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On May 28, 2007, Freddy Garcia took the hill for the Phillies, squaring off against the Diamondbacks in a standard, run-of-the-mill game that would ultimately have no bearing on the standings. Nor would it boast any outstanding feats you’d have cause to recall. Quite simply, the meeting served as the perfect example of a nondescript game that lives in the memories of a few avid baseball fans for one minuscule reason or another. Though Garcia proved to be a bust for the Phillies, he pitched very effectively in this particular outing, missing a flurry of bats. By missing bats, I am not referring to the shorthand for fanning a hitter, but rather the literal definition: he induced a lot of swings and misses. A quick glance at the box score shows that Garcia recorded 18 swinging strikes against the Snakes, an impressive tally, and one he had not reached in almost two years. Swinging strikes are rare in major league baseball, especially when compared to the other events capable of occurring on a pitch, and they usually signal some sort of overpowering of the hitter, whether that’s with a deceiving off-speed delivery or an ample supply of late movement.

How rare is the swinging strike? Consider that last season Juan Cruz posted the highest swinging-strike rate among those pitchers with 50 or more frames logged. His mark was 15.5 percent. The average swinging-strike rate was considerably lower, 8.6 percent, meaning that in big-league action, it would be perfectly normal for other outcomes to take place on nine of every ten pitches thrown. The highest swinging-strike rate achieved in this decade belongs to Brad Lidge, when he recorded whiffs on 24.2 percent of his pitches during the 2004 season, a mark still short of a quarter of the time. Since 2000, there have been just five instances in which a pitcher exceeded 20 percent with this rate, all of which belong to either Lidge or Eric Gagne. Though the leaderboard in this same span is topped primarily by relievers, adjusting the playing-time qualifier to 120 or more innings places Francisco Liriano‘s 15.9 percent in 2006 atop all others. Perhaps not at all surprisingly, names like Randy Johnson, Roger Clemens, and Johan Santana appear the most frequently among the starters.

Earlier this year, Matthew Carruth of Fangraphs penned a very interesting article in which the swinging-strike rates were broken down by pitcher, pitch, and batter handedness using Pitch-f/x data. The research concluded that Ryan Madson‘s changeup, when delivered to same-handed hitters, caused the highest percentage of whiffs, at 36 percent. The Pitch-f/x data set is still only a toddler, making similar inquiries into past years impossible, but Retrosheet has kept track of the pitch breakdowns for quite a while; their data makes possible at least some semblance of this kind of research for previous seasons. With this idea in tow, I first calculated the overall pitch breakdowns for everyone from 2003-08, and further partitioned the data based on batter handedness. Here are the swinging-strike percentages for the four different types of matchups over the last six seasons:


Pitcher  Batter Swinging
                Strike %
  LHP     LHH     9.3
  LHP     RHH     8.7
  RHP     LHH     7.9
  RHP     RHH     9.9

As expected, pitchers perform better against same-handed hitters, but righties were less prone by almost an entire percentage point as far as getting a swing-and-miss against opposite-handed hitters.

Aside from averages, who are the leaders this decade against hitters from each side of the plate? The data below consists of the top swinging-strike rates from pitchers with at least 150 batters faced from a specific side of the plate in this decade. Take note of the much higher percentages from northpaws to same-handed hitters, which makes sense given that this specific matchup boasted the highest average rate. Also of interest is how the top southpaw against right-handed hitters posted a lower rate than the six pitchers shown on the righties vs. left-handed hitters chart, suggesting that the latter matchup featured much more extreme results, with certain righties faring very well, and others missing bats at a Jon Garland-like clip.


LHP-LHH                         LHP-RHH
                      Swinging                          Swinging
Pitcher        Year   Strike %  Pitcher           Year  Strike %
Randy Johnson  2005   15.4      Johan Santana     2002  16.5
Andy Pettitte  2005   14.8      Randy Johnson     2002  15.9
Scott Olsen    2008   14.7      Billy Wagner      2005  15.8
CC Sabathia    2007   14.6      Francisco Liriano 2006  15.8
Randy Johnson  2004   14.3      Billy Wagner      2002  15.8
CC Sabathia    2008   14.3      Randy Johnson     2001  15.4

RHP-LHH                         RHP-RHH
                      Swinging                          Swinging
Pitcher        Year   Strike %  Pitcher           Year  Strike %
Brad Lidge     2004   21.6      Brad Lidge        2004  26.8
Eric Gagne     2003   20.4      Eric Gagne        2003  23.8
Eric Gagne     2002   19.3      Eric Gagne        2004  23.2
F. Rodriguez   2000   19.2      Ugueth Urbina     2001  20.5
John Smoltz    2002   18.9      Octavio Dotel     2002  20.4
Eric Gagne     2004   18.6      Antonio Otsuka    2004  20.3

Although the data mining can be very enjoyable—yeah, I’m a nerd—what should be of great interest is whether or not recording swinging strikes is an actual ability. In other words, are these rates consistent from year to year for each pitcher? When testing the relationship between two variables on a multi-year level, an AR(1) Intra-Class Correlation becomes a very valuable statistical test, working the same way as a year-to-year correlation, but incorporating more than just two years of data. For the sake of this study I queried all data from 2003-08, since it is important to avoid very large time frames when performing such tests; comparing a pitcher in his age-27 season to his performance in his age-37 season will naturally produce different numbers based on changes in style and approach, skewing the results. Prior to crunching the numbers I hypothesized that the correlations would be closer to zero, proposing that the swinging-strike rates were more random than a sustainable skill, but what does the actual data say?


Swinging
Strike %   ICC
Overall   0.60
LHP-LHH   0.55
LHP-RHH   0.61
RHP-LHH   0.57
RHP-RHH   0.65

These coefficients work similarly to standard bivariate correlations in the sense that marks closer to 1.0 increase the strength of the relationship. All five of the aforementioned relationships ended up being particularly stable over the last six seasons, defying my hypothesis and suggesting that cajoling barren swings is actually more skill-based than random. The overall swinging-strike rate also shared a moderately strong 0.44 correlation to total percentage of strikes, indicating that just about 20 percent of the variation in total strike percentage, including balls in play, relative to all pitches thrown can be chalked up due to swinging-strike rates. Even though it makes sense for these rates to go hand in hand with foul-ball rates given the lack of solid contact made, their 0.05 correlation portends randomness in the data. Strikeout and walk rates were also particularly independent of swinging-strike rates with low correlation coefficients of their own. Since both of these rates are decidedly stable themselves, and are direct components of the more accurate metrics exhibiting success through controllable skills, it stands to reason that swinging strikes really have no advantage over fouls or called strikes.

At this juncture, it dawned on me that certain pitchers posted lower swinging-strike rates relative to all pitches thrown, but they might actually be much more apt to recording whiffs relative only to themselves, called strikes, and foul balls. If balls and balls in play are removed from the number of pitches thrown, do these correlations change at all?


SS%/K      ICC
Overall   0.58
LHP-LHH   0.53
LHP-RHH   0.58
RHP-LHH   0.54
RHP-RHH   0.63

SS%/K = Swinging-Strike Rate relative to non-BIP strikes

A minimal drop-off (at best) is observed when comparing the overall swinging-strike rates to the rates relative to non-BIP strikes. Interestingly, these two rates share virtually no relationship with an r of -0.032. In fact, the only significant relationship I found involving the rate per strike included foul balls per strike at -0.38; as the distribution of non-BIP strikes tilted in favor of swings and misses, pitchers experienced a decrease in foul balls. Thinking of the pitches along the lines of non-BIP strikes paves the way for some other intriguing ideas, such as quantifying the term “effectively wild.” These types of pitchers are notorious for being all over the place with location, throwing higher percentages of balls, but possessing “stuff” capable of getting the job done.

Matt Clement instantly springs to mind as an example of such a pitcher whose control could not be predicted, and yet for a while the wildness worked to his advantage. Though this is merely a cursory attempt to quantify the aforementioned scouting term, I got to thinking that the effectively wild pitchers would throw strikes, including balls in play, less than half of the time, but would post high marks in the swinging-strike area. Querying for pitchers with at least 120 innings in a season and a strike percentage below 50 percent, sorted by swinging-strike rate relative to non-BIP strikes produced the following list:


Pitcher             Year  Strike%   SS%/K
Victor Zambrano     2004    47.8     23.1
Daniel Cabrera      2006    49.1     22.8
Jason Jennings      2003    48.8     21.7
Victor Zambrano     2003    47.2     21.5
Zach Day            2003    48.4     21.2
Jason Jennings      2004    48.4     21.1
Victor Zambrano     2005    49.6     20.3
Jason Jennings      2005    47.2     19.5
Damian Moss         2003    45.6     19.4
Barry Zito          2006    49.2     18.8

SS%/K = Swinging-Strike Rate relative to non-BIP strikes

Swinging-strike rates are a very stable metric, year to year and pitcher to pitcher, but the lack of a noteworthy relationship to any other performance-based metric that makes some sort of logical sense—swinging-strike rates have no relationship with shutouts, no matter what any correlation coefficient argues—makes them much less meaningful. What would be of interest is the underlying root of these fruitless swings, searching for patterns in pitch repertoire and sequencing that leads to the whiffs. This sort of research will not be meaningful until the Pitch-f/x data set is expanded, but it may help us to determine solid ways to attack a hitter as well as potential out-pitches not currently being used in the correct fashion.

For example, it would be very valuable to know if Ryan Madson’s changeup to righties displays stability in the swing-and-miss department over a predetermined time span, or if the pitch loses its effectiveness. Swinging and missing at the major league level is very rare, especially on fastballs. That’s reflective of the level of talent; a hitter who whiffs too often had better exhibit tremendous ability in some other facet of performance, or else he will not last very long in the big leagues. Due to this kind of rarity, pitchers who miss bats with the greatest of ease are incredibly appealing assets, but the lack of a relationship between this feat and other performance-based metrics suggests that there is no true advantage over those who struggle to elude the whooping sticks.

Thank you for reading

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dmoriart
5/01
Interesting stuff, thanks...

What pitchers have some of the lowest swing-and-miss % of this decade?
flalaw
5/01
It's interesting in the latter list that the two names which are prominent are Victor Zambrano and Daniel Cabrera, two pitchers with great stuff whom baseball people thought were a good pitching coach away from becoming stars; we have Zambrano, whom the Mets famously gave up Scott Kazmir for and thought Rick Peterson could "fix", and Cabrera, for whom the Orioles brought in Leo Mazzone with no ultimate success.

Ironically, Kazmir at times lately has looked quite Zambranoesque or Cabrereqsue, especially in his start at Minnesota the other night.
krissbeth
5/01
Huh. Whaddaya know?
EJSeidman
5/02
I know this is a pretty vague comment ;-).
Oleoay
5/01
Eric, as a follow-up, is there a correlation between the ability to get a swinging strike and the ability to get a second swinging strike? What I mean is, if a pitcher has an ability to induce a swinging strike, is that pitcher even more likely to induce a second swinging strike in that at-bat? Or is a pitcher's chance at inducing a swinging strike similar regardless of the previous pitch outcomes of an at-bat?
blcartwright
5/01
I'm still not clear - the first measure was StS/Pitches, while the 2nd was StS/Strikes? Or StS/Swings (StS+Fouls+BIP). I'd do it as a pct of swings - you can't swing and miss until you swing.

The inverse correlation with strike% might be an ability to get the batter to swing at pitches out of the zone, which would be easier to miss on, such as a two strike curve or slider.
EJSeidman
5/02
The first measure is STS/pitches but the second is STS out of STS+CalledK+Fouls. The reasoning deals with the distribution of non-BIP strikes. Some may get more whiffs, others may get higher percentages of fouls than anything else. Measuring it relative to swings is certainly valid, it just isn't what I was intending to look at.
LlarryA
5/02
I would be interested in seeing a breakdown of swings and fouls relative to the count, specifically, swinging strikes to finish Ks, and fouls with less than two strikes. Once the batter gets to two strikes, he's going to get defensive, which will lead to a greater number of subsequent fouls, but are there any trends concerning early fouls. Do they indicate a guy who's hittable, and the batter *just* missed, or are there guys who can tease batters consistently with stuff that's just "not quite" reachable, and might that help set up a later "out pitch"?