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Defense has been big reason for Cubs’ early success this season

- BY THE NUMBERS Twitter: @Grochowski­J

Starting pitching has received much of the credit for the Cubs’ fast start, and deservedly so. Entering their doublehead­er Monday against the Cardinals, Cubs starters had a 3.17 ERA, second in the majors to the Indians’ 2.58.

But part of run prevention is defense. And despite a couple of missteps in losing three of four games to the Brewers, the Cubs have been stellar in the field, too.

Through their first 19 games, the Cubs stood fourth in the majors with a .731 defensivee­fficiency percentage, meaning they had converted 73.1 percent of balls in play into outs.

The Cardinals led at .773 through eight games, followed by the Dodgers (.746 in 23) and Twins (.739 in 22). The major-league average is .700.

When the Cubs won the World Series in 2016, they led the majors with a .728 DefEff, 25 points better than the runner-up Blue Jays. They dropped to .699 in 2017 (the major-league average was .688), then were at .700 in 2018 (the major-league average was .691) before plummeting to .681 last season, seven points below the .688 major-league average.

The easy way to find defensive efficiency is to check the league defense pages at BaseballRe­ference.com.

For those who like a more hands-on approach, the formula is 1 - ((H + ROE - HR) / (PA - BB - SO - HBP - HR)). In addition to the common abbreviati­ons, ROE is ‘‘reached on error.’’

DefEff treats hits and ROE in the same way. Both are balls in play that the defense didn’t turn into outs. If a runner reaches first on a grounder through the infield, it doesn’t matter if the fielder didn’t get to it and it’s labeled a hit or if it went off a fielder’s glove and is labeled an error. All that matters is whether the defense turned the batted ball into an out.

There are more advanced defensive measures than DefEff, including defensive runs saved. Advanced measures require human interventi­on to judge location relative to position and factor in how hard the ball is hit and other factors.

The object is to determine how many plays a fielder makes compared to an average fielder. DefEff can’t account for where or how hard a ball is hit, and sometimes teams that are strong in runs saved will fall short in DefEff. That’s the case with the White Sox, who rank fourth in the majors with 12 runs saved but 23rd in DefEff at .691.

The Cubs fare well with 14 runs saved, second to the Dodgers’

21. Because comparison­s are to average, an average fielding team would have zero runs saved. The Cubs were well below that line last season with minus-28 runs saved.

Catcher Willson Contreras is the team leader with three runs saved, followed by Albert Almora Jr., Javy Baez, Yu Darvish and Anthony Rizzo with two each.

Defensive efficiency isn’t as advanced as runs saved, but it’s much more advanced than fielding percentage. And by either DefEff or runs saved, defense has been a plus in the Cubs’ early success.

It had been four years since right-hander Tyson Miller heard his name called during the 2016 MLB Draft. On Monday, he finally got his first taste of the big leagues.

Miller was recalled from the Cubs’ alternate site in South Bend, Indiana, to serve as the 29th man and start Game 2 of a doublehead­er against the Cardinals. He threw two innings in his first major-league appearance.

“Tyson’s been throwing really well,” manager David Ross said before the game. “He’s got a couple of new toys that he’s developed down there in South Bend as far as pitch mix.”

Miller allowed two runs and one hit and walked three batters. While he struggled with his control during the outing, he only made one mistake; Cardinals designated hitter Brad Miller ambushed him on a first-pitch fastball for a two-run homer in the second inning.

Tyson Miller was the Cubs’ fourth-round pick in 2016 and became the first Cub to make his majorleagu­e debut in a starting role since Duane Underwood Jr. on June 25, 2018, against the Dodgers. He was 7-8 with a 4.35 ERA last season at Class AA Tennessee and Class AAA Iowa.

Miller’s time with the big-league team will be brief, but with more doublehead­ers likely in the Cubs’ future because of pandemic-related rescheduli­ng, along with possible injuries, there may be more opportunit­ies for him to make his mark.

Quintana continues to progress

Left-hander Jose Quintana , working his way back after hand surgery, threw another four-inning simulated game Sunday, tossing 61 pitches at South Bend. While Ross didn’t say so definitive­ly, Quintana likely will throw at least one more sim game before returning.

“All things seem good,” Ross said. “I think we’ll push him back one more day for that sim game . . . . We haven’t quite finalized that schedule, but reports were good.”

Wednesday pitching plans unclear

The Cubs’ starters for Wednesday’s doublehead­er are still unknown, but one could be prospect Adbert Alzolay. Alzolay had been in considerat­ion to start Game 2 on Monday but took a line drive to his right forearm, causing a contusion.

“He is an option for Wednesday,” Ross said. “Obviously, the throwing forearm is an important area, and so it’s a day-to-day thing. Just in with communicat­ions with the trainers, but he is still an option for Wednesday.”

 ?? NUCCIO DINUZZO/GETTY IMAGES GETTY IMAGES ?? Catcher Willson Contreras leads the Cubs with three runs saved in 2020. Cubs center fielder Albert Almora Jr. makes a leaping catch against the vines last month. He has saved two runs this season.
NUCCIO DINUZZO/GETTY IMAGES GETTY IMAGES Catcher Willson Contreras leads the Cubs with three runs saved in 2020. Cubs center fielder Albert Almora Jr. makes a leaping catch against the vines last month. He has saved two runs this season.
 ?? NUCCIO DINUZZO/GETTY IMAGES ?? Ian Happ rounds the bases after his solo homer in the fourth inning of Game 1, which tied the score 1-1.
NUCCIO DINUZZO/GETTY IMAGES Ian Happ rounds the bases after his solo homer in the fourth inning of Game 1, which tied the score 1-1.
 ?? NUCCIO DINUZZO/GETTY IMAGES ?? Tyson Miller opened Game 2 on Tuesday, allowing a two-run homer by Brad Miller.
NUCCIO DINUZZO/GETTY IMAGES Tyson Miller opened Game 2 on Tuesday, allowing a two-run homer by Brad Miller.

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