The Whitey Herzog Cardinals
teams were built on speed and defense.
The recent Mets teams were built around power and pitching. Which approach is better?
Michael Maar says –
I'll start by pointing out that the one constant in building
a winning team is great pitching. Whitey
Herzog's teams had it, the '86 Mets had it, and every dynasty you can think of
had it.
There's no single answer to this question - teams have won
with both approaches. The key is to be
dominant in one way or another. So it's
not good enough to be able to hit HRs, but rather you have to have dominant
power, and be able to hit HRs against top pitching to win in the playoffs. That's not too common. If you're going speed and defense like the
old Cardinal teams, then you better have high batting averages/OBP, be aggressive
with that speed like the Cardinals or even the 2015 Royals, and have clutch
hitters.
I would say that it's best to be solid across the board and
have lots of ways you can win a game rather than selling out areas for a single
approach. Even the 80's Cardinals had Jack Clark bashing HRs at key moments. The '86 Mets had pretty solid Defense, and a
few guys could steal a base when needed.
Putting all of your winning strategy in one basket of hitting HRs or
stealing bases leaves you open to having your overall offense shut down. Neglecting defense for the sake of HRs often
leads to the ball finding the wrong guy in a big moment. Overall, I go old school with pitching,
strong defense especially up the middle, and then look for a balanced attack
with at least 3 guys who can hit 25+ HRs, some high OBP/BA table setters with
decent speed, and overall hitters who pass the
clutch eye test.
Jack Flynn says –
There is no singular approach to constructing a baseball
team. There are only "best practices," which essentially boil down to
getting the best players you can and maximizing their skills while minimizing
their shortcomings.
Of course, the caveat to this is that you must employ players
whose skill sets complement each other. Speed is not particularly useful in
players without a high on-base percentage. (Hence the old adage - you can't
steal first base.) Defense is not particularly useful if you don't have good
hitters to score more runs then you are preventing, or pitchers who are frequently
allowing batted balls that land over the heads of good defenders and into the
hands of spectators. Pitching is not particularly useful without good defenders
to convert batted balls into outs. (Sandy Alderson doesn't
seem to subscribe to this theory, but I do.)
Power - in particular, the ability to hit a home run - is the
only "skill" that is essentially self-reliant. A run is scored when a
home run is hit. It doesn't matter how good the pitcher generally is, or how
airtight the defense may be behind that pitcher. Home run trots are not timed
for anything other than curiosity, and the run goes on the board regardless of
whether it takes a batter 15 seconds or 30 seconds to round the bases.
Were I a betting man, I would wager that a team with home run
hitters batting behind players with a high on base percentage will win more
games than it loses.
Tom Brennan says –
Let's say after the Jay Bruce and
Yo Adrian acquisitions you really still have $30 million to spend...how would
you spend it to optimize 2018
Mack says –
God, did I love Herzog ball… especially the 5 million 95+mph
relievers that just kept coming out of the pen during the playoffs.
And who can argue with that success? They were always in the
playoffs.
I vote for speed and defense, though we are currently long off that
approach.
Mike Friere says –
Interesting question, Reese.
My first response was angst, as it seemed that the Mets' lack
of success in the 80's was primarily due to the Cardinals. Memories being what they are, I decided to
research the "White Rat's" career managerial record and I was
surprised at what I found.
He managed four different teams over an eighteen year career
and had a career winning percentage of .532, which translates to an average
season of 86-76 in today's 162 game format.
Eleven of his eighteen years were with the Cardinals and his numbers
with them were similar with regards to the winning percentage. What was odd is that he had three really good
years (1982, 1985 and 1987), to include a World Series Championship and two NL
Pennants (the last two seasons were at the Mets' expense in some ways, hence my
angst). The rest of his career with the
Cardinals was rather ordinary, which isn't what I thought on first blush.
When his teams were going well, they played excellent
fundamental baseball and they could literally run you out of the building. An innocent walk to someone like Vince Coleman would turn into a couple of stolen bases
and then a dribbler from Tommy Herr to the right
side of the infield would score a run. They
consistently did this to their opponents and when you combine that with their
pitching and defensive prowess, you routinely lost to them by a run or
two. It always felt sort of
"cheap" but it was successful more often than not. Plus, speed and defense never go into a
slump, right?
Sandy Alderson does not share the same views on speed and defense, it
seems. If a player he likes (power
hitter) also happens to run a bit or can play some defense, then that's a plus,
but it does not seem to go along with the Money Ball philosophy. Power hitting teams can light up a scoreboard
and combined with solid pitching, will be successful as the aforementioned
Cardinals teams, albeit in a different way.
The problem as I see it is that power hitting teams can and do go into
slumps, usually when they face good pitching.
Furthermore, in a short playoff series, fundamental breakdowns usually
decide the outcome (refer to the Mets/Royals series in 2015).
If I had to choose, I would take speed and defense every
time. Especially with a team that
features a strong pitching staff and one that plays in a pitcher's park, but
that's just me (or perhaps my 1980's "Cardinals PTSD" speaking).
Reese Kaplan says –
Speed and defense don't go into slumps. Good pitching can defeat power and good
hitting can defeat pitching. I think the
probability of success is greater when you create a team that contains
best-of-breed gloves and runners.
Of course, small ball is not as "sexy" as are
homers and strikeouts, but there are a great many people who have had
spectacular careers on the glove and foot speed sides of the equation.
Considering the club has lost in 5 of the previous 7 years of
the current regime's approach, maybe it's time to go in a new direction (or any
direction, not just making it up as you go along...a plan would be nice.) Chicks may dig the long ball, but the
Cardinals were in the thick of it year after year, not just in leap years or
when Halley's Comet makes an appearance.
Reese,
ReplyDeleteI love watching good, fundamental baseball.
That said, I don't think it's any coincidence that the team with fr and away the most championships is nicknamed the Bronx Bombers.