Beavan 5-for-5 ... the Route Forward

=== Plus, not Plus-Plus, Command ===

Here is one of Beavan's better AB's from Monday night, a first-inning strikeout of Josh Willingham:

True, he does manage to get through 7 pitches without giving Willingham much to hit, except the one centered FB that Willingham fouled back.  And, granted, there are three pretty nice jam pitches there, although Beavan is wide open to simply "Ball Two" on any of them.

But this is nibbling, as opposed to painting.

Go through a Doogie AB like this and you'll find strikes on the hands, strikes on the black, strikes at the letters, all done at will ... and no mistakes like that red one in the middle.

And this is one of the better Beavan AB's I could find.  Beavan nibbles, and he gives in, as opposed to painting like Doogie does.

***

I'm not trying to bury the guy.  I'm trying to document the reasons that I don't believe his command is in the Fister class.  Yet, anyway.

.

=== Mix 'em Up? Dept. ===

Can Beavan start throwing curves and changes?  Probably not.  His run value is -6 runs per 100 changes (!) and -8 runs (!!) on the curve.

Beavan is doing the right thing, throwing the pitch that he can execute well.  See this very info-taining article on the idea of trying to win with just a fastball.

But it is our duty to report that the 5-for-5 quality starts are defying gravity.   He's giving up 26% line drives and what happened was that he founds tons of leather to cobble those five good starts.   At Boston, for example, he gave up 10 line drives (!!) but somehow came out of it with a QS.

***

True, Beavan has a terrific motion and he has demonstrated plus command.  It's just a real hard uphill climb, pitching to contact like that with such a mediocre pitch.

.

=== Counterexamples, Dept. ===

Who, in recent history, did use (only) a 90 fastball to generate very few K's, only 1+ walks, and consistently good results?

Doug Fister had an unusual fastball -- for movement, release point, and precision.  He also had a change.

Bartolo Colon does indeed pitch like Beavan, using Catfish-level command (and hyper-aggressiveness) to stay way ahead in the count.

Justin Masterson doesn't count, for obvious reasons.

***

But there are some guys who try to use (almost) nothing except pure command.  Rick Porcello may be Beavan's star-crush.  In 2009 and 2010 Porcello did everything Beavan does:

  • 90-91 mph exactly
  • 70% fastballs
  • ALL of his offspeed pitches were slime
  • 4+ strikeouts, 2+ walks

But Porcello simply threw so many quality fastballs that he hung in there as a 100-ish pitcher.  (In Safeco, that woulda been 110.)

Then, by Y3, Porcello had honed three (3) different offspeed pitches to the point to where they were all plus, and now he's a good starter...

There are a few guys like this.  Trevor Cahill.  Check his rookie year, and year two.  He was dubious his first year or two, and then developed his offspeed stuff to become a good #3 pitcher.

Doug Fister is obviously another example.  Porcello, Cahill, Fister, and Beavan are pitchers, and sometimes pitchers improve.

.

=== Dr's Prognosis Dept. ===

Most guys, using Beavan's approach, get splattered.

This year and next, if Beavan's going to be a 100 pitcher, he's going to need to throw one quality pitch after another, with no margin for error.

Later on, he might (probably will) hone his offspeed stuff and become a fairly good starter.

It's gonna be more white-knuckle than you think, though.  Blake Beavan ain't no 100% Quality Start pitcha.

.

BABVA,

Dr D

Comments

1
Lonnie of MC's picture

I'm not the only one who isn't Beaven believer!  Good grief, from the time that Beaven left the Texas League right through this season at Tacoma, Beaven showed only slight, marginal improvement.  I have to think that the improvement that I saw was merely luck/fate/whatever stepping in for a 5 game stretch.  I know deep down in the my gut that Beaven is going to implode, and soon.  I would have to see what the results are going to be like when Beaven sees a team for a second time.
Lonnie

2

Now we'll see if he starts getting lit up by guys looking for that weak-sauce fastball.
I think Beavan is gonna have an adjustment period for sure.  He had one in AAA - he started off awful and became good.  In the bigs he started off good...but I expect him to have some bad turns in the rotation shortly, from which he'll need to grow.  He needs a better changeup (or split-finger) and IMO a cutter.  We teach everyone the cutter now so that'll help get him a FB with more movement on it.  He likes to throw FBs, so give him some variation in them to let him stay in the zone without getting crushed.
It's the one reason I wanted him in the bigs for a significant chunk of time this year - to work on something other than that Cha Seung Baek-level mush fastball.
He's gonna need it long term.  I like that Beavan doesn't have a pulse and is scared of nothing.  Now I need him to learn how to be Fister.  I was hoping he'd learn how FROM Fister, but alas, no such luck.
He'll have to do it on his own.
~G

4

If you've seen his F/X movement charts, you've seen he does mix in a few of 'em, and they've been by far his best secondary pitches...
As y'know G, there are worse things than a pitcher who cuts walks to 0 and doesn't beat himself ... especially in Safeco... this could be a pitcher who becomes a genuine park illusion, in contrast to what Fister and Vargas have been...
Can't go overboard with Beavan's hot start, is all...

5

He's coming closer and closer to the perfect 9 innings ... the eventual target being QS, W, 0 strikeouts.
2 K's tonight, but also 0 walks, 0 warning track balls IIRC, few line drives, a bunch of groundballs.  
He's looking like "Mr. Safeco BOR".
Think I'll call him Rope-a-Dope... go ahead and knock the ball around the park, guys... I'll still be here when yer breathin' heavy...

6

When the bases are getting full or runners are in scoring position his reaction is NO different than when the bases are empty and he has a 5 run lead. Beavan's night was made easier by some VERY nice plays by Ackley (starting a DP, making a great throw to 1st, leaping in the air to snag a soft liner) but anybody with his skillset is gonna rely on fielders since he's striking out exactly no one.
I DID love his 2nd K though - a tight breaking ball at the bottom of the zone that was so good the first time the ump called it a ball...so he threw the exact same pitch in the exact same spot and got the punchout.
Beavan's gonna get crushed one of these days, but it won't make his pulse flutter.  And he'll come back out and do the same routine the next time, trusting that it won't get hammered.
That mentality is not always a plus.  My memory of Jeff Weaver has him as the same kind of "Sure I got tagged for 8 runs in 3 innings, but no big, next game I'll have the same approach" sort of mental approach.  Cha Seung Baek was also like that.  Jeff Halama.  Ryan Franklin.
In Ryan Franklin's case it paid off - he's had a LONG career off of "I only made two mistakes and we lost, so next game I won't make em."  The Here-It-Is, Hit-It approach can be functional if you're in the right park and you can make sure not to center too many balls.  Halama couldn't.  Fister absolutely can.
Beavan...Beavan might, at least for a while.  For me the question is whether he can function long enough to get that curve ball to be functional and useful instead of meat served up on a platter.
That 2nd K says...maybe. :)  Right now the mushy FB and the "eh" change are doing well.  The Angels announcers kept pointing out how his body and arm action slows down for the curve and he's telegraphing it, and aren't sure why the second time seeing him the Angels aren't crushing it.
"Maybe he's harder to read from the plate than he is from the side," one mused.  I just remember seeing his arm action in Spring Training and expecting the radar gun to say 95 instead of 88.  He LOOKS like he should throw really hard.
Hopefully those looks stay deceiving enough.
~G

Add comment

Filtered HTML

  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <blockquote> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd><p><br>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

shout_filter

  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <blockquote> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.