Nationals Arm Race

"… the reason you win or lose is darn near always the same – pitching.” — Earl Weaver

Will the Cardinals get the same grief we got over not using Shelby Miller?

6 comments

Miller threw a grand total of one inning in the post season.  Photo unk via missourinet.com

Miller threw a grand total of one inning in the post season. Photo unk via missourinet.com

The common narrative surrounding the Washington Nationals after their 2012 NLDS exit was, and still is to this day, is a story of “arrogance” on the behalf of Mike Rizzo for deigning to protect Stephen Strasburg and shutting him down prior to the playoffs.  More than a few blow-hard sports writers on local and national stages postulated that the Nationals lost that series “because they didn’t have Strasburg.”

Cut to 2013: St. Louis’ year-long #2 starter Shelby Miller, a guy who had 31 starts with a 3.06 ERA/119 ERA+ and a 15-9 record, was removed from the playoff rotation and tossed a grand total of 1 inning this off-season.  He threw one inning of mop-up duty against the Pirates on October 4th in a 7-1 loss.  Instead the team gave those starts to #5 starter Lance Lynn, who rewarded the team with 2 losses in his 3 post-season starts and a 5.19 ERA in 17 1/3 innings.

For all the grief the 2012 Nationals got for voluntarily sitting Strasburg … why has there not been similar outrage for the Cardinals removal of their #2 starter from their post-season plans?   Where is the outrage facing the Cards’ management that Rizzo took for sitting Strasburg and “costing” his team in the playoffs?

The Cardinal’s excuse for sitting Miller was that he “was tiring down the stretch.”  To which I say B.S.; in five September starts he LOWERED his seasonal ERA.  This was clearly an innings-limit shutdown.  Maybe they’re the smart ones for just never SAYING it was a shutdown.  Miller himself apparently was unaware of the reason, being quoted recently as “not knowing” why he didn’t pitch in the post-season.

Strasburg was shutdown because he was recovering from an injury.  Miller was shutdown because the team subscribed to (in the minds of many critics) an arbitrary and unproven innings limit theory for starting pitchers.   What I don’t understand is why the two situations aren’t being treated as identical issues by those know-it-alls who so eviscorated the Nats for daring to protect a guy coming back from injury.  Is it simply a fame factor?  Strasburg clearly is more famous than Miller, therefore the situation was followed more closely in 2012?  Is it a factor of the Nats and Rizzo being the “new guys” and being ripe for criticism, while the Cardinals “know how it is done” and therefore get a pass in the national media?

I posed this question in a chat on Fangraphs and got the following response, “St. Louis didn’t lose the World Series due to lack of pitching.”  Ok.  Not the point; answer the damn question.  I could say the same thing about Washington’s loss in 2012; they certainly didn’t lose that game or series because of a lack of starting pitching … they lost that game because their bullpen couldn’t hold a 3-run lead and their closer couldn’t hold a 2-run lead at home in the deciding game.   You can play the “what-if-they-had-Strasburg” game for 2012 all you want; the fact is that the Nats were in a position to win the series and their closer blew it.  Can you say the same for St. Louis?   Don’t you think St. Louis would rather have had Shelby Miller on the mound in the pivotal game 4, which with a win would have given them an almost insurmountable 3 games to 1 lead in the series?   Instead Lynn coughed up 3 runs in 5+ innings, the Cards never have the lead, and Boston evened the series and regained home-field advantage.

It just frustrates me, the different treatment of the two franchises in these similar situations.  I readily admit that I’m defensive about pitcher shutdowns in general because I support the protection of young arms, I believe in innings management, and I believe both teams in the end did the right thing.  I talked about this in a post called “Innings Limits and Media Hypocrisy” in this space and (correctly) predicted that Miller would have shutdown issues towards the end of 2013.  I’m also defensive because I feel the Nats got a really raw deal in terms of the narrative, getting killed for trying to put a player’s health ahead of a short-term team goal.

I think the Cards had the right solution; shut him down, lie about it to the media, and go on with life.  A good road-map for Rizzo going forward, were he to run into this situation again.

Written by Todd Boss

November 1st, 2013 at 7:57 am

6 Responses to 'Will the Cardinals get the same grief we got over not using Shelby Miller?'

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  1. This was frustrating me to. He was clearly the Cardinals 2nd best starter during the regular season and just disappeared in the playoffs and was barely mentioned. Every other inning had a mention of Strasburg being shutdown last year and it is stupid. The mainstream sports media is a joke.

    pdowdy83

    1 Nov 13 at 9:33 am

  2. Exactly my point. I’m trying to get to the bottom of Why the Nats were killed but the Cards got a pass.

    Todd Boss

    1 Nov 13 at 10:21 am

  3. What is even odder about Miller is that they kept him on the roster. Doesn’t seem like even they knew what they wanted to do.

    Wally

    1 Nov 13 at 7:18 pm

  4. The Nats lost to the Cardinals in the playoffs last year because the Cards were able to stay calm amongst the pressure & the Nats couldn’t. The Cardinal players themselves said the Nats had a ‘deer in the headlights’ look.

    The Cardinals played the World Series this year with a 23 man roster.
    That wasn’t very smart at all

    Mark L

    2 Nov 13 at 8:56 am

  5. I think part of the difference is that, as you said, Miller is less famous than Strasburg and the Cards were less candid about Miller than the Nats were about Stras (could they have learned something from what the Nats went through?). Another part is the different perception of the franchises. It’s not too much to say that the Cardinals are at this point the most respected (by the baseball media) franchise in MLB, with a long string of success behind them and more championships than anyone except the Yankees. The Nationals are just two years removed from being a joke, and I suspect the perception among many in the media who weren’t paying close attention was that 2012 was a fluke and the Nats more likely than not weren’t going to get another chance any time soon, which increased the incredulity as to what they were doing with Strasburg. OTOH, even if the media had paid more attention to the Miller situation, the conclusion would likely have been, “Well, even if this cost them this year, chances are they’ll be back next year or the year after.”

    Steven J. Berke

    2 Nov 13 at 10:44 am

  6. The idea that the Cardinals are oh-so-cool and collected and the Nats had deer-in-the-headlights is overplayed, IMHO. The Cardinals hacked up a 3-1 lead like a mighty furball in their very next series, which made the Nats up-and-down peformance in one game look like small potatoes by comparison. And after the Cardinals mouthed off after the NLDS last year, I admit that I enjoyed their three game NLCS collapse thoroughly.

    John C.

    3 Nov 13 at 12:56 am

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