Catchers
We come, at last, to Fielders, starting with the men behind the Iron Masks. This is basically a system for fielders, but we had to put in 100 pages of work on pitchers to get here.
Catchers will be credited with Runs Saved for eight categories of on-field performance: strikeouts by their pitchers, walks avoided by their pitchers, Wild Pitches and Passed Balls Avoided, Stolen Bases Avoided, Runners Picked Off and Caught Stealing, and Error Avoidance. That’s eight performance areas, but since "Baserunner Advancement" includes three different things and "Runners Removed" includes two, there will only be five different values in the catcher’s mitt, whereas there were 10 for pitchers. And the explanations for those five should be much easier, since we have already explained essentially the same concepts in outlining the pitcher values. This chart, which I showed before, is intended to help you get an overview of the process in your head:
Category
|
P
|
C
|
1B
|
2B
|
3B
|
SS
|
LF
|
CF
|
RF
|
Strikeouts
|
97%
|
3%
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
Control
|
97%
|
3%
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
HR Avoidance
|
100%
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
Balks
|
100%
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
Wild Pitches
|
70%
|
30%
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
Passed Balls
|
35%
|
65%
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
Stolen Bases All
|
40%
|
60%
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
Outfield Assists
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
30%
|
30%
|
40%
|
Pitcher Pickoffs
|
100%
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
Catcher Pickoffs
|
---
|
100%
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
Runners Caught Stealing
|
40%
|
60%
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
Double Plays
|
16%
|
---
|
10%
|
42%
|
12%
|
40%
|
---
|
---
|
---
|
Error Avoidance
|
10%
|
10%
|
10%
|
15%
|
17%
|
22%
|
5%
|
6%
|
5%
|
DER
|
16%
|
---
|
10%
|
13%
|
10%
|
14%
|
11%
|
15%
|
11%
|
Formula 45: C-RS-K-C1 (Catcher’s Runs Saved on Strikeouts)
The formula for Catcher’s Runs Saved on Strikeouts is
(a) The Team’s strikeout total,
(b) Times the catcher’s putouts (at catcher),
(c) Divided by the team total of Catcher’s putouts,
(d) Times .166 (the run-prevention value of a strikeout),
(e) Times .03.
That is:
C-RS-K-C1 = TmSO * PO(ind-c) / PO(tm-c) * .166 * .03
Where PO(ind-c) means the putouts at catcher by an individual catcher, and PO(tm-c) means the team total. These would be the first leaders among the catchers on these 15 teams.
City
|
Team
|
Year
|
Player
|
Tm K
|
Poc-tm
|
Poc-ind
|
C1
|
Detroit
|
Tigers
|
1968
|
Bill Freehan
|
1115
|
1196
|
971
|
4.51
|
New York
|
Yankees
|
2000
|
Jorge Posada
|
1040
|
1076
|
892
|
4.29
|
Toronto
|
Blue Jays
|
1992
|
Pat Borders
|
954
|
973
|
784
|
3.83
|
Detroit
|
Tigers
|
1984
|
Lance Parrish
|
914
|
956
|
720
|
3.43
|
Philadelphia
|
Phillies
|
2008
|
Carlos Ruiz
|
1081
|
1120
|
623
|
2.99
|
Formula 46: Cat-Control (Catcher’s Contribution to Control, or walks avoided)
The TEAM’S walks avoided are as follows:
W=Av = BFP * .145 067 – BB – HBP
That is NOT Formula 46, above; that’s just the start of it. That part is actually exactly the same as Formula 2, back at the start of this series, except that at that time we were applying it to individual pitchers, and now, because we lack strikeout data for individual catchers, we are applying it to the team. Anyway, having done that, we pro-rate that to each individual catcher, based on his innings at the position:
Cat-Control = (BFP * .145 067 – BB – HBP) * (C-Inn / Tm-Inn) * .03
Where C-Inn is the Catcher’s Innings, and Tm-Inn is the team’s Innings.
Formula 47: RS-Cat-Control-C2 (Runs Saved by Catcher-Control-2nd Catcher Value)
Credit the catcher with .236 Runs Saved for each walk not issued.
Cat-Control-C2 = W-Av * .236
These are the top five catchers in the study in terms of Runs Saved by Control:
Player
|
BFP
|
BB
|
HBP
|
Tm IP
|
Inn-C
|
C2
|
Bill Freehan
|
6043
|
486
|
32
|
1489.7
|
1180.3
|
2.01
|
Johnny Bench
|
6191
|
491
|
21
|
1471.0
|
1071.0
|
1.99
|
Lance Parrish
|
6127
|
489
|
30
|
1474.0
|
1075.7
|
1.91
|
Pat Borders
|
6108
|
541
|
45
|
1440.7
|
1160.7
|
1.71
|
Smoky Burgess
|
5805
|
386
|
11
|
1399.7
|
748.3
|
1.68
|
And these are the Top 5, combining C1 and C2:
Year
|
Player
|
C1
|
C2
|
Total
|
1968
|
Bill Freehan
|
4.51
|
2.01
|
6.52
|
2000
|
Jorge Posada
|
4.29
|
1.64
|
5.93
|
1992
|
Pat Borders
|
3.83
|
1.71
|
5.54
|
1984
|
Lance Parrish
|
3.43
|
1.91
|
5.34
|
1976
|
Johnny Bench
|
2.87
|
1.99
|
4.86
|
But the numbers here are so small—five to seven runs for the top catchers—that these categories are mostly just a way of acknowledging the catcher’s contribution. Our ability to actually MEASURE the catcher’s contribution, throughout history, is very limited at this time, although ways could be invented to get closer to it.
Formula 48: BaSv-Cat (Bases Saved by the Catcher)
Formulas 48, 49 and 50, which outline Runs Saved by the catcher on Base Advancement, are a reprise of Formulas 7, 8 and 9, which outlined very similar calculations for the pitcher. Formula 7 was this:
A pitcher’s "Budget" for One Base Advancement Events is .037123 times his Batter’s Faced.
OBAE-Budget = .037123 * BFP
Formula 48 is essentially the same, except that we don’t have BFP data for catchers, so we have to modify it as follows:
OBAE-Budget (c) = .037123 * TmBFP * Innings (catcher) / Innings (team).
In other words, for Johnny Bench in 1976, the Team BFP was 6,191. Bench caught 1,071 innings out of a team total of 1,471, so his Budget for One Base Advancements Allowed is .037123 * 6191 * 1071 / 1471, which is 167.83. Bench will receive credit for bases saved based on how far below that number he is in Base Advancements Allowed.
Formula 49: BaSv-Cat (Bases Saved by the Catcher)
This was formula 8, which applied to pitchers:
BaSv-Pit = [(OBAE-Budget) – Bk - .70 * WP - .40 * OSB - .35 * PB] / 2
Since the pitcher is held 100% responsible for Balks, 70% responsible for Wild Pitches, 40% responsible for stolen bases allowed, and 35% responsible for Passed Balls, the catcher is held not at all responsible for Balks, 30% responsible for Wild Pitches, 60% responsible for Opposition Stolen Bases, and 65% responsible for Passed Balls:
BaSv-Cat = [(OBAE-Budget) - .30 * WP - .60 * OSB - .65 * PB]/2
I see on editing this for the 40th time that I should have spelled out that each catcher is held responsible for the TEAM’S wild pitchers, based on his innings as a catcher. We have data for Passed Balls for each catcher, but not data for Wild Pitches for each pitcher/catcher combination. We have to pro-rate the Wild Pitches based on catcher innings.
These are the five catchers in the study who we credit with preventing the most Base Advancements by Wild Pitch, Passed Ball, or Stolen Base (C3):
Team
|
Year
|
Player
|
Budget
|
WP
|
OSB
|
PB
|
Ba Sv
|
C3
|
Yankees
|
2000
|
Jorge Posada
|
193
|
49
|
70
|
11
|
65.7
|
24.5
|
Tigers
|
1968
|
Bill Freehan
|
178
|
38
|
66
|
9
|
61.6
|
23.0
|
Tigers
|
1984
|
Lance Parrish
|
166
|
47
|
44
|
11
|
61.1
|
22.8
|
Reds
|
1976
|
Johnny Bench
|
167
|
43
|
57
|
5
|
60.2
|
22.5
|
Pirates
|
1960
|
Smoky Burgess
|
115
|
25
|
22
|
2
|
48.4
|
18.0
|
Posada being first on the list is surprising, since Posada did not have a great throwing arm, and was not regarded as a great defensive catcher. The result here is heavily influenced by playing time; Posada caught more innings than any other catcher in the study. If you look at his Runs Saved (C3) relative to his Budget (which is based on playing time), you can see that Posada actually has a LOWER rate of Runs Saved, relative to the budget, than any of the other four catchers listed above—a lower rate, but a higher total.
But also, while Posada DID have some very poor defensive seasons later on, his 2000 season data is actually pretty good. He gave up 70 stolen bases while catching almost 1200 innings. It’s actually a pretty decent ratio. His record against the running game in his early years is actually not bad. And at this time, Posada is credited with saving more runs than any other catcher in the study:
City
|
Team
|
Year
|
Player
|
C1
|
C2
|
C3
|
Total
|
New York
|
Yankees
|
2000
|
Jorge Posada
|
4.3
|
1.6
|
24.5
|
30.4
|
Detroit
|
Tigers
|
1968
|
Bill Freehan
|
4.5
|
2.0
|
23.0
|
29.5
|
Detroit
|
Tigers
|
1984
|
Lance Parrish
|
3.4
|
1.9
|
22.8
|
28.1
|
Cincinnati
|
Reds
|
1976
|
Johnny Bench
|
2.9
|
2.0
|
22.5
|
27.3
|
Toronto
|
Bl Jays
|
1992
|
Pat Borders
|
3.8
|
1.7
|
16.8
|
22.3
|
Formula 50: BaSv-RV-C3 (Bases Saved Run Value, 3rd Catcher’s Value)
Each Base Saved by the Catcher has a Run Value of .373 Runs.
BaSv-RV-C3 = BaSv-Cat * .373
Formula 51: BRR-1-Catcher (Baserunners Removed by a Catcher)
A catcher gets credit for a Baserunner Removed when he (a) picks a runner off base, in which case he gets 100% for that baserunner removed, or (b) throws a runner attempting to steal, in which case he gets 60% of the credit, the other 40% going to the pitcher:
BRR-1-Catcher = PkOff(c) + OCS
This is a "positive" category in which high numbers are good, so it’s easy to figure.
Formula 52: RR1-RS- Cat-C4 (Runners Removed-1, Runs Saved, Catchers, 4th Catcher’s Value)
Each baserunner removed has a value of .516 runs:
RR1-RS-Cat-C4 = BRR-1-Catcher * .516
These are the five catchers credited with the most Runs Saved by Baserunner Removal:
City
|
Team
|
Year
|
Player
|
CS
|
PkOff
|
BRR-1
|
C4
|
Toronto
|
Blue Jays
|
1992
|
Pat Borders
|
51
|
2
|
32.6
|
16.8
|
Cincinnati
|
Reds
|
1976
|
Johnny Bench
|
42
|
3
|
28.2
|
14.6
|
Detroit
|
Tigers
|
1984
|
Lance Parrish
|
38
|
3
|
25.8
|
13.3
|
Detroit
|
Tigers
|
1968
|
Bill Freehan
|
38
|
2
|
24.8
|
12.8
|
New York
|
Mets
|
1964
|
Jesse Gonder
|
33
|
3
|
22.8
|
11.8
|
Let me explain something. The catcher who plays in a low-stolen-base era has an advantage in Base Advancements Prevented. Since he allows fewer stolen bases, he will be credited with NOT ALLOWING more stolen bases. But the catcher who plays in a high-stolen-base-attempts era has the advantage in baserunners removed. If a catcher allows 50 stolen bases and throws out 30 runners, he’ll show up strong in "Base Advancements", but do poorly in Baserunners Removed. If he allows 100 stolen bases but throws out 60 runners, he’ll do poorly in Base Advancements, but do extremely well in Baserunners Removed. Thus, Smoky Burgess (1960) was on the leaderboard in "Base Advancements Prevented), but disappears from the board in "Baserunners Removed", while Pat Borders (1992), who was not on the board in "Base Advancements", moves to the top of the list in "Baserunners Removed". Overall, the system is fair to both eras; it just depends on the total of the two values.
These are the updated leaders in Catchers, Total Runs Saved:
Team
|
Year
|
Player
|
C1
|
C2
|
C3
|
C4
|
Total
|
Tigers
|
1968
|
Bill Freehan
|
4.5
|
2.0
|
23.0
|
12.8
|
42.3
|
Reds
|
1976
|
Johnny Bench
|
2.9
|
2.0
|
22.5
|
14.6
|
41.9
|
Yankees
|
2000
|
Jorge Posada
|
4.3
|
1.6
|
24.5
|
11.0
|
41.5
|
Tigers
|
1984
|
Lance Parrish
|
3.4
|
1.9
|
22.8
|
13.3
|
41.4
|
Blue Jays
|
1992
|
Pat Borders
|
3.8
|
1.7
|
16.8
|
16.8
|
39.1
|
We'll finish the catchers tommorrow.