Effectively Wild: A FanGraphs Baseball Podcast

Ben Lindbergh, Meg Rowley
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Jun 29, 2018 • 1h 10min

Effectively Wild Episode 1237: Bedtime for Trout

Ben Lindbergh and Jeff Sullivan banter about Jose Alvarado, Shohei Ohtani‘s power and possible return as a hitter, Shane Bieber‘s velocity, the minor-league breakouts of Chris Paddack and Colin Poche, FanGraphs readers vs. average fans, Brandon Nimmo‘s latest HBP antics, the Mets’ recent struggles and Mets-fan fatalism, the recoveries of the Reds and Wilmer Font, what teams would trade to enter the awful AL Central, Edwin Jackson‘s journey, the decline of the 2018 free-agent class, and more, then answer listener emails about Jonathan Holder, the thresholds for “qualifying” performance, Peter Moylan‘s age and indecisive 2017, Randy Cesar’s record-setting hitting streak and the Astros’ player development, pitcher hitting vs. hitter pitching, a pitcher who can’t remember his previous pitch, Mike Trout with an early bedtime, listening to games without commentary, and “climbing” into the batter’s box, plus Stat Blasts about Waxahachie Swaps and the best single (and rookie) seasons by career sub-replacement players. Audio intro: The Blank Tapes, "Feels Like Summer" Audio outro: Florence + The Machine, "June" Link to Jeff’s post about the Rays’ Waxahachie Swap Link to story about Ohtani’s BP power Link to Jeff’s post about Colin Poche Link to Jeff’s post about predicting second-half records Link to Ben’s post about the AL Central Link to Jeff Passan’s 2015 article about the 2018 FA class Link to 2015 episode about the 2018 FA class Link to Ben’s article about the 2018 FA class  iTunes Feed (Please rate and review us!)  Sponsor Us on Patreon  Facebook Group  Effectively Wild Wiki  Twitter Account  Get Our Merch!  Email Us: podcast@fangraphs.com Source
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Jun 29, 2018 • 1h 15min

Effectively Wild Episode 1236: Local (and National) Color

Ben Lindbergh and Jeff Sullivan banter about Jeff’s lost and found voice, then bring on MLB on TBS and SNY analyst Ron Darling (5:33) to discuss preparing to call games, talking stats on TV, local broadcasting vs. national broadcasting, the beloved Mets broadcasting team, building booth rapport, positivity and negativity on TV, dealing with broadcasting criticism, calling AL games vs. calling NL games, 1980s baseball vs. modern baseball, facing Barry Bonds and Tim Raines, and pitcher hitting. Then they talk to EW listener, MIT PhD grad, and incoming Rays R&D analyst Michael McClellan (36:50) about getting a front-office job, the overlap between atmospheric science and baseball science, the physics of baseball, baseball construction and home runs, visiting all 30 ballparks, and more. Audio intro: Matthew Sweet, "Your Sweet Voice" Audio interstitial: Wilco, "My Darling" Audio interstitial 2: Crowded House, "Weather With You" Audio outro: Elvis Costello, "There’s a Story in Your Voice" Link to Michael’s writing at Banished to the Pen Link to Michael’s writing at FanGraphs  iTunes Feed (Please rate and review us!)  Sponsor Us on Patreon  Facebook Group  Effectively Wild Wiki  Twitter Account  Get Our Merch!  Email Us: podcast@fangraphs.com Source
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Jun 26, 2018 • 1h 23min

Effectively Wild Episode 1235: Becoming a Beat Writer and Marketing Mike Trout

Ben Lindbergh and The Athletic’s Lindsey Adler discuss Lindsey’s transition from blogging to beat writing, how to talk to players and become comfortable in the clubhouse, the contrasts between the Yankees and Mets (and Aaron Boone and Mickey Callaway), writing about teams vs. writing about baseball’s big picture, the beat-writing fraternity, being a beat writer on Twitter, and more. Then (32:01) they bring on former MLB Director of Business Public Relations Jeff Heckelman to explain why MLB players struggle to become superstars, the sport’s structural disadvantages from a publicity perspective, whether MLB is doing a bad job of marketing the sport, what makes people become baseball fans, why baseball players are so straitlaced on the field and on social media, MLB’s crackdowns on video-sharing, the demise of the MLB Fan Cave, how the league could improve its marketing message, and more. Audio intro: Ringo Starr, "Give Me Back the Beat" Audio interstitial: Pete Townshend, "Popular" Audio outro: Elvis Costello, "The Beat" Link to Lindsey’s writing at The Athletic Link to Bryan Curtis’s article about baseball dying Link to Jeff’s Twitter thread  iTunes Feed (Please rate and review us!)  Sponsor Us on Patreon  Facebook Group  Effectively Wild Wiki  Twitter Account  Get Our Merch!  Email Us: podcast@fangraphs.com Source
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Jun 22, 2018 • 1h 19min

Effectively Wild Episode 1234: The First Baseman Who Blogs

Ben Lindbergh and Jeff Sullivan banter about Coors Field, Domingo German, the amazing Max Scherzer, Tyler Chatwood, Kole Calhoun‘s comeback, the writing process, Marcell Ozuna‘s catch attempt, Ichiro and the Home Run Derby, and the AL playoff picture, then bring on 31-year-old MLB-player-turned-FanGraphs-writer Nate Freiman (20:22) to talk about his recent embrace of advanced stats, coding, and blogging, his record-setting college career, his short-lived attempt at being a two-way player, how being 6-foot-8 affects hitting (and catching), getting picked in the Rule 5 draft, being a platoon player, why pinch-hitting is hard, pressure and clutchness, clubhouse chemistry, the WBC, the 2014 AL wild card game and Jon Lester’s pickoff yips, playoff shares, coordinating pickoff attempts, hitting stats vs. pitching stats, playing in indy ball and Mexico, deciding to stop playing, interacting with the media, golfing vs. hitting, and more. Audio intro: The Jayhawks, "Comeback Kids" Audio interstitial: XTC, "Ten Feet Tall" Audio outro: The Baseball Project, "Twilight of My Career" Link to Jeff’s Domingo German post Link to J.P. Hoornstra’s Kole Calhoun article Link to Marcell Ozuna play Link to Meg Rowley’s AL playoff picture article Link to Jeff Passan’s report on the Mexican League Link to Nate’s xWOBA post Link to Nate’s bullpens post Link to Ben’s Mexico City altitude post Link to Nate’s WBC post  iTunes Feed (Please rate and review us!)  Sponsor Us on Patreon  Facebook Group  Effectively Wild Wiki  Twitter Account  Get Our Merch!  Email Us: podcast@fangraphs.com Source
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Jun 21, 2018 • 1h 24min

Effectively Wild Episode 1233: Baby Powder and Baby Cakes

Ben Lindbergh and Jeff Sullivan banter about Steven Brault‘s national-anthem performance, Brandon Morrow‘s ignoble injury, the Kelvin Herrera trade, banana ambivalence, a suspicious baby-powder puff, Vinny Castilla‘s bat-boning, an interleague-play update, Jose Urena‘s control, the New Orleans Baby Cakes and minor-league team names, the senseless Giants-Marlins beanball war, the debut of Jonathan Loaisiga, and a sound-of-strikes study, then answer listener emails about hoax broadcasts, Jon Gray’s confusing stats, public pitcher MRIs, whether American teams license their names to Asian teams, managers whose ages are higher than their teams’ win totals, linking DHs to starting pitchers, the most games played in a single season, pitchers who don’t know which batters they’re facing, trading draft picks for Mike Trout, baseball mulligans, and the ideal baseball era, plus Stat Blasts about Rich Sauveur and the longest rookie eligibility periods and the most beneficial batter strikeouts ever. Audio intro: Sparks, "Angst in My Pants" Audio outro: Elton John, "White Lady White Powder" Link to Steven Brault’s national-anthem performance Link to Meg Rowley’s Lind article Link to Maldonado’s HBP puff Link to Jeff’s interleague-play post Link to Vinny Castilla’s bat boning  iTunes Feed (Please rate and review us!)  Sponsor Us on Patreon  Facebook Group  Effectively Wild Wiki  Twitter Account  Get Our Merch!  Email Us: podcast@fangraphs.com Source
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Jun 19, 2018 • 1h 21min

Effectively Wild Episode 1232: The Ump Show

Ben Lindbergh and Jeff Sullivan banter about Juan Soto‘s timeline-rearranging home run, Adrian Houser throwing up mid-game, Nick Markakis and Braves all-star voting, a Mets official’s donut metaphor, and Mike Trout’s continued excellence, then (17:35) talk to longtime MLB umpire and crew chief Dale Scott about miking up umpires, manager-umpire arguments, the Tom Hallion/Terry Collins clip and the expression “ass in the jackpot,” automated strike-calling, catcher framing, other factors that affect the strike zone, coming out as the first publicly gay MLB ump (and the possibility of a player coming out), replay reviews on slides, pace of play and time between pitches, how umps develop their punchouts, why balks are confusing, whether strikes have a sound, his history with concussions, and more, plus (1:12:59) follow-ups on the stumble play and other topics and closing banter about a bad baseball scene on Netflix and a Pablo Sandoval patience secret. Audio intro: The Delgados, "Hate is All You Need" Audio interstitial: The Posies, "I May Hate You Sometimes" Audio outro: Porcupine Tree, "Don’t Hate Me" Link to Adrian Houser throwing up Link to Mike Trout fun-fact-a-thon Link to article about Dale Scott coming out Link to Dale Scott’s punchout Link to Ben’s ALDS Game 5 oral history Link to list of players who appeared in a suspended game “before” their MLB debut Link to article about Steven Brault’s national-anthem debut Link to baseball scene from Set it Up  iTunes Feed (Please rate and review us!)  Sponsor Us on Patreon  Facebook Group  Effectively Wild Wiki  Twitter Account  Get Our Merch!  Email Us: podcast@fangraphs.com Source
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Jun 16, 2018 • 1h 17min

Effectively Wild Episode 1231: Chasen the Dream

Ben Lindbergh and Jeff Sullivan follow up on Terry Collins, trick running plays, Steven Brault‘s disappointing strikeout, the Mariners, and Justin Miller, banter about Takuya Nakashima’s 200th career sacrifice bunt, the Astros’ enviable depth, the most exciting rookies of 2018 (including Juan Soto, Gleyber Torres, Walker Buehler, and Adam Cimber), and MLB’s attendance decline, and talk to Hans Van Slooten about his years building and maintaining Baseball-Reference.com as Sports Reference’s manager of baseball operations, his decision to accept a new job as a baseball systems developer with the Minnesota Twins, the pros and cons of working for an MLB team, writing words vs. writing code, the differences between public and private and big and small(er) data, how Baseball-Reference adds (or doesn’t add) information, the expanding Sports Reference empire, his favorite finds on B-Ref, Barry Bonds’s WAR, comparing current players and long-retired players, how the “opener” strategy and Shohei Ohtani affected the site, and how to have his job. Audio intro: The Police, "Too Much Information" Audio interstitial: Elf Power, "Back to the Web" Audio outro: Keith West, "On a Saturday" Link to Steven Brault strikeout GIF Link to Takuya Nakashima t-shirt photo Link to Travis Sawchik’s attendance post Link to Sports Reference site index Link to Sports Reference web developer job listing  iTunes Feed (Please rate and review us!)  Sponsor Us on Patreon  Facebook Group  Effectively Wild Wiki  Twitter Account  Get Our Merch!  Email Us: podcast@fangraphs.com Source
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Jun 14, 2018 • 1h 16min

Effectively Wild Episode 1230: Our Cast is in the Jackpot

Ben Lindbergh and Jeff Sullivan banter about the end of Steven Brault‘s strikeout streak, Brandon Nimmo‘s non-HBP, Jacob deGrom‘s and Mike Trout’s latest futile heroics, the Mariners’ luck, leaked umpire audio, Hank Aaron on bottle boning, the new-and-improved Jordan Hicks, Miguel Cabrera being done for the year, post-substitution ejections, and a clever college play, then answer listener emails about Manny Margot, lineup loopholes, technical fouls, LeBron James, and Steph Curry, a league of John Jasos, strikeout-free shutouts, doubleheader hangovers and the AL East, and AL fans vs. NL fans, plus Stat Blasts about players per team, teams with the most impending retirees, and MLB fathers vs. MLB sons, two more J.R Smith analogs, and two more DH updates. Audio intro: The Drifters, "Jackpot" Audio outro: Jon Auer, "Bottom of the Bottle" Link to Jeff’s Brandon Nimmo post Link to Ben’s article about the Mariners’ luck Link to linked umpire audio Link to the Gators’ trick play Link to Ben’s Jordan Hicks article Link to research on doubleheader hangovers Link to research about player fatigue effects Link to data on players per team Link to data teams with the most swan songs Link to data on father-son WAR totals  iTunes Feed (Please rate and review us!)  Sponsor Us on Patreon  Facebook Group  Effectively Wild Wiki  Twitter Account  Get Our Merch!  Email Us: podcast@fangraphs.com Source
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Jun 12, 2018 • 1h 13min

Effectively Wild Episode 1229: Say it Ain’t Shohei

Ben Lindbergh and Jeff Sullivan banter about Masahiro Tanaka‘s double hamstring strain, Joey Gallo‘s bunt against the shift, and Nationals reliever Justin Miller‘s amazing stats this season. Then they discuss the short- and long-term effects of Shohei Ohtani’s elbow injury, critique several baseball-fixing proposals by Nick Elam, inventor of basketball’s “Elam Ending,” and wrap up with an update about the endangered Nick Markakis fun fact. Audio intro: First Aid Kit (with Jack White), "It Hurts Me Too" Audio outro: The Zombies, "Don’t Go Away" Link to Masahiro Tanaka scoring on a sac fly Link to Joey Gallo’s bunt against the shift Link to Ben’s article about moving the mound back Link to Jeff Passan article about Nick Elam’s ideas  iTunes Feed (Please rate and review us!)  Sponsor Us on Patreon  Facebook Group  Effectively Wild Wiki  Twitter Account  Get Our Merch!  Email Us: podcast@fangraphs.com Source
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Jun 9, 2018 • 1h 12min

Effectively Wild Episode 1228: Dangerous DH Ideas

After Ben Lindbergh briefly mourns the Shohei Ohtani injury news, he and Jeff Sullivan banter about the…impassioned response to Ben’s article about the DH and pitcher hitting, a few DH-related fallacies, Steven Brault’s bullpen conversation, the newly patient Pablo Sandoval, the effective wildness of Tyler Chatwood, and the effective non-wildness of Miles Mikolas, follow up on the Vroom Vroom Guy and an ugly half-inning, and answer listener emails about the Alex Reyes injury, the historic struggles of Chris Davis, Jacob DeGrom’s hard luck, the breakout of Brandon Nimmo, immaculate innings vs. three-pitch innings, a “Mike Trout meets J.R. Smith” hypothetical, a Cubs kids’ book, how to describe complete games, eight-man lineups, and constructing a roster where pitchers never hit, plus a Stat Blast about hitters who’ve reached on catcher’s interference twice in one game and a dramatic reading of anti-DH tweets. Audio intro: Loose Fur, "You Were Wrong" Audio outro: Built to Spill, "You Were Right" Link to Ben’s pitcher hitting article Link to Joe Posnanski’s DH article Link to Jeff’s Pablo Sandoval article Link to Troy Carter’s Vroom Vroom Guy chronicles Link to Troy’s Vroom Vroom video Link to list of immaculate innings Link to list of three-pitch innings Link to list of games like the one described in Good Night, Cubs Link to Travis Sawchick’s “spread of the opener” article Link to Deadspin’s article about the EW Facebook group Link to Arthur Rudolph’s data on EW episode length  iTunes Feed (Please rate and review us!)  Sponsor Us on Patreon  Facebook Group  Effectively Wild Wiki  Twitter Account  Get Our Merch!  Email Us: podcast@fangraphs.com Source

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