I will preface this article by saying that I believe in analytics – I have both Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees in engineering, so math has been the most important tool in my box.
However, I also believe that you can have too much of a good
thing, and the 2021 Mets have been gluttons at the analytics table. Their post-season aspirations are suffering
from gout.
All baseball analytics boil down to probability and
statistics. Crunch a whole lot of data
on many aspects of player and team performance, and then analyze that data to
predict outcomes. When an outcome is
predicted, a manager can use tactical measures on the field to manipulate that
outcome. Also, in the cage or the
bullpen, a coach can adjust player mechanics to achieve a desired outcome.
There are many examples of this theory in practice in
today’s Major League Baseball, such as:
-
Defensive shifts to cover areas of the field
where batters are most likely to hit
-
Substitutions to create lefty-righty or
righty-lefty matchups
-
Removal of pitchers before facing a lineup the
third time around
-
Retooling of a batter’s swing to increase launch
angle
-
Throwing more pitches outside the strike zone to
players with high chase rates
Wow! The use of science
and math to gain a tactical advantage!
How could you go wrong?
The answer lies in not understanding the limitations of the
theory. Probability theory is based on
something called the “law of large numbers”.
From Wikipedia, “According to the law, the average of the results
obtained from a large number of trials should be close to the expected value
and will tend to become closer to the expected value as more trials are
performed.” These “trials” are expected
to be identical events performed many times in the same environment. Think of a pair of dice rolled over and over
on the same table. The probability of
rolling “7” is 17%. Now let’s apply that
to baseball. There are certainly a large
number of events since there are 30 teams playing 162 games per year with
rosters of 26 players. There have been
almost 150,000 at-bats in 2021 so far, so that’s a large number. But wait, part of the criteria is that they
have to be identical events performed in the same environment. An at-bat against a tired rookie left-handed
pitcher during the daytime in Colorado is not the same as an at-bat at night
against Gerrit Cole in front of 50,000 fans in Yankee Stadium.
So the data is not clean, and the probabilities derived from
it are not accurate. There are still
valid indicators that come from it, but there are several ways I believe the
Mets are misusing the indicators:
Case 1: Pitching changes.
Luis Rojas consistently removes starting pitchers by the fifth or sixth
inning, even with pitch counts that would reasonably allow for an inning or two
more without health impact. Is this
because the analytics say that batting average against goes up on the third
time around? Is it to leverage an
advantageous righty-lefty matchup? We
don’t know and he won’t tell, but the effect is that the Mets then have to fill
4 innings of work from their bullpen night after night. Add to that the fact that Mets relievers
(almost) never go more than 1 inning, and over a few months, the bullpen gets
fatigued. (By the way, there are no
splits in the data for fatigued vs fresh pitchers). I would propose that this misused analytic
leads to additional runs allowed in the later innings.
Case 2: Launch angle.
It is no secret that many of today’s hitters are having their swings
adjusted to pull the ball with optimized launch angle for home runs. For certain power hitters (e.g. Alonso,
Conforto) this can improve run production.
But for others it can have disastrous effects. Jeff McNeil, a lifetime .319 hitter coming
into the 2021 season is suddenly struggling to get to .250. With his world-class bat-to-ball skills he
should be having multiple hit games against every team that employs a shift
against him, but instead he has struck out or rolled over into 4-3 outs
repeatedly.
Case 3: Over-use of pinch hitters. The use of a pinch hitter in a critical
situation can be a manager’s greatest contribution to team success. However, I think the Mets overuse the lefty-righty
splits every ballgame. The same manager
that can’t justify leaving his starter in for a third time around the lineup is
bringing in 3-4 pinch hitters per game – meaning that he is removing a guy that
has seen the opposing starter a few times already. It’s brilliant when a lefty pinch hitter
forces the other team to remove their righty starter that was dominating for 7
innings. It’s dumb when Nido pinch hits
for McCann (they’re both righties batting around .230) because his stats are
better against the opposing pitcher over 20 career at-bats.
Case 4: The over-shift.
The defensive shift works well when the opposing batter hits the ball as
expected and won’t adjust his swing knowing there is an open field. Even though this still happens in baseball, I
have seen the Mets defense shift three players to the right of second base with
a runner on first. It has disrupted
double plays and left huge open gaps for opposing hitters to exploit. With the outstanding fielding range of both
Lindor and Baez, it is a sin to bunch them up together on the same side of the
infield.
6 comments:
You nailed it. Outstanding analysis of the problem of the 2021 Mets struggles.
Paul, nice breakdown. All teams do the same sort of stuff. I am not sure what some teams do better than the Mets in that regard. I think it has to go player by player. Saw an article recently where Quattlebaum(?) said McNeil has hit in a LOT of bad luck this year, plus the super slow start plus the injuries.
I truly believe the analytics need to focus on field depth. 5 less fee all around, and 8 feet shorter in CF, would boost the boys’ XBHs and averages…and psyches. Cheap fix…big results.
One stat grabbed me last night…Sal Perez has 45 HRs, while McCann had 42…RBIs. Remarkable.
5 less FEET, not fee.
Great article. Agree with you 100 percent.
This is good, thoughtful analysis.
However these are trends in baseball across the board, rather than something afflicting the Mets only.
People whine about Rojas -- because people always whine about managers, especially on the internet -- we would have driven Gil Hodges out of town -- but the next guy who replaces him will be directed to follow the same strategies.
Manager has become a middle management position now. A corporate guy, a "team player." The days of John McGraw and the manager who does his own thing has vanished from the landscape.
I mean to say: I think your problems with the Mets are, in actuality, your problems with baseball as it is currently played.
The Mets won last night 3-2 and used 5 relievers to do it. Six guys! A team really needs at least a couple of starters who can consistently give them seven innings. The insane thing is that even when those starts are available, the Mets are now pulling guys at 80+ pitches.
That said, from the stats I've seen -- and it's been a little while -- I don't think the Mets are outliers in terms of bullpen usage across MLB.
We sure miss Jake. Remember him?
Jimmy
I also think you are probably wrong about several other points.
You are a math guy, and you need to appeal to that part of my brain. So when you contend the Mets pinch-hit too much, well, those are just words. What's the problem? Last I looked -- again, there's no supporting data in any of this -- the Mets had pretty good success with the pinch-hitting this year. It's been part of the strong bench.
I really don't understand what you mean or why it annoys you.
Jimmy
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