Toolshed: Assessing Class A park factors
Started from the top, now we're here. Toolshed's series on park factors moves on to its final 2019 segment this week with the two Class A leagues, after covering Triple-A, Double-A and Class A Advanced. The Midwest and South Atlantic Leagues represent the first steps for many Minor Leaguers on
Started from the top, now we're here.
Toolshed's series on park factors moves on to its final 2019 segment this week with the two Class A leagues, after covering Triple-A, Double-A and Class A Advanced. The Midwest and South Atlantic Leagues represent the first steps for many Minor Leaguers on their journeys to navigating full-season ball for the first time, and unlike some of the higher circuits, they're pretty comparable to each other, if a little pitcher-friendly.
This is how both leagues measured up in 2019 with each league's rank among the 16 domestic Minor League loops in parentheses and the average of those 16 included at the bottom.
League | R/9 | HR/9 | H/9 |
---|---|---|---|
Midwest | 4.5 (10th) | 0.6 (11th) | 8.2 (12th) |
South Atlantic | 4.4 (11th) | 0.7 (ninth) | 8.1 (13th) |
Average | 4.8 | 0.8 | 8.5 |
Both leagues are just a smidge below the domestic Minor League average in all three categories and within 0.1 of each in the three as well. This isn't Triple-A, where offense mushroomed in 2019, or Class A Advanced with its polar differences in the California and Florida State Leagues. Class A is where hitters and pitchers alike can get a relatively fair shake.
Then again, "relatively" is an important word there. Because even though the Midwest and Sally Leagues are fair on the whole, individual parks differ between the hitter- and pitcher-friendly spectrums. Time to explore those spectrums with park factors. Each factor is put on a scale in which 100 is considered average. Anything above that favors hitters. Anything below makes the park more pitcher-friendly in that category.
Midwest League, 2019
Team | R | HR | H |
---|---|---|---|
Lansing | 126 | 105 | 113 |
Fort Wayne | 113 | 122 | 105 |
Bowling Green | 112 | 121 | 104 |
Lake County | 107 | 145 | 100 |
Peoria | 106 | 117 | 98 |
Clinton | 102 | 97 | 105 |
Beloit | 101 | 127 | 99 |
Quad Cities | 100 | 90 | 97 |
Kane County | 99 | 85 | 98 |
Wisconsin | 96 | 73 | 98 |
Dayton | 92 | 98 | 99 |
South Bend | 92 | 96 | 96 |
Cedar Rapids | 92 | 124 | 98 |
Burlington | 91 | 100 | 97 |
West Michigan | 90 | 53 | 100 |
Great Lakes | 85 | 76 | 92 |
Midwest League, 2017-19
Team | R | HR | H |
---|---|---|---|
Lansing | 113 | 100 | 109 |
Fort Wayne | 110 | 115 | 108 |
Burlington | 105 | 134 | 102 |
Cedar Rapids | 105 | 121 | 101 |
Kane County | 104 | 83 | 107 |
Lake County | 104 | 144 | 97 |
Beloit | 101 | 109 | 101 |
Wisconsin | 101 | 90 | 100 |
Bowling Green | 100 | 105 | 100 |
Dayton | 99 | 112 | 98 |
Quad Cities | 97 | 96 | 97 |
Clinton | 96 | 91 | 95 |
South Bend | 96 | 76 | 100 |
Peoria | 95 | 99 | 99 |
West Michigan | 92 | 54 | 99 |
Great Lakes | 88 | 86 | 92 |
The run and hit columns are close together within the 90-110 range. That is to say, few Midwest League parks are more than 12-13 percent hitter- or pitcher-friendly when it comes to runs and hits. That's a promising sight for the fairness of the league as a whole. In other words, there is no Lancaster's The Hangar here.
Clubs differ drastically in the home run column. Lake County's Classic Park is the best place to see dingers in the MWL with a home-run factor of 144 over the three-year span. In 2019 alone, 110 balls were sent out of the yard in Captains home games, compared to only 76 on the road. Cedar Rapids and Lansing -- 103 each -- were the only other MWL hosts with more than 100 long balls in their home games, and each of those squads had one more home game (70 vs. 69) than Lake County this past season.
At the other end, West Michigan's Fifth Third Ballpark is where homers have gone to die the past few seasons. There were only 49 dingers hit by either team in 70 Whitecaps games this season, 11 fewer than in home games for Kane County and Quad Cities -- their next-closest competitors with 60 long balls at home.
Overall, Great Lakes' Dow Diamond suppresses offense overall unlike any other park in the Midwest League, and Loons batters quite obviously suffered. As a club, Great Lakes led all Midwest League clubs with a collective .767 OPS in road games, and it wasn't close. Lansing was second at .704. However, the Loons only managed a .691 OPS at home. That's still a feat that they could rank eighth despite their home park factors, and the club finished first overall at .729. But it's more fun to imagine what numbers this collection of Dodgers' Class A prospects could have put up had they called somewhere a little more fair like Bowling Green or Peoria home instead.
Prospects affected
Bo Naylor: The 29th overall pick in the 2018 Draft moved to Class A to open his first full season and seemed to grow more comfortable as the season went on, finishing with a .243/.313/.421 line and 11 homers in 107 games. But there's no doubt the Indians' No. 5 prospect got a little bit of a boost playing for Lake County. The left-handed slugger belted seven of his 11 homers at home and finished with a .448 slugging percentage in 54 games there, compared to .396 on the road. Naylor's extra-base-hit output was relatively the same between the two scenarios -- 19 at home, 20 on the road -- but when he was able to punish the ball, it was much more likely to go beyond the fence in his own friendly confines. A move to Class A Advanced Lynchburg could see a reversal of fortunes in 2020.
Jacob Amaya: After the Great Lakes blurb above, some Dodgers farmhand had to appear here. The No. 13 Dodgers prospect is as good an example as any. Amaya led all Loons qualifiers and ranked eighth in the MWL with a .775 OPS over 103 games with Great Lakes, and he deserves bonus points for even reaching those heights. Amaya amassed only two taters and 14 total extra-base hits in 50 games at home and produced a .251/.374/.361 line in those scenarios. Compare to his .271/.387/.424 mark, four homers and 21 extra-base hits in 53 road contests. Amaya's strength -- at age 20 -- was his league-best 15.7 percent walk rate, but when he did make contact, he had a much better chance to put up numbers away from the Dow Diamond.
Wenceel Perez: Perez entered the season as the Tigers' No. 12 prospect, coming off two years in which he hit above .300 while showing plus speed and a slick glove at shortstop. In 2019, his stock slipped because a rough year with the bat. His .250/.312/.369 line and three homers in 62 games on the road didn't impress, but his home numbers -- .215/.286/.256, no homers in 62 games -- were even more rough. Even if Perez repeats Class A, he'll have West Michigan's cushy Fifth Third Ballpark waiting for him, and that won't be a welcome sight.
South Atlantic League, 2019
Team | R | HR | H |
---|---|---|---|
Asheville | 181 | 148 | 132 |
Hickory | 117 | 156 | 108 |
Rome | 110 | 75 | 103 |
Hagerstown | 107 | 111 | 105 |
Delmarva | 106 | 85 | 99 |
Greenville | 105 | 105 | 102 |
Augusta | 99 | 114 | 96 |
Lexington | 98 | 131 | 99 |
West Virginia | 97 | 119 | 94 |
Kannapolis | 95 | 83 | 98 |
Greensboro | 91 | 125 | 99 |
Charleston | 89 | 58 | 93 |
Columbia | 76 | 67 | 87 |
Lakewood | 75 | 47 | 90 |
South Atlantic League, 2017-19
Team | R | HR | H |
---|---|---|---|
Asheville | 131 | 128 | 116 |
Greenville | 109 | 122 | 105 |
Greensboro | 108 | 158 | 102 |
Rome | 107 | 56 | 102 |
Hickory | 106 | 146 | 105 |
Kannapolis | 105 | 83 | 100 |
Lexington | 105 | 139 | 101 |
Hagerstown | 102 | 100 | 102 |
West Virginia | 98 | 123 | 98 |
Charleston | 93 | 55 | 97 |
Delmarva | 92 | 75 | 96 |
Augusta '18/19 | 90 | 91 | 92 |
Columbia | 87 | 84 | 91 |
Lakewood | 80 | 63 | 92 |
Augusta '17 | 78 | 43 | 93 |
Before getting into other topics here, it's important to note the one Class A club to change stadiums within the three-year window. The Augusta GreenJackets said goodbye to Lake Olmstead Stadium after the 2017 season and opened up SRP Park for the 2018 campaign. As a result, the Giants' Class A affiliate went from the Sally League's most pitcher-friendly stadium to ... a slightly less pitcher-friendly stadium. SRP Park still stands below the Sally League averages, but it's a far cry from 2017, when only 37 homers were hit at Lake Olmstead Stadium compared to an incredible 91 in Augusta road games.
In terms of the other extremes, Asheville has long been held up as the bandbox of Class A, and the numbers tell no lies there. That was especially the case in 2019, when there were a combined 813 runs scored in the 70 games played in Asheville. The average of 5.81 runs scored per team per game was just below the average of 5.85 scored by Pacific Coast League teams. Essentially, Asheville's McCormick Field brought PCL baseball to the Class A level, at least in terms of offense. Even then, Greensboro, Hickory and Lexington had higher home-run factors over the long term than Asheville did, though none of the three touched the Tourists' home park in the three-year runs scored factor.
At the other end, hitters typically dread heading to Lakewood's FirstEnergy Park on the Jersey Shore, and that was no different in 2019. There were 458 runs scored in Lakewood home games -- 355 fewer than in Asheville games -- and the gulf in home dingers (47) from road dingers (106) was equally stark. One of those 47 long balls came from 2019 top overall pick
Prospects affected
Sam Dykstra is a reporter for MiLB.com. Follow and interact with him on Twitter, @SamDykstraMiLB.