The sabermetric blog of Cyril "Cy" Morong, retired economics professor
Thursday, November 5, 2015
Royals' Starters Excelled With Runners In Scoring Position
I looked at the following 7 pitchers on the Royals. These guys
were primarily starters and the vast majority of their innings were from
starting. I found their weighted average of OPS allowed with none on
and with RISP (weighted by PAs-maybe that is not quite right since SLG
is TBs over ABs).
Chris Young
Danny Duffy
Edinson Volquez
Jason Vargas
Jeremy Guthrie
Johnny Cueto
Yordano Ventura
With none on, they allowed an OPS of .731. With RISP it was .691. As I
mentioned in an earlier post, the team staff as a whole did .032 better with RISP (.668 vs. .700).
So the starters had an even bigger edge. A comment was made at the Hardball Times that
mabye that .032 differential existed because they brought in good
relievers with RISP and their relievers were much better than their
starters.
From 2010-14 for all of MLB, OPS with none on was .702 and with RISP
it was .733. So normally it goes up with RISP yet the Royals’ starters
managed to have it go way down. For the AL in 2015, OPS with none on was
.702 and with RISP it was .746.
Chris Young
Danny Duffy
Edinson Volquez
Jason Vargas
Jeremy Guthrie
Johnny Cueto
Yordano Ventura
With none on, they allowed an OPS of .731. With RISP it was .691. As I mentioned in an earlier post, the team staff as a whole did .032 better with RISP (.668 vs. .700). So the starters had an even bigger edge. A comment was made at the Hardball Times that mabye that .032 differential existed because they brought in good relievers with RISP and their relievers were much better than their starters.
From 2010-14 for all of MLB, OPS with none on was .702 and with RISP it was .733. So normally it goes up with RISP yet the Royals’ starters managed to have it go way down. For the AL in 2015, OPS with none on was .702 and with RISP it was .746.
Here are the OPS allowed stats with none on
Now with RISP