The mysterious Clutch Gene

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D-train
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The mysterious Clutch Gene

Post by D-train » Sun Oct 08, 2023 1:15 pm

Is it real?

Kershaw: 2.48 Career Reg. Season ERA 4.49 in the playoffs.
Bonds: 1.051 Career Reg. Season OPS Started his career in the playoffs 7-45

I can give Julio a pass given his age and because hitting a baseball is hard but wtf happened with Castillo those last two starts??
By Matt Calkins
Seattle Times columnist
It took a few days, but the fallout seems to have momentarily subsided, with Mariners president of baseball operations Jerry Dipoto apologizing for postseason comments that called his ambition into question.

That fiasco of a news conference was the main M’s headline over the past few days, as fans’ fears that the team might never spend big money were amplified.

But now that we’re five days removed from that presser — one filled with sound bites primed to come back and haunt at any given moment — let’s take a minute to acknowledge a fact that almost undeniably caused Seattle to miss the playoffs in 2023.

When the Mariners needed them most, their two best players sucked.

My apologies for not mining the depths of the English language for that description, but the word seems most apt. For most of the season — particularly in the second half when the M’s surged their way into playoff contention — center fielder Julio Rodriguez and starting pitcher Luis Castillo were the pillars of productivity.



At one point in September, Rodriguez was second in the American League in Wins Above Replacement, according to FanGraphs. And in that same month, betting sites had Castillo with the second-best odds to win the AL Cy Young Award.

So what the hell happened?

We’ll start with Julio. September wasn’t the worst month of the season for the 2022 AL Rookie of the Year, but his .792 OPS was below his season mark of .818 — and well short of his August 1.198 OPS that earned him AL Player of the Month.



I wrote about Rodriguez’s struggles to deliver in the clutch earlier in the season, focusing on his “late and close” stats, which essentially track production beyond the seventh inning in tight games. Those numbers were abysmal this summer before spiking later in the year.

Judging whether someone is “clutch” or not genuinely requires a larger sample size than a couple of seasons, and Rodriguez has had his moments. But a season during which he made himself a top-three MVP candidate at one point ended with a thud that could be heard from Vancouver.

Rodriguez’s late woes, however, might not have been as conspicuous as those of the Mariners’ three-time All-Star pitcher. Castillo also was dominant during Seattle’s midsummer climb up the standings, with the M’s winning 10 straight games in which he started.

But in his second-to-last start, when the Mariners trailed the Astros by a half-game in the wild-card race? He allowed five earned runs in six innings in a 5-1 loss to Houston.

And in his last start, when the Mariners trailed the Astros by one game in the wild card and the Rangers by two games in the division? He gave up four earned runs and five walks in 2 2/3 innings. The Mariners lost to Texas 6-1.

Perhaps you could say that the Mariners’ offense in each of those defeats was so anemic that even an above-average performance by Castillo’s standards would not have sufficed. Or you can look at the lopsided nature of some of the M’s losses during that homestand and argue that Rodriguez’s bat might not have helped all that much either.

I don’t know. You can blame the brass all you want for failing to acquire key players in the offseason or refusing to spend much needed cash. But that same brass gave the Mariners the tools to make the playoffs over the final 10 games if they could have just posted a winning record. It was the players who didn’t come through.

I’m not talking about everyone, of course. J.P. Crawford’s walkoff double vs. Texas would have gone down as one of the most clutch hits in Mariners history had his team reached the playoffs — and he followed those heroics with a grand slam the next game. And it wasn’t just Castillo and Rodriguez that had trouble. Starting pitcher Bryce Miller was shellacked in his final two starts, and third baseman Eugenio Suarez was just 4 for his final 18. But those aren’t players you rely on. Julio and Luis are.

To be sure, potential on this Mariners roster abounds. A trip back to the playoffs next year is still the expectation.

They just need their best to be at their best when it matters most. That simply wasn’t the case last season.
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Muri
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Re: The mysterious Clutch Gene

Post by Muri » Sun Oct 08, 2023 1:32 pm

Castillo was great last season in the clutch. And performance enhancing in baseball is half or more about recovery than strength (greenies baby). So Bonds in his later appearances on roids, after he got over the early jitters of his postseason career, probably kept him fresh. I'm convinced either something was wrong with Castillo physically and he's pushing through to try and earn his nickname The Rock. Or something mental... like how Dipoto mentioned that our September collapse was more on the players mindset than on the roster construction... Castillo must have put too much pressure on himself by trying to win one game, instead of pitching like he's supposed to under our regime. He's supposed to pitch like it's game number 1 of 162, to make sure we maintain our 54% pace. And everything would have been fine. (oh wait... reverse that. cause were idiots. :roll: And he already showed he can pitch in the clutch from last years postseason with the one game mentality, so... bleh)

So yeah, I'd put it on either bad mentality from terrible process from the M's. Or something is going on with his body, whether tired or slightly hurt/injured/wonky and not saying anything.

And as the great Lou Brown said: "Over 162 games, even tough guys get sprains, sore arms, muscle pulls!"

ice99
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Re: The mysterious Clutch Gene

Post by ice99 » Sun Oct 08, 2023 8:45 pm

Yes, if Castillo pitches better and the M's win the game against Texas, the M's make the playoffs.

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bpj
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Re: The mysterious Clutch Gene

Post by bpj » Sun Oct 08, 2023 10:08 pm

This season is Dipotos fault. It's Servais fault. It's Ty Frances fault. It's Geno's fault. It's AJ Pollock and Kolton Wongs fault. Beyond that, one could blame the lack of corner outfield production.

But blaming Julio (.818 OPS) and Castillo (3.34 ERA)... Come on...

It should never have come down to the final few games. Dipoto got his 54%.

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Donn Beach
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Re: The mysterious Clutch Gene

Post by Donn Beach » Sun Oct 08, 2023 10:23 pm

Yeah, Julio and Castillo over the season got them to the threshold, sometimes teammates have to pick you up

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D-train
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Re: The mysterious Clutch Gene

Post by D-train » Sun Oct 08, 2023 10:32 pm

Check out Edgar in the Series we won vs. the Series we lost. Wow.
edgar.JPG
edgar.JPG (60.27 KiB) Viewed 294 times
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D-train
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Re: The mysterious Clutch Gene

Post by D-train » Sun Oct 08, 2023 10:34 pm

The Series in Toronto a year ago was the first ever Mariners playoff series that Edgar did not play in. Jesus Christ that is insane.
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ice99
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Re: The mysterious Clutch Gene

Post by ice99 » Sun Oct 08, 2023 10:41 pm

Castillo lost his last 2 games. If they win one and they're in the postseason.

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bpj
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Re: The mysterious Clutch Gene

Post by bpj » Sun Oct 08, 2023 10:44 pm

ice99 wrote:
Sun Oct 08, 2023 10:41 pm
Castillo lost his last 2 games. If they win one and they're in the postseason.
If Kelenic didn't suck ass for 5 months, they win one of those games and they're in.

Pretty easy to do with any player over a 162 game season.

ice99
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Re: The mysterious Clutch Gene

Post by ice99 » Sun Oct 08, 2023 10:46 pm

bpj wrote:
Sun Oct 08, 2023 10:44 pm
ice99 wrote:
Sun Oct 08, 2023 10:41 pm
Castillo lost his last 2 games. If they win one and they're in the postseason.
If Kelenic didn't suck ass for 5 months, they win one of those games and they're in.

Pretty easy to do with any player over a 162 game season.
True but Kelenic's not one of our top players. at least currently.

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