[討論] Rotation
http://www.fangraphs.com/blogs/index.php/woeful-os
At some point, one has to feel bad for the Baltimore Orioles. 2009 was never
going to be a year where they competed for a playoff berth, but last year the
American League East had four of the five best teams in the AL. Now a few of
those teams have added the likes of Mark Teixeira, C.C. Sabathia, A.J. Burnett,
Pat Burrell, John Smoltz, and Brad Penny. If that’s not bad enough, the
Orioles rotation might look something like this:
Jeremy Guthrie (403 career IP, 4.58 FIP)
Mark Hendrickson (977.6 career IP, 4.5 FIP)
Garrett Olson (165 career IP, 5.28 FIP)
Koji Uehara
Radhames Liz (109 career IP, 6.08 FIP)
Yeah…that doesn’t appear particularly pretty, does it? Well, their other
options include Brian Bass and Brian Burres. Applaud the Orioles for not
rushing their pitching prospects, but 2009 is going to be anything but fun for
their rotation. Is it possible that this could be the worst rotation in recent
memory? Over the past five years, the worst rotations, as told by FIP are:
2008 Orioles 5.38
2007 Nationals 5.45
2006 Royals 5.50
2005 Royals 5.07
2004 Devil Rays 5.27
The average FIP of the four O’s starters is 5.11, yes it’s an extremely rough
estimate since we’re not taking innings into account and we’re assuming
nobody improves or declines. Uehara becomes the wild card. Keith Law notes that
Uehara and Camden Yards are not a good mix due to Uehara’s homerun tendencies.
At the same time, Uehara walks next to none, less than 1.2 per nine in his
Nippon career. Law notes the same concerns with Hideki Irabu, Tomo Ohka, and
Kei Igawa. Their career FIPs are 4.97, 4.46, and 6.19 respectively.
The Orioles also have interest in Braden Looper and Tim Redding, so while they
might have the worst rotation in baseball next season, odds are, they won’t
even be as poor as 2008’s edition.
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01/09 23:58, , 1F
01/09 23:58, 1F
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