Rockies Journal: By the numbers, from historically bad offense to promise in the bullpen

Rockies Journal: By the numbers, from historically bad offense to promise in the bullpen

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Around this time every year, I review the Rockies’ numbers, looking for statistics, rankings and trends. It paints a black-and-white picture of the just-completed season.

In the case of the 2024 Rockies, it wasn’t pretty.

A primary example: Colorado’s .242 average, .304 on-base percentage and .704 OPS were all the lowest in franchise history, while its 1,617 strikeouts were the most in club history. But then, you probably already knew that.

But perhaps you didn’t know that Colorado finished the season with a 50.9% swing percentage and a 31.8% chase percentage, both the second-highest marks in the majors behind Miami. In other words, the Rockies swung and whiffed a lot.

The apex of the Rockies’ futility occurred Sept. 3-7 when they struck out 75 times, the second-most strikeouts by a team over any five-game span in the modern era, trailing only the Brewers’ 77 K’s in 2017.

Socks blown off: Opposing hitters slashed .285/.354/.468 (.822 OPS) with 221 home runs against Colorado pitching this season, the highest mark in the majors in all of those categories. And Rockies pitchers allowed a 40.6% hard-hit percentage, the third-highest in the majors, and an 89.4 MPH average exit velocity, tied for the second-highest. They got the full Charlie Brown treatment.

Youth movement: The Rockies had 12 players age 24 or younger appear in a game, tied for the second-most in franchise history with the 2012 club, trailing only the ’16 Rockies (13 players). Four pitchers aged 23 or younger (Bradley Blalock, Angel Chivilli, Anthony Molina and Luis Peralta) took the mound, tied for the most in franchise history (also 2016). Only the Angels used more pitchers aged 23 or younger (five).

Bullish: It was a small sample size, to be sure, but six rookie relievers flashed promise, especially in the final weeks of the season. Jeff Criswell, Seth Halvorsen, Jaden Hill, Victor Vodnik, Peralta and Chivilli combined for a 3.84 ERA, 12 saves, and 8.59 strikeouts per nine innings over 143 appearances. It hints at better times in 2025.

High heat: Halvorsen threw a 102.5 mph fastball on Sept. 26 when he posted a save against the Cardinals in the Rockies’ 10-8 victory at Coors Field. It was the second-fastest pitch by a Rockie in the StatCast Era (since 2015), trailing only Julian Fernandez’s 102.8 mph heater in 2021. Halvorsen threw 47 total pitches of at least 100 mph over 12 games.

Power potential: Colorado launched 179 home runs, ranking 15th in the majors. And while the overall offense was bad, the Rockies flashed some power. Shortstop Ezequiel Tovar (team-high 26 homers), first baseman Michael Toglia (25) and center fielder Brenton Doyle (23) formed the only trio of teammates in the majors age 26 and under to record at least 23 home runs. The offense will improve significantly if Tovar (28.8%) and Toglia (32.1%) can whittle their high strikeout rates.

Budding star: Tovar, a Gold Glove finalist, added 45 doubles and four triples to his 26 dingers for a total of 75 extra-base hits, ranking second in the National League behind only Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani (99). Tovar’s 45 doubles led the NL and were tied for the 11th-most in a season in franchise history; the most since Matt Holliday mashed 50 doubles in 2007.



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