Rome with another banger of an article today. I grabbed the main points below.
https://theathletic.com/4923997/2023/10/03/astros-road-trip-lessons/Quote:
What we learned from Astros' do-or-die road trip and how it may impact October
The Astros' postseason really started seven days ago during a season-defining road trip. To secure a spot in October and maintain faint hope of an American League West title, every game felt like a must-win.
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Examining the details of those high-stakes victories affords a glimpse into how manager Dusty Baker and his coaching staff will operate in October. Here are five things we learned:
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It's going to be difficult for Yainer Diaz to play
Diaz took five plate appearances during the most crucial six games of Houston's season.
Rubber meets the road, Dusty is going all in on Maldy. Sucks, but I think it is what it is at this point. The handling of the catcher position / Yainer not playing more 1B/LF/DH is probably the biggest issue of the season or at least tied with the Chas BS.
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Teams are going to challenge Jos Abreu
Seattle's season was on the line in this game, so Servais managed like it. It's not unreasonable to expect managers to act similarly in October. Facing Abreu feels far less daunting than either Alvarez or Tucker ahead of him.
Its almost like Abreu shouldn't be able to be challenged in place of Alvarez & Tucker. Maybe he should be batting in the 7 hole.
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The third and fourth starters
Verlander and Valdez will almost certainly start the first two games of the ALDS. Nothing after Houston's co-aces is easy to decipher.
Matchups dictate everything in October, so the Astros will need to await the winner of the series between Minnesota and Toronto to develop a clear pitching plan for the remainder of the series.
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Neither Javier nor Urquidy is foolproof. Urquidy boasts a 5.29 ERA, is still not stretched out beyond 70 or so pitches and struggled to miss bats during his start against the D-backs. Javier's inefficiency and inconsistent fastball are ongoing problems and only finished six innings twice in his past 11 starts.
Both men, however, boast what France and Brown do not: experience starting on the sport's biggest stage
I think Chandler is somewhat missing here. They have treated Javier like a top-end guy all season even with all his struggles. He's paid like it. He's shown flashes of his old self this year. He ended the year fairly strong too. He's the clear #3. #4 matters a lot less. Start Urquidy, but know its an all hands on deck game.
Stat - Last 4 Starts / Season #sERA - 3.05 / 4.56
FIP - 3.06 / 4.58
xFIP - 3.97 / 5.16
SIERA - 3.71 / 4.76
K% - 32.5% / 23.1%
EV - 89.1 / 89.1
LA - 27.2 / 24.3 (more pop ups)
Barrel% - 4.2% / 9.4%
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Controlling the running game is a problem
Seattle and Arizona attempted nine stolen bases across the six games against Houston. Eight were successful.
Both Astros catchers boast above-average arm strength and have nearly identical pop times. Maldonado averages 82 mph on his throws with an average pop time of 1.93 seconds. Diaz, in a far smaller sample size, sits at 85 mph with a 1.90-second pop time. Major-league average pop time is 1.99 seconds.
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Struggles to adjust to the pitch clock and limited disengagements have been apparent all season and could be exposed in October. Houston's pitchers are too slow with their times to home plate and, most of the time, provide neither of the team's catchers a chance to throw anyone out.
Baseball Savant measures the average distance of a runner from second base when a pitch crosses the plate. League average is 56 feet. When Maldonado catches, runners are 53.9 feet from second base. They are 54.1 feet from the bag when Diaz is behind the plate. Translation: runners are stealing off Houston's pitchers.
100% Agree and I am glad Chandler broke it down to now **** on Maldy here. Its one of the thing Maldy still does well.
[url=https://theathletic.com/mlb/player/mauricio-dubon-lAB5G60IkqHl6uEV/][/url]Quote:
Mauricio Dubn is viewed as the team's best defensive center fielder
Dubn started three of the team's final six games in center field. In a fourth, he entered in the ninth inning with Houston clinging to a one-run lead on Saturday, the clearest sign yet that Baker views him as Houston's best defensive center fielder.
Dubn finished the year worth four outs above average in center field. Teammate Jake Meyers is worth nine, but it's clear Baker prefers Dubn's arm and overall defensive profile.
I think Chandler needs to say DUSTY views Dubon as the team's best outfielder. Meyers is the best. He's 11 in OAA in limited playing time and 4th in Jump. He makes the make sense as a CF "closer".
But I will say Dubon has come on fairly strong defensively. He's not elite, but he's not an issue. He's above avg with a good arm.
Let's just hope his PT is more dependent on match-up. If a LHP starts, an OF with Dubon & Chas makes some sense (Brantley to the bench).
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Ketch, do you think the final stretch will be paid similarly to the postseason or will there be greater influence from the front office? It is a fair point by Rome that the last week has basically been "playoff baseball".