The Twins just completed a series in which they scored five runs in three games while being swept by the Blue Jays. In my searches for the Series Preview in Blog, I came across this article about the inconsistency of the Jays offense in comparison to some other teams. The Twins were one of the more inconsistent offenses mentioned in the study. The author doesn't delve into cause and effect with his numbers (except for a rough characterization of teams as 'power' or 'speed' reliant offenses), but the short answer has little to do with a reliance on speed in the Twins offense. Rather the Twins offense goes mostly as the 3-6 hitters go. Unfortunately those hitters are the least consistently productive of the Twins regular lineup.
Player | OPS | St. Dev. | High | Low |
Mike Redmond | .680 | .224 | 1.173 | .343 |
Jason Tyner | .649 | .221 | 1.026 | .266 |
Jeff Cirillo | .741 | .202 | 1.019 | .449 |
Michael Cuddyer | .923 | .184 | 1.156 | .508 |
Joe Mauer | .849 | .182 | 1.249 | .547 |
Torii Hunter | .901 | .174 | 1.180 | .623 |
Justin Morneau | .949 | .160 | 1.260 | .689 |
Luis Castillo | .702 | .156 | .901 | .372 |
Jason Bartlett | .666 | .155 | .867 | .247 |
Nick Punto | .594 | .137 | .816 | .370 |
Jason Kubel | .709 | .120 | .919 | .512 |
The most inconsistent performers (Tyner, Redmond, Cirillo) are those that don't play as often. The next rung on the inconsistency ladder belongs to Minnesota's "big 4"; Cuddyer, Mauer, Hunter, Morneau. The most consistent are the "little 4"; the regular players with OPS under .800 (Kubel, Bartlett, Punto, Castillo). The biggest surprise to me was Joe Mauer's numbers. It's hard to believe that Mauer is less consistent than Torii Hunter. And, in fact, if you eliminate just the 10 game stretch immediately after he came off the disabled list the standard deviation drops significantly. So I dropped the highest and lowest sections from each players data and recalculated the data.
Player | OPS | St. Dev. | Adjusted | High | Low |
Jeff Cirillo | .741 | .202 | .175 | 1.019 | .449 |
Jason Tyner | .649 | .221 | .164 | 1.026 | .266 |
Mike Redmond | .680 | .224 | .163 | 1.173 | .343 |
Torii Hunter | .901 | .174 | .156 | 1.180 | .623 |
Michael Cuddyer | .923 | .184 | .154 | 1.156 | .508 |
Justin Morneau | .949 | .160 | .136 | 1.260 | .689 |
Luis Castillo | .702 | .156 | .128 | .901 | .372 |
Nick Punto | .594 | .137 | .122 | .816 | .370 |
Jason Bartlett | .666 | .155 | .117 | .867 | .247 |
Joe Mauer | .849 | .182 | .113 | 1.249 | .547 |
Jason Kubel | .709 | .120 | .104 | .919 | .512 |
Therein lies the problem with the Twins offense. The top and bottom of the order are consistently producing subpar offensive numbers (OPS of .594 to .709) so they rarely are able to pick up the slack when the middle of the order isn't at its top production. Unfortunately, it seems that the middle of the order this season has been the most unpredictable part of the offense, whether it's availability (Mauer spending significant time on the DL) or just production. If one or two (or sometimes three) of the "big 4" aren't producing, the offense almost completely evaporates. It's also interesting to note that the right-handed component of the "big 4" is the less consistent half. That might be a factor in the Twins struggles against left-handed pitching.
The inconsistency is not the fault of the middle of the order being more or less consistent than the rest of the lineup. In fact, I would predict that most of the high OPS hitters would see more variance than lighter-hitting players. Rather, it is an offense that is constructed to rely on a few people in the lineup to produce the majority of the runs, and when the remainder of the lineup doesn't heat up to cover the downswings of the big bats, the offense is doomed to sputter.
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