Tuesday, October 21, 2025

Newsletter Excerpt, October 21, 2025 -- Dan Wilson's Choice

 

This is a preview of the Joe Sheehan Baseball Newsletter, an e-mail newsletter about all things baseball, featuring analysis and opinion about the game on and off the field from the perspective of the informed outsider.

You can subscribe to the newsletter for one year for $79.95 using your PayPal account or major credit card. This is the best time to become a Newsletter subscriber -- playoff coverage has been where it shines for 15 years!

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Mariners fans, and for that matter most of the baseball world, will argue that Springer’s homer was also set up by a terrible decision by Wilson. The Mariners’ manager’s choice of Bazardo to face Springer in the seventh is the most derided managerial move since Kevin Cash pulled Blake Snell in the sixth inning of Game Six of the 2020 World Series. As was the case then, though, I can defend Wilson’s decision, though I think his overall performance was poor.

When Bryan Woo allowed the first two batters to reach in the seventh, Wilson faced a tough choice. He’d looked to Woo to go around the order once, and likely hoped to get eight or even nine outs from him. Now the tying run was on second, the go-ahead run was at the plate, and he still needed eight more outs. Moreover, with the top of the order up with one out in the seventh and no double play in order, it was very likely that the top of the Jays’ order would bat again in the ninth.

Wilson’s #1 relief pitcher is Andres Muñoz, who was used almost exclusively in a one-inning role. In 64 regular-season appearances, Muñoz got three or fewer outs 63 times, and four in the other game. He’d thrown more than 28 pitches once, and then just 31. As is often the case in the playoffs, Muñoz was asked to do more, getting at least four outs three times and going two full innings in ALDS Game Two. He had still yet to throw more than 25 pitches.

Once Wilson went to Muñoz, the righty would likely be asked to finish the game, especially with the likelihood that the top of the Jays’ order would bat again. I believe that asking Muñoz to get eight outs, maybe throw 30-40 pitches with the season on the line, would be setting him up to fail. I understand the argument that a manager should use his best relief pitcher in the biggest spot: I damn near invented it. In this case, though, it would be easy to foresee a second “biggest spot” seven outs later, with an exhausted Muñoz trying to retire Springer or Vladimir Guerrero Jr., or Wilson having to turn to Bazardo or Matt Brash at that point.

Where I dissent from the crowd is in the idea that Muñoz is so superior to Bazardo as to make the choice obvious. From the ALCS preview:

Still, Dan Wilson should be able to lean more on Andres Muñoz and Matt Brash late in games without sweating matchups, while Eduard Bazardo’s mastery over right-handed batters (.166/.231/.261) elevates his importance in this series.

Bringing in Bazardo to face the Jays’ top right-handed batters in the seventh inning is a pretty good game script for Wilson. Beating good right-handed batters in big spots has been Bazardo’s job all year, and increasingly so as the year went on. Bazardo’s average Leverage Index (aLI) jumped from 0.95 in the first half to 1.24 in the second; in mid-September, when the Mariners were making their charge to win the AL West, Bazardo made eight appearances, struck out 11 of the 31 batters he faced, and had an aLI of 1.42. This wasn’t some random; Bazardo was a key member of this bullpen. From a matchup standpoint, Bazardo (.166/.231/.261, 27% strikeout rate vs. RHB) and Muñoz (.181/.276/.233, 32%) were indistinguishable for the job at hand.

Wilson didn’t have a great choice once Woo gave up the single to IKF. He knew after Andres Gimenez bunted -- what, John Schneider was going to pass up a bunt? -- he would need eight outs, and would probably need to get Springer and maybe need to get Vladito out twice. Muñoz could reasonably get six outs, and someone else was going to need to get two, either now or in the ninth. I think choosing his righty-eater to pitch to RLRR was fine. As with saying “Blake Snell was cruising,” shouting “Muñoz is his best reliever” ignores the details and turns a complex decision into a screaming match.

Any use case for Muñoz in the seventh, if there is one, has him start the inning. That lines him up to face the bottom of the order in the seventh and the top in the eighth, and if that goes well, then you can match up in the ninth with Brash and Gabe Speier with far less chance that Springer and Guerrero will come up to bat.  Wilson thought he could get Woo through the bottom of the order. Even at that, pulling Woo after his second walk, this on five pitches to Barger, would have made sense. Woo was not sharp, missing gloveside repeatedly. Having Bazardo ready for IKF gives him a better chance to succeed and makes it harder on Kiner-Falefa. The original sin was asking too much from Woo, already being used in a way that voids the warranty, when you needed nine more outs, could probably ask for six from Muñoz, and had a path to keeping the top of the Jays’ order from batting a fifth time.

From the Mariners/Tigers ALDS preview:

No manager should be setting his rotation based on home/road splits, and it does make me wonder whether we’re about to find out Dan Wilson is in over his head.

Wilson’s decision to use Bazardo instead of Muñoz, given the batters, given the game state, given Bazardo’s skills, is defensible and I’d argue correct. Once I widen the lens to take in a longer time frame, though, I think we saw Wilson’s lack of postseason experience blow up on him. If Wilson was willing to use Bazardo in a max-leverage spot last night, then what the hell was Bazardo doing throwing two innings of minimum-leverage relief in Game Six? What was Matt Brash doing in that game? Did Brash’s 21 pitches in a three-run game affect his availability for Game Seven? Wilson chased Game Six, and while I can’t guarantee Bazardo throws a better pitch to Springer than a sinker middle-in if he’s fully rested, or that having a rested Brash might have changed Wilson’s decision tree, I do know that using them for three innings and 36 pitches down five and three runs respectively was an error. Pregame, I focused on the Brash choice, in part because I thought Wilson would stick to Muñoz, Brash, and Bryan Woo tonight. As it turns out, he needed one more guy.
 

Monday, October 20, 2025

Newsletter Excerpt, October 20, 2025 -- "Postseason 2025: Ball Go Down, Team Go Down"

 

This is a preview of the Joe Sheehan Baseball Newsletter, an e-mail newsletter about all things baseball, featuring analysis and opinion about the game on and off the field from the perspective of the informed outsider.

You can subscribe to the newsletter for one year for $79.95 using your PayPal account or major credit card. This is the best time to become a Newsletter subscriber -- playoff coverage has been where it shines for 15 years!

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Lineup depth has become a big story. Fox ran a graphic highlighting how much better the bottom of the Jays’ order has been relative to the Mariners’ #7 to #9 spots. I can isolate that even more; Barger’s homer came out of the #7 spot, which he’s shared with Ernie Clement and some defensive replacements in this series. The Jays’ #7 hitters have hit .273/.333/.591 in the ALCS, with two homers. The Mariners’ #7 hitters, mostly Dominic Canzone and J.P. Crawford, have hit .167/.333/.250. The story of the Blue Jays’ season was depth; I comped them to the Brewers during the summer. That depth, that productivity from the non-star parts of the lineup, may end up the difference in this seven-game series.  
 
 

Saturday, October 18, 2025

Newsletter Excerpt, October 18, 2025 -- "Two Heroes"

 

This is a preview of the Joe Sheehan Baseball Newsletter, an e-mail newsletter about all things baseball, featuring analysis and opinion about the game on and off the field from the perspective of the informed outsider.

You can subscribe to the newsletter for one year for $79.95 using your PayPal account or major credit card. This is the best time to become a Newsletter subscriber -- playoff coverage has been where it shines for 15 years!

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Maybe last night was the greatest game ever played. Don Larsen threw a perfect game in the World Series. Rick Wise hit two home runs while throwing a no-hitter. Reggie Jackson hit three home runs in a Series clincher. Bob Gibson almost won a Game Seven by himself. Fernando Tatis hit two grand slams in one inning. Willie Mays made a catch that turned a World Series and then scored the decisive run in extra innings. They all live on the head of the same pin. You can no more rank them than you can rank the paintings in the Met, the sculptures at the Louvre, your own children. Shohei Ohtani, on a night like last night, exists outside of WAR and WPA, above IVB and MPH, beyond even Ruth and Mays. Shohei Ohtani, for one night in Los Angeles, pushed the boundaries of our game, pushed our baseball imagination, like no one ever before.

I can’t wait to see what he does next. 
 
 

Friday, October 17, 2025

Newsletter Excerpt, October 17, 2025 -- "Postseason 2025: Maxed Out"

This is a preview of the Joe Sheehan Baseball Newsletter, an e-mail newsletter about all things baseball, featuring analysis and opinion about the game on and off the field from the perspective of the informed outsider.

You can subscribe to the newsletter for one year for $79.95 using your PayPal account or major credit card. This is the best time to become a Newsletter subscriber -- playoff coverage has been where it shines for 15 years!

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Mostly, though, the Mariners had no plan at the plate. Coming into the game, we talked about how Scherzer’s fastball had been very hittable all year while his slider and changeup had been considerably more effective. The goal should have been to jump on the fastball and hold off on soft stuff and spin. Instead, the Mariners swung at fewer than half the fastballs they saw from Scherzer, including taking eight for strikes. Meanwhile, they swung at 24 of Scherzer’s other 42 pitches, despite just 13 of them being in the zone, including swinging at every single curveball they saw from Scherzer, ten in all.


 
 

 

Thursday, October 16, 2025

Newsletter Excerpt, October 16, 2025 -- "Postseason 2025: Blowout"

This is a preview of the Joe Sheehan Baseball Newsletter, an e-mail newsletter about all things baseball, featuring analysis and opinion about the game on and off the field from the perspective of the informed outsider.

You can subscribe to the newsletter for one year for $79.95 using your PayPal account or major credit card. This is the best time to become a Newsletter subscriber -- playoff coverage has been where it shines for 15 years!

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It’s fair to say things have changed. Through eight playoff games, Dodgers starters have thrown nearly as many innings -- 52 2/3 -- as they did during last year’s entire run. They’ve thrown 71% of the team’s innings as a whole, a percentage that didn’t seem possible in modern baseball. It’s actually more extreme than that because the Dodgers ended the year with a six-man rotation and a bad bullpen. Of their 74 innings pitched, just 8 1/3 have been thrown by true relievers. Roki Sasaki, Emmet Sheehan, Clayton Kershaw, and Glasnow, all starting pitchers in 2025, have thrown 13 innings out of the pen. 

The quality of those innings has been exceptional: a 1.54 ERA, a 63/13 K/BB, a 32% strikeout rate. Seven of the Dodgers’ eight starts have been quality starts -- at least six innings, no more than three earned runs. In the entire 2024 postseason, there were just 18 quality starts by all pitchers. The Dodgers, with seven, already are tied for the most postseason quality starts of any team since 2019 (Nationals, 9), and are likely to have the most since the Tigers had ten in 2013.  
 
 

 

Wednesday, October 15, 2025

Newsletter Excerpt, October 15. 2025 -- "Postseason 2025: Mailbag"

 

This is a preview of the Joe Sheehan Baseball Newsletter, an e-mail newsletter about all things baseball, featuring analysis and opinion about the game on and off the field from the perspective of the informed outsider.

You can subscribe to the newsletter for one year for $79.95 using your PayPal account or major credit card. This is the best time to become a Newsletter subscriber -- playoff coverage has been where it shines for 15 years!

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Regarding manager walks to load the bases...I'm with you that when there are two outs you're comparing batting averages to on-base percentages. The calculation is different with one out, like it was in the 15th last night. Julio Rodriguez didn't need a hit to score a run, he pretty much just needed good contact. Jorge Polanco didn't need to get on base, he needed contact without a double play. 

-- Donald W.


I found nine intentional walks that fit the description: second and third, one out, tied game, seventh inning or later. The Win Probability Added was -0.01 in seven cases, 0.00 in the other two. In the abstract, it’s a neutral decision, ever so slightly negative.

Whether you’re getting the platoon advantage or not, and the gap between the hitter you’re walking and the one you’re facing, are huge factors in the decision, so take the general with a grain of salt. I am certain, though, that the value to a pitcher in pitching with a base open versus not, independent of the AVG/OBP issue, is significant and pushes the decision over.

Yes, if you’re facing a team managed by Mike Shildt and he’s taken Albert Pujols out of the game and your choice is facing Matt Carpenter or a pitcher, put up four fingers. For most reasonable situations, you’re better off giving your pitcher flexibility and taking “the pitcher has to throw strikes” away from the hitter.

--J.