Baseball Preview: Pitching

Submitted by formerlyanonymous on

Continuing the baseball previews in a build up to opening day this Friday, I'll look at how the team is pitching is set up this year. Previous preview posts: Initial Schedule Reaction, Maloney Podcast, A Look Back.

Starting Pitching

katzmanMichigan led the Big Ten in ERA last year and returns 74.3% of their innings. Chris Fetter was a big part of, but the returning pitchers had a collective 5.08 ERA. That would have have been good enough for second in the Big Ten. Top returner Eric Katzman, the only starting lefty, is expected to top the rotation upon his return from hernia surgery. Katzman went 7-4 last season with a 3.53 ERA. He'll be in the pen until he's comfortable with longer starts. While I'm expecting more consistency from him this season, I'm somewhat concerned about entering the season late out of the bullpen. If he gets pushed into the rotation too early, the results could be disastrous.

The depth behind Katzman should be better. Alan Oaks will start the year as the Friday guy. Oaks was used almost exclusively on offense to start the year, but after the pitching depth issues of last year started to take their toll Rich Maloney moved him back to the hill. Oaks had four starts at the end of the year. In those starts, he lasted an average of just over five innings per start, but one of his early starts against Indiana was particularly short and ugly at two innings. He had two impressive starts of seven and 7.2 innings respectively with just six earned runs between them.

oaksie

While I don't expect Oaks to be a lights out starter this season, he is capable of eating a ton of innings, exactly what Michigan was missing to start last season. Other than Fetter, no one could start a game and make it through the 7th inning. It will be interesting to see how spending the entire off season preparing to enter the starting rotation will affect his performance. While I'm skeptical that he has the ability to be our ace, Alan is a key player if Michigan is going to be better this year.

Along with Oaks, I'm expecting good things from Brandon Sinnery and Kolby Wood. I've took a shine to Sinnery since his start against Eastern Michigan as a freshman. The kid has potential and a pretty good combination of pitches. He's not at a dominant level yet, but I can see him being a force in the third or fourth starter. Maloney thinks he's really making a jump, so it'll be exciting to see.

Kolby Wood has just as impressive this off season as his team's closer, registering a 1.45 ERA and 4 saves over 19 games.  He's got a jerky motion, but his tall frame gives him good leverage on his fastball and the splitter he added this offseason. He should be in better shape this year. Rumor had it he had a sore wrist to end last season.

burgoon

Tyler Burgoon (pictured right from BostonWolverine's flickr, which you should check out if your a photo fan, great stuff*) also makes his return to the starting rotation this season after spending the last year and a half in the closer's role. Burgoon began his career at Michigan as a midweek starter during his true freshman season. He had some success, but was pushed into late innings during the weekend because he was too valuable to use just midweek. Burgoon has also fully healed his shoulder. He has a solid repertoire of pitches, most notably his fastball and wicked slider.

Matt Miller, one of our top relievers last season, will make some starts this season. Miller was 1-2 last season with 3.70 ERA, second best behind Dufek in the bullpen. He registered 3 saves in 23 appearances with 43 K's in 41.1 innings. He did start one game last season, but it was against Eastern Michigan and Michigan was just getting guys innings. He went two hitless innings, striking out one.

*(Boston Wolverine also writes Roar of the Tigers.)

The Bullpen

The bullpen should be better this season just due to increased depth. The pitching star of the 2009 freshman class, lefty Bobby Brosnahan (pictured at right), will return from Tommy John surgery. Brosnahan is an Ann Arbor native and during his junior year he was listed in the Michigan All-State 2nd team honorees. He had a solid offseason with the Lima Locos, so hopefully that's a good start.

Brandon Sinnery, Kolby Wood and Matt Miller might be seeing time in the bullpen as long relievers, but I think we'll also think we'll see more Matt Broder, Tyler Mills, and Kevin Vangheluwe. Broder pitched well at a lower level summer ball team, the Michigan Rams, but he's yet to get any innings at UM. Tyler Mills was Michigan's Gatorade Player of the Year his senior season at Mt. Pleasant HS but redshirted last season. Kevin Vangheluwe was coming off a serious injury coming out of high school and still hasn't quite found his stuff yet. Brian actually did a solid run down of him as a recruit back at mgoblog v1.0, with this now archived Detroit News clip:

"His (right) arm was discolored," Collins said. "It was like if you held it out of a car window and lost circulation. His dad (Mark VanGheluwe) took him to get examined and they gave him some medication to disperse the clot. He contacted (U-M coach Rich) Maloney and he told them to come immediately to U-Hospital. On Thursday, he had surgery to break up the blood clot and they said his muscles were pushing against the rib cage on that (right) side. I was told it was a normal case to remove that top rib on that side. And that was done Friday. Both were successful."

Kevin looked a little bit better this summer, but he's nowhere near the level of dominance he had before the injury.

Our top regular returner that is strictly a bullpen pitcher is Mike Dufek. When away from first base, he's been used here and there as a closer. His fastball can touch the 95-96 range and his slider is pretty good. Dufek probably won't be utilized as much this year, but he'll get his chances depending on how the closer by committee goes.

Travis Smith will spend more time in the bullpen this year. He's had a rough time as a starter over the last year both at Michigan and his summer gig in the Texas Collegiate League. All of these starter/reliever combinations should be huge assets in the pen if they aren't starting on the weekend.

Rounding out the returners are Matt Gerbe and Jeff DeCarlo. Gerbe hasn't shown too much yet during his time at Michigan or his stint with the Winchester Royals of the Valley League this summer. He had an atrocious stint as a starter with the Royals that saw his ERA balloon over 36. He managed to pull it under 9 by the end of the season.

Jeff DeCarlo, well, I've always made it a point to try and not speak that poorly of him. The guy is an Academic All-Big Ten player, not a All-Big Ten player. I respect that. I just cover my eyes and cross my fingers every time I see him on the mound, partially hoping he won't give up 3 runs in an inning, the other hoping he only pegs one guy in the 1 inning he might last. And this isn't an exaggeration. His 2009 stats:

ERA W-L App GS Sv IP H R ER BB K 2B HR OPP BA WP HP
21.60 0-0 5 1 0 5 11 14 12 5 6 1 3 .440 3 5

So as this season goes on, if I make references to the "DeCarlo-type outing", this is what I mean. We won't see much of him this year, but when we do, consider it a David Cone like moment, but with less Febreeze. It's a blow out one way or the other, and as a bonus, DeCarlo will have an ERA comparable to David Cone's completion percentage—not the fraction, but the fraction multiplied by 100.

Summary

Michigan has solid depth and a concentration of guys who could start or go in the bullpen. Several of those are in the running for closer, and it's always good to have a bunch of guys capable of closing out games. Hell, even DeCarlo was collecting saves with his summer team, so the future has to look brighter, no?

Michigan returns more quality pitching than the rest of the league, and it's had had a year to develop. They also get a few promising prospects back. If they stay healthy, this year's pitching could be just as good as last year's by spreading Chris Fetter's load over five or six players who weren't available for last year. The depth should be enough to keep Michigan from losing random games against conference bottom dwellers Iowa, Northwestern, and Penn State, teams that they had a 3-6 record against last year.

That makes me an optimist. An outsider's view of the pitching staff is a little bit different. Most saw Fetter as the be all end all of our staff. That was true about one in every three weekends, but again, I point to the depth issues and a couple inconsistent players. This off season was a promising one for a wide variety of pitchers. If Katzman can get fully healthy before we start to push him for innings, Fetter's loss will be survivable. 

Comments

colin

February 16th, 2010 at 2:35 PM ^

K/9 and BB/9 numbers on the top returners? And, waaay unlikely, GB%? Also, does Dufek seriously pump it in like that? If he can hit the zone, he's got prospect status by default. I'm surprised that Maloney wouldn't get him more work there.

formerlyanonymous

February 16th, 2010 at 3:01 PM ^

I have K/9 and BB/9 numbers, but GB% I tried to track last season, but it was too hard to keep up with. Play by play is included in 95% of all box scores, which is how I managed to try and keep up with it for about 3 weeks. Some schools actually release that, but alas, Michigan is not. Most of our pitchers have a higher GB%, but I think Oaks is one exception to that rule. I don't have numbers to back that up, it just seems like it. I don't think there's enough data on most of the returners from this last year. Only Katzman qualified with innings last season. Every one else spent too much time going from bullpen to starting that situations would be tough to decipher between. Dufek is just his fastball during most closing situations. His slider isn't anywhere close to ++. It's probably just a bit above average. His command is probably just above average as well. Great for college, still needs work before he goes to the minors. I think Maloney appreciates his bat too much to overuse his arm. We have other guys just as capable, if not more, who may not have the velocity.

colin

February 16th, 2010 at 4:45 PM ^

"I don't think there's enough data on most of the returners from this last year. Only Katzman qualified with innings last season. Every one else spent too much time going from bullpen to starting that situations would be tough to decipher between." But it's nice to know you have the data. As for GB%, I'm not surprised, but was wondering just because Michigan was dead last in GDP turned last year. So defense up the middle might have been an issue for them to some degree. Also, I kind of wanted to figure out Big Ten wOBA/FIP averages, but you have to change the weighting of the run value of the various events to do so, which is why I asked about league averages in the last thread. There's a thread on The Book Blog about it which I think I get and could probably do given sufficient data for league averages. http://www.insidethebook.com/ee/index.php/site/article/fip_for_your_hig… You have to scroll to the last comment to get the method. Tango screwed up the first go around. I'm pretty sure that K's and BB's and defense are super valuable for pitchers since there are fewer HR, but more runs scored. So that's what I'd focus on in describing run prevention success. Alternatively, it should mean that home run hitters are extra valuable. So no Dufek hating.

TrppWlbrnID

February 16th, 2010 at 3:06 PM ^

the above should be used as evidence to those how say Michigan should switch up the uniforms once in a while (classic strawman). the yellow on white looks not so good. i like the grey though...

TrppWlbrnID

February 17th, 2010 at 8:46 AM ^

i can't think of any pro teams that regularly wear it - pirates, a's. as a die hard tiger fan, perhaps i have been lulled into believing that your home uniform is white with your nickname or logo and the road uniform is grey with your location - end of story. you are right, the blue jersey is not very good, lots of piping and the letters are too hard to read. they should just go with the block M. also, your reply locked me out of the edit feature so now i will forever be on record as calling maize yellow. shameful.

Quag77

February 16th, 2010 at 6:35 PM ^

the rotation of Burgoon, Oaks & Miller is set until (A). one of them REALLY struggles or (B). someone REALLY shows some nasty stuff in their outing. Katz will more than likely throw from the pen this year unless (A) happens. Dufek probably won't see action until mid-season, if then, based on surgery. Brosnahan is the lefty coaches are most up on at this point. Woods will be the closer until and only if he show's he can't get it done (unlikely). Smith has looked very good the latter part of training and hopefully can keep it going. Sinnery is looking very good as well. Summary - our weekends should be solid. It will be interesting to see who coach throws mid-week or on the 4 game weekends. I see this weekend is even a TBA for Sunday. Really?....you don't know? come on coach.

formerlyanonymous

February 16th, 2010 at 11:03 PM ^

Yeah, I saw the TBA in the notes as well. I figured he's waiting to make sure all the starters can make quality starts. My guess is Sinnery unless someone has trouble making it out of the first two or three innings. In that case, I see Smith as the #4. I'm still skeptical until I see him perform to the supposed potential. I have to think he's the midweek guy and Sinnery does the long relief on the weekend. If he's not used enough there, he'll get the mid weeek game somewhere.