Tag: Cy Young Award

CC Sabathia Not Close to Cy Young Despite Win Total

For years the measure of a really good pitcher was how many wins he was able to rack up.

Last season, though, something happened: Zack Greinke of the Royals won the Cy Young Award despite only racking up 16 wins.

CC Sabathia currently leads the American League with 16 wins and has been the Yankees’ most dominant pitcher this season. This has some fans beginning to include his name in the conversation for the Cy Young Award.

The problem is, when you look at the numbers, CC isn’t really close at all at this point.

Here are the AL league leaders by ERA+:

Rk   Tm W L ERA G CG SHO IP BB SO ERA+ WHIP
1 Clay Buchholz BOS 14 5 2.36 21 1 1 133.1 50 89 185 1.193
2 Trevor Cahill OAK 12 5 2.50 21 1 1 140.2 42 81 164 0.981
3 Jon Lester* BOS 13 7 2.80 24 2 0 161.0 55 165 157 1.130
4 Felix Hernandez SEA 8 10 2.62 26 5 1 189.0 52 172 154 1.138
5 Cliff Lee* TOT 10 6 2.77 21 7 1 169.0 10 147 150 0.947
6 David Price* TBR 15 5 2.85 23 2 1 151.2 64 141 148 1.259
7 C.J. Wilson* TEX 11 5 3.19 24 2 0 149.1 70 116 136 1.239
8 Jered Weaver LAA 11 8 3.11 26 0 0 168.0 43 186 135 1.095
9 Jeff Niemann TBR 10 3 3.12 22 1 1 141.1 44 102 135 1.167
10 Colby Lewis TEX 9 9 3.28 23 1 0 148.1 49 150 132 1.153
11 John Danks* CHW 12 8 3.33 24 1 1 162.1 49 125 130 1.146
12 Jason Vargas* SEA 9 5 3.15 23 0 0 145.2 42 92 128 1.195
13 CC Sabathia* NYY 16 5 3.12 26 2 0 181.2 61 143 128 1.244
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated Aug. 19, 2010

 

Sabathia is ranked 13th on this list despite leading the league in wins. Yes, at times Sabathia has been dominant this season, but other times he has merely been average, and the Yankees’ potent offense has managed to snag him a couple extra wins here and there.

So despite the fact that he could finish with 20 wins for the first time in his career, Sabathia’s 2010 campaign pales in comparison to the likes of Clay Buchholz, Felix Hernandez, and even David Price.

Perhaps it is possible that things could change between now and the end of the season, but Sabathia would have to go on one hell of a tear.

 

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L.A. Angels’ Jered Weaver Could Get All-Star Revenge In The Form Of A Cy Young.

Fun fact: Who has the best winning percentage of any pitcher in baseball over the past five seasons?

Here’s a hint. It’s not C.C. Sabathia, Cliff Lee, Roy Halladay, Johan Santana, Josh Beckett or any of the other pitchers the East Coast writing establishment loves to go on endlessly about.

It’s Jered Weaver at .663.

Weaver has clearly taken his game to another level in the absence of former Angels ace John Lackey, and has managed to single-handedly carry his team through a horrific stretch in the process.

The one constant for the Angels in 2010 has been quality starts by Weaver—a stat that he leads all of MLB in with 14, along with fellow West Coast All-Star snub Felix Hernandez.

At a time when the rest of the Angels rotation and bullpen were ranked at the bottom of the league in every category, Weaver kept them afloat.

At a time when his team had the worst batting average in baseball and gave him one of the lowest run support totals in the league, Weaver managed to keep his team in games and win most of them.

Weaver should not only be in the conversation for the Cy Young, but the MVP as well.

Weaver also:

  • Leads both leagues in strikeouts with 124.
  • Leads all starters in K’s per nine innings with 10.27.
  • Is second to only Cliff Lee in walk to strikeout ratio at 4.77.
  • Has the third best WHIP in the league at 1.06.
  • Has the sixth best ERA in the league at 2.82.

The opposition is hitting .217 against him. Only Jon Lester and Colby Lewis (yet another snubbed West Coast pitcher) were better.

It is hard to be any more consistent than giving up two or less runs in 12 of your 17 starts, as the 27-year-old has done this season.

If it weren’t for Weaver, the Angels might very well be in the Seattle Mariners’ shoes right now—sellers at the trade deadline, instead of just 3.5 games out of the AL West.

Weaver doesn’t have a 100-mph, blow-you-away fastball. In fact, at times it is hard to see how he gets anyone out with a fastball that barely hits 90 mph.

The Simi Valley High School product simply knows how to pitch.

The game hasn’t seen a pitcher this crafty since Greg Maddux. Weaver is living proof that changing speeds and having control in the zone are just as important as having good “stuff.”

His ability to ring up batters through deception probably doesn’t get him noticed as much as hurlers with electric pitches like Sabathia. However, it’s his results that are electric and undeniable to anyone with an ounce of objectivity.

While most East Coast fans and writers are nestled in their beds or writing on deadline, Weaver will continue to take to the mound for his 10:05 EST starts and do his thing.

Hopefully, the outrage over Weaver’s failure to make the All-Star squad will help these misguided souls to discover this new invention called TiVo.

A whole world of baseball exists on the West Coast of your continent, East Coast homers. A world that extends beyond the former Brooklyn Dodgers and New York Giants.

If the East Coast writers manage to discover this world in time, and Weaver continues to demonstrate the consistency he has shown throughout his entire career—maybe, just maybe—Weaver can have his vindication at the end of the year in the form of a Cy Young Award.

Until then, the Angels, the team that had 100 wins last season.

The team that is the current three-time defending champions of the West.

The team that is hosting the Midsummer Classic, will have to settle for its hometown fans cheering for one player (Torii Hunter), as he takes to the field All-Star Weekend.

Enjoy your game, East Coast.

The West Coast fans are glad we could provide you with a neutral site on which to play it.

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Perfect Yet Not Enough: Why Jimenez Should Still Be Cy Young Favorite

Immediately after Roy Halladay tossed the 20th perfect game in MLB history, and an absolute gem at that—coming against a division rival in a hotly contested game, I logged on to different sports web sites to read about the reaction to such a momentous game.

Halladay’s perfect game, aside from being only the second in the history of the Philadelphia Phillies, also comes as the second of the month of May—the first one being thrown by Dallas Braden, the pitcher that had mostly been known as the guy Alex Rodriguez disrespected.

The inside story of Braden’s perfect game was that he threw it on Mother’s Day, in commemoration of his deceased mother while Braden’s grandmother was in attendance. As a nice bonus, Braden also delivered quite an embarrassing shot to Rodriguez.

Halladay’s history making game, however, comes with the virtual consensus opinion that he has now overtaken Ubaldo Jiménez as the number one contender for the National League Cy Young Award.

For baseball fans that have been conditioned to remember that the season is a “marathon and not a sprint,” this is a blithe assertion that was made in too much haste.

Jiménez, despite pitching in a slugger’s paradise, has a lower WHIP, lower ERA, more wins, two fewer defeats, and a .176 BAA to Doc’s .229. If the season ended today, like so many Halladay supporters are suggesting it has, Jiménez should still be a slight favorite.

The knock against Jiménez comes from the expectation that his numbers are going to fall victim to a proverbial slump that comes from playing the longest season in American professional sports.

But why are people so certain that Halladay isn’t going to cool off as well?

Halladay is an older pitcher and has showed signs early in the season that he’s not going to throw a gem every time he takes the hill.

Ubaldo Jiménez has allowed a total of seven runs in his ten starts this year. Halladay gave up seven runs in one start against the Red Sox—six of them earned.

In fact, in Jiménez’s one loss this year, the lanky pitcher surrendered a grand total of one run. And that one run inflated Jiménez’s then 0.87 ERA to a stout 0.93. As of his last start, it’s back to a respectable 0.88.

There is no question that Halladay’s perfect game is one of the most impressive ones that has been thrown in the last 20 years—another being Randy Johnson’s 13 strikeout perfecto against the Atlanta Braves.

But it’s Doc’s track record that has so many people unjustly writing Jiménez’s incredible season off.

Mention the name Halladay and baseball fans will revere how he dominated while playing for a less than average team in the toughest division in baseball, the American League East. Halladay almost routinely overcame the Yankees, Red Sox and the recently powerful Rays before the Phillies signed him and he moved over to the National League.

But the Cy Young Award is an award handed out for a pitcher that had a tremendous season. Not a tremendous career or a tremendous game. If baseball valued one game over the bulk of a pitcher’s work, Don Larsen would be in the Hall of Fame.

Jiménez will fall off this hot streak. It’s inevitable. If he continued this pace it would be one of the greatest seasons a pitcher has had in the history of Major League Baseball. So it’s safe to say that that ERA is going to start rising.

But Philly fans take note, that unless Halladay tosses another perfect game this season, the National League Cy Young race will be a contested one until game 162.

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Ubaldo Jimenez Is Colorado’s Commanding Contender for the Cy Young

Baseball in Colorado has always been defined by mile high scores from multiple mile deep homeruns.

Fans in the Rocky Mountains fell in love and were spoiled by the long ball for over a decade and a half.

Sure, the humidor was put in place at 20th and Blake back in 2002 and the number of homeruns have dropped a dramatic 60 per year, but balls still fly out of Coors Field at a high rate.

Since their inception in 1993, the Rockies have tried to go out and get big name pitchers, raise their own, or use homegrown Colorado talent on the mound—nothing worked.

That is, until Ubaldo Jimenez came to Denver from the Dominican Republic in 2006.

Despite his dominating stuff, Jimenez’ five year career numbers are somewhat mediocre at 39-29 with a 3.49 ERA, 499 strikeouts and a .228 opponent batting average.  

In his first four years, the only thing that stood out was Ubaldo’s high number of Ks and the nasty pitches he could throw when on top of his game. Jimenez has always been able to hit triple digits on the radar gun but command was his downfall at those devastating speeds.

When one looks closer at the young phenom’s numbers though, much more becomes clear.

Since Jimenez became a full time starter midway through the World Series 2007 season, he’s improved each and every year.

Along with strikeouts, Ubaldo’s wins have increased while his ERA, opponent’s batting average, walks, and runs have all decreased.

And while he was slightly and slowly improving as a starting pitcher, Jimenez has completely taken over on the mound this season.

Everyone started taking note after Jimenez’ no-hitter April 17th in Atlanta, the Rockies’ franchise first ever, and they haven’t looked back.

Now Jimenez is fresh off his MLB leading eighth win Thursday night against Houston (7 IP, 1 H, 2 BB, 4 K). He was an infield single away from pitching in another no-hitter, when third baseman Ian Stewart tried to bare-hand the hard hit ball and came up with only air.

Along with leading the leagues with eight wins, his miniscule 0.99 ERA is tops as well.

Ubaldo is phenomenal.

To wit, he’s only the fifth MLB pitcher since ERA was first taken in the early 20th century to win eight of his first nine starts and have an ERA under one. The last was Fernando Venezuela nearly three decades ago, in 1981.

Although, even with those spectacular numbers, Jimenez isn’t running away with the Cy Young Trophy—yet.

His two main competitors are the Phillies’ Roy Halladay and the division rival Giants’ Tim Lincecum. Both pitchers have been dominant for many years and both are currently playing stellar baseball. Halladay is 6-3 with a 2.22 ERA and is tops in complete games at four. Lincecum is 5-0 with a 2.35 ERA and his 75 Ks lead NL.

No offense to either of those two magnificent pitchers, but Jimenez is better this year—he deserves the Cy Young.

That is if he can continue this awesome success.

But beyond numbers, Ubaldo is unique, that’s what makes him so great. At 6’4” 205 pounds, Jimenez’ body is more like an NBA shooting guard than your average major league pitcher.

The morning after pitching, when the birds are chirping as Jimenez likely usually smiles with the rising sun, he runs—five miles.

This is no pot-bellied David Wells, the ex-Yankee pitcher that threw a no-hitter while, “half in the bag,” as he said referring to being half drunk.

Jimenez is an extremely hard working pitcher who’s devoted to improving his game.

April’s NL pitcher of the month has done just that.

Jimenez has improved to the point that batters cringe days in advance when they hear his name as the Rockies’ starting pitcher.

While Jimenez is leading the majors in nearly every major pitching statistic, he should have another—most opponents’ knees buckled.

Plainly, Ubaldo Jimenez throws insanely wild and wicked pitches with heat and movement.

He’s untouchable by even the best batters and Colorado knows they have the best chance of winning when Jimenez is on the rubber.

Ubaldo is unique in another way; he’s a pitcher that is exhilarating to watch—something brand new and exciting in this dusty old cow town that grew up on baseball won with the long-ball, not a well executed fastball.

The national media has caught on, so Denver, let’s get out and pack Coors each and every time Ubaldo pitches because he is the biggest professional sports star our city has (playing) right now.

If we’re lucky, Jimenez will lead the Rockies to their third postseason appearance in four years, and bring the biggest individual award to town since Larry Walker brought home the MVP in 1997.

 

Rich Kurtzman is a Colorado State University Alumnus and a freelance sports journalist. Along with being the Denver Nuggets Featured Columnist here on B/R, Kurtzman is the Denver Broncos FC for NFLTouchdown.com , the CSU Rams Examiner on examiner.com and the Colorado/Utah Correspondent for stadiumjourney.com.

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