M's 4, A's 2: the Game in Ten Plays (IV)

......

=== Play Eight ===

In the 2nd, Dustin Ackley tags up and scores on a medium-short fly ball.  His chances were no better than 50-50, but there were two out and Franklin Gutierrez up.  Guti grounded out on the next play.

It's a POTD for another day, but guess what?  The 2011 Mariners just now realized that they have to take chances on the bases.

It is a mathematical fact that the lower the run-scoring environment, the more it benefits a baseball team to run.  That means that this team needs to run constantly -- it will become a better team with 3-4 SB attempts every night.

That isn't opinion.  It's a demonstrable fact.  The Mariners' break-even point on SB's has now fallen below 60%.  Let me read that sentence again.

***

The game in ten plays:  the Mariners stole three bases, they "stole" home on the tagup play, and their running was the difference between a W and an L on Tuesday.

There is improvement to be had, simply by choosing to run a lot more.  I suspect that the Mariners' stats crew has just now convinced Wedge of this.  I could be wrong.

.

=== Play Nine ===

In the 9th, Brandon League gives up an opposite-field double to a LH hitter on a predictable outside fastball.  And he gave up the RBI single on a first-pitch fastball to a LHB.

But I'm not going to bust his chops in this particular case.  Nobody's perfect, and I didn't feel that his pitch charts were specifically the problem on Tuesday.

This game was just one of those things, as I saw it.   With the Mariners playing 2-1 games every night, League gets more than his share of "tough saves."  It's one thing to come into a 97% save when up by three runs, a completely different thing to come into an 82% one-run game.  They should be different stats, saving 3-runners and saving 1-runners.

Anyway, League gave up a run, so sue him.

.

=== Play Ten ===

In the 10th, Jamey Wright retires Kurt Suzuki for the second out.  The first out had been Kennedy's adroit little scoop-climb-and-throw.  On a 1-2 count, Wright threw a HUUUGGGE-breaking curve ball to Suzuki, who defensively chopped it at Brendan Ryan for out two.

That pitch dropped the A's chances of winning from 4% to 1%.

And in Jamey Wright's 500th career ML game, he picked up his 1st save.  Think that baseball goes on his shelf?

.

BABVA,

Dr D

Comments

1

It needs to go for the SB, literally every chance it gets -- five, six attempts in a single game if it gets the opportunities.
The deadball 1906 Cubs hit a total of 20 homers, but scored more runs than the 2011 M's (!!), in part because they stole 283 bases.
***
Especially in front of the bottom half of the lineup, Dustin Ackley just is not going to score unless he steals second.
It's time to turn them loose.  Run six times, steal four and get tossed out in two ... and you'll turn 1 or 2 runs into 2 or 3.
***
Guys don't like to be thrown out, but you need to tell them they're going to be.  If this amazing offense gets only 5 SB's vs 3 CS's, it's increasing its run total -- and every extra run scored is a possible win.

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