Photo by Jon Konrath
By now you know the drill with SWIP, right? I mean you have been coming to the site everyday to read my work haven't you? Well, in case you haven't been studious and are wondering what SWIP actually is, you can cick on the like to SWIP- Measuring a Pitcherâs Dominance.
Here is the simple equation that we will use to calculate SWIP.
SWIP = (K â BB) / IP
The 2010 ML average for SWIP was 0.43.
PART II of SWIP discussed starting pitchers.
Today I'll break down the men who toss pitches out of the bullpen.
.90 and Up: An excellent season. Hall of Fame level. .70 to .89:Â An all-star performance. Worthy of Cy Young consideration. .50 to .69:Â Borderline all-star. A guy youâd like to have on your staff. .35 to .50:Â Nothing more than the 3rd or 4th starter with his club. .20 to .34:Â His major league days could be numbered. Below .20: Minor leaguer in training.
1.30 â Rafael BetancourtI've already expounded on the greatness that is Betancourt in in his 2011 Player Profile.
1.18 â Billy WagnerIf only he hadn't retired.
1.14 â Koji UeharaHis competition for saves in Baltimore, Kevin Gregg, was way down the list at 0.47, just slightly above league average. The key for Koji is can he stay healthy?
1.11 â Carlos MarmolWhen you strike out an all-time record 15.99 per nine innings (see: The Strikeout - Relievers), even if you walk nearly everyone else you're still going to be a SWIP dominator.
1.06 â Joel Hanrahan, Joaquin BenoitHanrahan was named the closer for the Pirates over Evan Meek. It was the right call. Benoit was amazing last year leading all pitchers who threw 60-innings with a 0.68 WHIP.
1.01 â Matt ThorntonHe should have been the White Sox closer last year. The last three years, amongst pitchers who have thrown at least 200 innings, Thornton 1st in base runners per nine, 5th in ERA, 2nd in H/9 and 3rd in K/9 in baseball
0.96 â Takashi Saito, Ryan MadsonBoth of these setup men had a better SWIP than the men who take the ball in the 9th inning after them - Jonathan Axford (0.84) Brad Lidge (0.61).
0.90 â Brian Wilson, Sergei RomoIf Wilson does indeed miss some time with his strained oblique the Giants may not miss him too much if Romo's slider is breaking.
0.82 â Matt Belisle, Bobby JenksLast year Belisle came out of nowhere for a guy who owns a 0.49 SWIP mark for his career. As for Jenks, despite âstrugglingâ last year according to many people he still posted a better SWIP than Jonathan Papelbon (0.72) and Daniel Bard (0.62).
0.78 â Tyler ClippardHe's struggled in camp this year, though so has Drew Storen. Perhaps Clippard will get some looks in the 9th this year for the Nats?
0.72 â Jonathan BroxtonAdmittedly he struggled big time last year, but he still posted a better mark than Rafael Soriano (0.69) and the same mark as Huston Street and Papelbon.
0.57 â Mariano RiveraThe greatest closer in AL history is still money, but his declining K-rate will start to eat into his effectiveness.
0.52 â Chris PerezYou shouldn't have a barley better than league average SWIP when your K/9 mark is 8.71.
0.49 â Jose ValverdeHis 9.00 K/9 mark was a career worst and the fourth straight season of decline in that category.
0.37 â Brandon LeagueHe'll close for the Mariners with David Aardsma on the shelf. His SWIP mark is poor, but he offsets that with a dynamite ground ball rate (62.8 percent).
0.32 â Francisco CorderoHis 7.31 K/9 was more than a batter and a half below his career 9.09 mark.
0.29 â Brandon LyonDoesn't get strikeouts, and really is a league average pitcher in many respects.
0.26 â Fernando RodneyAngels know they have a lit fuse here (his BB/9 mark is 4.64 for his career). The question is â when will it burn out?
Photo by Jon Konrath
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