12 August 2016

Cup of jO's: 2nd Half, Orioles with .481 Winning Percentage


The season has been a peculiar one for the club.  Going in, nearly all projection models pegged the Orioles as a 78-82 win team with good offense, great relief, and a shoddy rotation.  The only outliers were PECOTA and the Depot model.  PECOTA was not impressed and put the over/under at 72 wins while the Depot model saw a mid-tier club in a tight AL East talent pool that would be pushed up to 1st (85 wins) with strong personnel control and a strong bullpen.

The first half surprised many as the Orioles opened up a 51-36 record powered by an elite offense and an elite relief corps while making up for wretched starting pitching.  It was mocked when people like Keith Law noted in April, May, and June what the Orioles record would be if you ignored their season beginning streak.  So it is strange there is no opportunity to mock anyone now when the club has gone 13-14 in the second half, which over a full season would be 78 games.  One might expect to hear that the Orioles are showing their true talent level now out of a flukey first half.  However, one should shrug at that suggestion.

1st Half 2nd Half
Batting wRC+ 112 (2nd) 73 (14th)
fWAR 14.7 (4th) -0.1 (14th)
Rotation FIP 4.73 (12th) 4.23 (6th)
fWAR 4.2 (12th) 2.3 (7th)
Relief FIP 3.86 (7th) 3.62 (4th)
fWAR 3.3 (3rd) 1.0 (5th)

When looking at the above, the immediate concern is how the offense turned into a rotten pumpkin while the bottom tier rotation has almost performed at a first division level.  It is not a complete flip, but close to it.  What is remarkable is that the second half rotation performance is only a little ahead of where most projections pegged it while the second half hitting is far behind projections and first half performance.

With this all in mind, I think we should feel fairly confidant that that club's batting and starting rotation should even out a bit and produce roughly the same total value in the second half that was produced in the first half.  It will look differently with simply an above average offense and an average starting rotation, but the total should come out about the same. 

That should be good enough for a playoff spot, though maybe not one that gets a bye from the Wild Card.  As it stands, the club is a half game out of first and three games ahead for the final Wild Card slot.  Regardless, the next seven or so weeks should be exciting.  Your heart should be racing until the club is in the clear, which will be about 3 games + the number of weeks left.  Right now, that number is 10 with Detroit, Seattle, and Houston all trying to make themselves relevant.

Tm W L GB vEast vCent vWest
TEX 68 48 --- 14-13 15-11 29-19
CLE 64 48 --- 12-16 31-16 11-9
TOR 65 50 --- 27-21 14-13 11-9
 BAL 64 50 --- 26-19 21-8 11-19
 BOS 61 52 --- 22-22 11-14 19-11
 DET 61 53 0.5 16-11 20-24 13-13
 SEA 60 53 1.0 17-9 13-14 19-24
 HOU 60 55 2.0 9-14 15-14 28-23
 NYY 58 56 3.5 16-24 19-11 16-11
 KCR 55 59 6.5 12-14 25-16 10-20
 CHW 54 60 7.5 16-13 19-27 13-13
 OAK 51 64 11.0 15-15 10-13 21-24
 LAA 49 65 12.5 8-16 15-11 20-27
 TBR 46 67 15.0 19-24 10-20 10-13
 MIN 46 69 16.0 10-21 14-26 16-13
Avg 57 56 15-16 16-15 16-16
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
Generated 8/12/2016.

2 comments:

Pip said...

Jon, the Red Sox seem to be snake bit. Despite being a very good team, they are floundering.
It seems like whatever else happens, the Red Sox will be on the outside looking in.
Do you have any ideas about who are the teams to beat going forward?

Jon Shepherd said...

They may be snake bit, but it seems hard to discount them too much with all the talent they have. I think they will give the Orioles a run for their money and I have a feeling the Astros are going to come on hot.