In my last post I talked about throwing pitches out of the zone in 0-2 counts. I concluded that it was an effective strategy because of the increased chance of a putaway and the cost of going from an 0-2 to 1-2 count was small from the perspective of the pitcher. If the batter takes the pitch, the pitcher maintains the advantage in the plate appearance. Plate appearances that reach a 1-2 count still result in strikeouts 39.9 percent of the time and a 0.243 wOBA compared to 46.2 percent and a 0.217 wOBA in 0-2 in plate appearances reaching an 0-2 count (based on 2020 data).
Now I am going to flip this analysis around and look at approaching the beginning of a plate appearance (from the pitcher's perspective). Investigating waste 0-2 waste pitches was of interest because of their controversial nature when talking about or watching baseball. But we saw how the decision to throw a pitch of this nature lacked import, in that the pitcher still had all of the leverage if the batter takes the pitch. The beginning of a plate appearance (I looked at the first three pitches) is another animal. The advantage for either the pitcher or batter swings wildly with these three pitches. Let us first look at the first pitch. The average OPS in the 2020 season was 0.740. After an 1-0 count that increased by 92 points to 0.832. For an 0-1 count the figure dropped by 118 points to 0.622. For context the difference between 1-2 and 0-2 counts was 50 points. If you consider leverage the potential swing in plate appearance outcomes in terms of OPS/wOBA, you would say there is about twice the leverage in the first pitch as there is in an 0-2 pitch (neglecting outcomes involving plate appearances ending which obviously have the most drastic OPS/wOBA swings). Here is another example: after an 1-0 count the league average OPS is 0.832 (cited above). That swings to 0.995 after a ball (163 points) and 0.679 after a strike (153 points). These early pitch outcomes are crucial to understanding how a trip to the plate plays out.
This is going to be one of (hopefully) a series of posts about how pitchers approach plate appearances including (but not limited to) sequences of pitch types and locations and their effectiveness relative to one another. I ultimately want to look at macro trends and how different groups of pitchers solve this puzzle. Before undergoing this type of analysis I had to first figure out ways to manipulate the pitch data to answer these questions. Thus, I am focusing on one player for now and then plan to apply the necessary techniques to the league at large. I chose the best pitcher on the team I most closely: Gerrit Cole.
Cole unsurprisingly yields better results (like the rest of the league) when he throws a first pitch strike.
There is nothing predicative about these results. The 2020 season was short and I looked at one pitcher. When I eventually look at more pitchers and the league as a whole hopefully I can yield some more interesting insights on the best methods for attacking hitters to mitigate wOBA against. I did not consider the counts in which these sequences were thrown which I will do in the future. The issue here was I am looking at one pitcher in a shortened season so I thought I would be slicing the data too finely (if I was not already).
OPS count splits via data reference and pitch level data acquired via MLBAM
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