The Invisible Man
With the powerful voice of Frank Robinson and his larger than life spectre,
there's not a lot of room to hear from his lieutenants. When's the last time
you heard a quote from Randy St. Claire? Have you heard anything about how
Davey Lopes has helped the baserunning? Me neither. Yet, when I was looking
at the stats the other day, there's one coach who's speaking loudly, Mitchell
Page.
Page, you'll recall, came over from the Cardinals juggernaut. He is an
alcoholic, and the Cardinals fired him when he couldn't get it under control.
Jim Bowden, always with an eye on hitting talent and hard-luck cases, offered
him a job as the roving minor-league hitting instructor. By all accounts, he
succeeded, and his work with Marlon Byrd last year, after which Marlon tore
the seams off the ball, is held up as the model of his success. Byrd
certainly succeeded last year. This year, not so much.
But the strength of Page isn't found in the individual, it's in the
aggregate. First, what's Page's philosophy? Well, it's hard to figure out
because he doesn't really talk. But Phil Rogers helpfully wrote about it for
ESPN a few years back. He wants his hitters to have good ABs, to look for
pitches they can drive, emphasizing their strengths as batters. Don't swing
at the pitchers pitches. Go after yours. And when you're behind in the count,
ease up on the swing and concentrate on getting the ball in play.
It's not quite the A's Moneyballish philosophy of taking and raking, but it's
close. Be aggressive when necessary. If your pitch is the first one, great.
If not, don't chase, but let the pitcher come to you.
Well, they're not having a ton of success with two strikes. Overall, the team
is batting .188. That sounds terrible, until you realize that the entire NL
is only batting .190 in that situation. They're slugging .295, but that's 3
points higher than the NL average. I don't have data from last year, and I
can't seem to find it anywhere. If you know of a source, I'd love to see it,
but it certainly seems like they'd be doing better here, if only because the
offense was so uniformly terrible last year.
Strikeout-wise, they're not really doing all that much better. They currently
rank 8th in the league with 683. Last season they finished in seventh. In
both seasons, there are four or five teams bunched up closely, and the
numbers are practically interchangeable.
So it doesn't seem like he's helped much with the Ks, even as there's slight
evidence that they're better with two strikes.
But where Page seems to have made the most difference is with the other
aspect of plate discipline, bases on balls. The team is walking a TON more.
Last season, they finished 11th in the league with 491. This year they're up
to third with 362 already. That's a HUGE improvement. That's a lot of extra
baserunners.
I wanted to break that down further, to see which players are contributing.
Here are the players on the team listed with their walk rates, simply the
percentage of walks they have per plate appearance. (for all Nats with 80+
ABs) I've subtracted out intentional walks.
2005 2006
Soriano 4.4 6.9
Zimmerman 9.4 7.6
Vidro 8.1 8.1
Johnson 13.4 14.9
Clayton 6.6 4.8
Schneider 5.5 7.4
Guillen 4.1 4.2
Byrd 6.9 9.3
Anderson 6.9 5.9
Jackson 9.3 7.8
Ward 6.1 11.5
Wow. Other than Zimmerman (and he only had 60 or so PAs last year), Anderson
and Jackson, everybody increased their rate or stayed about the same.
Soriano's improvement is striking, as is Nick Johnson's. Even players who
aren't making good contact, like Schneider and Byrd, made great strides in
their discipline. If they're making outs, it's not because they're swinging
at slop.
Their power, too, is up. And it's not all Soriano. Last year, they were dead
last in homers with a pathetic 117. This season, they already have 108.
Doubles are up, too, from fourth to second.
They're hitting for more power. They're walking more. What more could you
want? The runs aren't really there yet, thanks to some unlucky situational
hitting (especially with the bases loaded), but that should even out.
What matters is that their approach is different, and that their component
stats are there. The runs will come.
If Brian Schneider hits what he's capable of doing, and with a full season
from Lopez and Kearns, the offense is not going to be a problem next year,
even without Alfonso Soriano. Though it'd be nice to have him!
So, thanks, Mitchell Page. We never hear a word from you, but the results
speak loudly enough.
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