armchairgm
all sports, all you
+ Add Friends
You are not logged-in.
Sign Up - Log In
Main Page
Sports
Write
Articles
Hot Links
Images
Meet People
Fun
Explore
MLB - NFL - NBA - NHL - College Basketball - College Football - Soccer - Nascar - Other
Article - Locker Room Discussion
All Articles - New Articles - Today's Articles
Submit a Link - Approve Links
Picture Game - Ratings - Polls - Pick Game - Quiz Game - Spring Silliness
Random Page - Random Image - Random Fan
Edit
Page history Discuss pageWhat links here

The Return of the King?

10
Vote
by user Leftyloon
Is Maddux Back?
Is Maddux Back?

On Sunday, Greg Maddux continued his early season wizardry by holding the St. Louis Cardinals scoreless through 7 innings to run his record to 4-0. His ERA through 4 starts is a microscopic 0.99. Is Maddux's success simply a product of small sample size or has he been able to compensate for his dimished skills by making changes in his pitching? Let's look at the numbers. First, let's examine the three key components that pitchers themselves are able to exert great control over: walks, homeruns, and strikeouts. Here are Maddux's walks (this includes walks plus hit batters), homeruns, and strikeouts allowed per 9 innings since 2001. In addition, his runs allowed (earned plus unearned runs) are also included.


Year BB/9 HR/9 SO/9 RA/9
2001 1.31 0.77 6.68 3.32
2002 2.21 0.63 5.33 3.03
2003 1.69 0.99 5.11 4.62
2004 1.78 1.48 6.39 4.36
2005 1.72 1.16 5.44 4.48
2006 1.65 0.33 5.93 0.99


The pattern is pretty evident. Maddux's walk totals have remained relatively stable. His strikeouts have decreased since 2001, but have jumped around a bit. The one statistic that clearly jumps out is his homerun rate. Since 2002, his homerun rate has increased every season, and not coincidentally, his runs allowed per nine innings has almost mimicked this increase. Maddux seems to have reversed that trend in 2006. His strikeout and walk rates are pretty similar to his 2004 and 2005 numbers. The big difference is that he has cut his homer rate by over 75% from its high of 1.48 per nine innings in 2004. From 2003-2005, Greg Maddux was no longer Greg Maddux because he was wild within the strikeout zone. It would appear he has been able to rectify that problem.

Has schedule strength benefited Maddux? Let's take a look. He has started 2 games against St. Louis, and one game each against Los Angeles and Cincinnati. St. Louis ranks 10th in the 16 team NL in runs scored, LA is 6th, and Cincinnati is 1st. In regards to homeruns, LA is 14th, St. Louis is 9th, and Cincinnati is 1st. It appears schedule strength has been a little tougher than average for Maddux in regards to runs scored, and about average for homeruns hit. So Maddux has not parlayed an easy schedule into his 4-0 start.

All seems well, but one statistic sends off a red flag. Here is Maddux's groundball to flyball ratio for 2001-2006.


Year GB/FB Ratio
2001 1.84
2002 2.23
2003 1.84
2004 1.78
2005 1.96
2006 1.39


Maddux has allowed homeruns at a lower rate, but his groundball to flyball ratio is actually at an all-time low. This means he is allowing a higher percentage of flyballs. And of course, flyballs are the ones that tend to go over the fence. While it is obvious Maddux's ERA will not remain 0.99 on the season, I think he is in for some serious regression unless he drastically improves his groundball ratio. Those flyballs are eventually going to turn into homeruns. Be very wary about starting Maddux on your fantasy team.


Date

Mon 04/24/06, 6:17 pm EST <pageTools></pageTools>

Enable Comment Auto-Refresher
DNLLegend
1315 days ago
Score 4+-
If you have Maddux, you have to sell him. His peripherals aren't suggestive of a 0.99 ERA. Check out his <A HREF="http://www.f...mp;type=full">BABIP graph</A> on FanGraphs. He's way below average right now, and that's mostly a function of dumb luck. As that comes up -- and it will -- so will his other numbers.

Also note that BABIP is independent of homers hit (as a homer is not a "ball in play"), so when both his BABIP and HR rate come up, Maddux should revert to 2003-2005 form.

Permalink | Reply
LeftyloonJV Squad
1315 days ago
Score 0+-
Very good point about the BABIP. I forgot to include that when examining Maddux's stats.
Permalink | Reply
ASwaffAll-American
1315 days ago
Score -1+-
I would agree with the idea of selling Maddux, but for one thing. This city has already faced enormous backlash for selling Maddux before. Imagine the backlash they'll face now if they trade the only starting pitcher that's performed to this point in the season. It's way too early to talk about trade, especially when you look at a rotation with pitchers with ERAs over 6.00, and Carlos Zambrano who is 0-1 with a 3.94. Besides, you think other teams don't know that Greg Maddux should fall back to earth in time? You'll never get what you want for him, so you may as well stick with a guy that's all but guaranteed to get you 15 wins this season.
Permalink | Reply
ASwaffAll-American
1315 days ago
Score 1+-
Sorry, that should have said "a rotation with THREE pitchers with ERAs over 6.00." Rusch has a 6.41, Marshall has a 6.28 and Williams has a 7.30.
Permalink | Reply
Anonymous Fanatic #1
1315 days ago
Score 0+-
Sorry, just got that you were talking about fantasy baseball. My bad.
Permalink | Reply
Bball3345Draft Pick
1315 days ago
Score 0+-
According to BaseballProspectus, Chicago's defense has been the best in the majors, converting 76% of balls in play for outs.
Permalink | Reply
Add your Comment
ArmchairGM welcomes all comments. If you don't want to be anonymous, Register or Login. It's free


Retrieved from "http://armchairgm.wikia.com/The_Return_of_the_King%3F"

This page was last modified 12:49, 25 April 2006. Content is available under the GFDL.

Contribute

ArmchairGM's pages can be edited.
Is this page incomplete? Is there anything wrong?
Change it!

Edit this page Discuss this page Page history

Recent contributors to this page

The following people recently contributed to this article.

Embed this on your site

Main Page About Special Pages Help Terms of Use Advertise