NL Cy Young: Jake Arrieta vs. Zack Greinke

The NL Cy Young race is down to two at this point. Jake Arrieta's dominating performance over the last few months has allowed him to catch up to Zack Greinke and in many ways, pass him. Either person is deserving of the award and since I don't really care who wins it, this is just a list of their stats for you to look at it.

You Decide 2015

IP: 223 Arrieta, 214.2 Greinke
K%: 27.0%, 23.6%
BB%: 5.7%, 4.8%
K-BB%: 21.3%, 18.8%
ERA: 1.82, 1.68
FIP: 2.40, 2.76
ERA-: 46, 45
FIP-: 61, 71
AVG: .186, .187
HR/FB: 7.8%, 7.0%
W-L: 21-6, 18-3
WHIP: 0.88, 0.85
GB/FB: 2.41, 1.44
oppTAv: .256, .258
DRA: 2.19, 2.08
WARP: 7.6, 7.3
fWAR: 7.0, 5.7

I bolded the stats that are most important to me if I was to determine this. I'm a biased Cubs fan, but DRA, which is probably the best pitching metric around, slightly favors Greinke over Arrieta. This is such a close race that there is no wrong answer. I am a Cubs fan so I'm going to take Arrieta. I watched almost all of his starts and I'm not sure I've ever seen someone be as dominating as he's been. Pedro Martinez in his prime comes closest and that's some ridiculously high praise as Pedro's prime is probably the best a pitcher has ever pitched. 

115 thoughts on “NL Cy Young: Jake Arrieta vs. Zack Greinke”

  1. I mostly agree. I haven’t seen enough of Greinke to make a determination on his dominance, but I have only one comp for Arrieta that I’ve ever seen, and that’s Rich Harden when he was traded to the Cubs in 2008. He was just unhittable, and so is Arrieta.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  2. And when I say only, I mean only Cubs comp. Obviously Martinez and Johan Santana were insanely good, but I wasn’t watching every one of their starts.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  3. Someone on Sunday Night Baseball made a good point (Kurkjian maybe) that Greinke has been great all season long. His ERA has never been higher than 2. I’m not sure, but that might be as impressive as Arrieta’s complete dominance the last couple months. I’d vote for Arrieta, but I can easily see Greinke winning it and it won’t be an awful choice. It won’t even be a bad one. Realistically, Greinke probably deserves the award as much as Arrieta does.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  4. Suburban kid,

    Disclaimer:

    The opinions herein are shaped by years of futility. Any hedging involved stems from the fact that there is just enough intelligence here to have learned that fans—people invested in a particular outcome—are inherently optimistic, therefore must counteract such rosy outlooks with an inverse optimism that is distinct from pessimism and/or realism. This amounts to managing biased expectations, which automatically discredits any opinions, leaving only a dubious entertainment value in its wake.

    Obstructed View: Dubiously entertaining, and entertainingly so.

    (If I weren’t so lazy on a now tiny phone, I’d post the ForestOfHorrors.gif here.)

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  5. cerulean,

    Pretty much.

    I was just messin. I enjoyed the Doubting Theo tumblr very much, because those takes were OTT, but you’d have to be an asshole to judge any of the realism (as you put it) expressed here over the years. Sorry for being an asshole (dying laughing)

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  6. I bolded the stats that are most important to me if I was to determine this

    Based on that JA is at +3 over ZG.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  7. Suburban kid: Based on that JA is at +3 over ZG.

    (dying laughing) I’d probably pick two to be honest. K-BB% tells me enough most of the time. I haven’t seen Greinke start, but I know that based on his K-BB% he’s been really good. I know that Arrieta has been better in that regard. While I don’t know the ins and outs of DRA yet, which makes me nervous, I’ve accepted it’s the best thing we have to an ideal pitcher metric. Greinke wins in that one.

    I’m afraid the writers who are becoming familiar with some of the advanced stats are going to go to Fangraphs and vote for Arrieta because he has a better FIP. I’d think even the average voter at this point could tell you that while Greinke’s ERA is damn impressive, there’s not a lot of difference between his and Arrieta’s once you adjust for ballpark (ERA- adjusts for league and ballpark and they’re almost the same).

    If Arrieta performs well in his final start and picks up his 22nd win, I think he’s going to win the award. I think it becomes a little harder to argue against him at that point.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  8. Tangotiger has been publishing periodic updates for the Cy Young races. it’s not very scientific as far as I can tell, but prior to their last starts, he had Arrieta with a 75% chance of winning the award. I think that’s gone up to 85-90 when you include their most recent starts. Very good chance Arrieta wins it.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  9. dmick89: If Arrieta performs well in his final start and picks up his 22nd win, I think he’s going to win the award. I think it becomes a little harder to argue against him at that point.

    Agreed. there are still enough people for whom wins mean a whole lot. i also think that some voters may swing arrieta’s way because his dominance coincided with the cubs getting super hot and locking down the wild card in like mid-august. thus, arrieta was more integral to overall team outcomes.

    not saying that’s correct, just saying i could easily see shitheads like steve rosenberg making that argument.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  10. I think all postseason awards should be decided by fiat, with Jonathan Papelbon being the sole arbiter, as he is the sacred keeper of the Flame of Bangarang, Consecrated Heart of Grit and Hustle, Blesséd Be.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  11. dmick89: I think that’s gone up to 85-90 when you include their most recent starts.

    pretty hilarious that 7 IP, 2 ER, 7 Ks, 4 H, 3 BB is (relatively speaking) a shitty enough start that it takes you out of the cy young race. that really highlights how arrieta has been an absolute freak show over the last few months.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  12. I’m rooting for Arrieta though I can’t complain if Greinke or Kershaw wins. It’s not like the time a Cubs pitcher deserved to win and they gave of to a closer.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  13. In all seriousness, I’d like Arrieta to win, but there’s not a wrong choice among the three of them. You can make a solid statistical and historical case for any of them, really. It’s a cool thing to have witnessed.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  14. The only metrics I really care about for Cy Young considerations are runs allowed/ERA, park factor, and innings pitched. Maybe I’d look at peripherals like strikeouts for a tie-breaker.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  15. EnricoPallazzo: Agreed. there are still enough people for whom wins mean a whole lot. i also think that some voters may swing arrieta’s way because his dominance coincided with the cubs getting super hot and locking down the wild card in like mid-august. thus, arrieta was more integral to overall team outcomes.

    not saying that’s correct, just saying i could easily see shitheads like steve rosenberg making that argument.

    Yeah, for the BBWAA crowd, those 22 wins would hold more sway than Greinke’s scoreless innings streak(s) and Kershaw possibly topping 300 K, and even Jake’s all-time dominant second half. I’d be disappointed for that to be the reason Jake won, but I’d like to see him win.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  16. Mercurial Outfielder:
    In all seriousness, I’d like Arrieta to win, but there’s not a wrong choice among the three of them. You can make a solid statistical and historical case for any of them, really. It’s a cool thing to have witnessed.

    Agreed. I can’t remember this happening before.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  17. I’ve been talking to a lot of Oriole fans who come in to my office to give me shit about getting Arrieta for practically nothing. I asked them why he didn’t do as good for the Orioles and one of the guys I talked to said the Orioles pitching philosophy from Rookie ball to the Majors is terrible. He said one of the biggest reasons is because they discourage their pitchers from throwing Cutters. I don’t know how much truth there is to that but it could make sense as to why Arrieta has been so good with Cubs because he’s living off that fastball, slider, cutter combo he throws. He said he always liked Arrieta and said he had tremendous stuff but got in trouble a lot and the wheels fell off. Maybe taking away an out pitch has a lot to do with that? I don’t know but it was interesting hearing his thoughts on it.

    Cool story bro

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  18. Mucker,

    It’s been floated publicly that Arrieta was discouraged from throwing his slutter by the Orioles. An anti-two seamer bias at an org level is a new facet to that rumor, but it certainly lends credence to it.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  19. Mercurial Outfielder,

    Oh you’ve heard that too? Then yeah definitely gives it some weight. You would think with the young arms the Orioles have in their system, they would be doing everything possible to have them reach their potential. That Orioles’ window seems to be closing fast.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  20. I still think you guys are discounting Yadi’s chances. He knocks off like two full runs from every Cardinals starter’s ERA, that’s like a -10.00 ERA. Easily should win the Cy smh.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  21. berselius:
    I still think you guys are discounting Yadi’s chances. He knocks off like two full runs from every Cardinals starter’s ERA, that’s like a -10.00 ERA. Easily should win the Cy smh.

    Yadi is awarded the Triple Ought, Double Secret Most Valuable Comeback Cy Young Rookie of the Year award annually.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  22. I’ve wondered how many players organizations have screwed up over the years. I think Castro is an example of a player who should have just been left alone, but the Cubs tried to make some changes a couple years ago and they didn’t work. He’s never really been the same even since Castro said he went back to doing what he did when he came up.

    It’s the organization’s job to do these things, but sometimes it doesn’t work out. I’m not sure how much I blame the Orioles. Arrieta’s delivery is odd and undoubtedly puts additional stress on his arm. It was stress that he might be able to better handle now that he’s older, but I think any organization would have altered his delivery when he was that young.

    I think that’s slowly started to change though. We see pitchers with more funky deliveries these days than we did 5 or 10 years ago. That’s a good thing.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  23. berselius:
    I still think you guys are discounting Yadi’s chances. He knocks off like two full runs from every Cardinals starter’s ERA, that’s like a -10.00 ERA. Easily should win the Cy smh.

    I think you have to pitch an inning to win. Maybe the Cardinals can have Yadier go out there and retire a batter yet this season. Then he’s a sure thing to win MVP and Cy Young.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  24. dmick89,

    Yeah, it seems to me organizations are beginning to focus more on approach and less on mechanical tweaks. Or at least major mechanical tweaks.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  25. Mucker:
    I’ve been talking to a lot of Oriole fans who come in to my office to give me shit about getting Arrieta for practically nothing.I asked them why he didn’t do as good for the Orioles and one of the guys I talked to said the Orioles pitching philosophy from Rookie ball to the Majors is terrible.He said one of the biggest reasons is because they discourage their pitchers from throwing Cutters.I don’t know how much truth there is to that but it could make sense as to why Arrieta has been so good with Cubs because he’s living off that fastball, slider, cutter combo he throws.He said he always liked Arrieta and said he had tremendous stuff but got in trouble a lot and the wheels fell off.Maybe taking away an out pitch has a lot to do with that?I don’t know but it was interesting hearing his thoughts on it.

    Cool story bro

    I’ve heard the same thing as well (about the cutter), and his pitch usage statistics bear it out. Since he came to the Cubs, his slider usage has dropped effectively to zero and his cutter usage has jumped up to around 28-29%, replacing his old slider and some fastball usage. Pitch f/x still classifies most of them as sliders, but I think that’s more of a movement thing. A 90+ mph pitch with that kind of movement is just unfair.

    Wasn’t Dylan Bundy’s claim to fame (pre–draft) his cutter? Maybe the Cubs should try to get him for peanuts as well.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  26. Mercurial Outfielder:
    Mucker,

    It’s been floated publicly that Arrieta was discouraged from throwing his slutter by the Orioles. An anti-two seamer bias at an org level is a new facet to that rumor, but it certainly lends credence to it.

    I really don’t get the anti-two seamer bias, if true. Why would an organization have an issue with a pitch no more stressful to throw than a four seam fastball and that can induce a lot of weak contact?

    Then again, Peter Angelos owns the team, so I suppose anything’s on the table. (dying laughing)

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  27. The cutter isn’t everything though, it’s not like throwing cutters means that the rest of Arrieta’s pitches started finding the plate. It helps, but a lot of things have improved with Jake.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  28. Perkins,

    What I heard, at least with regards to Arrieta, was that the issue was his control of the pitch and him being told to abandon it in favor a straightforward slider, which the org felt he could control better.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  29. After high school, the kids made their way to Chicago for college: Pete, Tom and Laura to the University of Chicago, Todd to Loyola University.

    Fucking Todd never could pass muster.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  30. Mercurial Outfielder:
    berselius,

    This. Not enough attention is paid to the role Jake’s insane conditioning regimen has played in his growth as a player.

    Also true. It’s certainly a combination of the conditioning, improved mechanics, and pitch usage. I would also guess that the conditioning may compensate for the across the body mechanics (which always was a knock/injury concern for Kerry Wood, IIRC). Strengthening the muscle groups around ligaments can reduce the strain on them a lot (at least that’s what the PT told me after my ACL reconstruction).

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  31. Suburban kid: Fucking Todd never could pass muster.

    He put his college education at Scott Walker’s disposal to fill that gap in his campaign, that one sure worked out (dying laughing).

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  32. Just submitted Obstructed View to Apple’s News feed for their new iOS 9 News app. It’s being reviewed. (dying laughing) I feel sorry for the reviewer. Facepalm logo was included. I hope if they decline us they tell us “good luck with your blog.”

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  33. berselius,

    I wonder if his bicycle shop in my hometown is still in business. I hope not, because I am loyal to the Wilmette Bicycle & Sport Shop, where I got all my Schwinn (and Rawlings) products growing up.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  34. Suburban kid:

    Sorry for being an asshole (dying laughing)

    I, on the other hand, was being a pedantic asshole as a reaction to thoroughly enjoying your post. When I see a tree I particularly like, I cut it down, put it in my living room, and shame it with mismatched trinkets and tchotchkes as the life ebbs from its being. (already dead smiling)

    BTW—I haven’t tested it, but it the macro still on? (dying laughing)

    Edit: Apparently not. I just need to make a text expander shortcut for it, having already gotten used to typing it out on other forums.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  35. cerulean: BTW—I haven’t tested it, but it the macro still on? (dying laughing)

    use small letters. I’ll add caps and other variations when I get a chance. Figured the plugin had that covered, but apparently not. Small letters do work though.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  36. Saw this at BN recapping a Theo interview:

    Epstein reasserts that he’d like to stay with the Cubs after his contract expires after next season and that ironing out an extension won’t be a problem. I wouldn’t worry about this, folks. I don’t think anyone – on either side – wants to see Epstein go anywhere else, right now.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  37. dmick89: use small letters. I’ll add caps and other variations when I get a chance. Figured the plugin had that covered, but apparently not. Small letters do work though.

    Excellent (dying laughing)

    Honestly, I don’t know why I capitalized them.

    On Arrieta and the win total, I think that 22 is really damn impressive these days. Part of the “wins don’t matter” I think has to do with the fact that fewer starters go really deep and finish games these days combined with run support being harder to come by while other stats remain eye-popping. The last player in the NL to win 22 in a season was Webb in 2008. (Lee also had 22 that year and Verlander had 24 in 2011.) ERA, however, has often held more sway than wins—see Maddux in the mid nineties when his ERA was an order of magnitude better than anybody else’s. But Grienke’s ERA is not an order of magnitude better. I think that all the other rate and count stats are so dead even that the wins and innings pitched will outweigh the others, assuming the both perform as expected next start(s). And by starts, I am including the wild card coin-flip game for Arrieta, because if Arrieta does put on another clinic, it will be hard to ignore—even though they don’t technically count.

    Wandering through the pages on BBref has sparked a trivia question that I believe I know the answer to:

    What team was the first to win a wild card coin-flip game?

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  38. Apropos of nothing: Albert Pujols’ OBP is .301. I mean, I know he’s aging and he still hits for power, but I thought he’d age more gracefully than this.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  39. Rizzo the Rat:
    Apropos of nothing: Albert Pujols’ OBP is .301. I mean, I know he’s aging and he still hits for power, but I thought he’d age more gracefully than this.

    Are there all that many 1st basemen who age gracefully? I expected better too, but I’m not all that surprised.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  40. dmick89,

    Not many, no. He just struck me as a possible member of that rare group of hitters who remains dominant past his 35th birthday (e.g., Ruth, Musial, Williams).

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  41. berselius,

    By “orders of magnitude”, I mean powers of 10. In binary. (But seriously, probabilistically speaking, he was orders of orders of magnitude better.)

    I should mention—I forgot that Maddux’s feats were in 1994 and 1995, both strike shortened seasons, so the sample sizes were too small. (dying laughing)

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  42. Rizzo the Rat:
    Pedro’s 2000 ERA (in a DH league) is even more amazing than Maddux’s.

    heh:

    Adjusted ERA+ for the AL in 2000:
    1. Martinez (BOS) 291
    2. Sirotka (CHW) 133

    The difference between Martinez and Sirotka had a better year than Sirotka.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  43. Rice Cube:
    http://doubtingtheo.tumblr.com/post/130164373335/sigh

    He does the Lord’s work compiling all the shit from anti-Theo folks.

    I think the difference between the Doubting Theo stuff and the old OV opinions is that the opinions here, though not glowing of Arrieta, recognized a certain upside to the players acquired, and value to the cost control and thus came to a basic conclusion the trade wasn’t “bad.”

    The Theo Doubters all seem to have wanted to keep Feldman like he was some answer to the futility, and that’s just dumb. Plus, most of the tweets have a certain glee like they’re happy Theo fucked up (in their opinion).

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  44. aisle424: Plus, most of the tweets have a certain glee like they’re happy Theo fucked up (in their opinion).

    This. There have been times I’ve disagreed with what the front office did, but I knew they were in a better position to make decisions and I hoped they were right. Those people want to be right and therefore are wanting Thoyer to be terrible.

    I’ve never cared about this whole “true fan” shit, but those people can’t actually be Cubs fans.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  45. Mercurial OutfielderI think all postseason awards should be decided by fiat, with Jonathan Papelbon being the sole arbiter, as he is the sacred keeper of the Flame of Bangarang, Consecrated Heart of Grit and Hustle, Blesséd Be.

    This made me laugh a lot

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  46. Votto went ballistic a couple weeks ago, now he’s throwing away at bats. Bizarro. I could see a murder-suey in his future. Sorry Mrs Votto!

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  47. This strikeout machine offense with no set lineup now owns the third best record in MLB outright. The best team in the AL would be in fourth place in the NL Central.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  48. dmick89,

    A little late on this, but the 2011 race between Halladay, Lee and Kershaw was just as close:

    Halladay: ERA: 2.35 IP: 233.2
    Kershaw: ERA: 2.28 IP: 233.1
    Lee: ERA: 2.40 IP: 232.2

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  49. Perkins: Also true. It’s certainly a combination of the conditioning, improved mechanics, and pitch usage. I would also guess that the conditioning may compensate for the across the body mechanics (which always was a knock/injury concern for Kerry Wood, IIRC). Strengthening the muscle groups around ligaments can reduce the strain on them a lot (at least that’s what the PT told me after my ACL reconstruction).

    Plus you know, he grew a sweet beard.

    And he stopped smiling.

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0
  50. WaLi: Plus you know, he grew a sweet beard.

    And he stopped smiling.

    Even speaking as someone who doesn’t care for beards, his is pretty epic. Not smiling is also key. Ever since I adopted the Costanza “look serious and mildly annoyed” method, everything at work has been coming up roses. (dying laughing)

      Quote  Reply

    0

    0

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *