
Reply to  bstar

Artie Z @16 — That’s an interesting point about Smoltz’s bad game. I checked the 2002 relief leaders in Win Probability Added divided by Leverage Index (WPA/LI, a.k.a. Situational Wins Saved). Smoltz ranked 7th in that category, trailing only Gagne among closers. Then I saved the top 50 in that WPA/LI search, and re-ranked them according to WAR. Smoltz ranked 41st with 1.1 WAR, trailing 11 other closers besides Gagne. 14 of those 50 rated at least 2.2 WAR, so in some sense it does seem that the one bad game cost Smoltz more than 1 WAR. This requires more… Read more »

e pluribus munu
e pluribus munu
11 years ago
Reply to  bstar

Replying to Artie @16 and JA @18: The Smoltz game is one of my favorite examples of the limits of stats (I love stats, but love that they have limits, too). The last time I brought it up – awkwardly, in an early season discussion generally about starting pitchers, if it’s not a false memory – John had introduced the idea of “disaster starts,” and the issue later led to his “Mulligan ERA” for starters, a neat stat that had a vogue on HHS for a few weeks. The larger point is that the quality and value of a player’s… Read more »

John Autin
Editor
11 years ago
Reply to  bstar

epm @19 — FWIW, if we estimate the WAR cost of the Smoltz eruption at between 1.0 and 1.5 WAR, the impact on his all-time WAR ranking is not large. Giving Smoltz an extra 1.0 to 1.5 WAR (exactly how much doesn’t matter for this purpose) would lift him 4 spots, from 39th to 35th. He would pass Vic Willis, Don Sutton, Roy Halladay (for now), and Jim Palmer. To get him up any higher on the career list, the value of that game would have to be at least 2.0 WAR, which I just can’t see. That would give… Read more »

e pluribus munu
e pluribus munu
11 years ago
Reply to  bstar

Fair enough, John (although passing Palmer seems to me not such a tiny blip). But the larger point is that to dock a 200 game-winning HoF candidate 1.5-2.0% of his lifetime WAR for 2/3 of an inning of an early April game that got out of hand illustrates a type of unavoidable distortion that averages/advanced stats can mask. No quarrel with WAR – I think it does what it does pretty well. But like all averages, adjusted or not, it smooths out the bumps. Sometimes, the pattern of bumps itself offers important data. (And I hope the Mulligan ERA makes… Read more »

bstar
11 years ago
Reply to  bstar

One can make a reasonable mathematical estimation on what Smoltz’s WAR would be without the disaster game. Assuming things like park factors, strength of opposition, etc. are the same, you just change Smoltz’s RA9 and IP to reflect the lost game. This gives us 79.2 IP and a 2.485 RA9. Since RAA is [IPx(RA9avg-RA9)/9], we can solve for Smoltz’s new RAA assuming RA9avg is unchanged. I get 12.26 RAA for Smoltz. It gets tricky after that, as there is a step that recenters the league avg. to zero. Using the old numbers with the disaster game, Smoltz’s RAA is 4.55… Read more »

bstar
11 years ago
Reply to  bstar

I was worried that the RAA to WAR conversion for Smoltz was off in the previous comment, so I tried to find a 2002 NL reliever with approximately the same IP who had close to 12 RAA, like the mulligan Smoltz. It looks like the best comp is Luis Vizcaino of the Brewers, who had 81.1 IP, 11 RAA, a 0.0 WAA adjustment(like Smoltz), and 1.7 WAR.

If ~80 IP of 2002 NL ball translates to 1.7 WAR, the approximation of Smoltz’s mulligan WAR being 1.8 with 12 RAA seems to check out.

e pluribus munu
e pluribus munu
11 years ago
Reply to  bstar

If I follow you, bstar – and my record on this sort of thng is about .257, normed – the effect is about 30-50% less dramatic than I’d estimated.

When writing about Smoltz’s game in the future, I will tone down my rhetoric by 40%.

Thanks for putting so much effort into this!

bstar
11 years ago
Reply to  bstar

epm, thanks but it really doesn’t take that long. The only performance-based inputs into pitcher rWAR are IP and RA9. You can compute RAA really easily from that. I just did Bob Gibson’s 1967 disaster game and it took 5 minutes. Once you find RAA and estimate what the recentering adjustment might be, all you have to do is use the P-I to find a pitcher from the same league with similar RAA and IP (since the conversion varies based on IP) , and you should be able to convert from RAA to WAR pretty easily. One possible error source… Read more »

John Autin
Editor
11 years ago
Reply to  bstar

bstar @30: “Once you find RAA and estimate what the recentering adjustment might be, all you have to do is….”

Why do I feel that I just boarded two trains departing Chicago in opposite directions at different speeds? 🙂

Seriously, I totally dig that you can do those figures *and* explain your work. Me, I’d have a better chance of … well, of finding Cliff Clavin in my kitchen.

bstar
11 years ago
Reply to  bstar

JA, there’s very little math involved, really, but thanks.

Mike A.
Mike A.
11 years ago

I sorted Oliver’s career by ERA+. His best years w/ 50+ IP, in order, are at ages 41, 40, 39, 38, 37. This should make for an interesting projection!

BryanM
BryanM
11 years ago

Oliver is staying the same, the hitters are getting worse

Rico Petrocelli
Rico Petrocelli
11 years ago

I saw Oliver start a game for the Sox at Fenway. Mirabelli hit a homer. Oliver got shelled.

What was that…fifteen years ago??

I for one have aged

PP
PP
11 years ago

But you’ll always have 1969 to look back on with a smile.

Steven
Steven
11 years ago

He’s this year’s winner of the Rheal Cormier I Thought He Was Long Gone, But There He Is In The Box Score Crafty Lefthander Award.

John Autin
Editor
11 years ago
Reply to  Steven

I still can’t believe Arthur Rhodes hung up his spikes after just 900 games and 20 seasons!

His 2011 record of 7 one-batter appearances in a single postseason will stand for decades, I’m sure. 🙂

Doug
Editor
11 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

Rhodes’ and Oliver’s appearances in the 2011 WS almost resulted in a 40 year-old pitcher appearing in every WS game. Nevertheless, the six games with such an appearance is the most in any WS.

We are still waiting for a WS game in which each team featured a 40-something pitcher (the only other series with a 40-something pitcher appearing for each team was 2005 with Roger Clemens and Orlando Hernandez). Two forty-something pitchers have appeared in the same WS game for one team only twice: 1934 Cardinals (Vance, Haines) and 1947 Yankees (Newsom, Chandler).

John Autin
Editor
11 years ago
Reply to  Doug

Newsom/Chandler didn’t exactly strike a blow for the old guys: http://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/BRO/BRO194710020.shtml Newsom started and allowed 5 runs while retiring 3 batters (2 CS in the 1st bailed him out of that frame). Chandler pitched the 4th and restored Brooklyn’s 5-run lead, which turned out to be just enough. P.S. I’m glad I saw that box score. Looking at the 9th inning, I saw “B.Johnson” made the Yanks’ first out, and thought — Who? I had no idea that Billy Johnson was NYY’s more-or-less regular 3B in 1943 and ’46-’50. And certainly didn’t know that he hit 3 triples in that… Read more »

Richard Chester
Richard Chester
11 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

Now John, if you had been paying close attention to my comments you would have known I have mentioned Billy Johnson twice since Sept.20. I even mentioned his 3 WS triples on Sept. 20, 2012, post #165, under blog Alex I’ll Take the Yankees….

Johnson held the record for most RBI by a Yankee third baseman until broken by Graig Nettles.

John Autin
Editor
11 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

Richard @34 — Wait, now: Who’s this Grieg Netters lad you speak of? Anyway, I see that when he wasn’t lacing October triples, Billy (Don’t Call Me White Shoes) Johnson was performing such amazing feats as: – being the last Yankee to reach 90 RBI with 10 HRs or less, which he did twice; – slugging 2 HRs in a game on consecutive Sept. 1sts, 1950-51, each a 6-2 win (one Yanks, one Cards); and – sharing the Yankee first-year record of 155 games played (1943) until Hideki Matsui broke it in 2003. I hope you’re taking better notes than… Read more »

Mike L
Mike L
11 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

John A @35, “Grieg Netters” was a Norwegian born skier and soccer player who left the University of Oslo after two years to enter the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia in their conducting and composition studios. His athleticism with the baton was noticed, and the Yankees offered him a contract. Never had a lot of power, but great speed on the base-paths and excellent bat control. Career cut short by a shoulder injury (non-conducting arm) he returned to the world of music, and, during the 1940’s and 50’s, led some of the great orchestras of the world, including the Philadelphia, the… Read more »

John Autin
Editor
11 years ago
Reply to  John Autin

Mike L — Oh, THAT guy! Thanks for reminding me.

But you left out his tenure with the Brooklyn Dodgers Sym-Phony Band.

BryanM
BryanM
11 years ago

epm @ 16 and Artie — Similar game affecting the totals of a member of the HOF, (1 more run, actually) , this time a start – http://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/SLN/SLN196706290.shtml the idea of one-game do-overs is appealing , and I think in the run context of the time the WAR effect was probably worse, but I have no clue how to do the math , but I am typing this with a cards cap on my head, trying to improve my baseball smarts.

Steven
Steven
11 years ago
Reply to  BryanM

I was a jinx to Bob Gibson that year. The two games I saw him pitch in person in 1967 were that game and July 15, when Clemente broke his leg. Good thing for the Cardinals that I didn’t get to go to Busch Stadium to see him pitch in Game Four of the Series.

PP
PP
11 years ago

Also, Oliver’s “Transactions” list beats Lofton’s and Henderson’s. It’s quite a read…

Gootch7
Gootch7
11 years ago

Gosh. Way back in the 1996 ALDS, back when Joe Torre was still “Clueless Joe”, back before any of the Yankees’ recent titles, when we were just another one of those teams that were happy to be playing in October–I know at least you’re with me, Voomo–things were square 1-1 with Texas, back then. We considered ourselves lucky to be tied with those powerful Rangers, only evening the series by winning game two with late pluck and later luck. That Jeter kid sure is clutch, starting the winning rally in the 12th with a lead off single. But now we… Read more »

Hub Kid
Hub Kid
11 years ago

This is a great post, nicely supplemented by Doug’s and Dalton’s tables for 37-41 year relievers old 1901-present.

I confess that i hadn’t noticed Oliver, really, and this is the kind of player that I love to learn about.

Approximately one inning’s quality non-closing work a few times a week appears to be paid more logically than closing. I have not checked exact figures, but Oliver certainly appears to be a solid bargain for Toronto, for approximately 60 innings/year. How much is +/- 60 innings pitched a year actually worth?