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Ravelo Manzanillo and lots of walks and strikeouts

Posted by Andy on July 13, 2011

I had never heard of Ravelo Manzanillo before a few minutes ago when I read about him on The Greatest 21 Days. His brother Josias had a much longer major league career.

I noticed that Ravelo had a season with a really high walk rate despite amassing 50 innings pitched. I checked it, and here are the only guys since 1901 to pitch at least 50 innings with a BB/9 and a K/9 both as a high as 7:

Rk Player Year BB/9 SO/9 IP Tm G GS GF SV H ERA ERA+
1 Oliver Perez 2009 7.91 8.45 66.0 NYM 14 14 0 0 69 6.82 60
2 Carlos Marmol 2009 7.91 11.31 74.0 CHC 79 0 29 15 43 3.41 131
3 Dennis Sarfate 2008 7.00 9.72 79.2 BAL 57 4 15 0 62 4.74 94
4 Brandon Morrow 2007 7.11 9.38 63.1 SEA 60 0 18 0 56 4.12 107
5 Shawn Chacon 2004 7.39 7.39 63.1 COL 66 0 60 35 71 7.11 70
6 Nick Neugebauer 2002 7.16 7.64 55.1 MIL 12 12 0 0 56 4.72 87
7 Doug Creek 2001 7.04 9.48 62.2 TBD 66 0 16 0 51 4.31 105
8 John Rocker 2000 8.15 13.08 53.0 ATL 59 0 41 24 42 2.89 160
9 Scott Sauerbeck 2000 7.26 9.87 75.2 PIT 75 0 13 1 76 4.04 115
10 Jesus Sanchez 1999 7.07 7.31 76.1 FLA 59 10 8 0 84 6.01 72
11 Arthur Rhodes 1999 7.64 10.02 53.0 BAL 43 0 11 3 43 5.43 87
12 Reggie Harris 1997 7.12 7.45 54.1 PHI 50 0 13 0 55 5.30 81
13 Ravelo Manzanillo 1994 7.56 7.02 50.0 PIT 46 0 11 1 45 4.14 105
14 Mitch Williams 1992 7.11 8.22 81.0 PHI 66 0 56 29 69 3.78 93
15 Bobby Witt 1991 7.51 8.32 88.2 TEX 17 16 0 0 84 6.09 67
16 Bobby Witt 1987 8.81 10.07 143.0 TEX 26 25 0 0 114 4.91 92
17 Mitch Williams 1987 7.79 10.68 108.2 TEX 85 1 32 6 63 3.23 140
18 Bobby Witt 1986 8.16 9.93 157.2 TEX 31 31 0 0 130 5.48 79
19 Mitch Williams 1986 7.26 8.27 98.0 TEX 80 0 38 8 69 3.58 121
20 Eric Plunk 1986 7.63 7.33 120.1 OAK 26 15 2 0 91 5.31 73
21 Mark Clear 1985 8.08 8.89 55.2 BOS 41 0 30 3 45 3.72 117
22 Mark Clear 1984 9.40 10.21 67.0 BOS 47 0 27 8 47 4.03 105
23 Rod Scurry 1983 7.01 8.87 68.0 PIT 61 0 25 7 63 5.56 67
24 John D'Acquisto 1977 9.80 9.29 52.1 TOT 20 14 2 0 54 6.54 56
25 Ken Wright 1973 9.15 8.37 80.2 KCR 25 12 6 0 60 4.91 83
26 Dick Such 1970 8.10 7.38 50.0 WSA 21 5 3 0 48 7.56 47
27 Ed Connolly 1964 7.14 8.14 80.2 BOS 27 15 6 0 80 4.91 79
28 Sam McDowell 1962 7.19 7.19 87.2 CLE 25 13 5 1 81 6.06 64
29 Ryne Duren 1962 7.19 9.34 71.1 LAA 42 3 16 8 53 4.42 88
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 7/13/2011.

It's amazing how much more frequently this has been done in the Steroids Era, especially if you ignore Bobby Witt and Mitch Williams specifically.

44 Responses to “Ravelo Manzanillo and lots of walks and strikeouts”

  1. Anthony Nasella Says:

    I actually remember him because I'm a White Sox fan, and he was in the Sox minor league organization in the early 1990's. I'm sure I STILL have his minor league card somewhere. Sounds like the Sox made the right move in letting him go! 🙂

  2. Kahuna Tuna Says:

    if you ignore Bobby Witt and Mitch Williams specifically

    Why would I want to do that? They made baseball in my early adulthood ever so much more exciting! (And neither of them ever played for a team I liked, for which I'm deeply grateful.)

  3. Andy Says:

    I have to admit--Mitch Williams has always been one of my favorite players. And now he's doing a really great job on MLB Network, just further improving my admiration of him.

  4. Doug Says:

    In contrast, I was curious about guys with high walk rates, and lower K rates, and who could still pitch reasonably well.

    Here are the guys with 50+ IP, 7+ BB/9, under 7 SO/9, and an ERA+ of 90 or more.

    PLAYER.....................YEAR...BB/9...SO/9...ERA+...IP
    Grover Lowdermilk......1916...8.36...4.88...97...51.2
    Walter Beall.................1926...7.49...6.17...110...81.2
    Charlie Devens...........1933...7.26...3.34...90...62.0
    Ken Chase..................1937...7.07...5.07...108...76.1
    Johnny Vander Meer...1937...7.36...5.55...97...84.1
    Hal Newhouser............1941...7.13...5.51...96...173.0
    Ted Gray......................1948...7.59...6.33...104...85.1
    Tommy Byrne..............1949...8.22...5.92...109...196.0
    Johnny Vander Meer...1950...7.21...5.01...112...73.2
    Mickey McDermott.....1950...8.58...6.65...95...130.0
    Tommy Byrne..............1950...7.08...5.22...91...203.1
    Tommy Byrne..............1951...9.40...4.45...102...143.2
    Bob Wiesler................1955...8.32...3.74...97...53.0
    Danny McDevitt..........1960...7.13...5.09...94...53.0
    Dave Sisler.................1961...7.16...4.48...94...60.1
    Rick Ownbey..............1982...7.69...5.01...98...50.1
    Steve Avery................1999...7.31...4.78...92...96.0
    Robert Ramsay..........2000...7.15...5.72...136...50.1

    Tommy Byrne was able to do this 3 years in a row.

    Only one guy did this between 1962 and 1998. Notice this hasn't been since 2000, when the guys on Andy's list started to proliferate. Does that mean hitters are too good nowadays for a high-walk, lower-K guy to survive?

  5. kds Says:

    Doug, Remember that that K/9 has gone up pretty steadily throughout baseball history, While BB/9 has been mostly flat, going up a bit around the "Tommy Byrne era", you see above. I think that if you took most of this pitcher seasons you would find that they were above average for that year in K/9. K/9 = 7 is average today but far above historically.

  6. Richard Chester Says:

    Tommy Byrne is one of those forgotten Yankees who contributed to their string of pennants in the 40's and 50's. He won 16 games once and 15 games twice. In the 1955 World Series he pitched a complete game against the Dodgers, the only left-hander to do so that entire season. He was also a good hitter.

  7. Doug Says:

    @5.

    Absolutely, Kds.

    Your point is very evident in the seasons I found above, as only 3 came after 1961. Nevertheless, there were only those 18 seasons since 1901 - so pretty unusual under any circumstances.

    Why have Ks been going up consistently? Is it:
    - harder-throwing pitchers (90 mph fastball seems like "table stakes" nowadays for anyone aspiring to be a ML pitcher)
    - less disciplined hitters (no longer any stigma to striking out)
    - both of the above
    - or, something else

  8. Jimbo Says:

    Sluggers that swing for the fences, and walk more, also tend to strike out more.

  9. Mustachioed Repetition Says:

    I think it's a combination of factors, harder throwing pitchers and reduced stigma to striking out being among them. I think shorter pitching stints and more use of relievers contributes. I think swinging for the fences contributes. I think pitchers make more of a conscious effort to miss bats more than they did long ago. And I think these factors propagate each other.

  10. psychump Says:

    What team is TOT?

  11. Richard Chester Says:

    #10

    TOT is not a team, it means that the player played for more than one team that year and TOT means total for all teams.

  12. camisadelgolf Says:

    Jerry Gil is the nephew of Josias and Ravelo Manzanillo. I'm not sure why b-r doesn't have it documented.
    http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/g/gilje01.shtml

    Also, has there ever been a wilder pitcher than Brad Pennington? For his career, he had 89 BBs in 75.2 IP (10.6 BB/9). It's a shame he never reached enough innings to qualify for the list.

  13. Mustachioed Repetition Says:

    Camisa, send a note to the site so they can correct it, if you have evidence. Stuff written here doesn't usually filter up to the powers that be.
    http://www.baseball-reference.com/feedback/

    ***

    There was a pretty high draft pick, I wanna say within the last 10 years, who was notorious for much worse control than Pennington. I can't remember his name right now, unfortunately.

  14. Mustachioed Repetition Says:

    The guy I'm thinking of never made the majors.

  15. Mustachioed Repetition Says:

    Pennington has the most BB/9 of anyone with at least 40 IP in MLB history. Stu Flythe walked 61 in 39.1 IP (14.0).

  16. camisadelgolf Says:

    I know who you're referring to. It's Jason Neighborgall. http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/player.cgi?id=neighb001jas

  17. Mustachioed Repetition Says:

    Of course, there's always Steve Dalkowski, who blew out his arm just as he seemed to be somewhat harnessing his stuff and perhaps headed for the majors. His minor league numbers are unreal, if you've never seen them:
    http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/player.cgi?id=dalkow001ste
    I've seen more complete stats elsewhere. B-R is missing most of his strikeouts, which are as shocking as his walks.

    ***

    Here's the guy I was thinking of. Jason Neighborgall. Third round pick who walked 128 in 42.1 minor league IP. He was wild in college too, so not entirely unexpected.
    http://thebaseballcube.com/profile.asp?P=Jason-Neighborgall

  18. Dukeofflatbush Says:

    @Mustachioed Repetition,

    Talk about taking one for the team or a manager leaving a guy out there too long.
    That single IP in '07 by Neighborgall in South Bend, consisted of 9 wild pitches and 12 BB.
    9 Wild pitches!!!!
    Do you think they were primarily on his out-pitch with a runner on third? Or was he reticent to throw it with that 15.00 WHIP (which is nice, cause it seems he neither hit or killed anyone).

  19. Ghost of Horace Clarke Says:

    I was always curious when I saw the pitching staff of the Philadelphia Athletics and the fact they ...as a team.....had more Walks than Strike Outs...for about 3 years in a row, yet were at or above .500 around the late 40's early 50's....how that not only possibly to do but acceptable.

    I guess they did not have dorks like us calling the out on the net.

  20. Mustachioed Repetition Says:

    Do you think they were primarily on his out-pitch with a runner on third?

    Ha.

  21. Mustachioed Repetition Says:

    Actually, I checked his stats again cause 9 WP and 12 BB would be insane, and indeed, the 1 IP covered FIVE games. That makes more sense. I guess?

  22. Mustachioed Repetition Says:

    Ghost, as kds mentioned, walked rates spiked in the late '40s, especially in the AL. Tommy Byrne was an extreme Stengel pitcher, who didn't seem to care too much if his pitchers walked guys because he had a great defense which turned a lot of DPs. The league K/BB ratio was under 1.0 from '47-'51, so the A's were nothing out of the ordinary. (And actually it had been under 1.0 most of the liveball era. It went back over 1.0 in '52 and never looked back.)

  23. John Autin Says:

    In 2001, at the age of 37, Ravelo Manzanillo was the dominant pitcher in the Mexican League:
    http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/leader.cgi?type=pitch&id=6bec5ada

    He went 16-3 with a 1.52 ERA (league mark 4.59), with 202 Ks and just 56 walks in 184 IP, and a 0.85 WHIP.

    So perhaps the Ollie Perez story could still have a happy ending....

  24. Mike L Says:

    @23, JA. I know we are all rooting for Ollie Perez. He's an inspiration. I wonder if the proliferation of steroid era pitchers in this group is a function of a greater emphasis on working the count (moneyball stuff), and more hitters willing to swing hard with two strikes, because if they get a hold of it, they can hit it out. Not a lot of choking up on the bat these days.

  25. Dukeofflatbush Says:

    Report Created on Baseball-Reference.com

  26. Dukeofflatbush Says:

    Player SO/9 BB/9 IP Year
    Mark Clear 10.21 9.40 67.0 1984
    Ryne Duren 12.31 9.00 49.0 1960
    John DAcquisto 9.29 9.80 52.1 1977
    Rob Dibble 10.58 9.07 41.2 1993
    Aroldis Chapman 13.29 9.14 21.2 2011
    Rick Ankiel 10.13 9.38 24.0 2001
    Mark Wohlers 9.74 14.61 20.1 1998
    Mitch Williams 9.45 10.80 20.0 1994

  27. Dukeofflatbush Says:

    Sorry, still not a master of transfers.
    Any help or suggestions from the MASTERS.
    I know it is easy, but humor this idiot, I just want to paste a BRref table onto this blog!!!
    Not a HTML guy, just copy&paste dude.

    Anyway I made that table when Ryne Duren passed. Quite a feat. 9 K per 9 & 9 BB per 9. I was surprised a young pre-Angel Nolan Ryan didn't make the list.
    But the list is loaded with potential and 'coulda beens.'
    In fact, after the Carter (I shutter to mention him on this site) but Williams imploded, and the combined rates of his last 4 seasons are 9 & 9 K & BBs.
    Clear and D'Aquisto are the two who took me by surprise. Never thought of them as SO guys.
    Hopefully Chapman can harness his potential. I can see him being the next Randy Johnson. Once The Unit put his control issues behind him, or at least cut down on his BB, he went from mediocre at 27 years old, to Hall Of Famer. Supposedly before his breakout season, he was tutored by Nolan Ryan. Anyone remember that story. i recall both not talking about what was said or done... but it obviously worked.

  28. John Autin Says:

    @26-27, Duke -- It's not you, it's the system. Only "editors" may paste a table into a comment ... and FWIW, I'm not even an editor at this point.

  29. nightfly Says:

    Interesting split - anyone on that list who started more than one game was below-average in ERA (sub-100 ERA+). Mitch Williams (who only started once for TEX in 87) is at 140 ERA+. The other pitchers were all exclusively relievers and nine of the fourteen were above-average in ERA that year. It seems reasonable to conclude that a guy with control problems is more easily hidden in the bullpen - except, of course, when he's Oliver Perez.

    And related, there's gotta be a great article to be found in Bobby Witt's career. He was the third-overall pick in the draft, made the majors the following year, and faced over 11,000 batters with a sub-100 ERA+. He's 22nd on the all-time list for walks allowed. And his top statistical comp for ages 27 and 28, of course, is Oliver Perez.

    Makes me wonder if Ollie could have pitched ten more years if he'd debuted in the 80's, and if Witt would have been moved to the bullpen if he were pitching now.

  30. Dan L Says:

    I have noticed that the SF Giants pitching staff has an incredible avg and ops against left handers. They are almost a whole 10% better than the next team. what is the record for the best BA against or OPS against left handers for a team over the course of the season.

    Right now they are at .207 for BA, the next team is .233 TB.
    Right now they are at .583 for OPS, the next team is .640 SEA.

    just curious.

  31. Dukeofflatbush Says:

    At Night Fly,

    In Bobby Witt's first two years, he either struck out or walked first 43% of batters faced then 45% in his second year.
    I don't know of a better way of checking, but I think for qualifying pitchers, 45% has got to be a record.
    I eyeballed a few of the usual suspects (Unit, Nolan, Fellar, etc.) but they all were in the low 40's.
    Any guesses of how to run a more conclusive check.
    I think it would be interesting to see.
    I'm guessing there are a ton of relievers that go or went over 50%, but for a starter, pitching at least 162, I can't see anyone getting near 50%.

  32. John Autin Says:

    @31, Duke -- Witt's 1986-87 (SO+BB)% may be a record for the number of innings he pitched, but FYI, he didn't qualify for the ERA title either year. He had 157.2 IP in '86 and 143 IP in '87.

    I don't have definitive answers for any of these, but here are the highest percentages I can find:

    Min. 100 IP -- Mitch Williams (Witt's 1987 teammate) had a (SO+BB)% of 47.55% of batters faced, with 108.2 IP.

    Min. 50 IP -- Carlos Marmol in 2010 fanned or walked 57.2% of all BF.

    Also -- Mark Clear '84 and John D'Acquisto '77 are the only pitchers ever with 50+ innings and both more strikeouts and more walks than IP.

  33. Dukeofflatbush Says:

    @ JA

    I found some weird seasons from Bob Turley. In '54 he had 181 BB and 185 SO, leading the league in both.
    Ditto for Sad Sam Jones, 198 K, 185 BB, both led the league.
    JR Richard 303 K, 141 BB, both led the league.
    And of course Fellar and Ryan had 200 BB&Ks in multiple seasons.

  34. Richard Chester Says:

    @31

    If I have done my work correctly the highest percentage for a pitcher with at least 162 IP is 42.8% by Nolan Ryan in 1977.

  35. Dukeofflatbush Says:

    @Richard Chester

    The Unit in '01 had 372 K+ 71 BB = 443/994 = 44.56%

    Did you count HBP?
    If so,
    Unit in '01 is 46.3%
    Pedro in '99 does a 42.99%.
    Unit in '91 is at 44%.

  36. Charles Says:

    Kerry Woods rookie year 1998 45.5% for 162 innings (166.2)
    Randy Johnson 2001 44.6% for 200 innings (249.2)

  37. Charles Says:

    For Career (> 1000 IP) Kerry Wood 38.3% (active)
    For Retired (> 1000 IP) Nolan Ryan 37.7%
    For Career (> 100 decisions) Mitch Williams 38.6%

  38. Dukeofflatbush Says:

    @ Charles,

    Are you using HBP?

  39. Charles Says:

    no

  40. Richard Chester Says:

    @35, @36

    Thanks for the corrections, I had suspected a flaw in my methodology.

  41. Ramzavail Says:

    I was a huge fan of that 1984 Mark Clear season.

  42. Dukeofflatbush Says:

    @Ramzavail

    Imagine if the Red Sox kept him in '86?
    He had his best year after going to the Brewers.
    In '86 his ERA+ jumped from 117 to 199. His WHIP fell almost .4.
    He almost lost a hit per 9 innings.
    His walks per 9, went down 3.7 and his Ks per 9 went up 1.5.
    All in almost 20 more innings.
    Who was the Brewers' pitching coach that year?
    Either way, hoorah for the Mets.

  43. maTt Says:

    Based on some prior research, June 30 1994 was the first time brothers saved MLB games on the same day. Those two brothers happened to be Ravelo and Josias Manzanillo. It was Ravelo's only MLB save (in 53 appearances) while Josias amassed just 6 saves in his 267 MLB appearances. I believe that feat has only been accomplished once since, when Tim and Todd Worrell pulled it off on June 13 1997.

  44. Charles Says:

    @43 Not the same, but twice Dizzy Dean recorded a save in a game his brother Paul won.