I know this is a sort of sacrosanct belief to the wise old heads on these boards, but my own experience is leading me to believe that pitch calling isn't nearly as important as everyone seems to make it out to be. Using my own team in Addicted Users (located in OKC), I've had the following results over the last three seasons (in particular, pay attention to the season 48 results).
Season 46
Miguel James (65 PC): 1023 innings, 2.84 CERA
Javier Alcantara (90 PC): 442 innings, 2.95 CERA
Based on large, relatively equivalent (see methodology below) sample sizes for both, this season would argue that every 10 points of PC is worth -0.04 CERA (or effectively nothing)
Season 47
Miguel James (65 PC): 987.1 innings, 2.84 CERA
Nap Stargell (88 PC): 486.2 innings, 2.72 CERA
Based on this season. every 10 points of PC is worth 0.05 CERA (again, effectively nothing)
Season 48
Miguel James (65 PC): 931.1 innings, 3.44 CERA
Victor Olivares (22 PC): 523 innings, 3.56 ERA
This season is particularly interesting. I'd traded away some of my best pitchers so the CERA wasn't as stellar, but more relevant, I also didn't have a decent backup catcher. When James started to become fatigued, I took my backup SS in Olivares and plugged him in to the position - he had the best PC of my available options and a strong arm (side note: Olivares threw out 43.4% of baserunners, James only got 23.8%). This is useful to see since previous seasons had compared mediocre PC to stellar PC, this is the first time we'd had abysmal PC. Also, this season led to a WS win (also won a WS in season 45 with
Slade Lewis (51 PC) as my primary catcher, so I'm definitely not a believer that you can't win without a high PC catcher).
As you see, the CERA wasn't notably different. Here, each 10 points of PC equates to an advantage of 0.04 CERA.
So on average, over these 3 seasons, it looks like each 10 points of PC gives an advantage of 0.015 CERA, or 2.4 runs over an entire season. Given this, I'd much rather focus on a catcher with a strong arm who will throw out 40+% of baserunners.
Methodology/Critiques
Whenever I present this, I always get a few points of pushback, so I'll go ahead and address these.
1. "It's not an apples to apples comparison since the backup catcher is often catching for the superior relievers" - luckily for us all, I'm too lazy to set defensive replacements. I ride my starting catcher all game, every game, until they are worn down below 95. I then put my backup catcher in as the starter for weeks at a time until the starter is back to 100 (and sometimes beyond that date if I'm not paying attention). In all three circumstances, the catchers were working with the same pitchers.
2. "Veteran pitchers don't need good PC, but it makes more difference for young ones" - my oldest starter in any of these seasons was 29. Some folks make great use of veteran pitchers, but I'm not one of them. I do generally have a few veteran relievers, but the percentage innings pitched by pitchers at age 31+ in these seasons was 16% (S46), 0% (S47), and 0%. In total 5% of my IP were from 31+ so this specifically considers PC impact on younger pitchers.
3. "PC makes more difference the more difference you have between various pitches" - I can't look back exactly at previous seasons, but I put lots of emphasis on P1 and P2, but nothing after that. This season, with all SP returning from last season, my rotation P3 averages 52, actually somewhat subpar. My rotation P2 is pretty good (77) compared to my P1 (80), but I'd argue that this reflects more on the importance of getting SPs with more than one decent pitch. If none of your SPs have a decent P2, you're probably not contending anyway.
4. "You had really good pitchers, PC only makes a difference for bad pitchers" - Guilty, my pitchers were very good. It's possible this critique is true. Again though, if your argument is that PC is only important to help bad teams become slightly less bad, I'm not sure that's worthy of a major investment. It seems clear though that if you have a contending team, getting a catcher with better PC isn't going to push you over the top.
5. "You play in a low-offense home-field; PC doesn't matter there, but does elsewhere" - First off, no idea why this would/could be true. Secondly, even if it was and all the difference in CERA was due to away games (i.e. they had the exact same CERA in home games), we could double the value of it to account for it being only in the half of games played away. We'd still only be at 4.8 runs saved per season in a "normal" ballpark. Still not a meaningful value.
6. "PC doesn't matter until you get it up to a certain point" - I've used what I would characterize as high PC (90,88) in these years, what I would characterize as mediocre (65) and what I would characterize as abysmal (22). In no case was there a meaningful difference. I never directly compared a 22 PC catcher (well SS actually) to a 90 PC catcher, but I also don't think that's the decision most of us are making.
6/27/2019 2:00 PM (edited)