Back to web version
Sleep preference can predict a pitcher’s performance
By PETE GRATHOFFThe Kansas City Star
Early to bed and early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy and wise.
What Benjamin Franklin neglected to mention was that early to bed and early to rise also means a pitcher will do well in day games.
In fact, a major-league pitcher’s natural sleep preference might affect how he performs in day and night games, according to a research abstract that was presented in June at the annual meeting of the Associated Professional Sleep Societies.
According to the abstract, results indicate that pitchers who were morning types performed statistically better overall than those who were evening types. In early games that started before 7 p.m., the earned run average of pitchers who were morning types (3.06) was lower than the average ERA of pitchers who were evening types (3.49); however, in games that started at 7 p.m. or later, pitchers who were evening types performed slightly better (4.07 ERA) than morning types (4.15 ERA).
Sleep preference was determined using a modified version of the Morningness-Eveningness Questionnaire (MEQ). It identifies a person’s tendency to be either a morning type who prefers to go to bed and wake up early, or an evening type who prefers to stay up late at night and wake up late in the day.
The study involved 18 pitchers from five major-league teams: the Los Angeles Dodgers, New York Mets, Philadelphia Phillies, San Francisco Giants and Tampa Bay Rays. Ten participants were found to be evening types, and eight were morning types.
“We were surprised to see that chronotype did affect pitching,” principal investigator and lead author W. Christopher Winter wrote in a news release. “We were also surprised to see that pitchers who were more ‘morning type’ seemed to do better overall.”
Individual pitchers showed a trend toward higher ERAs in the late games. Winter, who is the medical director of the Martha Jefferson Hospital Sleep Medicine Center in Charlottesville, Va., said this supports previous research showing that the peak performance time for most athletes is between mid-afternoon and early evening.
The study used the players’ statistics from the 2009 season, which provided about 728 early innings and 845 late innings for analysis. Game start times were adjusted for travel using the principle that for every time zone crossed, it takes 24 hours to adjust.
“These results are important as they are potentially giving insight into an entirely new way to grade or classify an athlete, in this specific case a pitcher,” Winter wrote. “This study may provide insight as to which pitchers would be best in a given situation based upon when the game is being played. For example, a critical game being played in the evening might be a better situation to pitch an evening-type pitcher versus a day-type pitcher.”