Jimmy Rollins Amazingly Inconsistent Season

I thought about leading off this post with one of those “Guess who leads the Majors in WAR among shortstops” questions, but then realized that I put Jimmy Rollins name was in the headline, so that seemed to not be much of a challenge. But, yes, Jimmy Rollins currently leads all MLB shortstops in WAR, checking in at +4.9 for the season. He’s been the lynchpin to the Phillies second half comeback, but on the other hand, he was also one of the reasons that they had a big hole to dig out of to begin with, because Rollins is having one of the weirdest good seasons in recent history.

Here are his monthly splits:


Split PA AVG OBP SLG ISO BABIP wRC+
Mar/Apr 93 0.235 0.283 0.271 0.035 0.290 58
May 127 0.241 0.302 0.336 0.095 0.268 77
Jun 129 0.303 0.357 0.580 0.277 0.306 150
Jul 105 0.208 0.276 0.375 0.167 0.225 73
Aug 120 0.213 0.283 0.417 0.204 0.205 94
Sept/Oct 79 0.333 0.405 0.681 0.348 0.314 201

Rollins was atrocious in the first month of the season, mostly because his strikeouts went way up (18.3% K%) and his power went way down (.035 ISO). The ability to hit for power while maintaining high contact rates have always been his calling card, so when both of those things go south at the same time, he’s a pretty awful hitter. Even with his usual solid defense at short, Rollins was a replacement level scrub in April.

His May was slightly better, but not by much. He got his strikeouts back in check, but there still wasn’t much power, and and again, Rollins was mediocre at best. Then came June.

After combining for just 10 extra base hits in the first two months of the season, Rollins hit 18 in the season’s third month, including six home runs and three triples. He slugged .580 in June and posted an 11.4% K%, his lowest mark of the season. The contact and power reappeared, and for the month, he was one of the best players in baseball, posting +1.7 WAR in the process.

While the skills stuck around, the same process didn’t lead to great results in July and August, as his BABIP crashed and took his offensive production down with it. The power helped him produce more than he had early in the season, but he wasn’t anything special, posting +1 WAR total between those two months. Had he carried over some of his June production into July, the Phillies may have traded him to a contender in need of an upgrade at the position, but given his age and the $30+ million left on his contract, there wasn’t a huge market for his services.

That looks like it’s pretty fortunate for the Phillies, because his September has been even better than his June. He’s already his seven home runs this month, and he’s slugging a ridiculous .681 over the team’s last 17 games. At +1.5 WAR, he’s been baseball’s best position player this month – yes, even better than the legendary Miguel Cabrera.

Rollins has played 40 games in June and September, which accounts for just 30% of his season total. In those two months, he’s accumulated +3.2 WAR, which is 65% of his total for the year. And, while some normal variation in performance over these kinds of arbitrary endpoints is expected, you don’t see these kinds of awful-bad-great-bad-okay-amazing kinds of swings too often.

Overall, the total package for the Phillies has been quite valuable, and there’s a pretty good case to be made that he’s been baseball’s best overall shortstop this year. It’s been a roller coaster of a ride, however, beginning with a few months where Rollins looked like a shell of his former self. However, for the last four months, he’s been showing better power than he has at any point since his MVP season of 2007, and even with the increase in strikeouts, Rollins is still a very productive player. While he turns 34 in November and is probably headed for some decline in the next few years, it certainly isn’t here yet. As long as he keeps driving the ball and playing quality defense at a premium position, he’ll continue to be among the league’s best players.




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Dave is a co-founder of USSMariner.com and contributes to the Wall Street Journal.

39 Responses to “Jimmy Rollins Amazingly Inconsistent Season”

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  1. WholeCamels says:

    For what it’s worth, Rollins’ wife gave birth to their first child around the end of May. Probably coincidence, of course, but who knows?

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    • Bob says:

      Not necessarily. The first kid represents a sea change for a lot of people that makes things like work seem way less important. Why would baseball players be immune?

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    • Bill G says:

      Unless Rollins is some sort of playa-ogre, I think you may have hit on something. The birth of a first child roils your world. I think Musial mentioned that, in one of his off years, he had a baby at home that cried a lot at night. Not that I am comparing the two on the field…

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  2. YanksFanInBeantown says:

    Yeah, the case really can’t be made that he’s been baseball’s best overall shortstop this season. Ian Desmond has .2 less WAR, well within the margin of error, in 30 fewer games played and 150 fewer at bats.

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    • Baroque says:

      Well, doesn’t that just mean that the case can ALSO be made for Desmond? It certainly doesn’t mean the case CAN’T be made for Rollins.

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    • Chris says:

      Durability counts for something, too. Taking nothing away from Desomond, but playing nearly every day is valuable.

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      • YanksFanInBeantown says:

        No doubt, but would you say that Chris Johnson is a better overall third baseman than Evan Longoria this season because he has more WAR? (Obviously this is reducto ad absurdum, but still)

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    • Phrozen says:

      I’m curious, what is the defined “margin of error” for fWAR? Honest question here; I really have no idea.

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      • Josh G says:

        I believe it has to due with the uncertainty or unreliability in baserunning and defensive statistics for less than a full season of data. If you sum the root of each of those values, you get the margin of error. In this case, it would be .44 fWAR

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      • Phrozen says:

        Ok… but how do you come up with “summing the root?” Seems kind of arbitrary.

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      • YanksFanInBeantown says:

        They usually say that anything within .5 WAR is ambiguous.

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      • Phrozen says:

        Who is “they?”

        I mean, that seems reasonable, sure, but the glossary article here on Fangraphs doesn’t shed any light on the issue. You cite this as if it’s common knowledge, which it certainly is not.

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      • YanksFanInBeantown says:

        It’s the number I see thrown around whenever people make disclaimers about WAR, I don’t remember any specific articles though. Sorry.

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  3. Ben says:

    Great article. One thing to keep in mind is what would you rather have, a player like Rollins or David Wright, who have incredible months and awful months, or a player who is consistently solid. I, and my guess is most fans, would vote for consistency, mostly because in order to win the entire team must be performing adequately. During Rollins’ incredible September, Ryan Howard has been awful, and for some of it, Carlos Ruiz has been injured. Rollins may get on base but it doesn’t lead to as many runs as it should. When he’s awful, no one is on base for Utley, Howard, and Ruiz to drive in, thus leading to fewer runs scored. Rollins has played well overall in the first year of his contract, and given the other options, Ruben Amaro seems to have made a good deal. Consistency would be nice though. Also, Rollins’ base running can’t be overlooked, he’s still pretty quick, but more importantly he’s a smart runner who doesn’t get thrown out very often, whether it be when attempting a stolen base or when going from 1st to 3rd.

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    • Phrozen says:

      I’m fairly certain this contract is going to be one of Amaro’s best. At $5M/WAR, Rollins has already produced nearly three-quarters of the guaranteed value.

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    • hk says:

      During Rollins incredible September, the Phillies are 12-5, so you could argue that his inconsistency has benefited the team in the sense that it has allowed them to win at a high percentage while other players were injured and/or under-performed. Personally, I’ll take 5+ WAR from my shortstop whether it is 0.83 WAR per month for 6 months or something more along the lines of what the Phils have gotten from Jimmy this year.

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      • Ben says:

        I agree that Rollins’ season is great, and that 5+ WAR from a shortstop, no matter how it’s added up, is awesome. My point was only that throughout Rollins’ career consistency has sometimes been an issue and it shows this year as well. Obviously the best case scenario is for your players to all be hot at the same time, but that rarely happens. If not, you want them to at least be consistent, rather than bi-polar, what if when Rollins is hot everyone else slumps, it won’t always lead to wins. I don’t think the Phillies run scoring abilities have gone up dramatically in September. Their 12-5 record is more likely influenced by the much improved pitching, both from the bullpen and the rotation.

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      • Richard says:

        Well, yes, it has been the pitching. Runs have been way down. There have been several games this month in which Rollins has provided almost all of the offense.

        But the reverse is true, too. Rollins worse other months were not major reasons they were in the hole they were in, it was pitching. In fact, their worst month, record-wise, was easily June, and that was a great month for Rollins.

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      • hk says:

        Actually, they’ve scored 4.65 runs per game in September after scoring 4.15 runs per game through August 31. My point being that I don’t care at all whether a player is very consistent from month to month or if he is very volatile like Jimmy. It seems very likely that they would still be around 1 game over .500 if Jimmy had produced a WRC+ of 106 in each month instead of the volatile results that Dave has shown.

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  4. Andrew says:

    A 3-year, 33 million contract for Rollins looks like a huge bargain right now. No one on this board will say it, so I will: nice signing by Ruben Amaro.

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    • Dave Cameron says:

      I said it last year when they signed him to that deal. I even called it one of the 10 best transactions of the winter.

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    • hk says:

      I, like many fans on the Phillies blogs, including those among us who are harsh RAJ critics, liked the Rollins deal. In fact, it was one of the only, if not the only, deal that RAJ has signed in his tenure in which he let the market play itself out and used leverage to his advantage in getting the right price and the right number of years.

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      • Andrew says:

        David, did not mean you and I apologize about my imprecision. I was referring to some of my fellow commenters here who are knee jerk anti-Ruben in all cases because of some of his high profile mistakes. Keep up the good work, which I enjoy and do not find biased.

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    • SKob says:

      I was actually shocked he didn’t get a better offer on the open market when he was a free agent. It’s not like he signed a team friendly extension on purpose… he searched his ass off!

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      • vivalajeter says:

        To me, he seems like someone that would always get a worse contract than you’d expect based solely on his WAR. Last offseason, he was coming off of 3 seasons with an obp under .340 and 2 seasons with a slg under .400. A lot of his value comes from defense, baserunning and position scarcity. It doesn’t come from terrific offensive numbers, like you’d find with someone like Miguel Cabrera. Whenever I look at his numbers, then look at his WAR, it doesn’t really reconcile very well. Maybe GMs feel the same way.

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  5. Matt says:

    I came to fangraphs today specifically to look at Jimmy Rollin’s player page and voila, this article was here.

    If Jimmy puts up a couple more 3.5 – 4 WAR seasons, maybe a couple 2 WAR seasons as he fades into the twilight, is he a HOFer?

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    • Phrozen says:

      Real long shot, I think, but maybe.

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    • Jon says:

      I’ve been thinking about this a lot lately. When Rollins is done playing, he could possibly be among the top shortstops all-time in various categories. If he has three more moderately productive years and two more average years, he stands to finish in the:

      - Top 5 in HR
      - Top 10 in SB
      - Top 10 in 2B
      - Top 10 in 3B
      - Top 15 in RS
      - Top 20 in H

      Not to say that those stats necessarily indicate player value or all-time greatness, but it sure seems that the voters take those sorts of numbers into account.

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    • Oliver says:

      Most of his value is tied up in his (admittedly stellar) glove and his position (not to mention durability; he’s reached 600 PAs in every season but one since he was a rookie in 2001). His offense has been almost exactly average (101 career wRC+), and these are not the kinds of players who tend to get lots of HoF consideration. His best season wasn’t spectacular either. I’d say it’s super unlikely. If he has a couple more seasons like this with 20+ homers and good to great D, yeah he could have a shot, but I also really, /really/ don’t expect that.

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  6. Hurtlockertwo says:

    How on earth does .253/.315/ .437/ .752 100 (OPS+) get you a WAR of 4.6??
    Am I missing something here??

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  7. vivalajeter says:

    Dave,

    How do you get monthly WAR numbers? Do you calculate them yourself, or is there an online source for this?

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  8. Stringer Bell says:

    This made me look at the WAR leaders for SS, and holy shit is the UZR for Peralta inflated to insane levels. I wouldn’t even call him above average, let alone that good.

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    • Pinstripe Wizard says:

      He does usually catch everything within 3 feet of him. If it’s 4 feet away, Porcello just allowed another baserunner.

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  9. wes says:

    Two big problems with this article. First, without having some measure of average or median month to month variation among all players, or at least all starters, looking at one player’s performance doesn’t mean a whole lot. Second, this measure of variation is time-frame dependent. Different cut points–such as every 40 games or every 200 PAs–might tell a very different story. Finally, I find it funny that the author, on discovering that J Rollins is having a good year, responds by emphasizing the perceived inconsistency of that performance.

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  10. Pinstripe Wizard says:

    Rollins is probably the player I flip flop on the most. His defense and baserunning are superb, but he can be infuriating at the plate. He goes from being a Top 3 or 4 hitting middle infielder to looking like Dan Uggla at the plate far too often. At times, I think he’s a Top 5 shortstop in the game, and then for a couple of months, I’ll think he’s average at best. A lot of players are streaky, but very few of them have peaks as good as Rollins when they are going well.

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