View Full Version : NL Cy Young: Who would YOU vote for?
WSUCougar
09-14-2005, 08:43 AM
Chris Carpenter (Cardinals):
21-4 (30 starts), 2.31 ERA, 7 complete games, 4 shutouts, 226 innings pitched, 201 Ks, 0.99 WHIP
Dontrelle Willis (Marlins):
21-8 (30 starts), 2.49 ERA, 7 complete games, 5 shutouts, 209 innings pitched, 141 Ks, 1.11 WHIP
Roger Clemens (Astros):
11-7 (29 starts), 1.78 ERA, 1 complete games, 0 shutouts, 192 innings pitched, 171 Ks, 0.96 WHIP
Samdari
09-14-2005, 08:44 AM
I cannot believe the amount of discussion this is generating. Guys, its over, this is no longer a race.
WSUCougar
09-14-2005, 08:45 AM
Damn it, sorry for mispelling "Dontrelle" in the poll part. I hate the way polls are done on this board. I always feel compelled to rush so I don't get the dreaded "you forgot the poll part, dude" message.
JeeberD
09-14-2005, 08:45 AM
I'll give you one guess...
WSUCougar
09-14-2005, 08:47 AM
I cannot believe the amount of discussion this is generating. Guys, its over, this is no longer a race.
Maybe to you and me. But I keep hearing comments in the media to the contrary.
Ksyrup
09-14-2005, 08:52 AM
According to my unofficial count, the Astros are 13-16 in Clemens' starts, and the team hasn't won one of his starts since August 7. And yes, I count team performance, so even if I try to look past the fact that Carpenter has 10 more wins, the bottom line is that the Astros have a .528 winning percentage overall, and a .448 winning percentage when Clemens pitches. At some point, even if you can only chock it up to bad timing/luck, that has to count. Not to mention, Clemens won a Cy Young last year when, by the same argument people will make for Clemens this year, Randy Johnson could have won it. And Johnson had a far better record for a far worse team last year (my 1972 Steve Carlton theory).
I'm going with Carpenter, whose ERA isn't that much higher than Clemens' at this point.
Crapshoot
09-14-2005, 08:53 AM
Clemens should win this - but he won't. That being said, it isnt quite the travesty last year was.
WSUCougar
09-14-2005, 09:17 AM
Clemens should win this - but he won't. That being said, it isnt quite the travesty last year was.
What travesty is that?
Lathum
09-14-2005, 09:19 AM
I would have gone with Clemens, but after seeing Carpenter dominate the Mets last week he has my vote.
Samdari
09-14-2005, 09:37 AM
Maybe to you and me. But I keep hearing comments in the media to the contrary.
Every media member I hear discusses it for a while and then says, "of course it has to be Carpenter" Gotta fill air time I guess.
Klinglerware
09-14-2005, 09:44 AM
Granted, Clemens' 1st half was dominant--but I'm not sure where the hype is coming from at this point. Looking at the cold hard numbers, Clemens and Carpenter are very similar statistically, with the exception of wins and IP. Carpenter has a distinct advantage there, so I'd say give it to Carpenter...
samifan24
09-14-2005, 09:46 AM
Carpenter
First Cardinal to top 200 strikeouts since Jose DeLeon in 1989. That's a long time. I find it hard to believe, but then I think of all the hard throwers we've had since then...
Bryn Smith
John Tudor
Bob Tewksbury
Rheal Cormier
Rick Sutcliffe
Danny Jackson
Allen Watson
Mike Morgan
Kent Mercker
Kent Bottenfield
Jason Simontacchi
Brett Tomko
and I'm not surprised.
However, I would have thought Andy Benes, Todd Stottlemyre, Matt Morris, or even Darryl Kile would have made 200 strikeouts. Heck, I thought Rick Ankiel may have broke it.
Crapshoot
09-14-2005, 09:59 AM
What travesty is that?
Johnson should have own it over Clemens last year...
General Mike
09-14-2005, 10:05 AM
Pedro.
sachmo71
09-14-2005, 10:06 AM
NOLAN RYAN!
Cuckoo
09-14-2005, 10:08 AM
You should put up a poll for MVP too. That dude from FoxSports.com who typically bugs me, Dayn Perry or whatever, has a nice column on the MVP where he says Derrek Lee should win. Now I like him a little more. :)
Senator
09-14-2005, 10:15 AM
I refuse to even answer this poll until Bill James returns my phone call.
Ksyrup
09-14-2005, 10:16 AM
This is one of those years where the "valuable" part of the equation is really going to matter. Andruw Jones has certainly meant more to his team than any other player whose team will likely make the playoffs. However, Pujols has better numbers overall than Jones and deserves some credit for what he has done, but even with some big names in and out of the Cardinals' lineup, the fact that they've run away with that division has lessened the perception of his "value" to their winning ways. And Lee will get votes, but without a playoff team, he'd still need to be near Triple Crown numbers to generate first or second place votes.
stevew
09-14-2005, 10:24 AM
Going to see Clemens on Monday in Pittsburgh, barring injury or rainouts. Really excited.
miked
09-14-2005, 10:44 AM
It's kind of sad, but I think the Astros have been shutout 7 of Clemens's starts. The times they've scored, they've scored 3 or less runs about 10 times. A few times, his pen has blown it for him. He's arguably the pitcher guys would want to face the least right about now and that's probably why he deserves it. But if Bob Welch has taught us anything, people care about wins.
My opinion, go with Ditka.
Klinglerware
09-14-2005, 10:51 AM
It's kind of sad, but I think the Astros have been shutout 7 of Clemens's starts. The times they've scored, they've scored 3 or less runs about 10 times. A few times, his pen has blown it for him. He's arguably the pitcher guys would want to face the least right about now and that's probably why he deserves it. But if Bob Welch has taught us anything, people care about wins.
My opinion, go with Ditka.
Independent of the wins, Carpenter still has similar stats plus he has pitched more innings. Carpenter is a 7 or 8 inning pitcher, while Clemens is a 6 inning pitcher at this point--Carpenter helps his team by his effectiveness and by his saving the Cards from overusing the bullpen in his starts.
Stats aren't the end all and be all of the Cy Young for me--in a similar FOFC poll last year, I voted for Schilling over Santana because of the intangible factor. As good as he is pitching this year, I still don't think Clemens is showing the intangibles that could justify a Cy Young over Carpenter...
Crapshoot
09-14-2005, 11:42 AM
Independent of the wins, Carpenter still has similar stats plus he has pitched more innings. Carpenter is a 7 or 8 inning pitcher, while Clemens is a 6 inning pitcher at this point--Carpenter helps his team by his effectiveness and by his saving the Cards from overusing the bullpen in his starts.
Stats aren't the end all and be all of the Cy Young for me--in a similar FOFC poll last year, I voted for Schilling over Santana because of the intangible factor. As good as he is pitching this year, I still don't think Clemens is showing the intangibles that could justify a Cy Young over Carpenter...
Roffle. If by intangibles you mean "is a media whore, and pitched in Boston" then yes, Schilling has intangibles. Santana was miles better than Schilling, and them some.
Klinglerware
09-14-2005, 11:47 AM
Roffle. If by intangibles you mean "is a media whore, and pitched in Boston" then yes, Schilling has intangibles. Santana was miles better than Schilling, and them some.
That's a legitimate point. So why do you think Clemens should win it this year? His candidacy is also media driven...
MizzouRah
09-14-2005, 11:48 AM
Carp.
In fact, Carpenter just might be the MVP as well.
QuikSand
09-14-2005, 11:49 AM
Independent of the wins, Carpenter still has similar stats plus he has pitched more innings.
Okay, let's try to be fair here, though.
Carpenter did indeed pitch more innings, that much is true. But how good were those innings? Do some quick math here, and you figure out that Clemens has given up 38 earned runs. Carpenter has given up 58, in 34 more innings. So, the difference between those two, just in terms of earned runs, is this stat line:
34 innings, 20 earned runs, 5.29 ERA
It's pretty hard to give a lot of extra credit to Carpenter for giving more innings, when the "additional" innings compared to Clemens are probably below replacement level for even a marginal long reliever.
I'm not suggesting that Clemens is the obvious winner here - I just think there's a difference between "more innings of comparable worth" and just "more innings." By brushing off the difference in their ERA results, you minimize a pretty important difference between these two guys.
Honestly, if Clemens had stayed in some games longer, and had posted another 20 innings of 5+ ERA baseball in doing so -- would you really be saying that he had a better season as a result of doing so? I can't imagine you, or anyone, would.
QuikSand
09-14-2005, 11:52 AM
I'd be interested to hear a defense of a vote for Willis. I haven't yet given any thought to park factors, but it seems awfully hard to justify voting for Willis ahead of Carpenter to me, when you line up their stat lines as done above.
Klinglerware
09-14-2005, 12:00 PM
Okay, let's try to be fair here, though.
Carpenter did indeed pitch more innings, that much is true. But how good were those innings? Do some quick math here, and you figure out that Clemens has given up 38 earned runs. Carpenter has given up 58, in 34 more innings. So, the difference between those two, just in terms of earned runs, is this stat line:
34 innings, 20 earned runs, 5.29 ERA
That's is a pretty wild misuse of statistics there. You cannot shift earned runs around like that--in effect you are assuming that the extra earned runs that Carpenter gave up happened in the extra innings he pitched. In reality, those earned runs should be relatively evenly distributed among all of his innings.
Actually, his opponent batting average is actually lower during innings 7-9 than his overall opponents BA--so it is likely that his resultant ERA would be lower in those extra 34 innings...
Ksyrup
09-14-2005, 12:02 PM
Honestly, if Clemens had stayed in some games longer, and had posted another 20 innings of 5+ ERA baseball in doing so -- would you really be saying that he had a better season as a result of doing so? I can't imagine you, or anyone, would.
To me, this is why the extra innings works for Carpenter. It's not like teams have an unlimited number of innings from their bullpens to plug in if the starter can't go 7 or 8 innings, as oppose to 5 or 6. So you can't just look at the ERAs of the Astros or Cardinals bullpens and decide that if Carpenter had pitched 34 less innings, those innings would have been taken by pitchers who would have pitched more effectively. That's not a given, because those extra innings have to come from somewhere. In other words, there's value in pitching more innings, even if less effectively (of course, it's a sliding scale).
I bet the Astros' bullpen would be better off if Clemens had an extra 34 innings this year, even if that bumped his ERA up to around 2.00. But that's the kind of thing that's admittedly impossible to quantify.
Crapshoot
09-14-2005, 12:03 PM
That's is a pretty wild misuse of statistics there. You cannot shift earned runs around like that--in effect you are assuming that the extra earned runs that Carpenter gave up happened in the extra innings he pitched. In reality, those earned runs should be relatively evenly distributed among all of his innings.
Actually, his opponent batting average is actually lower during innings 7-9 than his overall opponents BA--so it is likely that his resultant ERA would be lower in those extra 34 innings...
Actually, what's trying to point out to you is marginal value - that extra innings pitched badly are not really worth that much. You are misunderstanding the point. This was the same point as when people tried to argue for Pujols over Bonds in 2004 - 130 extra AB's are great, but when you get only 8 more hits- they really aren't worth much.
QuikSand
09-14-2005, 12:09 PM
That's is a pretty wild misuse of statistics there. You cannot shift earned runs around like that--in effect you are assuming that the extra earned runs that Carpenter gave up happened in the extra innings he pitched. In reality, those earned runs should be relatively evenly distributed among all of his innings.
Actually, his opponent batting average is actually lower during innings 7-9 than his overall opponents BA--so it is likely that his resultant ERA would be lower in those extra 34 innings...
En garde.
You are, clearly, missing the point of the argument. Of course Carpenter did not have all his bad luck in his last 34 innings. The point is just that by lauding Carpenter for pitching more innings and simultaneously saying the two pitchers pitches "comparable" stats, you are essentially dismissing the significant difference in the two pitchers' stats. This isn't about where the meaningful difference in their resulting ERAs came from -- it's more about how very different their ERAs are, a point you shrug off above as if it's nothing at all.
Klinglerware
09-14-2005, 12:10 PM
To me, this is why the extra innings works for Carpenter. It's not like teams have an unlimited number of innings from their bullpens to plug in if the starter can't go 7 or 8 innings, as oppose to 5 or 6. So you can't just look at the ERAs of the Astros or Cardinals bullpens and decide that if Carpenter had pitched 34 less innings, those innings would have been taken by pitchers who would have pitched more effectively. That's not a given, because those extra innings have to come from somewhere. In other words, there's value in pitching more innings, even if less effectively (of course, it's a sliding scale).
I bet the Astros' bullpen would be better off if Clemens had an extra 34 innings this year, even if that bumped his ERA up to around 2.00. But that's the kind of thing that's admittedly impossible to quantify.
I took Carpenter's stats for innings 7-9 (courtesy of ESPN) and converted it to a stat line:
IP H BB K R R/9
47.1 34 5 39 11 2.09
It's not exact, but the gist of it is that those are quality innings (34 of which Clemens didn't pitch)...
QuikSand
09-14-2005, 12:11 PM
That's is a pretty wild misuse of statistics there.
No, the "wild misuse of statistics" was when a 2.31 ERA and 1.78 ERA were labeled above as "similar stats" as if they were statistically inseparable. They are not. They are very dissimilar. Both good, but not on the same level at all.
QuikSand
09-14-2005, 12:16 PM
I took Carpenter's stats for innings 7-9 (courtesy of ESPN) and converted it to a stat line:
IP H BB K R R/9
47.1 34 5 39 11 2.09
It's not exact, but the gist of it is that those are quality innings (34 of which Clemens didn't pitch)...
And this does not, at all, respond to the point made above. It's not about "late innings" it's about the huge difference in quality between the innings that the two pitchers actually competed.
If Carpenter had a truly comparable ERA (assuming, for the moment, that this is the fairest measure of effectiveness) and did indeed pitch an extra 34 innings -- then you'd have a great point. There would be a lot of value in those extra, above-average innings.
But the innings difference between these two guys, given the fact that Carpenter's overall ERA is so much higher, is a matter of simple math. And the simple math, shown rather clearly for you above, reveals that that this innings differential does not qualify as "good innings." It's an ERA over 5. Case closed.
Klinglerware
09-14-2005, 12:20 PM
No, the "wild misuse of statistics" was when a 2.31 ERA and 1.78 ERA were labeled above as "similar stats" as if they were statistically inseparable. They are not. They are very dissimilar. Both good, but not on the same level at all.
Okay, I will accept your point that Clemens .5 fewer ER per 9 innings he gives up compared to Carpenter is not insignificant.
My main argument that Carpenter's statistical performance are not that wildly dissimilar to Clemens', and the greater number of outs per game that Carpenter generates makes Carpenter a slightly more valuable pitcher.
Clearly IP does factor into your evaluation of who is worthy of the Cy Young, if it didn't you would be nominating a reliever with even better equivalized statistics than Clemens. So where do you draw the lines where IP becomes then ceases to become important?
Ksyrup
09-14-2005, 12:21 PM
En garde.
You are, clearly, missing the point of the argument. Of course Carpenter did not have all his bad luck in his last 34 innings. The point is just that by lauding Carpenter for pitching more innings and simultaneously saying the two pitchers pitches "comparable" stats, you are essentially dismissing the significant difference in the two pitchers' stats. This isn't about where the meaningful difference in their resulting ERAs came from -- it's more about how very different their ERAs are, a point you shrug off above as if it's nothing at all.
But isn't this largely a hypothetical argument, since we don't get the benefit of seeing how well or poorly Clemens would pitch in those 34 extra innings? He's only pitched the number of innings he has because, in all candor, he's old, gets tired more easily, and can't handle the excess pitches. What if Clemens, if left in in certain of his starts this year for a total of 34 more innings, had a 7.94 EA for those innings?
Again, there's value in the fact that Carpenter pitched those extra innings, but again, it's largely unquantifiable. Stuff like, had he come out in the 6th inning of 6 of the games he pitched a minimum of 8 innings in, how would LaRussa have juggled the bullpen and how effective would those relievers have been having to work those extra days in a row, or just the cumulative innings? I'm sorry, I don't see this as a negative for Carpenter in any way.
Crapshoot
09-14-2005, 12:27 PM
Okay, I will accept your point that Clemens .5 fewer ER per 9 innings he gives up compared to Carpenter is not insignificant.
My main argument that Carpenter's statistical performance are not that wildly dissimilar to Clemens', and the greater number of outs per game that Carpenter generates makes Carpenter a slightly more valuable pitcher.
Clearly IP does factor into your evaluation of who is worthy of the Cy Young, if it didn't you would be nominating a reliever with even better equivalized statistics than Clemens. So where do you draw the lines where IP becomes then ceases to become important?
Klingerware,
- Carpenter is essentialy Clemens + 34 innings with a 5.29 ERA. the question being posed by Quiksand is whether that extra 34 innings , given the relative ERA, is more than replacement value - and the answer, fairly clearly, is that it probably isn't. We can estimate the additional value of those 34 innings using WS or tweaked WS - which is how we would solve your reliever issue. I don't see the confusion here.
QuikSand
09-14-2005, 12:30 PM
I guess I must have sent this in the wrong direction with this little anecdotal argument:
Honestly, if Clemens had stayed in some games longer, and had posted another 20 innings of 5+ ERA baseball in doing so -- would you really be saying that he had a better season as a result of doing so? I can't imagine you, or anyone, would.
The point here is not what might have happened if Clemens had actually pitched more innings. My argument about these two pitcher's relative worth has nothing to do with this hypothetical situation. Sorry if the intended pithy observation above led some to believe that I was suggesting we could just "project out" one performance to more innings, or if I was somehow suggesting that it's the "extra" innings from Carpenter that were the bad ones.
(I still don't see how one could reach that inference, but I'm trying to grant the benefit of the doubt here in the spirit of fair play)
What I'm saying (once again) is that Carpenter's "more innings" are only worth something if they amount to "more good innings." And they obviously don't.
The only way you get from Clemens's totals to Carpenter's totals is by adding 34 innings of 5+ ERA ball. That is, very simply put, the difference between what these two pitchers actually accomplished. That is not quality, by any reasonable standard, much less by a Cy Young standard.
TroyF
09-14-2005, 12:33 PM
Okay, let's try to be fair here, though.
Carpenter did indeed pitch more innings, that much is true. But how good were those innings? Do some quick math here, and you figure out that Clemens has given up 38 earned runs. Carpenter has given up 58, in 34 more innings. So, the difference between those two, just in terms of earned runs, is this stat line:
34 innings, 20 earned runs, 5.29 ERA
It's pretty hard to give a lot of extra credit to Carpenter for giving more innings, when the "additional" innings compared to Clemens are probably below replacement level for even a marginal long reliever.
I'm not suggesting that Clemens is the obvious winner here - I just think there's a difference between "more innings of comparable worth" and just "more innings." By brushing off the difference in their ERA results, you minimize a pretty important difference between these two guys.
Honestly, if Clemens had stayed in some games longer, and had posted another 20 innings of 5+ ERA baseball in doing so -- would you really be saying that he had a better season as a result of doing so? I can't imagine you, or anyone, would.
I can understand that arguement QS, but Carpenter is going through an amazing run right now. From June 1 on, he's started 19 games and completed 8 or more innings 15 times. (two times he went 7+ and the others were both 6+)
I'm not saying those extra innings are the end all. I am saying that it does impress me that Carpenter is not only pitching well, he's pitching deep into games.
Hammer755
09-14-2005, 12:34 PM
A month ago, I would have said Clemens, but I'm leaning more toward Carpenter every day since Clemens is tailing off while Carpenter is still going strong.
Actually, I probably would have said Pedro a month ago. He's had a far stronger season than Willis has - #1 in WHIP, #3 in K/9, #2 in K/BB, #2 in Component ERA, #2 in Opponent BA & OPS.
QuikSand
09-14-2005, 12:36 PM
Since I made mention of this earlier - I'll offer this on ballpark factors.
My best source indicates that of the three home fields for these pitchers, both Florida and Houston are essentially neutral with regard to runs scored. St. Louis has the only meaningful effect, and it's a slight depression of runs scored there (which presumably weakens Carpenter's argument, thoughonly slightly).
Just FWIW - I judge these things (quantified park effects) to be at least as much art as science, there may be other opinions on the matter.
QuikSand
09-14-2005, 12:37 PM
I can understand that arguement QS, but Carpenter is going through an amazing run right now. From June 1 on, he's started 19 games and completed 8 or more innings 15 times. (two times he went 7+ and the others were both 6+)
I'm not saying those extra innings are the end all. I am saying that it does impress me that Carpenter is not only pitching well, he's pitching deep into games.
And I actually voted for Carpenter, believe it or not.
My argument here is not with the general conclusion being drawn, but with the statement that Carpenter deserves credit for all these extra good innings. When compared to Clemens, this is a demonstrably false argument.
TroyF
09-14-2005, 12:40 PM
And I actually voted for Carpenter, believe it or not.
My argument here is not with the general conclusion being drawn, but with the statement that Carpenter deserves credit for all these extra good innings. When compared to Clemens, this is a demonstrably false argument.
I understand the arguement and I couldn't agree with it more.
I'm just amazed at the run Carpenter has had with pitching that deep into games. 15 of 19 games going 8+? That reminds me of the 1970's, not this era of baseball.
Hammer755
09-14-2005, 12:41 PM
Dola
The more I look at the numbers, the more I'm convinced that Clemens deserves it - here is his Opponents Batting line - 0.188/0.251/0.272 - that is freaking unbelievable! The only things Carpenter has in his favor are the innings and a better BB/9 ratio, which is more than made up for by Clemens BAA.
tucker342
09-14-2005, 12:42 PM
Even though I really hate the Cardinals, Carpenter should win it. He has had an incredible season.
st.cronin
09-14-2005, 12:45 PM
It's really too close to call right now. They each have what, 3 starts left? I voted for Carpenter, but I could easily change my mind at season's end.
Klinglerware
09-14-2005, 12:46 PM
Klingerware,
- Carpenter is essentialy Clemens + 34 innings with a 5.29 ERA. the question being posed by Quiksand is whether that extra 34 innings , given the relative ERA, is more than replacement value - and the answer, fairly clearly, is that it probably isn't. We can estimate the additional value of those 34 innings using WS or tweaked WS - which is how we would solve your reliever issue. I don't see the confusion here.
I understand the point. I will agree that Clemens' statistics are eye popping.
I still believe that there is some value to pitching effectively deep into games--it minimizes the use of the bullpen. Carpenter is of more value to the Cardinals in this regard. Intangibles also play a role--if Clemens can reverse his late season fade and if his pitching can contribute to the Astros getting into the playoffs, then those would be factors that cannot be ignored.
Ksyrup
09-14-2005, 12:48 PM
And I actually voted for Carpenter, believe it or not.
My argument here is not with the general conclusion being drawn, but with the statement that Carpenter deserves credit for all these extra good innings. When compared to Clemens, this is a demonstrably false argument.
I've never said they were good innings, just that there is value, a Workhorse Factor if you will, in pitching extra innings that the bullpen does not have to pitch. And considering his team's record in all of the games he's pitched, it's not like Carpenter's extra innings have cost his team games. That 5.29 ERA over 34 innings, in relation to what it did for the bullpen, doesn't appear to me to be all that significant. I'll grant you the pure numbers argument, but you are completely discounting the real world benefit a starting pitcher who pitches into the 8th inning on average provides his team. That' basically my only point, since I have yet to see a counter to my argument.
In fact, given the way Tony LaRussa uses his bullpen, the extra 4 outs that Carpenter gets a game more than Clemens saves at least 3 Cardinal relievers from having that many more appearances... :D
WSUCougar
09-14-2005, 12:49 PM
Well, I'm not sure innings pitched can be taken by itself. If wins are being devalued in this discussion (because obviously 11 and 21 aren't anywhere close), and E.R.A. is clearly in Clemens' favor, then on the flip side, let's not ignore this comparison, either:
Carpenter has 7 complete games, 4 of them shutouts. Clemens has one and none.
That means six more times (or 20% of his starts) Carpenter has gone the distance. In this era of weak and overused bullpens, that's significant, and even moreso with LaRussa as your manager. Maybe we should poll the guys in the Houston pen to see which pitcher they'd like out there. ;)
Ksyrup
09-14-2005, 12:54 PM
Well, I'm not sure innings pitched can be taken by itself. If wins are being devalued in this discussion (because obviously 11 and 21 aren't anywhere close), and E.R.A. is clearly in Clemens' favor, then on the flip side, let's not ignore this comparison, either:
Carpenter has 7 complete games, 4 of them shutouts. Clemens has one and none.
That means six more times (or 20% of his starts) Carpenter has gone the distance. In this era of weak and overused bullpens, that's significant, and even moreso with LaRussa as your manager. Maybe we should poll the guys in the Houston pen to see which pitcher they'd like out there. ;)
That's precisely my point. It's why Sid Fernandez was a huge disappointment - the guy had a career ERA+ of 110, yet could barely pitch 6 innings a start (if that) most years, which made the quality of his pitching less valuable. The fact that a team would have to commit an average of 3-4 bullpen innings a game in his starts, in addition to their usual workload, simply lessened his value. In comparing Clemens and Carpenter, the same kind of argument has to hold true.
WSUCougar
09-14-2005, 12:54 PM
The only things Carpenter has in his favor are the innings and a better BB/9 ratio, which is more than made up for by Clemens BAA.
Come on now. How can you say such a thing? :rolleyes:
QuikSand
09-14-2005, 12:57 PM
I still believe that there is some value to pitching effectively deep into games--it minimizes the use of the bullpen.
I've never said they were good innings, just that there is value, a Workhorse Factor if you will, in pitching extra innings that the bullpen does not have to pitch.
Point granted on both counts. I was never really opposed to this argument, just to the suggestion that the two players were pitching innings of basically comparable worth -- a point which has now been retracted to my satisfaction.
Of course, at some point, even the "inning eater" concept loses its value. If that starting pitcher pitches into innings 7 and 8 but does so with an ERA of 6 or 7 or 10... then the team would be better served with a crappy mopup guy in there instead, who could presumably do a better job protecting the workload of the valuable relief pitchers. But the general point is sound.
JimmyWint
09-14-2005, 01:00 PM
Where is the love for Willis. He has pitched in important games all season long....Carpenter has not pitched in a MUST WIN situation all season. Clemens has pitched his heart out as well, but when winning is the bottom line you can't give a guy the award who only has 11 wins.
Ksyrup
09-14-2005, 01:06 PM
Of course, at some point, even the "inning eater" concept loses its value. If that starting pitcher pitches into innings 7 and 8 but does so with an ERA of 6 or 7 or 10... then the team would be better served with a crappy mopup guy in there instead, who could presumably do a better job protecting the workload of the valuable relief pitchers. But the general point is sound.
I think I conceded that in an earlier post (I mentioned that the value based on the ERA would be a sliding scale). Although, if we're really looking at the late-inning effectiveness of a starter, as opposed to just the "extra innings" he's pitched in comparison to another pitcher, that's a different analysis altogether.
For instance, you could have a pitcher who statistically, in game in which he pitches in the 7th-9th innings, is actually better than his 1-6 innings ERAs, but has, say 4 starts where he got bombed and that contributes to his greater ERA in the additional innings he pitched. In fact, I haven't looked at his game log in depth, but just based on my memory of how this season has gone, I seem to recall Dontrelle Willis having an inordinate number of games in which he was completely ineffective, given his overall ERA. He might be one of those who, if you just compared quality starts, would compare more favorably with Clemens and Carpenter.
Not to say that his getting blown out shouldn't be counted against him - in fact, it's for just that reason that I wouldn't want him as a starter on my team in the playoffs - but it's another wrinkle in the late inngins vs. extra innings argument.
Ksyrup
09-14-2005, 01:14 PM
I looked at Willis' game log quickly, and he really has had only one strech of 3 bad starts where he pitched 14 innings and gave up 23 runs. He had one other game where he gave up 5 runs in 7 innings, and couple of 4 run games, but no other blow outs. It's amazing how good he has been (1.61 ERA over 195 innings) aside from those completely out of character starts. He seems to be the classic "when he's good, he's great, and when he's bad he's terrible" type pitchers.
JimmyWint
09-14-2005, 01:21 PM
I looked at Willis' game log quickly, and he really has had only one strech of 3 bad starts where he pitched 14 innings and gave up 23 runs. He had one other game where he gave up 5 runs in 7 innings, and couple of 4 run games, but no other blow outs. It's amazing how good he has been (1.61 ERA over 195 innings) aside from those completely out of character starts. He seems to be the classic "when he's good, he's great, and when he's bad he's terrible" type pitchers.
So, couple what you just said, and add the extra pressure of the games he has pitched in and it seems to be that he should be the choice for your 2005 CY Young Award Vote.
Hammer755
09-14-2005, 01:24 PM
Come on now. How can you say such a thing? :rolleyes:
Well, by looking at the numbers. Show me where else Carpenter has the advantage.
Karlifornia
09-14-2005, 05:57 PM
Willis. Give it to the black pitcher? Why? Maybe you can market him in urban areas, and possibly stunt the decline of young blacks who play baseball. Barry Bonds has won MVP's, but he isn't as marketable as Willis is. Willis has that "urban" edge, growing up in Oakland and wearing the tilted cap.
Hey, just trying to make it interesting here......
JimmyWint
09-14-2005, 06:48 PM
I was wondering who would be the first to play the race card! Jesse Jackson would be proud of you
WSUCougar
09-21-2005, 10:18 AM
Posted on SI.com yesterday:
In addition to being one of the most exciting players in baseball -- don't limit the scope to pitchers -- Dontrelle Willis is a rather polite and wise man for someone who is only 23. He apologizes and says, "Excuse me," if he inadvertantly bumps into a clubhouse visitor. He calms himself with herbal tea on the night before he pitches and, largely on the work he does with youth baseball, was nominated for the Roberto Clemente Award, which recognizes community service but typically goes to veteran players who have the resources and networking contacts to make significant impacts on communities.
"When my resources improve, I'll do more," he promises.
So when Willis gives his opinion on the National League Cy Young Award race, all of us should listen, particularly because Willis himself is a strong candidate. Given Willis' maturity, his pick is not surprising.
"If I did have a vote I wouldn't vote for myself,'' Willis says. "I never thought I'd be mentioned in the same sentence. Chris Carpenter, Roger Clemens ... Dontrelle Willis? It kind of sounds like a bad joke.
"Clemens is bar none the best pitcher in the history of baseball. He's definitely changed the game and is a face of our game. I'd have to vote for Carpenter. He hasn't given up a hit in like a year and a half. No offense, Roger, I love you. But you can give up one."
So who should win? Here are the candidates, including Willis despite his Mooseport-lilke withdrawal from the race:
[B]Willis
Case for: He is 21-9 with a 2.48 ERA and a league-leading five shutouts. Willis has allowed only nine home runs this year. Do you know how rare it is for a pitcher to win more than 20 games and give up fewer than 10 homers? It's been done only once in the past 60 years in the NL -- by Gaylord Perry in 1978. Only five pitchers have done it in the AL in that span: Pedro Martinez (1999), Clemens (1990, 1997), Tommy John (1979), Mike Garcia (1952) and Mel Parnell (1949).
Case against: Willis trails Carpenter in innings and trails both Carpenter and Clemens in ERA and strikeouts.
Clemens
Case for: His ERA begins with 1 -- 1.89 to be exact. Since Ron Guidry in 1978, only five pitchers have posted a sub-2 ERA with at least 30 starts: Martinez (1997), Kevin Brown (1996), Clemens (1990), Dwight Gooden (1985) and John Tudor (1985).
But wait. Despite that ERA and despite 180 strikeouts, Clemens has only 12 wins. No pitcher in history ever has struck out so many batters with a sub-2 ERA and won so few games. Is it his fault the Astros don't hit?
Case against: He trails Carpenter and Willis by nine wins and has the fewest innings among the three. Is a half-run advantage in ERA enough to compensate?
Carpenter
Case for: He is 21-4 (.840 winning percentage) with 203 strikeouts and a 2.42 ERA. The Cardinals are 26-5 when he starts, including a 17-0 run that ended Sunday. The list of pitchers who won more than 20 games and at least 84 percent of their decisions while striking out 200 batters is rather short. It is this short:
Martinez (1999), Clemens (1986), Gooden (1985), Guidry (1978), Whitey Ford (1961), Lefty Grove (1930) and Smokey Joe Wood (1912).
That's it. No Koufax, Seaver, Marichal, Gibson, Johnson or Mathewson.
Case against: Carpenter has the highest run support per nine innings (5.31) among the three candidates; Willis gets 5.05 and the Rocket receives a paltry 3.57.
Carpenter and Clemens have two starts remaining -- and Carpenter has been tagged for eight earned runs in 10 1/3 innings in his past two starts. Willis could get three more starts, so the precincts aren't closed just yet. But with 92 percent of the season completed, the winner is likely to be the candidate with the most innings and strikeouts and fewest losses, the best strikeout-to-walk ratio, and the one who is tied for the most wins and most complete games. As wise as he seems, Willis is right: Carpenter looks like your winner.
vBulletin v3.6.0, Copyright ©2000-2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.