By Rick Morris
As
noted in our World Series notes/oddities column, the star wattage of this
World Series isn’t as deep as some of the past years. There’s only really four players per team who
deserve the “star” designation: Justin Verlander, Miguel Cabrera, Prince
Fielder and Austin Jackson for Detroit and Matt Cain, Buster Posey, Madison
Bumgarner and Ryan Vogelsong for San Francisco.
What’s striking about that, however, is the “superstar” magnitude of the
aforementioned list. Those stars who are
here are very, very good and there’s the outside chance that the AL and NL Cy
Young and MVP winners may be playing in this series (Verlander and Cain are
both dark horses for the pitching honors, but Cabrera and Posey have strong
chances at MVP).
[There are also
some interesting notes about the best players in this series. Cabrera (Florida ’03), Verlander (Detroit ’06)
and Posey (San Fran ’10) have only played in the World Series as rookies, the
latter two players having won Rookie of the Year. Cain, now firmly out of the shadows of Tim
Lincecum, has a chance to be earn the respect that has already been accorded to
many of the other top arms of his generation with a second World Series
win. And, as
noted in our ALCS/NLCS notes/oddities column, franchise pitchers are more
likely than franchise hitters to win the World Series, so expectations are
deservedly high for Justin Verlander to cross this accomplishment off of his
wish list en route to Cooperstown.]
What’s even
MORE striking than the high level of star power in this final series, however,
is that the keys to this series are held by the grizzled, tobacco-loving
baseball lifers on the respective benches.
As
also noted in our notes/oddities column, Bruce Bochy and Jim Leyland are
part of a rare managerial matchup in the World Series, one in which both
skippers come in having won at least three pennants. These are clearly two of the top leaders of
their generation, potentially two future Hall-of-Famers, and each is burdened
by a lineup that is incomplete at best.
Starting in
2011, we devised a system for analyzing teams in the postseason in certain key
areas. Here’s how the teams look in this
World Series:
MATCHUPS
Great – 5
points
Very Good – 4
points
Decent – 3
points
Poor – 2 points
Horrible – 1
point
DETROIT (18)
Lineup
Explosiveness: Very Good
Lineup Depth: Decent
Starting
Pitching, Top-End: Great
Starting
Pitching Depth: Decent
Bullpen: Decent
SAN FRANCISCO
(16)
Lineup
Explosiveness: Horrible
Lineup Depth:
Poor
Starting
Pitching, Top-End: Great
Starting
Pitching Depth: Very Good
Bullpen: Very
Good
For what it’s
worth, St. Louis tallied 17 points on our system and our score going into last
year’s World Series was Texas 21, St. Louis 19.
So neither team, on paper, is as good as either team in last year’s
seven-game all-time classic.
There’s just
not much depth in either lineup. San
Francisco makes their lineup from two years ago, or the ’88 Dodgers for that
matter, resemble the ’27 Yankees. Their
anemic 103 home runs bring up the rear in all of Major League Baseball, behind 16th-ranked
Detroit by 60 – although they only trail the Tigers by 23 RBI and eight
runs! Timely hitting, indeed.
You should not
draw any conclusions about the length of the swings involved for the two teams
based on the power numbers, however, as neither struck out very much. Detroit was tied for 24th with
1103 whiffs, while San Francisco was just behind them in 26th with
1097. Similarly, the Giants were 5th
in batting average at .269 and the Tigers were 6th at .268. So, while neither offense is anywhere near
being deemed a juggernaut, they both make contact and can keep innings alive.
The speed
comparison is almost an inversion of the power one, though, as San Fran ranked
10th with 118 swipes and the Tigers lagged in 29th with
only 59 stolen bases.
Both pitching
staffs mix an excellent top end with depth and have comparable numbers. The Giants were 7th in ERA at 3.68
and 12th in strikeouts with 1237, while the Tigers were 9th
in ERA at 3.75 and tied for 5th in strikeouts with 1318.
Going against
the usual grain, neither bullpen is completely impeccable at the back end, at
Brian Wilson missed most of the year for Frisco with an arm injury and has been
replaced by a pretty good committee; Detroit has struggled with Jose Valverde
this postseason. So there could be more
drama than usual in save situations this year.
The DH
situation doesn’t really favor either team.
The Giants barely have enough competent starting bats for regular
National League play, so putting the likes of Aubrey Huff in the lineup in
Detroit won’t yield much above the level of their decent-batting pitchers. Detroit, however, will face regrettable
defensive issues in the Bay Area games with Delmon Young in the outfield.
The Giants have
more in the way of upside-wild-cards than the Tigers, with Lincecum, Barry Zito and Pablo Sandoval having achieved past stardom – and in the case of
Zito and Lincecum, pretty good success in this postseason. Detroit will work to avoid memories of 2006,
when they also had plenty of time to sit after winning the pennant and came out
rusty and ineffective against a hot Cardinal squad. They face a similar foe this time, as San
Francisco proved impossible to finish off in the National League playoffs, down
2-0 to Cincinnati and 3-1 to the previously unkillable Cards. In an odd twist, Detroit will have some
familiarity with their surroundings, becoming the first team ever to return to
the same greater metropolitan area to face a second team in the playoffs (after
dispatching Oakland in the ALDS). But
this is a small nugget to place up against home field, the unbeatable spirit
surrounding the Giants and the season-long propensity for summoning the right
hit at the right time from the hero of the day.
It’s very difficult to pick a team with a lineup as classically weak as
San Fran’s, but they’re not facing a Washington or Texas team that threatens to
mash them right off the field. On paper,
most of these games should be close and low-scoring, but in the spirit of the
National League playoffs, look for some rock-and-sock affairs where you least
expect them and look for the Giants to win their second world championship in
three years. San Francisco in 6 (playoff picks thus far are 3-5).
2 comments:
Excellent article, but how does your system account for a guy like Marco Scutaro, who had an astounding 14 hits in the NLCS and, generally, was not considered a big offensive threat before the Series? Steve K.
Interesting question, Steve. He's hot at the moment and has performed well for them down the stretch, but my assessment is about the lineup as a whole over a longer period of time, so I didn't factor his production into giving San Fran a stronger grade than I otherwise would have.
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