Daily Graphing – Chris Young

In what was a surprise move to me, the Rangers sent Chris Young, Adrian Gonzalez, and Terrmel Sledge to the Padres for Adam Eaton, Akinori Otsuka, and a minor leaguer. In Chris Young's first full season in the majors he posted a 12-7 record with a 4.26 ERA and a good strikeout to walk ratio (K/BB) of 3.06. Not too shabby considering he played in one of most hitter friendly parks in baseball. Now that he'll be moving to the pitcher's haven, PETCO Park, what should we expect from Chris Young in his second full year in the majors?

ERA

Looking at his ERA, he was really on quite the roller coaster ride. Early in the year he was looking like an AL Rookie of the Year candidate as he started off going 5-1 with a 2.93 ERA. In June and July things got a little hairy as his ERA rose to an awful 6.19. Then he had a strong final two months of the season, going 4-1 with a 3.62 ERA. Most of the increase in ERA towards the middle of the season can be explained by a brief period of time when he experienced a “tired arm”. This “tired arm” period becomes evident by looking at the major spike in his home runs per 9 innings (HR/9).

HR9

In just over a one month period he allowed 12 of his 19 home runs for the season, bringing his HR/9 to a horrible 2.65. Despite this one month period, his home runs per fly ball (HR/FB) remained extremely low for the year as only 7.7% of his fly balls became home runs. If you take away that one month home run derby, then only 4% of his fly balls became home runs. That's pretty amazing considering on average in Ameriquest Field, righthanded pitchers's fly balls became home runs nearly 14% of the time. He's lucky he kept his HR/9 below the league average since he has the 3rd highest fly ball percentage in baseball.

LDGBFB

You Aren't a FanGraphs Member
It looks like you aren't yet a FanGraphs Member (or aren't logged in). We aren't mad, just disappointed.
We get it. You want to read this article. But before we let you get back to it, we'd like to point out a few of the good reasons why you should become a Member.
1. Ad Free viewing! We won't bug you with this ad, or any other.
2. Unlimited articles! Non-Members only get to read 10 free articles a month. Members never get cut off.
3. Dark mode and Classic mode!
4. Custom player page dashboards! Choose the player cards you want, in the order you want them.
5. One-click data exports! Export our projections and leaderboards for your personal projects.
6. Remove the photos on the home page! (Honestly, this doesn't sound so great to us, but some people wanted it, and we like to give our Members what they want.)
7. Even more Steamer projections! We have handedness, percentile, and context neutral projections available for Members only.
8. Get FanGraphs Walk-Off, a customized year end review! Find out exactly how you used FanGraphs this year, and how that compares to other Members. Don't be a victim of FOMO.
9. A weekly mailbag column, exclusively for Members.
10. Help support FanGraphs and our entire staff! Our Members provide us with critical resources to improve the site and deliver new features!
We hope you'll consider a Membership today, for yourself or as a gift! And we realize this has been an awfully long sales pitch, so we've also removed all the other ads in this article. We didn't want to overdo it.

Despite Chirs Young's good strikeout to walk ratio, if he were to continue playing at Ameriquest Field, I'd say he'd have a similar 2005 season as it would be hard for him to continue to limit his home runs considering his fly ball tendencies. This however is not the case as he'll now be playing in a park where an extreme fly ball pitcher should thrive. One thing to note is he won't get the same kind of run support playing for the Padres as he did for the Rangers. In 2005 he had the 3rd most run support per inning of any pitcher in baseball. If he can remain healthy, I'd expect Chris Young to definitely improve upon his 2005 ERA, but he may find wins harder to come by.





David Appelman is the creator of FanGraphs.

Comments are closed.