Corbin Burnes the Braves in Game 1 Brewers Win

The National League Division Series between the Atlanta Braves and the Milwaukee Brewers got off to a low-scoring start on Friday afternoon, with Corbin Burnes dueling Charlie Morton for six innings. Offense was nearly nowhere to be found, as the teams combined for just nine hits against 18 strikeouts. The three runs came on two hits: a two-run shot by Rowdy Tellez in the bottom of the seventh and a solo follow-up by Joc Pederson the next half-inning:

That wasn’t the only big moment of the night by Tellez, as the husky first baseman made a solid throw to nail Jorge Soler at the plate for the back end of an Ozzie Albies double play ball in the first inning. That run turned out to be the difference. Read the rest of this entry »


Kyle Tucker in the Right Place at the Right Time in Astros’ Game 2 Win

Kyle Tucker enjoyed a breakout season this year, bashing 30 homers and leading the Astros with a 147 wRC+. Yet he’s been hitting as low as seventh in Houston’s order in an attempt to maximize the number of runners on base ahead of him in one of the game’s deepest lineups, a strategy that Owen McGrattan examined late last month. In Game 2 of the Division Series against the White Sox on Friday, that strategy paid off handsomely, with the 24-year-old slugger driving in three runs that bookended the Astros’ scoring, as well as making a key defensive play, in a 9–4 victory that will send the Astros to Chicago with a chance to sweep.

Thursday’s series opener featured Houston quickly getting ahead and Lance McCullers Jr. holding Chicago scoreless on one hit over the first six innings en route to a 6-1 victory. By contrast, Friday’s game was a wild back-and-forth affair, featuring four lead changes in the first seven innings. The Astros broke it open with a five-run seventh that was keyed by a couple of managerial moves that backfired and capped by Tucker’s two-run shot into Minute Maid Field’s Crawford Boxes.

Starters Framber Valdez and Lucas Giolito both dealt with considerable traffic as they worked through the opposing lineups the first two times, but things quickly unraveled as each attempted a third pass. While both bullpens allowed inherited runners to score, the Astros kept the White Sox scoreless the rest of the way as their offense went to town for those five runs.

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FanGraphs Dodgers/Giants NLDS Game 1 Chat

9:30
Kevin Goldstein: Hi everyone. Let’s get weird.

9:31
Kevin Goldstein: Thanks so much for joining us tonight. We love doing these, and they’ve been a big hit this week.

9:31
Luke Hooper: Now that Young Sheldon is over, the real fun can begin!

9:31
Nicklaus Gaut: Welcome, everyone!

9:32
Kevin Goldstein: I’m here with Luke Hooper and we will be watching Dodgers/Giants and the rest of this wacky game in Tampa. We will provide insight, hopefully some laughs, weird polls, and of course, you can ask us . . . well anything!

9:32
Nicklaus Gaut: I’m all jacked up on expresso and am ready to start.

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Postseason Preview: Two NL West Titans Clash in the NLDS

The Dodgers managed to survive their do-or-die Wild Card matchup against the Cardinals on Wednesday night thanks to the ninth inning heroics of Chris Taylor, setting the stage for the seemingly inevitable clash between the two best teams in baseball in the NL Division Series.

You may have already read that this is the first postseason matchup between these two storied franchises. Since 1995, the first year the Wild Card was implemented, the Dodgers and Giants have made the playoffs in the same season just twice: 2014 and ’16. The success of each team has ebbed and flowed, with one thriving while the other flounders. A new chapter in this historic rivalry will be written this October, with the winner of this series the favorite to claim the National League pennant in the next round.

Dodgers vs. Giants: Team Overview
Overview Dodgers Giants Edge
Batting (wRC+) 113 (2nd in NL) 114 (1st in NL) Giants
Fielding (OAA) -5 (10th) 28 (2nd) Giants
Starting Pitching (FIP-) 78 (2nd) 85 (3rd) Dodgers
Bullpen (FIP-) 90 (1st) 92 (2nd) Dodgers

During the regular season, these two teams were pretty evenly matched. Both won 50 games in the second half. In their head-to-head matchups, San Francisco held the advantage in wins with 10 to Los Angeles’ nine, while the Dodgers scored just two more runs than the Giants in those games. When you break down their rosters into their individual components, these clubs were ranked right next to each other in offense and pitching, with team defense the lone factor separating factor. Read the rest of this entry »


The Yankees Need a Remake, But Their Flexibility Is Limited

After finishing first or second in in the American League in scoring in each of the past four seasons, the 2021 Yankees were supposed to be yet another iteration of the Bronx Bombers. Yet this time around, they scored just 4.39 runs per game, good only for 10th in the league. When they lined up for their do-or-die appearance in the Wild Card Game behind Gerrit Cole, they did so with a lineup featuring just four hitters with a wRC+ of 100 or better, two of whom didn’t join the organization until the trade deadline. After an abrupt exit from the playoffs at the hands of the Red Sox, the question of where the Yankees go from here looms particularly large, but for all the “if the Boss were alive” shrieking from some quarters — fans and media hot-take artistes alike — a radical overhaul of the roster this winter doesn’t appear likely.

For years, the Yankees have relied upon a model of power and patience for their offense, accepting the high strikeout rates that come with it as the cost of doing business. The model worked well enough when juiced baseballs were flying out of parks at record rates; they set single-season team home run records in both 2017 and ’18 and blew past those marks in ’19 even as the Twins edged them by a single dinger.

The Decline of the Yankees’ Offense
Season R/G Rk HR Rk K% Rk AVG Rk OBP Rk SLG Rk wRC+ Rk WAR Rk
2017 5.30 2 241 1 21.8% 10 .262 3 .339 2 .447 3 109 2 29.2 2
2018 5.25 2 267 1 22.7% 11 .249 8 .329 4 .451 2 112 1 31.4 3
2019 5.82 1 306 2 23.0% 7 .267 4 .339 3 .490 3 117 2 32.8 2
2020 5.25 1 94 2 21.7% 3 .247 6 .342 1 .447 2 117 1 9.9 2
2021 4.39 10 222 3 24.5% 12 .237 13 .322 5 .407 7 101 7 18.2 7
Rk = American League rank

Amid the backdrop of the de-juiced ball, the Yankees still placed third in the league in homers, but their overall offense was far less potent. Where the major league rate of home runs per plate appearance declined by about 5.5% relative to 2020, theirs dipped by 12%, and that’s with a reasonably full season from Giancarlo Stanton, who clubbed 35 homers in 139 games after being limited to 23 games in 2020. Even with that rebound, injuries deprived the team of some big bats and led to inferior replacements.

Yankees Primary Position Players 2020 vs. 2021
Player PA 20 AVG/OBP/SLG 20 wRC+ 20 PA 21 AVG/OBP/SLG 21 wRC+ 21 wRC+ Dif
Gary Sánchez 178 .147/.253/.365 69 440 .204/.307/.423 99 30
Tyler Wade 105 .170/.288/.307 69 145 .268/.354/.323 92 23
Miguel Andújar 65 .242/.277/.355 71 162 .253/.284/.383 81 10
Aaron Judge 114 .257/.336/.554 140 633 .287/.373/.544 148 8
Giancarlo Stanton 94 .250/.387/.500 143 579 .273/.354/.516 137 -6
Gleyber Torres 160 .243/.356/.368 106 516 .259/.331/.366 94 -12
Brett Gardner 158 .223/.354/.392 111 461 .222/.327/.362 93 -18
Kyle Higashioka 48 .250/.250/.521 102 211 .181/.246/.389 71 -31
Gio Urshela 174 .298/.368/.490 133 442 .267/.301/.419 96 -37
Luke Voit 234 .277/.338/.61 153 241 .239/.328/.437 111 -42
Aaron Hicks 211 .225/.379/.414 124 126 .194/.294/.333 76 -48
Clint Frazier 160 .267/.394/.511 149 218 .186/.317/.317 82 -67
DJ LeMahieu 216 .364/.421/.590 177 679 .268/.349/.362 100 -77
Rougned Odor 361 .202/.286/.379 83 n/a
Joey Gallo 228 .160/.303/.404 95 n/a
Anthony Rizzo 200 .249/.34/.428 113 n/a

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Postseason Preview: Power On Display as Brewers Face Braves in NLDS

Despite reaching the playoffs in dramatically different ways, the Brewers (95–67, NL Central champions) and Braves (88–73, NL East champions) look rather alike. Our power rankings give Atlanta the slight edge, but our projections land slightly on the side of Milwaukee. And while the Brewers may have the advantage in record, the Braves had a better run differential. To make matters even tighter, they split their season series, 3–3. Still, our staff predictions, where 26 of 28 folks chose the Brewers, would suggest that this is the most lopsided of the first-round matchups, but I don’t think that captures how close this series is on paper.

Team Breakdown
Braves Brewers
wRC+ 98 (13th) 91 (23rd)
wRC+ vs Lefty 93 (25th) 90 (26th)
wRC+ vs Righty 100 (10th) 92 (19th)
Starter ERA 3.83 (7th) 3.13 (2nd)
Starter FIP 4.09 (13th) 3.29 (1st)
Bullpen ERA 3.97 (10th) 4.02 (14th)
Bullpen FIP 4.08 (12th) 4.34 (18th)
Infield OAA 3 (10th) -31 (29th)
Outfield OAA 6 (10th) 17 (4th)
MLB Ranking in parenthesis

The Brewers won the NL Central with elite starting pitching that helped make up for their poor offense, which scored just enough runs to make those starts stand up. The Braves have a more well-rounded team that is strong on offense, pitching and defense, but is perhaps not elite anywhere.

Milwaukee coasted into the playoffs, with a 52–27 stretch in the heart of the season giving them a 99.9% chance to win the division on September 1. Going 14–15 in that final month may have made fans uneasy heading into October, but Craig Counsell was able to use his team’s large lead to go a bit easier on a pitching staff that will be asked to do the heaviest lifting going forward.

Of more concern for the Brewers is the injury to Devin Williams, who broke his hand while celebrating the division clinch and will miss the postseason. He was their best right-handed option out of the pen, and his loss will put added pressure on Brad Boxberger, Hunter Strickland and Jake Cousins, all of whom move up a rung on the ladder and none of whom are sure bets. Boxberger had a great season but pitched poorly in September, with 10 earned runs and three homers allowed in 8.2 innings. Strickland has been stellar since joining the Brewers in mid-June, but that came with a .198 BABIP. Cousins has the most electric stuff of the trio but is fresh off a biceps injury that kept him out of Milwaukee’s final week of games.

Unlike the Brewers, the Braves have been playing meaningful games all September, sweeping a big series against the Phillies at the end of the month and surviving just enough shaky outings from volatile closer Will Smith to clinch their fourth straight division crown. That latest title did not come easy. Atlanta lost its best player, Ronald Acuña Jr., to a torn ACL on July 10th, and went without one of their best pitchers all season when Mike Soroka suffered a setback in his recovery from an Achilles tear. Add some poor play to the mix, and the Braves had just a 10.4% chance to win the NL East on the day of the trade deadline. But thanks to a number of small moves made at the deadline, like bringing in Eddie Rosario, Adam Duvall, and Jorge Soler, the team took off.

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FanGraphs Audio: Kicking off the Playoffs With Chelsea Janes

Episode 943

We’re as excited about the postseason as you are, and this week we share some Wild Card reactions before looking ahead to the rest of October.

  • In our first segment, David Laurila welcomes the Washington Post’s Chelsea Janes, who was in attendance for both of the Wild Card games this week. David and Chelsea discuss the exciting atmospheres in Boston and Los Angeles before turning their attention to how the Giants won 107 games and how veteran catchers like Buster Posey and Salvador Perez impressed this season after a year off from the demanding job. Finally, Chelsea shares why Trea Turner is her pick in the tight NL MVP race. [2:36]
  • After that, Eric Longenhagen is joined by Jason Martinez to talk about the start of the playoffs and catch up on how their respective baseball jobs’ schedules change in October. Eric shares some of the prospects he has been keeping an eye on, while Jason lets his inner Padres fan speak up about the team’s rough second half. Finally, the duo go over some of the big 40-man roster crunch situations teams will face this winter. [26:37]

Read the rest of this entry »


Chin Music, Episode 34: In the Club With the Grandkids

One day after a special episode ofChin Music, it’s time for the regular version. This week, I am joined by Mike Ferrin of MLB Network Radio for an otherwise guest-less show that still features nearly two hours of baseball talk with a couple of yuks thrown in. We begin by talking through all four Division Series, followed by a look at the future of the front office and manager situations for both New York clubs. Then it’s your emails on made-up utility players, San Francisco’s lineups, and manager/player rifts. We finish by catching up with Mike on the 2021 Arizona Diamondbacks and the challenges of broadcasting games remotely, before offering a series of TV recommendations.

As always, we hope you enjoy, and thank you for listening.

Music by Decibelles.

Have a question you’d like answered on the show? Ask us anything at chinmusic@fangraphs.com. Read the rest of this entry »


Job Posting: Detroit Tigers Director of Baseball Data Infrastructure

Position: Director, Baseball Data Infrastructure

Summary:
The Detroit Tigers are currently seeking a Director, Baseball Data Infrastructure. This role will be responsible for leading all internal data and infrastructure initiatives within Baseball Operations. This position will report to the Vice President and Assistant General Manager, Baseball Operations. Read the rest of this entry »


Job Posting: Detroit Tigers Full-Stack Software Engineer

Position: Full-Stack Software Engineer

Summary:
The Detroit Tigers are currently seeking a Full Stack Software Engineer. This role will be responsible for development and maintenance of software projects within Baseball Operations. This position will report to the Director of Baseball Systems.

Key Responsibilities:

  • Perform development and maintenance on internal software products.
  • Utilize modern software techniques and best practices in all parts of the software lifecycle.
  • Support the integration of baseball analysis into the Tigers’ proprietary tools and applications.
  • Assist with the design and development of new software products.
  • Other projects or responsibilities as directed by Baseball Operations leadership.

Minimum Knowledge, Skills and Abilities:

  • BS degree in Computer Science, similar technical field of study, or equivalent experience.
  • 3+ years of experience developing web applications in a production environment.
  • Demonstrated knowledge of modern web development including at least one popular single-page web application framework.
  • Experience working with large-scale relational databases using SQL.
  • Ability to work in all phases of the product lifecycle, including requirements-gathering, design, testing, and implementation.
  • Ability to learn new technologies and techniques as necessary.
  • Familiarity with the sport of baseball, baseball-specific data, modern statistical techniques, and sabermetric analysis.

Preferred Knowledge, Skills and Abilities

  • Experience in the sports industry or with sports data
  • Experience working on cloud-based software systems
  • Understanding of User Experience principles and practices
  • Experience with JavaScript visualization tools such as D3 or Plotly
  • Preference for the declarative programming paradigm

To Apply:
To apply, please use this link.

The content in this posting was created and provided solely by the Detroit Tigers.