Dayton Daily News

Dodgers say less mound time is more

- Tyler Kepner ©2018 The New York Times

A few GLENDALE, ARIZ. — years ago, it was every team’s fantasy: 1,000 innings from five starters. Chances are it would never work out like that, but with good health and a little more than six innings per start, it was possible.

Now, that concept is as dead as the paper All-Star ballot. Last season, the Los Angeles Dodgers’ rotation averaged 86 pitches per start, fewest in the majors. Yet they won the most games, 104, and their starters’ 3.39 ERA was the best in baseball. Less was more.

“Do you want to be an innings eater, or do you want to be an impact guy in your rotation and on your team?” said Alex Wood, who worked 152⅓ innings and enjoyed his best season. “If you give me the choice of 150 innings and dominance or 200 innings and mediocrity, it’s not even a question.”

The Dodgers lost the World Series in seven games to the Houston Astros, who had no pitchers throw 160 innings in their uniform during the regular season. The Dodgers had one: Clayton Kershaw, whose second-half back injury held him to 175.

Only 15 pitchers in the majors reached 200 innings last season, matching 2016 for the fewest in a nonstrike year.

Part of the reason, according to Dodgers general manager Farhan Zaidi, is that pitchers are raised to give maximum effort in every inning. Youth baseball is a “radar-gun culture,” he said, just like the pros. Pitchers rarely pace themselves early to stick around late.

“There’s no notion of adding and subtractin­g, or not exerting yourself to the absolute fullest on every pitch,” Zaidi said. “But teams are also giving players the message: ‘Just go all out. We’ll take your five good innings over your seven mediocre innings.’”

The Dodgers, not surprising­ly, are sending that message emphatical­ly. Under Andrew Friedman, their president of baseball operations, the Dodgers have one of the most progressiv­e front offices, unafraid — and perhaps eager — to challenge convention­al wisdom.

By recording their most single-season victories since moving to Los Angeles, and making a dominant run through the National League playoffs, the Dodgers validated their approach. Internally, they were already convinced.

“It’s something that, from our front office to the coaches to the players, we believe in, so it’s not something we needed to be validated,” manager Dave Roberts said.

The Dodgers did not use a six-man rotation last year, as the Los Angeles Angels and perhaps the Texas Rangers plan to do now, yet they managed to give their starter more than four days’ rest in 115 of 162 regular-season games. They shuffled pitchers in every way possible: on and off the 10-day disabled list, up and down from the minors, in and out of the bullpen. Minimized effort led to maximum performanc­e.

“You have to build up a certain amount of organizati­onal depth to be able to do that,” Zaidi said. “If you don’t have the depth, then I think bulk and being able to eat innings is more meaningful. But I think we’re at the point now where, in that quality/quantity tradeoff, quality matters a little bit more — because if guys do need time off, we have a pretty high replacemen­t level behind those guys.”

The Dodgers plan to use Wood, Rich Hill, Kenta Maeda and Hyun-Jin Ryu behind Kershaw. They lost some of their depth when they traded Brandon McCarthy to Atlanta, and a veteran newcomer, Tom Koehler, has a shoulder injury. But they hope to get up to 150 innings, between the minors and the majors, from the top prospect Walker Buehler, and have their usual assortment of Class AAA depth.

Hill, who turns 38 this month, signed a three-year, $48 million contract before last season. The Dodgers were determined to give him a reasonable workload, and Hill — a master of the curveball — made the most of his 25 starts, with a 3.32 ERA and 11 strikeouts per nine innings, a better rate than Kershaw’s.

At 27, Wood is part of the generation that is making 200 innings an exception, not a rule, for starting pitchers. Yet he is human — and as a profession­al athlete, he is extremely competitiv­e. Even as the game changes, pitchers still hate to give up the ball.

“You never want to come out, whether it’s a spring training game or the World Series,” Wood said. “But like everything in life, I try to see both sides of everything, and I understand the early hook. It’s only getting more and more common around the league.”

Nobody gives the early hook as readily as the Dodgers. And nobody wins more.

 ?? EZRA SHAW/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Dodgers pitcher Alex Wood never wants to leave a game, but he’s OK with the Dodgers’ approach because it works.
EZRA SHAW/ GETTY IMAGES Dodgers pitcher Alex Wood never wants to leave a game, but he’s OK with the Dodgers’ approach because it works.

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