Gary Armida's Blog
It seems like every spring, the Toronto Blue Jays are touted as a sleeper pick to make the playoffs. There is good reason for that; they are a quality team and organization from top to bottom. Alex Anthopoulos and his staff have built a powerful offense, stocked the farm system well, and have had many of their reaches--Colby Rasmus, Yunel Escobar, and Edwin Encarnacion--come out exactly as planned. The Blue Jays, despite being on a significantly smaller budget than the Yankees and Red Sox, have built a team that can compete in the difficult AL East.
For most of the season, the Blue Jays have sat in third or fourth place, a few games over the .500 mark. That accomplishment is stunning considering the injuries that they have faced. Three fifths of the rotation is on the disabled list. Their anointed closer, Sergio Santos, has pitched a total of five brutal innings and is now lost for the season. His setup man, Francisco Cordero, is busy proving why no team was interested in bringing him in as a closer. Then, perhaps the most devastating blow to any sliver of hope of making the playoffs, Jose Bautista took a swing and was writhing in pain at Yankee Stadium. While it looks like the Blue Jays caught a break and Bautista isn’t said to be seriously hurt, they have now fallen into last place and are now the only sub-.500 team in the division despite being third in runs scored and second in homeruns.
But, the Blue Jays’ hopeful season was dashed before Bautista took his ill-fated swing. The first nail was driven in when Brandon Morrow went on the disabled list with an oblique injury. He is progressing, but can’t be expected back until mid to late August. The other nail is being pummeled in by Ricky Romero. Billed as the Blue Jays’ ace after his tremendous 2011 season, Romero has failed in every way to live up to those expectations.
Expectations were quite high heading into this season for the 27 year old southpaw. He had just completed his third season as a Major League pitcher and his third consecutive season in which he improved in all facets of the game. He gave up less hits per nine innings for the third consecutive year, along with a third consecutive year of improvement in walk rate, ERA, and ERA+. His 15-11, 2.92 ERA in 32 starts was impressive. Even more impressive was a 7.1 H/9, 1.9 HR/9, 3.2 BB/9, and 7.12 K/9. It looked as though the lefty was thriving in the AL East and ready to become the ace to fill the void that Roy Halladay left.
But, beyond his traditional statistics, there was some cause for concern regarding his ability to be an ace. His batting average on balls put in play was .242, unbelievably low and not likely to happen again. It was also well below his career BABIP of .285. In other words, he was due for some regression. Secondly, his FIP was 4.20, which means that his 2.92 ERA was a product of some good defense.
Even those warnings couldn’t have forecasted just how bad Romero would be this season. After starting April with a 3-0 record and a 3.18 ERA, it seemed as if Romero would actually meet expectations that now look too high. But, since the first month Romero has struggled. Overall, in 20 starts, Romero does have an 8-6 record. This is just more proof that a win-loss record is not an indicator of pitcher success. In 122.1 innings, he has allowed 122 hits, 4.56 BB/9, 6.18 K/9, 1.25 HR/9, all adding up to a 5.22 ERA and a disturbing 5.19 FIP. And, bad luck can’t really be to blame as his BABIP is .284, still below the Major League average.
It is difficult to pinpoint the exact cause of Romero’s poor season. The walk rate is one big area, but the question has to turn into why he isn’t throwing strikes. His flyball and groundball rates are similar to his career norms, but his line drive rate is 19.1 percent, up more than 5 percent from last season. So, batters are making better contact.
Perhaps they are making better contact because of a velocity dip. He is averaging one mile per hour less on his fastball. That may sound insignificant, but he isn’t a hard thrower to begin with. He now averages 91.2 MPH with his fastball. That should be more than enough, but Romero is actually throwing his fastball far less than he did last season. This year, he goes to the fastball just 48.5 percent of the time as opposed to 60.2 percent last season. His fastball use has dropped to do his increased reliance on his cut fastball, which is up to 18 percent as opposed to 9 percent in 2011. And, he is using his curveball about 4 percent more than he did a year ago.
The cut fastball use is interesting. Romero stated that it was a goal to develop it better at the start of the season. In yesterday’s start against the Yankees, he threw it ten times, only four for strikes. He also couldn’t locate his curveball or changeup, throwing them for strikes only at a 40 percent rate. That left the Yankees sitting on his fastball. Pitch command is obviously an issue. Allowing teams to sit on a 91 MPH fastball is just asking for trouble. To his credit, Romero seems to try to be adjusting by throwing his other pitches, but if he can’t command them, allowing teams to sit on the fastball isn’t going to be a recipe for success.
The result of his lack of command has manifested itself in how batters attack him. Batters are swinging at his pitches less--about three percent less--and are making more contact on pitches he does throw in the strike zone. This season, he is only eliciting swings and misses on pitches in the strike zone 7.7 percent of the time. That is below his career average of 10.3 percent of the time. With batters being more selective, they are making better contact. With Romero’s walk rate at 11.8 percent, batters are making better contact with more runners on base. And, that better contact has resulted in 26 home runs allowed, already a career high.
Where Romero goes from here depends on how he wants to adjust. He could try to revert to a fastball dominant pitcher again, which should help cut his walks. Or, he could continue to refine his secondary pitches in the hopes that they improve to the point where he can be successful again. Many left handed pitchers have made similar transitions. Andy Pettitte went through a down period--although not this bad--during the middle of his career as a refined his cut fastball and his approach. Romero could be going through the same thing. Of course, perhaps he was mislabeled as an ace after what looked to be an improving career path that the secondary statistics just didn’t support.
Whatever it is, the Blue Jays need Ricky Romero to be a top of the rotation pitcher. They will not be able to compete without Romero being an above average pitcher. The tools are there. Because of their injuries, they cannot remove him from the rotation. For whatever reason, he has just lost his control which has allowed hitters to key in on an average fastball.
# 1
BlueJaysFan @ Jul 19
he should go back to the fastball, if it wasn't broken why did he try to fix it? I have a feeling ricky has been fighting through a shoulder injury but he's trying to pitch through it. I can see why due to the slew of injurys, Lets just hope he finds his form agian
# 2
CujoMatty @ Jul 19
I think he's trying way too hard right now. I've watched every jays game for 3 years now and what I love is his intensity. He wants to win so bad and I've seen him noticeably upset when the bullpen has blown games he should have won. I can't really blame him for Over thinking everything with the state of the jays bullpen.
if he could just go out there and get out of his head he'd be fine. I just really don't think he's made that way though.
if he could just go out there and get out of his head he'd be fine. I just really don't think he's made that way though.
Gary Armida
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