Twins' Nolasco better than ERA indicates
Ricky Nolasco has a 5.17 ERA in 12 starts this season, but advanced metrics suggest he is actually pitching better than that.
The 33-year-old, who will start when the Twins play the Los Angeles Angels on Monday, has a Fielding Independent Pitching of 3.54 this season. That suggests he hasn't struggled as much as his ERA would indicate.
FIP estimates a pitcher's run prevention independent of the performance of their defense, a stat Fangraphs.com says is generally a better representation of performance than ERA.
AL, Largest Difference in FIP < ERA -- 2016 (minimum 50 IP)
Player |
Team |
^FIP |
ERA |
Diff |
Ubaldo Jimenez |
Bal |
4.4 |
6.89 |
-2.49 |
Michael Pineda |
NYY |
4.01 |
5.88 |
-1.86 |
Dallas Keuchel |
Hou |
3.78 |
5.54 |
-1.77 |
Ricky Nolasco |
Min |
3.54 |
5.17 |
-1.63 |
Collin McHugh |
Hou |
3.79 |
5.22 |
-1.43 |
Matt Shoemaker |
LAA |
3.36 |
4.76 |
-1.41 |
Nolasco will face an Angels' lineup led by the dangerous Mike Trout, who has put together one of the best all-around offensive starts to his career in baseball history. The 25-year-old has been arguably the most complete play in the majors since his debut in 2011, hitting 152 home runs while batting .304.
MLB Players with .300+ BA, 150+ HR, 100+ SB in 1st 6 Seasons Since 1886 (when stolen bases became official)
Player |
Team |
Years |
HR |
SB |
AVG |
Mike Trout |
LAA |
2011-2016 |
152 |
122 |
.304 |
Ryan Braun |
Mil |
2007-2012 |
202 |
126 |
.313 |
Willie Mays |
NYG^ |
1951-1957 |
187 |
121 |
.311 |
^Willie Mays was in the Army for much of the 1952 season, and all of the 1953 campaign.
Trout is leading an Angels' team that is just 27-36 on the year but has been strong on offense in their wins. The team has a .314 batting average in wins this year, which ranks fourth in the majors.
MLB, Worst 1st-Inning Run Differential - 2016
Boston Red Sox |
.323 |
Detroit Tigers |
.320 |
Pittsburgh Pirates |
.320 |
Los Angeles Angels |
.314 |
Much like the Twins, however, the Angels have struggled this year after a winning 2015 season. While the Twins have the largest decrease in winning percentage from 2015 to 2016, the Angels are close behind.
Team |
2015 |
2016 |
Decrease |
Twins |
83-79 (.512) |
19-43 (.306) |
-0.206 |
Braves |
67-95 (.414) |
18-44 (.290) |
-0.124 |
Pirates |
98-64 (.605) |
32-31 (.508) |
-0.097 |
Angels |
85-77 (.525) |
27-36 (.429) |
-0.096 |
Royals |
95-67 (.586) |
32-30 (.516) |
-0.07 |
Information courtesy STATS Inc.