Category Archives: Uncategorized

Danny Clyburn homered off some great pitchers

Former major-leaguer Danny Clyburn, who sadly died yesterday, hit only 4 major-league homers, but he hit them off some really good pitchers:

1998 HRs Date @Bat Pitcher Score Inn Out Pit(cnt) RBI WPA Play Description
1 1998-09-25 BAL @ BOS Tim Wakefield behind 0-4 t 4 2 5,(1-2)  1 0.055 Home Run (Line Drive to Deep LF Line)
1999 HRs Date @Bat Pitcher Score Inn Out Pit(cnt) RBI WPA Play Description
2 1999-04-11 TBD BOS Derek Lowe tied 4-4 b 8 2 3,(1-1)  1 0.298 Home Run (Fly Ball)
3 1999-04-17 TBD @ BOS Mark Portugal behind 0-4 t 4 1 1,(0-0)  1 0.059 Home Run (Line Drive)
4 1999-05-08 TBD @ CLE Mark Langston ahead 5-2 t 5 0 2,(1-0)  1 0.063 Home Run (Fly Ball)
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 2/8/2012.

Three of his four homers came against the Red Sox, and all 4 pitchers were good.

Craig Biggio – now THAT’S a Hall of Famer

Craig Biggio gets emotional before his final major-league at bat in 2007 / Icon SMI

Our recent discussion about Lou Brock a couple of questions about comparisons with Craig Biggio, who himself will be eligible for the Hall of Fame for the first time coming up soon. In short, there really is no comparison.

At first glance, Brock and Biggio have a number of similarities:

  • They both hit leadoff a lot in their careers
  • 3000 hits thanks in part to a long career
  • lots of speed & stolen bases
  • lots of doubles
    negative defensive contribution
  • OPS+ of about 110

After that high-level view, though, Biggio really separates himself from Brock (and most other players) when you dig into the details. Continue reading

Football’s over, baseball’s coming, and Jayson Werth’s hacking #Nationals

Just another nice baseball photo to get the juices flowing…

Jayson Werth homers, 9/8/2011 / Icon SMI

Werth did indeed homer on this swing, and you can tell he got all of it. Notice how his bat is ever-so-slightly bent after making square contact.

If Werth can rebound to have a good year–even .270/.370/.470–the much-improved Nationals should win at least 85 games in 2012.

100 wins and still with his original team

Thanks to offseason transactions, Justin Verlander is now the only active 100-game winner who is still with his original team. Verlander is signed with Detroit for another three years.

As you see in the table below, there were two such pitchers at the end of 2011, both toiling in the Windy City:

Rk Player Franch. W ▾ L ERA ERA+ WAR From To Age G GS CG SHO IP BB SO HR Tm
1 Mark Buehrle 1 161 119 3.83 120 46.6 2000 2011 21-32 390 365 27 8 2476.2 564 1396 274 CHW
2 Carlos Zambrano 1 125 81 3.60 122 31.8 2001 2011 20-30 319 282 9 4 1826.2 823 1542 152 CHC
3 Justin Verlander 1 107 57 3.54 124 27.2 2005 2011 22-28 199 199 14 5 1315.1 410 1215 118 DET
4 Ervin Santana 1 87 67 4.22 101 15.8 2005 2011 22-28 206 203 13 6 1297.2 414 1034 164 LAA
5 Brandon Webb 1 87 62 3.27 142 29.2 2003 2009 24-30 199 198 15 8 1319.2 435 1065 92 ARI
6 Felix Hernandez 1 85 67 3.24 129 29.1 2005 2011 19-25 205 205 18 4 1388.1 424 1264 116 SEA
7 Jered Weaver 1 82 47 3.31 128 26.8 2006 2011 23-28 177 177 8 4 1131.2 308 977 121 LAA
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 2/3/2012.

But those 2011 leaders are now both with Miami: Mark Buehrle went free agent after 161 wins in the pale hose (#6 on the franchise list, 2 shy of Wilbur Wood), while Carlos Zambrano was mercy-traded to the Marlins after wearing out his welcome both on and off the Wrigley playing field. Big Z is #11 on the Cubs’ career list with 125 wins, 3 short of Pete Alexander.

Only three other active one-team pitchers have 80+ wins: Ervin Santana (87) and Jered Weaver (82) of the Angels, and Seattle’s Felix Hernandez (85), who is the active SP leader in WAR for his original team (29.1 to Verlander’s 27.2). All three are under contract for at least the next two years, though there is much trade speculation about King Felix.

Buehrle’s departure from the South Side means that Ron Guidry remains the one-franchise leader in the free-agent era with 170 wins:

Rk Player Franch. W ▾ L ERA ERA+ WAR From To Age G GS CG SHO SV IP BB SO HR Tm
1 Ron Guidry 1 170 91 3.29 119 44.4 1975 1988 24-37 368 323 95 26 4 2392.0 633 1778 226 NYY
2 Mark Buehrle 1 161 119 3.83 120 46.6 2000 2011 21-32 390 365 27 8 0 2476.2 564 1396 274 CHW
3 Brad Radke 1 148 139 4.22 113 41.4 1995 2006 22-33 378 377 37 10 0 2451.0 445 1467 326 MIN
4 Dennis Leonard 1 144 102 3.68 107 24.2 1975 1986 24-35 307 298 103 23 1 2165.0 610 1315 202 KCR
5 Jim Palmer 1 139 83 2.98 124 35.8 1975 1984 29-38 290 278 113 27 2 2081.1 622 1035 170 BAL
6 Scott McGregor 1 138 108 3.99 99 17.5 1976 1988 22-34 356 309 83 23 5 2140.2 518 904 235 BAL
7 Steve Rogers 1 133 125 3.13 117 40.3 1975 1985 25-35 344 338 111 33 2 2450.0 747 1403 127 MON
8 Carlos Zambrano 1 125 81 3.60 122 31.8 2001 2011 20-30 319 282 9 4 0 1826.2 823 1542 152 CHC
9 Bob Stanley 1 115 97 3.64 119 21.5 1977 1989 22-34 637 85 21 7 132 1707.0 471 693 113 BOS
10 Paul Splittorff 1 113 91 3.91 102 11.5 1975 1984 28-37 296 262 50 8 1 1697.2 520 627 134 KCR
11 Justin Verlander 1 107 57 3.54 124 27.2 2005 2011 22-28 199 199 14 5 0 1315.1 410 1215 118 DET
12 Mario Soto 1 100 92 3.47 108 26.9 1977 1988 20-31 297 224 72 13 4 1730.1 657 1449 172 CIN
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 2/3/2012.

From 1920 through 1974 — comprising 958 team-seasons — there were 30 pitchers with at least 200 wins, of which 15 won 200+ on behalf of one team (whether or not they also pitched elsewhere). But since the dawn of free agency in 1975 (comprising 1,024 team-seasons), only 3 out of 23 pitchers with 200 wins did so for one team: teammates Tom Glavine (244) and John Smoltz (210) with Atlanta, and Andy Pettitte (203) with the Yankees. Three more came close: Jack Morris won 198 with Detroit, Greg Maddux 194 with Atlanta and Roger Clemens 192 with Boston.

Sidebar: Verlander and Weaver have been linked ever since they were drafted in 2004:

  • Verlander went #2 over all that year, while Weaver (the collegiate player of the year) slipped to #12 due to “signability concerns” (Latin name: Borasthesia).
  • Both were MLB fixtures within 2 years; Verlander broke camp with the 2006 Tigers and wound up as Rookie of the Year, while Weaver was called up in late May and placed 5th on that ballot.
  • Each has at least 11 wins every year since 2006; they rank #1 and #4 in AL wins in that span.
  • Verlander led the majors in strikeouts last year, Weaver the year before.
  • Verlander edged Weaver for the AL ERA crown last year, 2.40 to 2.41.
  • Verlander also holds a slim edge in their 5 career face-offs, with a 3-2 record and 3.89 ERA, compared to 2-3, 4.50 for Weaver.
  • Their career bWAR values are virtually the same — 27.2 for Verlander, 26.8 for Weaver.

 

Players traded twice together

On Twitter, @Minor_Leaguer (who writes for Bluebird Banter) asked about players who have been traded twice or more together. He cited Jeff Kent and Jose Vizcaino, who were both involved in the following trades:

July 29, 1996: Traded by the New York Mets with Jeff Kent to the Cleveland Indians for Carlos Baerga and Alvaro Espinoza.

November 13, 1996: Traded by the Cleveland Indians with a player to be named later, Jeff Kent and Julian Tavarez to the San Francisco Giants for a player to be named later and Matt Williams. The Cleveland Indians sent Joe Roa (December 16, 1996) to the San Francisco Giants to complete the trade. The San Francisco Giants sent Trent Hubbard (December 16, 1996) to the Cleveland Indians to complete the trade.

Can you think of any other examples of players who were traded together two or more times?

High Heat Stats news

A few quick news items:

  • I have added a mobile theme that makes the blog easier to read on your mobile device. You also have the option to revert to the standard desktop theme if you wish.
  • I have asked the ad server to stop with the pop-up full-page ads and videos and they have agreed. Please do not block ads otherwise on the site–I have made them unobtrusive and it’s important that they get displayed to maintain our traffic numbers.
  • I’ve implemented spam filters for comments and most should get blocked now. You still might see the occasional spam comment make it through…just ignore them.