Ah, Bronson Arroyo. What do you think of? A #4 starter paid like a #2 starter? His exquisite mane? His singing career? Well, much like his musical ability, I am sure Mr. Arroyo is a party of one when thinking he deserves his contract. And in a way, he is right. His last 70 innings, or since his name was kicked around in the trade rumor mill, he has been virtually unstoppable.
For several seasons now I have argued about my theory of a divided Bronson Arroyo. Most people do not watch the Reds or follow the Reds much as they are not media darlings, and for good reason, but rather look at Arroyo’s bottom line. And the bottom line usually is that of an effective but not spectacular pitcher who logs innings and gets the job done without a level of dominance achieved. But if you would look closer at his seasons, you can find patterns of a #2 and even of an ace. This of course means to balance out to what he is, he needs to pitch pretty poor, which happens. To prove my point I will use the simplest of stats with as little investigation as possible. If I can find these stats at 6:30 AM and write this article within a half hour, any GM worth his weight would be able to do the same (wearing a Matt Stairs t-shirt is purely optional, although highly recommended.)
Over his past 11 starts, Arroyo has 10 quality starts, thrown two complete game shutouts, and pitched into the 7th inning or later in 10 of those starts. Over these 70 innings of work, he has reduced his ERA from 5.85 to 4.23. We could dive further into the statistics, but the picture of Arroyo since early July is rather clear; he could have been a huge help for a team in contention.
Let’s look at a simple split for Arroyo, certainly makes my job easier (big numbers scare the hell out of me,) post-ASG numbers.
Year IP H ER BB K ERA 2006 110.2 100 43 32 86 3.50 2007 99.0 105 39 25 81 3.55 2008 96.0 87 37 27 70 3.47
And in 2009….
Year IP H ER BB K ERA 2009 71.0 63 19 19 42 2.41
Arroyo has had trends which are not the most encouraging, notably his decreasing K/9, but it’s hard to argue with overall success coming after the All-Star Game. We could speculate all day and some of the night on why he improves in the second half; works the rust and the kinks out of his delivery, enjoys a mini vacation on his party boat (search for the pics, I’m not your smut provider), the Reds have completely killed any playoff hopes typically by this point and creates a low stress working environment, etc.
No matter how you slice it though, it seems like Arroyo could have been the arm that some NL teams needed to give them that playoff push and in the new economic times of baseball, teams are valuing frugality over making the required moves for success. The Reds may have been able to move him if they included all-star play C. Ash but alas that is more frugality. Then again, if the Reds are as delusional as they lead us to believe, perhaps they realize the 2nd half warrior that Arroyo is and decided his July-September performance of 2010 might be nice to have.