Resetting division projections

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  • ThomasTomasz
    • Nov 2024

    Resetting division projections

     
    When you do a lot of work with projections, one of the things that takes some getting used to is the inevitability that your soothsaying will miss the mark on several occasions. Baseball teams have a lot of moving parts, and over half a year there's great potential for assumptions to go awry, askew or afoul.

    With a quarter of the season already behind us, we have a great deal of new information on teams -- some good, some bad -- and unless Bud Selig comes up with some crazy new idea to make the All-Star Game "count" even more, there are a lot of wins and losses in the books that nobody can go back and erase. Missing the mark here and there really isn't so bad -- if we could predict the future perfectly, things would be rather boring.

    So, which teams have changed their potential position in the standings at the end of the year by the greatest degree?

    To answer this question, I used updated ZiPS projections and a set of Monte Carlo simulations to estimate wins during the rest of the season, adding them to this morning's standings. The good news is that most teams still project in the same neighborhood, with 25 of 30 teams coming within six wins of the preseason projection edition.

    But if you have a tendency to see your glasses as half full, as I do, that leaves five teams that ZiPS is likely, at season's end, to have missed by more than six games.

    1. Los Angeles Dodgers
    Preseason projection: 72-90
    Current projection: 87-75
    Difference: plus-15 wins

    ZiPS was down on the Dodgers going into the season, given that the team required the best pitcher and the best hitter in the NL just to eclipse the .500 mark in 2011. The two superstars -- Clayton Kershaw and Matt Kemp -- and the departed Hiroki Kuroda combined for 60 percent of the team's wins above replacement last year. With most of the team's offseason additions looking a bit like the remainder bin at a book store, there were good reasons to be pessimistic about the Dodgers' chances.

    Rather than even a minor regression, Kershaw and Kemp have retained the performance of their big 2011s this season. And in Kemp's case, he has safely surpassed last year's performance so by adding nearly 200 points of OPS to last season's shoulda-been MVP year. Add in Ted Lilly and Chris Capuano combining for 101 1/3 innings and a 2.04 ERA, Andre Ethier already at more than 80 percent of his 2011 homer count, and a bullpen with few nasty surprises, and it's not hard to see why the Dodgers are doing so well in the early months.

    ZiPS is still not convinced the Dodgers will be a great team going forward -- Kemp probably won't end the year with an OPS near 1.200, and even with the decrease in offense, soft-tossing lefties don't usually finish with ERAs around 2.00. The lineup, so Kemp-heavy it resembles a Little League team that somehow convinced league management that Barry Bonds was a 12-year-old, still is riddled with holes and lacks depth. But with a 29-13 record, even a sub-.500 record the rest of the way gives the Dodgers a strong shot at taking a weak division.

    2. Baltimore Orioles
    Preseason projection: 67-95
    Current projection: 81-81
    Difference: plus-14 wins

    My favorite storyline of the season -- no doubt due to my bias as an O's fan -- the O's are now threatening to hit the .500 mark for the first time since we were all a lot younger. When the O's were last a good team, Bryce Harper was nearing his fifth birthday.

    That the offense (fourth in the league) has been so strong is perhaps not so shocking given the breakout potential of youngish players like Matt Wieters and Adam Jones. The truly shocking thing has been the pitching staff, especially the bullpen, with a collective 2.29 ERA so far.

    Baltimore likely won't be fighting for first place when we hit the fall, but the Orioles have reached the point where they're probably a better team than the cellar-dwellers they've been in recent years. Possibly the most important thing going forward is team owner Peter Angelos recognizing the irony of a team that's finally becoming relevant is that it wasn't constructed by feasting on over-the-hill veterans and mediocre relievers in a futile quest for .500.

    3. Colorado Rockies
    Preseason projection: 85-77
    Current projection: 76-86
    Difference: minus-9 wins

    The team's bullpen is still solid but practically nothing else is. Only one starter, Juan Nicasio, has an ERA better than league-average (when taking park into consideration), and the starter with the second-best ERA (Drew Pomeranz) was demoted to Triple-A for a while.

    Without any true juggernaut teams in the division, a lousy pitching staff might have been overcome with a solid lineup, but Troy Tulowitzki is having an ordinary year, and the team is getting little production out of its three starters older than 35. The team is actually third in runs scored, but once you factor for Coors Field, that ranking drops to 13th. Even Jorge de la Rosa eventually having a successful comeback isn't enough to right this ship by itself.

    4. Los Angeles Angels
    Preseason projection: 90-72
    Current projection: 82-80
    Difference: minus-8 wins

    The only real good news for the last-place Angels is that with the extra wild card and several of the teams expected to be the class of the AL struggling to various degrees, there still are realistic scenaros that have them squeezing into the playoffs.

    Even with the Angels finally finding room to play their best outfielder (Mike Trout), there's no way the team can survive with half the starting lineup having numbers akin to good-hitting pitchers. To turn their season around, the Angels need a star in Albert Pujols, a solid Erick Aybar, a Howie Kendrick with an OBP better than .300, and a Peter Bourjos with a gold glove not attached to a .545 OPS.

    5. Milwaukee Brewers
    Preseason projection: 86-76
    Current projection: 78-84
    Difference: minus-8 wins

    With legitimate major leaguers on the left side of the infield this year, the Brewers looked to have decent odds to survive the loss of Prince Fielder. Instead, the team has lost Alex Gonzalez and Mat Gamel for the year with torn ACLs, leaving holes in the lineup to be filled by Cesar Izturis and Travis Ishikawa.

    The bullpen, formerly a team strength, has exactly two players who have made positive contributions this season: Manny Parra and Kameron Loe. The team can still manage without Fielder, but it needs Rickie Weeks contributing again, better performances from Yovani Gallardo and Randy Wolf, and John Axford to summon whatever mystical powers are contained in his mustache. Luckily for the Brew Crew, the St. Louis Cardinals and Cincinnati Reds haven't lapped the division yet, so there's still plenty of time.

    Revised AL projections
    How the American League races project after a quarter of the season.

    EAST
    W
    L
    GB
    Tampa Bay Rays
    90
    72
    --
    New York Yankees
    89
    73
    1
    Boston Red Sox
    86
    76
    4
    Toronto Blue Jays
    85
    77
    5
    Baltimore Orioles
    81
    81
    9
    CENTRAL
    -
    -
    -
    Detroit Tigers
    87
    75
    --
    Cleveland Indians
    85
    77
    2
    Chicago White Sox
    78
    84
    9
    Kansas City Royals
    71
    91
    16
    Minnesota Twins
    64
    98
    23
    WEST
    -
    -
    -
    Texas Rangers
    95
    67
    --
    Los Angeles Angels
    82
    80
    13
    Oakland Athletics
    75
    87
    20
    Seattle Mariners
    73
    89
    22

    Revised NL projections
    How the National League races project after a quarter of the season.

    EAST
    W
    L
    GB
    Atlanta Braves
    92
    70
    --
    Washington Nationals
    89
    73
    3
    Miami Marlins
    89
    73
    3
    Philadelphia Phillies
    86
    76
    6
    New York Mets
    77
    85
    15
    CENTRAL
    -
    -
    -
    Cincinnati Reds
    87
    75
    --
    St. Louis Cardinals
    86
    76
    1
    Milwaukee Brewers
    78
    84
    9
    Pittsburgh Pirates
    75
    87
    12
    Chicago Cubs
    68
    94
    19
    Houston Astros
    64
    98
    23
    WEST
    -
    -
    -
    Los Angeles Dodgers
    87
    75
    --
    San Francisco Giants
    85
    77
    2
    Arizona Diamondbacks
    81
    81
    6
    Colorado Rockies
    76
    86
    11
    San Diego Padres
    69
    93
    18
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