by Rany Jazayerli and Keith Woolner
August 4, 2000
http://www.baseballprospectus.com/article.php?articleid=710
Just read your "Doctoring the Numbers" piece on the sucking Rockies. It would
be good to see how non-Rockies teams fare on road trips. Perhaps fatigue,
stinky underwear, the cumulative effects of restaurant food or some other
aspect that builds over a road trip makes all teams hit significantly worse
later in a road trip. And perhaps the "adjusting to hitting outside of Coors"
effect does ameliorate this unspecified "long road trip" effect.
In other (simpler) words, you left out the control group.
--Mark Stevenson
The Baseball Prospectus readership ranks as one of the most intelligent
demographics in the country. I was reminded of that fact once again last
week, when within hours of posting last week’s Doctoring the Numbers, I
received literally dozens of e-mails almost indistinguishable from the one
above: readers asking whether the Rockies’ decline in production during road
trips was all that significant, or whether it was simply a natural phenomenon
that all teams endure the longer they are away from home. Some wondered, in
fact, whether the average team declined more than the Rockies did during a
road trip, which would then lend credence to Jeff Cirillo’s theory that the
Rockies’ offense would improve as they got reacclimated to sea-level
pitching.
Well, we’ve got the data, so let’s take a look at it. Here is how the
Rockies’ offensive performance on road trips in 1998-99 (as showed last
week) compares to the Houston Astros from the same two years. The Astros are
an interesting comp in that they were the Rockies’ diametric opposite: a
good team playing in a great pitchers' park.
Rockies Astros
# Trips AVG OBP SLG OPS # Trips AVG OBP SLG OPS
1 24 .260 .315 .403 718 1 25 .280 .357 .451 808
2 24 .247 .306 .410 716 2 25 .257 .330 .404 734
3 23 .251 .308 .367 675 3 25 .279 .362 .452 814
4 19 .263 .321 .403 724 4 22 .244 .316 .365 681
5 19 .247 .300 .403 703 5 22 .271 .339 .399 738
6 16 .237 .289 .383 672 6 17 .273 .341 .448 789
7 10 .242 .288 .373 661 7 11 .303 .373 .515 888
8 8 .233 .297 .374 671 8 6 .267 .362 .436 798
9 6 .216 .259 .385 644 9 4 .314 .413 .453 866
10 4 .210 .280 .363 643 10 2 .329 .370 .382 752
11+ 7 .312 .363 .435 798 11+ 2 .337 .385 .650 1035
While the Rockies’ offensive numbers appear to drop slightly as a road trip
progresses, no clear pattern emerges for the Astros: while their offense dips
during the middle games, they actually hit their best from the seventh game
of a road trip on. Let’s combine the numbers into three-game increments to
get a better picture:
Rockies Astros
# Trips AVG OBP SLG OPS # Trips AVG OBP SLG OPS
1-3 71 .253 .310 .394 704 1-3 75 .272 .350 .435 785
4-6 54 .250 .304 .397 701 4-6 61 .262 .331 .400 731
7-9 24 .232 .284 .376 660 7-9 21 .295 .377 .482 859
10+ 11 .275 .333 .410 743 10+ 4 .333 .378 .517 895
Looked at this way, the Rockies’ offense appears to decline steadily until
the tenth game of a road trip--in a very small sample size--while the Astros
are at their best in the late stages of a road trip.
It’s an interesting one-on-one comparison, but making the Rockies go
head-to-head with one of the best teams in baseball (remember, we’re not
looking at 2000 stats) may not be fair to them. Plus, it’s just a one-team
sample. Let’s look at how the Rockies stack up against all other MLB teams
combined:
Rockies Rest of MLB
# Trips AVG OBP SLG OPS # Trips AVG OBP SLG OPS
1-3 71 .253 .310 .394 704 1-3 2206 .265 .331 .421 752
4-6 54 .250 .304 .397 701 4-6 1647 .266 .333 .423 756
7-9 24 .232 .284 .376 660 7-9 645 .265 .330 .423 753
10+ 11 .275 .333 .410 743 10+ 170 .266 .328 .428 756
The consistency with which the rest of baseball hits during a road trip is
astonishing. You would expect a swing of much greater than four points of OPS
based on chance alone. There is simply no evidence that your typical team
plays worse the longer they have to endure hotel mattresses and airplane
food.
Frankly, there’s no significant evidence that the Rockies are adversely
affected by prolonged road trips either. But the hypothesis we’re testing isn
’t whether the Rockies play worse the longer they’re on the road; it’s
whether they play better.
And they don’t. So we’re back to our original conclusion: the Rockies don’
t struggle on the road because they have trouble adjusting to the way pitches
move at sea level. The Rockies struggle on the road because they suck.
First, let me say that BP rocks, and I have particularly enjoyed your work
since I found the site.
Now on to the first point: Jeff Cirillo does not suck.
Ignoring this season at altitude, he's got a career 835 OPS, not a superstar,
perhaps, but somewhere above the suck-point for a competent defensive third
baseman, I would think. Most teams not owned by Ted Turner would be pretty
happy with a thrid baseman who'd posted an OBP over .390 in three of the last
four seasons, scoring 95 runs or better in those three seasons, with Jeromy
Burnitz and not much else to drive him in. If he'd stayed with the Brewers,
and posted his career average for an OPS, he'd be fourth in the NL among
qualifying third basemen, in Phil Nevin/Aaron Boone territory (though neither
of those guys have career numbers that measure up to his).
Furthermore, Cirillo never really displayed any substantial home/road split
as a Brewer. He'd be 50 points up one way one year, and 50 points up the
other way the next, but on average they were about the same. This year, of
course, he's got a huge split, he's an outrageous 1153 at home, and an
atrocious 620 on the road (70 points worse than his worst full season ever, a
126 at-bat tryout in his first year in the majors). That's a pretty huge
difference for a guy playing in most of the same NL parks against most of the
same NL pitchers he faced last year. It's not the biggest sample (163 road
at-bats), but I think it merits an attempted explanation beyond, "He sucks."
--Roy Noah
Roy was not the only reader to take offense to the flippant suggestion that
the Rockies suck. First off, a clarification: the Rockies as a whole suck.
They have scored just 189 runs on the road, by far the fewest in baseball.
But not every Rockies hitter sucks. In particular, I did not mean to imply
that Jeff Cirillo sucks. Cirillo has been one of the best third basemen in
baseball for five years; that his OPS this year (886) is just 24 points
higher than it was last year (862) is a sign that he’s having an off-year,
not that he’s a bad player.
The greater point here is that Cirillo is having the worst year of his
career...in his first year with the Rockies. Is this an isolated phenomenon,
or a sign of a more insidious effect on hitters by Coors Field and its
predecessor, Mile High Stadium? Andres Galarraga, who we universally derided
as a product of high altitude during his time with the Rockies, joined the
Braves at age 37 and hit as well as ever. Maybe there is some sort of
altitude-induced malaise at sea level that takes a lot longer than just a
week or two to shake off.
Let’s look at Cirillo’s numbers before and after joining the Rockies and
compare them to the other prominent hitters the Rockies have acquired. We’ll
look at players who played at Mile High Stadium as well as at Coors Field,
since the theory we’re testing here involves the altitude of their home
park, which didn’t change when they moved to Blake Street in 1995.
I combined the players’ statistics for the two years prior to joining the
Rockies, in order to get a more established level of performance on the road.
In the cases of Andres Galarraga and Dante Bichette, I also compared their
last season in Colorado with their first season with their new team (since
Galarraga missed all of 1999 and Bichette is still in his first season with
the Reds, it was impossible to generate a two-year average of their
post-Rockie performance).
Cirillo:
Year Team Home Away
1998-99 MIL 333/414/445 315/395/461
2000 COL 421/490/650 210/274/324
Larry Walker:
Year Team Home Away
1993-94 MON 317/406/578 267/369/474
1995 COL 343/401/730 268/361/484
Andres Galarraga:
Year Team Home Away
1991-92 MON/STL 244/278/363 215/271/336
1993 COL 402/430/647 328/368/544
1997 COL 342/406/611 295/372/560
1998 ATL 315/422/570 296/375/615
Dante Bichette:
Year Team Home Away
1991-92 MIL 245/289/386 274/297/410
1993 COL 373/408/650 252/291/410
1999 COL 308/363/575 287/342/502
2000 CIN 309/367/539 271/324/401
Ellis Burks:
Year Team Home Away
1992-93 BOS/CHW 277/360/460 260/330/410
1994-95 COL 316/398/636 258/343/480
(Because Burks was hurt and played only sparingly in his first year with the
Rockies, I combined his numbers for his first two years with Colorado. I
would have looked at his post-Rockie performance as well, but he was traded
from the Rockies to the Giants in mid-season in 1998, and unfortunately I do
not have his home/road splits broken down that year for before and after the
trade.)
While Cirillo’s performance on the road has been much worse than it was in
previous seasons, none of the other major acquisitions by the Rockies had a
similar split. Both Walker and Bichette hit essentially as well on the as
before, though one could argue that since offense around the majors has gone
up steadily over the last eight years, their relative performance has slipped
slightly.
Ellis Burks’s road numbers went up after joining Colorado, and Galarraga’s
improvement from the stiff who hit .219 and .243 in 1991 and 1992, not
slugging .400 in either season, to the league leader in batting average in
1993, had very little to do with the thin air of Colorado: his road OPS
jumped more than 300 points.
If Cirillo’s poor performance on the road this season was a reflection of
his new home environment, he would be the first Rockies hitter to be affected
in this way. Similarly, if that were true then we would expect the road
performance of a Rockie hitter to improve after he moved to a new team.
Galarraga’s road numbers with the Braves in 1998 were only marginally better
than they were with the Rockies in 1997, and Bichette is actually hitting
much worse on the road this year than last.
The enigma that is Coors Field is an enduring one, and there may not be any
simple answers to explain its effects. Instead, we must examine what goes on
there on a case-by-case basis. And in this case, it appears that however high
altitude affects hitters, those effects occur only at high altitude. There is
no evidence that suggests there is a hangover effect; there is no reason to
think that playing half your games at high altitude affects how you play at
low altitude.