Sox Watch

Monday, June 26, 2006

Red Sox WPA through 6/26/06

Another wild win today. Just when you think that Ortiz couldn't possibly come through again, he proves you wrong. He needed to come up big today, because the team was not hitting on all cylinders. No runs for Wakefield through six innings. Wakefield, Seanez, and Lopez combining to blow most of a six-run lead in the seventh. Papelbon giving up his first HR, and his first real blown save, of the year. Gonzalez wasting a man-on-second, one-out chance in the tenth. Kapler and Lowell ruining a bases-loaded, one-out chance in the eleventh. This just did not look like a game that we were going to win. Until, of course, Big Papi came to the plate in the bottom of the twelfth, and, for the second game in a row, sent a Phillies pitcher walking slowly toward the dugout.

There were buckets of WPA to go around today, both positive and negative. Youkilis and Ortiz obviously take home the lion's share for tying and winning the game, but Crisp's double to lead off the twelfth was also huge, worth +0.239. And Wakefield's strong performance can't be overlooked, either. He piled up +0.389 WPA through six scoreless innings before giving back -0.058 in the seventh by loading the bases with no outs. He takes part of the heat for that debacle of an inning, but most of the blame belongs to Seanez (where have you heard that before?), who allowed four runs to score in facing just two batters.

The most interesting WPA story today was Papelbon. Normally, a blown save is a WPA killer for a closer. You take a situation where your team's chances of winning are in the 90% range, and you either reduce them to close to 0% by giving up the lead, or reduce them to around 50% by allowing the opposing team to tie. That's why closers typically pile up many small chunks of WPA, one for each save, and then give it back in big chunks whenever they blow a save. However, Papelbon today had a decent outing, despite the solo HR to Utley. First of all, he came in to get the third out in the eighth in a tough situation, an out that was worth +0.081. As the top of the ninth began, before the HR, the Sox chance of winning (Win Probability, or WP) was 82%. After the HR, it dropped to 50%, which is -32%, or -0.320, just for that one batter. However, he managed to get through the rest of the inning unscathed, which is worth a lot in a tie game, picking up +0.155 over the remainder of the inning. So his net for the day was -0.084, which is typically what you see for a run-of-the-mill bad relief appearance - not the type of calamitous WPA hit you normally see in a blown save. As a result, he still leads the rest of the team by a large margin, although if Ortiz continues hitting walk-offs, that lead won't stand up for long...

That's nine in a row for the Sox now, and three straight series sweeps. Let's hope this momentum continues against the Mets.


Individual Player WPA Contributions
Monday, 6/26/06
Phillies 7, Red Sox 8



Full-Season Player WPA Contributions
Through Monday, 6/26/06



Full-Season Category WPA Contributions
Through Monday, 6/26/06

Sunday, June 25, 2006

Red Sox WPA through 6/24/06

Individual Player WPA Contributions
Saturday, 6/24/06
Phillies 3, Red Sox 5



Full-Season Player WPA Contributions
Through Saturday, 6/24/06



Full-Season Category WPA Contributions
Through Saturday, 6/24/06

Red Sox WPA through 6/23/06

Individual Player WPA Contributions
Friday, 6/23/06
Phillies 2, Red Sox 10



Full-Season Player WPA Contributions
Through Friday, 6/23/06



Full-Season Category WPA Contributions
Through Friday, 6/23/06

Thursday, June 22, 2006

Red Sox WPA through 6/21/06

Individual Player WPA Contributions
Wednesday, 6/21/06
Nationals 3, Red Sox 9



Full-Season Player WPA Contributions
Through Wednesday, 6/21/06



Full-Season Category WPA Contributions
Through Wednesday, 6/21/06

Wednesday, June 21, 2006

Red Sox WPA through 6/20/06

Individual Player WPA Contributions
Tuesday, 6/20/06
Nationals 3, Red Sox 11



Full-Season Player WPA Contributions
Through Tuesday, 6/20/06



Full-Season Category WPA Contributions
Through Tuesday, 6/20/06

Tuesday, June 20, 2006

Red Sox WPA through 6/19/06

I didn't see this entire game, so I don't have too much analysis today.

However, there is one interesting WPA note on the play where Loretta was thrown out at the plate in the fourth inning. At this point, we had Loretta on second with Ortiz up and two outs. Ortiz singles to center and Loretta tries to score, but is gunned down by a nice throw from Byrd, the center fielder (MLB.com has video of the play). Normally I score this as follows:


  • A single for Ortiz moving the runner to third, which is +0.014 WPA for Ortiz in this situation (charged against the pitcher).
  • An out for Loretta advancing to score, which is worth -0.047 WPA in this situation. This gets charged to Loretta as the baserunner (with Byrd getting credit on the other side).

However, on this play you also had Manny in the on-deck circle, being, well, Manny. Rather than signalling Loretta to slide, he's instead standing behind the umpire, doing nothing. Manny's lack of involvement in the play looked like it cost Loretta a decent chance of sliding safely. So for this play, I decided to split the -0.047 evenly between Loretta and Manny. I usually don't give WPA credits/debits to players not directly involved in the play, but this was an unusual situation, one where it seemed appropriate to assign some of the debit to Manny even though he wasn't directly involved. This is part of why Manny comes out negative for the night, despite his 2-for-5 night and his HR in the eighth.

Individual Player WPA Contributions
Monday, 6/19/06
Nationals 3, Red Sox 6



Full-Season Player WPA Contributions
Through Monday, 6/19/06



Full-Season Category WPA Contributions
Through Monday, 6/19/06

Monday, June 19, 2006

Red Sox WPA through 6/18/06

I don't know which was more painful - watching Rudy Seanez get credit for the win, or listening to Jon Miller's inanities for almost four hours. Let's hope that Seanez gets designated for assignment soon, and ESPN never carries another Red Sox game.

Individual Player WPA Contributions
Sunday, 6/18/06
Red Sox 10, Braves 7



Full-Season Player WPA Contributions
Through Sunday, 6/18/06



Full-Season Category WPA Contributions
Through Sunday, 6/18/06

Red Sox WPA through 6/17/06

Individual Player WPA Contributions
Saturday, 6/17/06
Red Sox 5, Braves 3



Full-Season Player WPA Contributions
Through Saturday, 6/17/06



Full-Season Category WPA Contributions
Through Saturday, 6/17/06

Saturday, June 17, 2006

Red Sox WPA through 6/16/06

Individual Player WPA Contributions
Friday, 6/16/06
Red Sox 4, Braves 1



Full-Season Player WPA Contributions
Through Friday, 6/16/06



Full-Season Category WPA Contributions
Through Friday, 6/16/06

Friday, June 16, 2006

Red Sox WPA through 6/15/06

Individual Player WPA Contributions
Thursday, 6/15/06
Red Sox 3, Twins 5



Full-Season Player WPA Contributions
Through Thursday, 6/15/06



Full-Season Category WPA Contributions
Through Thursday, 6/15/06

Thursday, June 15, 2006

Red Sox WPA through 6/14/06

The Red Sox offense has now scored three runs in the last 21 innings. Sigh.

Individual Player WPA Contributions
Wednesday, 6/14/06
Red Sox 1, Twins 8



Full-Season Player WPA Contributions
Through Wednesday, 6/14/06



Full-Season Category WPA Contributions
Through Wednesday, 6/14/06

Wednesday, June 14, 2006

Red Sox WPA through 6/13/06

Well, in my book that easily qualified as the toughest loss of the year (so far, anyway - let's hope it doesn't get any worse than last night). To throw away eight innings of brilliant work by Schilling, plus three more from Papelbon and Timlin, with that wretched performance in the twelfth was like a punch in the gut.

Switching over to the more clinical WPA perspective to avoid having to relive just what a painful game it was, there were a couple notable statistical lowlights on the night. First of all, Julian Tavarez managed, in a single inning, to eclipse 23 games of suckitude from Rudy Seanez to move to the bottom of the barrel in the WPA charts. He's not just our worst relief pitcher. He's not just our worst pitcher. He's the worst player on the team, period. He's worse than Seanez and Alvarez and Holtz - put together. Throw in Josh Bard and the combined foursome still has not hurt the team as much as Tavarez.

On a more positive note, Gonzo's 3-for-5 performance last night continued his strong performance over the last week or so. Once mired himself in last place in the WPA standings, he has surged ahead to overtake first Matt Clement, and then last night Tavarez and Coco Crisp.

The game itself was of course a gem, at least through the eleventh inning. WPA gives us some perspective on the overall "excitement level" of a game. Last night neither team led by more than a run until the final swing of the bat - in fact, all but nine batters came to the plate with the score tied. This means that there was a lot of WPA on the line with every play. Summing up the total WPA, both positive and negative, gives us a way to measure the excitement level of the game - how much of your fingernails you chewed off over the course of the game. Of course, every game has a net WPA of either +0.500 or -0.500, but the net figures mask the big positives and negatives. Adding up the absolute values for all the players gives us a better sense of how the game felt. By this standard, last night's game, with a total WPA of 3.24, was by far the tensest of the year. Only five other games this year have exceeded the value of 2.00, and none has come close to 3.00.

The top five games in excitement level so far this year, apart from last night:

  • 4/29/06, total WPA 2.09 - Keith Foulke gets the win as the Sox come back from a 6-5 deficit with four runs in the ninth to beat the Devil Rays, 9-6.
  • 4/26/06, total WPA 2.20 - Manny's three-run homer in the eighth at Cleveland breaks a 5-5 tie. The Indians come back to score one in the bottom of the inning, but the Sox hold on to win, 8-6.
  • 4/21/06, total WPA 2.70 - The first extra-inning game of the season - Overbay doubles in a run in the bottom of the twelfth to give the Blue Jays a 7-6 victory.
  • 5/3/06, total WPA 2.78 - Another 7-6 loss to the Blue Jays, as Papelbon gives up his first (and still his only) run of the season in the top of the ninth.
  • 4/17/06, total WPA 2.81 - Patriots' Day. The Sox score one in the bottom of the eighth to take a one-run lead, the Mariners get the run back in the top of the ninth, and Loretta's walk-off HR in the bottom of the inning caps the 7-6 victory.


In contrast, the biggest yawner so far this year was on May 4, when the Sox took a five-run lead over Toronto in the first inning and went on to win 7-4. The total WPA in that game was just 0.571.

Here's a chart of the total absolute value of individual player WPA for each game so far this season.
Total Absolute Value WPA, Per Game
Through Tuesday, 6/13/06


Individual Player WPA Contributions
Tuesday, 6/13/06
Red Sox 5, Twins 2



Full-Season Player WPA Contributions
Through Tuesday, 6/13/06



Full-Season Category WPA Contributions
Through Tuesday, 6/13/06

Monday, June 12, 2006

Red Sox WPA through 6/11/06 (second game)

Individual Player WPA Contributions
Sunday, 6/11/06 (second game)
Rangers 13, Red Sox 6



Full-Season Player WPA Contributions
Through Sunday, 6/11/06 (second game)



Full-Season Category WPA Contributions
Through Sunday, 6/11/06 (second game)

Sunday, June 11, 2006

Red Sox WPA through 6/11/06 (first game)

Individual Player WPA Contributions
Sunday, 6/11/06 (first game)
Rangers 4, Red Sox 5



Full-Season Player WPA Contributions
Through Sunday, 6/11/06 (first game)



Full-Season Category WPA Contributions
Through Sunday, 6/11/06 (first game)

Red Sox WPA through 6/10/06

Individual Player WPA Contributions
Saturday, 6/10/06
Rangers 7, Red Sox 4



Full-Season Player WPA Contributions
Through Saturday, 6/10/06



Full-Season Category WPA Contributions
Through Saturday, 6/10/06

Saturday, June 10, 2006

Red Sox WPA through 6/9/06

I'm a bit relieved that Papelbon finally has his first blown save behind him. As blown saves go, this was about the best you could have hoped for. Thrown into a tough situation in the eight, with a man on third and two outs in a one-run game, Papelbon quickly yielded a base hit to Hank Blalock, ending his streak of consecutive saves at 20. That was not the end of the story, however, as the Sox came back with a run in the top of the ninth, and Papelbon returned to strike out three in the bottom of the inning to essentially secure a ninth-inning save for his own win. Papelbon lost -0.123 WPA in the eighth, but earned +0.203 in the ninth to come away with a net positive +0.080 for the night.

Tim Wakefield turned in his second-best outing of the year, WPA-wise, but the biggest contributor was Trot Nixon, who went 4-for-4 with a three run HR to come away with +0.436 WPA for the night.

Individual Player WPA Contributions
Friday, 6/9/06
Rangers 3, Red Sox 4



Full-Season Player WPA Contributions
Through Friday, 6/9/06



Full-Season Category WPA Contributions
Through Friday, 6/9/06

Friday, June 09, 2006

Red Sox WPA through 6/8/06

If you just look at the WPA, Curt Schilling comes out of this game looking like he (slightly) hurt the team, with a -0.012 total for the night. The three long balls he yielded were of course responsible for the negative total. The WPA doesn't tell the whole story, though. As far as I'm concerned, Schilling can give up three home runs every night he pitches if he wants to, as long as he continues to keep runners off the bases otherwise. Take your starter into the eighth allowing three runs, and turn the ball over to Papelbon in the ninth to shut things down, and you're going to win a lot of games.

This is now Schilling's fifth consecutive start without walking a batter. That's 34.2 innings of ball, during which time he has struck out 27. A 27-0 K/BB ratio is not too shabby. By contrast, Matt Clement has issued 19 walks over his last 34.2 innings. Schilling's ability to keep runners off the bases last night was almost uncanny - he threw a grand total of three pitches with a man on base (Damon, with his double in the third, had the only non-HR hit of the night, and Crisp promptly doubled him off on a line drive from Melky Cabrera).

For a while last night, it looked like Papelbon might have a chance to pick up his 21st save of the year, but Varitek put an end to that with his three-run shot in the seventh. Instead, the one who ended up with a chance for a save turned out to be Red Sox whipping boy Scott Proctor, who took the mound in the sixth with a 3-2 lead, nobody out, and the bases full of Red Sox. Talk about a tough save! Proctor of course immediately yielded the sacrifice fly to Youkilis to bring in the tying run, and went on to give up the shot to Varitek in the seventh. Proctor now has four blown saves in his last twelve appearances, not usually what you're looking for in a middle reliever. His ERA against the Red Sox is now 13.50, which is why he's dead-last in the Yankees WPA ranking (in games against Boston). However, he's not at the bottom of the Yankees overall team WPA for the whole season. That honor, according to Fangraphs, belongs to none other than Randy Johnson. Hehe.

Individual Player WPA Contributions
Thursday, 6/8/06
Red Sox 9, Yankees 3



Full-Season Player WPA Contributions
Through Thursday, 6/8/06



Full-Season Category WPA Contributions
Through Thursday, 6/8/06



Yankees Player WPA Contributions
Thursday, 6/8/06



Yankees Player WPA Contributions vs. Red Sox
Through Thursday, 6/8/06