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Playoff Prospectus: San Francisco Giants vs. Atlanta Braves
by Chris Kahrl
Unstoppable force, immovable object, best hitter of all time versus... well,
if not exactly the best, one of the game's best rotations. It all
almost borders on a Xena: Warrior Princess plot line. Throw in Keith
Lockhart or Vinny Castilla, and you've even got the lame sidekick or two.
You've got two managers famous for in-season success and postseason failure,
and Barry Bonds and his almost tediously similar legacy. For international
flavor, you've got one Pacific Rim token and another one starting Game Four
for the Braves, Julio Franco representing the AARP, David Bell representing
people whose fathers played against Julio Franco, and Benito Santiago
representing AARP graduates--the living dead. It makes for an interesting
mix, obviously.
CF-L Kenny Lofton (.261/.350/.414/.276)*
Atlanta Braves
SS-B Rafael Furcal (.275/.323/.387/.250)
Thanks to their employing the best hitter in the game's history, cumulative
totals will tell you that the Giants are the stronger lineup. However, these
two teams make for an interesting study in contrasts as far as lineups go.
The Giants have two great hitters and six useful mediocrities, the Braves
four great hitters and four bad ones. Which one would you prefer over six
months, and which one works out well over a short series? Thinking on it,
there's reason to prefer the four over the two: four guys who can give you
that Lloyd McClendon Little League World Series as opposed to only two makes
it seem like you've got better odds, doesn't it? It's the great players who
have those Derek Lilliquist career days regularly, that's why they're great.
The odds that Lockhart or Castilla or any of the Giants' six mediocrities
will have those kind of games are, of course, negligible, but then how many
people have a Reggie day in October, anyways?
On the other hand, assuming Christy Mathewson's wisdom about coasting has
any value in today's game--although frankly I doubt it--you could argue that
the Braves' six through nine hitters are the ideal match-up to cruise through
a half-inning every other inning. Normally, hitters this weak might get
pinch-hit for by Tom Glavine in one of his better-swinging seasons, but
unfortunately for the Braves, Glavine didn't hit so well this year. But
those are three OBP sinkholes, and they're not guys prone to long at-bats. A
command and control fiend like Kirk Rueter might actually finagle his way
past the lot of them.
A lot will depend on what Cox does with Barry Bonds. The entire NL was
willing to let Barry Bonds get only 85 at-bats with runners in scoring
position, against 78 walks. On those 85 at-bats, Bonds drove in 65, so what
can you say, the Bochy Plan doesn't seem like such a bad idea over the
course of a season. However, as long as Baker insists on batting Kent third,
Bonds is there to be walked and force the Giants to live and die on Reggie
Sanders and Benito Santiago in high-leverage situations. Baker's lineup
whimsy might play out well over the long haul of months of games, as
single-game effects on a lineup wash out over slumps, streaks, and opponents
of varying quality. Against a good team with a good pen, it looks like an
exploitable weakness. And if Bonds ends up screwing the bat into sawdust
hankering after an opportunity, any opportunity, because they've gotten that
much more scarce because of his manager's design, you can count on the
continued schadenfreude from commentators and fans, and a continued
free pass for Dusty for making it so.
C-R Yorvit Torrealba (.279/.355/.397/.273)
Atlanta Braves
C-R Henry Blanco (.204/.267/.335/.201)
If it works, it works, but whatever advantages the Giants might have
offensively, it's not because of a deep bench. They have Damon Minor,
although Minor should probably be starting ahead of Snow at first, and they
have Martinez, who would be a very nice fit for the Braves as their everyday
second baseman, but they do not have a good high-OBP pinch-hitter. Worse
yet, they don't have a big right-handed bat to go after the Braves' key
lefty setup men. They've got Franco to sub for Franco, and that's about it.
The Braves' bench doesn't have anybody who will give a calculating manager
the willies, even if it does feature two or three people who should be
playing every day ahead of Lockhart and Castilla. The nice way to look at it
is that Bobby Cox has the tactical option of making a double-switch after
Lockhart or Castilla have ended an offensive inning, flipping the pitcher's
spot up to get DeRosa or Giles or Helms an at-bat and minimizing the chances
of having to pull an effective reliever out of offensive need. No, it isn't
as good as having good hitters in the lineup, but the absence of good
regulars should force Cox to be aggressive in pursuing tactical benefits
wherever he can.
RHP Russ Ortiz (1.1, 214 1/3, 3.61)
Atlanta Braves
LHP Tom Glavine (3.3, 224 2/3, 2.96)
If the series was merely a matter of asset management, the Braves win,
because they've got the big battalions right here. Fortunately for the
disinterested and curious, the game, like any plan, is combustible, and in
the short season, rarely survives the sterile absolutes of the season's
spreadsheet. The Braves' rotation is obviously stronger, and that's
obviously good for them. But it also forces Cox to avoid pinch-hitting to
help a weak offense, and it sort of dictates that the Braves aim for
low-scoring affairs. And for all of the press devoted to the postseason
failures of a Bonds or a Clemens, the mixed track record of Greg Maddux in
October should take some of the luster off of this otherwise obvious
advantage.
The match-up I find particularly interesting is Millwood versus Schmidt.
Back-to-back bad outings against the Marlins in September were the only real
warts on what has been an outstanding second half for Millwood, but Schmidt
has been similarly strong down the stretch. The Giants will obviously have
to hope that Russ Ortiz can take advantage of his general tendency to do
better in daylight and at home, but those are the sorts of things that are
less important than having the offense get off to a good start against two
of the better starting pitchers in the game.
RHP Robb Nen (15.0, 73 2/3, 2.20)
Atlanta Braves
RHP John Smoltz (17.8, 80 1/3, 3.25)
A lot of ink has already been wasted on John Smoltz for MVP or Rolaids Boy
or President of a Banana Republic to be named later or whatever, but the
really interesting situation here is that the Giants' bullpen was
"only" the third-best pen in the league behind the oft-noted
Braves and the Cardinals. The extent of the Braves' overall lead doesn't
really matter--both teams have quality pens, and although somebody's going
to have to have a bad day at the office at least one day out of five, both
teams are loaded with relief talent.
This shared strength actually matters more for the Giants. They can avoid
having their starters see the Braves' core hitters more than two or at most
three times in a game, assuming Dusty's sense of machismo doesn't get in the
way. If the Giants go to the pen aggressively, they can compensate for a
comparatively weaker rotation, and keep the Braves' lineup from putting
together a game-ending crooked number in the sixth or seventh innings. But
it's up to Dusty to play to his team's strengths.
Chris Kahrl is an author of Baseball Prospectus. You can contact him by
clicking here.
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