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Pedro Martinez wonders if bad chemistry is the reason the Tigers and Mariners are out of contention

Boston Red Sox

CIRCA 1999: Pitcher Pedro Martinez of the Boston Red Sox in the dugout before play in 1999. (Photo by Al Messerschmidt/Getty Images)

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Pedro Martinez is whip smart when it comes to baseball, but we all have bad days I guess:

It’s disappointing to see talents like Cano, Verlander, Cabrera and know their teams are out of contention with such awesome players

— Pedro Martinez (@45PedroMartinez) August 28, 2015



You have to wonder what went wrong? To me, having such talent in a team and not making it, there’s must be something wrong about chemistry.

— Pedro Martinez (@45PedroMartinez) August 28, 2015


We’ve already talked a lot about team chemistry this week and it’s relative importance so I won’t rehash it all here. I will, however, default to Occam’s Razor and prefer the simplest explanation which explains a phenomenon over a more complex explanation. And in this case it goes like this:


  • Robinson Cano has been far below his usual level of production for most of the year, Seattle has one of the worst offenses in the AL and, unlike the past couple of years, now has the fourth worst pitching staff in the AL in 2015;
  • Justin Verlander was gone for the beginning of the season, sucked for a decent chunk in the middle and has only recently returned to form;
  • Miguel Cabrera missed a month and a half on the DL and, even when he was there and was awesome, was not, unfortunately, a member of the Tigers awful bullpen and could not start games in place of the back end of the Tigers rotation which, for most of the year, has been a tire fire.

I will also note that, during my visits to Comerica Park over the summer, I specifically asked Justin Verlander, Gene Lamont, Al Kaline and some other Tigers about their clubhouse culture and the like. All of them, particularly Verlander, talked about how great a clubhouse it is, how supportive the veterans are of the kids and how, even when they were losing like they were then and even when trade rumors were swirling, everyone kept an even keel. And it was born out in their behavior too. Guys joked and laughed and played video games together and all of that. If there are chemistry issues in Detroit, they’re really, really well-hidden.

Chemistry is a thing. I’ve never argued that it’s not. But it’s not a big enough thing to cover for the aforementioned issues with the Mariners and Tigers, and it’s certainly not as clearly explanatory as those things are.

Star players can carry a crappy basketball team. They can’t carry a baseball team. Especially when the star players themselves do not perform like stars.