Last year, Seth Lugo provided the shot in the arm the Mets needed to return to the playoffs. This year, Lugo needed a shot in the arm just to be able to pitch. Since returning to the majors on Jun 11, he’s taken his spot in the rotation and missed just two turns despite his elbow woes. Still, he hasn’t quite delivered the quality results that he did in 2016 and it’s an open question what the Mets should expect from him in 2018 and beyond.

While Lugo delivered a 2.67 ERA after his promotion in 2016, the estimators showed a completely different story. In that stretch, he posted a 4.33 FIP and a 4.71 xFIP, which indicated his results were not supported by his peripherals. If all you knew were his ERA, FIP and xFIP, you would expect Lugo’s 2017 ERA to be significantly higher than his ERA in 2016.

And that’s exactly what’s happened. Lugo sits today with a 4.64 ERA. As expected, he hasn’t been able to duplicate either his BABIP (.230) or LOB% (85.7) from a year ago. But while last season Lugo exceeded his peripherals, this year he is underperforming them. Right now, his FIP checks in at 4.00 and his xFIP is at 4.39 for the season.

So, what the heck is going on?

There are at least two addtional things that we have to take into account when looking at Lugo’s 2017. First is that his season was delayed when it was found he had a partial tear in his pitching elbow. Lugo opted against having TJ surgery and instead received a PRP injection into his elbow. This allowed him to get back onto the field this year, although it’s far from clear if he’s out of the woods as far as needing further elbow surgery down the road.

For what it’s worth, back in mid-July, Lugo told Abbey Mastracco of NJ Advanced Media that his elbow was a non-factor, saying:

“At this point, it’s been feeling good for over a month and I haven’t even thought about it,” he said. “I just make sure to do my routine postgame and in between starts. I don’t think about it much more than that.”

“It’s pretty normal,” he said. “I wouldn’t say it’s any different than usual.”

Of course, we have to take everything most athletes say in regards to their health with a grain of salt. Unfortunately, we have a culture that says if you talk about injuries instead of playing a tough guy that you’re letting your teammates down. Lugo’s quote does not mean that he’s home free. But he’s pitching every five days and not requiring any outward special treatment. In nine of his 14 starts, he’s topped 90 pitches and he’s thrown as many as 114 in an outing. He only threw 84 pitches in his last start but he was pinch-hit for in the bottom of the sixth when his spot in the order came up with the bases loaded.

When Lugo came back this season, the idea was that getting up multiple times in the non-regimented way of a reliever would be more stressful on his elbow than if he had a starter’s additional innings workload but on a predictable pattern. Will the Mets feel the same way after an offseason of rest? Many people, most notably Matt Cerrone of MetsBlog, felt that Lugo would be a terrific multi-inning reliever. Since the Sandy Alderson regime arrived, the Mets have bent over backwards to accommodate lefty relievers. What if instead they bent over backwards to accommodate a guy to pitch 2-3 innings at a time? Ah, dreams…..

The other thing we have to keep in mind while evaluating Lugo is the run environment. In 2016, NL pitchers allowed almost a quarter of a run fewer per game than they have here so far in 2017. So, in a season where runs are more plentiful and one where he’s pitching with a tear in his elbow, Lugo is performing better than he did a season ago by the run estimators.

Examining nothing but his ERA compared to other league starters, minimum 50 innings pitched, this year Lugo’s 4.71 starter’s ERA has him as a low-level SP4. But if instead we compare Lugo to other NL starters by FIP, we see his 3.90 starter’s FIP ranks tied with Rich Hill for 24th-best in the league, making him a low-end SP2.

If Lugo’s FIP last year could be used to point out he wasn’t anywhere close to as good as his ERA suggested, shouldn’t it be used this year to show that he’s better than his 2017 ERA?

Health permitting, Lugo should get four more starts this year to further aid in evaluating his season. Assuming he pitches in those similar to how he’s done so far in 2017, the Mets will have to determine how healthy he can be in 2018, if he’s good enough from a quality standpoint to be penciled in as a starter and if he’s better than the potential alternatives.

It’s just another in a long line of tough evaluation decisions the Mets have in front of them. Still, when you consider all that’s gone on here in 2017, Lugo’s season has been a nice development.

*****

Much has been made about Lugo’s effectiveness the third time through the order this season, when opponents have a .363/.413/.488 line in 92 PA. Yet you don’t hear anywhere near as much about his struggles with the bottom of the order. Seventh place hitters have a .907 OPS against him this year while guys hitting eighth check in with an .845 OPS.

Baseball-Reference has a metric called sOPS+, which compares the individual’s split relative to the league’s split in the same category. Lugo’s sOPS+ mark the third time through the order has an sOPS+ mark of 129, which is not good. But his sOPS+ mark for eighth place hitters is 139 and for guys who hit seventh it’s 142 – meaning relatively he’s performed worse against those hitters than he has third time through the order.

The sample sizes for all of these are small, so you probably don’t want to read too much into any of them. Instead, this is just a factoid to counter those who think that all of Lugo’s issues will magically go away if he doesn’t have to face a batter more than twice in a game.

10 comments on “Seth Lugo’s underappreciated season as a starting pitcher

  • John Fox

    I bet pitching so many innings during the spring for Puerto Rico in the WBC affected his pitching negatively

    • Brian Joura

      I dunno. He pitched 15 innings while Marcus Stroman pitched 15.1 and some Japanese guy pitched 14.1 innings. Sometimes pitchers just get hurt.

  • Metsense

    I appreciate Seth Lugo. When he is compared to his peers he is a #3 rotation pitcher. The concern is the tear in his elbow. The Mets should obtain a better than #3+ free agent starter to slot in with deGrom and Syndergaard and stabilize the 2018 rotation. Starting pitching sabotaged the 2017 season.

  • Name

    I thought Lugo has been horrendous this year, but perhaps i need to update my context. The animal once known as a “Starting Pitcher” pretty much no longer exists.

    I used starters with a 50 IP minimum.
    2014 : 3.82 ERA, 52% averaged 6+ IP/Start.
    2015 : 4.10 ERA, 34% averaged 6+ IP/Start.
    2016 : 4.34 ERA, 26% averaged 6+ IP/Start.
    2017 : 4.49 ERA, 21% averaged 6+ IP/Start.

    Absolutely absurd drop. 4 years ago 1/2 of the pitchers could go 6+, now only 1/5 can…

    And some of the supposed “elite” pitchers that don’t make the 6+ list?
    The entire Dodgers rotation sans Kershaw
    Darvish
    Lance Lynn
    The entire Cubs rotation

    • Metsense

      Name, that is the most eye opening post! It is great that you “found” and could “recognize” this new trend in baseball. JP has been posting that the 6+ starting pitcher is becoming a thing of the past. Name, you just proved it. The Mets now need to apply this information and they have the pitching personnel to do it. The era of the 2-3 inning relief pitcher may be dawning. Nice job !

      • Jimmy P

        Right, I think we are beating our heads against the wall by complaining about 6-inning starts. Moreover, I wonder if the 7-inning start becomes a net negative over the length of the season, especially when a strong finish is required.

        Jake deGrom, at one stretch, was really great and made it a personal mission to try to go deeper and help out the pen. Later, he kind of ran out of gas for a number of starts.

        I just wonder if we need to accept the six-inning start. Someone the max effort in today’s world is just not the same as it was 40-50 years ago.

        Another guy I always think of is Greg Maddox, who was really one of the first babies out there. He’d pull himself after 90 pitches all the time (thing is, he was so efficient, it was usually at seven innings). He simply didn’t believe in going deep and over-extending himself. Had a pretty good career. Was he ahead of his time?

        If this is true — that a wise team embraces the six-inning starter — then there are other consequences, too. They must also embrace the 1-2 IP reliever and the necessity of a deep bullpen. Importantly, managers must adapt. The old mix-and-match approach doesn’t work across six innings. Terry Collins proved this point in the negative all season long. He took the old 8th-inning approach and tried to apply it to the 7th inning, too, effectively burning at least one extra reliever each and every game.

        Getting ready futuristic, maybe one day we’ll see starters return to a four-man rotation — with the understanding that they are going to give you 5-6 innings and turn the ball over. Who knows!

        Brian has been on this one for a long time. The need for relievers to pitch to both sides of the plate and go beyond one inning. Robles can do this. Unfortunately, he bizarrely sucks. Lugo is interesting in this way. Maybe Gsellman in the pen could also pitch in this role. Sinkerball pitchers seems to thrive on extra work.

        Anyway, I regress . . .

  • Eraff

    Under-appreciated…ok. #3 Starter???…that’s over-rating him

  • TJ

    Gentlemen,
    Most of the top contending teams have realized this and staked the bullpens. The Mets, however, have been under-manning the pen and AAA for years…clearly the fault of the GM but most likely driven by ownership and money. Collins has been an abuser, but he cannot be judged independently since I cannot recall when he ever had more than 3 reliable arms in the pen at the same time.

    If the Mets were serious about 2018, given the uncertainty regarding Famila, they’d acquire a closer that is better than Familia and Rojas, then fill the remaining spots with guys like Lugo, Wheeler, Montero, and Gsellman…that can pitch multiple innings. Add a legit, dependable starter and then look for position players. I’d be fine with Lagares/Nimmo in CF, TDA/Plawecki catching, and adding only 1 legit bat, so long as the two pitching additions were a big closer and a quality starter. I see this as the only recipe to compete in 2018.

    • Brian Joura

      With Familia and Ramos already on the roster, I think you’re dreaming if you believe they will entertain the idea of adding a closer.

      Now, a 7th-8th inning guy? I’d say that’s at least a possibility, if not a particularly strong one…

      • TJ

        Brian,
        Oh yes, I am admittedly dreaming, as the Wilpon/Alderson combo would have to change their strips on this. However, this type of move has been made by teams like the Yankees, the Indians,the Cubs, even the Dodgers to an extent…basically the legit World Series contenders.

        I really don’t see any othr formula for the Mets to make up 35-30 games on the elite teams in one offseason.

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