Sandy Alcantara Controls Nothing

Noted stoic Epictetus famously said, “Freedom is the only worthy goal in life. It is won by disregarding things that lie beyond our control.” If we accept this to be true, then St. Louis Cardinals prospect Sandy Alcantara might need to disregard small balls of cork wrapped in yarn and cowhide.

Alcantara was called up from AA to join the big-league club on Friday, bypassing AAA completely.

For the purposes of this article, we’re going to assume control is referring not to a pitcher’s ability to not walk batters, but by his ability to throw the ball somewhere that, by the end of the exchange, it ends up in his catcher’s mitt, be it as a ball or a strike.

By this definition, in 125.1 innings pitched for Springfield this year, Alcantara has controlled next to nothing. He has thrown 20 wild pitches and hit 15 batsmen, all with a repertoire that includes a fastball which, according to Eric Longenhagen, “sits 95-97 and will touch 101 with plus movement.”

This comes out to Alcantara being expected to either hit someone or throw the ball to the backstop once every 3.58 innings. For this study, let’s call this his “Craziness Per Inning Pitched” or CPIP. I know it would be better phrased as innings pitched per craziness, but IPPC isn’t an acronym that rolls off the tongue.

Here is a list of (as far as I can tell with my inexperienced play indexing) the lowest single-season CPIPs of all time (minimum 50 IP).

  1. 2011 Daniel Cabrera: 3.4
  2. 1995 Toby Barland: 4.35
  3. 2000 Hector Carrasco: 4.37
  4. 2000 Matt Clement: 5.26
  5. 2010 A.J. Burnett: 5.32

As you can see, Alcantara, with his 3.58 CPIP would slide right in at second lowest all-time. However, the top three on my list were all used primarily as relievers, where you can get away with a little more wildness. Only four of Alcantara’s 125.1 innings have come out of the bullpen this season. Among starters, his CPIP would rank as the lowest all-time.

Now, obviously, these are all major-league seasons, and Alcantara’s was in AA, but still, a player being expected to throw a ball that ends up somewhere other than in his catcher’s mitt once every 3 1/2 innings is some special craziness at any level. You could probably even make the argument that, due to increased competition and pressure, a prospect who is suddenly vaulted two levels higher should expect to see an increase in wildness.

With the Cardinals promoting fellow pitching prospect Jack Flaherty as well, it does seem likely that Alcantara will be pitching in relief for the Cardinals, but Cabrera’s record is still within reach if he can just allow himself to control a little less.





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YKnotDisco
6 years ago

I included some others for your list:

1991 Jason Grimsley….: 3.58 (61.0 IP/17 (03 HBP + 14 WP)
2011 Henry Rodriguez.: 4.07 (65.2/16 (02 HBP + 14 WP)
2016 Ken Giles………….: 4.07 (65.2/16 (02 HBP + 14 WP)
2014 Justin Masterson: 4.42 (128.2 IP/29 (15 HBP + 14 WP)
2000 Jason Grimsley…: 4.57 (96.1 IP/21 (05 HBP + 16 WP)
2000 Scott Williamson: 4.66 (112.0 IP/24 (03 HBP + 21 WP)
1969 Dennis Higgins…: 4.72 (85.0 IP/18 (03 HBP + 15 WP)
1967 Bo Belinski……….: 4.79 (115.1 IP/24 (08 HBP + 16 WP)
2001 Mac Suzuki………: 4.92 (118.1 IP/24 (08 HBP + 16 WP)
1995 Hector Carrasco.: 5.12 (87.1 IP/17 (02 HBP + 15 WP)

2017 Trevor Cahill……..: 4.00 (76.0 IP/19 (03 HBP + 16 WP)

“Congrats” to Grimsley for appearing twice on the list

Giolito's changeup
6 years ago

ColinBaseball,

Thanks for the fun article. All NL teams have ordered extra cushy pads for their hitters. As for the backstops in NL parks, they have been warned that Sandy A. is in the house.