Category: Defense

  • Defensive Excellence Q&A: Beth Woerner (Lebanon Valley College Assistant Coach)

    Defensive Excellence Q&A: Beth Woerner (Lebanon Valley College Assistant Coach)

    Beth Woerner began coaching at Lebanon Valley College, an NCAA Division III school in Pennsylvania in August of 2021. She is believed to be the only full-time female baseball assistant coach in the NCAAs.

    As you’ll read in our interview below, Beth’s comes to baseball with a fresh perspective, having not played it or softball in college. And a lot of her knowledge is self-taught. In her previous stop at University of Charleston, West Virginia she spent a lot of time coaching infield, so that was the focus of our discussion with her here. We also talked briefly about one of her other passions, coaching excellence in baserunning.

    Follow Beth on Twitter at @beth_woerner

    This is the latest article in a series in which we’ve interviewed a diverse group of coaches about teaching defensive excellence. To read the others in the series, including 2 others with female coaches, click here.

    This interview has been edited for clarity and length.

    Mark: Can you explain your playing background to me?

    Beth: Sure. I haven’t played a ton. I didn’t play softball in college. I just graduated college and I found out about a women’s baseball league in the D.C./ Baltimore area called the Eastern Women’s Baseball Conference. So I started playing with them about 6 or 7 years ago, just for fun. I’m not very good at playing baseball, but because of that, I started to figure out, started to research. How do I get better at this? How do I make this play? How do I not mess up so much? Which is pretty much what coaching is, is figuring out how do we get better? How do we make fewer mistakes?

    Mark: So what was the research that you did?

    Beth: It started out with just like really simple stuff, like how to field a ground ball, what footwork should I use? But then I started just watching the game differently, seeing the little things that happen that you may not think about when you’re just watching for fun. I’m starting to notice a lot of little things, little specifics in the footwork, specifics in the way that people throw.

    So that was sort of where I started. I played pretty much everywhere, second base, outfield, pitched a little bit, caught a little bit in the women’s league, which is a great opportunity.

    It’s not as extensive as a lot of other coaches, but I think there’s a lot of value in it.

    Mark: What does defensive excellence mean to you?

    Beth: I think defensive excellence is just being able to be the best player that the player can possibly be, whether that is making all the routine plays or making routine plays and some excellent plays. But I think that is extremely individual on the player.

    Mark: Okay, so who were the players you watched that most influenced you in trying to get to that point yourself?

    Beth: My brother played third base as a kid, so I’ve watched a lot of good infielders play. One of my favorite players is Andrelton Simmons. Watching him play defense is a lot of, a lot of fun. He’s really good and makes really excellent plays all the time, was always locked into the game. So those are probably a few people there.

    Mark: Who are the people that have influenced you as a coach?

    Beth: All the ones that have encouraged me to continue coaching. Some of those people are the coach I currently work for, which is Jonas Fester here at Lebanon Valley College. He was a great infielder himself.

    We have a lot of conversations about good defense and how to be a better coach, not just on defense, but in general. And I owe him a lot of credit for everything that I’ve done. And then also the coaches that I worked with at the University of Charleston under Robbie Britt, who is now at Eastern Michigan, and Pablo Cabrera, who’s now with the Red Sox.

    Pablo and I worked together as infield coaches together at Charleston and we learned a lot together. I’m sure some of the stuff that I’ll talk about here in a minute is stuff that he and I worked on together and came up with together.

    He played infield in college and was a very good infielder and I had a background in teaching but didn’t know that much about infield. So we came from two very different backgrounds and worked together to create the way that we both think about infield now.

    About Beth Woerner
    Full-time assistant baseball coach, Lebanon Valley College (NCAA Division III)
    – One of few women working in college baseball coaching
    – Experience comes from playing in adult baseball leagues
    – Graduate of James Madison University

    Mark: What’s an example of something you work on with players now?

    Beth: It’s hard to say because it’s different with every player. Every player is working on different little things. But I think one of my favorite things to teach and to work on with players is the infield prep step, which is whatever the player is doing before the pitch. I think it’s fun because every player is a little bit different in what they feel.

    And it’s really about what they feel. Matching that to what they’re actually doing, so there’s creativity required to become good at it. That’s true of all parts of the fielding a ground ball and making a play. There’s little things that players can do to maximize what they’re good at and limit their weaknesses.

    Mark: Okay, can you pick out a player and go into the specifics with his prep step?

    Beth: I love working with third basemen.

    One of our third basemen last year, he was working with his prep step and he was a little bit early, which means that he wasn’t reacting as quickly as he could because he was heavy on his feet at the point when he was making the decision to move, once he knew where the ball was going.

    So we worked with him and it was a lot of fun because every now and then he would say, hey, I’m still a little off. Can we check in? And then we would work with some video and check in where he was at and then he could work on it in his drills once he knew that he was a little late and needed an adjustment.

    Beth: When I first got to Lebanon Valley, I wasn’t really sure how the team was gonna treat me and he accepted me as somebody who could help him get better right away. So that was a pretty special moment for me as a young coach that this player wants to get better and wants to use all of his resources … which is me, to get better.

    Mark: What else have you discovered in working with players?

    Beth: This is true for all coaches—some players connect with you better and some don’t, but I think most players, once they realize that this person wants to help me get better, they’re going to do what they feel like they need to in order to get better.

    Sometimes you don’t necessarily have to have the closest connection with every single player because they’ll teach each other what you teach them.

    It’s really cool they’re taking what you’ve taught them and applying it. And not only applying it, but helping other people also learn how to do those things better.

    Mark: Did your experience with him get you credibility with everybody else?

    Beth: Yeah, younger players, sometimes don’t even know how to interact with coaches in general. Once they see this is how this player, who they trust, trusts me and is working with their coach, it’s a model for them on how to communicate with a coach.

    Mark: What’s the hardest part about teaching defense?

    Beth: I think the hardest part and the coolest part are the same answer. Every single player is different. Everyone has different strengths and weaknesses.

    Everyone feels the way their body moves, the way they do things differently. Everyone understands the game differently. So that makes it difficult because every single player is a new challenge. That makes it a lot of fun because you’re always trying to work with that player and figure it out.

    Hey, this is exactly what you’re feeling. This is exactly what you’re doing. This is how we can get better. There’s no formula or special secret sauce to getting a player better because everyone is different and has different experiences.

    Mark: Okay. How have you used technology and data in your coaching?

    Beth: We’re a Division III school, so we don’t have as many resources as some of the other programs. But we do still use a lot of information, and we still use the research that other teams and organizations do to inform decisions.

    And for the defense specifically, we will track some things. We’ll track the plays that our players are making. We’re actually in the process of figuring out how we want to do that this year. And then we use that as feedback for our players.

    Mark: You have a master’s in strategic leadership. How does that come in handy in coaching?

    Beth: We talked about leadership in all different kinds of organizations and how things are organized for leaders. Knowing how leaders work is helpful in knowing that I want to do things how this leader does them or don’t want to do things how this leader does them.

    Mark: I know you also teach baserunning, and you just did a talk on it at Saberseminar, and I saw the tweet that you sent after Ken Rosenthal wrote about vault leads.

    So, why don’t you give us the perspective on the vault lead from the baserunner’s side, and then how you would stop it defensively from a pitcher, catcher, fielder combo?

    Beth: The vault lead give you an advantage when a pitcher’s quicker, has a quicker delivery. It helps you to get a better jump and our players who have a good feel of it, they actually have an easy time getting back to the base no matter what part of the vault they’re in. That’s the difficult part – that it’s easier for a pitcher to catch you off-balance.

    I think the players who are very good at it and understand the way that it’s supposed to work in terms of timing are able to easily implement the vault leads.

    It also is useful against the left-handed pitcher because you might have a hard time getting a good jump. Vault leads are difficult because it requires a lot of creativity on the player’s part to know exactly what they’re able to do and how to do it and know exactly where they are in space at those points where there may be more risk involved in getting that vault jump.

    Our players really enjoyed learning how to do them. We’ll play some development games that don’t count towards anything, but both teams are just there to get better.

    One of our players who isn’t really a base stealer was like, ‘Hey coach, I’m just going to try a vault lead. I want to see what happens.’ He stole the base and came back to me and said that was the best jump he ever got in his life. ‘I felt like I got there so fast and was running so fast.’

    The benefit of it is it’s able to give you a little extra momentum, just like if you’re driving and you come to a stoplight, you stop all the way at the stoplight, it’s going to take you longer to keep going. But if you keep rolling just a little bit, it’s going to be easier to accelerate once the light turns green.

    It’s the same kind of concept, but with running. If a full vault isn’t comfortable, maybe we can do half vault, or maybe we can do a walking lead, or some kind of other lead that gets that momentum without having to do the full vault.

    Players love getting creative. They get to make it their own, how they want to do the vault.

    And then, on the defending it side, it’s a lot of fun here at practice, actually, when we practice it. Because the pitchers, they really want to pick off runners, especially some of our faster runners who are able to get further off the base.

    So we’ll get competitive in practice and have pickoff practices where the base runners are practicing getting their leads and the pitchers are practicing pickoffs to see how much momentum they can get, how far off the base, and the pitchers are working on mixing up their timings.

    Having a different delivery, maybe a slightly higher leg kick or a slightly lower leg kick. There’s all kinds of different things to to hold the runners.

    And what’s cool about practicing it with our pitchers is that sometimes, hey, I can tell that you’re gonna pick off because you turn your head a different way when you’re picking off, and we’ll tell our pitchers that so that they can get even better.

    Mark: What are your aspirations as a coach? Long term?

    Beth: This is a tough question because I really don’t know and I debate it with myself all the time. I love college baseball when I first started, my original dream was to work in the big leagues like everyone else.

    I think I will likely end up doing quite a few different things in the future, but I definitely want to stay working with players and I want to keep working with the best players that I can.

    Mark: Last question: Is there any point that you wanted to make that I didn’t give you a chance to make?

    Beth: I love working with the players and I love getting creative with players to help them learn what they’re able to do and how to be the best player they can be. The creativity piece is a lot of fun.

    Anybody can coach. Even if you don’t know every single little thing there is to know about baseball, you’ll figure it out.

  • August’s Defensive Players of the Month

    August’s Defensive Players of the Month

    This month the SIS/Fielding Bible Awards Defensive Player of the Month goes to two players who demonstrated defensive dominance in August: Phillies center fielder Johan Rojas and Pirates 3rd baseman Ke’Bryan Hayes.

    Rojas is getting it done at a premium position for a Phillies team that can use the defensive help. He saved 11 runs in August, the most of any player, and has 12 Defensive Runs Saved for the season. He ranks tied for 3rd in Runs Saved by a center fielder despite ranking 44th among them in innings played. Rojas was also the runaway leader in Runs Saved by a minor league center fielder with 15.

    Rojas also covers ground better than most. He ranks 5th in MLB’s Jumps stat, covering nearly 3 feet more than the average outfielder within the first 3 seconds of batted-ball contact. He ranks 3rd in the Statcast metric “Burst” – covering more ground than the average outfielder when the ball has been in the air from 1.5 to 3 seconds.

    Additionally, Rojas has a strong arm, one that has averaged about 92 MPH on the top 10% of his throws. That ranks Top 5 among center fielders this season. Also impressive is that he’s minimized his mistakes. He had only 1 Error and no Defensive Misplays the entire month.

    Rojas’ 11 Runs Saved for the month easily topped the next-closest center fielder. Daulton Varsho (6) of the Blue Jays was the only other player with more than 5 Runs Saved there in August.

    Hayes also easily led his position with 9 Runs Saved in August. The next-closest third baseman for the month was Austin Riley of the Braves with 5 Runs Saved.

    Hayes is a two-time winner of the award this season, having also taken the honor in April. This month marked a triumphant return from the lower back injury that caused him to miss all but one game in July. Hayes now has 20 Runs Saved this season and reclaimed the seasonal lead in Runs Saved at third base from Ryan McMahon of the Rockies, who has 17. No one else has more than 10 Runs Saved at that position this season. By the way, Hayes also hit .320 with 6 home runs, 20 RBI, and a .956 OPS in August.

    Other players under consideration for the award this month included Guardians left fielder Steven Kwan and second baseman Andrés Giménez, and Padres right fielder Fernando Tatis Jr. Each led his respective position in Runs Saved for the month.

    A reminder that Sports Info Solutions will announce the winners of The 2023 Fielding Bible Awards in late October. A panel of voters selects the top defensive player at each position, along with a multi-position honoree. This will be our 18th consecutive year presenting this honor.

  • Dodgers Doing It On Defense Again

    Dodgers Doing It On Defense Again

    On June 18 the Dodgers lost to the Giants, 7-3, completing a three-game Giants’ sweep in which the Dodgers were outscored 29-8 and gave up at least 7 runs in every game.

    Each of the last 2 games featured an array of misplays and errors. There were offline or wasted throws, missed line drives, bobbled ground balls, and multiple failures to catch throws.

    At that point in the season the Dodgers were a not-very-Dodgers like 39-33.

    Since that day, the Dodgers have looked a lot more like the Dodgers you thought you knew, going 44-16. And they’ve had something of a defensive reset.

    The Dodgers totaled -5 Defensive Runs Saved and ranked 21st in that stat at the All-Star Break. But since the Break, they rank No. 1 with 43 Runs Saved. They’re now 4th overall.

    Most Defensive Runs Saved – 2023 Season

    Team Runs Saved
    Blue Jays 72
    Brewers 50
    Padres 41
    Dodgers 38
    Rays 34

     

    What’s been so good about the Dodgers defense this season?

    Left Side of the Infield

    When the Dodgers traded for Miguel Rojas in January, they knew they were getting a top defensive player. And though Rojas hasn’t hit, he’s more than met defensive expectations with plays like this one. He ranks 4th among shortstops in Defensive Runs Saved with 11 and he has the most Runs Saved of any Dodgers player since their hot streak started on June 20 with 7.

    Additionally since returning from injury on June 27, Max Muncy has looked more like the third baseman he was in 2022 when he saved seven runs in a little more than a half-season’s worth of games. He’s saved 4 runs there since his return. He was at -2 at third base prior to that.

    Mookie

    Mookie Betts isn’t going to win a Fielding Bible Award in right field this season but he’s in-play for our multi-position honor.

    In 2023 Betts has split time between right field, second base and shortstop. He’s handled second base particularly well, netting 6 Runs Saved in 50 games. And keep in mind that he was replacing Miguel Vargas, who was at -3 Runs Saved there.

    The Outfield

    The Dodgers are one of the best teams in baseball at turning balls hit in the air into outs. Among a crowded field of teams they rank in the Top 5 in that stat both overall and specific to balls hit to the outfield.

    Through June 18, they ranked 11th in an efficiency stat that measures their catch rate (how often they’ve caught balls). Since then, they’re No. 2 in MLB and they’ve increased their out rate by more than 4 percentage points.

    An increase of that much on the roughly 800 balls hit in the air represents about 34 more catches than they would have made if they were performing at their pre-June 20 level.

    Out Rate on Balls Hit In the Air

    Through June 18 Through June 20
    Out Rate 66.6% 70.9%
    Out Rate (Balls Hit to OF) 59.6% 64.0%

     

    With Betts being shuffled between right field and the infield, the success of the Dodgers outfield defense this season is more of a collective effort than one player carrying the load. For example, three-time Fielding Bible Award winner Jason Heyward has saved 4 runs in 68 games in right field (though he’s -2 in a brief amount of time in center. Another past Fielding Bible winner David Peralta has manned left field without issue, saving 4 runs.

    And more recently, James Outman has lived up to his last name. He has 3 Runs Saved playing center field exclusively in August. He was -3 there prior to that.

    Putting Players In The Right Place

    When we say collective effort, that includes the team’s coaching staff too. Our Defensive Runs Saved splits up credit between a player’s skill and how well or poorly he’s positioned.

    The Dodgers have 21 Positioning Runs Saved combining the team’s infield and outfield alignments. Here are a couple of instances (here and here)in which the team got significant positioning credit for putting their fielders in position to best use their skills.

    Catcher

    What Will Smith has done the last three years with both his bat and his glove is impressive. Smith is in line for his 3rd straight season with an OPS+ of 120 and at least 5 Defensive Runs Saved behind the plate.

    Smith currently ranks tied for 5th among catchers with 8 Runs Saved (which would be his best season total yet) helped by above-average pitch-framing stats. The Dodgers are 58-29 when he starts at catcher, 25-20 when he doesn’t

    A Tale of 2 Pitchers

    Just like the Dodgers knew what they were getting in Miguel Rojas, they knew what they were getting in Noah Syndergaard. And when they traded Syndergaard, who has never been able to thwart a running game, they got rid of a pitcher who was bringing down the team’s Runs Saved total. He was at -4 for them. They’ve also since dealt oft-used reliever Phil Bickford and his -3.

    But one guy who hasn’t gone anywhere is Clayton Kershaw, who has 4 Runs Saved, giving him potentially his best defensive season since 2015.

    In Sum

    Give the Dodgers credit for consistency. Presuming these numbers hold up, they’ll rank in the Top 10 in Defensive Runs Saved for the 8th straight season. They’ve ranked in the Top 6 in 6 of the last 7 years. Defensive excellence continues to be a staple for them year-in and year-out. This year, it just took them a little while to get to that point.

  • Marveling At The Defense Of Fernando Tatis Jr.

    Marveling At The Defense Of Fernando Tatis Jr.

    It was never a question of if Fernando Tatís Jr.’s athleticism would play on defense. Even in his tumultuous time as a shortstop, he flashed the leather with leaping plays that made him look more like the Air Jordan logo than a baseball player. 

    But the errors piled up and the Defensive Runs Saved sank, and after a brief cameo in the corner outfield in late 2021, it was clear Tatís, who missed all of last year first due to a fractured wrist and then a PED suspension, would be calling right field his more permanent home entering 2023. 

    By the numbers, the move has paid off in spades. The 24-year-old is the runaway right field leader in Defensive Runs Saved with 23. His 21 Runs Saved rank second among all outfielders, trailing only Daulton Varsho’s 24 and above past Fielding Bible Award winners like Kevin Kiermaier and Steven Kwan. 

    Most Defensive Runs Saved – 2023 Right Field 

    Name Team Runs Saved
    Fernando Tatis Jr. Padres 23
    Alex Verdugo Red Sox 14
    Ramón Laureano A’s-Guardians 9
    Adolis García Rangers 7
    Will Brennan Guardians 7
    Blake Perkins Brewers 7

    A closer look reveals how he’s tapped into his unicorn-like athletic ability to close the gap on such stalwarts, and where he can hope to improve to rank among the truly defensive elite in the outfield. 

    The arm

    What stands out, perhaps unsurprisingly, is his arm. He’s tied for 2nd among outfielders in assists with 11 and the video shows they’re no cheapies. 

    “I was having a conversation about this very topic the other day and the thing we are all wondering is why people keep running,” SIS VP of Baseball Bobby Scales said. “It seems foolish, but they keep going.”

    “The only thing we can think of is they are testing his decision making and/or his accuracy. Jeff Francoeur used to be this way as well: People ran because they were betting on him chucking it into row ZZ. But if they were wrong, it was ugly.” 

     

    Early on in the year, like the plays shown above, it was a matter of baserunners and base coaches underestimating the might of his cannon. As the season has progressed, however, he’s been turning awkward angles into surprising outs. 

    Of Tatís’ 4Good Fielding Plays given for outfield assists in June, three came on plays in which his momentum was carrying him toward the right field line. Two such plays demonstrate the potential of Tatís’ defensive ability (on the third, the Colorado broadcast team claims Elehuris Montero stumbled a bit out of the box, making him easier to nab). 

    On this play against the Guardians, Amed Rosario, who possesses 95th percentile sprint speed (per Baseball Savant), thinks about taking two. As he sees Tatís digging the ball out of the corner, he throws on the brakes, fearful of getting nailed at second. Tatís, whose mind was surely on making the throw to second to try to prevent Rosario from getting there, sees the runner make the wide turn, adjusts, and fires a one-hop strike to Jake Cronenworth for the out. 

    The baserunner is erased, both out of fear of Tatís’ arm and because of it. 

    In this play, Elly De La Cruz chops a single into shallow right. Tatís comes in to field the ball and De La Cruz, maybe the fastest man in the sport, decides to challenge him. The displaced infielder picks up the ball like a second baseman, turns like he’s making a throw across the diamond, and fires a seed to get the runner. 

    In both plays, Tatís is able to control himself as he moves laterally to field the ball, shift his body to put himself in a position to make a throw back toward the infield, and fires to get the runner. They require skills one might typically expect from an infielder, demonstrating one of the advantages the former shortstop seems to have over his outfield contemporaries: He was playing on the dirt just two seasons ago. 

    The range

    It hasn’t been only with his arm that Tatís has been able to save extra bases. He leads all right fielders with +10 Plays Saved on deep balls, which are likelier to be doubles and triples. 

    The converted infielder has shown no fear going back toward the wall. On this play, in just his 21st Major League game in right field, he sprints toward the corner before using the fence to stop his momentum. At the end of last month, he navigated an awkward right field corner at Petco Park to rob Bryan Reynolds, crashing into the jutting right field foul pole to pad his fall. 

    The downside

    Early in the season, he made his share of misplays that can likely be attributed to inexperience. 

    On two plays in his first series back from suspension, Tatís attempted to throw to the base ahead of the lead runner, allowing the trail runner to advance an additional base. On one hit in his very first game back, he fired home even though the runner didn’t even attempt to advance from third, making it easy for the batter to take second. 

    The 4th-year standout has also suffered a bit from overestimating his own ability. He didn’t have much of a chance on two failed slides against the Nationals in the first half, allowing runners to move up extra bases. 

    But though there have been mistakes – Tatis ranks 8th among right fielders in our Defensive Misplay tracking on a per-inning basis – the benefits have far outweighed the risks.

    And it’s that athletic ability that makes one wonder what the defensive ceiling looks like for him. 

    He gets a defensive misplay on this deep fly ball for not reeling it in, but if you were to make a short list of outfielders who have a chance to make that play in the first place, Tatís might be the only name. 

    That always is the case: No matter where he finds himself on the diamond, Tatís’ upside is sky-high.

  • Stat of the Week: Rookies Making Big Defensive Impacts For Contenders

    Stat of the Week: Rookies Making Big Defensive Impacts For Contenders

    Have you gotten to see the Phillies rookie center fielder Johan Rojas since his recall about a month ago?

    He’s been something to watch from Day 1.

    Rojas was the runaway leader in Defensive Runs Saved in center field in the minor leagues. And he’s racing up that leaderboard even after just 30 games in the major leagues. He’s already saved 10 runs and is within striking distance of the MLB leaders in Runs Saved in center field, Kevin Kiermaier and Daulton Varsho, who each have 13 for the Blue Jays.

    Player Team Runs Saved
    Kevin Kiermaier Blue Jays 13
    Daulton Varsho Blue Jays 13
    Johan Rojas Phillies 10
    Brenton Doyle Rockies 10
    Kyle Isbel Royals 10

    Rojas is a potential gamechanger for a Phillies team that has struggled defensively the last few seasons. The Phillies had -24 Runs Saved at the All-Star Break but have actually increased that total by 5 runs since then.

    But Rojas isn’t the only rookie to make a prominent impact defensively for a postseason contender.

    We’ve brought up a few in some of the articles we’ve written. Here’s a list of those who have been the most impressive for potential playoff teams.

    Giants catcher Patrick Bailey leads everyone at that position with 15 Runs Saved. He’s been great at both pitch framing and controlling the running game. He will be a strong contender for a Fielding Bible Award.

    Another catcher, Yainer Diaz of the Astros, has forced Houston’s hand a little bit, as his 4 Runs Saved are considerably better than pitching staff favorite Martín Maldonado’s -10.

    We just wrote about Mariners infielder José Caballero and outfielder Cade Marlowe in an article for our website this week. Caballero has 9 Runs Saved, most of anyone on the team. Marlowe has excelled for the Mariners, contributing 7 Runs Saved to an outfield that ranks 4th in the majors in that stat.

    There’s also Orioles infielders Gunnar Henderson and Jordan Westburg. Henderson, barely rookie eligible after getting a long look last season, has 7 Runs Saved at shortstop and 2 at third base. Westburg has 6 Runs Saved at second base (and -2 at third base) since his recall two months ago.

    The NL Central is loaded with talented rookie fielders. The Brewers have Joey Wiemer and Brice Turang, as well as our June Defensive Player of the Month winner, Blake Perkins. Between the 3 of them, they have 23 of the Brewers’ 46 Runs Saved. Turang ranks tied for 5th at 2nd base with 8 Runs Saved. Perkins, out with an oblique injury, has played even less than Rojas but ranks tied for 4th among right fielders with 7 Runs Saved. Overall, the Brewers rank second to the Blue Jays in Runs Saved this season.

    And yes the Reds have Elly De La Cruz, but their best defender may be Matt McLain, who has split time between shortstop and second base and handled both without issue. He’s tied for the team lead with T.J. Friedl with 5 Runs Saved.

    There are some big moments ahead for these players in the next 5 weeks. They’ve played like seasoned veterans so far but their biggest tests have yet to come.

  • It’s Not Just The Hitting and The Pitching For The Mariners

    It’s Not Just The Hitting and The Pitching For The Mariners

    The Mariners are rolling.

    They’ve scored 55 runs in their current seven-game winning streak. Julio Rodríguez has been impossible to get out and that’s rubbed off on his teammates.

    So of course, we want to talk about their defense.

    The Mariners rank 9th in MLB in Defensive Runs Saved. So it’s not just the hitting that explains why they’re 15 games over .500.

    The key to their ranking is the performance of their outfield. The Mariners outfield ranks 4th in Defensive Runs Saved. The team has a 61.8% out rate on balls hit to the outfield, 2nd-highest in MLB.

    Here are the top defensive outfields in MLB.

    Team Runs Saved
    Blue Jays 45
    Padres  25
    Guardians 23
    Mariners 22

    By our measures, Seattle doesn’t necessarily have anyone who’s going to blow you away save for small-sample size superstar Cade Marlowe, whose strong Statcast “burst” numbers have allowed him to make up for slow reactions to the ball off the bat. 

    Marlowe made the catch in the tweet above filling in for Rodríguez in center field last night. He’s spent most of his time since his recall in left field, where he has 7 Runs Saved, including a couple of assists, like this one on which he played spoiler for another player’s memorable moment. 

    The Mariners have done well with whoever they’ve put in left field. Jarred Kelenic and A.J. Pollock have also combined for 5 Runs Saved there.

    But more than anything, the Mariners outfield is good because the team doesn’t play anyone who is bad. All but 73 innings this season have been played by an outfielder who totaled a non-negative number of Runs Saved.

    Go figure that Teoscar Hernández has been an unexpected positive contributor in right field. He’s never finished a season with a positive Runs Saved total there but has 4 Runs Saved. 

    The Mariners play him deep – at an average depth of 297 feet at T Mobile Park, an average of about 7 feet deeper than they played their right fielder last season.

    Hernández had a strong first month, with 5 Runs Saved at the end of April. He’s leveled off since then but his season numbers are still alright. 

    Depending on your metric of choice, Rodríguez is either having a great defensive season (Baseball Savant’s Runs Prevented) or one that’s a little above-average (Defensive Runs Saved). The metrics agree that he’s good but differ on the degree, which happens sometimes. In this case, there’s an explanation. Our Defensive Runs Saved separates out the value a team accrues from properly positioning him. Rodriguez, Steven Kwan, and George Springer have each netted 6 Positioning Runs Saved for their teams, the most for any outfielder in MLB this season.

    Rodríguez is another player who can make up ground with a burst once the ball has been in the air for 1.5 seconds and that’s led to a bunch of dazzling catches. 

     

    The other player who has given this team a defensive boost is a surprising one. The Mariners were projected to open the season with a pair of Gold Glovers in second baseman Kolten Wong and shortstop J.P. Crawford. But the team’s best defensive infielder by Runs Saved has actually been utility man José Caballero. The soon-to-turn 27-year-old rookie has 9 Runs Saved split primarily between the two middle infield positions.

    The Mariners aren’t a perfect defensive team. The numbers from their corner infielders, particularly Ty France and Eugenio Suarez aren’t great (though they’ve put up good numbers at first and third in the past), their primary catcher Cal Raleigh hasn’t quite replicated what he did last season when he ranked 3rd among catchers in Runs Saved, and J.P Crawford hasn’t matched where he was in 2020 and 2021.

    But right now there’s enough there both at the plate, on the mound, and in the field to make up for that.

     

  • Stat of the Week:  The Surprise Defensive Runs Saved Leader

    Stat of the Week:  The Surprise Defensive Runs Saved Leader

    Photos: Larry Radloff/Icon Sportswire

    Whenever I share the list of Defensive Runs Saved leaders by position, there’s one name that always elicits a strong reaction.

    People are surprised that not only is Carlos Santana of the Brewers the leading first baseman, he’s the leading first baseman by a healthy margin.  He has 9 Runs Saved, well ahead of Christian Walker (5 Runs Saved), Matt Olson (4), Anthony Rizzo (3), and Paul Goldschmidt (2), who have combined to win the last 8 Fielding Bible Awards. Santana has never won one.

    Santana doesn’t exactly look the part. His body type would best be described as “stout.” He’s listed at 5-foot-11, 210 pounds, and at that height he’s one of the shortest first basemen in MLB. At 37 years old, he’s also one of the oldest, which might make you think that his ideal position is DH.

    But Santana has played a good first base in the past. This will be his 4th consecutive season with positive Runs Saved there. Since a rough 2015 in which he cost his team 11 runs with his defense, Santana has had positive Runs Saved in every season but one, peaking at 8 in 2017. He ranks 4th in Defensive Runs Saved by a first baseman over the last 3 seasons.

    Most Defensive Runs Saved, 1B Since 2021

    Name Runs Saved
    Christian Walker 26
    Matt Olson 16
    Lewin Díaz 14
    Carlos Santana 13
    Paul Goldschmidt 13

    How Is He Doing It?

    So what’s driving Santana’s success?

    Amassing Runs Saved at first base largely comes down to how well you field balls and finish plays more than how you handle throws (being well positioned isn’t part of the calculation). It might surprise you: Santana is pretty good at fielding and finishing.

    Santana rates 13 Plays Saved better than the average first baseman (Plays Saved is similar conceptually to Statcast’s Outs Above Average). If you go to The Fielding Bible website, you’ll see that he’s an MLB-best 7 plays better than average on balls hit to his right, 4 plays better on balls hit to his left, and 2 plays better on balls hit at him.

    So how is Santana getting to all of these balls?

    In addition to charting batted ball locations and speeds, SIS also denotes what we call elements of descriptive defense, such as: Did the fielder slide, dive, or jump to make the play?

    Santana is playing 2023 all-out. He leads all players with 29 plays made via slides, dives, and jumps this season (click the hyperlinks to see examples).

    2023:      29 Diving, Sliding, Jumping plays in 852 innings

    2021-22: 28 Diving, Sliding, Jumping Plays in 1,822 innings

    He leads all first basemen with 53 such attempts. But his efforts are not wasted.

    Carlos Santana in 2023

    Type Plays Made-Attempts Success Rate (MLB avg)
    Dives 15-28 54% (37%)
    Slides 8-11 73% (71%)
    Jumps 6-14 43% (39%)

    Santana is succeeding at an average or better rate in sliding, diving, and jumping. Of his top 6 defensive plays made this season by Runs Saved value, 5 of them involved Santana diving, sliding, or jumping either to extend his range or to make sure he’d successfully corralled the ball.

    Santana got off to a slow start after being traded by the Pirates to the Brewers but Craig Counsell continues to play him. The Brewers have been rewarded twice this week with home runs. They’ve also gotten good defense. In 16 games with the Brewers, Santana has 3 Runs Saved.

  • Going Deep: Blue Jays CFs On Run-Saving Tear

    Going Deep: Blue Jays CFs On Run-Saving Tear

    The Blue Jays currently have a huge lead on the Defensive Runs Saved leaderboard. They’re currently at 77 Runs Saved, 30 runs clear of the Brewers for the most in MLB.

    The Blue Jays have three positions in which they’ve excelled this season. One is catcher, where Alejandro Kirk ranks 2nd overall with 13 Runs Saved. Another is third base, where Matt Chapman ranks 3rd with 11.

    Then there is center field.

    The Blue Jays have accrued 26 Runs Saved in center field this season. The next-closest team is the Royals with 13, half of Toronto’s total.

    Teammates Kevin Kiermaier and Daulton Varsho are tied for the center field lead with 13 Runs Saved. In other words, the Blue Jays have two center fielders with more Runs Saved than all but one other MLB team. Varsho’s numbers are particularly impressive given that he’s played about half as many innings there as Kiermaier has. 

    How does something like this happen?

    Kiermaier and Varsho are both great at chasing fly balls. 

    Kiermaier ranks No. 1 in MLB’s jump stat, which analyzes how much ground each outfielder covers in the first 3 seconds that a batted ball is in the air. Varsho ranks 20th out of roughly 100 qualified outfielders.  

    That is most evident when we do a team-by-team comparison of how each team does at catching balls that our batted-ball evaluation system classifies as “deep.” Blue Jays center fielders are alright at catching balls classified as “shallow” and “medium.” 

    But they are elite at catching the deep ball, at taking away potential extra-base hits.

    There have been 133 balls hit against the Blue Jays this season that were classified as “deep” in which the center fielder had a >0 chance to make the catch.

    Based on the out probabilities of each of those balls, the center fielder was expected to catch 106 of them. Blue Jays center fielders beat that by 16. They caught 122, for a catch rate of nearly 92%. Going 122-for-133 on plays rather than 106-for-133 meant that they beat their expected out rate by 12 percentage points.

    Only one other team’s center fielders came close to that. The Phillies via Brandon Marsh and rookie standout Johan Rojas bested their expected catch rate by a little less than 9 percentage points.

    Individually, Kiermaier has converted 74-of-82 (90%), 10 catches above expectations. Varsho is 47-of-50 (94%), beating his expected catch total by 6.

    In sum, the Blue Jays totaled about 12.6 Runs Saved on deep balls this season. They almost outpaced every other team’s total Runs Saved with just their Runs Saved on deep balls.

    Here’s one other perspective on the 122 out of 133 that shows the gap between the Blue Jays and an average team.

    Deep Balls Made Plays Missed Plays
    Blue Jays CF 122 11
    Average of Other Teams 99 27

    This is not the only area in which Blue Jays center fielders rate as best in MLB. They’re also tops in Outfield Arm Runs Saved, which combines a fielder’s success at holding runners on base hits and potential sacrifice flies with how often they’ve thrown a runner out without the help of a relay man. Toronto has 5 Outfield Arm Runs Saved thanks to throws like these.

     

    But it is the deep-ball differentiation that most separates them from the rest of the sport.

    Lastly, to put the Blue Jays’ center field success into historical perspective, their combined 26 Runs Saved rank 8th most since DRS was first tracked in 2003. The 2015 Rays set the standard for positional excellence with 37 Runs Saved. That team had a familiar center fielder, none other than a younger Kiermaier. 

  • The Defense Behind A Chicago Hope

    The Defense Behind A Chicago Hope

    On June 8 the Cubs hit their low point of the season, 10 games under .500 after getting swept by the Angels. They were 26-36, 6 1/2 games out of the wild card.

    I’d like to tell you that the Cubs played a good defensive game the next day. They didn’t. They mishandled a hit, botched a foul pop up and bobbled a slow roller.

    But I can tell you that if we measure from June 9 forward that the Cubs’ playing pretty good defense is a big part of this turnaround.

    The Cubs rank tied for 3rd in Defensive Runs Saved this season after ranking 21st in 2022. They currently have the biggest improvement in Runs Saved ranking from last year to this year.

    Team Defensive Runs Saved
    Blue Jays 61
    Brewers 46
    Cubs 31
    Padres 31

    When we isolate skill and just look at that (in other words, discounting positioning), the Cubs fielders have the second-most Defensive Runs Saved in MLB since June 9 trailing only the Brewers.

    What’s the story of their season from a defensive perspective? There have been two things that have been the biggest keys.

    The middle infield

    The Cubs made it a point to improve their middle-infield defense this offseason. After signing Dansby Swanson to play shortstop and moving Nico Hoerner from shortstop to full-time second base, the Cubs went into the season with arguably the best second base-shortstop combo in MLB.

    It’s lived up to the billing. 

     

    Cubs second basemen and shortstop have combined for 23 Runs Saved, the most in MLB in 2023. Swanson ranks second to Wander Franco in Runs Saved at shortstop with 12. Hoerner has 6 Runs Saved at second base, which ranks tied for 6th, and his fill-ins also have 3 Runs Saved.

    Most Defensive Runs Saved – 2023 Middle Infields

    Team Defensive Runs Saved
    Cubs 23
    Rays 18
    Rangers 12
    Yankees 11
    Orioles 11
    Dodgers 10

    Outfield Improvement

    After spending the first two months of the season with a negative Runs Saved total, 2022 Gold Glove-winning left fielder Ian Happ has turned it around. He has 3 Defensive Runs Saved and a positional high 7 assists without the help of a cutoff man. His 7 Runs Saved in left field since June 9 rank second to Steven Kwan’s 11. 

     

    Though Happ isn’t on pace to match his numbers from 2022, the rest of the Cubs outfield is going to far surpass their totals from what was a rough 2022.

    Cubs center fielders ranked last in MLB last season with -19 Runs Saved and only three teams had a right fielder total worse than the Cubs’ -9. This season, with Cody Bellinger and Mike Tauchman patrolling center, the Cubs have improved their Runs Saved total to -1 Run Saved. 

    An 18-run jump makes a big difference regardless of where you’re starting from. So does the 9-run jump that the Cubs have made in right field thanks to better play from Seiya Suzuki (2 Runs Saved in right field after totaling -4 in his rookie season). And some of the plays these outfielders are making are highly impactful

     The Cubs offense is averaging better than 7 runs per game in the last 23 games. We can’t dispute that it’s the primary reason why the Cubs find themselves in the Wild Card race. But make sure to take note of their defense too, as it has made and can continue to make the difference between winning and losing. 

  • Defensive Excellence Q&A: Bianca Smith

    Defensive Excellence Q&A: Bianca Smith

    Engage Bianca Smith in conversation about defense for a few minutes and you’re almost sure to think about the game in a different way when you’re done. We experienced that after talking to the former Red Sox minor league coach on Tuesday, just before she heads to Japan on a new coaching venture.

    Smith, the first African-American woman to be a pro baseball coach, has taught all aspects of the game, including defense, on the scholastic, collegiate, and professional levels. She spent two years as a coach at the Red Sox complex in Fort Myers and spent the last few months coaching a summer college team on Long Island. She’s a graduate of Dartmouth with an MBA and law degree from Case Western Reserve. You’ll get a good education in both the physical and mental side of coaching defense from reading this Q&A.

    This is the latest article in a series in which we’ve interviewed a diverse group of coaches about teaching defensive excellence. To read the others in the series, click here.

    This interview has been edited for clarity and length.

    Mark: What does defensive excellence mean to you?

    Bianca: It’s not quite like being perfect at defense, but it’s more giving 100% and knowing what you’re doing when the ball comes to you.

    Mark: Who taught you how to play defense?

    Bianca: I got the physical skills from my high school coaches.

    But the mental part I actually learned just from watching the game. I always put myself in the same position as whatever player was in my position and would go through the game as well, thinking about the situation and if the ball came to me, what would I do. That’s what prepared me for my games.

    Mark: How do you teach that and how do you teach defense?

    Bianca: A lot of it is experience, but I’ve also found just going over situations with players is going to be a lot more effective than putting them in the situations in games and just hoping they figure it out, which I’ve actually seen a lot of coaches do.

    They just kind of assume the players know. And I even found this out with the Red Sox. You get to the professional level and you assume that players know how to play and what they’re supposed to be doing. And a lot of the times, they actually don’t. So I spend a lot of my time as an outfield coach, probably more time actually, talking about situations, talking about defensive skills, rather than actually doing them.

    Once I actually explained it to them first, it was a lot easier for them to practice and pick up rather than just throw them out there and try to force them to figure it out.

    Mark: This isn’t meant to be critical of their past coaches, but is that due to where they were before, or is that due to instruction being done differently at different levels?

    Bianca: I think it’s more instruction being done differently. And like I said, I’ve seen it with coaches at higher levels. You just expect that either their previous coach or the fact that they’ve been playing so long that they already know this information. And when coaches come in with that assumption, you don’t coach it, and then they go off to the next level, and they still haven’t learned it.

    So, I don’t think it’s a lack of coaching. It’s more just that assumption that a lot of coaches have, based on whatever level they’re at. You just assume, oh, at some point they’ve learned this already, I shouldn’t have to teach them.

    So you don’t even bother bringing it up.

    Mark: Can you break down some of the things you teach and give us some specifics?

    Bianca: I’d say one of the most important things for outfield – it’s not as much the physical part.

    It’s knowing where to throw the ball and knowing how to throw it properly.  A lot of outfielders, no matter what level, they like to throw it as hard as they can because they’re trying to show off their arm.

    Giving them a situation where I explain to them that there’s a runner on base, so what is your goal?

    Are you trying to prevent them from scoring, or prevent them from moving and advancing, or are you actually just trying to get them out? Some players will say, yeah, we’re trying to get them out. Others will say they’re trying to prevent them from advancing.

    And I’ll explain it using statistics that, the majority of the time, outfielders are not going to actually throw a player out. That’s why outfield assists really aren’t as high a number as you would expect.

    And then I explain, imagine you’re in a game, you’re throwing as hard as you can, the throw technically gets to the base, but it’s too high. Or you overthrow it because you’re throwing as hard as you can because you’re trying to throw them out versus trying to just keep them from advancing. Now the runner is going to advance anyway.

    So, talking that through, explaining why we want to play a certain way, keeps them from going into a game and making those types of errors.

    And then, that’s when we start working on a long-hop drill, throwing to the base, where we’re trying to get the long hop. I’ve even had drills where half the outfielders will be in the outfield throwing, the other half will actually be fielding in the infield, to give them an idea of what it’s like to catch a long hop versus a short hop for the infielders.

    And then they really understand, okay, yeah, I need to do a long hop, because it’s a lot easier for them not only to catch it, but to apply the tag, if we do actually manage to throw them out.

    Mark: How do you get them to listen to you?

    Bianca: Ha!

    It depends on the age group, depends on the level. But one thing that I’ve found to be very effective in getting them to listen to me, but also in making sure that everybody understands what we’re working on, is that I don’t like to give drills that I haven’t tried myself at least once.

    I was never an auditory learner. If I hear something, I don’t retain it as well as if I either read it or I do it myself. So I’m a very hands-on learner. So I like to actually practice the drill before I tell the players what we’re going to work on and I show it at the same time. They learn it better, but they also have this understanding of, okay, she actually does know what she’s talking about because she’s done this before.

    I don’t believe every coach needs to have played the game. I do believe you need to at least be able to do some of the skills that you’re showing your players because it does help them, and it gives them a little bit more trust. I’m not necessarily gonna trust a coach who tells me to go run two miles, but they can’t even run a little bit. You do what you preach, pretty much. I’ve found that’s a lot of the ways that I’m going to gain trust from players.

    Mark: Do you do anything different for kids?

    Bianca: Kids are actually a lot easier to gain trust from.

    They just expect that you know what you’re talking about. But I approach it the same way. When you’re first starting out with players that you don’t know very well, you don’t know what kind of learners they are. As I get to know them a little bit more, I might change my coaching style based on what kind of learner they are, based on how they receive my coaching style.

    Once I start talking to them and get to know them, you also build trust that way because you’re just learning about them as a person versus just them as a player.

    I know the moment that I’ve really gained trust from a player is when they start asking me stuff that doesn’t have to do with baseball.

    Mark: How do you overcome the gender gap?

    Bianca: Never really had to.

    I think we’re at that point now, at least in baseball, where most players don’t really care. whether you’re a man or a woman.

    It’s funny because I would have boys and girls in my camp, and one of the girls would throw a ball really well. One of the boys would go, oh my gosh, I can’t believe she’s a girl and she could throw a ball. And I’m just looking at him thinking, you do realize that your coach is a girl, right?

    Mark: How do you talk to a potential outfielder about knowing when to leave his or her feet?

    Bianca: That’s been a fun one because I’ve had this conversation quite a bit. At least with the players that I’ve worked with, most of them are too afraid to leave their feet because they’re scared of messing up.

    So I explain it that if you think there’s like a 95% chance that you think you can catch that ball, I want you going for it. The only times you wouldn’t is if it’s a sharp line drive, you’re playing left field or right field and you’re diving towards the foul pole or foul line. Because if you miss that, that’s going to get way past you.

    If it’s in the gap,  I actually prefer them diving, even on a sharp line drive. If we’re teaching them right, your center fielder is backing you up. The center field basically has free range, meaning if you’re diving either way, hopefully the other outfielder is backing you up. So that, I don’t mind at all.

    I would rather them dive and at least try for it, than see a bloop single land in front of them that they could have caught. We actually practice just backing up. I will have two guys go out at the same time, put a ball in the machine. The guy in front will pretend like he missed it, and the guy behind has to actually back him up.

    So they have to figure out: How far am I going to be away from my other outfielder so I can be there in case he misses the ball?

    I’ll go over situations depending on, what runners are on, are they fast, what’s the score, what’s the inning? Is this a do-or-die play or is this a situation where if you dive, you catch it, we win the game? If you don’t dive and it drops, they’re gonna win anyway, so you might as well dive. I make sure that we’re gonna go through every situation. And if they do dive in a situation that I don’t think they shouldn’t have, I just bring them back in after the inning’s done, we talk about it, and then they learn from it.

    But I try to make sure players know I’m never gonna be upset with you giving 100% and diving for the ball. I’m gonna be more upset if you didn’t try at all, the ball drops and now they got a hit.

    Mark: What about teaching the technique of getting under the ball when you dive?

    Bianca: We had to do this even with the Red Sox because diving is something that’s not really practiced because of injury prevention.

    We make sure to do some kind of progression. I remember this is how I actually learned diving in the outfield and became more comfortable with diving and sliding.

    It’s just starting from your knees, actually even just starting in a diving position so you understand where to put your hands, how to keep your body up a little bit so you’re not face-planting when you dive or keeping your wrist from rolling under you. Then going from your knees and just trying to kind of get comfortable with landing on the ground.

    Then we start getting to a position where you’re going from your feet and then you’re running. We might use a diving mat or sliding mat. I ran a camp for a summer collegiate team just a few weeks ago, and we worked on sliding on a slip-and-slide. So, now that’s something I bring up with the kids, especially if it’s hot out.

    They have less of a fear of sliding now, and they’re just getting familiar and comfortable with their bodies to the point where eventually, it’s just going to become natural in a game, and they’re not thinking about it, they’re just going to do it. As soon as they start thinking, that’s when you’re risking injury, because then your body tenses up.

    Mark: Do you teach jumping at the wall too?

    Bianca: With kids it’s more just finding the wall. But as they get older, we’ve done that with the Red Sox where we have a drill where they’re not just finding the wall, they are trying to actually judge it and see if they can jump and just protect their bodies so they’re not getting hurt.

    Mark: On your website, you had a one-line reference in your ‘About Me’ section to playing soccer and dancing as you grew up. I’m curious if you have any favorite drills to teach footwork that mimic either soccer or dancing movements.

    Bianca: So, it’s not really a drill. I haven’t done it yet. I’ve brought it up once and it kind of got laughed at. But the idea that in baseball, you need rhythm. Because no matter what you’re doing, whether you’re hitting, you’re on the bases, you’re in the field, you’re dancing with the pitcher. That’s your timing.

    And I saw one team who actually warmed up with music and danced. I thought that was a great idea and that’s something I would love to do with a team. But I know it seems a little weird until you start to explain how you’re dancing with the pitcher.

    It’s literally just rhythm. You start to see it with guys when they can’t dance or they don’t have rhythm. It makes so much more sense when you see them either hitting or in the field trying to work on their pre-pitch. Because you try to tell them your pre-pitch is just going off the pitcher. But then their pre-pitch is off.

    I’m [thinking] okay, that explains so much and we can try to just work through that. But that’d be one drill. It’s not really a drill. It’s more the warm-up. But it’d be one thing I definitely want to incorporate, trying to get that rhythm and everything going at the same time.

    I love looking at other sports and trying to incorporate things that we can use for baseball. You can talk to any of the players that I’ve had in the last few years. I’ve introduced bunting with a lacrosse stick. And I love doing that. When I teach guys tracking the baseball, we do football routes. We would have the coaches actually throw footballs We put the cones out there and they’re actually just running routes.

    I’ve looked at hockey for hitting a slap shot is very similar to the body movement you use with your hips when you hit it. The same thing with golf. I’ve even started looking at volleyball for pitching and throwing. One of my brothers plays volleyball and we’ve gone back and forth about how to strengthen up his arms. It’s very similar to how pitchers do it.

    So looking at other sports, it’s fascinating how similar the movements still are.

    Mark: What about soccer?

    Bianca: This is a little different. It’s not a physical defensive skill. It’s something that I’ve also found interesting with the Red Sox. It’s not like it’s not taught, but it’s one of those things that you assume that they already know. Simple communication in the outfield, which could make a huge difference on whether a ball is caught or not.

    So rather than do your typical drill where you have two lines, you hit a ball in the gap and have them call for it, I had them juggling a soccer ball amongst themselves and calling for it.

    Anybody who was at the Red Sox complex in my first season (2021) has done the soccer ball drill.

    The first week or two that we had games, they weren’t really talking in the outfield.  They were catching balls, but it bugged me, because I’m saying there’s going to be a point where there’s a ball in the gap, nobody says anything, and you’re going to collide. Or, you’re going to think the other person has it, you’re going to back off, and nobody’s going to catch it.

    So I said okay, we’re working on this drill. You guys need to be loud. I want to hear you be loud. I want to know who’s actually got the ball. And it gave them an opportunity to kind of break out of their shells and just have a little bit of fun while still working on something that’s really important in the outfield.

    And it became a competition because if they called for it and they missed it, they’re out. We assigned our normal center fielders, they were the center fielders of the circle that started with all our outfielders lined up LF, CF, RF, LF CF, RF. You had your three outfielders and the center fielders had priority and everybody knew who the center fielders were, but they had to call for the ball. As players “lost,” they came out of the circle.

    I did see guys become a little bit louder in the outfield after that.

    Mark: What’s the hardest thing to teach defensively?

    Bianca: Actually throwing the ball.

    Because you don’t want to fall into that cookie cutter that you have to throw it this way. Just because [your arm slot] looks bad doesn’t mean they’re not doing it effectively. Some guys are more comfortable from sidearm. Some are more comfortable from three quarters. It’s all over the place.

    Mark: What’s your favorite thing to teach on defense?

    Bianca: Diving and sliding. I still do figure four slides when I’m shagging balls during BP. And the guys get really excited if I actually do manage to catch one.

    I love being able to teach that because I think once you get into their heads that it’s okay for them to dive and slide, their aggressiveness in the outfield just shoots up and it’s so much more fun.

    Mark: Anything else you would like to say about coaching defense?

    Bianca: Anybody following major league baseball now, they see the rule changes. Defense is so much more important now than it used to be and yes, offense is important. I understand that too. I was a hitting coach.

    So. being able to rely on defense, especially now that hitters are gonna have to focus more on just driving the ball, getting hits versus just hitting home runs means you have to be able to field the ball properly. You have to be able to throw the ball in. You can’t risk errors.

    Defense and baserunning were my bread-and-butter as a player. That’s why it’s so important to me.

    Mark: You’re headed to Japan – this week actually. Thank you for talking to me. What’s the coaching opportunity you have overseas?

    Bianca: Japan started this program called The JET Program in the 1980s where they would send English speakers over to teach English in their schools. The last decade or two they’ve started including sports coaches. There are 10 of us in the whole country compared to something like 3,000 English teachers.

    The baseball position opened up in February. It was perfect timing. I found out that I got it in May, so I’ll be heading over and living in Higashikawa, which is the center of Hokkaido, the northern island of Japan and I will be coaching elementary and junior high students from 5 to 15 years old. It’s kind of like their local Little League team. It’s a really good team. I do know that. And I found out the elementary school program has 52 players on the team.

    It’s been on my bucket list forever to be able to work in baseball in Japan. I’m incredibly excited. I’ve loved the culture and the country since I was a teenager. A goal of mine is to coach an NPB team someday.

    So I’m merging my three loves: baseball, Japan, and traveling.

    This is the latest article in a series in which we’ve interviewed a diverse group of coaches about teaching defensive excellence. To read the others in the series, click here.