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Bring on the Twins

Anyone who’s seen my Playoff Prospectus pieces over at Baseball Prospectus knows I can go as deep as anyone in the business when it comes to breaking down a postseason matchup. But with the Yankees’ first-round opponent not yet set in stone, I’m not going to max out my pitch count in pursuit of hypotheticals. I think the Yankees have an uphill battle to repeat as champions any way you slice it because of the concerns about their rotation and the likelihood that they’ll be the Wild Card winners due to the Rays having the more favorable schedule the rest of the way.

Which means they’ll likely be facing the Twins, and while my colleagues may view the Rangers’ matchup as the more favorable one, I’m walking the contrarian path for the moment and embracing the matchup with Minnesota. Sure, Texas is the weaker team of the two going by record and run differential. Yes, the Rangers are the less-experienced postseason team, and top star Josh Hamilton may be ailing. Certainly, the Rangers have the more power-oriented pitching staff than the Twins, and as I pointed out recently the Yankees have feasted on power pitchers while struggling with finesse ones.

Delmon Young and the rest of Minnesota's defense leave something to be desired (AP).

But for the moment, I’ll hang my hat on two points:

1) The Twins don’t have a very deep rotation. Aside from Francisco Liriano and Carl Pavano, the Twins don’t have a single starter with an ERA+ of 100 or higher, which is to say a better ERA than the park-adjusted league average. Kevin Slowey and Scott Baker are a tick below average, and Nick Blackburn is well off the pace; fill-in Brian Duensing is above-average, albeit in a smaller body of work — and as BP colleague Christina Kahrl points out, manager Ron Gardenhire has some tough choices to make given Baker’s elbow and the uneven nature of Blackburn’s season. The Rangers, by comparison, have four pitchers with ERA+ above 100  in Cliff Lee, Colby Lewis, C.J. Wilson and Tommy Hunter, and it’s pretty obvious those are Ron Washington’s front four. Now, I know it’s hip lately to prefer component-based ERA measures such as xFIP or SIERA which strip out the luck on balls in play and focus on the repeatable skills of strikeouts, walks and homers (or groundball/flyball ratios) instead of good ol’ ERA, but…

2) The Twins don’t have nearly as good a defense as the Rangers. Texas is currently fifth in the league in Defensive Efficiency, converting batted balls in play into outs at a .704 clip. Minnesota, by comparison, is eighth at .693. Furthermore, the Rangers rank first in the league in Park-Adjusted Defensive Efficiency (2.06 percent above average) while the Twins again rank eighth (0.45 percent below average).  So the Twins’ pitchers allow more balls in play and convert fewer of them into outs, which is hardly a surprise when you’ve got guys like Delmon Young and Jason Kubel stumbling around the outfield. Add to that the fact that the Twins fielders will have to get to those balls in play under colder conditions than the Rangers’ fielders would, and you can see how that might present an opening for the Yankees.

Convincing? Admittedly, I’m less than 100 percent sold myself. But after hours of banging my head against the desk trying to find reasons to embrace the inevitable, that’s what I’m selling.


6 responses to "Bring on the Twins"

  1. JJ says:

    “But after hours of banging my head against the desk trying to find reasons to embrace the inevitable, that’s what I’m selling.”

    Oh, come now- you can’t think of any other reason to desire the Twins in a 5 game series? Let’s flip it, then. Hypothetically, Sabathia pitches very well, but Lee is a bit better and wins both games. Easily could happen. That means Andy, Phil, and A.J. all have to win to advance . . . what, that doesn’t sound good? One could argue that a five game series where Lee pitches twice is something no opposing team wants any part of. And you know there is no way in the world Girardi pitches other than Sabathia against Lee. Sure, playing the Twins won’t be easy, but at least it means either Lee or Price won’t be taking the mound next round.

    • awayish says:

      heard of liriano?

      • JJ says:

        Sure I have heard of Liriano, but by implication, you think he is equal to Lee (or Price)? I’m not sure he is at all a game changer, especially after having gotten pulled the other night after 3 innings for illness. Really cursory (sorry, have to run) glance at Liriano, 3.48 ERA, WHIP 1.26 despite pitching in a pitchers park (at least it is in my mind- I could be wrong about that). ERA against Yanks this year 3.46. Yank’s BA against= .309. He is a fine pitcher, the typical top flight pitcher all playoff teams have, but I don’t think that he really compares yet to the elite Lee (Lee ERA = 3.29, WHIP 1.02) or Price (ERA 2.73, WHIP 1.20) . Show me I’m wrong, though. I’ll listen.

        Another way to look at it: You can argue Price and Lee pitched this year better than Sabathia. Are you going to do that with Liriano?

        • Jay Jaffe says:

          Liriano vs. Lee is pretty much a toss-up, actually.

          Liriano:
          3.48 ERA, 121 ERA+, 0.3 HR/9, 2.8 BB/9, 9.4 K/9
          3.03 SIERA, .566 Support Neutral Winning Percentage (how often his team would win his starts given average offense and bullpen support)

          Lee:
          3.29 ERA, 127 ERA+, 0.7 HR/9, 0.8 BB/9, 7.8 K/9
          3.08 SIERA, .572 SNWP

          As you can see, the numbers are VERY close, with Liriano’s league-leading homer rate and Lee’s league-leading walk rate both quite impressive. If Lee has an edge, it’s that he tends to pitch deeper into games (7.6 IP/GS, compared to 6.1), but on the other hand, he’s also the one with the minor health concerns going into October.

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