One of the mantras we hear from Fantasy Baseball experts is “Don’t chase Saves.” Closers are so hit-or-miss in this league, that on draft day trying to chase mediocre closers usually turns into wasted draft picks as these guys frequently get hurt or under-perform and get replaced. Well, its not that much better in “real” baseball, where teams best laid plans for closers often backfire mightily.
In fact, check out this link on RotoAuthority.com, which charts the Opening day and Closing Day 2012 closers for all 30 teams. In summary:
- Only 10 of the 30 MLB teams kept the same closer wire-to-wire.
- 14 of the 30 teams had a different guy in the closer role by season’s end. That’s half the league!
- The other 6 teams had the same guy at season’s start and end, but went through personnel changes in between. This includes our own Nats, who started with Drew Storen, he got hurt, Tyler Clippard took over and stayed in the role after Storen got back, then Clippard melted in September and Storen took back over the role.
By my observations, as of June 15th 2013 here’s the same stats for this year:
- 22 of 30 teams have same guy as start of season
- 8 teams have already made a switch (Boston, Detroit, Arizona, Oakland, Chicago Cubs, Cleveland, St Louis, Los Angeles Dodgers)
So what’s the point here? Teams need to re-think they way they grow, acquire and pay for “Saves.” Lets look at how far one particular organization has gone “Chasing Saves” and pursuing a Closer. I present you the Boston Red Sox, normally considered a very forward-thinking, analytical organization but which seemingly has a very large blind spot for the mytical “shutdown closer” position. As of the publishing of this article (June 14, 2013):
- Current Closer: Andrew Bailey, for whom they traded 3 players to the Oakland A’s in 2011 to obtain. Two minor league prospects and one Josh Reddick, who hit 32 homers last year.
- Acquired last off-season to be their 2012 closer: Mark Melancon, for whom they traded two good prospects to the Houston Astros in 2011; Jed Lowrie and Kyle Weiland. Lowrie is now posting a nifty 126 ops+ for the Athletics (to whom he was flipped by Houston for even more prospects). Melancon had two bad outings at the beginning of 2012, was banished to the minors and eventually flipped for ….
- Former 2013 closer: Joel Hanrahan, for whom they traded 4 players to the Pittsburgh Pirates last December. Including Mark Melancon, who is repaying the Pirates for their patience in him by posting a .072 ERA in 25 innings thus far this year. Hanrahan just had Tommy John surgery and is out for at least a year.
- [Post-post update]; By the end of June, Bailey allowed 4 homers in 5 games, hit the D/L and on July 22nd was announced as undergoing season-ending surgery. and is being replaced by … somebody. By Mid July it seemed clear that it was Kenji Uehara, a free-agent signing last off-season. So for all their trades, they end up using a minor FA signing as their closer.
So for the record that’s 9 guys traded away (including at least two effective hitters) in the past two off-seasons to chase one (in my opinion) relatively meaningless statistic. And basically all they have to show for it is Andrew Bailey no longer pitching the 9th for them.
Of course, maybe the joke’s on me, since the Red Sox are in first place at the time of this writing.
But for an organization that used to be known for doing smart things (including the smart move of allowing long-time closer Jonathan Papelbon be overpaid by someone else on the FA market), these moves are just dumb. Find a hard throwing guy in your system, make him the “closer,” repeat as necessary. That should be the strategy.
And oh, by the way, I don’t exempt our own team from this. Rafael Soriano was an unneeded purchase who (as we’ve seen by the unwarranted shot at Bryce Harper) could be more trouble than he’s worth. But hey, its not my money right? At least the Nats didn’t trade good prospects to acquire him (like Boston has done over and again).
This argument leads into an oft-repeated discussion in this space about the ridiculousness of the Save statistic and how frequently closers are preserved for “Save Situations” despite their leverage rating. Lets look at a couple of very specific mathematical arguments against overpaying for closers:
1. Joe Posnanski and others have shown how useless closers are. Teams are winning games at basically the same percentage now in the closer era that they were 50 years ago, without highly paid specialized closers. Some quick percentages: For the latest decade teams won 95.2% of games in which they led going into the 9th. In the 60s, 70s and 80s that same percentage varied between 95.6-94.8%. Can someone explain to me how the proliferation of highly paid closers in the last 20 years of the game has basically helped teams …. win the exact same number of games they used to before closers, matchup bullpen roles and Loogys existed??
2. Any old mediocre reliever is going to end up being a relatively effective closer. Proof?
Lets say an average reliever has a 4.50 era or so (which in today’s game frankly is a stretch, given what we’ve talked about before and the advantages that relievers have over starters; they can go max effort for shorter time periods and they don’t have to face batters more than once). That means he gives up one run every two innings. Now lets say that you used this pitcher with his 4.50 era in every closing situation you face in a given year. A save situation can be a lead held by 1, 2 or 3 runs.
So, out of these three scenarios your 4.50 ERA pitcher can give up his run every other start and still “save” 5 out of 6 games.
- 1 run lead: gives up 0 runs; save
- 1 run lead; gives up 1 run: blown-save
- 2 run lead: gives up 0 runs; save
- 2 run lead: gives up 1 run: save
- 3 run lead: gives up 0 runs: save
- 3 run lead: gives up 1 run: save.
And then even in those blown-save situations, extra inning affairs are basically coin flips anyway historically, which means that teams are going to win half those games anyway. So you’re basically going to win 5.5 out of every 6 games. 5.5 out of 6 is 91%. So historically even my normal case scenario undervalues the ability of teams to win these games.
And this scenario really undervalues what kind of reliever you’re actually going to put into the role. Every team has a handful of relievers in their bullpen with ERAs in the 3-3.50 range; that’s 1-1.5 runs better than my “mediocre pitcher” example over the course of a couple weeks (assuming closers get about 9 innings of work every two weeks). With even this marginal improvement you’re going from 91% to closer to the historical 94-95% of games won.
Want some more food for thought on closers? Here’s your current top 5 closers in the league by number of saves, along with their acquisition method, salary and general statement about their careers thus far:
- Jason Grilli – 23 Saves. 36yrs old. $2.25M. He was flat out released in July 2011 by Philadelphia and signed as a Minor League FA by Pittsburgh. He’s a 36 year old journeyman on his 7th pro organziation with a 106 career ERA+.
- Jim Johnson – 23 saves. 30yrs old. $6.5M. He’s a home-grown middle reliever thrust into the closer role last year when the O’s got fed up with FA closer Kevin Gregg.
- Mariano Rivera – 23 saves. 43yrs old. $10m, taking a discount from his $15M/year deals since 2008 b/c of knee issue. Home-grown player who converted to relief after bombing out as a failed starter at age 25.
- Joe Nathan – 20 saves. 38yrs old. $7M, taking a discount from his last contract value of $11.25M/year after significant arm injury. Failed starter with San Francisco, traded to Minnesota in the AJ Pierzynski deal and has flourished as a closer.
- Addison Reed – 19 saves. 24yrs old, $520k (20k above MLB minimum). 3rd round draft pick by the White Sox out of San Diego State, where he was a career relief pitcher after not having ever pitched until his Junior year of HS.
The next few guys are Kimbrel (655k), Mujica ($3.2M). But you’ve also got guys out there closing like Wilhemlsen, who didn’t even make the majors until he was 27 and was out of the game working as a bartender for 6 years.
The point? You shouldn’t pay for a high end closer; you find someone internally who looks like a good option on the cheap and go with them. You can find someone in your farm system, or on waivers, or working in a bar who can be an effective closer. Find someone who can throw 1mph for 20 pitches a few nights a week; they’re going to give you as good of a chance to win as throwing the last guy out of the bullpen out there with a 3 run lead in the 9th.
One last bit of observation: Lets look at Dennis Eckersley‘s career. As a starter: good, not amazing. A couple years with a smattering of Cy Young votes. One 20-game winning season but another season where he 9-13 with a 5.61 ERA. He converts to a closer and immediately his ERA plummets, his K/9 jumps up, his ERA+ numbers rise to stupid levels. One year (1990) as a 35-yr old he allowed just 5 earned runs and just 3 unintentional walks on the year through 73+ innings.
That’s a lot of loosely tied together points to my main theory: If I were the GM of a team, the absolute last thing I’d pursue on the FA market was a high-priced closer. I don’t think the “closer” role is going away (players know that Saves translate to Dollars in arbitration and on the FA market), but I’m hoping we’ll see less Dusty Baker-esque management techniques and more Joe Maddon.
I absolutely agree with your overall point, and Eckersley’s example is intriguing when you think about Dan Haren being lights out in the first inning this year and then quickly “tiring.” Seems to me he has the potential to be another Eck in the making.
That said, I’m still glad the Nats signed Soriano, especially since they deferred half of his salary and he won’t break the bank over the next two years. Though he hasn’t been as dominant as I’m sure the team was hoping he’d be, given what a mess the pen has been and Storen’s struggles in particular combined with our woeful offense, I’d hate to think about how many more leads the Nats might have blown this year without him. Right now, he might just represent the difference between a team that has a chance to climb back into contention and one that would already be buried without him.
bdrube
14 Jun 13 at 11:46 am
I looked up my stance on the Soriano signing at the time and I seemed non-committal. The opinion i stated was something along the lines of “we didn’t need to spend that money but hey its not my cash.”
On the whole of it yes Soriano’s deal is team friendly, takes the value down to $11M/year, won’t break the bank. Its just not the way I’d build a bullpen, preferring to spend that money elsewhere. But, honestly we didn’t look like we had any holes in the off-season at that point.
Todd Boss
14 Jun 13 at 1:29 pm
Would Haren be a good test case to Eckersley? I dunno. Eckersley’s sidearm approach and his great slider makes for my “gimmick-y” approach that works for closers; does Haren have a similar arsenal right now? Maybe in shorter stints he could throw harder? It seems to me he’s a sinker baller who right now isn’t getting the sink or the control he normally gets. Soriano isn’t exactly overpowering either; what he has is impeccable control and a nice tight slider that he can put on the corners very well. I’m surprised he never got a look as a starter frankly.
Todd Boss
14 Jun 13 at 1:30 pm
Haren doesn’t profile well as a closer IMO. He admitted earlier during Spring Training he was trying to throw too hard and his pitches were flat because of it.
Soriano is making $7m this year and $11m next year so the deffered money is definitely significant but again it seemed like a luxury acquisition instead of a necesarry one. My only question when the deal was made was why they had the large chunk of money available for him but not the $3m that was needed for a JP Howell.
Soriano started out as a starter for the Mariners. He made 8 starts in 2002 and gave up 24 runs in 42.1 innings, including 8 homers. He had an underwhelming ERA of 5.10 in those starts and a K/BB ratio of only 1.6 with a K/9 ratio of 5.5. In ’03 he was used strictly as a reliever at the ML level which may have been need based for the team because he was still starting at AAA. The following 2 seasons it appears he was battling injuries because he made all of 33 appearances (14 starts) across ’04 and ’05 in the minors and majors. That was the end of his years as a starter. Maybe injuries contributed to it because he was never able to pitch more than 137 innings. Interestingly enough he was rated as the #30 (’02) and #27 (’03) prospect as a STARTER.
PDowdy
14 Jun 13 at 2:12 pm
PDowdy – Too bad for Haren, because if he doesn’t turn things around in a hurry, his days as an MLB pitcher will be rapidly drawing to a close.
BTW – given how incredible J-Zimm’s one inning of relief against the Cards in the NLCS was last year, how great do you think HE would be as a closer? I’m thinking “who is this Kimbrel guy?” great. Not that I am in any way sugesting he SHOULD be.
bdrube
14 Jun 13 at 2:53 pm
If the season were to end now with Haren’s numbers, what kind of deal could he expect to get on the FA market? 1yr $4M? less? Minor league deal? How about Tim Lincecum right now? If you were an opposing GM looking at Lincecum’s body of work and his last two years … what would you offer him?
Todd Boss
14 Jun 13 at 3:20 pm