IT BEGINS with a
puff of infield dirt, a tiny smoke signal sent up from near first base.
Translated for the pitcher, it might read, you are toast. With that liftoff,
the crossing of left cleat over right, Philadelphia Phillies shortstop Jimmy
Rollins, the best base stealer on the best basestealing team in the league, is
headed for second. Let's freeze it right there. � See the catcher? The poor guy
is helpless. With elite runners like Rollins, catchers generally have very
little control over the play. What matters is how quickly the pitcher delivers
the ball to the plate. Faster than 1.2 seconds is excellent; slower than 1.4
and the would-be thief gains such a head start that, as Phillies baserunning
coach Davey Lopes puts it, "The catcher can have a bazooka back there and
it won't matter." Regardless, the man behind the plate is the one whose
reputation is on the line. His caught-stealing percentage is what people look
at, so he's bracing, hoping to uncork a perfect throw. With Rollins, he'll need
to.
Next check out
the shortstop. With the lefthanded-hitting Chase Utley at the plate, he's
already moving to cover second base, creating a fat hole on the left side of
the infield through which Utley can send a line drive or a hard grounder. This
is one perk for hitters batting behind a speedster like Rollins; another is
that they'll likely see an increase in fastballs. (The quicker the catcher gets
the ball, after all, the quicker he can throw down to second.) The end result:
According to
Baseball Prospectus
, a hitter's batting average jumps 15 points
when a basestealing threat is on first, with a slight bump in power as
well.
On to the fellow
on the mound. At this point in his delivery he's already committed, for better
or worse. If he's unfurling a slow, looping breaking ball, then Rollins is as
good as safe; a fastball and it might be close. Might be. Either way, the
pitcher's already lost the game within this game, the goal of which is to keep
Rollins tethered to first by slide-stepping, throwing over or holding the ball.
(Do it long enough and a runner's legs, coiled to sprint, start to ache.) In
this case, however, Rollins correctly read the pitcher's "tell" just as
a poker player might—it could have been a slight dip of the shoulder, an
incline of the knee or even an unconscious glance downward—and knew he was
initiating his delivery. That's when Rollins took off.
Finally turn your
attention to the short guy in pinstripes causing all this commotion. Head down
and knees driving, Rollins is drifting ever-so-slightly toward the infield
grass as he runs, a habit that drives Lopes nuts. (During practice, Rollins
invariably runs straight.) At this point Rollins has one of two thoughts on his
mind—"Either, I'm going to be safe, or Oh, s---, I better get going,"
he says. In a few more steps he'll sneak a glance toward the catcher and
evaluate the situation. Is the ball in the dirt, making a slide unnecessary? If
not, should he go in straight or fade to the right to avoid a tag? And when
should he ease off the throttle, lest he repeat the mistake he made against the
Washington Nationals in August, when he beat the throw to second but kept on
sliding, as if he'd suddenly hit a patch of ice, until he was stranded a few
feet from the bag, baserunning's equivalent of a beached whale? That one still
rankles him, and understandably so. It's one of only two times this season
Rollins has been caught. The other came when Atlanta Braves catcher Brian
McCann threw him out. ("Just a damn good throw," says Rollins.) Every
other time, all 38 of them through Sunday, he's been safe.
If 38 of 40
sounds like an impressive ratio, that's because it is. Only once in the last 86
years—in 2006, when the Seattle Mariners' Ichiro Suzuki went 45 for 47—has a
player stolen more bases while being thrown out so few times. So while
Rollins's steal total may not be as gaudy as, say, Willy Taveras's
league-leading 66 for the Colorado Rockies or Rickey Henderson's eye-popping
totals from the past, his thefts may be more valuable. Sure, Rickey once stole
130 bases in a season, but he was also caught 42 times that year. Forty-two! At
his current rate of 95%, Rollins would steal 798 bases before he got caught 42
times. And in this post-Moneyball age, it's not how many you steal that
matters, but how efficient you are.
Why? Well,
consider that every stolen base increases a team's expected runs by .25 per
game according to
Baseball Prospectus
, whereas getting thrown out reduces them
by .64. In other words, to make it worthwhile, a team needs to be successful on
roughly three out of every four attempts. By that measure, even though players
are running less than in decades past, we are in something of a golden age of
theft. The average efficiency in the majors this season is 73.4%, second in
baseball history only to last season's 74.4%, and the most prolific
basestealing teams this season are all playoff contenders: in order, the
Rockies, Rays, Mets, Dodgers, Phillies, Red Sox and Angels. They're also the
most effective; Rollins's Phillies lead the majors in stolen base percentage,
at 83.8%, followed by the Rockies (81.1%) and the Red Sox (79.6%). At a time of
year when an extra run here or there can mean the difference between an October
spent playing ball and one watching it, that can be a huge advantage. "It's
a great weapon, but the key is to use it correctly," says Lopes, who stole
47 bases in 51 attempts for the Cubs at the age of 40. "It's a matter of
becoming a student of baserunning. People associate speed with basestealing,
but I've known a lot of guys who had great speed but were terrible base
stealers. There's an art to it."
SO WHAT is that
art? Well, everyone knows how not to steal a base: jump too early and get
picked off, go too late and get gunned down or just be plain dirt slow. In the
annals of bad baserunning, there are plenty of cautionary tales. The Mariners'
Harold Reynolds was nabbed 29 times in 64 attempts in 1988, and the Cardinals'
Garry Templeton went 28 for 52 in 1977. Then there's former Giants first
baseman Will Clark, a sublime hitter who nonetheless put together perhaps the
most unsightly basestealing season in history. In 1987, Clark broke for the
next bag 22 times. Only five times did he successfully make it. (In his
defense, Clark explains that it was partly a managerial thing. "We had
Roger Craig as our manager and we did a ton of hit-and-runs," says Clark.
"I mean, he'd hit-and-run with anybody, and he said, 'If I put a
hit-and-run on, whatever you do, don't get picked off.' So you rarely got a
good lead.")
How to steal,
however, is a discipline that has evolved over the years, from the days of Ty
Cobb to Maury Wills—who had more stolen bases (104) for the Dodgers in 1962
than any other team in the league—to, of course, the Rickey-zoic period.
There's not a base stealer in the majors today who wasn't influenced in some
way by Henderson. Even kids who weren't fast wanted to be like him. "I
remember everyone in Little League, they'd all buy his Mizuno [batting]
gloves," says Giants second baseman Kevin Frandsen. "They were
fluorescent green and you'd wiggle the fingers, just like Rickey. You thought
you were faster because of that, that maybe your hands were faster."
Likewise, as a
boy growing up in Oakland, Rollins idolized Henderson, who first came to fame
with the A's. Rollins would crouch in his living room during A's games and
mimic Henderson's moves, stepping out to a lead, then creeping, creeping across
the carpet. "He'd just be inching along, and I was like, Don't they see him
over there?" says Rollins. "It was almost to the point where I could
look at him on TV and be like, He's about to steal."
Henderson's
arrival changed the nature of the pitcher-runner relationship. Not only was he
putting up preposterous numbers—130 steals in '82, 108 in '83—but he was also
entirely fearless. Once, in 1982, he got thrown out three times in one game
and, upon reaching base again in the ninth with two outs, ran again. (He was
safe.) It helped that he had a permanent green light, even when he didn't.
"I had to make it happen," explains Henderson, now 49, who even in his
retirement remains confident that he could "easily" steal 40 bases
today. "If there were two times I got thrown out, then I had to use, 'I
missed the sign,' and [A's manager] Billy Martin would say, 'You ain't missed
no sign' and I'd say, 'Sure I did.'"