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Game Five of the 2008 World Series will long be remembered for its umpires’ Beatles-inspired belief that, as John Lennon sang, “When it starts to rain, everything’s the same,” a philosophy which prevented sundry sodden millionaires (and Carlos Ruiz) from seeking shelter until the middle of the sixth. Despite the headlines garnered by this debacle, however, an equally intriguing story lay behind the first two relievers that Joe Maddon sent to the mound when play resumed two days later. Why does this tale of two stoppers matter? Because not long before they found themselves charged with holding the Phillies at bay in the highest of high-leverage situations, Grant Balfour and J.P. Howell were readily available. While the Rays made a point of adding this particular pair, the auction for relief help really never ends; by examining two who got away, future bidders may improve their chances of spotting tomorrow’s bargains.

That Balfour and Howell were on the spot at that juncture wasn’t a surprise given the duo’s regular-season performance. They had been charged with similarly demanding duties (and fulfilling them capably) for some time, placing fourteenth and seventh, respectively, among major league relievers in WXRL. The farther back we go, however, the more unlikely it appears that anyone could have predicted the tandem’s development into the two-headed anchor of a pennant-winning bullpen. Exactly a year before their pressure-packed outings in the World Series, the pair were coming off of disappointing 2007 campaigns followed by almost four weeks’ worth of offseason. Both had posted impressive lines in Triple-A (Howell, a starter prior to this season, led the International League in strikeouts), but ERAs near eight in the majors led to the ominous appearance of labels like “journeyman” and “Quadruple-A pitcher” in their BP2K8 player comments. PECOTA wasn’t especially optimistic, either; each hurler handily exceeded his 90th-percentile forecast, though it’s important to note that both Howell’s and Balfour’s projections featured big Improve/Breakout Rates.

The Rays acquired Howell from the Royals in June of 2006 in exchange for Joey Gathright and marginal infield prospect Fernando Cortez. Just over a year later, they sent Seth McClung to the Brewers in return for the Balfour; it should be mentioned that Balfour had missed all of 2005 and most of 2006 rehabbing from surgeries on a veritable Triple Crown of pitching-related trouble spots (labrum, rotator cuff, and UCL). Any of the 28 teams not involved in each of these transactions could have mustered packages of equal or superior value; none chose to do so, although some proved willing to expend more valuable commodities during the same period for short-term rentals of Bob Wickman, Jorge Julio, Scott Linebrink, and Eric Gagne, to say nothing of the lucrative multi-year contracts awarded to Danys Baez, Scott Schoeneweis, Jamie Walker, and David Riske over the ’06-’07 and ’07-’08 offseasons.

Before the Rays turned the two around, Balfour and Howell were “there for the taking”-not “free” talent, exactly, but talent firmly ensconced in the bargain bin. They weren’t the only ones whose potential went undetected; a number of other tried-and-trashed relievers joined them in experiencing dramatic gains in effectiveness this season. Thirty-five relievers lowered their Fair Run Averages (RA adjusted for inherited and bequeathed runners) from 2007 levels in 2008 (minimum 40 IP per season). Here are the 20 who enjoyed the greatest improvements:


Rank Diff  Pitcher          FRA08  FRA07
 1   3.32  Dan Wheeler       2.94   6.26
 2   3.07  Joe Smith         2.97   6.04
 3   3.00  Carlos Villanueva 2.27   5.26
 4   2.10  Salomon Torres    3.94   6.05
 5   2.09  Guillermo Mota    4.04   6.12
 6   2.06  John Grabow       2.70   4.76
 7   2.00  Trever Miller     3.32   5.32
 8   1.99  Matt Thornton     3.37   5.36
 9   1.97  Clay Condrey      3.75   5.72
10   1.80  Geoff Geary       2.58   4.37
11   1.63  Brad Lidge        2.32   3.95
12   1.57  Mariano Rivera    1.35   2.92
13   1.43  Jason Grilli      3.53   4.96
14   1.22  Darren Oliver     3.20   4.42
15   1.12  Javier Lopez      3.14   4.26
16   0.94  Matt Lindstrom    2.81   3.74
17   0.92  Chad Bradford     2.97   3.90
18   0.79  Frank Francisco   2.86   3.65
19   0.76  Scot Shields      3.26   4.03
20   0.73  Jason Frasor      3.68   4.41

Had Balfour and Howell qualified, they would have topped this list, but neither accumulated the requisite innings in relief in 2007; minimum-innings limits tend to exclude “free” talent from consideration, in favor of pricier fare. A brief examination of those who did make the cut, however, might help us predict some of the names on next year’s version, as well as future non-qualifying successes like the Tampa Bay twosome.

Despite their substantial improvements in FRA from ’07 to ’08, these pitchers’ peripherals remained relatively static. They induced more ground balls and handed out fewer free passes relative to the league, but their strikeout rates, perhaps the most predictive component of relief performance, actually declined in comparison to the competition. Since factors directly under the group’s collective control can’t account for such dramatically improved FRAs, we’ve nowhere left to turn for an explanation but-you guessed it-factors primarily out of their control. Not only do we find that the pitchers who relieved these twenty players in 2008 stranded their inherited runners with greater frequency than they had in 2007 (a fact for which FRA accounts), but we also discover that this season’s models pitched in front of the defensive equivalent of the 2008 Rays (first in MLB in DER), while last season’s endured fielding follies analogous to those of the 2007 Rangers (22nd). One way to represent the impact of this variance is through the discrepancy between each group’s expected BABIP: since both groups allowed line drives in roughly 18 percent of plate appearances, we would have anticipated league-average .300 BABIPs in both cases, rather than the actual figures of .311 in 2007 and .279 in 2008.

At first glance, the prominent role which fortune plays in relief performance appears to preclude the possibility of accurate forecasts: no one has yet perfected the art of predicting luck, despite what some have claimed. Both Steven Goldman (in BP2K6) and Jon Weisman investigated the turnover among relievers using Adjusted Runs Prevented, a metric engineered (and explained here) by Michael Wolverton. What they found, in short, was that annual ARP leaderboards had fluctuated wildly from year to year, a pattern which held true this season: only two of 2007’s top 10 ARP leaders, and 44 of its top 100, returned to their corresponding lists in 2008, compared to six of 10 and 56 of 100 on the offensive VORP list.

Why is relief performance so volatile? Consider that after his first seven starts and 43 1/3 innings of 2008, CC Sabathia threatened to buckle beneath the weight of a 7.51 ERA. If you blamed an injury for his struggles, you had plenty of company, but shortly thereafter dined on crow (in direct violation of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918), for Carsten Charles had 209 2/3 remaining frames in which to entirely reverse his season’s fortunes en route to what should be a record-breaking contract. For recent vintages of Dennys Reyes, however, Sabathia’s workload over five weeks would constitute a season’s worth of labor. If the chips (and baseballs) fall unfavorably for Reyes’ first 40-odd innings, he finishes with a FRA over six, as he did in 2005. If they land inside gloves, he goes to his winter reward with a FRA under two, as he did a year later. Small sample sizes work both ways.

Consequently, Weisman concluded that, “finding a relief pitcher you can count on is like a dartboard toss. Track records are almost completely useless.” This assertion contains an element of truth, but while identifying next year’s firemen may present an even greater challenge than explaining what Julio was doing down by the schoolyard, it probably overstates the case. Leveraging luck into success usually requires a certain amount of skill. Not only was our group of twenty’s average strikeout rate well above the MLB baseline in both seasons, but only seven of its members posted below-average strikeout performances in 2008 (in 2007, that total was only five, despite the bloated FRAs). Of those seven, four (Torres, Condrey, Lopez, and Bradford) made up for their inability to elicit swings and misses by inducing grounders at an elevated rate, and three (Geary, Oliver, and Lindstrom) compensated either by posting flukily low line-drive and HR/FB percentages, or by facing an inordinate number of batters who had stolen Jobu’s rum (a similarly unrepeatable skill).

Strikeouts limit balls in play, so high-strikeout relievers who limit balls in play within an already limited sample stand to gain (and lose) the most from fluctuations in BABIP. While that may not be good news for last year’s BABIP beneficiaries, it’s a glad tiding for the relievers who have thus far shared their performance, but not their luck: given health and opportunity, the members of the latter group may soon find themselves conditioned to greet the sound of a ringing bullpen phone with an impromptu rendition of “This Will Be Our Year.”

With that in mind, I’ve come up with my own list of ten prime candidates for a Howell/Balfour-like breakthrough in 2009. I’ve excluded career minor leaguers and highly-regarded prospects who may have found their initial cups of coffee scalding, although the former category is certainly one worth examining. The following alphabetically ordered players have had their chances at the major league level, and have either blown them, or failed to seize them in fashions which led to permanent, prominent roles-but in the process, they’ve shown enough to suggest that next time, if it ever comes, might be a different story:


  • Chris Britton:
    It’s rare to see a young pitcher earn his ticket to the majors, excel there, and then spend most of the next two seasons languishing in the minors despite continued effectiveness, but that’s the predicament in which Britton finds himself heading into 2009. Another converted starter, Britton made a light snack of the Carolina League in 2005 and hasn’t looked back, accumulating an abundance of strikeouts and very few walks with the aid of a low-90s fastball and an above-average curve. His ’08 Triple-A line was good for a Davenport-translated 3.20 major league DERA, which excited the Yankees so much that they called him up on six separate occasions. Wherever and whenever Britton receives his next extended opportunity, it’s clear that he’s outgrown the bullpen in Scranton, both literally and figuratively.


  • Jason Bulger:
    The Angels‘ relief corps has been a tough unit to crack for some time, finishing in the top five in AL bullpen ERA in six of Bulger’s seven professional seasons. Still, the 29-year-old converted third baseman deserves more than the 34 major league innings he has to his name. Posting 10.8 K/9 and a 2.6 K/BB ratio in 356 2/3 minor league innings (as well as the best slider in the Angels’ system, according to Baseball America), Bulger keeps the ball on the ground and in the park, and his 0.63 ERA and 42.9 percent strikeout rate (thank you StatCorner) in 43 innings earned him a 0.90 translated DERA in 2008, tops in the PCL.


  • Fernando Cabrera:
    Baseball America anointed Cabrera “Cleveland’s closer of the future” in 2006. Things didn’t work out that way, but not because of anything Bob Wickman or Joe Borowski did. Cabrera retains the devastating fastball/splitter combo he’s been using to dominate minor league batters since his days as a starter, but his control has deserted him against major league competition over the past few seasons. At 27, Cabrera is still young and talented enough to be someone’s closer of the future.


  • Francisco Cruceta:
    As a starter, Cruceta’s primary weakness was the long ball, but this season (his first spent entirely in the pen), he didn’t allow a single one in 42 2/3 Triple-A innings. Cruceta’s revised job description enabled him to boost his strikeout rate to 32.45 percent (fifth in the International League), but a .411 BABIP masked his overall improvement. If he can refine his command of a low-90s sinker and a sharp splitter, he’ll have seen the last of Toledo.


  • Lee Gronkiewicz:
    At the core of any undertaking of this nature lies the conviction that, “at some point, the body of work has to mean something,” a maxim drawn directly from Gronkiewicz’ BP2K8 player comment. In 413 2/3 minor league innings, Gronkiewicz has recorded 432 strikeouts against 113 walks, a ratio which only improves if we limit our investigation to his performance at the Triple-A level, and which entitles its owner to more than a single (four-inning) major league appearance. Gronkiewicz, a free agent, underwent Tommy John surgery in May and won’t be available until midseason in 2009, but he could provide a worthwhile return on a minimal investment. Remember, we’re not selling jerseys here.


  • Tom Mastny:
    This 6’6″ sinkerballer lacks the raw stuff possessed by some of his companions on this list, but he hides the ball well and throws strikes, mixing in a good 10-to-6 curve. He’s much better than his 6.13 career major league ERA would indicate; the author of a 442/120 K/BB ratio in 420 minor league innings, more than half of them coming as a starter, Mastny’s ’08 work in Buffalo translates to a 3.06 DERA in Cleveland. As BP2K8 said, “That’s good enough to be that extra arm that everyone is looking for.” Now that he’s headed to the Japanese leagues, he’s off the table, but who’s to say he won’t be back?


  • Juan Salas:
    Four years ago, Salas was a third baseman with an 80 arm and Joe Shlabotnik‘s bat; today, he’s seven years older, and a power reliever who strikes fear into the hearts of International League batters. If not for visa problems and a drug suspension, his mid-90s cutter might’ve made him the third reliever Joe Maddon called upon in Game Five.


  • Dennis Sarfate:
    Sarfate’s 4.74 ERA in his first full season in the majors fails to impress, but a little digging reveals the impact of four disastrous starts; remove those, and you’re left with a guy who struck out 71 in 64 relief innings en route to a 3.38 ERA. There’s a reason the Brewers confined him to the bullpen in 2006: Sarfate doesn’t have much to go along with his fastball and slider. But since the fastball occasionally touches 100 and the slider breaks down more sharply than the Dow after a disappointing retail sales report, two pitches will do just fine, as long as Dennis cuts down on his real menace: walks.


  • R.J. Swindle:
    Swindle is no longer quite as “free” as he once was: the Brewers recently plucked him from the minor league scrapheap, although as Christina Kahrl observed in her analysis of the signing, he’s hardly assured of a major league role. As Christina noted, Swindle’s path has wound through a number of leagues and systems, but his overall minor league stat line is a thing of beauty: 226 strikeouts and 25(!) walks in 194 innings, and a 1.58 ERA. He also boasted the third-highest strikeout rate (34.7 percent) and the third-lowest translated DERA (2.60) in the International League this season. Swindle has yet to surrender a homer to a fellow southpaw; in fact, lefties have hit .149 against him, with a mere eight walks (to go along with 88 strikeouts) in 51 innings.


  • Ehren Wasserman:
    BP2K8 labeled Wasserman a “situational star in the making,” but if Josh Hamilton, Gaynor/Garland/Streisand, and the Hubble Space Telescope have taught us anything, it’s that the birth of a star isn’t always a quick and painless process. The side-armer made strides against his lefty nemeses during a sterling ’08 campaign for the Charlotte Knights, but faltered in Chicago, where his fastball hits 90 only when the wind’s blowing in.


  • Honorable Mentions:
    Rocky Cherry, Scott Dohmann (popular, that one), Kevin Hart, Wil Ledezma, Charlie Manning, Ed Mujica, Scott Patterson, Carmen Pignatiello, Clay Rapada, Chris Resop, Brian Rogers, and Mark Worrell.

As visions of a five-year, $75 million contract dance in Francisco Rodriguez’ head, the GM who does his Christmas bullpen shopping at a discount may save himself an awful lot of MORP-ing around (buyer’s re-MORP?) a few years down the road.

Ben Lindbergh is an intern with Baseball Prospectus and a student at Georgetown University. You can contact Ben by clicking here.

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patrickclark
12/09
This is exceptionally good: reasoned, informative, entertaining. You already knew that, but, wow, great piece.
speedchaser9
12/09
Sweet article... very.... clandestine
roycewebb
12/10
Has Chris Resop returned from Japan?

In our Diamond Mind Baseball league, we\'ve noticed in the 2008 stats that there are more LOOGYs (and even ROOGYs, an almost previously unknown species) than ever -- three or four times normal. I know that it\'s kind of heretical to suggest this on the same day that Perrotto\'s article gets slammed for saying that PEDs led to an increase in homers, but might getting amphetamines out of the clubhouses have meant that relievers had a tougher time blowing the ball past hitters of the opposite side? I\'ve never seen so many pitchers with bad splits, pitchers who would only rarely have been allowed to face hitters of the opposite side if their managers had had access to those statistics.
MattBishoff
12/10
buyer\'s re-MORP...classic
westy21
12/10
What about the scariest name in baseball: Randor Bierd
DrDave
12/10
Chris Britton was the sleeper star of my Diamond Mind bullpen for the 2006 season. I couldn\'t believe how the Yankees failed to use him; it\'s not like he was blocked by quality.

For me, I look for K rate, low opponent OPS, and a small platoon split. As roycewebb noted, that last one is hard to find lately, with lots of extreme platoon splits even in 2007. (And no, I can\'t see how PEDs could possibly be related to an increase in platoon splits...)

Of course, based on my favorite indicator stats, my crystal ball would have predicted a breakout last year for Santiago Casilla. Ooops.
bornyank1
12/10
Roycewebb, Resop finished the season with Hanshin (as a starter), and hasn\'t changed teams, AFAIK. A July account of his sale in the Naples Daily News had this to say:

\"The clubs finalized the sale on Monday, a procedural move that means when Resop fulfills his contract — which could run anywhere from the rest of 2008 to two more years, he said — he can return to the United States as a free agent, open to sign with the team of his choice.\"

His comments at the time suggest that he viewed the trip overseas as a more lucrative springboard back to the majors than Richmond.

Westy, Bierd\'s not a bad choice, but even though he lost time to TJ, I\'d have to see some success above AA (or at AA, for that matter) before calling \'09 his year.

Dr. Dave, your crystal ball saw more clearly than the average fortune teller\'s. Casilla\'s ERA was under one when he went down with elbow soreness in mid-May; even though he may have returned too soon (it rose almost two points in his next four outings), it stood at 3.22 before his last outing of the season. If I had come up with a list like this last year, he almost certainly would\'ve been mentioned.

For the record, here are some names that missed the final cut for the article, but might still be undervalued:

FA: Steve Andrade, Colter Bean, Ryan Braun, Kiko Calero, Cory Doyne, Eric Hull, Marcus McBeth, Blaine Neal, Royce Ring, Francisco Rosario, Scott Strickland, Chin-hui Tsao

Purple Heart Brigade: Angel Guzman, Josh Kinney, Carlos Martinez, Fernando Nieve, Merkin Valdez

Put me in [the bullpen], coach: Jorge de la Rosa, Devern Hansack, Radhames Liz, Chad Reineke

Oldies, but goodies: Greg Aquino, Jason Childers, Tim Hamulack, Brandon Knight, Julio Manon

What’s a guy gotta do to get a call-up around here: Joe Bateman
vegasman
12/10
What a great job with this article; kudos!
roycewebb
12/11
Really, Dr. Dave? You don\'t see how losing 3-5 mph off your fastball might make it easier for hitters of the opposite side to catch up to you?