Saturday, May 23, 2020

Cloverland Leagues: 22 May Update


Friday was an off-day, so it's time for another update.

I was actually thinking I wanted another update anyhow, and hadn't quite gotten around to one in the last 2-3 days. Taking a Doylist look at things, the runs per game (and home runs) are rather too high. I'm not sure if it's one problem or two different ones. It's worse in the AL than the NL, which maybe is DH-related? Not sure. I think there are also too many strikeouts.

In any case, let's just pull out a few players. We're very close to one-third of the way through the season. David Cone is 4-4 with a 5.35 ERA (which is actually good for a 106 ERA+) and 12.7 K/9. In the real 1998, his ERA+ was 125. It's not unreasonable to think he'd suffer when facing stiffer competition in a league of all-time greats. His real 1998 K/9 was 9.1, though. So he's striking out more than 33% more batters.  Kevin Millwood of Atlanta is 4-3 with an ERA+ of 92 and 12.6 K/9. His ERA+ in real 1998 was 102 and he had 8.4 K/9. Once again, he's striking out more people in this all-time league than in real life.  Turning to batters, Ichiro is hitting .398 with an OPS+ of 132 and a 16-HR pace. In real 2001 he had an OPS+ of 126 and 8 home runs. So, against all-time pitching staffs he's doing better than he did when he got to face a bunch of terrible staffs a bunch of times a year.  I could go on, but you get the point. Maybe this is something I could go in and tweak (or could have gone in and tweaked) before starting the league, but so it goes. Maybe this is why the MLB-sponsored  games are tournaments rather than full seasons--it works for seasons with a reasonable distribution of talent but not what I'm doing.  In any case, it's perfectly fun and there's no real ground truth, so that's all fine. But I don't think it's "realistic" inasmuch as we can reasonably form expectations.

Anyway.

We've now got 48 games played, putting us close to 1/3 of the way. Here are the current standings:




Basically, the AL remains very close and the NL still looks pretty settled. In the AL Northeast, Boston and Cleveland have more or less maintained their previous pace while the Yankees went 8-4 to gain a share of first place. The Yankees' stretch included a frustrating sweep by the Angels where they were outscored 43-14 and had a bench-clearing brawl with the Angels in a game that was mercifully cut short by rain. Minnesota's mediocre 6-6 run was enough to let them gain sole possession of the AL Central, as the other teams have been playing abysmally badly (the Tigers and Brewers were 4-8, the White Sox 3-9). In the AL Southeast the standings have been kind of static, but the teams have (mostly) been playing well: Texas and Tampa Bay at 8-4 and Houston at 7-5. On the other hand, Baltimore had the worst stretch of any team in either league at 2-10. In the AL West, Seattle and Oakland inched closer to Kansas City but it was the Angels who had the best stretch at 8-4 during a difficult run of games (the Yankees, Red Sox, Blues, and Rays).

Over in the NL, the story seems to be that the teams in the drivers seats are still more or less there: Pittsburgh, Atlanta, and the Dodgers all extended their division leads. However, there does appear to be some action in the NL Central.  St. Louis' lead has shrunk from 4 games to 2. They've played OK at 7-5 in the most recent 12-game stretch (the same as the Dodgers), but the Reds have been playing much better of late: 10-2 in the last 12 and with an overall Pythagorean record that would put them 1st in the division. I'd suspected they'd do well, so the question will be whether they can sustain this over the next stretch--it starts relatively easily against Florida and San Francisco before they host the juggernaut Atlanta team.

Turning to the individual statistics: The overall leader in batting is Manny Sanguillen at .416 and Eric Aybar leads the AL at .399.  The leaders last time have cooled, with Bregman down to .390 and Clemente at .379. Bregman and Chipper Jones still lead their leagues in WAR, both by a significant margin. Pat Burrell has taken over the lead in the HR race, with 8 in the last 12 games and 11 in the last 15 games. Even that is not quite as hot as George Foster, who has 12 HR and 27 RBI in the last 14 games. Stargell leads the NL in HR with 20 to Foster's 19. 5 AL players have between 59-62 RBI, with Bret Boone leading the way. Matt Adams of the Cardinals leads the NL with 53.

As noted above, the NL seems to be a lower run scoring environment, or has better pitching, or something. So as you'd expect most of the pitching leaders are in the NL.  Kevin Brown of the Marlins lowered his ERA to 1.20 since last time, giving up 1 run in 18 innings. John Smoltz also has his ERA down under 2.00 now. Jack McDowell leads the AL in ERA with 2.27 after a couple of nice starts including a 1-hit shutout of the Twins. Don Gullett and Garret Richards both have 8 wins to lead the majors (and their leagues). Kevin Brown of the Padres is now at 3.8 pitching WAR, with Smoltz not too far behind at 3.6. Meanwhile, the Randy Johnson strikeout parade continues, he's up to 163 after striking out 36 in 16 innings including tying his all-time record with another 21-K game.

That's all for now, see you at @CloverlandLeag1 on Twitter! 

Sunday, May 10, 2020

Cloverland Leagues: 10 May Update


It's another off-day! Time for another update.

We're twelve games further in, with each team having played 36 games. I'm not crazy about the schedule, to be honest--every team plays a bunch of games in a row, kind of in lockstep. I feel like it might really end up wreaking havoc on some pitching staffs, though maybe the AI can handle it since OOTP is pretty well established? In any case, with just a 150-game schedule, we're nearly 1/4 done!

Here are the current standings:



The Red Sox' winning streak ended just after the last update, and they lost 2 of 3 to the Yankees, were swept by Oakland, and lost 2 of 3 to Detroit (though they won a series with Oakland). New York (7-5 since last time) and Cleveland (8-4 since last time) have made up most of the deficit. Between now and the next off-day update (22 May), Boston will play Seattle, Milwaukee, Baltimore, and LA, the Yankees play most of those same teams (playing Toronto instead of just-visited Seattle), and Cleveland faces LA, Toronto, Houston, and Kansas City.

Over in the AL Central, the White Sox went 8-4 to take over the division lead, sweeping Baltimore and taking 2 of 3 from Milwaukee and LA before losing a series to Toronto. They're within shouting distance of .500, the only division leader below that mark. Milwaukee had a disastrous stretch, going just 2-10 and are now tied for the worst record in this simulation.

The AL Southeast has remained more or less static. Tampa Bay and Houston went 7-5 and narrowed the gap between them and Texas to 1 game. Baltimore had a very difficult stretch and dropped to 5 games back. But none of these teams strike me as out of it.  Texas' schedule next has them playing Detroit, Seattle, Milwaukee, and Baltimore. Tampa Bay will play Baltimore, LA, Toronto, and Houston, while Houston faces Chicago, Minnesota, and Cleveland before the showdown in Tampa Bay.

Kansas City remains in first place in the AL West, slightly enlarging their lead after a 7-5 run. However, second place now belongs to Seattle, who swept Minnesota and won series with Tampa Bay and the Yankees (while losing a series to Cleveland) to go 8-4. Oakland also went 8-4, and has taken over 3rd.

The story in the NL is more of good teams extending leads. The largest divisional lead in the AL is 3 games (Kansas City in the AL West), while the smallest divisional lead in the NL is 4 games (St. Louis in the NL Central). Pittsburgh went 8-4, St. Louis went 9-3, Atlanta went 10-2, and the Dodgers went 9-3. On the flip side of this, Montreal, Colorado, Charlotte, and the Mets went 3-9, and Arizona and the Giants went 4-8.  Atlanta had a 13-game winning streak, which was snapped by Pittsburgh in a showdown of the league's best teams (Atlanta won the series). St. Louis has the longest active winning streak at 8, Charlotte owns the longest active losing streak at 6.

Looking at the statistical leaders, Alex Bregman has been very hot, and now leads the AL in batting at .429 and WAR at 3.3. Roberto Clemente is at .414 to lead the NL in batting average, Chipper Jones has a WAR of 2.5 to lead th eNL. George Brett remains the AL home run leader at 17 despite only hitting 2 in the last 12 games--Pat Burrell and Darryl Strawberry (Yankees edition) are just behind him at 16. Cody Bellinger leads the NL with 15.   Brett continues to drive in runs, however, with 18 in 12 games to maintain his RBI lead with 15. Matt Holliday of the Rockies leads the NL with 43.  Brett's RBI pace remains close to where it was (229 on the season), though his home run pace is down to "only" 71 (in a 150-game season, though)...

The pitching leaders include Kevin Brown of the Marlins, who has a 1.63 ERA, Kevin Brown of the Padres, who has 2.8 pitching WAR, several folks tied with 6 wins (Don Gullett is the only NL player among them, though), and Randy Johnson maintaining an insane strikeout pace, now at 127 for the season and averaging 19.1 K/9. That puts him on a pace to strike out 529 people on the season.

Thanks again for reading, and you can get daily scores and highlights on the league Twitter feed at @CloverlandLeag1, which I retweet at my personal feed at @asrivkin.