Throughout history, there are certain moments that shift how things are done, seen, and perceived as “normal”. Most of these moments are obvious and create an immediate, lasting impact. The birth of social media, for example, or the election of president O’Bama. However, some of these moments aren’t as noticeable and take time to make their impact. As a sports historian, I am always fascinated to analyze and uncover these impactful moments that change the sports world forever. Getting behind the psychology of the teams and front offices at the forefront of creating these shifts in how their respective leagues operate. A recent example is looking at how the Golden State Warriors changed how the NBA is managed, coached, understood, and played. Making the center position virtually obsolete, creating a modern game that virtually demands big men to be able step outside and knock down jump shots. Signaling the start of front offices aiming to construct a “death” lineup, where the strategy is to put your 5 best players on the court come crunch time regardless of position, or; the position-less basketball era. Utilizing athleticism and length to disrupt passing lanes in attempt to better defend the screen and roll offensive play style of the NBA today. Today, I want to dive into one of the most fascinating watershed moments in sports history. Happening back in 2012, what has transpired across the last 7 years has gone under the radar. Until now. “We’re going to run him out there until his innings are gone and then stop him from pitching,” said Nationals General Manager Mike Rizzo back in February of 2012. “Him” being young pitching phenom, Stephan Strasburg. And although you may not realize it yet, the MLB has never been the same since that day back in 2012 when Rizzo uttered these words.
Now, Rizzo saying the Nationals were going to hold their young ace to an innings cap wasn’t an irrational theory at the time. Over the decade before-hand, teams and leagues started realizing that it was detrimental to the future of young pitchers to over-use them in the beginning stages of their career. Not to mention Strasburg was coming off Tommy John surgery the year prior, and was the most highly touted pitching prospect since former Cubs pitcher Mark Prior. As such, the Nationals granted him with the most lucrative contract of any pitcher on their rookie deal. Making even more sense as to why they wanted limit the extraordinary young talent amid a time in the franchises history that didn’t come with much success. Bottom line- The Nationals were the doormat of their division, and wanted to preserve their young phenom that they were heavily invested in. The plan was simple: Strasburg would pitch every 5th day throughout the 2012 season until he reached 160 innings, then he would be shut down for the remainder of the season.
As previously mentioned, the Nationals had struggled mightily since moving the team to the nations capital from Montreal, finishing the previous 6 out of 8 years dead last in their division, and found themselves 21.5 games out from first after the 2011 season. But as we know in sports, the deplorable and most incompetent teams are rewarded the most for being, well, terrible. Thus, the Nats were able collect a plethora of young promising talent during their period of dreadfulness, including the likes of: Jordan Zimmermann, Bryce Harper, Wilson Ramos, Ian Desmond, and Drew Storen. The collection of talent brought life to the nations capital, and the club planned to use the 2012 season to develop their young talent and allow them to come together and gel to set themselves to compete in the coming years. But… plans changed.
Skip ahead to August 2012 and the inning cap on Strasburg was the talk of the league. Since: 1.)Strasburg came off Tommy John surgery as a force to be recon with, dominating opposing offenses throughout the year. (He finished the season with a 30.2 percent strikeout rate, which would’ve led MLB starters if he’d thrown enough innings to qualify.) And, 2.) The Nationals were suddenly in contention: When Strasburg made his last start, they were 85–53, 6.5 games up in the division, and bound for their first playoff appearance since 1981. But on September 7th, 2013 Strasburg reached his inning cap, and GM Mike Rizzo followed through on his plan. Strasburg went from domination- to street clothes. This has become the norm for top pitching prospects, with teams taking the methodical approach and playing for the long game with their young pitching assets.
While the public innings limit is now routine, pulling Strasburg from a playoff race remains a unique occurrence. Teams have given inning caps to young aces, but abandon the plan when they find themselves competing. For example, back in 2015 Matt Harvey was coming off Tommy John surgery and was given a 180 inning cap, but the Mets bent that rule to allow him to pitch in the playoffs. Same went for Blue Jays pitcher Aaron Sanchez a year later in 2016 who ended up totaling 203 innings pitched after a lengthy playoff run. It’s fair to say that teams are more inclined to abandon prior plans when a shot to compete in the playoffs is on the line, it’s natural. But also because there is no math or science behind it. It’s just a logical theory bad teams have adopted in order to maximize the usage of the assets they have invested in. There is no magic number of innings to cap a pitcher at to avoid Tommy John. Just like there’s no math or science behind avoiding injury in any other capacity. We just have historical data to make educational guesses, but every case is different. Which is why it is so fascinating to discover how the GM of such a deprived organization and fanbase was able to resist not seeing through a surprisingly successful season, for some random number of innings he threw out there in February. Rizzo was committed to the future of the Nationals organization, and Strasburg was clearly the center of their future plans. The Nationals did end up making the playoffs in 2012, after winning 98 games and took home the division title for the first time since coming to DC from Montreal. But the fun was short lived, as the Nats fell to the St. Louis Cardinals in a winner take all game 5 of the ALDS. Could Strasburg have helped his team reach the NLCS? Probably. Would he ever get a chance to do it again, or was the innings cap just avoiding the inevitable? I think you know the answer.
Fast forward 7 years and here we are. Game 6 of the World Series. And the Washington Nationals are chasing their first ever World Series pennant. Although it will be no small task as they are matched up against the juggernaut of the league- the Houston Astros. The Nats came out firing on all cylinders, and took a commanding 2-0 lead behind brilliant pitching efforts from co-stars Sherzer and Strasburg. But after Sherzer was scratched for game 5, youngster Joe Ross took the mound. Ross was pulled after surrendering 4 earned runs in 5 innings of work. The Astros road the back of workhorse ace, Gerrit Cole, who pitched a gem, and added 3 insurance runs to coast to a 7-1 victory. So not only did the Nats lose, to fall from up 2-0 to facing elimination, but the Astros bats were hot and as confident as ever going into the potential closeout game 6. The Astros were on the doorsteps of another pennant, and you could feel the momentum shift completely to the Stros heading into game 6. Hell, even local mattress mogul, “Mattress” Mack was in attendance. But the Nationals had other plans, looking to secure a win in game 6, with their eyes on a game 7 for all the marbles. So, who was on the mound for the Nationals, on the road in Houston, facing off against the red hot Astros with elimination breathing down their backs? Stephan Strasburg. Yes, the now 31 year old veteran, who was shut down 7 years ago, games away from the playoffs, to save the young ace for the “future”. Well, the future is now. And Strasburg came out dealing. Despite 2 first inning runs, Strasburg wasn’t rattled. Surrendering just 6 hits in his 8 and a third innings of work. Stagnating the Astros loaded lineup much of the night, Strasburg brought that elusive dream back into focus, setting up a game 7 on Wednesday for the pennant. And as I sat there and watched this unfold, I couldn’t help but crack a smile for Strasburg. So the question remains: Was it worth it. Was it worth shutting down the most promising prospect in a decade, while on the doorsteps of relevance for the first time in years, all to save hope for one thing- The Future. It’s tough to speculate wether or not the inning cap, and the ultimate shut down of Strasburg back in 2012 played a hand in him continuing to dominate 7 years later with the same team, with a shot at the pennant. But I’d like to think so. And I’m sure the afore-mentioned Matt Harvey and Aaron Sanchez, who’s inning caps were abandoned, and for the most part, neither have not the same pitching forces since, would have something to say about the topic. But one things for sure- Nationals GM Mike Rizzo agrees with me.
This story has finally come full circle, but something tells me it’s not over yet. After last nights performance Strasburg was asked if he would be ready to come in, in relief duty in game 7. His answer? “You take it one day at a time…”. Which is ironic considering this all started with the forward-thinking process of preserving the ace for the future. So, don’t be shocked if the Nationals turn to the veteran in game 7 in relief duty, because after all these are the moments the organization dreamed of when they shut him down 7 years ago. The perfect “cap” to an even better narrative. Plus, as a sports fan, it would just be really fucking cool to see. So the question remains, what’s more important: The “Now”, or, The “Future”?
