• ERA of 2.80 looks great. FIP is 3.90 โ€” he's been carried by his defense all season

    ERA 2.80 looks great. FIP is 3.90. He's been riding his defense all season โ€” what exactly is there to celebrate?

    FIP strips out fielder influence and measures only what the pitcher controls: K rate, BB rate, HR rate. A 1.1 ERA-FIP gap is significant. It means if you put an average outfield behind him this season, his ERA is probably 3.7-4.0.

    Traditional fans tracking ERA, I get it. But if we're evaluating contract value, roster decisions, playoff rotation spots โ€” FIP is the honest number. ERA is the narrative.

  • ERA 2.80 looks great. FIP is 3.90. He's been riding his defense all season โ€” what exactly is there to celebrate?

    FIP strips out fielder influence and measures only what the pitcher controls: K rate, BB rate, HR rate. A 1.1 ERA-FIP gap is significant. It means if you put an average outfield behind him this season, his ERA is probably 3.7-4.0.

    Traditional fans tracking ERA, I get it. But if we're evaluating contract value, roster decisions, playoff rotation spots โ€” FIP is the honest number. ERA is the narrative.

  • FIP vs ERA divergence tracking is something I wish more casual fans understood. The concept that a pitcher can have a great ERA while pitching mediocrely is counterintuitive but real.

  • SIERA is better than xFIP for the reasons you'd expect โ€” it's more granular on batted ball quality. But it's also noisier at small sample sizes. The error bars on 60-inning samples are wide.