Effectively Wild: A FanGraphs Baseball Podcast - Effectively Wild Episode 2476: Bodies, BABIPs, Batter’s Boxes, and Birds

Episode Date: May 8, 2026

This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, please visit our Patreon. Ben Lindbergh and Meg Rowley banter about a report that Tarik Skubal’s surgically cleaned-up elbow contained on...ly a solitary “loose body,” why the NL now has the upper hand over the AL and whether the latter’s lackluster win-loss records matter, Meg’s thrilling, frustrating in-person Paul Skenes spectator experience, Kazuma Okamoto’s move back in the box, and Rico Garcia’s impressive .000 BABIP streak, plus a follow-up on why good framers have struggled at challenging, listener emails (57:54) about making more knuckleballers, a popup that never comes down, retiring not just numbers, but names, rotating umpires within games, extra-inning non-scoring, and “extra bases,” followed by a bunch of postscript updates. Audio intro: Guy Russo, “Effectively Wild Theme” Audio outro: Andy Ellison, “Effectively Wild Theme” Link to Heyman tweet Link to “Torn and Frayed” Link to Bodies Bodies Bodies Link to Rodón quote Link to Rodón EW discussion Link to Sheehan on NL vs. AL Link to team run differential data Link to 2026 team run differentials Link to winning records data 1 Link to winning records data 2 Link to AL vs. NL record by year Link to Skenes start gamer Link to Skenes TTOP Link to 1-0 game at Coors Link to Savantle Link to Petriello’s Okamoto tweet Link to Petriello’s Okamoto article Link to Okamoto quesadilla article Link to depth in box correlations Link to .000 BABIP streaks Link to Garcia profile Link to fielder support for pitchers Link to Voros BABIP article Link to EW Episode 1399 Link to Ben’s article on knuckleballs Link to Knuckleball Nation website Link to Knuckleball Nation article Link to knuckleball total by year Link to pitcher knuckleball totals Link to Jannis on EW Link to Granderson popup clip Link to Granderson popup post Link to Orosco glove article 1 Link to Orosco glove article 2 Link to Orosco glove article 3 Link to Prince guitar toss article Link to Lee6 article 1 Link to Lee6 article 2 Link to Lee6 article 3 Link to Baumann on the Muncys Link to EW Episode 1700 Link to EW Episode 1715 Link to scoreless zombie-inning streaks Link to listener emails database Link to Domínguez injury story Link to Jones call-up story Link to Judge/Jones comparison Link to 2026 TTO% leaders Link to all-time single-season TTO% leaders Link to Frazier’s sign-off Link to Matthews SABR article Link to Rushing feature Link to Coaches4Hire LLC photo Link to Coaches4Hire LLC info Link to coaches4hire.com Link to archived Coaches4Hire site Link to Coaches4Hire Insta  Sponsor Us on Patreon  Give a Gift Subscription  Email Us: podcast@fangraphs.com  Effectively Wild Subreddit  Effectively Wild Wiki  Apple Podcasts Feed   Spotify Feed  YouTube Playlist  Facebook Group  Bluesky Account  Twitter Account  Get Our Merch! var SERVER_DATA = Object.assign(SERVER_DATA || {}); Source

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Starting point is 00:00:01 Effectively Wild Effectively Wild Effectively Wild Hello and welcome to episode 2476 of Effectively Wild A Fangraphs Baseball podcast brought to by our Patreon supporters. I'm Meg Rowley of Fangraphs and I am joined by Ben Lindberg of the Ringer.
Starting point is 00:00:26 Ben, how are you? I'm doing well and I've got good news as relayed by John Heyman of the New York Post. Here's what he tweeted on Thursday. afternoon. Terrick Scoopal elbow surgery was such a success. He could start working out within days, and two months is even seen as a conservative estimate for the two-time
Starting point is 00:00:47 Syung winner to return four to six weeks possible. One relatively small, loose body was removed. So we got a count of the loose bodies, and in fact, it's not even plural. It's just a single, solitary loose body. Yeah. Not even bodies.
Starting point is 00:01:07 Just loose body, at most, one joint mouse. Not even joint mice. And I'm sorry to inflict that phrase on you again. Well, we're fighting. I can't remember ever seeing an update like this. The precise number of loose bodies or body in this case. Now, does this have anything to do with the purportedly cozy relationship between John Heyman and Scott Bors, who just so happens to.
Starting point is 00:01:36 represent Terrick Scouble and might be happy to pass along such a report about his client's health. I couldn't possibly presume to say, but, you know, sometimes we hear the surgery as a success. Very rarely do we immediately hear that it wasn't a success. Sometimes long after we learn that it wasn't such a success, but rarely do I hear that it was such a smashing success, that, in fact, the return to play timeline estimate is better than everyone thought. and we had a precise count of the number of bodies. And it was one. And it was relatively small. It wasn't even a big loose body.
Starting point is 00:02:14 It was a small loose body. Let's start there. Of course it was a small loose body. It's in his elbow. There is an upper bound to the size of the loose body that can be in his elbow. That's a good point. That's not a big part of your body, you know? It's not like he had a loose body in his abdomen, a much larger part of his body proportionally.
Starting point is 00:02:41 He did say a relatively small loose body. So even by the standards of loose bodies, which are small to begin with in your elbow, presumably, it's a small loose body. Okay. So I saw this update. I don't want to impugn, John. But hey, man. What are you talking about? What are we talking about?
Starting point is 00:03:09 So, okay, great. I'm glad here's the most interesting and I think happy, optimistic part of that update. That when they got in there and they were looking around and, hey, yeah, they only found one relatively small loose body. It's like, what is that as a unit of measure? I have no idea. What is the size of a typical loose body? Sorry, I'm going to get distracted. We're going into this coldest sack of distraction for a moment.
Starting point is 00:03:38 Is a big loose body like the size of a quarter? Is it like a nugget such that you would feel like, oh, there's gold in them there, hills? Like you got a prospect. What is it the size of a microchip? Is it the size of an ant? Is it the size of a large but non-dangerous spider? What is that? What is a pebble?
Starting point is 00:04:00 I really don't know. I have no frame of reference. that I've never seen such a loose body. Not this kind of loose body. So that doesn't make any sense. I mean, it does, but it's, it is information
Starting point is 00:04:12 without a reference point to the point of being sort of useless, right? Because I don't know what, relative to what? The size of, we don't know what that is. What is that? So there's that. Okay, so let's set that, set aside the potentially ant or penny shaped a bit of bone
Starting point is 00:04:28 that they pulled out of his elbow. Right. The, the best part of this update the part of it that makes you feel the most optimistic about Scoobles, both short-term and long-term health, is that when they got in there, they didn't see any other damage, right? Because sometimes they get in there and they're like, oh-oh, bomb went off in here and nobody noticed and stuff is frayed. And we are into a different genre of movie.
Starting point is 00:04:57 It's like there's a war film in there and we didn't realize it. It's like the stone song. from exile torn and frayed. That's what it looks like in there often. But not this time, evidently. Not this time. Evidently, I mentioned to Ben Clemens that I find loose bodies to be like a very horror film adjacent injury description.
Starting point is 00:05:18 And he made the excellent joke of loose bodies, bodies, bodies, which I was like, mm-mm-mm-mm-mm-beautiful. That might be our episode title. Anyway. No, it doesn't apply in this case, though, because it's only one loose body. You can do, all right. I have faith in your ability. to work as an editor, Ben, even though we are fighting.
Starting point is 00:05:35 So I am skeptical of anyone's ability to fundamentally change the diagnosis or timeline for return based on their only being one relatively small, loose body. Like, wouldn't his timeline to return be dictated more by things like, hey, does the inflammation from surgery come down? Does he have full range of motion? Does he have like full strength in the joint, right? Is he able? Also, hey, it's Terrick Scoobel.
Starting point is 00:06:08 Don't screw around and rush him back. What are you doing? What would you be doing? Now, I say that and I want to be clear that this does not read as official communication from the Detroit Tigers. What it reads like is a text message from somebody's agent, which is likely what it was. Just saying, hey, man, offering a hypothesis for the or. of that piece of information, but it did have a certain agentie flare to it. Yes, there was a spin.
Starting point is 00:06:39 I don't know why I'm so worked up about it, but something about it really kind of irked me because I feel like this is an injury where people's understanding, and I will include myself and people here, of the, like a long-term prognosis, the return to any play at all, the return to effective play is much squishier, sort of like the inside of his elbow. then our understanding of, say, Tommy John, where we have a very good understanding of how long it takes to start rehabbing to be able to throw in games to sort of return to one's peak form. We have a good sort of generalized timeline for that with deviations, obviously, upward down, depending on the guy, and certainly depending on the extent of the procedure, right? Internal brace threw us off for a long time. Now we're getting a better sense of the timelines there.
Starting point is 00:07:29 But I just feel like I'm being, excuse us where, bullshit here in a way that I don't understand the motivation behind because we've already determined that he didn't need the worst thing, Tommy John, and that upon getting in there, that he didn't have a worse injury than we had originally believed based on the loose body's diagnosis. So we're just going to find out what's happening. Yeah, we will see. It really irritated me. I was mostly amused. I found it very irritating. I feel like I'm being, excuse my swear again, bullshit. And to what end?
Starting point is 00:08:13 For what purpose? Yeah, ultimately, the proof will be in the pudding of Derek Scoople's elbow and how quickly he is able to return. But now I'm curious to see what his actual time frame is. And if he does come back more quickly than anticipated, and I'd be happy to hear from many sports surgeons in the audience. Yes, please. The number of loose bodies is correlated. Right.
Starting point is 00:08:36 Is the number of bodies in their determinative? Now, I'd rather hear this, I suppose, than remember when we talked about Carlos Rodan and the surgery that he had, that was back in January, episode 2432, we talked about his comments about his surgery, and he had a bone spur shaved down, I think, and some loose bodies cleared up. And he described it as the surgeons took a lot of body. bones out, but it's better now, which is also amusing. So I guess I'd rather hear one relatively small, loose body than took a lot of bones out. It seems, it's probably better, but I don't know,
Starting point is 00:09:13 because a lot of it is just going to be the recovery. It's an arthroscopic procedure, so it's not super invasive, but obviously it's going to take some time. Once you're in there and you insert something into an elbow, then I don't know whether the number of bodies you suck out of there really affects how quickly you come back, but perhaps it does. I will defer to superior medical knowledge, though not necessarily John Heyman's medical knowledge. Anyway, I will be disappointed from now on if we do not learn the precise number of loose bodies in every loose body removal. I need to know whether we're talking about mice or mouse in this joint. Okay.
Starting point is 00:09:50 Well, now we're back to fighting. But I think I've identified the source of my frustration and consternation with this. And it's less about how I feel like I'm being BS, although I do feel that way. My position on medical waste is well established on this podcast, which is that that's none of my business and I don't want to see it. But now I want to see the loose body. And that's what I'm Oh, you want to see the loose body. Well, because what size is it? Okay. How big is the loose body? Yeah. Poor Terrick Scouble, if he wanted some keepsakes from this surgery, he has only He has not multiple bodies to choose from.
Starting point is 00:10:31 Lucky, lucky man. A lucky man. And I hope that when they came to him in the recovery room, if he said, well, I'm imagining him still kind of drugged up when he's talking to the nurse. And the nurse said, I'm sorry, it was so small. We lost it. And now he doesn't have to grapple with what to do with it. You know, that burden, that's been removed from him.
Starting point is 00:10:55 It's been placed on me because now, I want to see the loose body. All right. Well, now we know possibly more than we wanted or needed to know about the state of Terek Skipple's elbow. Or maybe we don't actually know anymore at all. I don't think we really know that much more. I remain convinced that this is a mostly, Ben, I'm mad.
Starting point is 00:11:16 I'll try to settle you down here by transitioning to another banter topic. Okay. Which is that the American League is full of loose bodies or just full of. teams that are not off to strong starts. We have discussed this. We've mentioned this in passing. And we got an email about this from listener Brett, Patreon supporter, who said, and this was a couple days ago, I was looking at the standings and noticed that only 10 of the 30 teams currently have positive run differentials. And that's across both leagues, obviously, which got me wondering what's the lowest share of the league that has finished a season in positive territory?
Starting point is 00:11:55 And by the league, he's talking about both leagues. all leagues combined. So Michael Mountain took a look at this frequent stat blast correspondent and found the number and rate and percentage of AL slash NL teams finishing with positive run differentials, greater than zero run differentials since 1901. And the lowest share of the overall league was 37.5%. So six out of 16 teams in both 1912 and 1917.
Starting point is 00:12:24 There were a lot fewer teams then. In the 30-team era, we've never seen. seen fewer than 13 teams end the season in the black. And we're at 10 or we were at 10 when we got this email. And obviously, that is mostly the American League's doing the NLs over here going, don't look at us. We're an entirely normal league. It's not our fault. And obviously, this is fluctuating by the day. Like, we're recording here going into Thursday's games and the Cardinals are at negative one and the Rangers are at positive one. So this will change even by the time people hear this most likely. But right now, we're at, I think,
Starting point is 00:13:04 11 teams across both leagues with a positive run differential. And actually, five of those are in the American League. So the Yankees are well into positive territory. The rays are at plus 15. The Tigers at plus six. The Mariners at plus four. The Rangers at plus one. So some of those teams are barely qualifying, but nonetheless. However, when we look not at run differential, but actually record wins and losses, then that tells a somewhat different story, because as we speak, there are two winning teams in the American League, two. There are more winning teams in the American League than there were loose bodies in
Starting point is 00:13:43 Terrick Scoobble's elbow reportedly. So it is only the Yankees and the Reyes who were neck and neck in the ALEs, 25 and 12, and 24 and 12, and then no one else is above 500. Now, obviously all fun or unfun facts lie. The Guardians, as we speak, are exactly 500. The A's are exactly 500. And the Tigers are two games under. And the Mariners are two games under. And the Rangers are two games under. And the Royals and White So, you get the point. The Orioles, too. So there's a lot of clustering. But a lot of those teams are clustered in mediocre territory. So I was looking also to see about lopsided distributions
Starting point is 00:14:24 win-loss-wise over the course of a full season and I just look this up and if you want the lowest percentage of teams in a single league or you know
Starting point is 00:14:35 if we do a full league both leagues ALNL combined going back to 1901 when the AL joined the party then right now we're at 10 of 30 so 33.3%
Starting point is 00:14:48 or maybe it's 11 as we speak but Which of course was cut short, but who knows what we were in store for because that year there were 10 winning teams of the 28 total. So that was 35.7%. That's the lowest combined percentage across both leagues and not a full season, of course. 1954 was 6 of 16. So that's 37.5%. 1984 and 42. War years were also 6 of 16 and so was 41. So those were all sort of the same. And if you want a 30 team year, but you don't count this year, then 2017 is your low with 12 of 30 winning teams. That's 40%. If you look at a single league, so in the AL this year, we're at 2 of 15, two of the 15 American League teams have winning records as we speak. That's 13.3%. In 1941, it was 2 of 8, so that's 25%, but much smaller league. In 2017, it was 5%. of 15, 33.3.3%. Over in the NL, the low is 1984, four of 12. We're in winning positive territory, so that's 33.3%. And that's, those are the lows. So where we are now is super extreme,
Starting point is 00:16:07 but within a game or day or two, it could be into not totally unprecedented territory. But obviously, it's a little lopsided. And we answered a question and did a stop last recently about run differential or record comparing the leagues to each other. So the NL is holding up its end of the bargain or more so, and the AL is not. And we've remarked on this, and it's noteworthy, obviously, when you look at the standings and the playoff picture and everything. But ultimately, does this matter? I guess it matters that we've noticed it and that we've mentioned it in passing previously.
Starting point is 00:16:44 But I guess this goes back to the old debate about what makes for. an exciting race or finish or season. Is it, do you have to have elite teams or is it enough to have parity and a bunch of teams that are close to each other? Is it more about the relative records, like the relative size of the loose bodies? Is it more meaningful to know just your record in comparison to other records or your record in comparison to excellence? Is this detracting from your enjoyment of baseball in 2026 that some of these teams
Starting point is 00:17:18 sort of stink if they're still in good races. Well, if they're still in good races, it's less bothersome. Although, how good can the races be? You know, if everybody is truly not very good. I'm not concerned about it right now. I will be concerned about it if this persists for another month. Now, last year, we remarked upon sort of the midness that we were observing across baseball. And this was true across both leagues last year, if I recall.
Starting point is 00:17:46 We were like, it is a big mushy middle. I wasn't yet calling it a fat metal, which I have a, anyway, we have this big kind of mushy mess of teams. It didn't feel like anyone had really distinguished themselves with a couple of possible exceptions, but in general, kind of a me team distribution. And then we had like a completely thrilling October, right? It was a great postseason, lots of tight series, great world series, drama, excitement. And one of the things that can happen, when you have sort of midness, is that if there are standout units within the midness and they are
Starting point is 00:18:24 countering more mid units, you have this like opportunity for drama. And so sometimes it can be, the composition of the midness, I think, matters a lot. Because if everyone truly stinks, if there's just like a lot of bad baseball being played, well, that's a bummer. Because bad baseball, I mean, bad baseball can be amusing. Bad baseball can be interesting for the contours of its badness. but it's not something you necessarily want to engage with for 162. If there are units within the badness that are really good or very exciting standout individual performances, which I feel like we got last year, right? We had Cal versus Judge.
Starting point is 00:19:05 We had Otani being Otani. We had, you know, we had Scoobel's season. We had Skeen's season. We had all these guys who were individually interesting. It still managed to like elevate it enough that I, I've had fun. I felt like it was a fun year of baseball, but I don't know that I would call it a good year of baseball.
Starting point is 00:19:24 And it's hard to know exactly where we are on that continuum after, you know, a month and change of play. So I'm not, I'm not panicked. And I don't think that it necessarily means that we're doomed to like a drab October. But I will say that it feels like the quality of play sort of across the board with a couple of exceptions. Like the Yankees are good at baseball. And they seem like they're playing good.
Starting point is 00:19:47 good baseball. As we are recording this on Thursday, they played a day game and Jason Dominguez looked like he suffered a very scary injury. So we hope that Jason Dominguez is okay. We also hope that the Rangers don't have occasion to play Jock Peterson in the outfield again because that did not go well. But, you know, I think that it kind of depends. And we don't yet know if we are going to have, you know, more teams joining the sort of ranks of, well at this point I would say the teams that are just
Starting point is 00:20:20 seem like they're objectively pretty good unequivocally the Yankees and the Dodgers increasingly the Braves although I remain skeptical of them just because how is it working
Starting point is 00:20:29 it well I mean part of it is that Matt Olson and Ozzy Albies are playing out of their gourds but how is it working but then you have a mid you have a mid-ass team like the Mariners
Starting point is 00:20:41 then it takes two or three from the Braves so it's also still baseball you know all that's a long way of saying I don't know, man. I'm having fun, mostly. Part of why I can say I'm having fun is that I got to watch Paul Skeens pitch live yesterday,
Starting point is 00:20:55 which was pretty spectacular. That was pretty special, yeah. A one-nothing game in Arizona. That doesn't happen all that often. I mean, there was a one-nothing game, I think, in Colorado this year, which everyone was like, whoa, and this was also unusual. But you got to see a pitcher's duel. The headliner was Skeens, but it turned out to be not only Skeens dealing.
Starting point is 00:21:16 Can I rant briefly? Yeah. I'm very annoyed that they didn't let him try to finish that game. Oh, yeah. For those of you who were not paying attention to yesterday's Diamondbacks Pirates game, Polskine's was brilliant. And Polskine's start immediately prior had been kind of poor. But one could not say that about his start yesterday.
Starting point is 00:21:39 Again, we were recording on Thursday. So this was his start Wednesday night against the Diamondbacks. It's just easy for that guy when it's going good. And I know that that's a sort of simplistic way of describing it, but he was spectacular. He had everything working for him. His changeup was devastating. You look at his secondary stuff when you see it live and the amount that everything is moving and wiggling. You're like, I get why, you know, he throws his fastball very hard. Its shape is still not amazing. And I get why that doesn't matter. Because everything else and the command that that man has, It's the way he is able to dot things. Ben, it's beautiful.
Starting point is 00:22:20 It was beautiful. I was just like, this is beautiful. I'm really having a good time. Part of it was that it was the first day in a week that I had felt legitimately healthy. So that also helped. And you're right, it was a 1-0 game. And the Diamondbacks in the first inning, Michael Soroka gave up a home run to Brandon Lowe.
Starting point is 00:22:40 That was the only run he gave up. He had traffic for much of the evening. the diamondbacks made a number of very sharp and impressive defensive plays. So that really helped them stay in it. But even though it was only a one-run game, I don't think that he gave up his first, Skeens gave up his first hit until the sixth. He gave up two hits total.
Starting point is 00:23:03 I know he only struck out seven. It felt like he struck out more. But there was just like very little hard contact until right at the end. He threw 97 pitches. He had a protracted A.B. against Gabriel Moreno in the eighth inning. And I think that that is probably why they wouldn't send him back out there.
Starting point is 00:23:22 But I was furious. I was so angry. And look, I understand this is, you got to protect this dude. You know? He is so important. And I feel like in a way that must feel like something of an undue burden on the pirates, but one that they have to assume, they have a responsibility to like baseball like capital B baseball to not screw around with this dude and to not jeopardize his ability to appear on the mound and is it fair that I feel like that responsibility has ratcheted up in the last couple of days because of the relatively small loose body and taras scubules elbow no that's not fair to them guess what that's how I feel anyway because it's just we gotta see this guy do his thing because this is really special to get to see having
Starting point is 00:24:11 said that, how dare you take 97-pity, it wasn't like he was at like 110. You know? He was carving. His career high in the majors is 108, so they never really let him to it. You cannot convince me. And you know what? Of course you can't convince me
Starting point is 00:24:29 because you can't like unfurl the alternate reality where he gets to go back out there. I acknowledge that he could have gone back out there and immediately given up a home run, right? Like that could have happened. They were starting to hit him a little harder that at bat with Moreno it was clear he was seeing him better like there was more of a battle I understand all of that how dare you let him let him try let him I was almost I was like they deserve
Starting point is 00:24:54 to lose which is a crazy thing to say because they had played a great game also man oh Neil Cruz is a really bad inside of field but here's another defensive observation that I had that pertains to the guessing I had to do on the savant site last time savantle yeah savontle where part of of what flummoxed me initially was that the fielding and range scores for Nolan Aeronado were like very blue and I'm not confused by that anymore having seen a play out. Now he made, he still made a number of very nice little defensive plays. Don't get me wrong. But boy, it's it's not what it was anymore. Yeah. It's unfortunate. It's really, it's like so stark. But anyway, it's been a long time since I have seen a guy.
Starting point is 00:25:41 have one such an obvious plan for every dude coming up there, execute so precisely, have just such pinpoint, beautiful sharp command, such a strong handle on the entire arsenal. And like, here I am being like, hey, did you know the Polskine's is good? Which, what an unoriginal observation. But this was the first time I had seen him in person. It was really a special thing. It was, and the roof was open, which was beautiful. It was. It was. a beautiful night. We're at that point in the year here where you're like, how many more of these are we getting? I don't know.
Starting point is 00:26:16 It'll still be nice at night, I think, but it's getting there. It's starting to ratchet. And it was really something. I was so glad to get to see it. Also, the Pirates Welder helmet does travel with them. And so I got to see,
Starting point is 00:26:31 wow, put it on, and it's freaking cool, man. It's so cool. And I didn't get to see it very close. But it was, that's a nifty, that's a nifty thing. One more observation from my rant and then we can move on because I feel like I have Bogart at enough time here. I would like to submit to you that the Pittsburgh pirates are possessed of an abnormal amount of neck. There's a lot of neck on that team. And you think she's talking about Connor Griffin. And I am in part talking about Connor Griffin because there's a
Starting point is 00:27:04 lot of neck. Spencer Warwick's got a lot of neck. There's a lot of neck on that guy. He's just got like a, Yeah, in a way that is, they put his roster photo up there and they're like, whoa, it's a lot of neck. And look, I don't want people to think that I only make fun of Mike Trout for looking like a thumb. I will also just note the amount of neck. It's a lot of. Yeah. You are, you're very neckcentric. You've been most on the necks of Jesse Winker, Kyle Tucker.
Starting point is 00:27:32 Yeah, sometimes they're very long. They're noteworthy necks. I will acknowledge. Kyle Tucker, it's less, it's not just. the neck. It's mostly, it's Kyle Tucker's profile is really what stands out to me, but that's because he is Iqabod cream from the animated Legends of Sleepy Hollow, A True Classic. So it's less neck and more like chin into neck and to nose. He's just a very Ikebod crane looking fella. 108 WRC Plus. Not exactly what they wanted. Good news for the Savantle super
Starting point is 00:28:05 fans, Andrew updated the site so that you can play to your heart's content. It's It's not just one percentile screenshot a day, but you can go back and replay the old ones or just have a randomly selected ones. So, yeah, it's not like a loose body, only one relatively small one. Infinite number of savant percentiles. Well, probably not infinite. But, you know, close enough. And apologies to Andrew for crashing the site by mentioning it on the podcast. I mean, I did go to it like mid-episode.
Starting point is 00:28:39 It wasn't just gear. Give it a go. Yeah. Paul Schien, by the way, he has at times through the order effect, but it's not very pronounced. He has been worse, the third played appearance facing the same opponent in a game, but still a 616 career OPS allowed in those situations. So he has hardly been hit hard. And sorry. And one more thing.
Starting point is 00:28:59 Sorry. One more thing. You know, sometimes I think we have talked about this maybe in the past, sometimes really transcendent start. it's almost better to see them on TV than it is to see them in person because you just, you have the opportunity for replays. The center field camera angle is so great for being able to just judge movement, you know, and you get to really like visualize the whole. Like there's an argument to be made.
Starting point is 00:29:30 But this was, it was really something, Ben, you know? He does make it look easy. Yeah, he's pretty impressive. It's just so. It's just. So, 2.15 time of game. Yeah. Well, one-nothing will do it.
Starting point is 00:29:44 But yeah. Wipped through there. The two winning teams in the AL, I think that this is unusual even at this early stage of the season. And thanks to listener, Patreon supporter, Sean Kelly, who looked into this for me. So a couple instances in the American League, 1959 was close to finishing with two winning teams. They got to September 8th that year, but fewer teams in the league. And then post-expansion, 1967, made it to May 25th, and then it happened in April a number of times after that. As recently as, say, 2005, that was super early, though.
Starting point is 00:30:21 April 8th, there was one winning team that had a three-and-one record, and then every other team but one was two and two in the American League. And then there was August 4th, 1958, when there was one winning American League team. The Yankees, who had a 654 winning percentage and no other team in the league was above 500. but eight-team league. This is the latest in a season that it has happened in a 15-team league. So even just to get to this point is unusual. And technically, I guess, it has happened at a later date, but in 2020 in the American League on July 25th when the Astros were 2 and 0 and everyone else was 1 in 1 or 0-2,
Starting point is 00:31:02 that season started late, as you may recall. But really, it's unusual. And so the only one team, even early in the season, Sean says, happened 30 times in the 16-team era, plus another 7 from the Federal League. And then twice in 2002, the NL had two teams out of their 16, so also one out of eight. But I have a spreadsheet with every day with under a 25% rate of winning teams in a league. But yeah, this is weird and unusual. But does it matter? I don't know.
Starting point is 00:31:35 I think just the fact that you have mediocre records, that doesn't necessarily tell you that much about the quality of the teams in isolation. I guess it tells you about the quality of the teams in relation to each other, but they could all be pretty good and just fighting each other to a standstill or something. Or they could if we didn't have the NL to compare the AL too, because the NL has been trouncing the AL in interleague play. So if this were an earlier era where we didn't have interleague play or there wasn't as much interleague play. or there wasn't as much interleague play, then there wouldn't be as much basis for comparison maybe. And you could kind of talk yourself into it's just, you know, all the teams are okay instead of just a really stratified league
Starting point is 00:32:16 because people didn't love that either when there were a bunch of tanking teams and a bunch of super teams. So maybe damned if you do, damned if you don't. But I think there is just a perception because it's not purely the records and the run differentials. We can see the rosters too. We can see the teams. And we know that these are not powerhouses for the most part, even if we've been somewhat surprised by teams that have been worse than expected or better than expected.
Starting point is 00:32:41 But really, I guess what this highlights. And Josian just wrote about this, that we are seemingly in an era where the pendulum has swung back to the National League being superior to the American League. And even that doesn't really matter so much anymore because the leagues, it's a distinction without a difference, really. It's just kind of geography, kind of historical affiliation, but it's not as if there are dramatically different rules or really any different rules. It used to be really almost, you know, different leagues was a meaningful distinction, whether it was because of DH or no DH or different balls or different umpiring crews or different rules or whatever. And now, and for quite some time now, it's been unified, really, the DH was kind of the last actual significant difference. And when that fell, when pitcher hitting went away, then now it's just kind of conferences, really. And there's some historical resonance to it, but beyond that, not much significance.
Starting point is 00:33:40 So it is, I guess, true that we are in an era where things have swung back toward the NL. Because, you know, there was an earlier era where the NL reigns supreme for years and years. And this was back when you had to judge based on All-Star Games and World Series. And then from 2004 to 2017, the AL beat the NL in Interleague play every single year. So that was a formative period for us and for this podcast, and the AL was consistently superior during that time. And we talked a lot, and people wrote a lot about why that was, and it was kind of interesting to try to untangle that. And people thought, well, is it because the AL has the dedicated DH? And so when you play interleague games, the NL sort of someone has to be forced into service as the DH, but they don't have a dedicated DH.
Starting point is 00:34:30 And maybe that handicaps them somewhat. And I think it did, but that wasn't that big in effect, really. I think the big effect was that the best teams and the biggest spenders were in the AL. And Joe just wrote about this. We've talked about it. We just talked about it the other day with the Yankees, how they're sort of second fiddle to the Dodgers, if that now. And so I guess the lesson from this that maybe is kind of interesting is that teams that are really trying, they do really raise all boats. And when you have a team in a league or in a division that is outspending everyone and trying really hard, then everyone has to keep up with them.
Starting point is 00:35:11 Because even if the leagues are essentially the same, there are still six playoff spots per league. There are only so many to go around even now. And so if you're in the division with the Dodgers, if you're in a league with the Dodgers, well, then you've kind of got to raise your game too. And maybe the Mets start spending more. Or the Padres say, we don't want to be also Rams in this division. So we're going to try to build up our team too. So when it was the AL, you had the Yankees who were outspending everyone and attracting all this talent.
Starting point is 00:35:38 And then the Red Sox said, well, we got to try to keep up with the Yankees. And so they started spending and accumulating talent and they got good. And then other teams tried to follow suit. And now that's not really where. we are. We have the Dodgers and we have the Mets and we have the Phillies and a lot of the big spenders are in the NL and things have flipped where for years as Joe documented in his newsletter Joshean.com the tax overages for years and years were mostly in the AL disproportionately where teams exceeded the competitive balance tax threshold and now it's mostly in the NL that those
Starting point is 00:36:15 dollars are being paid by NL teams. So ultimately, does that matter? Not really except in the sense that it dictates who makes the playoffs in any given year, which is pretty important. But I guess the larger point is that when teams try and really invest, then it does light a fire under other teams. And then there is kind of a domino effect. And so the more teams you have spending and trying, the more pressure that puts on other teams to spend and try. And there are only so many wins to go around in Major League Baseball, and there are only so many Major League quality players and war to be distributed and everything. And it's a zero-sum game and all.
Starting point is 00:36:55 So there's a limit to how many teams you can have spending a ton and investing in their rosters at any given time. But it does really have knock-on effects, I think. It just depends on who the powerhouses are at any particular time because they do kind of pull the other teams up. and now that's happening more in the NL than the AL. I think that there's like a cyclicality to it, but it is a notable shift back. Who's going to salvage the AL? From like a big spending perspective.
Starting point is 00:37:27 Like who's going to be the driver that like starts the arms race? Because it doesn't seem like it's going to be the Yankees. No, the Yankees and the Red Sox have sort of ceded that territory. Not that they're not spending anything. But yeah, it has been the Blue Jays, I guess, of late. Not that they're off to that greatest. start, even so. But yes, they have put the pressure with the fire, perhaps, under their competitors in the division. And that's why we went into this season thinking, oh, A.L. East, it's going to be
Starting point is 00:37:55 even more of a meat grinder than usual. That'll do it for the free preview of today's Effectively Wild. Thank you for listening. If you'd like to listen on and hear whatever wisdom and wit await, we would love to have you. You can visit patreon.com slash Effectively Wild to access the rest of this episode and plenty of other exclusive content. Weekly subscriber only episodes, monthly bonus shows, our Discord group, our live streams. Either way, we will be back with another episode soon, which will appear in full on this feed. Until then, we wish you well and thank you for your support of Effectively Wild, whatever form it takes.

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