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A few years ago, I wrote an article criticizing Tony LaRussa for benching
Ray Lankford in favor of Placido Polanco. I wrote:

“Lankford, who was recently benched then traded by the Cardinals, had an OPS
of 841 for them this season and a career OPS of 848. While these numbers
do not make him an All-Star, they certainly make him a serviceable major-league hitter. But Lankford was benched in favor of the light-hitting
Placido Polanco. (Albert Pujols was moved to LF from 3B, taking Lankford’s
spot and making room for Polanco.) Polanco, who is having the best year of
his career, has a 782 OPS this season and a 738 mark for his career. So
what could possibly be the reason for such a move? Simple: Lankford strikes
out too much.

But in many cases, strikeouts are no worse than any other out, and they are
certainly better than grounding into a double play. Of course, they don’t
advance runners, either, but situations where an out advances a runner are
not all that common.”

I went on to argue that when you add up all the situations where contact
advances a runner, and subtract all the situations where contact results in
a double play (a double play is to an advanced runner what a
caught stealing is to a successful stolen base, i.e., the out is more than
twice as bad as the advanced base is good), Lankford came out way ahead.

In essence, my conclusion was that benching a guy who strikes out too much
(and Lankford struck out a ton) for a contact guy with questionable on-base
skills and little power (Polanco has since improved a bit) was a mistake–at least on the offensive side. The team would net less runs as a result
and presumably win less games.

But is that necessarily the case? Could it be that a contact guy has hidden
advantages over the power hitter who strikes out and walks a lot?

Over the course of the season in terms of total runs created and OPS, the
answer is no. Adam Dunn and a healthy Jim Thome will, of course, outproduce
Ichiro and Juan Pierre by those metrics nearly every year. That they
strike out frequently doesn’t matter because they make far fewer outs per
plate appearance, thanks to their many free passes. In other words, against
the entire league, which includes fourth and fifth starters, middle
relievers just called up from the minors and the entire Kansas City Royals’
rotation, Dunn, Thome, Jason Giambi and their ilk are on-base and power
machines. But is their approach to hitting–looking at a lot of pitches,
getting ahead in the count and swinging from their heels–as successful
against the top pitchers in the league, say those with a 2.5 to 1 K/BB ratio
and a K/IP ratio of 7.5 or better?

The best pitchers in the league make hitters swing at more difficult pitches, both by getting ahead and locating
well. The first hittable pitch you see might be the best one you’re ever
going to see in that at-bat. If you take it for a strike, you might not ever
recover. But a contact hitter like a Juan Pierre or an Ichiro isn’t as
likely to get behind because they’ll swing at the first good offering and
often put it in play. Once the ball is in play, then the quality of the
pitcher is largely removed from the equation. So while the top pitchers
allow very low batting averages against–because of their many strikeouts–the contact guys aren’t as subject to that because they don’t miss much. And
the extra out saved by the Dunns and Giambis by walking doesn’t occur nearly
as much against pitchers who rarely walk hitters.

Or at least that’s my hypothesis. I haven’t done a study, but I would love
to see how Ichiro and Pierre, two extreme contact hitters, fare against the
top 10-20 percent of pitchers (choose your favorite metric to say who those
pitchers are) versus how the power-hitting/strikeout-walk guys fare. And if,
as I hypothesize, the contact guys experience far less of a dropoff against
the top competition, wouldn’t that affect their value to a team? After all, a
run against Pedro Martinez or Roy Oswalt has got to be worth more than a run
against Aaron Sele or Ryan Franklin. If a pitcher only allows three runs per
game, scoring a third of the expected output against him has got to be more
important than scoring a sixth of the expected output against a lesser
pitcher. If the contact guys don’t fall off as much as the
walk-strikeout-power guys as the competition gets tougher, then they’re
going to contribute a disproportionate amount of runs relative to their
overall stats against the better pitchers.

Moreover, in the postseason, rotations shorten–you’ll only see the fourth
starter once a series at most, and scrubby middle relievers are only around
for mop up duty in blowouts. No, you’re seeing the big three, the primary
setups and the stopper, most of whom presumably are better than the garden
variety pitcher you see all year. And in the postseason, you’re facing
winning teams, so presumably their rotations and bullpens, all things being
equal, are better than league average to begin with. Could this help explain why
the A’s of the aughts haven’t won a playoff series?

Don’t get me wrong–the traditional sabermetric approach favoring walks and
strikeouts in equal proportion over a hit three times out of 10 is still
correct–the issue is whether the K/BB ratio (as well as the home-run rate)
can be maintained against the top pitchers. If it can’t, (and surely it
can’t in most cases), then the question is whether the rate of drop-off for
the big power/walking/low-contact guys is more severe than it is for the
high-contact, low-power guys. If it is, and we posit that a run against a
tougher pitcher is more valuable than a run against a weaker one, then we
need to adjust our relative valuations of these different kinds of players,
particularly in the postseason. Were we to do this, it would have major
implications across the board from salary arbitration hearings to Hall of
Fame voting. While there might not be proof of clutch hitting in baseball, a
hitter whose skill set makes him disproportionately likely to come through
against top competition might exist. Is this what old-school types like
LaRussa instinctively sense when they worry about an otherwise productive
hitter’s strikeouts? Or is it, as I concluded five years ago, that they just
find strikeouts embarrassing?

Chris Liss is the Managing Editor of RotoWire.com, and can be reached here.

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