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Playoff Prospectus: Arizona Diamondbacks vs. St. Louis Cardinals
by Gary Huckabay
In any given year, at least one or two of the playoff spots wrap up early.
Usually, writers from those markets start to madly flail for anything relevant
to write about between the time their team clinches a playoff spot, and the time
the postseason begins. There's a few stock categories for this type of piece,
some of which we've already touched on (excessively), and the rest of which
you're painfully familiar with. These topics include, but aren't limited to:
I could continue, but there's a good chance you've already put your
fist/head/sledgehammer through your monitor, and I think you get the idea. The
truth is that no one really knows what makes a great postseason team. I've seen
a ton of pieces from people who think they know, but there's not a study out
there that does a definitive job of identifying particular ballclub traits that
make a team more successful in the postseason than in the regular season. If
you have one, I'd sure love to see it. At the end of the day, it pretty much
comes down to two things:
There are some obvious storylines specific to the Arizona/St. Louis matchup, as
derived from the generic list above. Let's lay those out, and address them one
by one:
Gonzalez, before suffering a nasty shoulder injury, posted a very serviceable
.288/.400/.496 for the season, with about a hundred-point OPS platoon split.
The guys most likely to get his time at the plate:
Depending
on the health of Danny Bautista, he could see some time in this series,
or you might see an offense/defense platoon with Mark Little. Yes, having
Gonzalez would be nice, but primarily, what the Diamondbacks are losing is some
tactical flexibility. Having players that mash pitching from one side of the plate
is nice, but it does mean that during the late innings of games, you can end up
painted into a corner in terms of your optimal in-game moves.
Every year, some juggernaut rolls through the regular season, then has some sort of
lull towards the end of year, and desperate columnists fill 1200 words about it.
To date, no one has demonstrated that
a brief late-season
decline has any predictive value when it comes to a short post-season series.
D-Back fans, don't lose any sleep over it.
The losing pitchers during September Cardinal Wins: Jimmy Haynes, Bruce Chen,
Alan Benes, Antonio Alfonseca, Kerry Wood, Ben Diggins [twice], Wayne Franklin,
Ben Sheets, Tom Gordon, Peter Munro [twice], Kent Mercker, Justin Speier, Jason
Jennings, Kirk Saarloos, Rick Helling, Mike Fetters, Curt Schilling, Glendon
Rusch, and Luis Vizcaino.
It's not that tough to peak when you face the Brewers seven times over a three
week span. Just as the A's 20-game winning streak was
chock-full-o-Tigers-'n-Royals, the Cardinals' schedule was a little soft. I'm
not suggesting that the Cardinals were lucky or undeserving or something, but
Cardinal fans shouldn't take much solace in the Cards' hot finish, other than
the implication that everyone seems to be relatively healthy.
There is a bigger concern than simply having Durazo in the outfield. One advance
scout describes the D-Back defense as "very old. Even Steve Finley
can't cover that much ground out there anymore. Matt Williams is a shadow
of his former self, Tony Womack's a great athlete playing out of position,
and there are no plus defenders on the field. Their outfielders get good velocity
on the ball, but they take forever to release it, so their opponents can run
wild."
The St. Louis defense, on the other hand, is much more highly regarded.
"They're one of the best two or three infield defenses in either league,"
says an advance scout. "The addition of Scott Rolen next to
Edgar Renteria makes the left side amazing, and everyone on the field has
a head for the game. They'll steal at least one out on instinct during the
LDS."
Let's look at the pitching matchups:
Games 1 & 4:
Pitcher GS IP R SNW SNL SNPct W L RA APW SNVA SNWAR Johnson, R 35 260.0 78 20.7 6.9 .751 24 5 2.70 6.3 6.7 9.0 Morris, M 32 210.3 86 13.8 9.7 .587 17 9 3.68 1.8 1.9 3.8 Game 2:
Pitcher GS IP R SNW SNL SNPct W L RA APW SNVA SNWAR Schilling, C 35 258.3 92 18.5 8.2 .691 23 7 3.21 4.8 4.9 7.1 Finley, C 32 190.7 97 12.1 10.2 .543 11 15 4.58 0.3 0.7 2.6 Game 3:
Pitcher GS IP R SNW SNL SNPct W L RA APW SNVA SNWAR Batista, M 29 176.7 96 9.8 10.2 .490 8 9 4.89 0.2 -0.3 1.3 Williams, W 17 103.3 30 7.7 3.3 .700 9 4 2.61 2.1 2.0 3.0
It's possible that the D-Backs could run Rick Helling or John
Patterson out for a potential Game 4, but you're just as likely to see
Johnson vs. Morris again, should it come to that. Clearly, there's a huge
advantage here, and it belongs to Arizona. St. Louis fans can hang their hat on
two things. First, Curt Schilling may be suffering from fatigue or a minor
injury. In September, Schilling has been downright mortal, posting a 5.87 ERA,
and a K rate slightly below what it's been throughout the year at a
"mere" 9.69 K/9, compared to the 10.94 he's posted for the entire
season. Second, the one team that's beaten him up this season has been the
Cardinals, against whom he's 0-2 with a 7.71 ERA.
Still, you have to like those matchups if you're a Snakes fan.
Name Team Lge Pos Out PA EQA EQR RAR RAP RARP Junior Spivey ARI NL 2B 379. 614. 0.295 89.3 41.2 24.9 42.0 Steve Finley ARI NL CF 361. 568. 0.294 84.9 39.1 15.8 34.2 Erubiel Durazo ARI NL 1B 165. 273. 0.312 44.9 24.0 8.5 18.2 Damian Miller ARI NL C 223. 338. 0.265 40.3 12.0 6.7 15.6 Greg Colbrunn ARI NL 1B 114. 183. 0.320 33.1 18.6 8.3 14.9 Quinton McCracken ARI NL RF 245. 383. 0.281 51.4 20.3 0.5 14.0 Tony Womack ARI NL SS 438. 635. 0.242 63.3 7.7 -10.3 9.3 Matt Williams ARI NL 3B 157. 231. 0.270 29.8 9.9 1.3 8.9 Danny Bautista ARI NL RF 106. 165. 0.291 24.2 10.8 2.0 7.9 Chad Moeller ARI NL C 76. 118. 0.259 13.0 3.4 1.3 4.4 Mark Grace ARI NL 1B 220. 340. 0.261 38.4 10.5 -10.1 2.8 Rod Barajas ARI NL C 118. 167. 0.225 14.2 -0.7 -3.6 1.2 Chris Donnels ARI NL Oth 60. 89. 0.258 10.1 2.5 -2.2 1.1 Mark Little ARI NL RF 14. 23. 0.268 2.6 0.8 -0.4 0.4 David Dellucci ARI NL RF 177. 258. 0.249 27.3 4.8 -10.7 -0.6
Is there a Barry Bonds here? A Brian Giles? Even a Luis
Gonzalez? No, but it's not a bad offense. Everyone in the lineup with the
exception of Womack is someone that can be effective in fairly common
situations. The St. Louis pitchers won't get much time to completely relax and
blow through three or four easy outs, and there should be plenty of tactical
movement to keep Brenly and LaRussa occupied. Arizona's offensive performance
will largely depend on the comparative abilities of LaRussa and Brenly to
control each plate appearance. Colbrunn's a nice bat to have against the likes
of Steve Kline, but there will be a number of moves and countermoves that will
have to shake out in each game.
And now, for the clear Cardinal advantage:
Name Team Lge Pos Out PA EQA EQR RAR RAP RARP Jim Edmonds STL NL CF 331. 569. 0.330 103.6 61.6 40.4 57.2 Albert Pujols STL NL LF 406. 667. 0.319 116.7 65.2 33.2 55.4 Edgar Renteria STL NL SS 383. 593. 0.283 81.5 32.9 17.2 34.3 Eli Marrero STL NL RF 291. 433. 0.275 57.6 20.7 1.8 16.7 Scott Rolen STL NL 3B 149. 225. 0.297 35.7 16.8 9.1 16.2 J.D. Drew STL NL RF 319. 489. 0.275 63.1 22.6 -4.5 13.5 Fernando Vina STL NL 2B 461. 680. 0.244 67.6 9.1 -10.8 10.1 Tino Martinez STL NL 1B 379. 571. 0.269 71.4 23.3 -12.2 10.0 Placido Polanco STL NL 3B 246. 358. 0.246 37.0 5.8 -6.4 5.2 Mike Matheny STL NL C 239. 346. 0.227 29.3 -1.0 -7.2 2.5 Mike DiFelice STL NL C 134. 192. 0.234 17.7 0.7 -3.6 2.1
These are just plain better hitters. LaRussa has some flexibility, and from the
looks of these rosters, we're going to see games with a lot of relievers as both
teams scramble for platoon advantages. The Diamondbacks can't answer a middle
of the order that contains the likes of Jim Edmonds and Albert
Pujols. The secondary performers, including an injured J.D. Drew,
have comparable performance levels to the core performers for the D-Backs. This
offense could beat the stuffing out of mediocre pitching, but right now, they're
not scheduled to face any.
It's possible that this series could be disproportionately affected by the
strike zone being called on any given night. If Woody Williams doesn't
get the Jimmy Key plate, he may well be bashed around. The Cardinals are
powerful enough that if they can squeeze Schilling a little, they might be able
to catch up with his fastball, if, in fact, his velocity is down. "His
velocity isn't down at all," says one advance scout, "but his command
has been flaky, particularly up and away to right handed hitters. If they can
lay off that pitch and make him bring the ball down, he can be hit and hit
hard." Perhaps, but that sounds like a long shot.
Gary Huckabay is an author of Baseball Prospectus. You can contact him by
clicking here.
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