The Dodgers' starting rotation has a 3.26 ERA, fourth-best in baseball. The Dodgers' relief pitchers have a 3.74 ERA, 18th-best in baseball. You could get into fancier stats -- perhaps more appropriate to the question, or that would help break it down as to why it's so. But all that's going to lead you right back to the same place -- the bullpen isn't getting the job done.
The influence of a bullpen on the team's win-loss record explains a good portion of why the Dodgers have been so disappointing in the first third of the season. The bullpen's win-loss record is 4-14. While the win-loss stat is generally a terrible evaluator for relievers, it certainly tells a story here. No other team is doing worse in bullpen games.
The question, as always, is what are you gonna do about it? Four things can happen, hopefully all in the positive direction. Injuries heal, prospects get a chance, new blood finds its way in the organization, volatile reliever performance pendulum swings the other way.
Elbert, in case he's faded from your memory, is a hard-throwing lefty who gets a lot of strikeouts. He had a 2.43 ERA in 2011 and a 2.20 ERA in 2012. Hey now! But he's not really that good. Earned run average for relievers is an awkward measure of ability -- especially for guys who pitch a lot of partial innings like Elbert. A reasonable expectation might be that he has the talent to put up a ~3.70 ERA going forward. He's probably a solid contributor, but not a shutdown guy.
Meanwhile, what will become of Mr. Billingsley upon his return? If everyone is still healthy, that's six legitimate above-average major league starters. He might begin his path back to the rotation in the bullpen. Sooner rather than later, they'll probably have to convert either Bills or Dan Haren or Josh Beckett to the bullpen. That certainly ought to help in terms of quality bullpen arms. But all three of those guys are pitching for a contract. Haren's contract has a team option that turns into a player option if he throws 180 innings (plus he has incentives he can reach for this year if he stays a starter). So, none are going to be real happy about that kind of move. This gets right back to Don Mattingly's comments about too much focus on individuals, but it is what it is. You'd like to keep all six so when something does happen, you're not relying on Paul Maholm and AAA guys. Someone will go on the disabled list eventually, and there will be starts for all these guys. But in the meantime, there'll be some additional agitation.
What about prospects? The Dodgers have some legit options in the minor leagues. Chris Reed, Yimi Garcia, Colt Hynes, Zach Lee, Matt Magill, Jose Dominguez, Paco Rodriguez. Any of these guys has a good chance of being better than several of the bodies in our bullpen right now. But to get any of them in would require cutting ties with Maholm or Chris Perez. Perez was one of the worst pitchers in baseball last year. The Dodgers took a chance on him and he's one of the worst pitchers in baseball this year. Mahom has more walks than strikeouts. How much more does management need to see of these guys?
What about getting some new blood from outside the organization? A lot of relievers available for nothing but money who were snapped up lately: Todd Coffey, Carlos Marmol, Kevin Gregg and Luis Ayala. Ned Colletti didn't bite on any of them. Well, there's a few more: Octavio Dotel, Brandon Lyon, Ryan Madson, Christian Martinez and Heath Bell.
Also, Cuban defector Raciel Iglesias is supposedly ready to be in the big leagues right now, but he has not been cleared by the U.S. government to work in America yet. A college pitcher from the draft could get promoted right away in principle, but that seems exceedingly unlikely. Many relievers are probably available in trade -- Jose Veras, Jim Johnson, Grant Balfour -- a lot of teams are having the same problem as the Dodgers. Proven closer is a laughable concept. Cross your fingers and hope we don't overpay in trade. It seems almost inevitable.
Until some of the actions above start to kick in, the Dodgers are left with the same scary crew out there. The overuse issue has been reduced with Clayton Kershaw back from the DL. But the bullpen was actually worse in May (89 innings, 4.16 ERA) than April (95 innings, 3.78 ERA).
So, we just have to hope for things to work themselves out. The well-known volatility of relievers goes both ways. In 16 innings so far in June, the bullpen has a 1.15 ERA and the walk rate is back to respectable (good, even). On the season, the Dodgers' relievers are striking out 24 percent of batters they face (fourth in the league), but walking 11 percent (which is terrible, 25th in the league). They are trending in the right direction each month though, so if the bullpen's control is under control, that's one less frustration to deal with. The feeling of a reliever coming into a close game and proceeding to walk a couple guys en route to blowing the game is one of the lousiest fan experiences.
K%
|
BB%
|
K-BB%
|
|
April
|
26%
|
12%
|
14%
|
May
|
22%
|
11%
|
10%
|
June
|
35%
|
7%
|
28%
|
MLB
|
22%
|
9%
|
13%
|
Photo credit: File photo
DODGERS NEED COMPLETE CHANGE OVER..
ReplyDeletePITCHING COACH...FIRST BASE COACH...AND HITTING COACH....AND MANAGER.....AND ASIST MANAGER..
AS IMPORTANT AS BUILDING UP THE PLAYERS..!!!
THE DODGERS...LOOKS LIKE THE YMCA ...,,,,,,, LET EVERYONE PLAY...ESPECIALLY THOSE WHO ARE STRUGGLING AND UNDER PERFORMING...
AND DON"T LET HOT HITTING PLAYINGS PLAY. TWO GAMES IN A ROW !!! ..GIVE EVERYONE AN EQUAL CHANCE........NO WONDER PLAYERS LOOK AWKWARD IN THE FIELD AND HITTING.... THEY ARE BEING...... AMATUERIZED..
PLAYERS ARE CHANGED ALMOST EVERY DAY !!!...HOT OR COLD DOES NOT MATTER !!!......A RIGHT HANDED BABE RUTH WOULD NOT HIT AGAINST A RIGHT HANDED PITCHER.....IF THE DODGERS HAD HIM TODAY !!
" EAT THE CONTRACT..."...ALL DO NOTHING .. COACHES..!!!
MANY ARE " NICE GUYS ".... MAYBE GOOD PLAYERS ..BUT NOT COACHES THAT MAKE THINGS HAPPEN..!!!