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

Over the last several decades, with the platoon effect becoming more widely understood and exploitable, a flood of pitchers with otherwise weak skills in the broad strokes have found employment in the major leagues. No aspect of the sport has undergone as thoroughgoing a transformation as bullpen usage, and while the idea of a structured relief corps may in fact be inefficient in terms of roster management, it has certainly paved the way for the rise to prominence of a number specialist relievers. Those referred to as LOOGYs-courtesy of John Sickels, who coined the catch-all term for Lefty One-Out GuYs-comprise the vast majority of this new group, entering into the latter stages of a game to try to face a same-handed hitter or two. Pitchers assigned to the role generally dominate lefty batters; approximately three-quarters of the pitches that a batter will see over the course of a season are thrown by right-handers, and a pitch delivered from a southpaw to a left-handed batter can be thrown from a more deceptive angle, altering the perception of the hitter.

Since these specialists meet and greet so few batters per appearance, evaluating their performances can be very tricky. As is, the stats for relief pitchers tend to be unreliable as stable summations of skill due to smaller innings totals; this only gets worse with LOOGYs, who accrue even less playing time. It’s very common to see a specialist experience a large disconnect in his appearances and his innings pitched totals, logging, for example, only 40 2/3 innings in 65 games, as the pitcher records only one or two outs in most instances, and the resulting numbers can appear inflated and therefore non-indicative of actual performance. Many fans have already reached similar conclusions, and have shifted their statistical focus to slash lines, checking to see if certain pitchers hold an advantage against same- or opposite-handed hitters.

Unfortunately, such research proves to be meaningless because of its lack of context, which is key in any study or evaluation, but is often ignored as confirmation biases reign supreme and proper evidence which contradicts a previously determined point may be dismissed. The single-season home-run record of 73, set by Barry Bonds in 2001, becomes significant only when compared to all other seasonal totals. Without knowing about previous records, or the context in which the figure matters, his home-run total becomes nothing more than an ambiguous data point. The stats-related misstep of leaving context by the wayside occurs far too frequently, and can happen even more when evaluating LOOGYs. To begin rectifying this issue, we must first define specialist relievers for the purpose of our database classification.

One of the tables in my database contains a row for every game from each pitcher-season. I queried this table to count the number of times that a pitcher faced a maximum of three hitters in an appearance, and the number of total games for each season. Simple division, with the specialist count as the numerator, provided the percentage of total appearances in which a pitcher, well… specialized. Anyone with a specialist percentage south of fifty percent was removed, so for the sake of this study, a pitcher is considered to be a specialist if he saw three or fewer hitters in at least half of his appearances. The cutoff point can be debated, but it’s far from arbitrary, as certain pitchers may not serve in the role all season long, while others may take on two jobs during the season, simultaneously serving as mop-up men.

Since the goal here involves evaluating LOOGYs and placing their numbers in the proper context, all right-handed pitchers were also removed from the table. Before delving deeper into the data, here is a breakdown of the specialist percentages relative to all games pitched, be they starts or relief appearances, going back to 1955:


  Span      SpecGP    Spec%
1955-59      3,811     13.5
1960-64      5,656     15.1
1965-69      6,922     16.0
1970-74      7,450     15.7
1975-79      7,066     14.2
1980-84      7,881     15.3
1985-89     10,072     17.1
1990-94     12,946     22.4
1995-99     19,860     25.0
2000-04     23,568     26.6
2005-08     21,750     28.9

Here is a graph displaying the trend over time. Note that specialists appeared in their lowest percentage (in the Retrosheet Era) from 1955-59, but they also experienced a drop-off from 1975-79, before seeing their opportunities increase in each subsequent span.

graph

The biggest jump occurred right around the time that Nirvana and Pearl Jam burst onto the scene in the early ’90s. Percentage increases in this area are still being observed, making it clear that managers have bought into the LOOGY strategy. How did these pitchers fare against same-handed hitters? Once the lefties meeting the specialist-percentage benchmark were pooled together, a separate table was created that consisted of their results against each lefty batter faced during their specialized seasons. This is important to keep in mind, in that specific pitcher-seasons are of interest here, not their entire careers. The reasoning for breaking each pitcher-season down by hitter will make more sense presently, but the idea deals specifically with context-based evaluations, primarily since LOOGYs should not be compared to themselves or evaluated using our own uninformed theories. Rather, these specialists must be compared to the rest of the league.

Take, for instance, former Giants reliever Jack Taschner, who now earns his keep as a member of the Phillies‘ bullpen. When the defending champs acquired his services to replace the suspended J.C. Romero, some Phillies fans, myself included, questioned the validity of the move given that lefties hit .279/.339/.394 against the southpaw last season. His Raw EqA (REqA), sans stolen-base components, hovered around the .765 mark against same-handed hitters. Without context, these numbers lack meaning, and they tend to become skewed when personal biases or ideas are factored into the mix. Since a .279/.339/.394 line doesn’t exactly imply dominance, some felt that the Phillies should have looked elsewhere. What really needed to be asked was how Taschner’s line compared to the rest of the league, making the methodology here quite clear: take all of the batters faced by a specialist in a particular season, and calculate the numbers for non-specialist pitchers against the very same batters. This sort of matched-pair analysis aids in placing specialist performance in the proper context.

If a specialist allowed lefties to hit .270/.335/.440, but those same hitters boasted a collective .300/.380/.520 line against all non-specialists, then the LOOGY essentially accomplished his goal by being more effective than the league as a whole. His numbers against may lack sizzling dominance, but they indicate a solid performance that would not necessarily be understood by merely eyeing a seasonal-splits page. The following table shows the slash lines and non-SB Raw EqA for LOOGYs against same-handed hitters, from 1999-2008:


Specialists
Year    PA    Avg/ OBP/ SLG   REqA
1999   2307  .237/.322/.373   .723
2000   1684  .225/.306/.358   .698
2001   2756  .238/.306/.380   .711
2002   2892  .220/.292/.353   .672
2003   2729  .234/.301/.353   .679
2004   2388  .241/.312/.381   .718
2005   2939  .233/.304/.361   .691
2006   2833  .235/.307/.371   .703
2007   3437  .233/.307/.336   .675
2008   3162  .215/.285/.333   .648

And here is the data for all non-specialists against those same left-handed hitters, separated by pitcher-handedness:


Non-Specialist LHPs
Year    PA    Avg/ OBP/ SLG   REqA 
1999   9616  .266/.340/.417   .775
2000  10360  .268/.341/.418   .777
2001  10622  .266/.336/.422   .775
2002  11837  .252/.322/.403   .743
2003  13029  .255/.320/.395   .734
2004  13022  .259/.327/.405   .752
2005  12470  .254/.318/.387   .726
2006  12096  .252/.320/.401   .739
2007  13086  .253/.321/.392   .734
2008  14719  .250/.315/.387   .722

Non-Specialist RHPs
Year    PA    Avg/ OBP/ SLG   REqA 
1999  44395  .285/.353/.468   .834
2000  46289  .280/.351/.469   .834
2001  45093  .276/.340/.463   .817
2002  45460  .276/.342/.452   .810
2003  42180  .277/.341/.454   .810
2004  43488  .276/.342/.458   .815
2005  42942  .275/.336/.446   .797
2006  40425  .282/.344/.465   .824
2007  41610  .276/.339/.452   .807
2008  45397  .272/.336/.444   .796

Perhaps this data may be easier to interpret in graphic form:

graph

Non-specialist southpaws clearly performed better against same-handed hitters than their right-handed counterparts, relative to the same batters faced by specialists. This makes sense, and is confirmed by the very basis of the platoon effect. A lefty specialist should not be considered successful in a given season for performing better against a group of hitters than a non-specialist righty, or for falling in line with non-specialist lefties. They will only be considered dominant against same-handed hitters when their numbers prove to be better than those of non-specialist southpaws.

Getting back to Taschner, we now have some context when referring to his .279/.339/.394 line, since the non-specialist lefties allowed .250/.315/.387 against the same hitters that he faced. Taschner’s REqA of ˜.765 was actually much worse than the .722 posted by the non-specialist lefties, confirming the opinions gathered at the time of the trade, but arriving at the conclusion in a more statistically accurate manner.

On the whole, LOOGYs bested non-specialist lefties in each of the ten seasons of interest here:


     Non-Special  LOOGY
Year   LHP REqA    REqA   Diff
1999    .775      .723    .052
2000    .777      .698    .079
2001    .775      .711    .064
2002    .743      .672    .071
2003    .734      .679    .055
2004    .752      .718    .034
2005    .726      .691    .035
2006    .739      .703    .036
2007    .734      .675    .059
2008    .722      .648    .074

The 2004-06 seasons are intriguing, as the differences in REqA dropped significantly. In 2004, LOOGYs posted their second-highest REqA; however, in 2005-06, the non-specialists simply performed much better against the very same hitters. Who were some of the best in this span? Some of the worst? Here are the top five and bottom five LOOGY seasons from 1999-2008:


Best           Year   Avg/ OBP/ SLG    REqA
J.C. Romero    2008  .102/.189/.193    .392
Damaso Marte   2007  .094/.227/.125    .407
Mike Myers     2000  .120/.198/.207    .431
Arthur Rhodes  2002  .158/.177/.242    .436 
Mike Myers     2005  .158/.198/.211    .436

Worst          Year   Avg/ OBP/ SLG    REqA
Jim Poole      2000  .448/.438/.897   1.328
John Rocker    2002  .364/.488/.758   1.190
Matt Perisho   2005  .346/.500/.615   1.092
Troy Brohawn   2001  .386/.476/.600   1.055
Scott Forster  2000  .289/.448/.622   1.042

Structured bullpens and specialist relievers aren’t going anywhere, not unless Nolan Ryan magically clones himself and manages to both infiltrate and take over the remaining 29 franchises (and yes, I have already begun work on the screenplay for this film, hoping that Kurtwood Smith will play the lead role).

With all of this in mind, I must again stress the importance of context. Whether you’re evaluating home/road splits, platoon splits, monthly splits, or any other split, comparing a player to himself is an inaccurate route to take even if, in the end, the correct route confirms the predetermined opinion. When a team acquires a specialist, don’t automatically form an opinion based on his career splits against a certain-handed batter without first finding out how those numbers compare to the rest of the league. As the data here indicates, some LOOGYs look worse than they actually are when lacking context, and some can actually look better when the numbers of non-specialist lefties are ignored. Regardless, the message is clear: context is key, and should be incorporated into the statistical repertoires of every interested fan and every analysis involving splits.

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
JayhawkBill
5/08
Eric, thank you. The number-crunching for this article was considerable, but you've demonstrated some points regarding LOOGYs that many of us have claimed as likely fact without possessing the exact research to back it up.

Now that you've demonstrated the importance of Spec% and REqA vs. same-side hitters, where will we be able to find them in the BP sortable statistics? I'd like it as an automatic part of the Relievers Expected Wins Added Report, but I'm certainly happy to have the stats available anywhere in the menu.
joeboxr36
5/08
What's interesting is Taschner had righties hit .176 off him and lefties hit .316 off him back in 2007.
mhmckay
5/08
Was interested in knowing how you actually determined who was a LOOGY and who was a lefty non-specialist -- that wasn't discussed in the article
EJSeidman
5/08
Yes, it certainly was. Re-read. I classified LOOGYs as anyone who, in a particular season, faced 3 or fewer hitters in 50% or more of their appearances. Non-LOOGYs = everyone else.
BurrRutledge
5/08
Very nice, thank you, Eric! The LOOGY approach works, just make sure you've got the right LOOGY for the job.

Any chance you can create a 'super-LOOGY' category somehow, to distinguish those fellows of recent years who come in for one or two batters, and whose managers jump outta the dugout with the mere shadow of a righty approaching the plate? I realize it'll be a tiny subset of the LOOGY that you've defined, but it might also show an added level of value beyond the 'average' LOOGY.

Thanks again!
EJSeidman
5/08
Burr, do you mean LOOGYs who ONLY faced lefties in like 75% of their appearances?
LlarryA
5/08
And for your next trick, how about the even rarer, but apparently real ROOGY? There have been a few (probably not enough to really tell anything from) who have been used that exclusively. Of course, with Righties with short appearances, you have to work harder to filter out the Closers...
EJSeidman
5/08
Right, and that's exactly why I didn't do them, haha, but I'll definitely see if something is there... righties who dominate righties but are not closers and have usage patterns similar to LOOGYs.