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Some Quick Thoughts On Day 2 Of The Playoffs

Not so Minnesota-nice anymore, are you

Hannah Foslien - Getty Images

Not so Minnesota-nice anymore, are you

I'm back for another round of this, and I'm feeling less worn out than I did yesterday. Maybe that's because I didn't get completely drained by a no-hitter crammed in the middle of two other dramatic, mega-important baseball games. Or maybe it's because this time around the Yankees were an appetizer, rather than the disappointing, chewy main course. Tim Lincecum kind of served as an upper there at the end. The man is his own drug.

  • So here's what Game Score is. Game Score is a simple metric created by Bill James to assign a numerical grade to any start, where the higher the number, the better the performance. It's supposed to be reflective of quality. It isn't perfect - they never are - but it's simple and convenient and not completely ridiculous, and it's with that in mind that I present the following three game scores:

    98: Roger Clemens, 10/14/2000
    96: Tim Lincecum, 10/7/2010
    94: Roy Halladay, 10/6/2010

    Clemens' game - against the Mariners! - has the highest game score in the history of playoff baseball. Halladay nearly matched him two days ago, and Lincecum nearly matched him today. There are two reasons this is interesting:

    (1) Lincecum beat a guy who threw a no-hitter
    (2) These two games happened in the first two days of the playoffs

    The reason Lincecum beat Halladay is that game score takes strikeouts into account, and Lincecum whiffed 14. You can agree or disagree that that's the right thing to do, but that's the explanation. More significant, however, is #2. How lucky are we? How lucky are we that we got to see Halladay and Lincecum do what they did this early in the postseason? How lucky are we that we got to see Cliff Lee do what he did, too? Not that anyone's going to be talking about that anymore. But, Jesus Christ, these are playoff lineups, and we've seen three absolutely breathtaking pitching performances in the span of like 36 hours. I don't know that 2010 is the Year of the Pitcher, but this is presently the week of them.

  • You could write a book about this. I'm going to write a bullet point, and I haven't even thought it completely through. But what I think we just saw from Halladay and Lincecum is the difference between being hard to hit and being unhittable.

    And the weird thing is that I'm going to slap the 'unhittable' label on the guy who gave up a hit. Hear me out. Halladay worked his complete game no-hitter, striking out eight in the process but more importantly keeping the Reds from even coming close to getting a knock. The nearest they came was a drive off the bat of starter Travis Wood. Nobody squared Halladay up. They swung through a lot of pitches, sure, but they also hit a lot, and hit them poorly. Roy Halladay was hard to hit.

    Tim Lincecum, meanwhile, struck me as unhittable, and here's my evidence: of the 55 swings that Braves hitters took against Lincecum tonight, 31 of them missed. 31. 31 swinging strikes and foul tips (which are basically swinging strikes). I don't know of any single-game swinging strike leaderboard, but I swear to you I've never seen a total as high as Lincecum's was tonight. Atlanta's contact rate was 44%. They had about as much success even making contact with a pitched baseball as Matt Hasselbeck has completing downfield passes.

    Against Roy Halladay, it was hard for the Reds to pick up a hit. Against Tim Lincecum, it was hard for the Braves to bat the ball somewhere in the first place. Those are two different paths to what wound up being very similar results.

    I don't think one is better than the other. Both were absolute treats to watch, and I'm thankful that my job required me to watch them, since ordinarily I tune out the playoffs until they get closer to the Series. I'm an impartial observer of this postseason, but I was not an impartial observer of Roy Halladay and Tim Lincecum. They absolutely pulled me in and had my support, and what they were able to do is spectacular.

    What a time for Lincecum to come up with the best start of his life.

  • Halladay and Lincecum each have an argument for having thrown the best start in playoff history. Halladay and Lincecum were each making their playoff debuts.

  • Watching the Yankees hit against Carl Pavano was like watching two different games. Early on, the Yankees were content to wait him out, which is a mistake when you have a guy who peppers the strike zone like Pavano does so consistently. Then they flipped a switch, and both their approach and their results changed in an instant. From the start of the fourth until he got yanked in the seventh, Pavano threw 34 strikes, and the Yankees swung at 29 of them, a marked departure from their 14/26 through the first three innings.

    The Yankees stopped letting Pavano come to them, and they started going after Pavano. They hit the ball hard, they scored four runs, and they nearly scored more. The Yankees are normally a patient lineup, and they tried to be patient again today, but it was when they switched things up to meet their opponent that they flourished. I wasn't happy to see it, but it was interesting to watch a team adjust on the fly.

  • Some time tomorrow, or over the weekend, sit down and think about Mariano Rivera. People like to talk about how good bullpens shorten games, but when Brian Wilson or Heath Bell come in for a save, their opponents still feel like they have a chance. Against Rivera, nobody feels like he has a chance. Rivera allowed 39 hits this year. Three home runs. I can't help but assume that all of them were lucky. There has never been a player in any sport who has ever felt as automatic as Rivera does now, and as Rivera has for well over a decade. Michael Jordan came close, but Michael Jordan missed shots. Rivera doesn't miss shots. Rivera is simply the first component of a Rube Goldberg device that takes five minutes to run and ends with a zero on the scoreboard.

    I know that Rivera's blown saves before. I know that he famously blew Game 7 of the 2001 World Series. Baseball has never seen an unlikelier miracle. Tony Womack? There were other forces at play that evening.

  • Umpire controversy!

    (1) In the Rays/Rangers game, Michael Young appeared to go all the way around on a two-strike pitch, but the first base umpire said he checked his swing, and on the next pitch he hit a backbreaking three-run dinger

    (2) In the Twins/Yankees game, Lance Berkman appeared to strike out on an inside fastball, but the home plate umpire called it a ball, and on the next pitch Berkman hit the go-ahead double

    (3) In the Giants/Braves game, Buster Posey appeared to be tagged out on a stolen base attempt, but the second base umpire called him safe, and shortly thereafter he scored on a Cody Ross single for the only run of the game

    There were two important missed calls yesterday. There were at least two more today, and arguably a third, depending on what you think of that pitch to Berkman. There isn't even anything new to say anymore. Everybody just has to recycle the same old articles and the same old arguments. "Replay will prevent these mistakes from happening!" "Replay will slow the game down." "Replay will make the game more accurate!"

    I'm sick of it, I'm sick of it mattering so damn much, and I think this has become a one-sided battle of attrition. The commissioner's office is going to wear us down with its inactivity until we all grow so tired of pleading for replay that we either accept things as they are or throw up our hands and go watch lacrosse.

  • The refereeing is no better in lacrosse.

  • Incidentally, the people I feel worst for are the umpires. Players can take it. Fans can take it. Players and fans have support systems. Umpires get it from everybody, and sometimes there's not even anything they can do. Sometimes plays are just too difficult for the human eye to figure out. Yet nobody gives them a break. Nobody gives a shit about their perspective. A lot of umpires are dicks, and worthy of our contempt, but a lot of them are not, and when one of the good ones gets a big call wrong, that sucks. That sucks for the players, and that sucks for the fans, but more than anyone else, that sucks a lot for the umpire. An umpire's job is thankless at the best of times. At worst, he's completely alone, hated by all who surround him. If I were an umpire I'd probably make a lot of sarcastic wanking motions.

  • Good news, Minnesota! Now that you're down 2-0 in your series, you get to go to New York and hand the ball to a guy who never strikes anyone out! If he somehow manages to come away with a win, then you get to hand the ball to a guy who somehow strikes even less hitters out! Thank God that ballpark is so spacious and forgiving. 

  • Phillies/Giants will be the best series of the month, and the year.

  • Joe Maddon's reputation is almost completely dependent on how good his team looks. He's either a puzzling overthinker, or he's a genius. Conclusion: stop trying to understand managers and start trying to understand something you actually have some hope of figuring out, like how come some bananas go from green to yellow to brown while others skip the middleman? I don't know when I should eat you, mysterious banana :(

1 recs  |  43 comments

Comments

High-five on the paragraphs about umpires

With the exception of Joe West or Angel Hernandez or any other umpire who I feel is showboating and being an asshole, I feel for the guys. They’re pretty damn good at what they do, and they’re subject to mistakes, as we all are. It’s a thankless job, and they do a better job than any of us would do.

That said, they could do themselves a favor by being less defensive about replay. All we fans want is for them to have all the information available. We don’t want to prove them idiots; we just want them to see what we see and make the the correct call — or at least the closest thing to a correct call as is possible.

But regardless of whose fault it is, they’re working with way less information than we are. And that’s ridiculous.

That Ensberg blog where he said umpires see their families maybe two weeks a season just killed me
It would kill me more if they didn't suck so bad at their jobs :o

Seriously though, that is pretty terrible. Regardless, I can’t have sympathy for the guys Teej mentioned, like Joe West or Angel Hernandez. Guys like Jim Joyce, on the other hand, who are willing to admit they made mistakes at their job garner a little more sympathy from me. Helping them do their job better through something like replay obviously won’t help them see their family more often, but it may make them feel better about the outcomes of games they ump.

Can you please share that post?

I’m curious to see why they don’t go home all winter, and I imagine it’s in there….

He said "a season" So I'm guessing they see them during the offseason.

Still, 2 weeks total in 6 months isn’t a lot.

Yep

I can’t find the post right now, but basically, umpires don’t have a “home base” during the season – they’re at the mercy of the league scheduling system, and they are always on the go. They get two weeks vacation a year, and obviously they get winters off, but from March to October they’re pretty much never home. It’s brutal.

Is there any reason MLB can't or won't assign umpires to specific regions?

Only being able to go home for two weeks out of a six month season (possibly up to eight months if they work spring training and the post-season) is brutal, not to mention completely unfair to the umpires and their families. I would imagine that 6 months of constantly traveling and sleeping in hotels would take its toll over the course of the season and possibly impact their in-game judgement by season’s end.

It would make sense for MLB to look into setting up a system similar to college football, where each region (AL/NL West, AL/NL Central, AL/NL East) has their own group of umpires. This would significantly reduce the amount of time they’re on the road and allow them to actually see their families more often throughout the season. The end result would be happier umpires who aren’t completely burned out from traveling by the end of the year. Is there a downside to this?

It introduces systemic bias into which umpires see which teams.

And you know what? Umpires are amazingly compensated for their travels. This isn’t an entry level job.

I had thought of the bias.

But I also thought that having them work both AL/NL divisions would help eliminate that bias. By rotating through 8-10 cities they’d likely still see all of the teams, but it is true that they would see the teams within their divisions a bit more frequently.

As for compensation, I’m sure MLB does a good job with that. But my point had more to do with the mental stresses of being on the road all the time and not being able to enjoy the benefits of sleeping in your own home.

Compensation is nice but if you have a family it doesn't replace being home.
I don't want an NFL replay system

I just want a 5th umpire watching the game on tbs who can fix the calls that are obviously wrong.

If everyone watching Twins/Yankees two nights ago on tv can tell that the ball was caught, and not trapped (in real time!) and none of the six umpires can, then something must be done.

This is basically what I want

A 5th (or in the playoffs, 7th) umpire in a video booth. Whichever regular ump has the call would get the right to defer to the replay ump, who would already be reviewing the play. It could work just like the home plate umpire asking for help on check swing calls.

They are planning

an off-season meeting

They always have meetings
Having meetings is what executives do best.
A banana that goes from green to brown is a plantain, silly
Bullshit

Evidence: our kitchen right now

Plantains like to smuggle themselves in with everyday bananas
"Our kitchen right now"

Wow.

Jess and the Missus are.. um. Wow.

Lacrosse!

Sign me up.

Lacrosse is just hurling for sissies.

And field hockey is lacrosse for sissies.

hello
does anybody here like hurling?
I have watched hurling being played and found it to be awesome in its brutal unexplainability
Bananas are the opposite of stoplights. Green means hold on...yellow means go ahead...and red means where the fuck did you get that banana?!
Thank you Mitch Hedberg....

“My friend asked me if I wanted a frozen banana; I said “No, but I want a regular banana later, so … yeah”

The thing about that joke is that red bananas are awesome

They carry them pretty often at the co-op here in Olympia. Starchier than hell if under-ripe, but they taste like candy from heaven when they’re ripe…

Hmmm.
They had about as much success even making contact with a pitched baseball as Matt Hasselbeck has completing downfield passes.

I see that you’ve re-picked up football pretty quickly. I only say this because even people that watch a lot of football somehow still have not figured that simple fact out.

If you think for even one instant

that I would let LL become what Field Gulls comments have become w/r/t the Hasselbeck situation, then you are horrifically mistaken.

Schoolchildren in Sub-Saharan Africa know Hasselbeck can't throw the deep ball
I know Hasselbeck can't throw the deep ball.
What about the medium ball?
I'd settle for a football.
I know this might have been missed, being a direct reply to your comment and all, but
If you think for even one instant that I would let LL become what Field Gulls comments have become w/r/t the Hasselbeck situation, then you are horrifically mistaken.

If anyone wants to go bitch about Hasselbeck or Whitehurst, go to Field Gulls and join the lynch mob. I’m not letting stupidity spill over here too.

God Bless you.
Jeff, the answer you're looking for...

Is probably “Never”. Mystery food is generally not a good thing.

I think the part about Lincecum's start that was most impressive was the 1-0 final score.

I don’t feel the need to get into “pressure” situations and the intangible pressure that puts on a pitcher, but Roy Halladay won his start in the 1st or 2nd inning. It felt over from that point on. 1-0 never feels over but Lincecum was, as you say, unhittable.

*I don't feel the need to debate what a "pressure" situation or how to measure it I mean.
I make word good!

Fridays, am I right?

Secret for extending life of bananas

Fit as many as you can in a ziplock bag while still being able to squeeze all the air out. This will keep them from turning for several days.

Bananaimmortality will happen in our children's lifetimes.

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