Saturday, June 23, 2012

#SaleGreinke earns its hashtag
by Christopher Kamka

Yes it's true that both men combined for merely eleven whiffs; a total each pitcher had surpassed on his own at least once this season.  But there's more to a mound masterpiece than a long trail of strikeout victims.  Sale kicked it up a notch when runners threatened to score.  Greinke simply chose to deny scoring position as an option.  When the game ended with the Southsiders' 10th consecutive goose egg (apparently the goose remains the only animal capable of producing eggs of this shape), the box score showed tremendous numbers for the two starters. 

In fact, both Sale and Greinke posted game scores of at least 80.  The game score***, developed by Bill James,  is a quick and easy way to measure the quality of a starting pitcher's performance.  While not perfect, I think it gets the job done while assigning a quick one-number value for the sake of comparison.  Digging through the box scores, it becomes apparent that the White Sox haven't participated in a  pitchers' duel of this magnitude in some time. 

The last time a Sox starter took part in a battle of 80+ game scores was game one of an August 17th,1990 doubleheader, when the "Little Bulldog" Greg Hibbard locked horns with Nolan Ryan in a strange "David vs Goliath" matchup in Texas.  The crafty White Sox left-hander was on his way to a career-high 92 punchouts (in 211 innings).  Of course the "Ryan Express" grunted and groaned (Goose Gossage, in his autobiography The Goose is Loose, commented that "When he let go of his fastball, he sounded like a woman giving birth.  Or a beast in the jungle."  Bill Melton told me virtually the same thing.) his way to at least twice as many as Hibbard's career high in 18 different seasons, tripled it six times, and with his Major League record 383 in 1973 quadrupled it.  And on this August 1990 day, the 43-year old legend posted a game score of 101#.  What would amount to Hibbard's career high of 81 went for naught. 

August 18, 1990 (game 1);  Rangers 1, White Sox 0

                   GSc     IP     H     R     ER     BB    K
Hibbard:       82      8      2     0      0        3     6
Ryan:         101     10     3     0      0        0    15


The previous "80 vs 80" came improbably in 1987, a year of epic offensive explosion.^  Floyd Bannister and Mark Langston combined to allow just three hits on a Sunday afternoon at the Kingdome.  The White Sox managed two solo homers (by Donnie Hill and Pat Keedy, of course) and the lone Mariner safety came in the bottom of the third courtesy of Harold Reynolds, who was promptly called out trying to stretch it into a double.  No White Sox pitcher would surpass Bannister's 95 game score until Philip Humber's perfect game (96) against these same (yet very different) Mariners 25 years later.

September 13, 1987;  White Sox 2, Mariners 0

                   GSc     IP     H     R     ER     BB    K
Bannister     95      9      1     0       0       0     10
Langston     81      9       2     2      2       3      9



There were two others since 1980;  both White Sox losses.  Both on May 25th

May 25, 1986       Joel Davis 82                  Dennis Leonard (Royals) 82
May 25, 1983       Britt Burns 80                 Bruce Hurst (Red Sox) 85


And the previous two came in consecutive games in 1979:

August 15, 1979    Ken Kravec  83             Mike Flanagan (Orioles) 99
August 14, 1979    Rich Wortham 83          Steve Stone (Orioles) 80

and just for fun, the Sox' Steve Trout tossed an 83 the day before on August 13, 1979 (But the Orioles' Scott McGregor turned in a shabby 32), making it three in a row by White Sox starters with exactly 83!


While other recent matchups were certainly ones to remember (for example Floyd vs Lilly in 2010, Santana vs Garcia in 2005, etc.), Sale vs Greinke fulfilled my latest obscure statistical requirements, and hopefully the White Sox offense will prevent another one of these pitchers' duels from happening for quite some time.




***Game Score:  begin with 50 points.  Add one point for each out recorded.  Add two points for each inning completed after the 4th inning.  Add one point for each strikeout.
                            Subtract two points for each hit allowed.  Subtract four points for each earned run; two points for each unearned run.  And subtract one point for each walk.

#Only six times has a pitcher reached 100+ since; Ryan again in a 5/1/1991 no-hitter, Kerry Wood 5/6/1998 in his 20-strikeout game, Curt Schilling 4/7/2002, Randy Johnson's 5/18/2004 perfect game,
  Brandon Morrow 8/8/2010, and Matt Cain in his 6/13/2012 perfect game.

^1987 offense stuck out like a sore thumb (below are MLB totals)
   YR       R/GM    HR
   1985    4.33     3602
   1986    4.41     3813
   1987    4.72     4458
   1988    4.14     3180
   1989    4.13     3083

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Dodger Disappointment

For whatever reason, Robin Ventura removed Jose Quintana from Sunday's White Sox loss to the Dodgers. With just 77 pitches thrown, it made more sense to just leave him in there. I believe in sticking with the known quantity; that every day brings a different version of each reliever. You just don't know which Matt Thornton or Addison Reed will show up on any given day. That's why if a Jose Quintana is rolling along with a low pitch count and no signs of fatigue, you need to stick with what you know, and what you know is that you've got Quintana at his best.

That being said, Quintana posted a really odd statline: gamescore of 78, pitch count of 77.

Of all White Sox starts 1918 to current, only one other Sox starter has had a game score of 75+ with a higher gamescore than pitch count.

Jack McDowell 7/14/1991 - pitches: 83, gamescore: 84.

That aside, it would have been particularly cool if Quintana would have finished off the 1-0 win in 9 innings.

The previous White Sox CG SHO against the Dodgers had been exactly 7 years ago to the day - Mark Buehrle had the last 6/17/2005.

And the previous White Sox 9-inning CG with fewer than 90 pitches was Bartolo Colon 6/7/2003... at Dodger Stadium against the Dodgers.

And I was excited about those notes, so I was particularly annoyed when Reed took the mound. Just a whole lot of bad that I care not to relive.

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Sox getting killed by Homers at Home

Philip Humber struggled through another start on Sunday, and the main culprit was the longball.  In fact, it's been a team-wide problem at US Cellular Field.   While the Southside ballpark is well known as a home run haven, the White Sox had been keeping opposing four-baggers in check for the most part:

2008:  83 HR, 82 Home Games
2009:  89 HR, 81 Home Games
2010:  79 HR, 81 Home Games
2011:  80 HR, 81 Home Games
2012:  50 HR, 34 Home Games

And I'll calculate the projected numbers for this season for the sake of comparison:
2012:  119 HR, 81 Home Games

That's a significant spike.  And adjustments need to be made.

Saturday, June 9, 2012

Putting the Hurt on Houston

Saturday, the White Sox did what you're supposed to do to the Houston Astros. They won 10-1. Chris Sale continued being that guy who, when he pitches you wonder not whether he's going to win, but how foolish will he make the opponent look. Four hits, no walks, 7 strikeouts. Pretty foolish; as the lanky lefty lowered his American League-leading ERA to 2.05. He's done an incredible job keeping the ball in the park. By comparison:

Chris Sale: 4 HR in 74.2 IP
Gavin Floyd: 14 HR in 72.0 IP

Sale was at 101 pitches through eight innings, and due to pitch count, did not get the opportunity to become the youngest White Sox pitcher (at 23 years, 71 days) to toss a complete game whitewash since Jon Garland (22 years, 335 days) on August 28, 2002. It was the right call. No need stressing a young arm (who in this game surpassed his 71.0 IP mark from 2011) in a 10-0 game in early June.

Adam Dunn hit a grand slam in the 8th inning. It snapped an 80-HR non-grand slam streak. (Previous GS was 7/25/2009).

It also gave the White Sox 5 grand slams in the last 11 games against the Astros dating back to game 2 of the 2005 World Series.

10/23/05 - Konerko off Chad Qualls
6/23/06 - Podsednik off Andy Pettitte
6/24/06 - Crede off Chad Qualls
6/25/06 - Iguchi off Brad Lidge
6/9/12 - Dunn off Rhiner Cruz

Dunn's blast to straightaway center was the only extra base hit of the White Sox' 17 safeties on the day.

Saturday, February 11, 2012

The Willie Montanez Award

I've been wanting to see some kind of “honor” bestowed each season upon the Major League player who plays in the most games with a WAR of 0.0.

Since the player with the most games with a career WAR of 0.0 is Willie Montanez (1632), it'll be called the Willie Montanez Award

Most games played with 0.0 WAR – (Baseball-Reference.com)

year by year since 1970

2011 Juan Pierre - White Sox - 158

2010 Todd Helton - Rockies - 118

2009 David Eckstein - Padres - 136

2008 Emil Brown - Athletics - 117

2007 Felipe Lopez - Nationals - 154

2006 Jeff Conine - Phillies/O's - 142

2005 Royce Clayton - Diamondbacks - 143

2004 Tony Batista - Expos - 157

2003 Wil Cordero - Expos - 130

2002 Ricky Gutierrez - Indians - 94**

2001 Todd Zeile Mets - 151

2000 Fred McGriff - Devil Rays - 158

1999 Darryl Hamilton - Rockies/Mets - 146

1998 Rico Brogna - Phillies - 153

1997 Ray Durham - White Sox - 155

1996 Johnny Damon - Royals - 145

1995 Cecil Fielder - Tigers - 136

1994 Felix Fermin - Mariners - 101

1993 Ken Caminiti - Astros - 143

1992 George Brett - Royals - 152

1991 Jim Eisenreich - Royals - 135

1990 Alvaro Espinoza - Yankees - 150

1989 Andy Allanson - Indians - 111

1988 Chris James - Phillies - 150***

1987 Gary Ward - Yankees - 146

1986 Gary Matthews - Cubs - 123

1985 Dave Concepcion - Reds - 155

1984 Bob Kearney - Mariners - 133

1983 Jim Sundberg - Rangers - 131

1982 Aurelio Rodriguez - White Sox - 118

1981 Chris Speier - Expos - 96

1980 Larry Herndon - Giants - 139

1979 Jerry Martin - Cubs - 150

1978 Frank Taveras - Pirates - 157

1977 Craig Reynolds - Mariners - 135

1976 Larry Parrish - Expos - 154

1975 Jeff Burroughs - Rangers - 152

1974 Rusty Staub - Expos - 151

1973 Leroy Stanton - Angels - 119

1972 Rich Reese - Twins - 132

1971 Don Hahn - Mets - 98

1970 Tito Fuentes - Giants - 123



**Tied with Luis Alicea and Shane Spencer with 94 games, but Gutierrez had the most PA

***Tied with Frank White with 150 games, but James had more PA

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Cleanup in aisle 3

Here is a list of American League cleanup hitters (4th in order)
of Wednesday's games, sorted by their OPS+ entering the game

Tigers - Miguel Cabrera - 170
Red Sox - David Ortiz - 164
Rays - Ben Zobrist - 139
Mariners - Mike Carp - 138
Twins - Michael Cuddyer - 129
Rangers - Michael Young - 125
Indians - Jim Thome - 125
Yankees - Mark Teixeira - 123
Athletics - Josh Willingham - 119
Angels - Torii Hunter - 112
Royals - Eric Hosmer - 106
Blue Jays - Adam Lind - 99
Orioles - Vladimir Guerrero - 90
White Sox - Alex Rios - 54

54. Fifty-four. CLEANUP. 54.

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Mike Trout; Winged Prodigy

Mike Trout homered twice tonight, at age 20 years, 23 days...

The last player to homer twice in a game at a younger age than Trout is

Andruw Jones - August 22, 1996 (19 y, 121 d)

And the only other player younger than Trout with a 2-homer game since 1970 is

Ken Griffey, Jr. - May 30, 1989 (19 y, 190 d) and again July 5, 1989 (19 y, 226 d)

and the last guy before Griffey Jr. to homer twice in a game at an age younger than Trout is

Tony Conigliaro - September 16, 1964 (19 y, 253 d)