Much of modern sabermetric thought regarding pitcher evaluation has been based upon the theory that most types of contact are created somewhat equally. High and low BABIPs allowed are usually attributed to good and bad luck, and FIP, which is directly based upon BABIP, is oft cited as the go-to individual pitching statistic. Well, not all contact is created equal. This week, we’re using a fairly basic method of evaluating contact management ability, and looking at the leading contact managers in both leagues. As it turns out, there’s a head-to-head battle for supremacy in both the AL and NL.

This upcoming weekend, I will be giving a presentation about the best contact managers of all time at the Saber Seminar in Boston. These hurlers were identified utilizing a fairly simple method. Simply strip away all of the strikeouts and walks from every ERA-qualifying starting pitcher’s record. Take the remaining results allowed, assign run values to all of them, and scale each pitcher’s performance on all balls in play to the league average. The resulting figure is the pitcher’s unadjusted contact score. In any given year, there may be a great deal of noise in an individual pitcher’s unadjusted contact score – team defense, ballpark, luck, etc., they’re all in there. Over a pitcher’s career, however, the good contact managers manage contact well, and the bad ones, well….don’t. I’ll leave the history for this weekend in Boston, however – for now, let’s focus on 2014. Yesterday, we looked at the American League – today, it’s the National League’s turn.

In yesterday’s AL article, a table listing the unadjusted contact score leaders in both leagues from 2000-13 were listed. It included names ranging from inner circle all-time greats such as Roger Clemens and Pedro Martinez to relative non-entities such as Joe Mays and Odalis Perez. In between those poles, however, were a significant number of solidly above average major leagues hurlers who relied primarily on contact management rather than on maximization of K’s and minimization of BB’s for their success.

Popup inducers such as Jered Weaver, Jeremy Hellickson, Chris Young and early-career Barry Zito have been league leaders, as well as ground ball generators such as Tim Hudson, Chien-Ming Wang, Russ Ortiz and Derek Lowe. The 2000-13 league leaders’ unadjusted contact scores have ranged from a low of 56 (Derek Lowe – 2002 AL) to a high of 79 (Justin Masterson – 2013 AL). The 2014 AL frontrunners to date, profiled yesterday, are Garrett Richards (59) and 2009 AL leader Felix Hernandez (65). Today, we’re going to take a look at the two 2014 NL frontrunners, through August 8, as well as a laggard who threatens to put up one of the worst single-season unadjusted contact scores in recent memory.

The leaders:

– Johnny Cueto – .259 AVG-.396 SLG, 63 Unadjusted Contact Score

– Adam Wainwright – .272 AVG-.382 SLG, 65 Unadjusted Contact Score

And the laggard:

– Edwin Jackson – .374 AVG-.607 SLG, 140 Unadjusted Contact Score

Historically, both Cueto and Wainwright’s marks are very worthy league-leading scores. Cueto’s 63 matches Jose Fernandez‘ 2013 NL-leading mark, with Wainwright just a short distance behind. We’ll talk a little more about Mr. Jackson later.

As do most top pitching prospects, Cueto diced through the minor leagues on the strength of his ability to maximize strikeouts and minimize walks – managing contact was an unnecessary afterthought as he posted a 378/88 K/BB ratio in 370 2/3 minor league innings, but only a 3.35 ERA over that span. His unadjusted contact scores in his first two ERA-qualifying seasons in the major leagues were quite poor, 120 and 110 in 2008 and 2009, respectively. He improved to 98 in 2010 and 88 in 2012, and is poised to improve by at least 10 basis points for the fifth consecutive qualifying season at the beginning of a career, which has to be some sort of record. Though his fastball velocity is basically the same now as it was at the beginning of his career, his ability to locate it has dramatically improved, and along with the emergence of his changeup, has driven his growth as a pitcher.

Wainwright’s minor league track record is actually quite similar to Cueto’s. He posted a 781/244 K/BB ratio in 793 minor league innings, but his 3.78 ERA didn’t match up to his peripherals by an even greater magnitude than his Reds’ counterpart. Wainwright apprenticed for a full season in the Cards’ bullpen, and qualified for his first ERA title as a starter in 2007. He has managed contact fairly well since, posting a career 90.9 unadjusted contact score entering this season, peaking at 79 in 2010, and bottoming out at 104 in 2012. Wainwright’s ability to generate grounders has been at the core of his contact management success, but as we shall see, he has moved away from this season. He has ridden two legitimate out pitches – first his curve, and later his cutter to his place among the game’s elite starting pitchers.

Now that we’ve identified these two as the leading 2014 NL contact managers based on the raw, unadjusted numbers, let’s hold them up against the scrutiny of context. Are these two guys legitimately elite contact managers, or have they had some help along the way? Let’s review their 2014 plate appearance outcome frequency and production by BIP type data for some clues. First, the frequency information:

FREQ – 2014 Cueto % REL PCT K 25.8% 127 84 BB 6.7% 87 51 POP 7.2% 94 55 FLY 28.5% 102 69 LD 16.7% 80 1 GB 47.6% 109 79 ———— ———— ———– ———– Wainwright % REL PCT K 20.6% 101 41 BB 6.0% 78 35 POP 6.0% 77 24 FLY 29.6% 106 80 LD 24.5% 118 99 GB 40.0% 92 21

The most noticeable item on Cueto’s frequency profile is the incredibly low liner rate he’s allowed this season, good for a percentile rank of 1. Early in his major league career, Cueto was a fly ball pitcher, and not a particularly good contact manager overall. More recently, he has been more of a ground ball pitcher, and a much better contact manager. In 2014, his liner rate is so low that he has above average percentile ranks in all of the other BIP categories. He still has a bit of a grounder tendency (79 percentile rank), but it not as extreme as in recent seasons. His low liner rate should regress moving forward – in his five previous qualifying seasons, his liner rate was below league average twice, above twice, and right on the average once. His K rate has taken a strong step forward this season (85 percentile rank), without material deterioration in his BB rate (51). Missing more bats plus an off-of-the-charts low liner rate equals career year.

Wainwright’s frequency profile is, for lack of a better term, pretty weird. If you would have shown it to me before the season and said that it would be Wainwright’s in early August, I would have assumed that 2014 would have been the year of his great decline. Plunge in K rate (to percentile rank of 41)? Check. Upward bounce from career-low 2013 BB rate to previous level (35 percentile rank)? Check. Evaporation of his longstanding significant ground ball tendency (to 21 percentile rank)? Check. Explosion of liner rate to a higher mark than anyone posted in the NL in 2013 (99 percentile rank)? Check. Somehow, some way, Adam Wainwright has had a downright Wainwright-esque year despite all of this.

We’ll learn more below, as we take a look at the production by BIP type allowed by both pitchers, both before and after adjustment for context, to get a better feel for the batted-ball authority they have allowed:

PROD – 2014 Cueto AVG OBP SLG REL PRD ADJ PRD ACT ERA CALC ERA TRU ERA FLY 0.229 0.568 63 77 LD 0.623 0.783 85 99 GB 0.203 0.223 71 71 ALL BIP 0.259 0.396 63 72 ALL PA 0.185 0.242 0.283 58 64 2.05 2.13 2.36 ————- ———- ———- ———- ———- ———- ———– ———– ———– Wainwright AVG OBP SLG REL PRD ADJ PRD ACT ERA CALC ERA TRU ERA FLY 0.201 0.403 38 46 LD 0.622 0.793 86 88 GB 0.155 0.182 44 85 ALL BIP 0.272 0.382 65 80 ALL PA 0.211 0.259 0.296 65 79 2.34 2.39 2.88

The actual production allowed by both pitchers on each BIP type is indicated in the AVG and SLG columns, and is converted to run values and compared to MLB average in the REL PRD column. That figure is then adjusted for context, such as home park, team defense, luck, etc., in the ADJ PRD column. In the three right-most columns, their actual ERAs, calculated component ERAs based on actual production allowed, and “tru” ERAs, which are adjusted for context, are all presented. For the purposes of this exercise, SH and SF are included as outs and HBP are excluded from the OBP calculation.

The core of Cueto and Wainwright’s contact management success is rooted in their ability to limit fly ball damage. Cueto has posted a 63 unadjusted contact score on fly balls, Wainwright an outlandish 38. There are two ways to successfully limit damage on fly balls – to manage the vertical angle and the exit velocity off of the bat. Splitting the fly ball category into upper and lower groups equidistant in size from the popup and line drive borders yields starkly different results. The “higher” fly balls yield an .098 AVG-.234 SLG, while the “lower” ones yield a .380 AVG-.990 SLG. Roughly 35% of fly balls reside in the upper group, 65% in the lower.

Cueto has limited damage on fly balls by allowing significantly more “high” fly balls than the average pitcher. 47.5% of the fly balls allowed by Cueto to date have been “high” fly balls. He has allowed higher than MLB production (.089 AVG-.339 SLG) on them, as Great American Ballpark is often quite windy and high fly ball-friendly, while allowing a .355 AVG-.774 SLG on “low” fly balls – below league average, but not to an extreme, elite extent. He has induced these high flies with his entire array of pitches, but his changeup and cutter have been the two most successful offerings. Cueto has suffocated fly ball production by managing the exit angle more so than by limiting authority, and one should expect his “high” and “low” fly rates to normalize in future seasons, especially since he doesn’t have a track record as a popup guy. He’s living on a razor’s edge with regard to fly ball contact this season – his contact score is adjusted upward to a still strong 77 based on context – and likely won’t remain there.

Wainwright, on the other hand, has a quite low “high” fly ball rate, 29.9% thus far in 2014. He strangles fly ball production in both sectors, however, allowing .100 AVG-.200 SLG in the upper tier, and .245 AVG-.489 SLG in the lower. That paltry level of “low” fly ball production is quite amazing. His fly ball contact score is barely adjusted upward for context to 46, as his hard/soft fly ball rates are exceptional. Wainwright’s curve and cutter have been his foremost weapons in generating weak fly ball contact.

Both pitchers have allowed weaker than MLB average authority across all batted ball types, but it should be noted that all of the contextual adjustments for both pitchers increase their component contact scores. Most significantly, Cueto’s line drive contact score increases from 85 to 99, and Wainwright’s grounder contact score spikes sharply from 44 to 85, as his .155 AVG-.182 SLG yielded on grounders has a healthy dose of luck in it. Despite all of this, both pitchers have better than MLB average adjusted contact scores on all batted types, though their overall contact scores on all BIP increase to 72 (for Cueto) and 80 (for Wainwright) once adjusted for context. After adding back their K’s and BB’s, their “tru” ERAs are 2.36 for Cueto, and 2.88 for Wainwright, 0.39 and 0.34 better than their actual ERAs. Both are exceptional pitchers having exceptional years, but are pitching a bit above their numbers.

There is one guy who could still catch them in the race for NL Contact Manager of the Year. That would be Clayton Kershaw, whose unadjusted contact score has plunged from 105 to 86 in the last five weeks. His adjusted contact score in early July was 84, and is likely better than either Cueto or Wainwright’s as we speak. Kershaw is an elite all-around pitcher – a top-of-the-scale bat-miser with unmatched contact management skills – his 73.9 career unadjusted contact score is an all-time record for a pitcher’s first five qualifying seasons. Cueto is a good, improving pitcher having his career year, Wainwright is showing unmistakable signs of decline, but is busily compensating in other areas, as only as the really good ones can.

What about Edwin Jackson? Here are his frequency and production tables:

FREQ – 2014 E.Jackson % REL PCT K 20.1% 99 38 BB 9.6% 125 95 POP 6.8% 88 46 FLY 28.1% 101 64 LD 26.5% 127 99 GB 38.6% 89 17

PROD – 2014 E.Jackson AVG OBP SLG REL PRD ADJ PRD ACT ERA CALC ERA TRU ERA FLY 0.404 0.981 191 123 LD 0.684 0.898 106 107 GB 0.203 0.238 75 100 ALL BIP 0.374 0.607 140 128 ALL PA 0.288 0.357 0.468 139 128 5.61 5.10 4.70

Jackson has always thrown hard, and has been coveted – and paid well – by club after club. While durable, the flaws highlighted in the above tables have always been present. His liner rate has been above MLB average in six of the last seven seasons, and is in the stratosphere this season. Not only has his longstanding grounder tendency dried up this season, he has allowed well above average authority on fly balls and liners this season. Allowing a .404 AVG-.981 SLG on fly balls – a 191 unadjusted fly ball contact score – is beyond the limits of good taste. Adjustment for context brings it down quite a bit to 123, but that’s still way too high for a guy who allows a lot of fly balls. The only positive in his production profile – his 75 unadjusted grounder contact score – is watered down by adjustment for context, as well as the fact that he hasn’t yielded many ground balls this season. His 5.61 actual ERA is boosted a bit by both sequencing and context, but his “tru” ERA of 4.70 places him right around replacement level, where he belongs.

Jackson’s 140 unadjusted contact score is in pretty select company. Only four pitchers – Brandon Backe (149, 2008), James Shields (149, 2010), Ivan Nova (146, 2012) and Jose Lima (140, 2000) have posted unadjusted contact scores of 140 or worse this century. All of this – both positive and negative – is simply more evidence that not all batted balls are created equal. There are different ways of getting it done, either by inducing larger than normal amounts of popups, grounders, or even “high” fly balls, or “low” ground balls – or just by minimizing batted-ball authority across batted-ball types. The good contact managers find a way to get it done, while the bad ones don’t.