RESEARCH: Expected Wins

A few years ago, this writer was looking at projections for the Reds' pitching staff. While the exact numbers are part of history, they looked somewhat like this:

Arroyo, with the highest projected ERA and fewest IP, was projected for the most wins. And Volquez, with the lowest ERA and most IP projected, was projected for the fewest. Now, this made sense given the win totals for each player over the prior three years, but it didn't make intuitive sense. Surely, lower ERA and more innings should lead to more wins, all things being equal. (And all things were equal—these pitchers had the same offense and defense behind them, and the same bullpen). Yet, there we were.

We've tackled the subject before. Last year, Patrick Davitt took a look...

Almost!

You’re just a few clicks away from accessing this feature and hundreds more throughout the year that have a singular goal in mind: Winning your league. Subscribe to BaseballHQ.com here!

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

More From Research

The pitching landscape has shifted yet again, and our Pure Quality Start metric undergoes a minor shift to level-set the results.
Nov 28 2023 1:01am
With the new pitch clock we examine who the clock may impact and how the clock may or may not impact pitcher performance.
Feb 23 2023 1:05am
Several years have passed since the original article. It's time for an update and a look at the initial 2021 list.
Jun 17 2021 12:04am
The elite rate at which Dansby Swanson produced 95+ mph exit velocity in 2019 suggests that he's an overlooked breakout target.
Jun 15 2020 1:05am
Nick Pivetta gave up less very hard contact in 2019 than you might think. Could it be a precursor to a rebound season?
Jun 9 2020 1:05am

Tools