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Home - Baseball Betting
Bullpens for Baseball Betting
With this week's article we are going to take a look at bullpens
for baseball betting. Baseball is right around the corner so it’s time to start looking at
some of the basics. Starting pitching and offense are the two things
that people look at most when handicapping baseball but there is one
aspect that is considered by some to be the most important and that is
the bullpen. A shaky bullpen can kill a quality start and can erase a
big lead given to them by the offense so if the bullpen falters,
starting pitching and offense doesn’t even matter.
On the flip side, a good bullpen will do just the opposite and protect
those big leads and give the starters good support throughout the
season. The middle relief is where games are won and lost and a good
middle rotation takes pressure off the closer as well as the starters
since they don’t need to feel they have to throw a near perfect game in
order to get a win.
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Looking at the 2005 season, the top ten teams in bullpen ERA were
Cleveland, St. Louis, Chicago, Minnesota, Oakland, San Diego, Los
Angeles Angels, Washington, Seattle and Houston. It’s no surprise that
seven of those teams were in the top 10 in profits with Minnesota, San
Diego and Seattle being the only teams not to show a profit. Those seven
teams were a combined +8,542 in profits. Coincidence? Not a chance.
Extending out further, the top ten teams in bullpen ERA finished a
combined +4,725, a very solid ending number. Looking at the bottom five
teams in bullpen ERA, only Boston finished the season with a winning
record and the Red Sox and Devil Rays were the only of those five teams
to finish in the black on the money line. The combined losses were
-3,438 so a bad bullpen leads to some ugly numbers.
Going back a year and there is not much of a difference. Looking at the
2004 season, the top five teams in bullpen ERA were St. Louis, Los
Angeles, Anaheim, Texas and Atlanta. Four of those teams were the top
four teams in profits with Anaheim being the only team not in the top
four. Those four teams were a combined +7,745 in profits showing once
again that a solid bullpen leads to the cash.
Overall, the top ten teams in bullpen ERA finished a combined +5,305.
Looking at the bottom five teams in bullpen ERA, only Cincinnati
finished the season with a profitable year as Detroit, Cleveland,
Toronto and Colorado all finished in the red. The combined losses were
-3,585 which is very close to what the bottom five finished with in
2005.
A closer obviously plays a big role in the outcome of a game but just
how big? Four teams finished last season with a blown save percentage of
25 percent or less. Three of those teams, Chicago, Cleveland and Los
Angeles were the top moneymakers with the Astros being the only team on
the outside but not by far. The four combined to go +6,538 on the money
line.
Trying to handicap the bullpens is the toughest part since the pitchers
are coming in an out, whether it’s to and from the minors or back and
forth from the starting rotation. Knowing who is back there is extremely
important and looking at daily transactions is a must since the bullpen
is constantly turning over for most teams. It’s an aspect that is
overlooked by most but obviously should not as the analysis can make or
break your season.
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