That's a pretty contrived situation, especially since even scenario 2 likely results in at least a tie in the ninth. When the first guy in the eighth got on, a reliever should have been brought in. If your second best reliever gives up a double to the first batter he faces in the eighth, and it's indicative of the kind of pitcher he is, there is no post-season for your team. If Marmol can warm up more quickly than Wood, which I think is the case, that's the only reason you need to not have Marmol as the ninth inning "closer." It's a simple and unavoidable fact that, on average, a pre-9th inning "leverage" guy will pitch more crucial outs and innings than a pure closer (every 1-3 run lead, ninth-inning only). The perfect situation would be Marmol pitching both pre-9th inning key situations and nailing down 9th-inning, one-run leads. I'm kind of curious (and I'm not using this to argue against using the best reliever in a setup/fireman role, I agree with that thought) how often a closer faces each group of hitters. I keep seeing the "closer facing the 7-8-9 hitters" argument, but is that really any more likely than the closer facing the 1-2-3 or 3-4-5 hitters? Again, it makes no difference in my opinion, I still feel that the best reliever should be used in the most important role (i.e. fireman). I'm just curious.