Anyway, since 1980 269 pitchers, or 7.7 per year, have walked at least 3.4 batters per 9 innings, had WHIPs of 1.30 or higher, and with Strand rates of .800 or better kept their ERAs to 3.00 or better. And without the walk minimum that number grows to 346 - just about 10 per year.
I think it is a "thing". And if it really exists, it would be an example of "clutch pitching" and if "clutch pitching" exists, then it is possible we are just not doing the right kind of research, asking the right kind of questions, to figure out why clutch play would exist in pitching but not in hitting, or rather what measures would bring out its existence if existence there be.
From 1947 to 1979 the number of pitchers with WHIPs of 1.30 or higher, with 3.4 or higher walks per 9 innings and Strand rates of .800 or better with ERAs of 3.00 or under was 160 - in 33 years. That is just shy of 5 per year, a little lower than the 1980 to 2015 era which saw 7.7 of such pitchers per year. Why the difference?
When we eliminate the 3.4 walks minimum as a search criteria, we get 201 such pitchers from 1947 to 1979, or just over 6 per year, whereas we have 10 per year since 1980. Why the difference?
This difference is just one of absolute numbers, so it may be a mere function of there being more teams than in the earlier period. If so, then we have a relatively consistent presence of pitchers who are able to keep people from scoring once they are on base over historical time.
But how do we interpret this fact then? One way would be to say that there is therefore no clutch anything happening, just a statistical probability. Somewhere between 6 and 10 pitchers a year will have a Strand rate such that it keeps their ERA under 3.00 despite their WHIP being over 1.30. So no individual anything is happening here.
Another possibility is to see this as being common enough to support the hypothesis that such pitchers exist. See, it is not automatic in either direction, though the serious SABR-heads will argue that since only things that they can show to have been happening statistically can be said to exist, then the relatively consistent range of numbers of such pitchers means that it does not - that there are no individual pitchers that are especially good at keeping keeping people from scoring separate from their overall WHIP, since players being on base or not, the score, etc. should statistically have no more significance or meaning than the bases being empty. As Descartes taught us (supposedly) all time and place is homogeneous and so one hit counts as one hit, one walk as one walk, and 3 outs as one inning - whether they actually occur in one inning, across two innings, or in three different games in which a pitcher pitches one-third of an inning each. Context is irrelevant to such thinking.
1/13/2016 1:08 PM (edited)