Rates & Barrels - Will Bullpen Decay & The Mets' Success Against Relievers Define This Postseason?
Episode Date: October 15, 2024Eno and DVR discuss the Dodgers' altered bullpen game approach in Game 2 of the NLCS which included an earlier usage of Landon Knack, who surrendered a critical second-inning grand slam to Mark Viento...s. Plus, they examine the Mets' success against relievers throughout the year as highlighted by Robert Orr of Baseball Prospectus, a few potential fits for Alex Bregman and Willy Adames in free agency, and the success of Carlos Rodón in Game 1 of the ALCS against the Guardians. Rundown 1:41 The Mets Slug Against the Dodgers' Bullpen to Take Game 2 7:16 Mark Vientos' 2024 Breakout 12:23 How Will Alex Bregman's Defense Age? 18:01 Willy Adames' Foray Into Free Agency 22:55 Did the Dodgers' Hold Back Their Top Relievers in Game 2 to Limit the Mets' Looks? 26:39 Robert Orr's Breakdown of the Mets' Success Against Relievers 35:20 What Would You Put on Your Hitters Skills Checklist? 39:55 Can the Guardians Begin to Turn Good Hit Tools Into More Power? 47:51 What Changed for Carlos Rodón in Game 1 of the ALCS? 52:37 Will Luis Severino Add Wrinkles for the Dodgers' Lefties in Game 3? Follow Eno on Twitter: @enosarris Follow DVR on Twitter: @DerekVanRiper e-mail: ratesandbarrels@gmail.com Join our Discord: https://discord.gg/FyBa9f3wFe Subscribe to The Athletic: theathletic.com/ratesandbarrels Hosts: Derek VanRiper & Eno Sarris Producer: Brian Smith Executive Producer: Derek VanRiper Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to Rates and Barrels, it's Tuesday, October 15th. Derek Van Riper, EnoSaris here with Brian Smith producing on the ones and twos in the
background.
Almost was on the show, forgot to put him in the background before hitting the record
button.
We'll get Brian on camera one of these days, we appreciate all the hard work he's doing
for us behind the scenes. On this episode we discussed the Mets
drawing level in the NLCS with some success against the Dodgers bullpen.
We're gonna look at a bigger picture question around teams that hit bullpens
effectively. Yes there was a Robert Orr story in there that got us thinking
about this a little bit as well so we'll connect a few dots there. Head a few
follow-ups to our Tigers Vuelogy
that I thought were pretty interesting.
So we'll get to those.
And of course we'll talk about the ALCS,
which has game two getting underway on Tuesday night.
We're not gonna preview game two
because it's going to be happening
by the time many people hear this podcast.
But we've got some interesting observations
about Carlos Rodan who pitched effectively in game one
as the Yankees took the opener of that series.
Edo, how's it going for you on this Tuesday?
Going good. All the family's out of the house now, so we're back to just the regular zoo that we've got going here.
Yeah, like the movie, we built the zoo.
Yeah, two kitties, two dogs, six fish, two sons.
Everybody's happy, that's the key.
You can join our Discord with the link in the show description by the way.
Get some more lively chatter going as these playoffs continue.
But let's start today with the Mets.
The bulk pen game backfired on the Dodgers.
The Mets slugged their way to even the series.
A Marc Vientos grand slam really punctuated a five run second inning for the Mets.
That's all they ended up needing
in that game and a lot of ways to pick this one apart.
But the thing that surprised me was that the Dodgers
went to land a knack so early in this game
compared to the usage in the bullpen game of,
I think it was game four of the NLDS against the Padres,
we thought we'd see Nack this
early then, instead we saw him in the final inning of a game that was out of hand.
So I wonder what it was matchup wise that the Dodgers preferred here because with the
off day on Tuesday and with very few high leverage relievers needed behind Jack Flaherty
in game one, the card was wide open and the Dodgers chose to go this route.
Now I realize because it didn't work,
it's gonna get the extra criticism,
but the order matters a lot.
I thought they'd follow a very similar script
to what worked in San Diego.
You know, I think Knack has one of these fastballs
that has surprising movement given his slot.
And I wonder if, you know, the Dodgers say, Hey,
NAC faced the Padres like a week ago,
you know, when they last had this decision.
And maybe we think that this is the kind of fastball that has faster
decay as in batters see it, you know,
and can do more with it once they've seen it rather than batters see it, you know, and can do more with it once they've seen it
rather than batters who'd never seen it. And what you saw with the way that
Landon Ack pitched too was that he was gonna be, he came in as a two-pitch guy.
He was fastball slider. He was not, you know, throwing the curve or the change
that he threw 15, 16 percent of the time during the regular season. He was a
two-pitch guy and I think that the game plan was change that he threw 15, 16% of the time during the regular season. He was a two pitch guy.
And I think that the game plan was thought that they're going to actually have some hard, a hard time hitting this fastball and it's a good slider.
So that's what he's going to be.
He's going to be a two pitch, you know, reliever type for us.
And he's going to go one time through the order.
And instead, I think you saw that they saw his fastball pretty well.
And in particular, in this Mark Vietos at bat, what I think you saw that they saw his fastball pretty well. And in particular in this Mark Vietos at bat, what I think you see is, you
know, there's one fastball, the fourth pitch of it.
So he's got it with just sliders.
He's got him to a one, two count with two fouls on sliders.
Then he throws a four seam fastball.
That's like four inches above the zone and Vietos fouls that sliders. Then he throws a four-seam fastball that's like four inches above the zone and Vientos fouls that off too. And the next slider is a ball in the dirt thinking
okay well maybe he'll just swing over the top of something. But by the time he throws
the sixth slider and the seventh pitch overall, he does something that puts him in trouble.
That seventh slider is a ball.
And at that point, it's a three-two count,
and he hasn't gotten a single swing and miss
from Mark Viento.
So Landonak has tried everything.
He's tried the high fastballs, high sliders, low sliders,
and now with the three-ball count and the bases loaded,
he has to throw a fastball that's not four inches
above the zone, like his last fastball.
That must have been the thinking.
And so he throws a fastball that's in the zone
and it just happens to be middle middle.
And I think this is like, you know,
when you are a two pitch pitcher
and one of your pitches is a fastball,
and we know that pitchers miss 10 to 13 inches
on average is what the research suggests. That means that every time you're throwing a fastball
in this situation, it's like you're in the eighties ripping packs. And one of those, you're going to
rip the pack open. It's going to be the manager card and nobody wants the manager card. And that's
the middle, middle fastball. That's the Tom Kelly on your piece of cardboard, you know, sitting in the dugout is his action
picture.
That's the home run.
That's the grand slam he gives up, you know, and I think it's about count leverage there,
but it's also just not about not sneaking in any of his other pitches when he's starting
to see, Oh man, he's fouling everything off.
There's gotta be some idea, a right on right change you brought up.
You know, maybe that's not the best idea across, you know, everything,
but it's probably something Vientos hasn't seen that much, you know?
Or just a big old lollipop curveball that Vientos takes for strike three.
Probably would have been a better idea than the middle, middle fastball. When you're seeing him, he's geared up to hit everything. pop curve ball that Vantos takes for strike three.
Probably would have been a better idea than middle middle fastball.
When you're seeing him, he's geared up to hit everything.
Right, middle middle fastball wasn't the plan.
It was the failure of a plan.
But I think that's the part that's tricky to me
is like you do have a third and fourth pitch
even if you don't like them.
In that situation where you're not getting
any sort of swing and miss and you didn't have the command
of the fastball dusting something else off.
I think if you said, it's your call DVR,
what would you have thrown?
I think I would have gone with the curve
because I think you want to change speeds again.
If he's following everything off and the change
is about the same speed as the slider.
He's on that like 87 to 94, like he's right, he's hot.
He's hot, he's up there. Throw something that's right. He's hot. He's hot. He's up there throw something at 79
That's what I would have tried and maybe
Maybe he would have just hit the crap out of that or followed it off or something, too
And this would have happened eventually anyway the other part of this though is you know mark fientos has been?
Phenomenal in the playoffs and he was been he's been very good all year, right?
That's that's one of the stories stories of how'd the Mets get here
and why is this working?
He's added some depth and quality to this lineup.
I mean, this is a guy that had major questions
about his defense.
That's the main reason I think people like me
were on Brett Beatty instead.
Brett Beatty's not a smooth defender at third base,
but I thought he was less of a liability than Vientos.
I thought we saw some signs that Beatty
was going to take a step forward this year,
and instead Mark Vientos was that guy.
He had the breakout that I thought Brett Beatty
was gonna have, and the way he does it,
tons of hard contact, right?
We've seen that from day one from Mark Vientos
in the big leagues.
He's keeping the K-rate around 30%.
He's patient enough to draw walks.
He can do the damage. Where do we go in 2025? There's still a few chapters of his season to
be written in this series, possibly in the World Series, but for a guy that popped 27 homers and
454 played appearances and did it in an environment that is pitcher friendly for half of his games,
I think people are going to be looking at Vientos
as a legitimate top 100 target in some instances
because power comes at a premium in those middle rounds
and I think he's done more than enough this year
to establish himself as a core piece
for the Mets going into next season.
The Mets are also losing a core piece
that I'm also gonna put onto every team in baseball by the end of the offseason, which is Pete Alonso. And I do think the flaws
are still there. I, you know, the defensive numbers line up with the eye test for me,
Mark Vientos. I don't think he's a good third baseman. You know, we've already had plays in
the playoffs that could have led to, you know, bad situations and just happened not to.
But we've seen him bobble, I don't know, three balls at third.
We've seen some poor throws.
It doesn't look like good hands to me.
So if I were the Mets, I would love to already, I think, I think I would love to
already move Vientos to first if I'm not going to wrap up Pete Alonso and that does paper over one problem for the team but it doesn't necessarily solve everything because then you need a third base.
You can give Brett Beatty another try you're also as the Mets going to clean up a fair amount of the books this year with
Quintana, Severino, Harrison Bader, JD Martinez, Brooks Railey, Adam Ottavino,
Ryan Stanek, Jesse Winker coming off the board of the books along with Alonzo.
Right now they have even with the arbitration set up they have a hundred
and seventy two million dollars under contract next and luxury tax, they were at 358
last year.
So obviously that means they could just sign Alonzo back and maybe that's what's most
likely.
But it does open the door for them to do something different and sign like an Alex Bregman or
something, you know, to play third, move Fientos to first.
And obviously from the names that I mentioned,
they have to spend on starting pitching.
Right.
That'll be, regardless of how things go,
something the Mets are trying to address this winter.
I think the Bregman possibility makes a lot of sense.
I think not putting JD Martinez on the roster again next year
also leaves the door open for Vientos
to coexist with a re- a resigned Pete Alonso
They could share first base in DH. So they basically platoon the DH with Winker and JD right now
There's no compelling reason to bring both of those guys back
People keep putting Juan Soto on the Mets too. So that's gonna be a big outlay of cash
But I think you know, I think that think that going from 358 to 172,
I think that there is enough room for them to do,
I think it's probably Soto or Alonzo.
Because I think they do have to spend a fair amount
on starting pitching.
Do you think they could do Soto and Alonzo and three
starting pitchers?
Maybe.
I think the limit does not exist.
I think it is a situation.
They were comfortable with 358 last year.
Look at what the Dodgers just did this winter.
There's actually no reason that we know of
that the Mets can't do stuff like what the Dodgers
just did spending wise with Otani and Yamamoto
and extending glass now.
Everything's on the table for the Mets right now.
With their defensive shortcomings of Mark Vantos though,
maybe some of their, you know,
one of their signings
should be a little bit more tilted towards defense
if you think about it, like either Bregman
or signing Willie Adamas to play third or something.
Oh, come on man, we're just gonna do that.
We're just gonna give him everything.
You just wanted to give him everything,
I've given him everything.
No, it's true and I think with Bregman,
how do you think Alex Bregman's defense is going to age?
I think his bat is aging pretty well.
We've seen a few lulls, even in these years,
these last three seasons have looked pretty much the same
by the end, this year being the outlier
from an OVP perspective, he dropped all the way down
to a 315, so maybe we're starting to see a little bit
of decay with the eye in particular, but if defensively,
Bregman is going to be good or solid
for most of a long-term deal,
and we think he's the type of hitter that won't age poorly,
then that ends up being a pretty nice long-term deal
for any team that signs him, I guess.
Do you agree, though, that the defense holds up
fine over time for him at third base?
If you ignore UZR, and I think in this case,
it might be a good idea because the Astros at some point
were on the forefront of shifting
and UZR doesn't use starting position.
And you focus more on DRS and outs above average.
So DRS has a negative for Alex Bregman in 2022 and a negative
in 2017, but it also has seasons where he was worth eight defensive run saves and out above
average has never had a negative. So I just voted on the Fielding Bible Awards. And one of the things
I did was when I'm looking across the different stats,
I gave people credit if they had like, you know, like a 15 out above average or like
a 15 DRS, even if out above average or DRS didn't agree with it.
I was just like, Hey, one of these systems thinks this guy's out of sight.
And the other thing I did was if one of the systems had a negative on there, I would kind
of put them, push them down a little bit. Oh because one of these systems thinks he's not good at all
When you look at Alex Riggs and page what I see is the systems both agree. He's excellent
Yeah, so if you're excellent today
we're gonna probably slowly regress you down to average over like a six-year deal if that's what he ends up getting and
All the top along the way the skills are so excellent in terms of making contact and and walking I know he's not
our type in terms of barreling and max CV and hard hit but you know I just feel
like that the the average in the OPP are always going to be pretty good and if he
only hits you 15 to 20 homers by near to the end of that contract it's
everything else is gonna be all right.
It depends on the number.
It really depends on the number.
If he wants hundreds of millions of dollars,
like I don't know.
Well, I think you have to look at him
compared to what else is out there.
And if you're considering something like Willie Adames
as an option to play off of shortstop,
where Adames is still a good enough defender to play
for just about any team that would be looking
for help there, right?
How do they compare apples to apples?
If you had to go to the same number of years
and the same dollar amount,
and I've been, for the entire time,
I've been thinking about what it would take long term
for any team to have Willy Adamas.
I've said, well, the Dansby Swanson contract,
the Cubs, seven for 1777 is probably attainable for him.
I mean, Bregman turns 31 around opening day next year and March next year.
Adamis will turn 30 next September.
So they're close in age, but Adamis is a year younger and he plays the more
valuable position, so it matters.
He's a better athlete than Bregman.
So let's assume Bregman.
So let's assume Bregman's gonna get maybe one less year,
but the AAVs are comparable.
Is that a reasonable place to put the conversation?
If that's the situation, which one would you sign
if you could only add one,
because some other team's gonna swoop in
and get the other one?
I think I'd lean towards Adamas,
because I would be nervous,
especially if I was the Mets in particular,
is I'd be a little bit nervous to see
how Bregman's power poured it over to my stadium.
Yeah, okay.
And Adamas has like kind of that no doubt power.
He fits into the hits the ball very hard bucket,
which I think is a big part of why he popped up in Discord.
Logan I-54 listening to our eulogy for the 2024 Tigers
on the Monday episode suggested Willie Adamis
is a fit for the Tigers,
which would mean they'd push Trey Sweeney off of short.
I don't think it's impossible.
I think you can basically look at this off season
for the Tigers and say,
we've got some defensive flexibility at a couple spots.
As a result, we're gonna get the best possible hitter
and we'll make the pieces fit, right?
With our mixing and matching.
I could see that as one of the options.
I think the thing that Adamas satisfies
is hitting the ball hard enough
to still have power at Coamerica, right?
We've got four consecutive seasons
with a double digit barrel rate,
still right close to his power peak,
age-wise, couple of 30 home run seasons,
showed more speed this year,
mentioned the defense before, still being generally good at shortstop you know
occasionally makes the mistake on like a routine play but generally a very good
defender so what do you think about the Tigers as a fit for Willie Adames?
I was thinking about you know my sort of offhand comment of you know going cheap
with right-handed veterans like Turner, Justin Turner, or JD Martinez. And I think if I'm the Tigers,
I kind of feel like, no, I, you know, even if it's just a mini resurgence from Torkelson or,
or somebody, you know, stepping up from, from what we have, we can kind of do that level.
What we need is either youth where there's
a like a like Torkelson where there's a chance that these even better like he like he finally
breaks out right so that the arrow bars in the right direction or we need someone who
can hit the snot out of the ball. And one of my reasons for this is I was looking at
the Statcast venue park factors and what they have are speed and angle park factors and
including this one line called environmental park factors they say extra feet of distance
versus average given the same exit velocities and I think this is a kind of
a really important spot here it was minus 4.5 feet last year in
Quamerica so basically to achieve the same results that you would want in a
neutral park you'd have to hit the ball four and a half feet farther.
So I do think that for them, if they're looking for right hand power, they're looking for somebody who hits the ball super hard.
And I think Willie Domus is on that list.
Oscar Hernandez is on that list.
Pete Alonso is on that list.
And maybe Anthony Santander is on that list. Pete Alonso is on that list and maybe Anthony Santander is on that list but
Alex Bregman is probably not on that list. Maybe even somebody like Paul Goldschmidt is not
somebody you necessarily want to even do on a one-year deal at this point. I think Cody
Bellinger is not on that list. There are certain fits where you're like if you're kind of a medium
hitting guy I'm not sure I want to put you in my stadium if you're kind of a medium hitting guy,
I'm not sure I wanna put you in my stadium
that minuses four and a half feet off your distances.
I think the Bregman part for the Tigers
that would be interesting though,
is that because the defense is good
and because Scott Harris is absolutely,
as you said, a control the zone guy,
you mentioned that.
He mentioned it in his end of year debriefing,
Cody Stevenhagen had a breakdown of that on the athletic.
That part makes me think Bregman could fit.
There is the connection to AJ Hinch as well,
so maybe that gives them an inside track.
So Bregman's gonna have a few suitors.
I think Bregman's going to become even more wealthy
a few months from now because there's a lot of things
he does really well.
But yeah, Willie Adames could be a fit there.
Also saw a comment on the aforementioned
Cody Stevenhagen piece from Chris E.
I don't know if he listens to the show or she.
Yandy Diaz as a Tigers trade target.
And I kinda like that for the same sorts of reasons.
Could play both corners as needed,
gives them some versatility.
Harris mentioned not wanting to be too left-handed.
So Diaz as a righty that hits the ball hard.
He's a control the zone guy for sure.
100% control the zone guy.
And we've wondered for a while, you know,
how long are the Rays, even though they've got
Yandy on a nice team friendly deal,
how long are they going to ride that out
before they decide to move on and let somebody else
maybe enter the equation such as, you know,
Jonathan Aranda who could be good enough to DH,
but if he's going to play a defensive position,
would probably end up settling it at first base
if the playing time opened up there.
It's just like, do you have to trade Yandy Diaz?
Because right now their luxury tax number is 87 million.
Tempted to say $87. No, it is 87 million. Oh. Attempted to say $87.
No, it's 87 million.
87 million, and last year it was 124.
So, you know, they're almost set up to, you know,
offer some big, you know, they're always rumored,
the RASR, to have some sort of offer out for Aaron Judge.
You know, they're always willing to like,
high, you know, AAV, low years offers to some of these veterans.
I wonder if they'll have a surprise for us in the other direction instead of
trading Andy away.
Cause they don't really need that $10 million as much as they need
production next year, especially when it comes to their bats.
He's one of the few guys that hits the ball hard and makes contact, you know,
that's something that's a little bit missing from this.
You know, the other side of the argument is,
hey, let's play Brandon Lau at first.
That can happen too.
Right, or they could trade Brandon Lau.
And as Brian mentioned, I mean, also,
among the many things damaged in hurricane season so far,
the trop losing its roof, like maybe the park
will end up being the same home park too
Costs millions of dollars to fix right? That's insurance stuff
But you know it's just more of like well if the rays have to play in a different ballpark for a little while like that
That could be something that changes the calculus of players. They're able to go get in free agency, too
So how much money they can bring in I mean at the trop?
I don't think has we know that it doesn't have great
attendance, but going to like a minor league park, it's you're cutting your
even possible attendance down.
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We started this conversation looking at how the bullpen game didn't work for the Dodgers
this time around and the decision to use landed a knack when they did but also to then not
bother with using the rested A bullpen options they had, right?
They just kind of said, all right, we're going to cruise through and let Brent Honeywell
chew up a bunch of innings and I mean, hey, we may only see Brent Honeywell one more time in this series even if it goes seven.
This may have been Brent Honeywell's only opportunity.
Edgardo Henriquez pitched two innings, Banda pitched one.
So those three guys chewed up six innings and for me it wasn't about resting the other
relievers as much as it was about not letting the Mets get a look at those guys.
Because one thing we've started to talk about
a little bit more on this show is
diminishing value of relievers
as teams get those second, third, and fourth looks
in a short period of time.
It's the same, we talk about the third time
to the order penalty.
Like there's going to be decay
the more you see reliever, relievers have fewer pitches.
So there's a couple ways to go here,
but first and foremost, do you think that there is
an actual team skill component to being more effective
at hitting relievers?
Or are there things that teams,
some teams do better than others,
be that scouting, the trajectory machine,
like what could it be
that leads a team to be better against relievers
than they are against starters?
I would guess coaching and preparation.
And you know, I think the bad word here is guessing.
That's a word that has been used to sort of denigrate
certain hitters, oh he's a guess hitter.
Anticipating.
Huh?
Anticipating.
Right, exactly.
Anticipating is the much nicer word,
and I've even talked about that specific sort of,
the semantics of using those two words with hitters.
And I think the consensus from what I've had
in these conversations, a lot of them off record
because hitters don't like to talk about approach,
but I think the consensus is that with VELO
to where it is right now,
a certain amount of anticipation is required.
You know, and what you did see from Vientos there was,
I think his anticipation, what he was anticipating was,
it's all gonna be hard.
It's either gonna be an 88 mile an hour slider,
or it's gonna be a 94 mile an hour fastball.
I'm not going to see those
79s and 82s, you know, from the change up or the curve. That allowed him to sort of gear up and, you know, be like, I'm trying to get the fastball and I'm going to foul. I'm just going to relax
my hands and foul off, you know, the 88 mile and I can do that. And so anticipation is underlying a lot of these things that are happening.
We talked about, you know, Pierce Johnson's great curveball, great by stuff plus throws
a 70% of the time, you know, gets crushed in three, oh, counts when he has to come into
the zone.
That's where anticipation meets, you know, stuff plus and anticipation can win.
And then we look at Robert Orr's great piece
from baseball prospectus where he looks at Seager
and Seager is making good decisions.
So it's not outcomes, it's did you swing it,
that's a little reductive to say did you swing it
strike strikes and not at non-strikes, but it's like that.
It's a little bit like looking at zone swing
minus chase rate. And
when you look at that piece, you have this great graph that he's made where he shows
team Seager against starters and against relievers. And the Mets are bottom five in the league in Seager against starters, and they are top
five in the league in Seager against relievers.
And that's a little bit weird because you have the Dodgers who are tops against relievers
and third against starters.
You have the Yankees that are top five against both.
You have Atlanta who was second best against starters and, you
know, six best against relievers.
So, you know, you have generally the teams that you think are good, are
good at approach against both starters and relievers, the Mets are just the
weirdest they're there.
The only one in their quadrant, basically, you know, there's no team around them
in inches of graph space.
And so when you see something like that, you, you know, Robert Orr then goes
and looks at like number of pitches and there's some, there's some light effects
there, but I think there's something about relievers reliever tendencies,
smaller arsenals. And you saw that play out,
I think, in the land and knack, where they were like,
maybe they do a good job of what we talked about before,
is sort of self-scouting.
If we were telling land and knack what to do
against Marc Vientos, what would we tell him to do?
We would tell him to do high fastballs,
high and tight, specifically,
get some chases outside of the zone on high fastballs,
and then sliders in the dirt.
You know, that's basically what Lananac tried to do.
And Vientos on the other side just knew
that was the approach,
and was just waiting for the mistake.
You know, the one that was in between.
So I'm curious where the Padres ranked
in Seeger against relievers, because by OPS, just by results,
and again, OPS is what it is,
but they were number one against Relievers,
and they were great against Starters too.
They were, I think, six or seven.
Really, because by Seager against Relievers,
they were bottom eight.
Interesting.
It's like maybe six or seven.
It's hard when you look at it graph like this,
but Seager against starters,
they were not a good secret team. They found ways to be good.
They were bottom five against both starters and relievers.
So they were good because they slugged and because they made good contact.
And in fact, this was an interesting thing.
It's come out of the Cleveland situation, which is depending on how the series
goes, you know, there's always, you know, the kind of the afterwards, let's
say they lose, there's going to be some soul searching in
Cleveland because what they've they found a certain type of
hitter that's undervalued maybe by the draft or by free agency
or all the different ways they've accumulated these hitters
and in trades and what they found is high chase rate, low slug, high contact.
That's the Cleveland hitter these days.
And what I think you found in San Diego was,
we're not too concerned about chase
if they can make great contact or slug.
So it's a modified sort of Cleveland approach
where they're like, yeah, we want to make great contact,
but we also want some sluggers on this team.
So I think I've lost the question.
No, this is what happens.
We start thinking about things differently
and our brain kind of pulls on a bunch of threads
and we'll tangle up in the threads sometimes.
The Padres also had this strange thing
that I've noticed with the splits against relievers.
And just for reference, I mean, like, generally teams saw 24, 25, 2600 plate appearances.
There is a bit of a range on how many plate appearances you saw against relievers from team
to team. I believe they had the lowest strikeout total against relievers, but that's like almost a Luis Arias like team,
like think about Luis Arias impact on a team
that already didn't strike out a lot.
Like against everybody.
Right, like they were a low strikeout rate team anyway.
So that, like, I wonder if that helps you
maybe outperform some decisions, right?
Like you can still hit everything.
You still make contact.
Maybe you're not making the best decisions,
but your hit tool's good enough
where you're overcoming that.
Like so maybe there's some of that going on, and that.
Seager is just eye, and it's missing both batted ball oomph
and contact rate ability.
It is interesting to see that the Padres are down there,
you know, in the bad place. I mean, other teamsres are down there in the bad place.
I mean, other teams that are down there with poor Seeger
against both starters and relievers,
the White Sox, the Guardians as I pointed out,
the Padres, Boston, and Boston seems to be making
a big bet on taking high contact rate guys
and adding bat speed.
That's how Christian Campbell became a top five prospect,
you know, overnight.
That's how even somebody like,
who's the shortstop there that didn't hit very well
this year, but he was kind of the backup shortstop.
Is it on Raffaella?
No, the other guy.
David Hamilton.
David Hamilton did bat speed training to get where he is. There's a couple of, I think
Roman Anthony did some bat speed training to get where he is. So they're
making a bet on guys who have natural contact ability and coaching up the
bat speed. And I guess that they're assuming that those two things, even with
Bad Seeger, you can be successful because that's sort of where the Padres are.
St. Louis was not successful,
the Chicago White Sox were not successful,
Cleveland did it all on contact rate for the most part.
So those are the Bad Seeger teams.
You wanna know the good Seeger teams against both sides.
It's the Dodgers, it's the Yankees, it's the Braves,
it's the Mariners.
And the A's and the Rays.
Arizona is also in the good place, and then Kansas City might be a little bit surprising.
Good Seager against both starters and relievers.
Houston's right on the line.
They're the very best team for Seager against starters,
and they're middle of the pack for Seager against relievers.
Yeah, it's interesting because Seager is a relatively new thing that Robert developed
a few years ago and I think I'm still learning the best ways to apply it.
Use it as an analyst, use it as a fantasy player.
It's a really good way to look at who's making good choices.
That's what it's made for.
But it mirrors our own meandering obsession
with Chase Raiden on this podcast
of maybe overvaluing it early on
and then trying to fit it in with zone swing
to get a better idea.
And then ultimately, we've admitted many times,
it's definitely part of why some hitters are good,
but not every hitter is good because of their eye.
And I think this is also something
that people struggle with bad speed.
It's like, how important is bad speed?
You do look at the best power hitters,
they all have great bad speed, right?
For the most part.
There are people like Arise,
who are great without bad speed.
There are multiple ways to be good, even on the hitter side.
I think we want the hitter side,
we want them to do everything.
We know this on the pitcher side,
oh, you can be a multiple,
you can be a Seth Lugo type,
or you can be a Spencer Strider type,
or you know, like there's,
we've assumed that we've figured out
that there are different ways to be good
in starting pitching.
And I think it's the same in hitting.
If you don't have good bad speed, you limit the amount of ways you to be good in starting pitching. And I think it's the same in hitting. If you don't have good bat speed,
you limit the amount of ways you can be good.
If you don't have good Seager eye at the plate,
you limit the amount of ways you can be good.
If you have a prospect coming up
and they are good at Seager
and they hit the ball super hard and they make contact,
that feels like somebody you should really invest in.
Most likely you're gonna get one or two of the three.
So imagine that you have a checklist of hitter traits
and there are, I don't know, 10 things
that you care about for hitters.
And you say going in, like if any hitter has
half of those things, they're probably gonna be
at least a competent major league hitter.
If they have six or seven of those things, they're to be above average if they have eight or more of those things
they're going to be an all-star right they have 10 out of those 10 things they are a superstar
hall of famer right so like imagine thinking about it that way instead of saying oh this hitter
doesn't do that it's like okay every hitter has something they probably don't do as well as
has something they probably don't do as well as others. Like there's a relative weakness in every single profile.
Which weakness or weaknesses are okay to have
with certain strengths.
That's sort of like the whole analysis process.
And now that I'm thinking about checklists,
is it worse to pull a checklist card or a manager card?
Oh, the checklist card was awful.
Those are probably both going in the bike spokes, right?
I mean, I'm so glad that they stopped making those cards.
Like, why?
Why did you put a checklist card in there?
Why would anybody be happy to pull that?
It was back when sets had 792 cards in them.
792, it's like, well, we don't need 26 managers
and we don't need 12 checklists.
Now they divided the 792 cards over three different things.
So all the rookies are in the Bowman set.
Different years, yeah, I know.
Now there's 792 different refractors for every card.
Yeah, which refractor should I put in my bike spokes?
The answer's probably none. The dumbest thing about refractors is
now I don't know how to describe them
when I'm looking up how much they're worth.
And I'm like, it's kind of rainbow-y.
Oh wait, wait, this one has like, it's rainbow-y but it's X.
I think this is an X refractor.
And then there's all these different refractor names.
And it's like, oh wait, this is kind of like a wavy one. Is it like a wavy refractor?
I think refractor variants have gone completely too far.
Back to your question.
I actually think if I had to give something away, it might be I it's, I think this is,
Oh, this is interesting.
I hadn't thought about it this way.
So I is one of those things that makes Joey Votto
stick around for really long.
And we've talked about how bad,
how badly chasing outside of his own ages, right?
But what if you don't care about 31 and 32 and 33?
We've talked about that.
But just think about it organizationally.
What if as an organization you're like,
I'm probably not gonna sign any of these guys long-term.
It's like, what if specifically you're like the Rays?
Or the A's?
How about this?
Did the Cubs?
And you don't care about I as much.
Did the Cubs care about Javier Baez's I
at his breakthrough age?
The Cubs didn't, but the, the tigers do.
Right.
It doesn't matter how it ages.
If you have it for six years cost controlled and you can just bail
at any time, if you're not happy, that doesn't matter.
That has implications for how you run a player development situation.
Cause you're like, okay, most of these guys are not going to sign long term.
And if we do develop, if develop, even if we have values
that we develop certain things,
we're gonna accidentally develop guys
that have good eyes anyway.
Right?
Then we can sign those guys to long-term deals if we want.
But if we value something, I hate to say it,
I think Boston's got a bit of a ticket here.
They give, I'm gonna develop something, I think Boston's got a bit of a ticket here. They give you, I'm going to develop something.
I want to start with good bat to ball and I want to have, I want to have good bat
speed.
If I have good bat to ball and good bat speed, I'll try to prepare him really
well for the games, you know what I mean?
Anticipate, you know?
So organizationally speaking, Cleveland's done, I think a good job for a long time
of finding Hit Tool.
It goes as far back as, Lindor was an early draft pick, but Jose Ramirez, I think we've
said this a few times, he's turned into a player that if you look at him at the beginning
of his career as a prospect and projected this, you deserve all the trophies and all
the flowers because this outcome compared to where he started his career, is absolutely absurd.
But even it goes down to like the Tyler Freeman types they've had in their organization. Like they've done this well for a long time.
Can they take a blueprint like what the Red Sox are doing and actually successfully implement that?
Can they start to be a team that turns these hit tools into more than just bat to ball?
Can they start developing that power?
Can they do the bat speed training?
They do it on the pitching side.
They were the organization that would get guys to add Velo for a long time.
I know for a fact that Stephen Kwan did bat speed training.
I know that Ramon Lloriano did the bat speed training, but that wasn't along with Cleveland.
He just did it on his own, which I just love him for that.
Like he literally bought bats off of Google
and like off of eBay and just figured it out.
So I love that.
You bought used bats?
Yeah, he bought like used weighted bats and like,
cool man, I mean, he did have one of his better
barrel rates of his career.
I can't say that I know for a fact that Andres Jimenez
or Josh Naylor do it or you know what I have heard
you know about like the Baltimore Orioles
as they come up through the minors is that weighted
bat training is part of the everyday process.
And that's one thing that I've heard you know analysts
wonder about is it something you can do
and sort of get into a new stratosphere
or is it something you need to do all the time?
How sticky are those gains?
And do you need to have those weighted bats with you
and do them on a daily, weekly, whatever it is basis
to retain that bat speed?
I know that JD Martinez brought his weighted bats
to the Mets this year and was showing
them showing that to a lot of the players there.
So my guess is Cleveland is already underway and that's part of their idea is get good
bat to ball and try to coach up the power and not worry so much about chase rate because right now they chase only Miami, Colorado, Houston and the
White Sox chased more than Cleveland this year. I'm surprised that Cleveland
chases that much but it's because I'm staring at Stephen Kwan's player page as
we're having this conversation. As for the stickiness and even the ceiling on
bat speed training, all right, I, can you can you actually add multiple times over multiple seasons?
Like, do you have an individual plateau that you're going to hit for the early part of your career?
Like, these are all things we don't really know yet.
But Stephen Kwan, compared to when he broke into the big leagues in twenty twenty two,
added just over 30 points of ISO this year, right?
So you get to 14 homers in a little less than a full season.
So if you got to 650, 700 played appearances,
maybe you would hit 17, 18 homers.
That's pretty big jump.
Could he add a little bit more?
Could he get to 150 ISO next year?
Or if this is even where his plateau is,
like you'll take that, that's worth it.
That's a completely different player.
At least an extra eight to 10 times,
he's gonna do more damage as a result of that.
That's worthwhile, as long as it doesn't come
with some kind of downside akin to sitting closer
to your max as a pitcher and tearing your body up.
We wondered about that with the Tristan Cassis injury
and some of the things that we're starting to see.
Like you're still pushing the human body in
into like a max sort of situation or closer to a max.
But can you live where Stephen Kwan is right now without getting hurt from swinging harder and then sustain that gain for multiple seasons?
That's still really interesting. If that's if you turn a six homer guy into a 14 homer guy, great.
That's still really interesting if that's if you turn a six homer guy into a 14 homer guy great You're probably turning a 12 homer guy into a 22 homer guy like you're you're getting a pretty massive
Gain, even though at a glance you're like oh
He's still kind of a slaps the ball over the place guys like no he does a little more now
That's a that's an important adjustment remember our first weighted bat success story was JP Crawford and
You know he did something similar where you know his peak ISO before The first weighted bat success story was J.P. Crawford.
He did something similar where his peak ISO before had been like 145 and he got it to 172,
which is like at first glance you say,
okay, he went from slightly below average
to slightly above average,
but that's going from a pro rated 10, 11 homers to 19.
And it also, in terms of wrc plus that's going from a 95 wrc plus to 136.
Now of course he didn't quite show that in 2024 and he was more injured so you know he kind of fits into our overall conversation here but still you know even nine even nine homers and 451 played appearances for him is a pretty good outcome compared to what he did before.
So there was some stickiness there, even though he lost some, he regressed some.
The other thing I would say is like, if I was coaching people and if I was in
charge of a player development for a team, I would see some parallels here for
hitting and pitching.
What I would say is what I want all of you guys to do is push your max speed in training environments
so that you can throw 106 and you can swing the bat 86, you know?
But then I want you in games to not be selling out to get that 86 and not be throwing 106.
So have, you know, have 103 sit 98, you know,
have 86 as a bat speed, sit 80.
Like sitting 80 would still make you one of the fastest bats
in baseball.
I think that mitigates some of the concerns
that some hitting coaches have when they talk
about bat speed and they're like, oh,
but how did you get the bad seat?
Are you selling out?
Are you just pulling through?
Are you opening up?
Are you doing these things?
And it's like, okay, yeah, I don't want you.
I'm not telling you that I want people to do more bad speed, do it badly.
I want them to do it in good mechanics.
That's why I would say like, Hey, do something where you can get to 86, but you actually
sit 80.
You're not swinging hard
When you swing hard, you know what I mean? Does that make sense?
Like you're not in your head. You're not swinging hard. You're actually you think this is free and easy
Oh, I'm at 82 free and easy. That's what you want the bats to be training to do for you is not
Turn you into someone who's always like looking to see how hard you swung
You know due to somebody well you can swing 86,
but you actually don't always do.
We don't need a Joel Zumaia with the bat.
Like, we don't need to go, don't go that route.
Looking up at the ribbon board,
how hard did I swing that bat?
Do you remember, yeah, do you remember the outfielder
for the twins that couldn't make any contact,
but hit the ball really hard,
and he never made it to the major leagues really.
Are you talking about Adam Walker?
Yeah, he had really good bat speed.
I do remember Adam Walker.
Yeah, so it's obviously not the only thing,
but if I was training guys,
I think I would focus on bat to ball,
like acquire, it would be somewhat similar
to my pitching plan.
I think I'd be acquiring bat to ball,
coaching up bat speed, acquiring command,
and coaching up pitch speed.
I think I would want the nine pocket around.
Not all the time, but I think I'd wanna have it
as a training tool.
I like it, it's old school, it's simple,
but hey, if it works for George Kirby,
I'm convinced it could work for a lot of people.
That's all he throws to in the off season, I love it.
Maybe he should go one step beyond that,
but I think it should be part of the tool bag.
Let's take a look back at the game one
between the Yankees and Guardians.
I wanted to know what you saw from Carlos Rodin
that you thought might have been different.
I mean, of course, by results, like geez,
25 swinging strikes, I mean,
that's just a phenomenal outing overall.
So when six innings struck out nine, like a one run on three hits, he was rolling just five
hard hit balls from the Guardians in those six innings.
And I think last time we saw him a little over a week ago against the Royals started
off strong and things started to unravel on him a little bit the second time through the
order.
But was it Velo?
Was it Stuff?
Was it Command?
What caught your eyes as you were watching Rodana Monday.
There's been some excellent stories about, you know,
the like sort of reigning in of a passion
that we saw that Carlos Rodon had,
he always has like the flapping shirt with the, you know,
no undershirt, you know,
and he's always been kind of a yeller and a barker, but there,
there was this back and forth that we saw where Carlos Roudon is, you know,
screaming about things. And then after the game,
Michael Garcia said something like you celebrated too early or something like
that. And we also saw Carlos Roudon fall apart in the fourth inning. And you know,
so my inclination was to be like, you know,
there's a lot of reasons to be hyped up
and that we know that some part of pitch velocity, you know, is actually intent.
And that's, you know, one of the things we heard from Charlie Morton at some
point was like, yeah, I just decided I was going to throw harder and he wasn't
going to like leave it in the tank.
And so, you know, my first inclination is like, oh, you know
this intensity helps him and
He did average
97 on the fastball in the in the ALDS and
You know among his games this year that only there was only one game
this year where he had he had a nice
7.1 in July and otherwise and then the this this the third fastest game Vila wise was nice six four in
August so that was basically like the hardest he could throw
and he was
screaming and hollering and letting it all out and
It was fun to watch and it was some ways good for
him, but it was also bad for him. And I looked at that fourth inning and he threw 13 fastballs
in that fourth inning of the divisional series. Carlos Rodón did eight of them were not even
in shadow or, you know, they were in waste. He wasted eight of 13 fastballs. I think it
became pretty easy for people in that inning,
especially with him sort of yelling and screaming
and running around to be like,
yo, man, this guy has no idea where he's going.
You know, like you just get one that's like above your head
and you're just like, oh, Carlos, simmer down, you know?
And you know, what you got for Radone in the second game
was a 95-8 on the four seam, which, you know what you got in for Rodin in the second game was a 95 8 on the fore seam
Which you know just fits in in the sort of upper third of his of his games in terms of you know this year
But also just I had to go through the fourth and fifth inning to find I think three
That were in the waist maybe two
The other thing that he did was he mixed it up more.
He was very fastball slider in that fourth inning
against the Royals, maybe because of game plan,
maybe because he was amped up,
maybe he couldn't command the other pitches.
In this game, he mixed it up more.
There was more changeups, more curves, more cutters.
Maybe that's something that's a little bit easier to do
when you're not, you know, screaming.
Yeah, I mean, you want intensity.
You can just go a little too far.
Maybe that's a big part of why that command waned,
but that was a version of Carlos Rodan
that gives the hinkies a lot more
at the front of that rotation in tandem with Garrett Cole,
who they have going in game two,
or not previewing game two, because like I said earlier,
it's gonna be happening by the time
people hear this podcast.
So I thought we should spend a little bit of time
just looking at the Dodgers-Mets game three matchup
on Wednesday, because there will be some time
for people to digest this.
And one thing that I'm really curious to see
is what Luis Severino is going to try and do
against the Dodgers lefties.
This year, Severino struck out almost 23%
of the righties he faced.
Nothing in that arsenal's working really well
against lefties.
Home run rate goes up, K-rates under 20%.
We've talked about the overall stuff numbers
looking generally okay for Luis Severino.
And what did he add this year?
Kind of a sinker and a sweeper.
That's not gonna help him against lefties.
Not gonna work against lefties.
So I guess what is going to be his plan
against the lefties and Tommy Edmonds,
a switch hitter in that lineup too.
I mean, you think about Otani, Freeman, Muncie, Edmond.
Those are gonna be some pretty tricky spots for Severino
trying to get through that Dodgers lineup in game three.
I bet you he does some weird things
because a lot of those guys probably have mental Rolodexes
against Luis Severino because he's been around for a while.
And so, you know, I bet you he tries to do some weird things where he just throws some
sinkers and sweepers to lefties just to, you know, not be completely predictable.
That's one of the reasons he did add the sinker this year is to be less predictable. That's one of the reasons he did add the Sanker this year is to be less
predictable and that's something that the Mets really value. As we've said, they've
got more pitchers with three fastballs than anybody else in the big leagues. So, you know,
that's probably what he's going to do is try to mix it up more than just be fastball slider
against them because they'll know all about his fastball and slider.
I did want to mention real quick, Chris Kirschner has a great story about the Rodin intensity and how Andy Pettit
was an important part of reigning that in Andy Pettit.
One of the more legendary postseason pitchers out there.
I would, I would say that he got more chances than a lot of people.
You know, he was sort of legendary in terms of how calm and collected he was.
And he's, there's a great story here about
how he influenced Rodin ahead of that start.
Yeah, I gotta check that out, yeah,
I should check that one out.
If you don't have a subscription,
theathletics.com slash rates and barrels
gets you the door for $2 a month.
The other side of that matchup,
Walker Bueller in game three.
So maybe one benefit of going the route
the Dodgers did in game two,
by staying away from all of their A relievers,
is that it's fewer looks for the Mets hitters, right?
Is if the Mets are doing a good job scouting
and anticipating what those relievers are likely to do,
not burning them, even with an off day,
perhaps has some value the longer that this series goes.
Yeah, and you kept them away from looks.
I mean, if you're Evan Phillips,
there's a lot of just two pitches,
and the more the left-hander gets a look at Evan Phillips,
the more that he feels comfortable in the box against him.
They kept those relievers away.
I would say that the Dodgers have a little bit
of an advantage in this one.
I mean, I prefer Severino to Bueller,
sort of devoid of context,
but with all this context we're giving it,
it makes me a little nervous.
Today, though, Bybie and Cole, that's gonna be a fun one.
It sounds like a pitcher's duel, of course.
Who knows what that means in the end.
Yeah, it sounds like it.
I think the only thing I'm wondering
as the Yankees Guardian series goes on
as far as pitching usage goes
is will there be some diminishing returns with Luke Weaver?
He's been fantastic, but they're using him
for four and five out saves kind of on a regular basis,
going a little thinner with their A bullpen list right now.
I wonder if that will come back to bite them
in this series or possibly in the World Series
as teams keep getting extended looks at him.
I haven't seen a lot of cutters.
So I think you might have one more wrinkle to show them.
You know, I think the last outing,
I saw a lot of fastballs and changeups.
And you know, the cutter was something, you know,
I'm gonna write about this today,
but the Yankees really have it dialed in
in terms of plans for pitchers when they get there.
And they were like, hey, Luke,
we want you to move your fastball grip like this much.
And we want you to move your cutter grip like that much.
The change-up one was the most obvious one
because they went from a two-seam to a one-seam,
but they had plans for all of his pitches
and they really affected one of the biggest
pitcher turnarounds.
I know that he was starting to show us something
when he switched to relieving,
but year over year the Yankees did a lot with Luke Weaver
and they're reaping the benefits.
Yeah, and the thing that's also working really well
for the Yankees in the early part
of this series too, is just thinking about Rodin and Cole, if they keep giving
them five plus shortening that list of relievers gives them an easy script to
follow.
I don't know if the guardians are built to knock a Garrett Cole out of this game
early.
I I'm trying to come up with a, a script, a plan in my head that they're going to execute,
that's going to have us talking later in the week about,
wow, Garret Cole went two and two thirds
and got rocked by the Guardians, what did they do?
And I'm struggling to even imagine that scenario in my mind
short of Cole having just no command
and just getting hammered in the snow.
I was going with command.
I would say, I think wait a minute.
I think that this version of Cole right now
is not at the best command wise.
So I'd try to wait him into some deep counts, I think.
That might be the secret.
We'll see how it plays out on Tuesday.
And of course, we'll talk about it as the week unfolds.
That is gonna do it for this episode of Rates and Barrels.
You can find Eno on Twitter, at EnoSaris,
find me at Derek Van Riper, find the pod at Rates and Barrels. Thanks again to Brian Smith for
producing this episode. We are back with you on Wednesday. Thanks for listening.