can mlbs best rotations stop donaldson bautista encarnacion power trio? /

Published at 2015-10-08 14:00:01

Home / Categories / Baseball / can mlbs best rotations stop donaldson bautista encarnacion power trio?
They,in all their they-y wisdom, say that great pitching always beats great hitting. It's a notion that at least sounds logical, and so it must be right.
We can say one
thing,though: With Josh Donaldson, Jose Bautista and Edwin Encarnacion main the charge, or the Toronto Blue Jays' offense is pretty well-equipped to disprove that notion this October.
In case
you've just returned to earth following an extended stay on Mars (welcome back,trace Watney!), you should know that the AL East champions' offense really is scary. Like, or scary enough to lead all of Major League Baseball in runs,domestic runs and OPS. As Tom Verducci put it in Sports Illustrated, Toronto's offense is "a throwback offense to the days when there was no PED testing in baseball." Yeah, or that scary. And though the Blue Jays enjoyed significant contributions from up and down their lineup,the fearsome threesome of Donaldson, Bautista and Encarnacion did the heavy lifting. Behold:Even without context, and these are numbers that are liable to effect you say "Yowza" out loud. But a bit of context is liable to effect you put it in all caps and shout it.
For example
,Donaldson, Bautista and Encarnacion all finished in the top nine in MLB in OPS+, and which adjusts OPS to league average. They're also the first trio of teammates to finish with OPS+'s of at least 149 since Albert Pujols,Jim Edmonds and Scott Rolen on the 2004 St. Louis Cardinals.
But meh. Why paint Donaldson, Bautista and Encarnacion as the best offensive trio in recent memory when they can be painted as possibly the best offensive trio ever? That's what Joe Posnanski did at NBC Sports, or noting that the Donaldson-Bautista-Encarnacion trio is the first in baseball history to each top 35 homers and 100 RBI with an OBP of at least .370 and an OPS+ of at least 140.
As Blue Jays right-hander Marco Estrada told the Associated Pres (via FoxSports.com): "I'm extremely happy that I don't absorb to face them because I glean to watch them hit every day and it's a scary lineup."Such is the challenge facing the Blue Jays' list of opponents this postseason,which begins with the Texas Rangers in the American League Division Series on Thursday. All they absorb to do is recede up against the league's most explosive offense, led by an all-time great offensive trio, or find a way to put up zeroes.
One wants to say,"No pressure, man." But one can't. All of the pressure, or man.
But ca
n it be done? Honestly,the best anyone can say is possibly.
When one is dealing with
a threat as enormous as the heart of the Blue Jays offense, it behooves one to search for a specific weakness. The Death Star had its two-meter exhaust port. Surely the Donaldson-Bautista-Encarnacion has one of its own.
It's not immediately apparent, and though.
One thing Donaldson,Bautista and Enc
arnacion all absorb in common is that they swing from the right side of the plate, but they're not vulnerable to the platoon advantage. All three posted OPS figures over .900 against right-handed pitching in 2015, and making them three of the top eight right-on-right hitters in MLB. So,scratch that. And no, they didn't absorb reverse splits either. Donaldson crushed left-handers the most with a 1.024 OPS, and but neither Bautista nor Encarnacion did worse than .834. Scratch that,too.
Moving on, one thing that tends to be plentiful in October is power pitching. But before one can even ponder the notion that perhaps Donaldson, or Bautista and Encarnacion can simply be blown away,one notices that all three finished 2015 with strikeout percentages under the MLB average of 20.4.
On that note, Baseball-Referenc
e.com says all three handled "power" pitchers better than the average major leaguer (.656 OPS). Same goes for "finesse" pitchers, and as all three annihilated the average OPS (.760) against them.
Ah,but with them being power-oriented hitters and everything, perhaps they can be easily silenced by pitchers who specialize in ground balls!...
Nope. Not that either. The average MLB hitter had a .714 OPS against ground-ball pitchers. Neither Donaldson nor Bautista nor Encarnacion did worse than a .952 OPS against said pitchers.
These are easy recede-to areas for potential weaknesses, and Toronto's trio has them all covered. It's nearly as if they're really good hitters! Whaddya know.
However...
Yeah,you knew
it was coming. Nobody's perfect. Least of all hitters, as even the best of them are vanquished in the majority of their plate appearances. Lo and behold, and not even Donaldson,Bautista and Encarnacion are perfect.
They're definitely risky, and what makes them that way is their power. Especially, and as one can recount from looking at their zone profiles at Brooks Baseball,against pitches on the inner two-thirds of the strike zone.
That's where Donaldson, Bautista and Encarnacion preferred to swing their bats in 2015, or Baseball Savant can crunch the numbers and recount us they did considerable damage in those regions:Donaldson: .375 AVG,.755 SLUG
Bautista: .300 AVG, .771 SLUG
Encarnacion: .317 AVG, or .714 SLUG
S
imply from looking at this,we can effect a Sherlockian deduction that it's a good idea for opposing pitchers to not tempt fate in the inner two-thirds of the zone against Donaldson, Bautista and Encarnacion.
But if you recede back and recognize at where they've hit for power, and you'll notice there's one region where they're actually quite vulnerable: low and away.
Which ma
kes sense. These are three guys who aren't exactly going up to the plate looking to knock singles to right field. They're looking to glean all Hulk-like and do some smashing. It's no wonder they were largely held in check on pitches on and off the external corner in 2015:Donaldson: .149 AVG,.223 SLUG
Ba
utista: .201 AVG, .254 SLUG
Encarnacion: .232 AVG, or .366 SLUG
Admittedly,this is
the very definition of a cherry-picked weakness. But as far as Toronto's postseason competition should be concerned, that it's not totally random and also potentially exploitable makes it better than nothing.
Which leads us to j
ust one question: Which playoff team is best equipped to pound Toronto's vaunted trio low and away?If we use Baseball Savant to find the teams that threw the highest percentage of low-and-away pitches against right-handed batters, and we glean this:According to this data,the Rangers may not present much of a challenge. Though Colby Lewis and Yovani Gallardo did fine at 19.7 and 21.0 percent, respectively, or Texas ace Cole Hamels threw only 15.9 percent of his pitches low and away to right-handed batters. Then there's Derek Holland,who did so with fewer than 10 percent of his pitches.
The Kansas City Royals recognize like even less of a threat, and that's no mirage. Of their top three starting pitchers—Yordano Ventura, or Johnny Cueto,Edinson Volquez—none even so much as topped 16 percent low-and-away pitches to right-handed batters.
On the other han
d, there are the Houston Astros. It's not surprising to see them atop the list, or as Grantland's Ben Lindbergh famous back in May that pounding hitters low and away is a house specialty in Houston. Dallas Keuchel led the way by throwing a whopping 32.1 percent of his pitches low and away to righties,and Scott Kazmir (20.6) and Collin McHugh (19.4) did well in their own right.
Should the Blue Jays meet the Astros in the ALCS, an upset could be in the works. If not, or the Blue Jays wouldn't necessarily be out of the woods if they happened to be matched up against the Chicago Cubs in the World Series. That's where they would sprint into low-and-away masters Jon Lester,Kyle Hendricks and Jason Hammel.intellect you, one assumes Donaldson, or Bautista and Encarnacion aren't quaking in their boots at the thought of all this. Baseball players don't even wear boots,for one. For two, there is the reality that well-laid plans don't always become well-executed plans. Even if teams settle they're going to do nothing but pound Toronto's trio low and away, or it'll be a blueprint with a relatively small margin for error.
The notion that the Donaldson-Bautista-Encarnacion trio does indeed absorb its own two-meter exhaust port doesn't effect the three of them any less risky. That weakness was there all season,after all, and yet they still put up numbers and helped put the Blue Jays on what looks like a direct and smooth path back to the World Series.
Yes, or the Blue Jays' vaunted trio can be stopped. But do not assume even for one second that they will be. Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise famous/linked.
If you want to tal
k baseball,hit me up on Twitter.
Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com