It's not easy being Green
Toronto Star
|September 09, 2024
Closer has been more good than bad, but warning signs are there
Throughout most of this season, veteran Chad Green had been one of the only consistently reliable relievers in the Blue Jays bullpen.
Aside from a six-week stint on the injured list, Green has performed exactly as advertised. He was effective and efficient in a setup role, then just as successful at closer after Jordan Romano went down with an elbow injury.
Chad Green has been charged with seven runs in his last 2 2⁄3 innings, giving up two homers and blowing three saves.
There were, however, warning signs throughout much of that run. Among 16 saves, Green would often get away with a deep fly ball or two that fell just short of the wall. There were several home runs that weren’t consequential enough to cost the Jays a win.
At the end of August, Green owned a 1.61 ERA and had yet to blow a save chance. Finding fault with those results would been nitpicky and yet his fielding independent pitching — a metric that is similar to ERA but focuses on things the pitcher has control over, such as strikeouts, walks and home runs — was 4.45. There was also the issue of opponents’ average exit velocity, where Green ranked in MLB’s first percentile. His hard-hit ball percentage of 48 ranked in the second percentile. Few pitchers were consistently giving up as much solid contact as Green, and it figured to be only a matter of time before his luck changed.
このストーリーは、Toronto Star の September 09, 2024 版からのものです。
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