Pinch Hit: Rotational History
Monday, November 01 2010 @ 10:07 PM EDT
Contributed by: Matthew E
Jonny German lays it all out for us. I love looking at stuff like this.
A
recent thread asked Bauxites for their wild visions of the future,
Starting Pitching Division. This struck me as a fool’s errand into the
unknowable, but it inspired me to trawl through the things we do know, the history of starting pitching in Toronto. I wanted to visualize it so I made a nifty chart.
The
general rule for inclusion in the chart is that a pitcher has to have
been one of the top 6 Blue Jay starters (by games started) in a single
season. Once a pitcher is in on the basis of one qualifying year, the
rest of his Blue Jay career is generally included as well. There is a
common exception of not including seasons spent entirely in the bullpen
or with less than 50 innings pitched. There are various exceptions where
I've included pitchers who wouldn't have merited it if they only spent a
single season in Toronto, i.e. Stieb and Hentgen's swan-song returns.
To
help convey how big of a role each pitcher played in each season, I
formatted their names according to how many innings they pitched. While I
was at it I embedded info about how good the team was overall.
100 or fewer innings 76 or fewer wins 8 point font
100 to 150 innings 77 to 81 wins 10 point font
150 to 200 innings 82 to 86 wins 12 point font
More than 200 innings 87 or more wins 12 point font, bolded
I pro-rated the shortened 1981, 1994, and 1995 seasons so that the formatting remains consistent throughout.
A few thoughts / notes:
- I
specifically kept Stieb, Hentgen, and Halladay in the leftmost column
even though it meant a hiccup in the general formatting (more on that
later), but otherwise the columns should NOT be interpreted as “#2
starter, #3 starter,” etc.
- Rather, the priority was for a pitcher to appear in one column only for his entire Blue Jay career.
- David
Wells is the only starter to have 2 significant runs in Toronto, though
David Cone also appears twice and was a part of a championship team.
It’d be fun to see how Tony Fernandez would look in a chart like this
- No two “top 6” Blue Jay starters have ever had the same surname. Could Zach Stewart be the one to break that up?
- Look
for Roy Halladay to return to Toronto in 2015. Hopefully he’ll stick
around for more than a single year and be more than a shadow of his
former self
The
most interesting part of the chart is how clearly it shows that the
pitching history of the Blue Jays can be quickly described as 3 eras:
Stieb, Hentgen, and Halladay. "Wait a second", you'll say, "That clearly
doesn't include the present day". True enough. And the geezers will no
doubt remind us that there was A Time Before Stieb. So let's also name
the Pre-Competitive Era and the Future. How do those look if we draw
lines through the chart?
- To
my thinking Stottlemyre is the most problematic pitcher in this
scenario; he's something of a poor answer to "How do you transition from
Stieb to Hentgen?"
- Carpenter
also straddles a line, but in my mind he clearly belongs in the more
recent era as he'll forever be linked to Halladay and Escobar from their
days as prospects
- History
may eventually tell us that Marcum and Litsch belong in the Halladay
era. I'm hopeful that it's not true for Shaun, less confident about
Litsch. I like Purcey's chances of having a decent career, but the line
reflects that his starting days are behind him
The
burning question, naturally, is "What shall we call the next great era
of Blue Jay hurlers?". Romero may be the safest bet, but it could
conceivably be Morrow, or Cecil, or even Drabek (which has a nice angle
to it given the trade that brought him to Toronto). Marcum is another
possibility, but it seems more likely that in this sort of discussion
he’ll go down as a good transitional guy.
--
Thanks to Jonny!
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