Triple-A pitchers, under the microscope
Last week, we looked at Triple-A pitch-by-pitch data to pick out some minor league players with notable contact rates, patience and lack thereof. Of course, we can look at the flip side too. Using the same information and slicing a little differently, we can find the Triple-A pitchers whose efficiency, bat-missing and strike-throwing stand out.
Before we jump into the numbers, a few notes for those of you who didn’t read last week’s column. Unfortunately, these data are only publicly available for Triple-A. These numbers are probably a little bit off: between stats stringers recording every pitch and my script parsing each one, mistakes are surely made. The results should be close though. Finally, all of these rankings are limited to pitchers who have faced 200 or more batters. Stats are current through Sunday’s games.
Efficiency
Much like contact rate for hitters, pitch efficiency is likely overrated for pitchers, especially in the minor leagues. We like prospects with lots of strikeouts, and I suspect we tend to prefer those who coax bad contact, which often turns into foul balls. As you’ll see at the bottom of the article, some of the biggest-name prospects to pitch at this level this year throw plenty of pitches, but seem to have gotten along okay in the big leagues.
That said, here are the Triple-A pitchers whose plate appearances end the most quickly:
Player PA Pitches Pit/PA Jim Crowell 261 847 3.25 Adam Pettyjohn 330 1079 3.27 Mike Esposito 430 1414 3.29 Brian Lawrence 410 1360 3.32 Yorman Bazardo 558 1851 3.32 Evan MacLane 508 1689 3.32 Bobby Livingston438 1457 3.33 Alex Serrano 240 799 3.33 Ricardo Rodrigue300 999 3.33 Dwayne Pollok 310 1036 3.34
Some of these hurlers have had solid years, but I suspect that high pitch efficiency in the minors is a good way to spot those who’ll go bust after a promotion. Jim Crowell has allowed a 800+ OPS against, so he isn’t likely to get much of a look, but he’s a good example. Surprisingly, his walk rate is high—around four per nine innings—but his strikeout rate is even lower. That’s the kind of pitcher who might come up and impress for a week, coaxing a few critical ground balls, before imploding in a sea of consecutive singles three outings later.
Strike throwers
Strike percentage can be a misleading stat. Color commentators have trained us to believe that strikes are good things—and often they are—but when looking at pitch-by-pitch data, a lot of undesirable (or unrelated) events count as strikes. Any pitch resulting in contact gets categorized as a strike, as does a meatball down the middle that, perhaps, Jason Botts doesn’t swing at.
Because pitching to contact generates a high percentage of “strikes,” there’s plenty of overlap between the most efficient Triple-A pitchers and the ones with the highest strike percentages:
Player PA Pitches Str% Alex Serrano 240 799 70.8% Brian Lawrence 410 1360 70.7% Nick Blackburn 331 1163 70.5% Kevin Slowey 453 1661 70.3% Dan Giese 241 872 69.7% Andrew Sonnanstine 256 963 67.9% Chris Britton 208 797 67.9% Adam Pettyjohn 330 1079 67.8% Scott Atchison 214 811 67.8% Josh Banks 578 1963 67.7% Jeremy Sowers 319 1103 67.6%
That’s not all that satisfying. We can do better.
Missing bats
If we’re looking for young pitchers with upside, we usually don’t prioritize guys who pitch to contact. We like strikes, but only of the swing-and-miss variety. Here are the pitchers for whom swings are most likely to turn into misses:
Player PA Pitches Str/Sw Jason Bulger 202 746 62.0% Chris Booker 206 900 61.1% Brian Rogers 223 817 60.0% Steve Andrade 244 949 59.9% Alec Zumwalt 222 827 59.9% Franklyn German 236 979 59.7% J. P. Howell 430 1529 59.4% Travis Driskill 229 840 59.3% Paul Estrada 263 971 59.2% Dennis Sarfate 225 913 59.0%
These pitchers are mostly relievers and they stand in direct contrast to the first two groups we’ve seen. Alec Zumwalt is a good example. He walks plenty, doesn’t have a particularly high strike percentage, but strikes out more than a batter per inning. Whether that translates into major league success remains to be seen—Grant Balfour is a good comparison, and the fact that multiple organizations haven’t tried him in their bullpens is another useful data point—but I’d probably take my chances on him as a seventh reliever over, say, Alex Serrano.
Pitchers of note
If you’re like me, you’re more interested in the Yovani Gallardos and Mike Pelfreys of the world than Serrano and Zumwalt. Here is a list of several pitchers—either prospects or guys I find intriguing for some reason—and how they fare on the metrics discussed above. “Sw/Str” is the percent of strikes that are swinging, “KS%” is the percent of strikeouts that are swinging, and “Fl/Ctt” is rate at which batted balls go foul.
Player PA Pit/PA Sw/Str Str/Sw Str% KS% Fl/Ctt Andrew Sisco 252 4.33 74.2% 56.5% 62.9% 77.8% 58.2% Dan Meyer 412 4.23 74.5% 57.2% 60.3% 76.2% 52.2% Fabio Castro 208 4.22 72.4% 55.8% 59.9% 63.4% 53.8% Will Startup 228 4.07 71.3% 57.3% 63.0% 70.9% 51.4% Homer Bailey 278 4.06 74.7% 56.1% 60.7% 69.5% 53.3% Yovani Gallardo 335 4.05 70.5% 58.8% 63.7% 68.4% 56.4% Craig Hansen 229 4.05 71.3% 56.1% 58.9% 60.0% 49.8% Michael Pelfrey 268 4.04 75.7% 55.2% 61.7% 67.4% 51.7% Matt Wright 465 3.86 72.4% 54.8% 62.7% 68.0% 47.2% Tyler Clippard 317 3.85 72.7% 55.6% 61.6% 63.6% 48.6% Charlie Haeger 490 3.85 69.1% 56.5% 62.0% 82.7% 47.4% Matt Garza 424 3.84 72.5% 56.4% 62.3% 64.0% 49.6% Matt Albers 223 3.84 72.0% 55.9% 60.2% 65.1% 46.8% Jon Lester 306 3.83 72.7% 55.2% 61.9% 64.7% 48.5% Chris Britton 208 3.83 73.4% 55.6% 67.9% 58.5% 55.5% Yusmeiro Petit 374 3.83 72.6% 55.4% 63.2% 66.7% 47.2% Eric Hurley 217 3.82 78.9% 56.9% 64.0% 82.2% 52.4% Billy Buckner 412 3.79 68.9% 55.3% 63.4% 70.1% 40.7% Andrew Sonnanstine 256 3.76 73.4% 57.7% 67.9% 78.5% 50.3% Joe Saunders 367 3.75 76.4% 56.5% 66.5% 78.6% 51.3% Adam Miller 256 3.73 72.0% 55.9% 65.8% 74.1% 51.4% Philip Humber 522 3.69 71.5% 55.4% 63.2% 59.6% 46.9% Kevin Slowey 453 3.67 74.9% 55.7% 70.3% 72.4% 51.2% Devern Hansack 492 3.65 72.2% 57.5% 66.6% 70.5% 45.5% Kason Gabbard 313 3.63 70.5% 57.9% 62.0% 76.6% 38.8% Jordan Tata 258 3.53 76.8% 55.1% 60.5% 80.0% 39.9% Carlos Marmol 202 3.53 68.7% 57.8% 64.4% 60.7% 47.6% Jeremy Sowers 319 3.46 71.8% 54.1% 67.6% 84.8% 44.7% Approx Avg --- 3.72 73.0% 55.9% 62.6% 74.0% 45.5%
Errata
In last week’s column, I repeatedly referred to numbers for first-pitch swings. I didn’t notice that those percentages didn’t come close to passing the sniff test. They were not the percent of first pitches that batters swung at, they were the percent of first pitches that batters made contact with. Big difference, and it probably explains the apparent Joey Gathright paradox that I pointed out in that context.