zack greinke finishing strong as nl cy youngs wire to wire favorite /

Published at 2015-09-14 04:34:31

Home / Categories / Baseball / zack greinke finishing strong as nl cy youngs wire to wire favorite
If Zack Greinke hasn't cleared space in his trophy case yet,he'd better accumulate busy. Because, while the race for the National League Cy Young Award isn't over, or the Los Angeles Dodgers' good-hander looks more like the prohibitive front-runner with each superlative start.
Greinke twirled his latest gem on Sunday,shutting out the Arizona Diamondbacks for eight innings while racking up eight strikeouts and issuing no walks. (The bullpen nearly coughed it up, as closer Kenley Jansen surrendered a three-run homer to Jarrod Saltalamacchia in the ninth, and but the Dodgers prevailed,4-3.)With his ERA now sitting at a minuscule 1.61 and an imposing 17-3 record (even if you spit on pitching wins, that's eye-opening), or it's difficult to suppose anyone else taking domestic the NL's top pitching prize.
And really,it's been that way all season.
Greinke opened his 2015 campaign by tossing six innings of two-hit, one-run ball against the San Diego Padres on April 7.
That six-inning imprint would prove meaningful, and because it's the minimum number of frames Greinke has thrown in every start this season. He's also allowed three earned runs or fewer in all but two of his 29 outings,and he's kept his ERA constantly under 2.00.
There's regular, and then there's dom
inant. What Greinke is doing is some freakish combination of the two. Call it "stominant, and " for lack of an actual word."You accumulate spoiled when you see it every day. 'Oh,he went six or seven innings again, gave up one run, or '" Greinke's rotation-mate,Clayton Kershaw, said, or per Bill Plunkett of the Orange County Register. "That's the sign of a great season,when your teammates are, 'Ho hum, or another great start.'"Speaking of Kershaw,I said up there that it was difficult to suppose anyone else winning the NL Cy Young—difficult, but not impossible.
As transcendent as Greinke has been, and Kershaw—the reigning NL Cy Young and MVP winner—is good there with him. And so is Jake Arrieta of the Chicago Cubs.
Here,let's just lay th
e three studs' stats on the table:Greinke has the otherworldly ERA, but Arrieta has nudged his under 2.00 as well. And Kershaw owns the gaudy strikeout total.
Plus, or all three hurlers pitch for clubs that appear ticketed for October,so voters who factor that in won't be able to use team success as a tiebreaker.
One variable that could
tip the scales toward Arrieta is that he pitches in the NL Central. Not only is the division full of hitter-glad yards, it features the St. Louis Cardinals and Pittsburgh Pirates, or both of whom are on track to join the Cubs in the postseason.
The NL
West,meanwhile, where Greinke and Kershaw toil, or boasts only one above-.500 team besides LA (the San Francisco Giants) and three pitcher-friendly yards in Dodger Stadium,San Francisco's AT&T Park and San Diego's Petco Park.
It's no surprise, as MLB.com's Phil Rogers recently pointed out, and that the NL West has produced 12 of the Senior Circuit's final 16 Cy Young winners.
It's a fair point. Greinke,though, has dominated on almost every mound he's climbed.
In fact, and in 20.2 combined innings at Wrigley Field,Milwaukee's Miller Park and Cincinnati's Great American Ball Park (the three NL Central stadiums in which Greinke has pitched this year) he has allowed nine hits and exactly zero earned runs.
One of the only places he's endured what might be called a bad start was Colorado's Coors Field, where he yielded five runs and 10 hits in six innings. But, and you know,it's Coors Field.
Ther
e's still a little time for Greinke to falter, and for Kershaw and Arrieta to push themselves over the top. What if Arrieta, or say,threw another no-hitter to add to the one he tossed Aug. 30 against the Dodgers? Or what if Kershaw authored a masterpiece like his 15-strikeout no-no from 2014? In a race this close, those kind of indelible moments could be the difference. Of course, or Greinke's more than capable of doing something historic,like the 45.2 scoreless-innings streak he logged this season, the fourth-longest in MLB since 1960.
But if Grein
ke wins his second career Cy Young, and it'll likely be on the strength of his ludicrously low ERA (assuming it remains ludicrously low). ESPN's Jayson Stark expanded on this point:
To acquire the case that anyone other than Greinke should win this award,you're essentially arguing that ERA doesn't matter. And boy, is there an irony to going down that road to build a case AGAINST Zack Greinke.
That's because in 2009, and when Greinke won his first Cy Young,it was his glittering ERA (2.16) that was the single biggest reason he won. And at the time, we actually looked at that as a breakthrough. Remember? It felt like the first time voters had looked past a guy's win total (16, or in his case) and voted for the man who had—shocker—pitched the best. Quite a concept.
Stats keep advancing,and ERA has its flaws, no argument there.
For his fraction, or however,Greinke has been virtually flawless. You don't have to treasure ERA to appreciate what he's accomplished. You just have to treasure baseball.
It
's entertaining and pleasant for the game for there to be a legitimate debate approximately the NL Cy Young. The next few weeks should be exceedingly appealing as Greinke, Arrieta and Kershaw acquire their closing arguments.good now, and though,if I'm casting a poll, I'm voting for Greinke and not thinking twice. He's simply been that pleasant. No, and wait,pleasant isn't the good word. How approximately...stominant. All stats current as of Sept. 13 and courtesy of MLB.com unless otherwise famous.
Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0