It seems almost too obvious to say that strikeouts are important. After all, anytime the ball is put in play, lots of variables immediately activate. The defense could commit an error, runners can move up on a sacrifice or on an errant or ill advised throw. By recording outs without the ball being in play, your obviously much better off. But in case it wasn’t already clear, there are 2 situations from last nights game that illustrate that clearly.
Last nights starter, Brian Burress, didn’t record a lot of strikeouts and he was far from efficient. He did manage to go 5.1 shutout innings by getting out of jams in the 3rd and fourth innings. The Dodgers should have been able to score in both of those innings. Getting out of the third unscathed was mostly the result of a fortunate call at second base when Clayton Kershaw tried to advance on a pitch in the dirt. The 4th is a different story. The Dodgers had runners on 2nd and 3rd with only one out. By striking out Casey Blake on 3 pitches, Burress was able to induce a 2 out grounder from James Loney to end the inning. I’m not going to say they definitely score without that K, but lets just say that organizational depth pitchers don’t usually get out of 2nd and 3rd, 1 out jams in 2 consecutive innings.
Now lets talk about Burres opposite number last night, Clayton Kershaw. Like Burres he wasn’t exactly efficient last night, throwing 117 pitches over 6.1 IP and walking 4. But the Pirates offense never got anything going, and only managed the 2 runs they did in the 1st inning as a result of Matt Kemp badly miss playing a Ryan Doumit single into a “triple”. Kershaw’s 7 strikeouts prevented the Pirates from ever getting a rally going. He stuck out at least one batter in 5 of the 7 innings he pitched in. It’s that ability to get strikeouts that makes him the Dodgers ace. The fact that no one on the Pirates current staff displays that ability is at least somewhat concerning. I’m willing to bet that if this franchise ever does turn it around*, they will do so only once they find a true staff ace. Go back through World Series teams and try to find one without a true ace. Just in the last few years, the ‘09 Yanks had CC, the ‘08 Phils had Hammels, the ‘07 Red Sox had Beckett, I think you get the point. Teams that compete at the highest levels do so with elite starting pitching. At this point, and unfortunately for the foreseeable future, the Pirates don’t have that.
*By “turn it around” I don’t mean 82 wins. I mean that they are in thick of the division race, competing for playoff spots, or dare I say even NL Pennants and World Series titles.
