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4 horsemen

Much has been made recently of the relative struggles of the Yankee pitching staff.  Sure, it’s nothing in comparison to what Texas is going through, but the Yankees are still waiting on Andy Pettitte to return from injury, for one of AJ Burnett or Javier Vazquez to find some semblance of form and earn the fourth spot in the rotation in the playoffs, and for Phil Hughes to right himself after recent struggles.  Additionally, both Damaso Marte and Alfredo Aceves are out for the year.  On the offensive side, the club is also battling through injuries.  Nick Swisher has a noticeable limp and a deep bone bruise in his knee, Austin Kearns has a bruised hand, Jorge Posada has concussion symptoms (but has been cleared to play, thankfully), and Francisco Cervelli has been diagnosed with an awful case of not being a very good baseball player and deserving to be demoted or at least rarely get playing time.

Yet perhaps lost in the shuffle is the excellence of the Yankee bullpen, a bullpen which is shaping up to be a formidable weapon in October.  With the acquisition of Kerry Wood, the Yankees now have four very solid pitchers able to close out games, not counting Mariano Rivera. Since the All-Star Break, here are their numbers:

Boone Logan, LHP: 16 innings, 0.55 ERA, 10 hits, 4 walks, 19 strikeouts.

Joba Chamberlain, RHP, 23.2 innings, 4.18 ERA, 22 hits, 7 walks, 22 strikeouts.

David Robertson, RHP, 21 innings, 1.25 ERA, 13 hits, 11 walks, 30 strikeouts.

Kerry Wood, RHP (since coming to the Yankees on 7/31): 16 innings, 0.54 ERA (1 earned run), 10 hits, 10 walks, 20 Ks.

Of these four, Yankee fans can be most happy about Boone Logan and Kerry Wood.  Both came to the team with huge question marks.  Logan throws hard but struggles with command.  Wood has been an incredibly successful pitcher at times, but can’t stay healthy.  Yet both have performed about as well as anyone could have anticipated.

As a result, the Yankees have four legitimate set-up options for Joe Girardi to play with in the playoffs.  Better yet, there is currently no predetermined setup man.  This means that each reliever can be utilized as the situation demands, and that higher leverage situations will be handled by the appropriate reliever. There are some obvious usage patterns that have developed thus far, though. Logan’s primary purpose is to retire left-handed batters, and he’s performed superbly, holding them to a .188/.278/.219 line. Girardi also seems to prefer using Robertson when there are runners on base, possibly because Robertson’s ability to get strikeouts is so incredible (10.91 K/9 in 2010).  Additionally, he seems to trust Wood more than Chamberlain at this point.  However, this hasn’t meant that Chamberlain has been relegated permanently to the 7th inning, and Wood to the 8th.  Instead, he seems free to bring in Wood in higher leverage spots, whether it be the seventh or the eighth.  Often times, he will let Wood pitch the 8th as well, or go to Chamberlain for lower-leverage spots.  It could just be a small sample, but it does appear that Girardi favors Wood in the higher leverage spots, regardless of inning.  This is how a bullpen should be managed.

Despite the loss of Marte and Aceves and the relative struggle of the early-season 8th inning man, Joba Chamberlain, the Yankees’ bullpen is in a good position headed into the playoffs.  They have four relievers peaking at the right time, and it will enable Girardi to have a shorter leash with some of the more unstable starters.  It’s almost frightening, actually, like handing a 16 year old the keys to a Porsche and telling him to keep it under 90 mph.  Girardi has the tendency to play the matchups in the bullpen, and sometimes it blows up in his face.  But it’s a good problem to have, really, and it could prove to be one of the Yankees’ strongest weapons this playoff season.  And I haven’t even mentioned the Greatest of All Time, #42.

For the record, yes, I did try to make the title as obnoxiously over-the-top as possible.  Feel free to use it and turn it into a meme.  Also, the Photoshop is courtesy of me.

On Tuesday I linked a piece that Tommy Bennett of Baseball Prospectus wrote about the best relievers in baseball.  In this piece, Bennett discusses the difficulty involved when trying to evaluate Mariano Rivera, who consistently outperforms even the most advanced metrics.  Rivera’s skill, Bennett concludes, is his apparent ability to sustain a low BABIP and to prevent home runs.  Bennett’s underlying approach was interesting though.  He gave each reliever a “score,” is based on their respective WXRL and SIERA scores.  Here is how he describes his methodology:

We’ll take WXRL and SIERA for all pitchers who have pitched solely in relief. For each pitcher, we’ll calculate how many standard deviations they are away from the mean in each category. Then we’ll add them together. For example, a pitcher who was one standard deviation better than the mean in both SIERA and WXRL would get a score of two.

So I’ve followed his lead.  Currently there are 11 teams with a reasonable shot at making the playoffs.  In the American League they are the Yankees, Rays, Red Sox, Twins and Rangers.  In the National League they are the Braves, Phillies, Reds, Cardinals, Padres and Giants.  I examined each team’s bullpen and tried to pick the six relievers that were the best and/or the most likely to see action in the playoffs.  I went with six relievers instead of seven for two reasons.   For one, not every team has a set-in-stone seventh reliever.  More to the point though, this exercise is about identifying the best relievers in the playoffs.  The seventh man out of the pen in October is usually a clean-up guy who sees action only in low leverage spots.  Picking the top 6 is a bit of inexact science, since it involves trying to figure out usage patterns for teams that I don’t watch regularly, but I did my best.  As such, the following relievers missed the cut: Wakefield, Fisher, Aceves, Martinez, Feldman, Sonnanstine, Herndon, Webb and Hawkesworth.

The results are after the jump.
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May 182010

(the following originally appeared on my blog here last night)

I don’t always watch the postgame show. Most of what I care about–manager and player quotes–are picked up on by the beat writers, but after a win like tonight’s, I kept YES on while I made gleeful and petulant comments on Twitter.

Girardi’s postgame conference with the reporters actually kept my attention for a couple of reasons: 1) for the way in which he defended his player, and 2) the managing of an injury-depleted bullpen.

There was one particular exchange of note: the question, which I cannot quote word-for-word, so please pardon the summary, nor can I officially identify who asked it:

Q: So, since it seems like you skipped Vazquez, so he didn’t have to handle the pressure of the situation–

The answer involved a very animated Girardi. Now, I’m sure, behind closed doors that some have been privy to seeing him really light up, but as far as anything I’ve seen on television, this was the most, erm, cross I have seen the Yankee skipper:

““I want to make this clear. He was not skipped because of that situation. Our bullpen is a mess. We needed a long guy. We could not activate Chan Ho Park if you didn’t have a long man. You couldn’t call up some of the guys we sent down, you couldn’t recall them, and you did not have Nova. We wanted Chan Ho Park back in our bullpen, and that’s why Javy had to do it.”

Let’s dissect that a bit, shall we?

First, there’s Girardi’s defense of Vazquez. It should not have needed to occur at all, but there you have it.

No, no one expects Javier Vazquez to be the Yankee ace, nor do you want to embarrass him, but if he can’t take the mound against a decent team (and Boston, thus far, is not), then he shouldn’t be pitching in baseball. Yes, I saw the references to “the last time Javier pitched in a Yankee uniform in relief” on Twitter, and yes, how could I not think about it, but, see, that’s the thing about baseball. You can’t forever dwell on past failures.

If Javy’s moved on, then we probably should, too.

Second, there’s Girardi’s admission that the Yankee bullpen is, in his words, “a mess”.

This ‘mess’ is due to a couple reasons, most of which relate directly to one another, starting with the rained out game in Detroit. The double-header the next day meant that some other starter had to be found for Sunday’s game against the Twins, as both Vazquez and Hughes pitched on the same day. Sabathia took the final game against the Tigers, and Burnett and Pettitte the first two against the Twins.

The Yankees had two long men in the bullpen: Sergio Mitre and Ivan Nova, and the start was given to Mitre. You can debate the merits of Mitre over Nova all you want, but this is besides the point.

Mitre left the game on Sunday with a lead, having given the Yankees five innings, and thus making himself unavailable for Monday’s game. After Joba’s high-stress outing on Sunday, as well as having been up twice on Saturday, Girardi had also deemed him (along with Robertson) unavailable for tonight’s game. In a later comment, Girardi reflected, saying how hard it can be to not use arms, but that the more important obligation is to keep everyone healthy–which, unlike what Joe Torre may have you believe, means not over-using relievers. It means that some days you’ll be in a lurch, because as much as you might want to use reliever B instead of reliever E, reliever B just needs that day off. His health is much more important than one game in a 162 game season.

Thus, at the start of today’s game, if you did not include Vazquez, the Yankees had at their disposal: Boone Logan, Damaso Marte, Chan Ho Park (replacing Ivan Nova off of the DL), Mariano Rivera and….well, that’s it. Alfredo Aceves is on the DL, and Chamberlain and Robertson were unavailable.

Chan Ho Park, who can pitch more than one inning in relief if need be, but not five, was then tapped to pitch two, and in his first game back from the disabled list, he was, shall we say, a little more than rusty. This was very possibly (I’m not in Girardi’s head, so I can’t say for sure) in Girardi’s mind when he told Vazquez to be ready to pitch out of the bullpen.

The Yankees, then, really needed Hughes to give their bullpen length tonight, but as happens with a young starter, Hughes was unable to do so. Boone Logan faced his few batters–and not especially well, either, Chan Ho Park his, Damaso Marte for nearly two innings, his.

With the exception of Mariano, who would have pitched had it been a save situation, Vazquez was literally the last pitcher the Yankees had at their disposal. As a starter, had the game gone into extras, Vazquez could have, in Girardi’s words, given them 100 pitches if need be–fortunately, this was not the case.

Tomorrow, the Yankees, I guess, might have Chamberlain, Robertson and Mariano available, assuming all are healthy, and I don’t know about the others. Thus, the forecast for rain and more rain may very well be a blessing.

Bullpen management is not easy, since bullpens themselves are often fluid. In 2008 and 2009, Girardi proved to us, no matter how much we went ‘buuh, that makes no sense!’, that he knows what he’s doing on this point (Certain games of the ALCS excepted). Girardi has taken, the past two seasons, a bullpen that looked like an arson squad in April, and turned it into a solid core for the team. While we might rail against his overmanaging, the fact is, when he does it, he’s doing his best to keep arms from falling off of guys–which doesn’t just hurt the team that game, but can ruin careers. Ask Scott Proctor (et al).

When a bullpen is compromised because of rainouts and injury, managing it becomes even harder. Can you honestly say that you would avoid the temptation to go to Chamberlain in the eighth tonight? Really? Especially when you consider that it was, after all, a Yankees-Red Sox game?

I’ll admit that at first the Vazquez-to-the-bullpen-for-this-week move didn’t make a whole lot of sense to me, but after the course of tonight’s game, it’s a lot easier to see why it was done.

You can argue about bullpen construction–if having two lefties is really ultimately necessary–all you want, but as it turns out, Girardi’s got a pretty good handle on this managing thing.

The banged-up Yankee roster had to resort to using Javier Vazquez as a long reliever last night. I actually give Joe Girardi a lot of credit for foresight – he skipped Javier in the rotation in part to take a start away from his worst starting pitcher, but also in part to allow the team to use their 5th starter as a long man while Sergio Mitre recovered from his spot start. However, he appeared only after the Yankee bullpen blew yet another lead. After Mariano Rivera, Joba Chamberlain, Alfredo Aceves, and Sergio Mitre, the Yankee bullpen has been a disaster this season.

I definitely expected the group of David Robertson, Alfredo Aceves, Chan Ho Park, Damaso Marte, and Joba Chamberlain to be an effective bridge to Mariano Rivera. Instead, they have been a glaring weakness on an overall strong team. With injuries to key players, including the effective Aceves, the Yankees can’t afford to let their bullpen plod along all season in the middle innings. They have replacement options, and would be stupid not to use them.

Boone Logan has been a complete and utter failure this season. Joe Girardi’s desire to have a second left-handed pitcher for strategic purposes has led him to hold on to a player that should never have been, and should never be, a part of a major league contending team’s bullpen. He has proven time and again to be a terrible pitcher who is incapable of getting hitters out. Left-handed batters are getting on base 50% of the time this season against him. Boone Logan should be immediately optioned down, or outright released, and replaced by a member of the Yankee Triple-A bullpen.

Who should replace Logan? Mark Melancon. Melancon has never been given any kind of extended shot at a regular major league role, despite great stuff and plenty of Triple-A success. Melancon’s line this season? 15 appearances, 23 innings, 12.1 K/9, 3.1 BB/9 and a 2.74 ERA. He no longer belongs at that level, and should already be in the majors. The Yankees have been reluctant to promote Melancon permanently for whatever reason, and it has cost them.

Furthermore, the Yankees should temporarily start changing the roles of Sergio Mitre and Chan Ho Park. I’m willing to give CHoP a pass for tonight after coming off the DL, but overall he has yet to prove he can consistently pitch at a high level. He has however proven that he can provide the Yankees innings, which sets him up perfectly for the long relief role. Sergio Mitre is one of the few Yankee relievers actually getting hitters out right now, and should be used in shorter, higher-leverage situations until Alfredo Aceves returns, he starts to pitch poorly, or CHoP proves himself able to pitch well.

Sergio Mitre needs to be pushed into a short relief role because David Robertson can’t seem to handle it this season. He seems to have lost some of his magic, and has proven easily hittable. His walk rate has skyrocketed, and his pitch counts have gone up with it. Something is seriously wrong with Robertson, but he keeps being pushed into important situations out of necessity. Robertson needs to get himself straightened out, but right now the Yankee roster situation doesn’t allow the team to carry a project. If one of Melancon, CHoP, or Robertson himself doesn’t settle in to an effective setup role in the next week or two, the Yankees need to let Robertson get straightened out where he is supposed to get straightened out: Scranton.

Who should replace Robertson? Jon Albaladejo. Albaladejo has the quietest 1.49 career ERA at Triple-A ever. He has absolutely dominated the level, and continues to do so this year. In 18 1/3 innings, he has 21 strikeouts and 7 walks. This is after posting a year after posting a 0.8 BB/9 for Scranton. I’ve always been a huge Robertson fan, and continue to be confident in his future, but it is ridiculous to allow one guy to blow games in the majors while you have a young prospect dominating Triple-A like Albaladejo is. All it costs is an option.

Joe Girardi is so much better than Joe Torre that I almost feel guilty complaining about the decisions he makes with his bullpen. I really hate to think about how beat up Alfredo Aceves’ arm would be if Torre was still manager. But his use of Boone Logan and David Robertson this season in key situations has been borderline inexcusable. With the Yankees chasing what seems like an unbeatable Rays team, he can’t afford to keep making the same dumb decisions. The Yankees need to use the options that they have.


One frequent complaint of baseball fans attempting to quantify the performance of relievers is the lack of a metric that provides an adequate representation of how a reliever impacts the game. ERA is faulty for players who frequently enter with runners on base, and other stats like inherited runners scored and WHIP tend to give only a partial picture. The save is the least helpful indicator, as it does not differentiate between a save with a 3-run lead and a much more difficult 4 or 5 out save in a one run contest. Attempting to remedy this situation, Tom Tango and Fangraphs have created a new metric for evaluating relievers, based on WPA. For those who are not familiar with WPA, here is a quick primer:

WE (win expectancy): The percent chance a particular team will win based on the score, inning, outs, runners on base, and the run environment.

WPA (win probability added): WPA is the difference in win expectancy (WE) between the start of the play and the end of the play. That difference is then credited/debited to the batter and the pitcher. Over the course of the season, each players’ WPA for individual plays is added up to get his season total WPA.

Using WPA, they have devised a way to credit relievers for particularly good performances, called shutdowns, and give demerits for poor performances, called meltdowns:

A Shutdown is when a reliever accumulates greater than or equal to 0.06 WPA in any individual game.

A Meltdown is when a reliever’s WPA is less than or equal to -0.06 in any individual game.

This is simply a more precise way to evaluate the impact the reliever had on the game, and considers the context of the situation, such that 2 runs allowed in a 12-2 game are weighed differently than the same 2 runs in a 4-3 game. In the comments, Tango notes that the ratio is 1.6 Shutdowns for every Meltdown, and that a poor reliever would have a ratio of 1 to 1. Let’s take a look at the Yankees bullpen and how it has performed in this area thus far:

The last two columns represent Shutdowns (SD) and Meltdowns (MD). It all seems fairly intuitive to me. Alfredo Aceves has been used in a number of tight spots, and his ability to eat 2-3 innings in an outing contributes to his good showing. Mariano and Joba have also been excellent, with the two of them combining for just one poor outing. Meanwhile, Boone Logan has been neither great nor poor, while Chan Ho Park and David Robertson have shown wild inconsistency. Finally, Damaso Marte has been atrocious, allowing a number of inherited runners to score. The metric seems to fit with the observed performances, and gives a quick and dirty way to measure impact on the game. I hope it catches on.

From Marc Carig:

In the sixth inning of a 6-2 Yankees victory against the Angels, Park had already completed his final warm-up pitches in the bullpen and was making a few extra throws when he felt what he described as tightness in his right hamstring.
Though Park called the sensation “minor,” bullpen coach Mike Harkey told Park it was too early in the season to risk pitching through the issue.
Park missed most of last September with a pulled his right hamstring but returned in time to help the Phillies in the postseason.
Said Park: “This is a different spot and much more minor than that.”

This does not sound like a big deal, but the Yankees might choose to be cautious and put Park on the DL. If they do, there are 3 options to take his place: Mark Melancon, Boone Logan, and Royce Ring. Here are their minor league numbers with Scranton thus far:

Melancon: 7 IP, 4H, 1ER, 1BB, 8K, 1HR
Logan: 6.2 IP, 3H, 1ER, 1BB, 9K, 0HR
Ring: 4.2 IP, 2H, 0ER, 3BB, 3K, 0HR

Logan and Ring are both lefties who are likely to be used as specialists in the majors, while Melancon is a righty without drastic splits who can be used for multiple innings. While Melancon seems to be the best choice due to his similarity to Park, I think Logan would get the call. I am not certain that the Yankees want to have Melancon on the “Scranton shuttle,” coming up and down every time a reliever is needed for a few days. Rather, they likely will bring him up when he will have a chance to hold onto a spot for a while. Furthermore, Girardi has said that he likes to have two lefties in the pen for strategic reasons, and the Yankees have plenty of arms out there that can give them enough length to justify carrying a specialist. While I would like to see Melancon get a shot, it seems likely that Logan is the next in line for a roster spot.

Apr 142010

Via Joel Sherman of the NY Post:

David Robertson has not thrown the ball well from late in spring training right through this early season. Now keep in mind that it is both early and that the Yankees like Robertson a lot. They not only love his stuff, but think that he is tough-minded and can handle big situations even in the AL East and The Bronx.

But he is young and he does have options, and the Yanks have alternatives they like. Both Boone Logan and Mark Melancon left positive impressions in spring training, and both have gotten off very well in small samples early this season at Triple A: Logan has allowed no runs in 4 1-3 innings with no walks and seven strikeouts while Melancon has permitted one run in six innings with one walk and seven strikeouts. In addition, after a horrible spring, Jonathan Albaladejo has righted at Triple-A with one run and seven strikeouts in five innings.

So if Robertson does not begin performing better the Yankees are going to at least consider those alternatives.

Robertson has not really had a blemish-free appearance since camp ended, however, I do not think that the Yankees are ready to ship him down to Scranton anytime soon. His worst appearance on the young season came in the ninth inning of yesterday’s game, when he gave up 4 earned runs and allowed 4 hits (the big blow came from Bobby Abreu’s grand slam). Prior to that, he had given up hits in each of his outings, yet he had not allowed an earned run. In addition, his velocity is strong, so, with regards to that, he is “throwing the ball well.” Thus, at this point, I doubt the Yankees are overly concerned with his 2.1 inning performance – a small sample – in 2010 (there’s not much to worry about).

Photo by Getty Images

Watching Alfredo Aceves throw in the bullpen would lead one to wonder how he has had moderate success as a major leaguer. He primarily throws 4 pitches, with none being particularly impressive or noteworthy. Yet, he consistently gets positive results out of the bullpen, and was an integral part of both last night’s victory and the 2009 World Championship club. So how is he doing it?

The answer is simple: Aceves effectively mixes his four pitches, and locates all of them consistently. He walked just 1.71 batters per 9 innings last season, which allowed him to post a sterling 4.31 K/BB. Let’s take a look at his outing last night to see how he attacked hitters in his 2 inning stint.

The table, coming courtesy of Brooks Baseball, shows that Aceves threw his fastball about 48 percent of the time, while using his 3 breaking pitches, cutter, curveball, and changeup 3, 4, and 5 times respectively. Other than the curveball, he was locating all of his pitches well, throwing at least 70% for strikes. As you can see, the velocity on the various pitches varied enough to keep hitters off balance. These attributes are not specific to this game, as he maintained similar ratios and velocities over the 2009 season. A look at the individual at bats shows how he used his ability to locate four pitches and change speeds to attack hitters.

Batter #1: Adrian Beltre
Beltre is a notorious first pitch fastball hitter. Aceves threw him a cutter down and away, baiting Beltre into swinging at what he thought was a fastball and Beltre lined out to Jeter.

Batter #2: JD Drew
Aceves started Drew out with a fastball on the low and outside corner, a perfect pitch. He then lowered Drew’s eye angle with a curveball down for a ball, and then came up and away with back to back changeups, with the second one inducing a groundout. This screengrab from Gameday illustrates how well Aceves locates to the edges of the zone:

Batter#3: Mike Cameron
Aceves threw Camron a cutter on the outer half that he fouled off, and then busted him inside with a FB. Cameron grounded to short, but Jeter threw it away.

Batter #4: Marco Scutaro
The scouting report on Scutaro must be to throw him fastballs, because Aceves threw him 4, to four different portions of the plate. Scutaro grounded out on a 2-1 count.

Batter #5: Jacoby Ellsbury
Aceves started Ellsbury with two curveballs down, one inside and one outside, bringing the count to 1-1. He then added some velocity with a changeup up, nipped the outside corner with a fastball that brought the velocity even higher while dropping the location a bit, and then induced a groundout by returning to the changeup at the bottom of the zone. This is another prime example of how Aceves gets outs.

Batter #6: Dustin Pedroia
Pedroia took a fastball down the middle for a called strike. Aceves then threw the same pitch but dropped it a few inches, and Dustin lifted a harmless flyout to center.

Batter #7: Victor Martinez
A curveball down and a fastball away put Aceves in a 2-0 hole, but he got a cutter over that got Martinez to foul it off. At 2-1, Aceves perfectly placed a fastball on the outside corner that evened the count. He then followed that with a changeup even further outside that Martinez chased and lofted to left for an easy out.

Aceves needed just 23 pitches to get through two innings despite Jeter’s error, and threw 16 strikes. He located well, as few of his pitches caught the middle of the plate, and he effectively mixed his pitches to keep hitters off balance. This formula served him well in his strong 2009, and continued to do so in his first outing of 2010.


When Joe Girardi removed David Robertson for Damaso Marte after just one batter during last night’s contest, the cries of “overmanaging” that first surfaced early last season and peaked during the playoffs began to emanate from the Yankee faithful. As I noted on Twitter, I hate that reaction in part because it is often espoused in situations where the move is perfectly logical, and in part because it is generally stated while solely considering the game at hand, rather than in the context of an entire season. There are various reasons for a manager making a move that some fans might see as overmanaging but is actually simply good managing:

1) Platoon advantage: While Joe may make pitching changes to obtain the platoon advantage a bit too often, it is hard to argue with the thinking behind a move such as the one he made last night. He was poised to use Robertson against Ortiz IF he retired Youkilis, meaning Robertson was effectively going to serve as the 8th inning man unless Youkilis got on base. When Youkilis reached, a situation tailor-made for Marte presented itself. Ortiz has awful numbers against Damaso, and Joba was available to finish the inning. Obtaining the platoon advantage when you have a bullpen that can provide plenty of innings is not overmanaging. It is simply managing.

2) Determining roles: Girardi needs to begin sorting his relievers by figuring out a pecking order so that he can most efficiently utilize his bullpen. Rather than establish a hierarchy out of the gate and then have months pass before certain pitchers pitch in high-pressure situations, Joe is throwing everyone into the fire right away, and will likely continue doing so for much of April. While this process may cost the Yankees a game or two along the way, it is almost certain to provide long term dividends.

3) Keeping everyone involved: The Yankees play a very choppy early schedule, with 3 off days interspersed among the first 7 games. By utilizing all of his relievers in short stints, Joe is helping keep everyone involved and fresh. It would simply be poor managing to leave a number of relievers on the bench during this span and have them be ice cold when you need them later this month. Only long-man Sergio Mitre has yet to make an appearance, and a number of relievers have appeared in both games.

4) Spreading the workload: A related point is that Joe tends to try and spread the pitching workload among all of his relievers, rather than just ride a hot hand. It is for this reason that, in the past, you might have seen a guy like Brian Bruney pitching in a spot that made you a bit uncomfortable, or Phil Coke pitching in a spot where Phil Hughes belonged. While Robertson can obviously handle a greater workload than he has been given over the last two games, his usage makes sense in the context of the other factors listed here.

The fact of the matter is, at the end of the season we will likely look back, as we have at the end of the last two years, and note that Girardi did an excellent job managing the bullpen, utilizing his best arms in the most important situations and keeping everybody involved and healthy. As THCM states in this comment, we have gone through this before. Joe may make the occasional mistake and overmanage a bit at times, but for the most part, it seems that he has a defined plan regarding his bullpen that results in its optimization over the long season. It is time to stop the “overmanaging” calls each time Joe trots out of the dugout.

Apr 072010

Trial by fire, indeed.

After entering the seventh inning of the Bomber-BoSox opener on Sunday night, Chan Ho Park, Brian Cashman’s touted offseason relief addition, promptly surrendered three runs, two of which were of the earned variety (the third run, the go-ahead run, scored thanks to Damaso Marte), costing the Yankees – and CC Sabathia, in particular – a very valuable lead. Reactions across the digital Yankee Universe were both swift and harsh. As stated by a commenter at the LoHud Blog, “Chan Ho Park is an NL pitcher, just like LaTroy Hawkins. Yea, he throws hard, who cares? The guy has had his only success in the NL. This guy is awful. Robertson and Joba need to be ahead of him.” While the comment ultimately made little sense – David Robertson and Joba Chamberlain should be ahead of Park in the bullpen pecking order because he’s bad (I guess Park should be the setup man, as that is where all the bad pitchers go…) – the angry, emotional response seemed to mimic much of what I read as I tweeted and and talked to fans.

In retrospect, now that the passionate response has subsided and we are a few days removed from the frustration inducing moment, I think the commenter, and others who reacted similarly, might feel differently about Park today. After all, how can we pass judgement – or more specifically, in this case, condemn – following just one poor outing (the first outing of the regular season, mind you)? Well, we can’t, of course, for such a response is simply unfair to Park and, in addition to that, it is a bit dangerous (in that if we collectively condemn based on one outing, we do not give him a chance to succeed and brand him as a failure prematurely, which can sometimes manifest itself in a player’s performance and a lack of confidence). Just as we failed to do with LaTroy Hawkins – he was deemed a failure far too quickly, hurting his comfort level – Park deserves a chance to be evaluated after multiple outings and multiple games. One bad outing does not a season make, so to think otherwise is more destructive than it is constructive.

Of course, we are Yankee fans and, at our core, we are passionate folks that often live and die with each pitch. That is what defines us, really, and it explains why we react the way we do, to each aspect of every game. However, with that said, we should take into account context when we live and die with each pitch in Game 1 of the regular season. The game is important as it signals the start of a new journey, but we should not dwell on the loss. And, while I wholeheartedly agree that Chan Ho Park is a bullpen enigma, an anomaly that pitched poorly in his first stint as a Yankee in Fenway Park, we should give the guy a break, at least for now. I mean, these things are going to happen.

Let’s chalk it up to rust, an off-night, whatever, and move on.

Photo by the AP

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