Notice: Trying to get property 'display_name' of non-object in /var/www/html/wp-content/plugins/wordpress-seo/src/generators/schema/article.php on line 52
keyboard_arrow_uptop

Brad Penny has certainly had his share of success during 11 major league seasons. The St. Louis Cardinals right-hander has won 108 games, was a major contributor to a World Series champ (2003 Marlins), pitched in two All-Star Games and dated noted sports fashion designer Alyssa Milano.

But whenever Penny faces New York Mets third baseman David Wright, he looks like a pitcher who would have a hard time getting Milano out. Wright has gone 11-for-19 against Penny in his career for a .579 batting average. Seven of those hits have been doubles and four have been home runs. Throw in five walks and Wright has an otherworldly 1.851 OPS when facing Penny. Wright "owns" Penny in a way few hitters own any pitcher. But is it the most impressive "ownership" in baseball? Let's find out.

Seattle Mariners shortstop Jack Wilson is noted much more for his defense than offense. Yet he is not a complete cipher at the plate with a .268 career batting average.

However, when the Mariners visit St. Louis for an interleague series next month, you can bet that Wilson hopes his team misses Cardinals ace Chris Carpenter in those three games. Wilson may as well concede whenever he steps into the batter's box against Carpenter as he is 1-for-26 (.038) with no extra-base hits or walks and six strikeouts, giving him a microscopic .076 OPS.

Managers have relied on batter-pitcher match-ups to make lineup decisions dating back to when Hall of Fame manager Earl Weaver was leading the Orioles in their glory days. Weaver kept all the matchups by hand on index cards. Today, computers spit out the same information at rapid speed. Regardless of how the information is compiled and disseminated, batter-pitcher matchups are fun to look at to see exactly who owns whom around the major leagues.

BP database wiz Eric Seidman has compiled the best and worst of batter-pitcher matchups. The criteria for the matchups are that the pitcher and hitter must have faced each other at least 25 times, they must be currently active, and they must be playing either in the same league on or teams that will face each other in interleague play this season.

What follows are two lists: the five batters who have the highest OPS in their matchups against pitchers, and the five who have the lowest:

Hitters who own pitchers

These hitters are otherworldly against these pitchers.

 

David Wright vs. Brad Penny

.579/.640/1.211

1.851

11-for-19, 7 2B, 4HR, 5BB, 4 SO

Vladimir Guerrero vs. Tim Wakefield

.429/.600/1.190

1.790

9-for-21, 12B, 5 HR, 9BB, 3SO

Grady Sizemore vs. Armando Galarraga

.500/.538/1.227

1.765

11-for-22, 2 2B, 1 3B, 4 HR, 3 BB, 1 SO

Manny Ramirez vs. Dan Haren

.577/.656/.1.077

1.733

15-for-26, 4 2B, 3 HR, 4BB, 3SO

Michael Cuddyer vs. John Danks

.533/.563/.1.167

1.730

16-for-30, 4 2B, 5 HR, 2 BB, 4 SO

 

Pitchers who own hitters

Mendoza Line? These hitters wish they were that good against these pitchers.

 

Jack Wilson vs. Chris Carpenter

.038/.038/.038

.076

1-for-26, 5 SO

Jason Michaels vs. Johan Santana

.043/.080/.087

.167

1-for-23, 1 2B, 1 BB, 7 SO

Jason Bartlett vs. Nate Robertson

.000/.200/.000

.200

0-for-24, 6 BB, 4 SO

Aubrey Huff vs. John Lackey

.061/.139/.061

.200

2-for-33, 2 BB, 5 SO

Adrian Beltre vs. Darren Oliver

.069/.069/.138

.207

2-for-29, 2 2B, 6 SO

 

Thank you for reading

This is a free article. If you enjoyed it, consider subscribing to Baseball Prospectus. Subscriptions support ongoing public baseball research and analysis in an increasingly proprietary environment.

Subscribe now
You need to be logged in to comment. Login or Subscribe
tcfatone
5/18
What happened to your chat?
NYYanks826
5/18
The fact that ANYONE is 0-for-24 against Nate Robertson is startling.
Michael
5/18
Must be a HBP or something else that got the Wright/Penny match-up up to 25 plate appearances.

None of these match-ups in the top or bottom 5 ended up at more than 35 plate appearances, suggesting that as a match gets more plate appearances, one sees the extreme outliers regress more toward the norm.

In general, based on research in The Book by Tango, Dolphin, and Lichtman, I don't believe that this data is predictive of future outcomes. I do believe that MLB managers use this match-up data, but there's not a good theoretical justification for doing so.
somaticmarker
5/18
One of my personal favorite dominations is Pujols' line against Odalis Perez. Slash line of .609/.719/1.391.
jsp377
5/18
I expected more strikeouts per PA in the second table. I feel like that would have had more predictive value than straight-up OPS. I feel like most of these are just bad luck on balls in play.
Richie
5/18
I understand the "not my job" perspective. But couldn't SOME-body on staff here mention to John that he's now 26 HOURS LATE FOR HIS CHAT?!?!? I mean, some word on what happened with it is perhaps just a teeny bit overdue. Ya think?
tpfister
5/18
It's too bad Barry Bonds isn't still "active" for the purposes of this graph. He'd have every entry.