June 25, 2012

The Truth About The Yankees’ Home Runs

The simple stupidity of the Yankees being criticized for relying on the home run ball speaks for itself. Are they supposed to stop trying to hit home runs to prove they can win without it? What’s the difference how they score their runs? Are they sacrificing other aspects of their game chasing homers?

The answer to the above questions is no.

They have players who hit a lot of home runs. If they lose games in which they haven’t homered, it’s a safe bet that they ran into a pretty good pitcher.

The out-of-context stat argument is more complicated. Picking and choosing a convenient stat to bolster an argument is not the true intent of using statistics to begin with. They’re designed to promote a factual understanding and not to fool readers into seeing things the way the writer wants.

Is it a bad thing that the Yankees score via the home run? No.

Is it indicative that they’ll continue that trend once the playoffs start and do they need to be prepared to find other ways to score runs when they’re in games against better teams with better pitchers? They’ll hit their homers, but it won’t be like it is now.

The truly important factor to examine isn’t whether or not they’re hitting home runs, but who they’re hitting the home runs against.

During the regular season there aren’t the top-tier pitchers they’re going to face in the playoffs. The better the pitcher is, the better his stuff is; the better his command is; the better his control is. He’s not going to make the same mistakes as the mediocre and worse pitchers they’re fattening up their power numbers against.

I looked at all the pitchers the Yankees have homered against this season.

The list follows:

Russell MartinClay BuchholzJustin VerlanderJose MijaresHomer BaileyJames ShieldsJ.P. HowellJonathon NieseJon Rauch

Mark TeixeiraAnthony SwarzakFelix DoubrontMatt AlbersBruce ChenLuis AyalaTyson Ross,Bartolo ColonGraham GodfreyHisanori TakahashiAlex CobbDillon GeeMike Minor

Robinson CanoJason MarquisLuke Hochevar (2), David PriceBronson Arroyo, Tyson Ross, Bartolo Colon, Ervin Santana, Alex Cobb, Johan Santana (2), Tom GorzelannyAnthony VarvaroTommy HansonMiguel Batista (2)

Alex Rodriguez: Ervin Santana, Clay Buchholz, Derek Holland, Justin Verlander (2) Tommy HottovyWill Smith (2), Octavio DotelJonny Venters, Tommy Hanson, Jon Niese

Derek JeterWei-Yin Chen, Hisanori Takahashi, Carl PavanoMatt Capps, Bruce Chen, Justin Verlander, Tommy Hanson

Raul Ibanez: James Shields (2), Jason IsringhausenNeftali FelizBurke BadenhopFelix Hernandez,Hector Noesi, Bronson Arroyo, Jonny Cueto, Randall DelgadoChris Young

Curtis Garnderson: Jake Arrieta, Ervin Santana (2), Carl Pavano, Anthony Swarzak (2), Jeff GrayPhil CokeMax ScherzerBrian Matusz, James Shields, David Price, Jason Hammel, Wei-Yin Chen, Will Smith, Bobby CassevahCasey CrosbyBobby ParnellTim Hudson, Tom Gorzelanny, Edwin Jackson

Nick SwisherJoel PeraltaKevin Gregg, Clay Buchholz, Vicente PadillaDrew SmylyJose Valverde, Luke Hochevar, Tyson Ross, Johan Santana, Cory GearrinR.A. Dickey

Eric Chavez: Clay Buchholz (2), Jason Hammel, Tommy Hanson, Jon Rauch

Andruw JonesDarren O’DayMatt MaloneyCollin BalesterSteve DelabarTommy Milone, Johan Santana, Jon Niese

There are some names above that the Yankees might be facing in the post-season. Shields, Price, Verlander, Hanson and a few others. But they’re not going to be able to use Hochevar, Pavano or most of the other mediocrities to beat on.

I don’t see the names Jered WeaverC.J. WilsonDan HarenStephen StrasburgGio Gonzalez or Yu Darvish in there.

If the Yankees don’t hit homers, then what?

Understanding the value of their homers is not the brainless bully strategy of, “Me swing hard; me hit home runs; team win.”

What was the score when the home runs were hit? What where the weather conditions? Did the pitcher make a mistake or did the hitter hit a good pitch? Was the game a blowout and the pitcher just trying to get the ball over the plate to get the game over with in either club’s favor?

These questions, among many other things, have to be accounted for.

Those who are complaining about the club needing to “manufacture” runs don’t know any more about baseball than those who are blindly defending the use of the home run without the full story.

Of course it’s a good thing that the Yankees hit a lot of home runs, but those home runs can’t be relied upon as the determinative factor of whether they’re going to win in the post-season because they’ll be facing better pitching and teams that will be able to use the homer-friendly Yankee Stadium themselves mitigating any advantage the Yankees might have. Teams that are more versatile, play good defense, steal bases and run with smart aggression and have strong pitching will be able to deal with the Yankees’ power.

Teams like the Mets are unable to do that.

The Yankees’ home runs are only an issue if they stop hitting them. Then they’ll have to find alternative ways to score when the balls aren’t flying over the fences. This is why it’s not a problem that they don’t have Brett Gardner now. In fact, it seems like the fans and media has forgotten about him. But they’re going to need him in the playoffs because he gives them something they barely have with this current configuration: he can run and wreak havoc on the bases and is an excellent defensive left fielder.

As much as Joe Morgan was savaged for his silly statements blaming the Oakland A’s inability to manufacture runs in their playoff losses during the Moneyball years, he wasn’t fundamentally inaccurate. It wasn’t about squeezing and hitting and running capriciously as Morgan wanted them to do and altering the strategy that got them to the playoffs; but it was about being able to win when not hitting home runs; when not facing a pitching staff that is going to walk you; when a team actually has relievers who can pitch and not a bunch of names they accumulated and found on the scrapheap.

The A’s couldn’t win when they didn’t get solid starting pitching or hit home runs.

Can the Yankees?

That’s going to be the key to their season. Then the true value of their homer-happy offense will come to light.

 

3 Comments:
  • HR's
  • how about
    its going going going GONE
  • There is no measurable parameter to equate their league leading HR production with their disastrous team average in RISP situation for cause-and-effect relationship.

    I can only infer from known facts: HR's are a lot more difficult to hit than singles and doubles...or BB. With RISP, most often a single is all it takes to score. Grand slam is rarer despite the theoretical supposition that pitchers have to throw strikes more than ever.

    It is not preposterous to deduce that Yanks' predilection to hitting HR has a deleterious effect in scoring with RISP.

    Yanks should take notice of their captain, the consummate team player, to have the right mindset in situational hitting. Jeter took 10 years in MLB and 135 AB with bases loaded to hit his first and only grand slam, his prior 156 HR's notwithstanding.



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