Jump to content
Talk Sox
  • Create Account

Recommended Posts

Talk Sox Contributor
Posted

Late on Wednesday, July 30, the Red Sox traded prospect Blaze Jordan for LHP Steven Matz from the St. Louis Cardinals. Talk Sox’s Nick John was quick to get an overview of the deal. I’ve highlighted Matz a couple of times over recent weeks, but admittedly, it's hard to see the fit because he’s another left-handed reliever. After diving into some deeper numbers and splits, I’ve come around, and the deal for Matz helps to solidify the bullpen in a solid way. He follows what the Red Sox like for their pitchers to do; he induces groundballs and has nasty secondary offerings. 

A Look Under the Hood
Matz currently has a 3.44 ERA with 47 strikeouts in 55 innings pitched. He’s worked as an opener twice this season and has notched a single save. His strikeout percentage is sitting at a solid 20.7% while his walk rate is an impressive flat 4%. That walk rate puts him in the top 2% of pitchers in baseball. His home runs per nine is the lowest it has been in his career at 0.65, and he has a career low in FIP at 2.87.

To go along with his 44.3% ground ball rate, he’s getting hitters to make contact over the top of the ball at a 37.6% clip, which makes sense when you look at his pitch mix. He relies heavily on a sinker that averages 94.3 MPH. He then features a curve and changeup that average 79.4 MPH and 83.8 MPH, respectively. He has a slider that he keeps in his pocket, but rarely uses it, with just two percent on the season so far. That being said, Andrew Bailey loves a good slider, so if he believes that Matz can tap into something with it, then it may become more than just a fourth option pitch for him. 

A Converted Starter
It’s no secret that Matz began his career as a starter with the Mets. He found success early in his career in this role, but floundered over the last couple of seasons after landing in St. Louis. To combat that, the Cardinals moved him to the bullpen in May of this year, and it seemed to unlock a new level for him. He’s already topped his strikeout numbers from last season, although that was an injury-shortened season for him.

Looking at his last full season as a starter in 2023, we see that the numbers that matter are all down across the board for Matz. His average against is down a hair from .263 to .260, his slug against is down from .405 to .377, and his wOBA is down from .316 to .292. He’s found a role that serves his pitching style well in the bullpen and looks to continue that dominance in Boston. The Red Sox are expected to keep him in his bullpen role, but his starting history could have him begin some games as an opener to help keep the starting rotation fresh as we navigate the dog days of summer. 

LOOGY Potential
Although Matz is a left-handed reliever, the Cardinals didn’t use him in a way that showcased his strengths. He’s thrown 24 innings against left-handed hitters and 30 2/3 innings against righties. He has faced more righties than lefties, 138 to 89, and has performed much better against lefties on the season. His slash line against hitters of different handedness shows that in Boston, he’s likely going to be seeing far more left-handed hitters than right-handed hitters. Lefties are slashing .179/.216/.226 with a .199 wOBA while righties are faring far better by slashing .313/.341/.473 with a .351 wOBA against him

Against left-handed hitters, he uses his sinker 25.5% of the time and his curveball 10.7% of the time. He all but abandons his changeup and slider, using them 1.1% and 0.8% of the time, respectively. Against right-handed hitters, he uses his sinker 33.8% of the time, and his change-up becomes his secondary pitch at 16.9% of the time, while his curveball and slider see a 9.8% and 1.2% use rate.  It seems logical, but making Matz a left-handed specialist is the path Boston is looking to take here. They already have left-handed help in the bullpen with Aroldis Chapman, Justin Wilson, Brennan Bernardino, and Chris Murphy already on the roster. Still, Matz should slot in before all of them except Chapman.

I don’t expect the Red Sox to be done as the trade deadline is mere hours away, but adding Steven Matz is a great step in the right direction for the club. Only giving up Blaze Jordan, a prospect who was blocked at both positions and would surely be taken in the Rule 5 draft next year, is a steal for Craig Breslow. Matz adds a left-handed specialty that the bullpen needs, even if that means other relievers have to be moved to accommodate him. 


View full article

Posted
1 hour ago, mvp 78 said:

Isn't LOOGY really passé now? Hard to be a one out guy considering the new rules. 

Almost but not quite.  Wilson and Bernardino both have several one-batter appearances.  

Community Moderator
Posted
7 minutes ago, Bellhorn04 said:

Almost but not quite.  Wilson and Bernardino both have several one-batter appearances.  

8 in 4 months is like once every other week. I'm just saying that it's devalued, right? It's not what it once was. Javier Lopez had 20 in 2007 (every third appearance). Bernardino does it like every sixth appearance. 

NOTE: Lopez was the only guy I looked at. 

Posted
2 hours ago, mvp 78 said:

8 in 4 months is like once every other week. I'm just saying that it's devalued, right? It's not what it once was. Javier Lopez had 20 in 2007 (every third appearance). Bernardino does it like every sixth appearance. 

NOTE: Lopez was the only guy I looked at. 

Mike Myers, between trick-or-treating in a goalie mask and Wayne's World.

Community Moderator
Posted
8 minutes ago, 5GoldGlovesOF,75 said:

Mike Myers, between trick-or-treating in a goalie mask and Wayne's World.

Myers: 28 of 75 appearances were 1 BF in 2004. So LOOGY is 1 of 3 games. 

Posted

Matz is a plug, not an asset of significant value.    He may help a tired BP  and may actually be a strike thrower which could be why RH'ers hit him well.

Matz is now listed on the 40 man roster.   Interesting that with Casas in somewhat no man's land looking forward ( needs to re-earn 1B)  that Bres  traded the highest ranking 1Bman in AAA

Posted
2 hours ago, vegasbob said:

Matz is a plug, not an asset of significant value.    He may help a tired BP  and may actually be a strike thrower which could be why RH'ers hit him well.

Matz is now listed on the 40 man roster.   Interesting that with Casas in somewhat no man's land looking forward ( needs to re-earn 1B)  that Bres  traded the highest ranking 1Bman in AAA

and he traded him for two months of a back of the pen, lefty reliever -which we have too many of anyway.

Old-Timey Member
Posted
8 hours ago, mvp 78 said:

Isn't LOOGY really passé now? Hard to be a one out guy considering the new rules. 

He’s not a lefty, but if Hicks can face 3 batters and get one out, I call it a successful outing…

Posted
7 hours ago, moonslav59 said:

The .814 OPS Against vs RHBs is very troubling, under the new rules.

Career:

.766 v R

.691 v L (.442 in 2025)

Better than Wilson this year

Posted
10 hours ago, mvp 78 said:

Isn't LOOGY really passé now? Hard to be a one out guy considering the new rules. 

Not passe.  You cannot find a manager anywhere who doesn't load his lineup with lefty bats against a righty starter and righty bats against a lefty starter.  

When you look at the splits for the Sox, you find the righty bats do better against lefties and the lefty bats against righties.  

You might think it's insane for Cora to start Rafaela at 2b against a righty starter so he can then have 3 lefty bats in the outfield, but I don't.  

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
The Talk Sox Caretaker Fund
The Talk Sox Caretaker Fund

You all care about this site. The next step is caring for it. We’re asking you to caretake this site so it can remain the premier Red Sox community on the internet.

×
×
  • Create New...