Sunday, December 31, 2006

Ringing in 2-007 with a vodka martini

With the holidays come and gone, there have been some major free agent signings that I haven't gotten a chance to touch upon. I've been enjoying time with my friends and family but now can wrap up the last transactions of the calendar year. Sorry for the delay, but bloggers have lives, too. Well, actually we don't, but . . . you know what I mean.

  • The biggest news, of course, is that prize left-hander Barry Zito signed a 7-year, $126 million deal with the Giants. The deal is the richest ever given a pitcher (AAV -- Average Annual Value -- of $18 million), and one of the longest, with only the 8-year deal given to Mike Hampton surpassing it.
    Where to begin? I guess a comparison to Hampton would be most apt. Not that the two situations are really similar -- Zito's going to the easy league and staying in a pitcher's park -- but let's remember the success rate of pitchers signed to contracts this long. It's Zito, Hampton, and Kevin Brown, and boy, that's not good company for young Barry. (I have to mention -- Zito's #1 similarity score through age 28 is none other than Hampton himself; take it for what it's worth).
    Remember that Kevin Brown looked like a safe 7-year investment at the time of the deal. Brown was a good deal older (33 when he signed; Zito is 28), but was also much better and much more reliable. Brown built up a reputation as a solid pitcher with Texas before becoming arguably baseball's best pitcher from 1995-1998, with ERA+ numbers of 136, 214, 150, and 160, consecutively. Brown signed the deal and gave the Dodgers two good years (1999 and 2000) before injuries turned him into Mr. Brittle. After 2000, Brown's seasonal IP were: 115.2, 63.2, 211, 132, 73.1. That 211 was a fine 2003 with the Dodgers that got him traded to the Yankees, where he reverted to form and finished his career in 2005.
    Although their styles of pitching aren't at all similar, and the five-year age difference is a huge difference, I think we can see Zito's deal working out in a similar fashion. Zito likely won't experience his deterioration as soon as Brown did -- the deal runs through his age 35 season -- the net effect may be similar: two good years and a lot of wasted money. Zito isn't remotely as good as Brown was at his peak, so even if he maintains his current value, he won't be worth $18 million a year. And no sane person would bet that much money for 7 years on something as unpredictable as a pitching arm.
    There are three main problems with this deal: 1) Zito isn't nearly as good as the Giants (and the press) think he is, and neither he -- nor any other pitcher -- is worth gambling $126 million on 7 years into the future; 2) Zito's 2006 performance is troubling, indicating a loss of stuff and with ill omens for the future, and 3) Zito's environment won't be as helpful in San Francisco.
    Point #1: Even if Zito maintains his current level of performance for seven years (something no one can safely predict), this deal won't be worth it. Zito is an above-average, durable pitcher who was really good for one season (2003), won a Cy Young Award he didn't deserve, and has been overrated ever since. None the less, he makes 34 starts a year and manages an above-average ERA (his ERA+ numbers since '03: 129, 105, 116, 116). His strikeout rate is above-average, but he also gives up a lot of walks and home runs (Zito has finished in the AL's top 5 in walks allowed every full season of his career but one). So the Giants are paying $18 million per year to an above-average innings-eater.
    This point was summed up well by Keith Law on ESPN Radio. He was asked if he'd ever looked at Zito and seen one of the five best pitchers in baseball. Law answered without hesitation, "No." I would add "absolutely not." He might have been back in 2003 when his fastball and curve were working so well, but not since and most likely not again. Why you would give the biggest contract in history to the tenth of twelfth best pitcher in the AL (and the second-best on your team, behind Matt Cain) is beyond me.
    Point #2: Zito's never really been the same since 2003, and it's not looking good. I'm not a scout (obviously), but most everything I've heard since then has been about the trouble he's had getting the curve over for strikes and the lost zip on his fastball. From what I've seen -- and admittedly I don't see the A's much -- that's pretty accurate. The scouting reports jibe with the numbers, which show that not only is Zito settling back into the "comfortably above-average pitcher," there are signs of trouble ahead. This may not mean serious trouble, but it would certainly make it unlikely that Zito's every going to break through and pitch like an ace again, even though he's sure as hell getting paid like one.
    Point #3: San Francisco isn't really the best setting for Zito. It's not that bad, certainly; it's big and roomy to suit Zito's fly-ball/walk tendencies, and it's in the weak league, which should give Zito a boost in ERA regardless of what he does. Many commentators point out that Zito will be pitching a lot not just in San Francisco, but in other roomy ballparks in Los Angeles and San Diego. That's true. He'll also be pitching a lot in Colorado and Arizona, where pitchers like Zito go to die. Let's not forget that.
    And, as many have pointed out, Zito will not have the benefit of a strong defense behind him, especially in the outfield. The A's have been one of baseball's best defensive teams in recent years, and this was never more true than in 2005, when they had Jay Payton, Mark Kotsay, and Milton Bradley covering ground for Zito. It's a long, long fall down to the level of Barry Bonds, Dave Roberts and Randy Winn. (Roberts isn't bad, but he's got a lot of room to cover.) He also won't have the benefit of Oakland's generous foul territory (a foul out in Oakland is an 8th-row souvenir and a do-over for the hitter in most ballparks).
    But this isn't just an odd fit for Zito, it's an odd choice for the Giants. The Giants, who have already leveraged big money on winning right away, can't really afford to stretch their payroll to the breaking point, and yet they've done exactly that. Zito is an improvement over the other guys in that he's about ten years younger and will be around for more than a year or two, but the benefit of a long contract is also a risk and a weakness; name one team that has ever looked back on a big, long-term deal with anything but regret about the last year or two (or four). You need look no further than Hampton and Brown, or most every other player given a contract in Zito's pay range. The only pitcher who's really justified such a blockbuster contract is Pedro Martinez.
    I'm not a political scientist, and I'm not a scout. But I know two things for damn sure: Dan Quayle is no Jack Kennedy, and Barry Zito is no Pedro Martinez.

    What's the bright side for the Giants? The "optimistic" view is that Zito will reverse his downward trend in peripherals and give the Giants solid work. Zito will certainly get a cosmetic boost from moving to the NL, and he could even manage a career year or two and contend for another Cy Young. He won't make the Giants contenders (at least, not by himself), and he won't push them to the World Series (neither Brown nor Hampton made it to the postseason until after they were traded away).
    But it's highly doubtful that Zito's couple of good years will outweight the other 5, especially as he reaches his mid-30's and the risk factor increases exponentially. The Giants have made a big mistake here, and this could prove to be the mortal one for Brian Sabean's career.
  • The other "big" pitcher left on the market, Jeff Suppan, signed a four year deal with the Brewers for $42 million. The deal is pretty much in line with what other pitchers have been making this offseason. While I don't think the deal is a big mistake, I have several reservations.
    The big thing that many commentators have pointed out is Suppan, who relies very heavily on his defense, is going to be very disappointed with the "D" in Milwaukee. Think of the confidence Suppan must have had to turn around and see an infield of Albert Pujols, Scott Rolen, and David Eckstein. What will he think when he takes a look at Prince Fielder's glovework at first? How will he adjust to the Merry Misadventures of Rickie Weeks at second? Corey Hart isn't bad, but he's not Scott Rolen; and if Bill Hall ends up at shortstop, God help us all. I saw one computation that had Suppan gaining a half-run of ERA simply due to more balls in play turning into hits. Suppan isn't a bad pitcher, and he's done quite well with the Cardinals, but I wonder if the Brewers know what he looks like in translation?
    All that said, I can understand why GM Doug Melvin made this deal. I think he's one of the most competent GMs in the game, and so I can give him the benefit of the doubt. He knows that pitching is his biggest weakness, especially if Ben Sheets is injured again. He's got a lot of major league-ready hitters, but no pitchers ready to step in and fill that #3 role. He sees that the NL Central is soft and weak, and he knows that a team with his payroll doesn't get a lot of chances like 2007. So I can certainly understand the logical reasoning behind this decision.
    I understand it, but I disagree with it. I think Melvin may have been too enamored of Suppan's Postseason Halo and not observant enough to see that his 4.12 ERA last year was an ensemble effort; remove the ensemble, and you're left with a 32-year-old low-strikeout pitcher with a 4.50 ERA. That's not bad, but it's not worth $13 million. Tomo Ohka may not be famous, but he's about 80% as valuable as Suppan at 25% of the price.
    The Suppan deal won't be the biggest disappointment of the offseason by a longshot. But it's a rare misstep for the Brewers, which is unfortunate. I have to admit; I'm kind of rooting for them to shock the world and win the division.
  • The Rangers and White Sox completed a semi-challenge trade last Saturday. The Sox sent erstwhile 5th starter Brandon McCarthy to Texas along with minor leaguer David Paisano in exchange for top pitching prospect John Danks and minor league pitchers Nick Masset and Jacob Rasner.
    I'm interested as to why the White Sox made this trade. McCarthy was penciled in as their #5 starter next season, but now that position will be filled by Gavin Floyd, Charlie Haeger, or perhaps even young Danks. McCarthy was a promising young pitcher whose only real achilles heel was home runs, and that's a problem in Chicago (it's also a problem in Texas, but there you go). After making room for McCarthy by trading Freddy Garcia, Chicago GM Kenny Williams has now traded McCarthy away as well. But the more I think about it, the harder it is to determine if the Sox made a good move. McCarthy wasn't the Sox' golden boy; their pitching staff will survive just fine without him. And John Danks is a good-looking young pitcher with a solid minor league track record; his ERAs haven't yet caught up to his strong peripherals, but he's also a 21-year-old at Triple A. He turns 22 in April with the potential to make the big leagues quickly. McCarthy is two years older than Danks, which is a pretty major distinction, especially since he's already spent time in the big leagues; the Sox control Danks for 6 major league seasons starting next year. Maybe that's the determining factor that would make the Sox get rid of a pitcher who could be better and more reliable than Danks. But that's debatable; Danks is good. I guess you could argue either way about which is the better pitcher short-term or long-term, but it seems to me that the White Sox gave up some short-term assurance for a riskier long-term prospect -- but one with (possibly) more potential. And since the Sox are just gambling with the #5 spot, it's not a big deal (at least for now).
    This is, essentially, a challenge trade, with Kenny Williams betting that Danks will mean more to the team than McCarthy. It also weighs toward the Sox in that they're also getting some good spare parts. Nick Masset will be 25 next year and made it all the way to the majors with Texas. There's not a whole lot to get excited about, but even if Masset is just a solid arm, hey -- those have value, too. Rasner is a starter that the Rangers took in the 7th round of the 2005 draft; an organizational soldier, if anything. Paisano, the Sox' other player involved, is also in the low minors. He's got some potential, but it's way in the future.
    As for the Rangers, I guess they feel the opposite; that they'd rather have the short term boost of Brandon McCarthy rather than gambling on Danks. To be fair, McCarthy does have a solid minor league track record and should have no trouble filling in as a #3 pitcher in the big leagues. He's young and healthy, too. The troubling thing for me is his tendency to give up fly balls. That won't do him any favors in Texas, although Chicago is a fair home run park in its own right. I've read a lot of commentary dismissing McCarthy's potential in Texas, but I think this is an overreaction; Texas really isn't much worse than Chicago when it comes to inflating offense, so it's not like McCarthy's pitching on the moon. And these were the same commentators who gave McCarthy high marks as a White Sox starter.
    So who won this deal? I really don't know. There's a lot we still don't know about Danks and McCarthy, and it's likely that the Rangers and Sox know more than I do. There are other factors involved in this as well, particularly concerning Barry Zito. The McCarthy trade was probably insurance in case the Rangers didn't sign Barry (and they didn't, as it turned out). Who knows? Right now, I'm inclined to favor Brandon McCarthy, but then I tend to favor the more proven commodity. Danks has the potential to surprise me and make this trade worthwhile. As it is, I think this is just one of those trades that you have to wait on, at least as far as I can see. I'd be interested to get a good scouting report on all the players involved to see if there's something I'm missing.
  • Reports came in today that the Orioles signed free agent Aubrey Huff to a 3-year, $20 million deal.
    Well, we can all debate as to whether or not Huff is worth that much money. I'm not sure, but I think he probably is for a team that really needs a corner infielder/outfielder swing man who hits lefty, especially if you're a contender with a hole to fill.
    For many teams, this signing would be perfectly reasonable. But for the Orioles, it's another in a long line of useless signings that is fast establishing them as one of the most inept franchises in the game.
    The biggest question I had was this: where the hell is Huff going to play? The press releases I found made no specific mention. I ask because there's no spot open in the lineup. First base is filled by free agent Kevin Millar (ugh), third base by incumbent Melvin Mora (look out below), left field by free agent Jay Payton (shall I pack your bats for the road trip, Mr. Payton, or just not bother?), right field by rookie sensation Nick Markakis (stud), and DH by incumbent Jay Gibbons (why overachieve when you can just settle for mediocrity?).
    Where does Huff fit in to this picture? He's not an untalented guy and could even be more useful than several of the guys slotted into the lineup. But unless the O's make a trade, they've just spent $20 million on a bench player.
    With most teams, I would take this signing as a pretty good sign that they're going to trade someone. Few teams intentionally overcrowd their lineup with expensive free agents. But you can never give the O's the benefit of the doubt when it comes to logic and good sense.
  • It's been a month since the J.D. Drew deal was announced and, unless I slept through the announcement, the deal still hasn't been finalized. I said before that I think the deal will get done, just because it's in everyone's best interests. But a month of silence can't be ignored.
  • The Marlins signed Aaron Boone to a one-year contract worth a little less than a million dollars. This isn't a bad deal for Florida; they could use some backup for Miguel Cabrera at third, and Boone has his uses as a bench player. His days as a starter are probably over, but he's worth a shot off the bench, especially at a rock-bottom salary.
  • The Reds traded for Jeff Conine from the Phillies. They didn't give up a lot to get him, mainly just spare parts, and will likely use Conine as Scott Hatteberg's platoon partner at first base. You could do worse than to have Jeff Conine on your team, but I'm still not sure the Reds are aware of what their real problems are.
  • The final numbers on Marcus Giles' deal with the Padres: one year, $3.25 million, with a club option worth $4 mil. for 2008. I'm still not sure what Schuerholz was thinking when he cut Giles, but he sure gave Kevin Towers one hell of a Christmas present.
  • Big, BIG news on the legal front: federal authorities have subpoenaed the test results from the MLB's confidential substance abuse tests of 2003.
    In 2003, as negotiated in the CBA, baseball initiated a confidential drug testing system to measure the use of steroids in baseball. Although positive tests were high enough to automatically trigger a full random drug-testing policy, they weren't nearly as high as the "25-50%" figures being bandied about in the news.
    The tests were done under the agreement that the results would be confidential; samples would not be linked to individual athletes and no disciplinary action would be taken (the Union, of course, insisted on these parameters).
    Enter the federal government.
    The feds recently raided the lab that held these old samples and also acquired the super-confidential coding system that connected the samples with the players. It seems that in their quest to mount a perjury case against Barry Bonds, they were looking for evidence of a positive steroid test (it's doubtful that the feds were targeting anyone else, except possibly Giambi and Sheffield). Although I don't see what good this raid would do for the government's case. If Bonds tested negative, that really hurts their case. And if he tested positive, so what? Bonds has already admitted to using PEDs, he just claims that he wasn't aware he was using them.
    At any rate, the player's union sued, claiming that the tests were confidential and the government's raid was an invasion of privacy. In a scary ruling, the courts decided against the union. Union head Don Fehr has promised to appeal the ruling, but right now it's very possible that the government can keep the samples and use them as evidence.
    This is a terrible blow for the Players' Union. With the players and the results now linked, the names of the positive tests will come out eventually, and that won't accomplish anything at all except to make a few dozen ballplayers' lives a living hell.
    And I can't help but feel that the Union itself is somewhat to blame. When the Union agreed to the confidential testing, they must have known (I hope) that Major League Baseball has, of course, no power to fight a federal subpoena. The feds could give a damn about a confidentiality agreement between the MLB and the MLBPA; in a criminal case, a subpoena trumps it all. Don Fehr must have known on some level that any assurances he got about confidentiality weren't backed up with any muscle. He should have known that he was about to agree to the systematic documentation of illegal activity among his union members, which would leave him totally vulnerable to federal subpoena, something Bud Selig has no power to control. Was Fehr really so unaware of this danger?
    Fehr's argument is on the basis of privilege and constitutional rights. That's difficult. He agreed to forfeit the consitutional rights of the players so that they could submit to the drug tests. That was fine. But letting other people read the results -- that's an invasion of privacy? The MLB has a right to your urine, but the federal government doesn't have the right to subpoena evidence of criminal activity? What logic is that?
    The more substantive argument is that since the feds seized the samples from a medical lab, they violated the players'/patients' right to medical privacy, i.e. "doctor-patient privilege." But this isn't really a case of a patient and doctor's privileged records. The feds aren't issuing subpoenas for Barry Bonds' latest medical checkup. The MLB and their contracted labs can hardly be granted the same privilege as a "doctor" who deals with the players as patients. Don Fehr disagrees; according to an AP report, Fehr said that if the ruling "is allowed to stand it will effectively repeal the Fourth Amendment for confidential electronic records."
    Strong words. But does the privilege really apply here? However useless the information might be to the feds, and however damaging it would be to the players, is there a legal basis for arguing that the raids violate the 4th Amendment? Hard to see. Among the things I'm not an expert on is constitutional law (most of my knowledge thereof was gleaned from AP US History class and Law & Order episodes). But is there precedent for the government getting subpoena power over employer/employee drug test results? With more and more companies testing employees for drugs, that must have gone before the courts by now. If the precedent was set that the government has no right to those records, then Fehr's case is solid. If the precedent is that an employer/employee confidentiality agreement is no match for a federal subpoena, then his case is toast.
    On a personal level, I consider myself to be a strong supporter of civil liberties. And I'm troubled by the invasive nature of drug testing. I certainly don't want my previous remarks to suggest that I want the government seizing these records. On the contrary. However, given the legal system as it is, there doesn't seem to be a strong legal argument to prevent them from doing so. It's a shame, but then welcome to post-9/11 life.
    And above all, I personally think that Don Fehr should have been ready for this.

We'll end today's entry with those strong words. We've covered a lot of topics, and somehow I've managed to tell everyone about all the things I'm not an expert in. That's not a good way to built a reputation for excellence, and they may revoke my claim to "whiz kid" status.
But that leads me to my next article: my New Year's resolutions (for baseball).

I'll see you then. Have a safe and happy New Year.

Saturday, December 30, 2006

Best Case/Worst Case

In the spirit of the new year, and having finished my "official" team-by-team outlook, I decided to lighten things up with a look at some possible headlines in the coming year. So let's go team-by-team and look at the "best case" and "worst case" scenario for 2007.


NATIONAL LEAGUE
Atlanta Braves
Best Case:
BRAVES WIN! ATLANTA FANS CAN NO LONGER COMPLAIN ABOUT WINNING 100 GAMES AND LOSING IN OCTOBER
Worst Case:
BRAVES FINISH 4TH! ATLANTA FANS WONDER WHY THEY USED TO COMPLAIN ABOUT WINNING 100 GAMES AND LOSING IN OCTOBER

Florida Marlins:
Best Case:
JEFFREY LORIA VISITED BY 3 SPIRITS; SIGNS CONTRACT EXTENSION WITH MIGUEL CABRERA AND BUYS TURKEY FOR CRATCHIT FAMILY
Worst Case:
JEFFREY LORIA THREATENS TO SELL OFF MORE PLAYERS UNLESS CITY GIVES HIM NEW STADIUM
and in other news . . .
JEFFREY LORIA THREATENS TO FORECLOSE ON THE ORPHANAGE UNLESS CITY GIVES HIM NEW STADIUM

New York Mets:
Best Case:
PEDRO'S RETURN SPARKS DRIVE TO WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP
Worst Case:
PEDRO ADMITS THAT OLD AGE "IS MY DADDY"

Philadelphia Phillies:
Best Case:
PAT BURRELL HITS 30 HOME RUNS; FANS BOO
Worst Case:
PAT BURRELL DONATES THE MONEY FOR LITTLE JIMMY'S LEG OPERATION; FANS BOO

Washington Nationals:
Best Case:
GM JIM BOWDEN GRANTED "MOST FAVORED FRANCHISE" TRADING STATUS WITH CINCINNATI
Worst Case:
SAMMY SOSA RETURNS, COMPLETES CRAPPY ROSTER

Chicago Cubs:
Best Case:
CUBS WIN WILD CARD THANKS TO MVP LEE AND CY YOUNG WINNER ZAMBRANO; GM HENDRY GIVEN CREDIT FOR SPENDING $300 MILLION ON A BUNCH OF OTHER GUYS
Worst Case:
CUBS LOSE; ANNOUNCERS FIRED

Cincinnati Reds:
Best Case:
GM WAYNE KRIVSKY INVENTS TIME MACHINE, REGAINS AUSTIN KEARNS AND FELIPE LOPEZ
Worst Case:
GM WAYNE KRIVSKY TRADES ADAM DUNN TO WASHINGTON FOR NOOK LOGAN, A TABLE LAMP, AND A PIECE OF TAPE

Houston Astros:
Best Case:
CLEMENS RETURNS TO LEAD ASTROS TO WILD CARD; CARLOS LEE MASTERS USE OF HIS GLOVE
Worst Case:
CLEMENS' RETURN POINTLESS; CARLOS LEE EATEN BY LEFT-FIELD WALL

Milwaukee Brewers:
Best Case:
BREWERS WIN WILD CARD! BUD SELIG FORCED TO STOP WHINING ABOUT SMALL-MARKET FRANCHISES
Worst Case:
BREWERS LOSE; SELIG RE-NAMES STADIUM "I TOLD YOU SO"

Pittsburgh Pirates:
Best Case:
"GM FOR A DAY" PROMOTION A SUCCESS, OWNERS MAKE IT PERMANENT
Worst Case:
STEELERS FAN UNCOVERS EVIDENCE OF OTHER PROFESSIONAL SPORTS IN CITY; EXPERTS SKEPTICAL

St. Louis Cardinals:
Best Case:
CARDS REPEAT! PUJOLS: 'TWICE IS NICE!'
Worst Case:
CARDS LOSE! PUJOLS: 'WE'RE ALL THE SUCK WITH NONE OF THE LUCK'

Arizona Diamondbacks:
Best Case:
ROOKIE SENSATIONS STEER 'BACKS TO DIVISION TITLE
Worst Case:
ARIZONA FARM SYSTEM PLAGUED BY LOCUSTS

Colorado Rockies:
Best Case:
COLORADO PLAYERS SWEAR OFF DEER-HUNTING, WIN WILD CARD
Worst Case:
ROOKIES TULOWITZKI, CLOSSER INJURED IN SQUID-MEAT TRAGEDY

Los Angeles Dodgers:
Best Case:
GM COLLETTI REDISCOVERS OWN FARM SYSTEM; REPORTS OF A HAUNTING BY THE GHOST OF BRANCH RICKEY ARE UNFOUNDED
Worst Case:
NOMAR, GONZO, PIERRE STUMBLE; BORED ROOKIES PLAY SUDOKU ON THE BENCH

San Diego Padres:
Best Case:
DAVID WELLS COMES OUT OF RETIREMENT
Worst Case:
DAVID WELLS COMES OUT OF RETIREMENT

San Francisco Giants:
Best Case:
GIANTS GET YOUNGER; MTV ALWAYS ON IN THE CLUBHOUSE
Worst Case:
GIANTS GET OLDER; MURDER, SHE WROTE ALWAYS ON IN THE CLUBHOUSE

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Baltimore Orioles:
Best Case:
OWNER ANGELOS SELLS TEAM; BUYER UNKNOWN, IRRELEVANT
Worst Case:
FANS ORGANIZE PROTEST AS ORIOLES LOSE; ANGELOS RAISES TICKET PRICES OUT OF SPITE

Boston Red Sox:
Best Case:
ACE PITCHING PROPELS SOX OVER YANKS; MATSUZAKA RUNS FOR MAYOR
Worst Case:
PITCHING STUMBLES AS SOX FALL TO YANKS; MATSUZAKA RUNS FOR HIS LIFE

New York Yankees:
Best Case:
YANKS BEAT MARLINS IN SERIES; STEINBRENNER REQUESTS 'DAVID & GOLIATH' STORY STRICKEN FROM THE BIBLE
Worst Case:
METS BEAT YANKS IN SERIES; STEINBRENNER REQUESTS 'THOU SHALT NOT KILL' STRICKEN FROM THE BIBLE

Tampa Bay Devil Rays:
Best Case:
DEVIL RAYS WIN FRANCHISE-RECORD 80TH GAME AS THOUSANDS CHEER
Worst Case:
DEVIL RAYS WIN FRANCHISE-RECORD 80TH GAME AS DOZENS CHEER

Toronto Blue Jays:
Best Case:
JAYS WIN DIVISION; RICCARDI CALLED 'GENIUS' BY FANS
Worst Case:
JAYS FINISH 3RD; RICCIARD CALLED 'SMARMY LITTLE *$%#!' BY FANS

Chicago White Sox:
Best Case:
SOX WIN; FANS OVERTURN CARS AFTER GAME
Worst Case:
SOX LOSE; MANAGER GUILLEN OVERTURNS CARS AFTER GAME

Cleveland Indians:
Best Case:
INDIANS CONQUER UNCANNY BAD LUCK AND WIN THE DIVISION
Worst Case:
INDIAN SIZEMORE PLAGUED BY BLACK CAT; STEPS ON CRACK, MOTHER HOSPITALIZED

Detroit Tigers:
Best Case:
PITCHER ROGERS WINS ERA TITLE; CLAIMS BROWN SPOT ON HAND IS 'JUST A BIRTHMARK'
Worst Case:
PITCHER ROGERS SIGNS ENDORSEMENT DEAL WITH IVORY SOAP, LOSES TEN STRAIGHT

Kansas City Royals:
Best Case:
ROYALS FINISH ABOVE .500; HALL-OF-FAMER BRETT 'PROUD TO BE A ROYAL AGAIN'
Worst Case:
ROYALS FINISH LAST; FORMER ROYAL BRETT CLAIMS TO HAVE BEEN A MARINER

Minnesota Twins:
Best Case:
TWINS REPEAT AS DIVISION CHAMPS DESPITE LOW PAYROLL
Worst Case:
GM TERRY RYAN FORCED TO TRADE FOR EXPENSIVE ALL-STAR, GETS FIRED

Los Angeles Angels:
Best Case:
ANGELS LOSE IN APPEAL; TEAM NAME CAN BE NO LONGER THAN 4 WORDS
Worst Case:
LOS ANGELES ANGELS OF ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, USA ON THE CONTINENT OF NORTH AMERICA IN THE WESTERN HEMISPHERE OF THE PLANET EARTH IN THE MILKY WAY GALAXY GO BANKRUPT PAYING FOR NEW BUSINESS CARDS

Oakland Athletics:
Best Case:
WORLD SERIES VICTORY SHOWS BILLY BEANE'S EFFECTIVE NEW METHOD
Worst Case:
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER SHOWS BILLY BEANE'S EFFECTIVE NEW METHOD

Seattle Mariners:
Best Case:
GM BAVASI TRADES FOR LAST YEAR'S MOST VALUABLE PLAYER
Worst Case:
GM BAVASI TRADES FOR LAST YEAR'S LEAST VALUABLE PLAYER

Texas Rangers:
Best Case:
RANGERS WIN DIVISION, EVOKE MEMORIES OF 1996 SQUAD
Worst Case:
RANGERS FINISH LAST, EVOKE MEMORIES OF 1985 SQUAD


Happy New Year.

Sunday, December 24, 2006

Looking Ahead: Texas Rangers

2006 W-L Record: 80-82
2006 pW-pL Record: 86-76
Runs Scored: 835 (4th in AL)
Runs Allowed: 784 (8th in AL)
Free Agents: Rod Barajas, Mark DeRosa, Adam Eaton, Jerry Hairston, Jr., Carlos Lee, Gary Matthews, Jr., Kip Wells

2007 Projected Lineup:
1B -- Mark Teixeira
2B -- Ian Kinsler
SS -- Michael Young
3B -- Hank Blalock
LF -- Frank Catalanotto/Brad Wilkerson
CF -- Kenny Lofton
RF -- Nelson Cruz
C -- Gerald Laird?
DH -- Jason Botts?

2007 Proj. Rotation:
Kevin Millwood
Vicente Padilla
Brandon McCarthy
Robinson Tejeda
Edinson Volquez/Kameron Loe

2007 Proj. Closer: Eric Gagne

Offense/Defense:
The Ranger offense appears to be in fine shape. The 2006 club wasn't quite as potent as anticipated, but in some ways they compensated. Where Mark Teixeira and Brad Wilkerson slumped, Gary Matthews and Mark DeRosa had unlikely career years. Adam Eaton got injured, but Vicente Padilla stayed healthy. The team traded for Carlos Lee and didn't even have to give up much to get him. That looks like a lot of turnover among their free agents, but the core group of contributors is still there. The Rangers appear to have a potent lineup, and although the outfield could use some juice, they'll probably be just fine.
The Texas infield returns intact from 2006. First baseman Mark Teixeira had a bit of an off year in '06 (282/371/514 is an off year for him), but should make a strong return in 2007. Second baseman Ian Kinsler is what the Rangers expected; a thoroughly capable hitter (286/347/454) and defender (-3 FRAA) who should man the position for the near future.
At shortstop, the Rangers have Michael Young. Young has always hit well for the position, and 2006 was no exception (314/356/459). But in the past, Young was a defensive liability. A former second baseman, Young shifted to shortstop when Alfonso Soriano came to town. That gave the Rangers arguably the worst middle infield in baseball. Young wasn't a bad second baseman, but at shorstop, he was agonizing. He was among the league's worst from 2003-2005, posting an FRAA of -16, -14 and -14 in those years.
But last year, Young's FRAA flipped to a Gold Glove-caliber +20. This was no illusion. Although the change doesn't appear as dramatic, other metrics have Young making a sizable improvement defensively. Win Shares has him improving from 4.3 fielding WS in '05 to 7.7 last year, a whole win unto himself. It's really hard to say what's actually going on here. It's unlikely that Young made a sudden improvement in defense at age 29, and even if he was that good in 2006, it's tough to predict what will happen in 2007. With defense, it's difficult to separate the underlying reality from the system of measurement. Part of this improvement could be due to the subtraction of the woeful Soriano to his left (defense does have an interdependent quality). But if pressed, I'd say that Young is more likely to be a below-average infielder next year. It's hard to imagine that he just suddenly got a lot better, although his case is eerily similar to that of Derek Jeter, who did maintain his defensive improvement.
At third base, the Rangers have the only real disappointment in the entire infield. It's sad, too, because he was supposed to be a rising star. None the less, Hank Blalock's career has hit the skids, and it's hard to see why. With almost no change in playing time, Blalock's power, patience, and batting average have all dropped from the high levels of performance he set in 2003 and 2004. Last year, Blalock hit 266/325/401, below-average for a player in Texas' offensive haven. This was a step down from 2005 (263/318/431), which was a step down from 2004 (276/355/500). Blalock's power has been cut nearly in half; in 2004 he had 73 extra-base hits, but he fell to just 45 last year. It's highly unusual for such an all-around wonder to succeed so well at such a young age (Blalock hit the game-winning homer in the 2003 All-Star Game at age 23) and then suffer a plunge in quality for no apparent reason. It seems like Blalock should bounce back eventually, but it's not looking good. Blalock may, unfortunately, share a page in the history books with contemporary Sean Burroughs as unexpected failures.
The Ranger outfield has been their weakness for years, as they've failed to find good hitters, especially in the outfield corners. And while the 2007 squad isn't that scary, it does have the potential for improvement. Time in left field will likely be shared between Frank Catalanotto and Brad Wilkerson. That would make for a fine platoon if both men weren't lefties. Catalanotto has had good success in Toronto as a platoon player, hitting 300/376/439 last season. But his success was mainly due to a platoon; 91% of his at-bats were against righties, and he hit just 237/348/342 when he did face lefties.
One possible solution would be to combine Catalanotto with Nelson Cruz. The Rangers seem determined to give the 27-year-old Cruz a spot in the starting lineup, but Catalanotto's need for a platoon mate could override that commitment. Plus, the Rangers have the advantage of redundancy in the outfield; even if you combine Cruz/Catalanotto in left, you can put Wilkerson in right and have Jason Botts as your full-time DH. Wilkerson had the worst year of his career struggling through injuries in 2006 (222/306/422), but the 252/358/448 lifetime hitter should be able to bounce back with solid offensive production to g0 with his defensive versatility.
Botts, who will get at least some playing time at DH, is a product of the Texas farm system. He's the classic big ol' sugger, with lots of power and lots of strikeouts. But Botts has already shown good plate discipline and has nothing left to prove in the minors (2006 in Triple-A: 309/398/582). His defense will limit him to DH, but he should hit well enough to hold down the position, even if only part-time.
In center field, the Rangers signed Kenny Lofton to a one-year contract. Lofton isn't going to give you a lot, but he does provide defense and solid offense from the position and is a far better investment than outgoing CF Gary Matthews, Jr. Plus, Lofton's 1-year agreement leaves the Rangers free to pursue one of the big-name center fielders coming on the market in the 2007 offseason (Andruw Jones, anyone?).
Behind the plate, the Rangers will replace the overrated Rod Barajas with Gerald Laird. Laird isn't much of a hitter (although he hit 296/332/473 in '06), but is a good defender and a good placeholder until hot prospect Taylor Teagarden is ready (around 2008-9).

There isn't the star power here that we associate with the Texas offense, and their friendly home park probably makes them look better than they are. But they're well-set with at least adequate production at every position and decent depth as well. If they can get pitching support, they could be considered a dark horse candidate for the postseason.

Pitching:
Of course, we've been saying that for years. The Rangers haven't had a really good pitching staff in over 20 years. In fact, the Rangers are rarely even above-average. In 1983, the Rangers posted an ERA+ of 122, the best in the league. Since then, they've only topped 102 four times in 23 years. The Rangers have only been strongly above-average 4 times since 1983, and they haven't been excellent since (their highest ERA+ since was 111 in 2004). It becomes very dull and repetitive to say that the Rangers need pitching every offseason, but it's still as true as it ever was. The Texas pitching staff was adequate in 2006 (ERA+ of 102), but with a poor defense and a lineup that's merely good, it will take a lot more than that to solve things.
Making matters worse, the Rangers' efforts to solve their pitching problems since '83 have led to catastrophe more often than not. The most notable example is the 5-year contract handed out to Chan Ho Park in 2000, one of the worst free agent deals ever. While the Rangers haven't repeated the Park fiasco since, they've committed a lot of money to pitchers that just aren't worth it.
The Rangers are paying Kevin Millwood Park-esque money; he's entering the second year of a 5-year, $60 million deal. Of course, Millwood is a better (and more proven) pitcher than Park, and what with inflation and all, the deal isn't that bad. But it's a backloaded deal, meaning that Millwood will earn $11 million in 2009 (at age 34) and $12 million in 2010 (if his option vests).
It must be said that the Millwood deal looks a lot better in light of what's happened this past offseason. But for their troubles, the Rangers did not get an ace (as they were hoping); they got an above-average pitcher whose durability is questionable. Millwood's ERA in 2006 was 4.52, although considering his ballpark, he did pitch fairly well (ERA+ of 102). His peripheral stats were basically unchanged from his 2005 season (2.86 ERA, ERA+ of 143). This could mean that Millwood was unlucky in 2006, or that he was lucky in 2005. Probably both.
The Millwood deal won't kill the Rangers, but it should be said that they're counting on him to be something that he's not: a #1 starter. Only with the salary inflation of the past few months does this deal look acceptable.
Much less acceptable is the deal given to Vicente Padilla. The Rangers traded for Padilla before 2006 and saw him put up a 4.50 ERA. He has similar peripherals as Millwood, except that his BB rate is much higher and his K rate is slightly higher. What Padilla doesn't have, however, is any sort of reputation for reliability. I discussed Padilla's deal when it went down, and my reaction is still that he's not reliable enough to pay $11 million a year. It's true that the contract is one of the more reasonable of those given out to free agent pitchers this offseason, but I'm still skeptical. The only extenuating circumstance here is the Rangers' desperation for starting pitchers -- even those who are just decent. And that desperation is the result of their own negligence.
The Rangers have Brandon McCarthy pencilled in as their #3. I'll be discussing the McCarthy deal in more detail later, but in short he's a big boost to their rotation. They may have given up too much to get him, but McCarthy's advantage is that he's already established himself at the big-league level. The trouble here is fly balls; McCarthy gives up a lot of them, and Texas isn't the place for that.
It will be the same bunch of shmoes filling out the back end of the rotation, with the possible exception of young Edinson Volquez. Volquez is one of the Rangers' top pitching prospects (yes, they do have some), and the closest to contributing at the big-league level. He threw 33.1 innings with the big club in 2006, but those are best forgotten (7.29 ERA, 17:15 BB:K ratio). Volquez does have a bright future, but he also has a troubling increase in walk rate to explain. Even at Triple-A last year, he was walking a lot of hitters (72 in 120.2 IP). This set a new career high for him by a mile; his combined 89 walks in 154 IP last year were far more than his previous career high of 41, set in 127.1 IP in 2004. The result could be that he begins that season in Triple-A.
If Volquez doesn't make the rotation, it will likely be the unimpressive if adequate combination of Robinson Tejeda and Kameron Loe filling things out.

In the bullpen, the Rangers made a big splash by signing Eric Gagne to a 1-year contract. This is a big risk, but it's a relatively cheap one and one that could pay off well. It's odd, though, that the Rangers got Gagne when they already had a closer in Akinori Otsuka. Otsuka is a bit old (35 next year), but is reliable and did quite well in his first season in Texas last year (2.11 ERA, 11:47 BB:K ratio). It's not that Gagne isn't a risk worth taking, it's just that it seems to me that the Rangers could have put that money to use elsewhere. And there is the very real possibility that Gagne will get re-injured, or that he just won't pitch nearly as well as he used to.
One benefit of the Gagne signing is that it gives the bullpen more depth, with Otsuka moving to a setup role. The Rangers should be able to fill out a competent group behind them, with returning favorites Ron Mahay and Rick Bauer along with some of their rising young pitching talent.

In the end, though, there's very little chance that the Texas pitching staff will be much better than it was last year. They added some upside with the acquisition of McCarthy and Gagne, as well as the continuing development of their prospects, but the realistic expectation just isn't much more than average to above-average -- the same as always.

Offseason Game Plan:
Now that I've finished my "Looking Ahead" series, the offseason is virtually over. I did not anticipate this, as there are usually a few big names stuck around after the New Year. But for whatever reason, everything happened really fast this year. Barry Zito (Giants) and Jeff Suppan (Brewers) are gone, and now the biggest names left out there are guys like Mark Mulder, Cliff Floyd, and Eddie Guardado.
So there's not much that the Rangers can do. The good thing is that there's not much they should do. The Rangers are basically stuck with what they've got, and unless they can find a good deal for Hank Blalock, this is what they're going to be taking into 2007.
There's a lot of encouragement to be found in the Rangers' Pythagorean W-L record of 86-76 last year. This suggests that the team already was above-average, and just needs to take a small step forward to enter the land of 90 wins, and thus contention. However, I'm pessimistic that the Rangers were really that good in 2006, and I'm also fairly pessimistic about how much they've really improved for 2007. The Rangers should be considered as an outside shot for the postseason -- if everyone hits like they should and the rotation stays healthy, it's not unreasonable to see them winning 90 games -- but it's highly unlikely that the Rangers can pass all of the other AL teams that are hovering around the 90-win mark.
Only four AL teams can make the postseason, and right now I'd say that the Yankees, Red Sox, Blue Jays, Indians, White Sox, Twins, Tigers, Angels, and A's are better teams than the Rangers. It's important to remember that; the Rangers are about the 10th-best team in the AL. Even if they shock everyone and pass three or four of the teams on this list, that means that they're going to be watching the postseason on TV once again.
There is hope for Texas; they have young pitching prospects, a core of offensive talent, and the money to buy more offense. But it's a very tall order to expect them to be contenders as soon as next year.

Saturday, December 23, 2006

Looking Ahead: Seattle Mariners

2006 W-L Record: 78-84
2006 pW-pL Record: 78-84
Runs Scored: 756 (13th in AL)
Runs Allowed: 792 (9th in AL)

Free Agents: Carl Everett, Gil Meche, Eduardo Perez, Joel Pineiro

2007 Projected Lineup:
1B -- Richie Sexson
2B -- Jose Lopez
SS -- Yuniesky Betancourt
3B -- Adrian Beltre
LF -- Raul Ibanez
CF -- Ichiro Suzuki
RF -- Jose Guillen
C -- Kenji Johjima
DH -- Jose Vidro?

2007 Proj. Rotation:
Felix Hernandez
Miguel Batista
Jarrod Washburn
Horacio Ramirez
Jake Woods?

2007 Proj. Closer: J.J. Putz

Offense/Defense:
Well, it's no secret that the Mariners need some work. They especially need someone to goose their offense or something; even considering their park, they aren't scoring runs and don't look to be scoring many more in the near future. Compound that with a front office who's made a name for itself this offseason by making really bad trades, and I don't think there's any reasonable way to see the M's as contenders in 2007.
It's always tough to recover from a 99-loss season, but it's even tougher when Plan A pretty much turns out to be a failure. The M's tried to aggressively improve their team by paying out big money to Richie Sexson and Adrian Beltre. With those two in the lineup, the Mariners managed to score exactly 1 run more in 2005 than they did in '04. The improvement to a 69-93 record was due mainly to the relative improvement in the pitching staff.
But we'll get to that later. The M's are stuck with the Beltre and Sexson contracts, although neither look quite as bad as they did at the time. Seattle made the same mistake many teams are making, in that they were paying a player to match their peak performance on a yearly basis. That just doesn't happen. And while Beltre and Sexson are both good enough, neither one has been enough to lift the Seattle lineup out of the doldrums. This is an object lesson for teams looking to improve a really bad team through one or two big splashy signings.
In between these decent but expensive corner infielders, the M's are playing a punchless pair of glovemen. Yuniesky Betancourt, the shortstop, had the reputation as a good-glove/no-hit type and pretty much lived up to the hype (289/310/403). Even worse, Betancourt's glove wasn't as good as expected. FRAA rates him at an ugly -13 FRAA. Other metrics aren't as negative; his 5.4 fielding Win Shares were 6th in the AL. Either way, it's pretty clear that young Betancourt has to carry a Gold Glove if he wants to keep the starting job.
Jose Lopez has more promise with the bat than Betancourt, although it should be noted that he's never really produced at the major league level (career 265/300/392) and has never been able to bring his bat with him from Tacoma. He's still young yet, so the M's shouldn't be in any hurry to get rid of him.
Unfortunately, his defense may force the issue. Lopez has never been great with the glove, but his -18 FRAA in 2006 made him an utter liability. And unlike Betancourt, this may not be a mirage; Lopez doesn't have Betancourt's pedigree with the glove, and the other defensive metrics seem to support the idea that he's not that good (his 2.8 defensive Win Shares rank 11th among AL second basemen). Lopez is the kind of guy who would be tolerable if you were getting your production elsewhere, but he could get pushed by the middle-infield prospects in the system, especially if the team can't get a good upgrade anywhere else in the infield.
The outfield situation is a lot less depressing, but still troublesome. The only sure thing is Ichiro. Ichiro was most closer to form in 2006, hitting 322/370/416 with such strong defense that he was shifted to center field to replace Jeremy Reed, another disappointing prospect (doesn't that sound familiar?). I'm not really sure how the shift to center will affect Ichiro's defense, but it will make his offense more valuable. And besides, this team has a whole lot to worry about besides Ichiro -- well, except for his impending free agency (after 2007).
We're likely to see Raul Ibanez manning left field, which isn't phenomenal news, but it's good for this team. Ibanez is still productive (289/353/516) and reasonably priced, at that. The M's could use a few more of those.
In right field, the M's took a gamble and acquired Jose Guillen. Guillen has often been compared this offseason to Carl Everett, the team's abortive DH solution from last year. But I'm more optimistic about him than some. He does have the attitude, yes, but he's also younger than he seems (31 next year) and still has the chance to be productive. His 2006 was a loss, yes, but he hit well in cavernous RFK Stadium in 2005 (283/338/479). And even if some of that is lost in translation, the M's are only committing $5.5 million to him, with a mutual option for 2008. So even if Guillen fails, the M's won't be in too much trouble; they can shift Ichiro back and go with Reed in center or promote Jones from the minors.
The other productive/cost-effective player in the lineup is catcher Kenji Johjima. Johjima profiled as an above-average hitter, and that turned out to be accurate (291/332/451). Concerns about his defense were apparently ill-considered. The ascension of catching prospect Jeff Clement could create some conflict here, but having too many catchers is a good problem, and the M's haven't had too many of those lately.
The M's were looking for an upgrade to DH Ben Broussard. But somewhere along the line . . . I don't know, I guess the "up" part was lost in translation, and the Mariners eventually made a strong downgrade by trading away relatively valauble prospects Chris Snelling and Emiliano Fruto for Washington's Jose Vidro.
I spoke about the Vidro trade recently, so you can visit the link to get my reaction. Suffice to say, the Mariners don't need to be paying old guys to clog up a lineup that's already proven to be pretty inadequate.

And that's about it. The Mariners had the second-worst offense in the AL last year, and I can't find any evidence that they're about to improve by any significant amount. They've already got plenty of money committed to Ichiro, Beltre, and Sexson. They've got some productive guys that are relatively cheap, such as Johjima and Ibanez. And they've got some unproductive guys who are relatively cheap (Vidro). Most of their young hitters are either a year or two away from making a big impact or have such a low ceiling that it's not worth getting too excited.
Example: Baseball America recently rated the Top 10 Prospects in the Seattle system. Most of them are pitchers, and most of them are in the low minors.
The only real hopes for 2007 are #1 Adam Jones and #2 Jeff Clement. Both have made it to the major leagues, but both appear as though they need more minor league seasoning. Jones could easily come up if Jose Guillen explodes, but with the acquisition of Kenji Johjima, there's no pressing need for Clement, a catcher.
For a franchise in such desperate straits, you need better production from your farm system, so that there is no pressing need to spend money on free agents. But the M's farm system has fallen on hard times in recent years, with the long line of injured pitching prospects especially ugly. There's not a lot of help coming up from below, and there's not a lot of help available from the free agent market. Unless the Mariners get really lucky in one of those two areas, they're not going to threaten the Angels or Athletics anytime soon.

Pitching:
It would be nice if I could turn around and make glowing comments about the Mariners' pitching staff. After all, neither Oakland nor the Angels are a whole lot better offensively; they may have much better upside, but the A's only outscored Seattle by 15 runs last year; the Angels by only 10.
But while both of those teams have a fine pitching staff to back them up, the Mariners have squat. There is some room for optimism, and it's very possible that they can improve over 2006. But there's just not enough here to compensate for the lineup.
The M's should be able to count on better production from ace Felix Hernandez. We all got a bit ahead of ourselves with the whole "King Felix" coronation and forgot that it's not that easy with a 20-year-old kid. But the good news is that Felix's peripherals were still strong in '06. His 4.52 ERA just doesn't jibe with his 60:176 BB:K ratio and 23 HR allowed in 191 IP. Felix Hernandez circa 2005 is still there, but we're going to have be a bit more patient before engraving his Cooperstown plaque.
The M's did make one move this offseason that should somewhat help the team. They overpaid to get Miguel Batista, but never the less, they're getting a pretty reliable LAIM. His BB:K ratio is troubling, but then it's always been that way. Seattle shouldn't expect a strong #2 in Batista, but if they're just hoping for a solid innings-eater at the back of the rotation, then they've got their man.
The trouble is that there are no good arms to support King Felix. Batista is a slightly overpaid LAIM, and Jarrod Washburn is an even more-overpaid one (2006: 4.67 ERA, 55:103 BB:K). Both men are capable of a surprise year where they pitch like a #2, but that's wishcasting; the more realistic scenario sees them both as supporting actors.
The M's don't have a lot to back these guys up. The most likely candidates are Horacio Ramirez (acquired in another bad trade), Jake Woods, Cha-Seung Baek, and Ryan Feierabend. None of them have much breakout potential, leaving the M's in bad shape if their 1-2-3 starters don't work like clockwork.
It should be noted that the M's have been rumored to be in the Barry Zito hunt. It doesn't seem likely that Zito will land in Seattle, which is probably best for the M's. They don't need to pay any more superstar salaries to non-superstars. If they were right on the cusp of contending, maybe; but they sure as hell aren't.

The bullpen was seriously weakened by the loss of Rafael Soriano (for Horacio f'n Ramirez?!), but the M's do still have J.J. Putz to close. Putz seems a lot younger than he really is. He'll be 30 years old next year despite only pitching three full seasons in the majors. But they were good seasons. His 2006 campaign established him as one of the best closers in the league. Putz managed a 13:104 BB:K ratio and a 2.30 ERA, saving 36 games for the M's. Both the ERA and the K rate are way out of line with his previous major league production. Putz certainly has the stuff of a dominant closer, but we should be suspicious that his 2006 results were such an aberration.
Soriano would have been a great setup man/insurance policy, but apparently the Mariners decided they'd rather have a bad starter with a history of injuries. And now that Soriano's gone, there aren't many sure things in the Seattle 'pen. Young Mark Lowe had a good debut in the majors last season and should have a bigger role in '07. Young Jon Huber seems to have taken well to his conversion to relief, and while he doesn't have a high ceiling, he could be useful. Julio "Mr. Flyball" Mateo will return in '07, as will George Sherrill and Jake Woods (if he's not a starter). This isn't a bad group of guys, but neither is it in any way intimidating.

The addition of Washburn and now Batista to the pitching staff has added a lot of salary without adding a whole lot of upside. Both pitchers would be great guys to supplement a good group of young starters, but they're miscast as #2 guys, and they're especially overpaid for a team with little hope of making the postseason. Add to that the loss of prospects in Mr. Bavasi's December to Dismember trades, and you've got to scrape the bottom of the barrel to find much optimism for this pitching staff, or this franchise, for that matter.

Offseason Game Plan:
Well, since the offseason is mostly over, it's too late for me to tell Bill Bavasi to exercise caution. That bus has left the depot.
I would have encouraged the Mariners to explore trading away players like Sexson or even Washburn if they felt they could get a good return in prospects. Instead the Mariners are getting rid of the few prospects they have to make a completely unrealistic run for the 2007 postseason. This smacks of a desperate man afraid to lose his job. And in fact, I wouldn't expect Bavasi to finish the season as the team GM, unless lightning strikes or they find a faith healer who specializes in pitching arms.

Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Looking Ahead: Oakland Athletics

2006 W-L Record: 93-69
2006 pW-pL Record: 85-77
Runs Scored: 771 (9th in AL)
Runs Allowed: 727 (3rd in AL)

Free Agents: Jay Payton, Frank Thomas, Barry Zito

2007 Projected Lineup:
1B -- Dan Johnson
2B -- Mark Ellis
SS -- Bobby Crosby
3B -- Eric Chavez
LF -- Nick Swisher
CF -- Mark Kotsay
RF -- Milton Bradley
C -- Jason Kendall
DH -- Mike Piazza

2007 Proj. Rotation:
Rich Harden
Dan Haren
Joe Blanton
Esteban Loaiza
Joe Kennedy?

2007 Proj. Closer: Huston Street

Offense/Defense:
The Oakland defense tied for 2nd in the AL in fielding percentage (.986) but were 6th in DER at .688. This could indicate the declining range of aging guys like Mark Kotsay and Mark Ellis, as well as injuries to key defenders Chavez and Crosby. But even if it's not quite as good as it looks, the Oakland defense is fine; the problem here is the offense.
The A's 9th-place finish in runs scored was the result of a roster stretched to its limits by injuries. Not only did the A's see regression from defensive stalwart Mark Ellis (249/319/385), they had to deal with the increasingly dismal output of guys like Jason Kendall (295/367/342) and Mark Kotsay (275/332/386).
But even with these guys bringing up the rear, the A's were supposed to be contenders with the rest of their lineup. Unfortunately for them, that didn't quite work out the way they'd hoped.

Despite getting good defense from Eric Chavez, the third baseman just isn't hitting like an MVP (241/351/435 in '06; career 271/350/489) and probably never will. When he's healthy, that's fine. But if he struggles with injuries again, as in 2006, the A's don't have the depth to replace his output.
The same can be said of Bobby Crosby. Crosby, a big-time prospect, suffered through yet another injury-plagued season (229/298/338) that was even worse than 2005, when he was also injured. It's easy to stay positive about Crosby since he's still young (just 26 next year) and does have a decent major league season under his belt (a 239/319/426 2004). But Crosby has yet to hit really well in the majors, and since 2004, he hasn't been able to stay in the lineup. Neither of these things bode really well for a guy who was supposed to be a future MVP. The A's need him to be productive to avoid another quick playoff exit.
First baseman Dan Johnson didn't have the high expectations of Crosby, but he was supposed to be a solid-hitting first base option like he was in 2005 (275/355/451). Instead, he was barely adequate (234/323/381) and got shipped to the minors. With prospect Daric Barton stalled (259/389/395 at Triple-A), The A's had no choice but to shift Nick Swisher to first and spend far too much time playing Jay Payton in left (296/325/418). Johnson should bounce back next year, and he's still got that 2005 swing left in him, but this was another step back on a team that couldn't afford any more of them. Combined with the injuries/regression suffered by 2B Mark Ellis, and the Oakland infield was effectively decimated in 2006. In the postseason, instead of a strong Johnson-Ellis-Crosby-Chavez infield, the A's were forced to play Swisher-D'Angelo Jimenez-Marco Scutaro-Chavez, with the punchless Payton in left field. Little wonder then that the Tigers swept them.
Swisher, who split time between left field and first base, was one of the few bright spots for the team. The team of Moneyball fame finished with a merely average .340 OBP, but that was no fault of Swisher's; the 25-year-old paced the team with 97 walks and also swatted 35 homers. He helped fill a big vacuum, and it was lucky for the A's that one of their young hitters was finally coming through.
Fiery trade acquisition Milton Bradley spent most of the time in right field, but the injury bug bit again, limiting him to 96 games. Bradley performed quite well, hitting 276/370/447 with the team, but it was little consolation; it was a case of "another one bites the dust" with Bobby Kielty forced to replace him.
The other Special Ks, Kotsay and Kendall, were unimpressive, as mentioned above. So the team went through most of the season with only Swisher (and sometimes Chavez and Bradley) contributing from the field. The team that looked like it had strong depth was instead held back by numerous injuries and disappointments, and their lack of depth (especially in the middle infield) was what people remembered.
Fortunately for Oakland, they had an insurance policy at DH. Now coming into 2006, no one would have predicted that Frank Thomas -- of all people -- would be the most reliable and productive hitter on the ballclub, and yet that's exactly how things turned out. Thomas only played 137 games, but he made them count; he hit 270/381/545, with a team-leading 39 HR and 114 RBI. He almost single-handedly kept the team afloat and resurrected his chances for Cooperstown, all for a relative pittance.

The A's will get to re-boot and try again next year, with the same cast of characters (sans Thomas) out to prove that they weren't overachieving when they reached the ALCS last year. The A's offense has a lot to prove. They must stay healthy, simply because there is little room for error; with most of the roster injury-prone, new manager Bob Geren will have to play mix-and-match with hopefully better options than Mark Kiger in 2007. A lot of people will have to step it up if the A's want to fight off the Angels and repeat in '07, with the most obvious being Eric Chavez and Bobby Crosby.

Pitching:
The Oakland pitching staff saved the offense last year, and there's every indication that they can do the same thing this year. Injuries struck here, too, as erstwhile ace Rich Harden made only 9 starts the entire season due to injury. Projections are still good for Harden, but his injury history is long enough now that Billy Beane should have visions of Mark Prior dancing in his head.
The good news is that even without Harden, the A's pitching staff survived. Barry Zito led the team in ERA at 3.83, despite a career-high 99 walks and a surprising 27 HR allowed (Oakland played as a pitcher's park in 2006). With Zito headed out as a free agent, the mantle of "backup ace" falls to Danny Haren, who should bear the burden quite well. Haren is, in fact, a better pitcher than Zito in the present and future. Haren will be just 26 next year and is coming off a season where he led the A's staff in innings (223) and strikeouts (176). His HR allowed were troubling (31), leading to a less-than-stellar 4.12 ERA. But Haren is the real deal; a strong #2 who can step in as a temporary ace if Harden falls again.
Behind Harden and Haren, the A's have two perfectly acceptable LAIMs. Esteban Loaiza got off to a woeful start, but -- while he didn't justify his brand-new contract -- he pitched well enough, managing a 4.89 ERA in 26 starts. Injuries may have played a part in Loaiza's struggles, although he doesn't have much potential to go under 4.50 in ERA at age 35.
The LAIM with the better growth potential is Joe Blanton. Blanton came on the scene with a strong rookie seaosn in 2005 (3.53 ERA in 201.1 IP), but his low strikeout rate caught up with him (116 K) and his 2006 ERA fell all the way to 4.82. The real Blanton is likely somewhere in between, and -- at age 25 -- he'll be cheap and productive for a while yet.
If Rich Harden can stay healthy and somewhat replace the departing Barry Zito, there's no reason to think that the 2007 starting rotation will be any worse than the 2006 squad. They've got the guys out there to eat up innings, but they would certainly like a better showing from everyone, at least in terms of runs allowed. They're losing depth along with Zito -- Joe Kennedy will likely step into the #5 spot -- but they may not be losing any quality at all.

The Oakland bullpen took a similar path as the rotation. Despite the troubles facing closer Huston Street, the A's managed to surround him with a fine cast of supporting players and ended up with a solid staff. Street regressed from his unlikely brilliance in 2005 (1.72), seeing his ERA nearly double to 3.31. Street's poise is real and was documented past the point of insanity in 2005. But his stuff is debatable. It's doubtful that he's going to assume the mantle of Mariano Rivera as the game's best closer, as the 2005 hype suggested. But even if he settles in as an above-average guy, he'll be valuable. And there's every reason to indicate that he can do that and more.
Behind Street, the A's have competent setup man Justin Duchscherer (2.91 ERA), Kiko Calero (3.41) and young Chad Gaudin (3.09). The A's wrote the book on the fungibility of closers and setup men, and their current pen is not only cheap, but very cost-effective. Behind those three, the team has long man Kirk Saarloos, Ron Flores, and a couple other options out of the 'pen. If the A's fail to repeat in '07, it will not likely be the fault of the bullpen.

Offseason Game Plan:
The A's have already nabbed Mike Piazza to fill the Thomas void at DH; they just need to hope that he's the 2006 version (332/372/564 on the road) and not an earlier version (251/326/452 overall in '05).

The A's could use a better insurance policy than Kirk Saarloos for the possible Harden injury. But considering the going rate for starting pitching, it's not likely that the team will do anything more than nibble at the free agent periphery. GM Billy Beane has even been involved in rumors trading away a starting pitcher, such as Blanton or Haren.
Really, though, it all comes down to the options. While the team needs better depth, the problem is mostly with the incumbent personnel. There's not a lot you need to change about a lineup that still includes Nick Swisher, Bobby Crosby, Eric Chavez, Milton Bradley and Piazza.
Top priority is keeping everyone healthy.

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

The Winds of Change Are Blowin'

At least in baseball, it doesn't get quite this bad.
  • Reports are that the Yankees have agreed to a contract with Japanese pitcher Kei Igawa. The Japanese newspaper Yomiuri Shimbun puts the value of the deal at about 5 years, $20 million. Add to that the Yanks' posting fee of $26 million.
    This seems like a good deal to me. Even taking the posting fee into account, the Yanks will be paying about $9 million a year for Igawa (less when you consider that the posting fee doesn't count toward the luxury tax). This is the going rate for an above-average starter, which Igawa seems to be. In fact, since he's relatively young and is (I think) better than he looks, he should be a good addition to the Yankee rotation. The Yanks now have a tentative rotation of: Wang, Mussina, Pettitte, Igawa, and Randy Johnson. This means they have the luxury of phasing in star prospect Phillip Hughes whenever they wish and could actually be trading away a starting pitcher mid-season.
  • Vernon Wells did indeed sign the 7-year, $126 million deal offered by the Blue Jays. I'll save this discussion for later when I can go into more detail, but I think people have deluded themselves into thinking that Wells is better than he is. It also commits Toronto to a lot of money which really limits their maneuverability in the coming years.
  • The Mariners made the second really bad trade of their offseason when they sent prospects Chris Snelling and Emiliano Fruto to the Nationals for Jose Vidro. Vidro is washed up as a hitter (289/348/395 last year) and has become a loss at second base. He's signed to a silly contract that's a remnant of the Montreal Expos era. I wouldn't trade away a box of paper clips for Jose Vidro and his contract.
    But the Mariners decided to trade away Chris Snelling, a promising (if injury-prone) young outfielder, and a fair relief arm in Fruto to get him. Vidro won't be displacing Jose Lopez at second base, and so will be the team's DH.
    Now you're probably thinking that a DH should be a good hitter. You're also thinking that if someone is a decent hitter for a second baseman, they're going to suck as a DH. Keith Law predicts that Vidro will be the worst DH in the league, and I agree. He's displacing Ben Broussard, who's no Dave Winfield, but is a much more valuable hitter than Vidro.
    This is yet another terrible deal for the Mariners that smacks of desperation and could easily seal the fate of GM Bill Bavasi.
  • The Devil Rays agreed to a perfectly reasonable contract with Japanese infielder Akinori Iwamura: 3 years, $7.7 million. Not bad for such an above-average guy, especially considering their posting fee was minimal.
  • As many people expected, the Tigers signed pitcher Jeremy Bonderman to a contract extension. The deal is for 4 years and $38 million, and is absolutely reasonable by any standard. The length of the contract covers Bonderman's entry first couple years of free agency, but is still relatively short enough to allow the team some wiggle room if the hard-worked youngster gets injured. And $9.5 million per year for one of the top 10 or so pitchers in the good league is well below market value.
  • The White Sox traded 1B/OF Ross Gload to the Royals for relief pitcher Andy Sisco. Okay, try to help me understand this. The Royals are amazingly crowded with 1B/OF types, most of whom are far better than Ross freakin' Gload. Andy Sisco is a young relief arm who is still a bit raw, but has good potential, and should be a valuable (and cheap) part of the Sox bullpen. Is Allard Baird still secretly running the Royals?
    The White Sox also signed up free agent Toby Hall to a 2-year deal to be their backup catcher. Hall doesn't hit well even for a catcher (career 265/301/384) and isn't particularly gifted on defense. It's not a lot of money, but I still wonder what makes people seek out Toby Hall.
  • The Red Sox made some maintenance moves to fill out their roster. They got reliever Brendan Donnelly from the Angels for a prospect, and they signed reliever J.C. Romero and backup catcher Doug Mirabelli to one-year deals.
    At 35, Donnelly's a bit old, but he's also got a reliable track record as an above-average big-league reliever. It's better that the Sox get him instead of making another Julian Tavarez-esque boo-boo.
    J.C. Romero is just 30, but is coming off a wretched season with the Angels (6.70 ERA in 48.1 IP). But Romero is usually solid, and so long as there's nothing lingering from his 2006 season, he should be a perfectly acceptable LOOGY. These two moves still leave unanswered who will be the Boston closer in 2007. The Red Sox are certainly capable of thinking outside the box, but there aren't any desirable closer-type relievers left on the market. The Sox have talked to several teams about a trade but haven't gotten anywhere yet (although they're in the running for the Pirates' Mike Gonzalez). I wouldn't be surprised if they ended up shifting Papelbon back into the role, if only for a year.
    As for Mirabelli, the Sox could probably do better for a backup catcher and really shouldn't go this crazy over a guy who can catch a knuckleball, especially after last year's fiasco.
  • The Giants signed Ryan Klesko to a one-year deal. Apparently, they were running low on Defensively Useless Old Guys With Nothing Left in the Tank.
  • Rumors have Marcus Giles headed to San Diego to join brother Brian on the Padres. This looks like a good deal for the Pads by any standard, as they get Giles, a well above-average second baseman. The Padres also have Todd Walker, who accepted the team's offer of arbitration, but that's not such a problem. Walker can serve as an insurance policy for young third baseman Kevin Kouzmanoff and is also a valuable backup guy and pinch-hitter.

More to come, no doubt, as we're still Waiting for Zito(t).

Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Looking Ahead: Los Angeles Angels

2006 W-L Record: 89-73
2006 pW-pL Record: 84-78
Runs Scored: 766 (12th in AL)
Runs Allowed: 732 (4th in AL)
Free Agents: Darin Erstad, Adam Kennedy, J.C. Romero

2007 Projected Lineup:
1B -- Kendry Morales/Robb Quinlan
2B -- Howie Kendrick/Brandon Wood
SS -- Orlando Cabrera
3B -- Chone Figgins
LF -- Juan Rivera
CF -- Gary Matthews, Jr.
RF -- Vladimir Guerrero
C -- Mike Napoli
DH -- Garret Anderson

2007 Proj. Rotation:
John Lackey
Jered Weaver
Bartolo Colon/Joe Saunders
Kelvim Escobar
Ervin Santana

2007 Proj. Closer:
Francisco Rodriguez

Offense/Defense:
There's plenty of room for shifting around in that starting lineup, especially with Figgins, the human patch, on the roster. There's about 4 or 5 guys on the roster who can play first, and two or three different third basemen. Rivera could shift to center, but neither he nor ideal DH Anderson are a good long-term solution there. The middle infield is also a bit crowded; along with second baseman Kendrick, you have minor league shortstops Brandon Wood, Erick Aybar, and Sean Rodriguez. None of these prospects have broken into the majors yet, but they could get there soon, which would put resident shortstop Cabrera on the trading block.
But any way you mix them up, this is still not a dominant offensive ballclub. Most of the hope for the lineup lies in the admittedly talented prospects littered across the infield. The Angels have had terrible luck getting things to work so far, but the new wave of middle infielders looks like it can help turn things around.
The Angels have Casey Kotchman, Kendry Morales, Dallas McPherson, and Robb Quinlan as potential corner infielders. Ideally, that's a fine arrangement of prospects that should produce at least two guys who can produce. But it hasn't worked out that well so far.
Kotchman looked like a monster, hitting for big averages with good plate discipline in the minors. It would be expected for him to take a while before handling the big leagues, but his 2005 stint looked like it showed good progress (278/352/484 in 47 games). But injuries limited him to 32 games combined between Triple-A and the majors last year. Kotchman will just be 24 next year, so there's still reason for optimism, but it has to be tempered somewhat with the ugly reality of his big-league career so far.
Morales, who looks like the starting first baseman, is a Cuban defector who's shown good offense in the minors. Morales spent the first half of 2006 at Triple-A, hitting 320/359/520. Granted, Salt Lake City is a hitter's park, and you'd expect a learning curve in the majors. But even taking this into account, Morales' second half has to be disappointing (234/293/371). Morales is also just 24 next year, so there's still some good potential there. And he at least has good health on his side.
With the signing of Gary Matthews, it looks like Chone Figgins will get shifted to third base. Figgins is a useful player who can play a number of different positions, steal some bases, and play good defense. The problem is that he's just not a very good hitter (267/336/376 in '06). The Angels may have some better third basemen on the roster, and they'd be well-advised to look into trading the overrated Figgins.
The Angels entered 2006 hoping that Dallas McPherson would take over the job of everyday third baseman. He was promoted to the majors despite a top-heavy 250/307/596 batting line in Triple-A, and he did indeed struggle in Anaheim (261/298/478 in 40 games). McPherson was promoted aggressively in the Angels system, and it's possible that being jerked around has had an impact on him. He hasn't had a good showing since 2004, where he split time between Double-A (321/404/660) and Triple-A (313/370/680), with an unimpressive MLB debut (225/279/475). McPherson began 2005 at the bottom of the Angels' system, but still managed to get a showing in the bigs, despite a Triple-A stint that's unimpressive in context (278/349/704 in just 14 games).
Add onto that his highly disappointing 2006, and it's getting harder to lo0k on the bright side with McPherson. He'll be 27 next year, and he still hasn't performed well in the majors. There are extenuating circumstances in his case, but he's getting farther removed from his last good season.
Robb Quinlan has filled in at both first and third base. Quinlan also has good potential, but unfortunately, he's hasn't been healthy and productive at the same time in years. 2004 was a relatively good season for Robb; he performed well in Triple-A and then hit well in 56 games in the bigs (344/401/525). But that was only 160 ABs, and the next year he struggled in the bigs (231/273/403 in 54 games). Quinlan made it into 86 games last year and hit 321/344/491, which has to be considered a victory, even if it was just 234 ABs. Quinlan will be 30 next year, and it's doubtful that he'll serve as anything but support for the other guys on this list.
Pressed for a third baseman, the Angels in 2006 turned to Maicer Izturis, who actually hit well (293/365/412). But it's highly unlikely that Izturis can produce like that again (career 265/335/377).
Surely the Angels will get a couple of these guys to hold their own and produce. But it's no sure thing; they thought it would happen last year, but it didn't.
Things are rosier in the middle infield, thanks to the arrival of some highly-regarded prospects. Orlando Cabrera is still clogging up shortstop. He's still a good producer (282/334/404 in '06), but he's about to become very superflous given his salary and the push he'll be getting from the prospects, especially uber-slugger Brandon Wood.
At second base, the Angels brought up Howie Kendrick last year and look to be sticking with him. Kendrick hit well enough in the minors that the club tried him at first base some in '06. But with Adam Kennedy gone, it looks like Kendrick will be taking over second. Kendrick will be 24 next year (what fascination do the Angels have with the Class of '01?) and while he didn't hit too well in the majors (285/314/616), he's got the potential to become one of the better 2Bs in the league (which is a pretty low standard, granted).
In the outfield, the team is surprisingly bereft of prospects. It looks like Juan Rivera and Garret Anderson will fill in the LF/DH spots. Rivera is a useful hitter obtained from the Nats who is quite valuable as an outfield/DH swingman. He's perfectly capable of hitting like an everyday player (310/362/525 in '06), although last year's numbers are likely a bit inflated. As for Anderson, he's degenerated into a pretty useless player, whose defense is limited and whose offense is simply inadequate for LF or DH (280/323/433 in '06).

In center field, the Angels tried the novel solution of signing a free agent. They signed Gary Matthews, Jr. to a 5-year, $50 million contract. His $10 mil. per year is fourth-highest on the team, behind Guerrero, Colon, and Anderson. And it's possible that he'll be the worst value of any player on the team, with the possible exception of Anderson. Matthews is a good fourth outfielder who has somehow managed to convince the Angels that he's an All-Star. At age 31, Matthews went to Texas and hit 313/371/495. Now considering that this is Texas, and that his career batting line is 263/336/419, we could safely say that this was a career year, right? But no; the Angels are going to pay Matthews on the assumption that he can produce 5 seasons of All-Star baseball, as opposed to the one season he's managed so far in his career.
The Angels didn't have a pressing need for a center fielder. They could have shifted Figgins to center and played one of the corner infielders at third. But for some reason, they decided to drop $50 million in one of the worst ways imaginable.
Catching for the Angels will likely by Mike Napoli. Jeff Mathis was supposed to be the #1 catching prospect for the Angels, but Napoli broke through in 2006 and hit 228/360/455 at the big club. It's highly doubtul that Mathis can hit like that, although he has a better defensive reputation. My guess it that Napoli has the job so long as he can hit the ball. And there's a lot worse things in life than having two genuine major-league catchers.

There's a lot of strong potential in this lineup, which is why the Angels are considered to be strong contenders in 2007 and for the near future. But even if the lineup doesn't live up to the hype, the Angels can always fall back on one of the best pitching staffs in baseball.

Pitching:
That starting rotation is scary good. Not only is Lackey a legitimate #1 and Weaver a legitimate #2, but the team has great depth and every opportunity to lead the league in ERA.

As for Lackey, he has broken through to the "ace" position in a short while, but there's every reason to believe he's for real. Lackey took off in 2005 and provided a fine repeat performance in 2006, notching a 3.56 ERA in 217.2 IP with 190 K and just 14 HR allowed. Lackey will be just 28 next year, and should anchor the rotation for the foreseeable future. He's definitely one of the more underrated pitchers in the game.
Behind Lackey is young Jered Weaver, who came upon the scene like a sensation in 2006. If the Angels had been hitting the ball worth a damn, they could have made the playoffs and given Weaver a shot at the Rookie of the Year. Weaver only pitched 123 innings, but managed a 2.56 ERA and a 33:105 BB:K ratio. Weaver was a star in college at Long Beach and showed off strong numbers in the minor leagues. The only real worry is that Weaver enjoyed a BABIP of .239, which was easily the luckiest in the league. You can chart this up to good defense and small sample size, but it could also be a sign that Weaver enjoyed a fair amount of luck last year. Still, even if he does take a step back, he should be a reliable starter, and the Angels have the depth to compensate.
Kelvim Escobar is another underrated pitcher. He has the reputation of a mid-level starter, but is actually a strongly above-average guy with a good strikeout rate. Escobar (who will be just 31 next year) threw 189.1 IP in 2006, with a 50:147 BB:K ratio and a 3.61 ERA. If this guy is your #3 starter, you're in fine shape. It should be noted that the Angels wisely signed Escobar to a contract extension early in the season, and so didn't have to deal with the slaary inflation of the offseason.
The #4 pitcher on the staff will be young Ervin Santana, although he could move up. Santana's name has been involved in a lot of trade rumors lately, but it looks now like the Angels will be keeping him. This is good news. Santana is young (24 next year) and has shown good break-out potential. Even if he stalls and repeats last year's performance (4.28 ERA in 204 IP), he'll still be a big asset.
The #5 spot will likely go to Bartolo Colon, although it's impossible to count on him considering his injuries and conditioning. Colon struggled through injuries last year, making 10 starts and posting a 5.11 ERA. He turns 34 in May, and the Angels would be wise not to count on Colon for very much going forward. His 2005 Cy Young was a minor fluke, and his stamina is such that he's not a good bet to stay healthy as he ages.
The Angels do have a backup in Joe Saunders. Saunders, who will be 26 next year, isn't a big-time prospect, but he held his own in 13 starts last year, managing a 4.71 ERA and a 29:51 BB:K ratio. That's not exactly awe-inspiring, but if your #6 starter is this good, then you're in good shape.
And the Angels' rotation has as much upside as any other in the league. Even if they do experience some speedbumps (regression from Weaver, injuries to Colon), they've got the depth and the personnel to compensate. The rotation is the biggest reason to consider the Angels contenders in the AL West.

The Angel bullpen is anchored by Francisco Rodriguez. I've heard a lot of comments from scouts expressing concern about K-Rod's violent delivery, believing that it could lead to major injury in the future. We have to keep that in the back of our minds, but we also have to consider that the youngster is still one of the elite closers in the game. Last year he posted a 1.73 ERA in 73 innings, striking out 98 and walking 28.
Behind K-Rod, the Angels have Scot Shields, the rubber-armed setup man who's shown good consistency. The Angels may feel that Shields' reputation has grown so that they can shop him around for a trade, but that hasn't happened yet. Behind these two, the Angels have taken a step back from their previous years of dominant bullpens. Stalwart Brendan Donnelly pitched well enough (3.94 ERA in 60 IP) and even Hector Carrasco, as unlikely a hero as there ever was, threw 100.1 innings with a 3.41 ERA.
Although it may not be as fearsome as it was circa-2002, the Angels have a good track record when it comes to assembling bullpens. All the major pieces are already there, so it just comes down to filling in the gaps.

Offseason Game Plan:
The Angels really don't have anything to do. They were rumored to be in on the Manny Ramirez trade, which would certainly be an upgrade over Garret Anderson. They may want to add some stability at the infield corners, but the roster is crowded enough with those guys as it is.
The Halos were rumored to be pursuing Barry Zito, and in recent weeks have come out as strong possibilities. I really don't see the wisdom of signing Zito. The Angels have a very, very strong bullpen, with three very good young pitchers (Lackey, Weaver, Santana), one 30-year-old gem (Escobar) and plenty of hope to fill out the back (Colon, Saunders). There's no need to overspend on a super-expensive free agent that doesn't in any way fill a pressing need. If you'll look back at the runs scored and runs allowed, you'll see that the Angels' #1 problem is offense. Their #1 priority should be improving their offense. Spending $50 million on Gary Matthews isn't going to help your lineup much, and spending $100 million on Barry Zito would be a tremendous waste of resources, as the Angels are one of the few teams in baseball that don't need any more starting pitchers.

Even if the Angels do nothing before Spring Training, they have to be considered a dark horse candidate to upset the A's in the AL West.

Matsuzaka news

  • After reports that the talks were hopelessly stalled, it looks like a deal or Daisuke Matsuzaka has been agreed upon. Boston GM Theo Epstein and President Larry Lucchino flew out to meet personally with Scott Boras. Progress was made quickly in the negotiations, but both sides were still apart by about $4 mil./year. The deadline for a deal was essentially by this afternoon, as the Sox needed Matsuzaka to fly back to Boston to pass a physical before the deal could be finalized. Word was that Epstein & Lucchino would be flying back to Boston today with or without Dice-K.
    And the Red Sox fans rejoiced when the word went out that they were coming back with Matsuzaka. Boras had previously stated that he wouldn't let Dice-K fly to Boston unless a deal was in place, so we can take this as a good sign that the sides have come to at least a preliminary arrangement.
    Word on the contract figure is 6 years/$52 million. If that sounds hideously low, it's because the Red Sox are factoring in the $51.1 million posting fee. The hold-up in the negotations came when Boras insisted that Dice-K get market value, regardless of the posting fee. If the $52 million figure is correct, then Boras must have caved somewhat (the deal also includes escalators that could raise it to $60 million).
    Is it a good deal for the Red Sox? Absolutely. It comes along with all of the risk of signing a free agent pitcher, especially sight unseen from another continent. But every indication is that Dice-K will pitch like a strong #2, if not an ace. There is downside in the deal, yes, but it's one of the best of the off-season, along with the Schmidt contract.
    Despite being two years younger than Gil Meche, Matsuzaka got the same contract length. And even if you add the posting fee in, the Sox will be spending about $103 million over 6 years, which comes down to about $17.2 million per year. We have to take into account, though, that the $51 million bid isn't factored into the luxury tax, so the Sox will save some money there. There are also the fringe benefits (which have been somewhat overstated) of having a Japanese player on your squad, especially if you haven't already mined that revenue stream. Factoring all of this in, the contract looks entirely reasonable for Boston, especially in the context of this inflated off-season.
    With Matsuzaka signed (and the bar set), we should see some progress in the Yankees' negotiations with Kei Igawa. There has also been a holdup in the Devil Rays' negotiations with Akinori Iwamura. The Rays' only bid a fraction of the $51 million it took to get Matsuzaka. And Iwamura projects to be a very good hitter either at second or third base. Nate Silver's projection for him (posted on BP) is a batting line of 275/354/445. Combine that with what is (reportedly) good defense from a third baseman (although he could shift to second), and we've got a better version of Tadahito Iguchi. Iwamura could make an All-Star team or two (especially considering the team), but it's doubtful that he'll be a major force. Still, the Rays' woeful offense could use above-average production from a key defensive position, especially if it comes with above-average defense.
  • The Blue Jays have reportedly offered CF Vernon Wells a 7-year, $126 million contract. Both Wells and the Jays have confirmed the offer, but the number is still a rumor.
    While I do think that the Jays would like to keep Wells, I see this move as a pretty bold bargaining move. Reports came out of Toronto last year that Wells wanted to leave Toronto when his time was up, which got a big negative reaction from the Jays. If the Jays make this offer (if the numbers are true), and Wells doesn't accept, then the Toronto front office has successfully cast themselves as the good guys. If Wells doesn't accept this contract, he will most definitely look like the bad guy, and the Toronto fans won't make his walk year very pleasant. The ball is in his court, and I don't think it's by accident.
    Perhaps I'm being too cynical to look for ulterior motives in the Jays' offer. I don't really doubt that they'd like to keep Wells. But I'd love to know who leaked that number to the press. The Jays may feel that if they put Wells on the spot in public, he'll feel more inclined to sign.
    For the record, I'm not convinced that Wells is worth $18 mil. per year. He's a troubling case to evaluate; he's had two very good seasons, 2003 and 2006. But in between, he was just above-average. Which is the real Vernon Wells? The Jays would love to know for sure. And signing him to a near-Soriano contract is a pretty big risk, especially when there are several center fielders scheduled to go on the market in 2007.
  • There's a funny article in BP Unfiltered by Nate Silver, who runs the PECOTA forecasts. PECOTA thrives by coming up for comparable players for every player in baseball. This can be difficult with guys like Barry Bonds and Julio Franco, who are unique on the historic level.
    But none of them brought the system to its knees, as did minor league pitcher Jason Neighborgall. The aspect of Neighborgall's game that made PECOTA cower in fear was this:
    In 13 IP last year (in the Rookie leagues), Neighborgall walked 46 batters.
    Wait -- is that really 46 walks in 13 innings? Yes, it is. Jason makes "Wild Thing" Vaughn look like Greg Maddux. His walk rate is 31.85 per 9 innings.
    Silver calls him The Man Who Broke PECOTA.

Does anyone here speak English? Or ancient Greek?

Go ahead and put me on the DL with a severely bruised ego.
News today re: the tenders, non-tenders and love-me tenders.
  • First of all, the Baltimore Orioles signed free agent Jay Payton to a 2-year contract for $9.5 million. The report was that the Orioles had finally found their right-handed hitting outfielder. Well, that's half-true; Payton is right-handed. But I'm not so sure about the whole "hitter" thing.
    The Orioles scored 768 runs last year, only 12 more than the last-place Mariners. You would think that, coming into this off-season, the team would try to target some positions that are ripe for improvement. Catcher, Second Base, Shortstop, Third Base, and DH are filled with free agents (or guys under long-term deals). Corey Patterson is set in center, as is Nick Markakis in right. That leaves first base and left field.
    The Orioles punted one opportunity when they signed Kevin Millar to play first base. But Millar should at least hit enough to survive, and he only got a 1-year deal. But Payton, who walks, talks, and quacks like a fourth outfielder, got a 2-year deal. 34-year-old Payton hit 296/325/418 last year, which isn't in any way adequate for a starting left fielder. Payton's contract isn't for much money, so they would be able to move him to a backup role if an upgrade came along. But are the Orioles even aware that they need an upgrade? And how long will they keep Payton starting in left until they realize it?
  • But the big news of today was a trade: the Rockies traded Jason Jennings and reliever Miguel Asencio to Houston for center fielder Willy Taveras and pitching prospects Jason Hirsh and Taylor Buchholz.
    I remarked before that it's a good thing for the Astros that they didn't give up Hirsh, Buchholz, and Taveras to get a pitcher as average (and expensive) as Jon Garland. And yet they've given up just that to get Jennings, who is much cheaper, but whose track record isn't nearly as strong. In fact, Jennings has every appearance of being a LAIM. And although he made a strong showing in 2006, there was little to be happy about from 2002-2005, even when you take Coors Field into account. Add in the fact that Jennings is a free agent after this season (I'm pretty sure), and the Astros have taken a big hit in their long-term plans for a very questionable return on the short term.
    Is it possible that I'm not giving Jennings enough credit? He did pitch quite well in 2006, posting a 3.78 ERA in a tough run environment, setting a career high in innings pitched and strikeouts (212 and 142, respectively). Is it just Coors Field that makes Jennings look bad? Partly. His career ERA on the road is a respectable 4.37, compared to 5.19 at Coors. He has a higher walk rate on the road, but his strikeout rate is also higher. His road K rate is about 6.16 per 9 innings, which is about average.
    So who is Jason Jennings? He's a 28-year-old with good durability who has an average K rate, an above-average walk rate, and is pretty good at limiting home runs, especially given his environment.
    That's a quality guy to have around. He's probably never going to be an All-Star, but that depends on your point of view. The pre-2006 Jennings looked to be much more of a low-end LAIM. But in 2006, Jennings took a noticeable step forward. Is this a step forward for good, or just a career year? Are his numbers, even his road numbers, better than Coors makes them look? That's a tough question.
    However, the point here isn't to question how good Jason Jennings is, it's to ask whether or not the Astros should have made the trade. So is Jennings (and Asencio, the raw throw-in) worth giving up your two top pitching prospects and your starting center fielder?
    I don't think so. Hirsh was the pride of the Houston system. He's shown good control and poise in the minors, arriving in the majors last year for a 9-start engagement. Hirsh pitched quite well last year in Double-A (2.87 ERA, 165 K, 42 BB and 12 HR in 172.1 IP) and continued that in Triple-A this year. He had trouble in Houston, posting a 6.04 ERA thanks in part to 11 HR allowed in 44.2 IP. This could be a problem for Hirsh; he allowed few homers in the minors, but once in Houston his fly-ball tendencies (32% while an Astro) caught up with him. Unfortunately for Hirsh, he's going to Colorado.
    If the deal were Jennings-for-Hirsh straight up, I could understand the Astros' take. Hirsh struggled in the majors, and while it would be premature to condemn him to a career of ineffectiveness, it is possible that he's not the right fit for Houston. Trading him in for a more proven commodity like Jennings would be understandable, although it would be a big risk to give up on Hirsh so quickly.
    The problem is that the Astros -- a team that really needs pitching depth -- actually sacrificed their pitching depth in this deal. Trading away two starting pitching prospects, both of whom have already reached the majors, for one starting pitcher, is hard to understand -- especially when the pitcher you're getting isn't an All-Star at all.
    The other pitcher in the deal, Taylor Buchholz, isn't nearly as promising as Hirsh. Buchholz hasn't had a quality season since 2003 in Double-A. Since then, his K rate has degenerated to unimpressive levels, and he allows far too many walks and home runs to compensate. Buchholz made 19 starts with Houston last year, posting a 5.89 ERA and showing off all of the marginal peripherlas he'd shown in the minors. At age 25, there's little reason to expect much from Buchholz, especially since he's going to a ballpark that will exacerbate his problems.
    Willy Taveras may be an overrated player, but he's still got his high points. He sports as empty a batting average as you'll find (career 284/329/340 hitter), and also steals bases (68/88 in the majors), but not enough to help much. His biggest strength is defense. Taveras looks like a heck of a center fielder out there, and the numbers back up that claim. Taveras is 33 Fielding Runs Above Average in his two full major league seasons, which is phenomenal. If the Astros weren't already stocked with punchless glove men, Taveras might be worth keeping as a cheap alternative.

    So: is it worth giving up Hirsh, Buchholz, and Taveras to get Jennings?
    I don't think so. I think Jennings is underrated, and should look better in Houston. The problem will be that he's just under the Astros control for a year, and if they do sign a long-term contract, they be well-told to do it later in the season to see how Jennings takes to the Juice Box.
    Hirsh may have his issues as a pitcher (he's also going to be 25), but he's the best the Astros have. He's cheap and is, in my mind, worth the risk. In my mind, you'd have to give up Hirsh for a pitcher who was demonstrably better. And it's hard to make that case for Jennings, especially in the long term.
    Buchholz doesn't have a lot of upside, but even a fifth starter would be valuable to Houston if he could eat up some innings.
    And while Taveras isn't any sort of complete player, it's hard to believe that the Astros will be a better team without him. They don't have any clear-cut successor on hand, unless they're planning on rushing Hunter Pence right into the starting job (which is possible). If they don't go with Pence, then they'll probably have to go with Chris Burke, which leaves the deteriorating Craig Biggio all alone at second base. Again, more evidence that this move isn't going to do Houston any favors in the short term.
    On the other hand, I kind of like this deal for Colorado. Hirsh may not profile like the best fit for Coors Field, but he does have good control, and any sort of pitching prospect is good news for Colorado. My personal opinion is that they should have kept Jennings, but if they were going to trade him, it's nice to get a valuable pitching prospect and a filler-type young starting pitcher and a new center fielder. Taveras should be more helpful to the Rockies than he was to the Astros. The Rockies look, long-term, like a team that should have a well-balanced offensive attack. Unlike the Astros, they can afford to waste a lineup spot on a glove man, especially if he's a fantastic center fielder roaming one of the widest outfields in baseball.
    The final decision on this trade will have to wait until we see how Jennings is outside of the Denver Bizarro World. But right now, it looks like the Astros gave up a little too much to get not enough in return.
  • Several players were not tendered contracts by the deadline, making them free agents. They were mostly marginal players, but some of them were useful guys who could help out a team, such as Aaron Guiel, Victor Zambrano, Brandon Claussen, Chris Reitsma, and Jayson Werth. But only one former All-Star got non-tendered, and it came as a big surprise to me, along with many others.
    The Braves non-tendered Marcus Giles, making him a free agent.
    Giles is far, far more useful than any other player non-tendered. He'll be 29 next year, and is a good-fielding second baseman who hits far above average for the position. Now, it's doubtful that Giles will retain the near-MVP form he showed in 2003 (316/390/526), but there's got to be a market out there for a good-hitting second baseman (career .279 EQA) with a good glove that borders on Gold Glove quality.
    Giles is coming off of a very dismal 2006, where he hit just 262/341/387. Is this perhaps a sign of something worse, and is that why Schuerholz couldn't get a good trade for him? It's possible. Giles' deterioration is partly power-based (he only hit 32 doubles and 11 HR last year), but it was mainly due to a near-30 point drop in his batting average. A his peak, Giles hit over .300, but his average has gone down every year since 2003, and it's possible that this indicates a decrease in bat speed. I watch Braves games more than any team besides the Reds, and while I'm no scout, Giles hasn't seemed as sharp at the plate as he used to. That may just be me rationalizing the stats. But the lack of interest around baseball seems to indicate that there are suspicions surrounding Giles.
    It's really hard to believe that Schuerholz couldn't get something for Giles. He was rumored to be going to San Diego, but that deal never worked out. He may end up there yet. But there are other teams that could use a good second baseman, among them the Mets, Nats (if they can pry away Vidro), Padres, and the Blue Jays, among others.
  • It's being reported that the Rangers have reached a 1-year, $6 million contract with Eric Gagne.
    I have mixed feelings about this contract. It's less money than Gagne was rumored to be offered, so it's a much better deal for someone as high-risk as he is. And it's not a lot of money to pay a closer.
    My problem is that the Rangers don't seem to be focused on spending their money in the right places. They already had a closer, in Akinori Otsuka. Otsuka isn't the most reliable closer in the league, but then it seems to me that the Rangers have more pressing issues than giving themselves redundancy in the bullpen. Their starting outfield was Catalanotto/Wilkerson/Nelson Cruz before they signed Kenny Lofton recently. Even with Lofton, their offense isn't as potent as it would seem, and their starting pitching staff is still unimpressive. Even assuming the best-case scenario for Millwood and Padilla, the Rangers still have three spots in their rotation to fill, preferably with people not named Jon Koronka.
    Step 1 is to Identify the Problem. Buying the Player is Step 5 or 6, and you shouldn't jump that far until you've carefully looked at Step 1.
  • Miguel Batista is reportedly close to signing a free agent deal for 3 years and $24 million (or $27 million, depending upon who you ask). Those numbers look oddly like contracts that were being signed last season, before the big salary inflation. Batista is basically a LAIM at this point in his career, although there are some troubling signs in his performance over the past few years. His walk rates and strikeout rates have gone in the wrong directions since his career year in 2003. Now, Batista has never had good numbers in that regard, so it's not automatically a reason to suspect his performance. But he's turning 35 next February and is coming off a year of a 4.58 ERA and a 84:110 BB:K ratio in 206.1 IP. He's not the kind of pitcher I would want to sign to this kind of contract, but considering the circumstances, it's not the worst deal of the offseason by any means. The most important thing here is that the Mariners limited themselves to just 3 years. 2 years would have been better, but that's probably wishful thinking.
    But the real trouble here isn't the contract, it's the team that signed it. The Mariners really aren't in any position to sign a risky contract. They're a team that needs to build up a strong foundation of some reliable players before they start going out and speculating. The problem is that the Mariners' downside is still last place by a good margin, and the signing of Batista commits a lot of money without significant changing that. The Mariners need more reliable players and safer contracts; they don't need any more Adrian Beltres.
    If the Yankees had signed this contract, I wouldn't be so negative. The Yankees aren't looking for one pitcher to save them, and they're also fiscally capable of absorbing the loss. But the Mariners are neither of these things. Batista doesn't strongly increase their upside, but he does increase the risk of another season of sunk costs and bad contracts.
    A lot of this is probably rooted in the Mariners' desperation. The M's were criticized for not being active at the Winter Meetings. And there's no better setup for a bad contract than when a GM is pressured to do something. GM Bill Bavasi is especially anxious, considered by many to be on the hot seat this year. And with the team struggling despite having made serious commitments to Adrian Beltre, Richie Sexson, and Jarrod Washburn, Bavasi is about to become the fall guy. And for the most part, that's probably justified.
  • Jeff Bagwell is expected to officially announce his retirement this week. I've always been a fan of Bagwell's and never thought he got enough credit for his hitting, especially his 368/451/750 1994.
    But the whispers are starting, and unfortunately, they're probably justified. Bagwell is one player who -- although there's never been any sort of evidence presented against him -- has been strongly suspected of steroid use. We're put in a very unfortunate position when considering Bagwell and the players of his era. On one hand, it's patently unfair to condemn something for suspicions as groundless as these. On the other hand, it would be irresponsible to be naive about the matter and wait for some "smoking gun" that we'll never find.

I'll be back later with my look ahead at the Angels. Only four teams to go!

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Response to BB Think Factory

My previous blog, "Is Adam Dunn?" was linked to the high-profile BaseballThinkFactory.com and posted in their forum.
It's pretty surprising when you realize that someone's actually reading what you write. Unfortunately, it also places a larger burden on the writer not to make mistakes and to carefully clarify your statements. I got a lot of responses to my entry, and although some were less than flattering, I appreciate all the response and feedback.
The blog was done in about 5 minutes, and I mainly intended for it to indicate my shock at seeing Dunn so closely associated with so many of the archetypal "old players' skills" players. It was not intended as an absolute statistical argument for Dunn's imminent decline.
The BR similarity scores are useful, but are not enough to stake an entire argument to. If I were to make a compelling argument that Dunn was a high-risk player entering his mid-30's, I would use more refined similarity scores. I would also -- as many readers rightly pointed out -- pay more attention to the comparables through age 26 instead of comparing Dunn's short career so far to Ron Kittle. I would also take into account other indicators of aging -- such as speed and defense, which don't show up strongly in the Similarity Scores -- if I were really trying to make an absolute argument.
The argument was meant more as an observation than any argument of certainty. I wasn't trying to argue that Dunn's similarity scores alone prove that he's dead meat. I only said that it was discouraging to see the players Dunn was so similar to. The prime reason for my argument concerning Dunn's career was not based on a few numbers I saw on BR. The similarity scores were of secondary concern to the fact that Dunn displays strong signs of the dreaded "old player's skills," and the story for players of his type is not a rosy one after age 30.
If it seemed like the BR Similarity Scores were the only basis for my argument, then I apologize for not clarifying. The "Dunn" entry was not meant as an absolute statistical evaluation of Dunn's career chances. They were merely the 2 AM observations that Dunn's list of comparables wasn't a rosy one.

Others pointed out that the fact that Dunn's #1 comp through age 26 is Darryl Strawberry, and there's nothing wrong with that. I wasn't trying to dispute Dunn's quality, nor was I suggesting that it was impossible for him to put together a Boog Powell-esque career. One fact that I nor anyone mentioned was that Dunn reached the majors at a very young age, 21 years old and proved productive right away. So even if Dunn is out of the majors at age 35, he can still put together a hell of a career. I'd argue that his chances of making the Hall of Fame are limited by his skill set and the track record of low-average, high-strikeout players. But then you don't have to get inducted into Cooperstown to have a great career, or make a lot of money for that matter.
The 2006 Baseball Prospectus annual lists Dunn's top 3 comparables, and this is a system much more refined and reliable than the BR lists, which are more for entertainment than analysis. Dunn's top 3 comparables are Troy Glaus, Boog Powell, and Hee Seop Choi. So the risk is still there, as evidenced by Choi. Powell's last effective season was at age 33 with Cleveland, and he retired by his age 35 season.
It's evident that I didn't do a good enough job of expressing myself. It's also true that I need to think twice before publishing an "observation" blog, without carefully clarifying what it is I'm saying. But one argument I can make and publish with a good amount of confidence is that Dunn looks like he could be headed for the Boog Powell career path. Powell didn't display the "old player's skill" as strongly as Dunn; only once in his career did he strike out more than 100 times in a season, and his walk rates were above-average, but not as high as Dunn's. With home runs, I'm not the person to run an official translation, but both men seem to have comparable power considering their eras.
I hope it did not sound like I was guaranteeing than Adam Dunn was going to go into a tailspin after age 30 and be gone by 35. Dunn has already exhibited much better production and better consistency than his #1 BR comp, Kittle. His #1 PECOTA comp, Troy Glaus, is 30 years old and doesn't appear to be deteriorating much at all. Considering injury, Glaus has actually been quite consistent. Last season, he hit 252/355/513, and in 2001 with Anaheim he hit 250/367/531. Considering that league AVG and SLG have both dropped by about 10 points since 2001, that's a good sign of staying productive.
One thing I also said but didn't stress enough is that Dunn is still very young. He'll just be 27 next year, and so it's academic to be debating what his age 35 season will look like. We'll learn a lot about Dunn over the next three or four years. Then we will be in a much better position to pass judgment upon his career.
I also mentioned in the article (but perhaps didn't stress) that I like Adam Dunn. I think he's a very productive hitter who doesn't get enough credit from Reds management. I also don't think he'll be experiencing any major downturns in the near future.
I also didn't mean to dismiss Pat Burrell, J.D. Drew, or Glaus by mentioning them in the article. Burrell pays a passing resemblance to Dunn in that they're both homer/strikeout guys in hitter's parks with little defensive value. Burrell's batting average is below-average, but not as much as Dunn's. His strikeout rates also aren't as high as Dunn's. As for Drew, I listed him simply because he showed up on Dunn's comp list. I was not trying to argue that J.D. Drew is really similar to Dunn, because they're miles apart. Drew's strikeout rate isn't nearly as high as Dunn's, and his career batting average (.286) is well above that of the league. Drew is also more athletic. They bear only the faintest resemblance.

The point of the article "Is Adam Dunn?" was to say that Dunn's comparable players only reinforce the idea that he is an "old player's skills" type that will likely decline rapidly after age 30 and reach a high attrition rate by age 35. I used the Similarity Scores because they struck me as reinforcing my thesis, not because I considered them to be solid evidence, or even the most important evidence of my claim. This wasn't really clear, as I should have stated explicity that the blog was not meant as a sophisticated argument but rather as an observation.

There have been many responses and comments to my entry. All of them were critical to some degree, and some were less than kind. But I appreciate the feedback, and I also appreciate the fact that someone's actually reading what I say. My thanks also to Tom at the BBTF for linking to me.

In the theatre, they tell you to listen to all criticism whether you agree with it or not. Hopefully, I'll always keep my ears open to those who disagree, in the hopes that it will only make my writing better (and my meaning clearer).

Let's just hope I can start to grow a thicker skin . . .

Is Adam Dunn?

After writing that entry about the glossary and making frequent mention of Adam Dunn, I decided to trot over to his Baseball-Reference.com page and check out his list of Top 10 most similar players to see if my predictions of doom after age 30 were correct.
I was actually kind of scared. Here are his top 10:
  1. Ron Kittle. Out of the majors by age 33; last productive season at age 31 as a part-timer.
  2. Pat Burrell. Still in the majors at age 30 playing for Philadelphia. In just as much hot water as Dunn, and much more expensive.
  3. Jim Gentile. Out of the majors by age 32; last productive season at age 30.
  4. Henry Rodriguez. Out of the majors by age 34; last productive season at age 31.
  5. Nate Colbert. Out of the majors by age 30; last productive season at age 27.
  6. Tony Conigliaro. Out of the majors by age 30; last productive season at age 25. Conigliaro isn't a good comparison, because he suffered a traumatic injury that nearly robbed him of his eyesight.
  7. John Jaha. Out of the majors by age 35; last productive season at age 33.
  8. J.D. Drew. Just signed a big contract with Boston at age 31.
  9. Nick Esasky. Out of the majors by age 30; last productive season at age 29.
  10. Bo Jackson. Out of the majors by age 31; last productive season at age 27. Bo did have those football injuries, but his offensive profile suggests that it wasn't just the knees that did him in.

Adam Dunn just completed his age 26 season. If you look at every batter in history just through their age 26 season, his most similar player is Darryl Strawberry. I guess that's good news, since Straw stayed in baseball through age 37, but he took a very ugly detour on the way.

Dunn's other most similar players through age 26? Other guys who fell off a cliff after age 30: Jose Canseco, Tom Brunansky, Roger Maris, Conigliaro, Boog Powell. Active player Troy Glaus is also on the list. The only promising guys on this list are Reggie Jackson and Harmon Killebrew.

So on these two lists, Adam Dunn has covered -- I'm not joking -- almost every one-year wonder and post-30 burnout of the post-War era. You couldn't compile a better who's who of flameouts. (BTW, Dunn's most comparable player through age 23? Pete Incaviglia, last productive season at age 26).

In all honesty, I really like Adam Dunn. I love that he still keeps bopping home runs even though the Reds don't like his strikeouts. And he's still got plenty of time at age 27.

But how troubling is it that of all the top 10 most similar players to Dunn -- nobody played a game in the majors after age 35. I'm not saying that nobody was good after age 35 -- I'm saying that they were gone by age 35; they'd already gone through their decline phase and were either sitting at home or back in the minors.

The average player on that list had his list productive season at around age 30. So unless the Reds trade Dunn to another team, I personally would recommend re-signing him to a 3- or 4-year deal and then dropping him as fast as they can. And if I were Adam, I'd live it up right now. Which he probably is.

Monday, December 11, 2006

The Whiz Kid's Glossary

It recently occurred to me that it would helpful to add a glossary of sorts to this site. It gets in the way sometimes to re-explain a concept again and again when it would be easier to have one central resource that I could refer people to. This way I wouldn't have to explain WXRL every time I mention it; just link to the glossary.
I'd like to include to not just advanced stats in the glossary but different concepts that I refer to from time to time. These can be old baseball concepts such as the "5-tool player," new sabermetric concepts such as TINSTAAP or the LOOGY, or humorous concepts of my own creation. Hopefully this will make the blog more accessible for old readers and newcomers alike.

I'd like to keep updating this, as new ideas develop, or if I just remember something I've forgotten. I'll try to link to the glossary from articles to make the reading experience smoother. Because I'm just that nice.
NOTE: I'll refrain from defining the more basic, i.e. baseball-card stats such as RBI, batting average, or saves. These definitions can be easily accessed at mlb.com's glossary of basic stats.


STATS
AVG/OBP/SLG
This is the standard way to denote the three essential hitting stats in baseball, in this specific order. So if I say that Justin Morneau hit 321/375/559 last season, it means that his batting average was .321, his OBP was .375, and his slugging percentage was .559. In some early entries on this site, I used the MLB.com notation of OBP/SLG/AVG, which is not the standard way. I'm working on going back and changing the early entries, but bear with me.
BABIP
Batting Average on Balls In Play. This stat can refer to a hitter or pitcher. It denotes the batting average on "balls in play," which excludes home runs, strikeouts, walks, hit batsmen, etc.
For a pitcher especially, BABIP is very informative. As Voros McCracken first illustrated (see concepts), a pitcher has almost no ability to control his BABIP (later research found that knuckleballers do have some control). So, other than strikeouts, walks, and HR, a pitcher's BABIP is determined almost entirely by chance and the defense behind him.
Therefore, if a pitcher has a particularly high (or low) BABIP, we should account for this good (or bad) luck when evaluating him. An average BABIP is between .280 and .290, depending on the context.
A pitcher with a better-than-expected BABIP is said to be "hit-lucky," that is, relatively few of his balls in play are going for hits.
DER
Defense Efficiency Ratio. A very basic concept that measures what percentage of balls in play a defense turns into outs. This is a very rough measure, and does not account for ballpark factors or the nature of balls in play (it's harder to turn line drives into outs than ground balls). But as a rough tool, there's no better measure of a team's defensive efficiency.
This stat can also be used for a pitcher, to determine the quality of the defense behind him and to see whether he was getting better or worse defense from his team than expected.
ERA+
ERA+ is the ratio of the league ERA to that of the pitcher (ballpark adjusted). ERA+ takes ERA and puts it in perspective, both for the pitcher's ballpark and for his league environment. 100 is average (the pitcher's ERA is the same as that of the league), while anything over 100 is above-average, and anything below 100 is below-average. Anything above 150 is pretty excellent; anything below 80 or so is untenable.
Bob Gibson's 1968 ERA of 1.12 adjusts to an ERA+ of 258 (he was 258% better than the league average). Pedro Martinez's 2000 ERA of 1.74 adjusts to an ERA+ of 285, the best mark of the century. 2006 AL Cy Young Winner Johan Santana's ERA+ was 161; NL winner Brandon Webb's was 154.
EQA
Equivalent Average. A Baseball Prospectus metric that condenses a player's entire offensive contribution into an average. The scale is similar to that of batting average; 300 is very good, 200 is bad, and 400 is historic. 2006 AL MVP Justin Morneau posted an EQA of an even .300; teammate Joe Mauer's was .313. Cleveland DH Travis Hafner's was .350. Barry Bonds' 73-home run performance in 2001 rated an EQA of .427.
FRA
Fair Run Average. Fair Run Average takes a pitcher's Earned Run Average and adjusts for runners inherited and runners bequeathed.
Regular ERA gives all credit (and blame) for inherited runners to the pitcher who leaves them behind, and none to the relief pitcher who inherits them. FRA portions out credit and blame to both the starter who leaves the runners, and the reliever who either strands them or lets them score.
A pitcher with a very good bullpen will end up with a better ERA than they deserve, whereas the same pitcher with a bad bullpen will have a higher ERA due to no fault of their own. The difference between a good bullpen and a bad one can have a significant effect on a pitcher's ERA.
FRA also applies to relief pitchers, making them bear the brunt of any inherited runners they let score. But it also gives them credit if they enter in a "jam" and strand the runners.
FRAA
Fielding Runs Above Average. FRAA condenses a player's defensive output into a number of runs, Fielding Runs. That is compared to the league average of 0, with a good fielder being above 0 and a poor one below. A similar measure is FRAR, or Fielding Runs Above Replacement, which sets the bar lower for comparison (see below to read about the concept of Replacement Level).
FRAA usually differs widely based on position. A first baseman or left fielder has relatively little effect on the defense, and so isn't likely to be much above or below average. Shortstop, on the other hand, is a key position. The difference between a good shortstop and a bad shortstop can be more than 20 Fielding Runs, whereas there is rarely such disparity between a good and bad first baseman.
Different sources use different adjustments to determine FRAA, but I go by Clay Davenport's numbers at Baseball Prospectus. According to Davenport, the most valuable shortstop in the AL last year was Jhonny Peralta of Cleveland (+23 FRAA); the worst was Detroit's Carlos Guillen (-13 FRAA). Derek Jeter rated at +4.
There are many different systems to rate defense and, unlike offense or pitching, there's no clear consensus as to which is best. There is Range Factor, Adjusted Range Factor, Zone Rating, Ultimate Zone Rating, and John Dewan's new plus/minus system. I tend to use FRAA as a default, while recognizing that it's not the absolute authority.
ISO
Isolated Power. This is a more basic measure; it seeks to define a player's power, measured in extra-base hits. Slugging Percentage measures a player's total bases, but doesn't really measure power. Pete Rose and Ichiro Suzuki accumulated a lot of total bases, but neither one were by any means powerful. ISO accounts for the difference.
It's taken by subtracting a player's AVG (batting average) from their slugging percentage. The reasoning is this: batting average measures every hit as 1; either a hit or not. Slugging percentage measures hits 1-4, with one being a single and 4 being a home run. If all your hits were singles, your slugging percentage and batting average would be equal. By subtracting AVG from SLG, you're left with how many extra bases a hitter accumulates.
Ichiro Suzuki's 2006 SLG of .416 would indicate a player with a little power. However, when we subtract his .322 AVG, we're left with an ISO of .094, not much at all. This accurately reflects Ichiro's 9 HR, 9 triples, and 20 doubles in over 700 PAs (plate appearances).
Adam Dunn's 2006 SLG of .490 is good, but not quite as good as you would think, given his reputation. We would expect him to be much better than Ichiro in this regard. And once you subtract his AVG (.234), he is: his ISO is .256, which is truly excellent. He's about three times the slugger Ichiro is, which is a much more accurate statement than their SLG would suggest, given that Dunn hit 40 HR and 24 doubles (but no triples).
K rate
Rate of strikeouts. For a batter, this is usually determined per at-bat or plate appearance. Ichiro Suzuki's K rate is tiny (71 K in over 700 PAs). Adam Dunn's is monstrous (194 in just under 700 PAs).
For a pitcher, this is determined per inning pitched. A pitcher's strikeout rate is one of the most important pieces of information you can get. It's more predictable and constant than almost any other basic pitching statistic, including ERA. K rate is much less susceptible to luck, chance, and environment than almost any other pitching stat. Therefore, it is much more indicative of a pitcher's true level of talent and is invaluable.
Generally speaking, a K rate of about 6 per 9 IP is average. A pitcher with a K rate below that is likely heading for danger. Truly excellent pitcher often have a K rate of more than 9 per 9 IP. So if you see a pitcher with more strikeouts than innings pitched, you're almost definitely looking at a star.
LEV
Leverage. Leverage indicates the importance of the situation a pitcher faces. If a pitcher only appears in the 1st inning with the bases empty, they'll have a very low leverage. If they only pitch in the 9th inning with the bases loaded, their leverage will be very high. Leverage also takes the score into account; a 1-run game is a higher-leverage situation than a blowout.
Leverage tells us how important a pitcher's innings were. This is especially important for closers or middle relievers; an ERA of 1.00 may be meaningless if it was compiled in easy chances, but if it was done in high-stakes competition it's fantastic.
Ideally, a manager would deploy his best relief pitcher to face the higher-leverage situation. Many analysts complain that modern managers aren't doing this, though -- at least not to the extent they used to. The save statistic has become more important than the leverage of a situation, when it should be the other way around.
It should be said that leverage is biased toward opportunity, so a pitcher's "leverage" score doesn't so much indicate inner talent as it shows how he was used.
PAP
Pitcher Abuse Points. I spoke about this in length during the blog about managers and, specifically, Dusty Baker.
PAP was developed by Rany Jazayerli and Keith Woolner in an attempt to quantify how much stress a pitcher was placed under. The formula for PAP has been recalibrated in an attempt to reflect reality, so that a high number of PAP strongly correlates with injury risk.
Jazayerli and Woolner defined five different "categories" of abuse for a starting pitcher, with Category I being little abuse and Category V being strong abuse. PAP not only lets us examine managers and their abuse of pitchers, it's also a great tool to examine and predict a player's future.
2006's leader in pitcher abuse was Livan Hernandez. Livan has led the category on and off for years now and appears to be the rare pitcher with a true "rubber arm." In 2nd place was Carlos Zambrano, who has also appeared on the leaderboard for years now. Zambrano, unfortunately, is still quite young, and so we won't know if he can handle such high stress until injury strikes. Thank you, Dusty Baker.
It should be noted that the AL's leader in PAP was free agent Barry Zito. Zito also led the league in 2005, and was 3rd in the AL in 2004. Buyer beware.
PECOTA
Baseball Prospectus' tool to predict a player's performance. PECOTA works by establishing a three-year baseline for a player's established level of performance and makes adjustments based on age, position, playing time, level of play, etc. PECOTA works by comparing the player to every other player in history to find comparables, and then looks at how those comparables performed. PECOTA is ever-changing to provide an accurate prediction tool.
PF
Park Factor. Determines how often runs are scored at the ballpark compared to the league average. Can be calculated for hitters or pitchers. A Park Factor of 130 indicates that runs were scored 30% more often than at other parks (think Coors Field in its heyday). A Park Factor of 85 indicates that runs were scored 15% less often than at other parks (the AstroDome at its most cavernous). Park Factors should always be kept in mind when viewing raw stats, as any Rockies fan can attest.
Park Factors are usually calculated with data from more than one year, to increase the sample size and improve accuracy. Park Factors are usually either based on 3-year or 5-year data sets. The trouble is that expanding your data sets increases your sample size, but also further distances you from the year you're actually measuring.
Most Park Factors are broad, indicating only run scoring. But the same principle can be applied to almost any other event. You can get a Park Factor for doubles, foul outs, and triples. These can be very important when looking at individual hitters. J.D. Drew, for example, is moving from a pitcher's park (Dodger Stadium) to a hitter's park (Fenway Park). Does that mean his offense will increase? Not exactly. Dodger Stadium is actually a friendly park to left-handed home run hitters, whereas Fenway Park is certainly not.
Pythagorean Win Totals (pWins or pLosses)
This metric was originally developed by Bill James, who established that a team's win-loss record is a predictable result of their runs scored and runs allowed. This strong correlation flies in the face of more traditional thinking that a team is more than just their stats. James found that on the other hand, they are for the most part. In fact, a team's Pythagorean Won-Loss Record is a more accurate predictor of future performance than their real won-loss record.
The formula itself is named because it bears a resemblance to the Pythagorean Theorem of Geometry.
The Pythagorean Totals come with some caveats. It's been shown that a team with a good bullpen can succeed despite a deceptively low pW-pL total; this is because they are timing their runs and runs prevented well. The Pythagorean Theory is based on the concept that a run is a run, but reality is that runs scored in later innings are more valuable. A team that is more talented at scoring (and preventing) runs in the late innings can succeed beyond the appearance of their pWin totals.
A further extension of the theory, accounting for some of these factors, was developed by Clay Davenport. These are known as the Pythagenport numbers.
Playing Time Requirements
In order to be considered on the leaderboard for a rate statistic (ERA, AVG, OBP), a player has to meet a minimum of playing time. This is obvious, because otherwise, the guy who went 1-for-1 would win the batting title.
Generally speaking, these requirements are:
For hitters, at least 3.1 PA/team game (502 plate appearances, if your team played 162 games).
For pitchers, at least 1 IP/team game (162 IP).
QS
Quality Starts. The number of starts where a pitcher a)pitched at least 6 innings and b) allowed 3 or fewer earned runs. The Quality Start was developed as a way to determine just that -- how many quality starts a pitcher made, as opposed to how many wins they were credited for.
With the development of more advanced pitching stats, Quality Starts is of less importance. But it is a good answer to a simple question: how many times did the pitcher keep his team in the game?
RA
Run Average. The same as ERA, except it takes into account all runs a pitcher allows, earned and unearned. Since the rules for separating earned and unearned runs are so antiquated and ineffective, many analysts choose to take all of a pitcher's runs into account. We know how to account for a pitcher's defense without the ineffective concept of "errors."
Runs (broad)
This doesn't refer to runs in the strict baseball sense (as in, Ichiro scored 100 runs or Johan Santana allowed 2 runs in the game). It refers to the attempt to take a ballplayer's total contribution and express it in one number: runs.
We've already discussed fielding runs, which attempt to express a ballplayer's defense in runs. There are also batting runs and pitching runs. In this context, all runs are created equal. A hitter worth 100 batting runs and -20 defensive runs contributes 80 total runs.
These are often qualified by determining how far they are above average or above replacement level. Hence, BRAA and BRAR; PRAA and PRAR; and FRAA and FRAR.
Generally speaking, 10 runs equals one win. So if one player is worth 50 runs above replacement, and another is worth 70, we can see that the latter player is worth 2 wins above replacement.
VORP
Value Over Replacement Player. Building one the entry above, VORP seeks to boil down a player's contribution into one number: the runs they provided above replacement level. VORP accounts for league, ballpark, and many other contextual factors.
VORP can be determined for hitters or pitchers. VORP does not take into account a player's defensive contribution, but it does take their position into account when determining value (i.e. a good-hitting shortstop is more valuable than a good-hitting DH).
Derek Jeter led all AL position players in VORP last season with 77.9. AL MVP Justin Morneau finished with a VORP of 50.9, ranking him 16th in the league, behind teammates Joe Mauer (65.4) and Johan Santana (79.7).
Seattle pitcher Joel Pineiro ranked near the bottom; his 6.36 ERA in 165.2 IP gave him -13.4 VORP. This means that the Mariners would have gained more than one full win had they replaced Pineiro with a readily-available replacement-level player.
WARP
Wins Above Replacement Player. WARP is essentially VORP translated to wins, plus accounting for defense. WARP1 includes a number of adjustments to take into account a player's season. WARP2 adjusts the player's performance for all-time. WARP3 is essentially WARP2 with an accounting for season length; it credits players who played in shorter, 154-game seasons.
WS
Win Shares. Amount a player contributed toward his team's wins. 3 WS = 1 win. A statistic developed by Bill James that accounts for offense, defense, and pitching. It multiplies a team's wins by 3 to determine its Win Shares and then apportions out credit or blame accordingly. James developed the statistic to work the opposite way from conventional statistics. Instead of trying to take HR, BB, etc. and turn them into wins, James started with wins and then parcelled out credit.
Win Shares is probably not as accurate as other models, and James is admittedly not a statistician, per se. The stat has been tweaked somewhat by the staff of The Hardball Times, who still use it as their basic measuring stick.
WXRL
Win eXpectation above Replacement, Lineup-Adjusted. See below on Win Expectancy for more background.
In short: WXRL measures the likelihood that a team will win a game based on the state of the game, the teams and players involved, etc. Every event in a baseball game changes the win expectancy. WXRL determines the net positive, or negative, effect that every pitcher has upon a ball game. If the pitcher comes in with a 50% chance of his team winning and leaves with a 70% chance of his team winning, then that pitcher would get (roughly) a WXRL of 0.2 wins.
This is a rough explanation of the concept, but the pitcher's net effect on his ballclub in terms of wins is expressed by WXRL. It seeks to take into account not just the total number of strikeouts, etc., but when they accomplish these things and what effect they have on the game. Leverage (see above) plays very strongly here.
Leaders in WXRL are usually closers, since they tend to pitch when the game is most on the line. The 2006 leader in WXRL was Francisco Rodriguez at 7.301, far above second-place Jonathan Papelbon (6.605).
WXRL is, like leverage, biased for opportunity. It doesn't just measure how a pitcher pitches, but when he does it. This isn't just a reflection upon them, but upon their manager (especially for relievers).
CONCEPTS
5-Tool Player
Baseball scouts measure 5 different "tools" to evaluate a prospect. The tools are: hitting for average, hitting for power, running speed, arm strength, and fielding ability. A 5-tool player is still a term to describe the very best prospect.
Partially because of the statistics revolution and the book Moneyball, the concept of a 5-tool player isn't as prevalent as it was. Scouts don't tend to go strictly by tools anymore, and more and more teams are using statistical analysis. This makes sense; having the "tools" to be a good baseball player does not indicate the likelihood that you will become one. The minors are full of former 5-tool players who never mastered the most important tool: playing good baseball.
The tools themselves are a bit flawed. They indicate that offense and defense are 40% of a player's game, and baserunning the other 20%. A more realistic weighting would be: offense 80%, defense 17%, baserunning 3%. There is no tool for plate discipline or batting eye; in fact, many failed 5-toolers are guys whose power never survived to the majors, because their poor plate discipline led to too many strikeouts (think Bo Jackson). The defensive requirements are less clear: what exactly is fielding ability? And while throwing arm is important, it's totally irrelevant if you're a first base prospect.
But, like most scouting principles, the 5 tools were based upon a good idea taken to impractical extremes. A well-rounded, athletic prospect -- one who does many things well -- is more likely to make it to the majors and thrive than a one-dimensional, unathletic prospect with the exact same statistics.
But athleticism and being well-rounded aren't everything. As Billy Beane said, we're not selling jeans here. Baseball is full of unathletic superstars and ultra-athletic washouts. But as a general idea, it's not bad.
As a note, the idea of the 5-tool player and the notion of being multi-dimensional are very important in the scouting world but irrelevant when discussing the past. This becomes evident when baseball writers -- most of them pro-scouting -- end up voting for the Hall of Fame. A player's past accomplishments are already there; it doesn't matter whether they used 5 tools to get them or zero. But you'll still hear guys like Mark McGwire criticised as being one-dimensional. But, looking at the past, dimensionality is irrelevant; how much did they produce?
This is a good example of how a good idea can be taken too far and used too much.
10-and-5 Player
Under baseball rules, a player with at least 10 years of major league service time and at least 5 years with the same club. Under current rules, such players automatically gain the power to veto trades.
There was some noise recently that the Braves would try to trade Andruw Jones before he reached the 10-and-5 threshhold and was able to veto them. But it didn't happen.
Age 27 Peak
Refers to the conventional wisdom that the average baseball players peaks at age 27. For years, the age of 30 was considered to be a baseball player's peak, but recent research by Bill James (basically confirmed by other studies) indicates that it is much earlier, around age 27. It's different for every player, especially different types of player (see "Old Player's Skills). But this is generally true.
Many people reflect an ignorance of the age 27 peak when they expect 31- and 32-year-olds to continue performing at their peak level for a multi-year contract. In fact, one basic fact of free agency is that almost every free agent who enters the market is past his peak; most in fact are over the age of 30. This further illustrates the danger of the Big-Name Free Agent and the importance of developing your own talent.
AS
All-Star. If I refer to a player as All-Star quality, it usually means that they're an above-average player among the two or three best at their position. They might be in the MVP race once or twice, but they're a step below what I consider to be an MVP-caliber player.
Examples include: Melvin Mora, Julio Lugo, Michael Barrett, Brett Myers, and many more
BB:K ratio
Like K rate, a good BB:K ratio is key for a hitter or a pitcher. For either one, you want to keep it on the right side of the 1:2 margin. A hitter who strikes out more than twice as often as he walks is probably trouble. Ditto for a pitcher who fails to strike out twice as many batters as he walks.
The 1:2 (or 2:1, if you prefer K:BB ratio) is a generalization and the rate of strikeouts and walks must be taken into account individually.
BBWAA
Baseball Writers Association of America. The group (often spoken of derisively by yours truly) that votes on the MVP, CY Young, and Rookie of the Year awards and inducts players into the Hall of Fame. Referred to recently (and more accurately) as the BBRAA -- the Baseball Reporters Association of America. Television and internet commentators need not apply.
Career Year
One year, which most players have, when they play above their established levels of production. Most everyone has one, just as most people will have off-years (the opposite of a career year). Most career years are simply the result of chance and good luck and are rarely the sign of any meaningful change. They are, however, usually mistaken for a sign that the player has undergone a miraculous improvement. I could mention dozens -- perhaps hundreds -- of examples of players who had a career year that the club mistook for a new, higher level of production.
You'd think that after being proven wrong so much, otherwise intelligent baseball men would wrap their heads around this concept. But it hasn't happened yet.
Examples from 2006 include Alfonso Soriano, Gary Matthews, Jr., Mark DeRosa, and a few others.
When in doubt, remember the concept of the Age 27 peak. Also consider the type of player to see if they really have ascended to a new level.
CBA
The Collective Bargaining Agreement. Ever since Marvin Miller came along and brought baseball's labor relations into the 20th century, labor and management have lived by the terms negotiated in the CBA. Whenever a CBA expires, it is usually a chance for labor (or management) to demand harsh terms for renewal. Every CBA renewal in baseball history led to a work stoppage of some sort until the 2002 negotiations were completed at the last minute. The 2006 negotiations were historically peaceful.
The terms of the CBA dictate all baseball policy that affects management and the players, from the amateur draft to the pension plan.
Clutch
The concept that certain players perform better under pressure conditions. Thrown about to label pretty much every player in the game as either "clutch" or "not clutch."
It could be said that the cause celebre of sabermetrics is to refute the idea of clutchness. Some of the earliest sabermetric studies looked for evidence of clutchness (they didn't find it), and some of Bill James' early work was to look for evidence that certain people consistently performed better in the clutch than others (he couldn't find it).
Later, more sophisticated, research has indicated that there is a certain level of clutch performance that can't be explained by true chance. That level is somewhere between 2 or 20%, depending upon whom you ask. But even the most optimistic sabermetric studies indicate that good (or bad) clutch performance is due more to chance than skill. In fact, much of the magical "clutch" performance is probably just good situational hitting; changing your approach to fit the situation.
But the idea of clutch is one of the most treasured in all of mainstream sports. The very mythology of baseball was written with clutch as its ink; almost every baseball film or glorious baseball memory has to do with someone "coming through in the clutch." It's a fantasy that the public (and the media) will not easily be disabused of.
But it doesn't hurt to try.
Davenport Translations
Clay Davenport of Baseball Prospectus specializes in "translating" stats; that is, removing all situational and contextual biases to provide a "true" sense of the player. Clay translates minor league stats to reflect what they would be in the majors; he translates stats from one ballpark or league into another; he can even translate the stats of a player in the Japanese League to the majors. His translations are at the heart of the PECOTA system.
Referred to as "DTs" for short.
Defensive Spectrum
An idea put forward by Bill James to establish the idea of defensive skill as a spectrum for most difficult to least difficult. It reads thus:
C -- SS -- 2B -- CF -- 3B -- RF -- LF -- 1B -- DH
Some have argued over certain aspects of it (whether to switch center field and third base), but the basic concept is still in use today. You'll often hear players referred to as being from the "right side" of the defensive spectrum, meaning that of little skill, or value. Therefore players from the left side are more valuable. It's rather like mounting a horse: the left side is the right side, and the right side is the wrong side.
James observed that, as players age, they drift from the left to the right side of the defensive spectrum. This holds true in almost every way. In fact, you can almost trace Pete Rose's career from a young second baseman to an old first baseman, hitting most every stop along the way.
James also remarked that a player is rarely moved left on the defensive spectrum. The teams that have tried often meet with disastrous results.
A great deal of discussion has raged recently over where the catcher's position should be on the spectrum. This may be worth an entry of its own, but there's been a great deal of research lately trying to prove the theory that the catcher is the most valuable defender on the field. Now, it's hard to argue that catching is the roughest position on the field, or that catchers have short careers. Therefore, a person who can man catcher is more valuable, since that position experiences higher attrition.
But the other aspects of catcher defense -- mainly that a catcher has a positive effect on a pitching staff -- are amazingly elusive to researchers. Recent research by a number of sources couldn't find any evidence of a catcher's effect on a pitching staff. Try though we might, we're coming more and more to the conclusion that the catcher isn't nearly as valuable as the shortstop.
But, since the concept of a catcher's defensive superiority is central to our understanding of baseball, it would be wise not to make up our minds just yet. Obviously, just because we can't find something doesn't mean it's not there. But this is something that merits further study. And from what I've seen, we may have to drastically revise the way we view a catcher.
GG
Gold Glove. Refers to a fielder who is one of the best -- if not the best -- defenders at their position. Our understanding of defense is still quite incomplete, and what wisdom we do have is rarely utilized by those who vote for the awards. So Gold Glove winners aren't necessarily the stars they're made out to be.
HOF
Hall of Fame. Also, HOF-er for Hall-of-Famer.
LAIM
League-Average Innings-Muncher.
Acronyms are all the vogue, and they are admittedly fun to use. LAIM refers to a pitcher who isn't really that productive, but whose chief quality resides in "munching" innings and keeping his team in games.
This term isn't meant as an insult. A LAIM has value; being average is still better than replacement-level, and guys who can throw 175-200 innings with a league-average ERA are few and far between.
While Greg Maddux used to be an elite pitcher, now he's become just another LAIM.
League Average
When looking at any raw stat, it's important to keep in mind what the league average is and compare a player's performance to that. See the above entry on "ERA+" to see why Pedro Martinez's 2000 ERA was better, in context, than Bob Gibson's 1.12 mark in 1968.
Catcher Matt Nokes had a .536 slugging percentage in 1987 as a catcher with the Tigers. In 1988, it fell to .424. Did Nokes experience a major power outage? Not exactly:
1987: Nokes' SLG -- .536; AL average -- .425
1988: Nokes' SLG -- .424; AL average -- .391
Nokes' power outage certainly happened, but the league changed a lot more than he did. A shift of .034 points is very big for one season.
If a player has an abnormally good or bad year -- or experiences a sudden increase or decrease in productivity -- first make sure that it's really the player that's changing and not the league.
And of course, always account for the league average when looking at any raw stat. The last NL player to hit .400 was Rogers Hornsby, who hit .403 in 1925. Are all the players since then pansies (Hornsby would think so)? The NL hit for a .292 average in 1925; Hornsby was .111 points above average. In 2006, the NL hit .265. Freddy Garcia hit .344; .079 points above average. Is Garcia really just .30 points away from becoming Rogers Hornsby? Not exactly; he had a "career year" (see above). But Hornsby doesn't look so immortal when viewed in context.
LOOGY
Left-handed One-Out GuY. It refers to the practice, now endemic to baseball, of carrying a left-handed reliever in the bullpen who is used to pitch to a single left-handed batter and then removed from the game. The practice was popularized by a young Tony LaRussa in Oakland, but now almost every team has one.
The concept of the LOOGY is often criticized; yes, left-handed pitchers perform better against left-handed hitters, but that's such a broad generalization that it shouldn't require us to breed a new species of relievers. It also serves to make games longer and much more boring, as the manager now uses three pitchers (R-L-R) whereas in the past he would use one (R). It has also contributed to the ever-growing bullpens, some of which have reached 13 men!
The LOOGY is an example of a good idea gone too far; although it did have the added benefit of giving Jesse Orosco a job after his 46th birthday. Luckily, the concept of the ROOGY hasn't caught on yet.
Mallpark
Pejorative term for the modern ballparks, which are often a part of broader "entertainment complexes," signalling the death of the Wrigley-era "neighborhood ballparks." It also refers to the absurd amount of cash owners make from ballparks, most of which are funded and subsidized with public money.
Old Player's Skills
Another Bill James concept. James observed that players with a certain skill set (walks and power, but with a low batting average and little athleticism) tended to lose their value much faster than players of a different skill set (high batting average but relatively little power or "patience," good athleticism resulting in strong defense and/or stolen bases). James noticed that as a player aged, their skills tended to evolve from the more athletic, average-driven game ("young player's skills") to the slower approach typified by walks and homers ("old player's skills").
James noted that if a young players arrives in the majors already displaying "old player's skills," they're not likely to have a long career. In fact, many big-time prospects have flamed out in precisely this manner (Kevin Maas, Pete Incaviglia). Any player who possesses the dreaded "old player's skills" is not a safe investment after age 30 and might even be out of the majors by 35. On the other hand, players who retain their "young player's skills" can stay in the game into their 40's (Rickey Henderson, Craig Biggio, Pete Rose).
If your list of comparable players include any members of the "old player's skills" Hall of Fame -- guys like Greg Luzinski, Ron Kittle, Nate Colbert, and Jim Gentile -- plan on drawing your pension before your 40th birthday.
And yes, I'm talking about Adam Dunn.
PEDs
Performance-Enhancing Drugs. I already mentioned these in the Mark McGwire comment, but these can refer to steroids, nutritional supplements, amphetamines, etc. -- anything that gives a ballplayer an extra, artifical edge over his opponents.
All steroids are PEDs, but not all PEDs are steroids. The two terms are often used interchangeably, but they're not the same (see Will Carroll's book The Juice). Human Growth Hormone is not a steroid, but a substance produced naturally by the body.
The line between an illegal PED (such as a "greenie" or amphetamine) and a legal PED (caffeine) is uncomfortably thin.
Peripherals
Analysts will often refer to a pitcher's "peripheral" stats; they are referring to his walks, strikeouts, and home runs allowed. Since these are "peripheral" in the mainstream consciousness compared to Wins and ERA, they are referred to as such. But, as the research of Voros McCracken and others have illustrated, they are anything but secondary. (See "Three True Outcomes.)
Postseason Halo Effect
This is the only entry of my creation -- so far (I'm trying). The concept isn't new, but my term for it is. The Postseason Halo is similar to the career year, but is more enduring and built of less substance.
The idea is that a player who plays a key role in the postseason will enjoy a postseason halo that obscures their shortcomings for months, or even years to come. One could also call this the Don Larsen effect, after the Yankee pitcher who threw a perfect game in the 1956 World Series but was never really good in the regular season again. None the less, his career lasted for 14 seasons, until 1967. (To be fair, Larsen enjoyed some good seasons later in his career after converting to relief).
Another example could be Scott Brosius, who combined his Postseason Halo with his Yankee Halo (needs no explanation) to earn himself a totally unmerited spot on the Hall of Fame ballot.
The concept is related to the idea of "clutch," with the theory being that if you can win in October, then you must be really good. But good players in October are no less lucky than good players in April.
David Eckstein is probably the best example from the past postseason. Bobby Jenks is a candidate from 2005. And the Boston Red Sox' unlikely championship in 2004 contributed at least half a dozen postseason halos (Kevin Millar, Derek Lowe, Orlando Cabrera).
NOTE: It's not a postseason halo if the player really is that good (Albert Pujols, Manny Ramirez).
Regression to the Mean
This is a statistics principle that states that an extreme performance -- good or bad -- is likely to regress back to the average in the future. This is true in baseball; MVPs rarely repeat their performances in the following year. Teams rarely win (or lose) 1oo games for several consecutive years.
There are many other factors that determine a baseball team's performance, of course, but a strong dose of regression must be taken into account.
Replacement Level
This is the backbone of the advanced VORP and WARP statistics and one of the more recent additions to the baseball ideology.
For years, many metrics compared a player to the league average. This was nothing new, as it was common to classify someone as above- or below-average. But recent studies have stressed that the baseline shouldn't be set at average. As we've seen, a below-average player is not just valuable on the field, but valuable in terms of salary. A player should be compared to the replacement level -- that is, their contributions are only as important as they are difficult to replace.
This isn't just a cosmetic difference. If you're consistently below-average, then an average-based (such as FRAA) metric would rate you in the negative numbers. But you can be below-average and still be valuable; a player shouldn't be punished for being consistently below average. The concept of "average" doesn't really agree with our concept of value, so we'll have to look elsewhere.
There is, across baseball, a pool of readily-available talent that can be had for a minimal amount of money (the waiver price, the league minimum). If your performance drops so low that it can be replaced by an easily-available, low-price alternative, then you are no longer valuable to the team. So our basic definition of "valuable" is how difficult you are to replace.
And so we introduce (and try to measure) the "replacement level." The replacement level differs by position. Offensively, it's much higher for a first baseman (easy to find a replacement) than it is for a shortstop (hard to find one). This also works on the positive side of the ledger. A great-hitting shortstop is more valuable than an equally great-hitting DH, simply because it's a lot harder to find a great-hitting shortstop. Oddly enough, although this is a new concept to sabermetrics, the free agent market has understood this for years. Good-hitting center fielders make a lot more money than good-hitting first basemen. And the biggest free agent contract of all time was given to a shortstop who hit like an MVP (A-Rod).
I don't do the concept justice here. It's best explained in the book Baseball Between the Numbers in the chapter: "Why is Mario Mendoza so important?" That's the basic idea: picture the Mendoza line (a .200 average), but draw it out for a player's entire offensive game. If you're above that line, you're worth having around. If not, you can be replaced.
Teams consistently make mistakes by paying big money to players who aren't far above replacement level. The most gratuitous example this offseason might be Gary Matthews, Jr.
Sample Size
Another concept from statistics. The idea is that the larger the sample you draw your data from, the more closely it will reflect the underlying reality.
Let's say I flip a coin ten times. It comes up 10 heads. Do I have an other-worldy coin? Of course not, you say; 10 flips doesn't prove anything. I agree. So why do we think that a hitter who goes 8-for-10 against a pitcher "owns" him?
Baseball men make mistakes every day owing to small sample size. They usually happen early in the season, when you only have a month or two of data to draw from. Our star player hits .200 in April? What's wrong with him? Let's try benching him or giving him extra batting practice on Mondays. Then we can fix what's wrong with him!
Of course, the idea that nothing's wrong with him isn't usually mentioned. This error is more often made in newsrooms. Granted, beat reporters make their living by taking what happens in one game and looking for the meaning of life. But no truly colossal decision should be made upon 10, 25, or even 100 at-bats worth of data. Because what you're looking at might not be a true reflection of reality; it could just be a bad time to be flipping coins.
Similarity Scores
What started as more of a toy than a tool is now a key part of performance analysis. It's fun to take one player's stats and see how closely they compare with another's. It's also neat to take a player's stats and see which players in history they match up with. (Baseball-Reference.com has the 10 most similar players for every major leaguer in history).
But -- as PECOTA has shown us -- when you know who a player is really similar to, you can start to project his future. If a player's top-10 list is full of guys who suffered injuries and were out of the majors by age 30, that's a pretty big red flag.
It should be noted that most similarity scores make no adjustment for era. A player with 400 home runs is similar to another player with 400 home runs, whether they're playing in 1966 or 1996.
Stolen Base Break-Even Rate
It's long been accepted baseball wisdom that a caught stealing is more harmful than a stolen base is helpful. So you have to do better than 50/50 in stolen bases to actually provide value to your team.
The general rate to break even in stolen bases is 70%. If you're successful less than 70% of the time, then you're hurting the team rather than helping it. However, the breakeven rate changes depending upon the offensive environment. In a high offensive environment (Arlington), it's not worth stealing a base when you're likely to score anyway. The out is much more harmful than the base is helpful. However, in a low-run environment, outs are plentiful, so it's a lower risk to try and take the valuable extra base.
So the break-even rate hovers between 60-80% between the far extremes. However, in general, 70% is a rough benchmark.
It's interesting to apply this principle to most basestealers and see the results. Almost every newspaper in America reports stolen bases, and when players are mentioned, they're usually mentioned with their raw number of steals. But that's as useless as knowing how many hits someone has without knowing their batting average. Stealing 20 bases is great if you're Carlos Beltran and can manage to go 20-for-22 or something. But if you've gone 20-for-30, then you're just hurting your team.
Even the most prolific basestealers rarely succeed often enough to make a really significant difference for their team. In 1982, Rickey Henderson set a new record by stealing 130 bases in a season. Every "serious" baseball fan knows that. But he was also caught 42 times, for a success rate of 76%. Now, 76% isn't bad. In fact, given that 1982 was a lower run-scoring environment, it's safely above the break-even rate. But even if we put the rate at 67% (roughly), every time Rickey was caught stealing would cancel out two stolen bases. So when you take the CS into account, Rickey only gained a net total of 48 bases. Wait a minute -- Rickey Henderson, the greatest base-stealer of all time, was only worth 14 home runs worth of stolen bases at his all-time best?
Well, yes, roughly. And 14 home runs is a hell of a lot, especially when you're already an MVP like Rickey was. But if you look at any basestealer in the modern game and think they're making a major dent in terms of runs scored -- compared to the sluggers and true hitters -- you're just fooling yourself.
Three True Outcomes -- Voros McCracken
I've already mentioned McCracken and his ground-breaking claim that a pitcher has almost no control over the balls put in play against him. It doesn't matter if you're Greg Maddux or Greg Jones -- once the ball leaves the bat, it's up to the defense. And while this isn't literally true, it's more true than we ever knew, and it changed the way we view pitchers.
And so, considering what little control pitchers do have -- we were left to consider the Three True Outcomes that a pitcher does have control over -- walks, strikeouts, and home runs. I've already mentioned that these are the three most important basic statistics of any pitcher anywhere.
But some fans took a liking to the idea of Three True Outcomes. In fact, the Rob Deer fan club soon sprang up to honor those hitters who give opposing defenses absolutely nothing to do. In an 11-year career, Deer came to the plate about 4500 times. Of that, he hit 230 home runs, drew 575 walks, and struck out 1,409 times. That comes to a Three True Outcomes % of nearly 50%, which is phenomenally high. The opposing defense was irrelevant nearly 50% of the time Rob Deer came to bat.
There's nothing especially good or bad about being a 3TO sort of guy -- although they tend to be "old players' skills" types -- some statheads get a kick out of those that turn baseball into a game of 1-on-1. Deer's heir apparent in today's game is either part-timer Russell Branyan or our old friend Adam Dunn.
TINSTAAPP
There Is No Such Thing As A Pitching Prospect.
This is a relatively new sabermetric trusim designed to confront people with the harsh realities facing pitching prospects. The difficult of predicting a young pitcher's performance, combined with the high probability of debilitating or career-ending injury, make it very dangerous to count those pitchin' chickens before they hatch.
Walk Year
The term reserved for the last year of a player's contract before they reach free agency. Conventional wisdom was that players tended to try harder in their walk year -- stay in the lineup and play through minor injuries -- to make their big payday. It doesn't sound that significant, but a study in Baseball Between the Numbers showed that players in their walk year did tend to do better than expected.
So GMs should be aware of this when signing free agents. And players should try their hardest to make sure that their "career year" coincides with their "walk year." They will become filthy rich, although they probably won't make their future employers very happy (Adrian Beltre).
Win Expectancy
See above: WXRL. Win Expectancy measures the "state" of a baseball games and determines the likelihood of a team's scoring a run or winning the game based on the current state. Measuring a change in the state of the game -- and the players who bring about those changes -- can be very enlightening. It can also tell us a lot about when stealing and sacrificing really do help you win games -- and when they're wasted outs.
Win Nexus
I've already dedicated one blog entry to this. But this concept (known by many other names) is that certain wins are more valuable to a team than others; therefore, they can be excused for spending more to achieve them. The Win Nexus is roughly between 87-92 wins -- depending on the league and division -- where anything below the nexus is out of the playoffs and anything above is in. The difference between making and not making the playoffs represents so much income for a team that they can understandably overpay to achieve those wins.
It's important to know which side of the Nexus you're on. Many teams -- the current Chicago Cubs, for example -- think they're much closer than they really are, and end up spending money for wins that are, as it turns out, irrelevant (the Cubs will thank Alfonso Soriano for bringing them all the way to 75 wins).
More to come, as I will be updating and improving this glossary in the future.

Looking Ahead: Minnesota Twins

2006 W-L Record: 96-66
2006 pW-pL Record: 93-69

Runs Scored: 801 (8th in AL)
Runs Allowed: 683 (2nd in AL)
Free Agents: Phil Nevin, Brad Radke, Shannon Stewart, Rondell White


2007 Projected Lineup:
1B -- Justin Morneau
2B -- Luis Castillo
SS -- Jason Bartlett
3B -- Nick Punto
LF -- Lew Ford?
CF -- Torii Hunter
RF -- Michael Cuddyer
C -- Joe Mauer
DH -- Jason Kubel?

2007 Proj. Rotation:
Johan Santana
Boof Bonser
Carlos Silva
Scott Baker?
Matt Garza?

2007 Proj. Closer: Joe Nathan

Offense/Defense:
One of the things that holds the Twins back, in my opinion, is their steadfast old-fashioned view of baseball. There's nothing wrong with being old-fashioned now and then, and I'm a firm believer that scouting and stats can and should work hand in hand. But the Twins, in a quest to honor the spirit of Calvin Griffith, believe in the spirit of small-ball and thrift. GM Terry Ryan takes care of the former, and owner Carl Pohlad more than accounts for the latter.
The Twins' approach does give them a strong defense, but they often end up sacrificing offense, even at traditionally offense-heavy positions. The corner outfield spots are probably the most obvious examples of this. The Twins kept Jacque Jones around long after he had played his best baseball, out of a bizarre combination of loyalty and a misconception of what a left fielder is. They picked up Shannon Stewart and, after an overly-hyped stretch run in 2003, got to see his career fade out in front of them. But Stewart was a real Twin; he was a good defender, stole bases, and hit for a high average. He also probably makes "productive outs" and says "please" and "thank you," too. The Twins could keep their offensive philosophy intact so long as they had somebody else in the lineup to knock those runners home.
It probably won't happen in 2007. In right field, the Twins got a great 2006 out of Michael Cuddyer, who hit 284/362/504, giving the Twins a much-needed boost of offense. But the 27-year-old Cuddyer has never really hit like that before. His career batting line is 268/342/455. That's not bad, but Cuddyer doubled his career high in homers (from 12 to 24) to become a legitimate offensive threat. The Twins need him to retain as much of that as possible to help support the M&M boys (Morneau & Mauer).
In left field, the Twins don't currently have anyone but Lew Ford. Ford is another example of the type of player the Twins don't need any more of; he's a good defender and probably a swell guy, but he's turning 30 next year and can't hit (226/287/312 in '06). The Twins used Jason Tyner some in 2006, but that's a really bad idea; Tyner's nothing but batting average, and is no kind of left fielder. Hopefully, the Twins can see through that, and won't get bogged down in that "piranhas" nonsense.
If I were Terry Ryan, I'd make left field my top, top priority. Of course, that's difficult since the Twins don't sign big-name free agents. But then the upside of that is that they don't have to suffer through Carlos Lee.
In center field, the Twins renewed incumbent Torii Hunter's option for one more year. It's questionable if they'll be able to keep him after 2007. It's obviously in the Twins' best interests to do so, since they don't have anyone to replace him, and the going rate for a center fielder who can hit is far out of their price range.
Luckily for the Twins, Hunter was able to bounce back in 2006, setting a new career high in home runs (31) while hitting 278/336/490. The low OBP is an issue, but welcome to the club. He's not the defensive God that Baseball Tonight makes him look like, but he's a hot hand.

The other offensive spot in need of filling is the DH role. It would be great if prospect Jason Kubel could step forward and claim the role. But Kubel was frustrating in 2006, hitting a woeful 241/279/386 in his 73-game debut. Kubel has the potential to do more than that, but it's questionable whether he can do it at the major league level. The Twins are notoriously fickle with their own hitting prospects; it took them forever to go with Justin Morneau at first, and Kubel's awful 2006 may have set his cause back a year or more.
But there's really no one else in the system who can fill the role. Ryan tried a creative solution in 2006 by bringing in free agent Rondell White on an incentive-based deal. It was a good risk, but didn't work out; White was terrible (246/276/365).

Do not despair, however, because the Twins have finally put their faith in their home-grown first baseman, and he did not disappoint. Granted, he didn't deserve the AL MVP; he wasn't even the most valuable player on his team. But he did "mash," as they say, hitting 321/375/559 and hitting 34 homers. It was the first 30-homer season by a Twin since Kent Hrbek. There's something not to be proud of; it's also perhaps a sign that we're taking our small-ball a little bit too far.
Either way, the Twins are set at first, which is more than can be said for third base. Nick Punto filled the role after the team wisely ditched Tony Batista, and Punto hit well enough (290/352/373). The problem is that even that is better than Punto's hit in the past, and he's not the kind of guy you want to install as a full-time third baseman. He's a fine insurance policy, but you can't really afford to run him out there every day when your lineup already has a few holes in it elsewhere.
Up the middle, the Twins seem set for now. Luis Castillo is the Twins' kind of player; speed, batting average, defense, and steals. Castillo got off to a slow start in '06, but fought back to a 296/358/370 finish. Castillo isn't the centerpiece of a killer offense, but he's a great guy to fill in a gap. The Twins finally killed off the Luis Rivas experiment and traded for Castillo, and should be happy with the results. He should have a couple more seasons like 2006 left in him, and he comes much cheaper ($5 million) than former teammate Juan Pierre, a lesser player.
At shortstop, the Twins have Luis Castillo Lite in Jason Bartlett. Like seemingly everybody else on the club, Bartlett hits for a pretty empty .300 average, but he draws enough walks to make it worthwhile (309/367/393 in '06). He also provides strong defense at shortstop. So Bartlett, like Castillo, is no All-Star, but he's good enough for now while you go looking for a left fielder and third baseman.
But I have saved the best for last. Because behind the plate, the Twins have Joe Mauer. Mauer, who will be 24 next year, is coming off a season where he might have been the most valuable player in the American League. He wasn't a major factor in the voting, but he hit 347/429/507 with excellent defense behind the plate.
It's really hard not to hurl superlatives at Mauer. Catchers who hit this well and field this well at age 24 are very, very rare. I'm talking Hall of Fame rare. And while it's too early to inscribe the plaque, Mauer bears a strong resemblance to a lot of the elite catchers of the past.
There is one difference -- size. Mauer is 6'4" and 220 lbs, which is pretty huge for a catcher. It's not just a cosmetic complaint, because Mauer's size will likely mean a heavier burden placed on his knees. The Twins certainly want to keep Mauer around for as long as possible. But he's such a good defender behind the plate that they don't want to get rid of a good thing. What will probably happen is that they'll watch Mauer's progress and leave him behind the plate unless something bad starts to develop.


With Mauer and Morneau on top, supported by Torii Hunter, Luis Castillo, and a couple others, the Twins have a decent lineup. If they could add an impact bat at just one of the empty positions (with LF being the emptiest), they could afford to keep their glove men where they are and still be contenders. Here's hoping that Terry Ryan sees the value of big-time offense. Because your pitching staff won't always be brilliant . . .

Pitching:
. . . or will it? One thing that you can't take away from the Twins is their knack for getting good pitching. You could quibble with their offense and their misuse of resources, but it's hard to argue with a farm system stacked with the best arms in the minors. The Twins have the best pitcher in baseball in Johan Santana and a fleet of pitching prospects coming along to back him up.
Do they even need hitters?
Johan Santana in short: Good like Tom Seaver; If he keeps it up, Hall of Fame -- First Ballot.
The only worry about the Twins' pitching prospects is that they don't have enough major league experience to count on for 2006. If they had Santana and wunderkind Francisco Liriano, that would be much less of an issue. But the fabulous Liriano (who was nearly as good as Johan in '06) will likely miss all of 2007 with Tommy John surgery. It's the best thing for his career, but it does put the team in a bit of a bind for next season.
One guy who's already pitched well in the majors is Boof Bonser. Bonser came up in 2006 and made 18 starts, posting a 4.22 ERA with a 24:84 BB:K ratio. His minor league numbers suggest that he's likely to improve upon that. Boof came over from the Giants in the same deal that brought Liriano and ace closer Joe Nathan. All the Twins had to give up was grumpy ol' A.J. Pierzynski. Sweet.
Another likely member of the rotation is prospect Scott Baker. Baker, who will be 25 next season, bears a strong resemblance to Brad Radke. He doesn't strike out a lot of batters (although he gets his share), but he compensates with great control (1:4 BB:K ratio in the minors). He is prone to the home run, which was the main thing that troubled him in 2006. Baker made 16 starts with the big club, and while his command was fine, his 17 HR allowed in 83.1 IP help explain his 6.37 ERA. But Baker's much better than that, and he looks good enough to start out 2007 in the rotation.
The only other person with a "lock" on the starting rotation is also the only veteran (other than Johan), Carlos Silva. The Twins re-upped Silva for the 2007 season. They didn't pay him much money, but even then it might be a bad deal. Silva is looking more and more like a lost cause on the mound. Silva has incredible control, allowing very few walks (his 2005 saw him post the best walk rate in nearly 100 years). But he also doesn't strike out many batters at all. That means that he allows a lot of balls in play, and not even the Minnesota defense can help him there. While Silva did fine in 2005, all that contact stung him in '06, as he finished with a 5.94 ERA in 180.1 IP. Silva is still young, but it's doubtful that he'll do much better than he did last year. His very pitching style is such that he allows far too many balls in play to be successful. He would have been a sensation back during the Dead Ball Era, but nowadays those balls are lively, and a lot of them leave the park (38 HR allowed in '06).
It should be noted that the Twins are trying to talk Brad Radke out of retirement. But Radke has suffered so much in recent years (4.32 ERA last year at age 33, with only 1.5 human arms) that it's doubtful he'd have much left in the tank. Certainly, it wouldn't be worth plunking down $8 million+ when he wouldn't pitch much better than the kids. Here's a place where excessive sentimentality can really hurt you (Radke's rag-arm performance in '06 made him a big hero in Minnesota, which would have been great if he'd actually been pitching really well).
With Santana-Bonser-Silva and probably Baker as the team's 1-4 , there are several possibilities for the #5 spot. I'm not exaggerating when I say that the Twins have at least a half-dozen minor league pitchers who could hold their own in the majors. That kind of depth is not only a great boon to your team but a great chance to make some trades.
The most likely candidate for the #5 spot is Matt Garza. Garza started 2006 in A-ball and looked like just another in a long line of promising Twin pitchers in the low minors. But then he caught fire. In 8 starts, he posted a 1.42 ERA and looked ready to move on. He made 10 starts in Double-A (2.51 ERA, 68 K in 57.1 IP) before getting moved on to Triple-A. With the big league rotation full of holes, the Twins put Garza on an express train for the Twin Cities. He threw just 5 starts in Triple-A (1.85 ERA) before he made it to the majors . . . and sucked (5.76 ERA in 9 starts).
Yes, Garza was really, really rushed last year. And if the Twins hadn't had such a strong need at the big-league level, he probably wouldn't have been pushed so hard. But a lot of the speed was justified, as Garza was dominant at A-ball and Double-A. It may be a good idea to let him plant his feet in the minors before he gets a full-time big-league job, but that decision will likely be made in Spring Training.
A few more names to toss out there: J.D. Durbin (2.33 ERA in 16 Triple-A starts last year); Justin Jones, Glen Perkins, and perhaps Adam Harben and Errol Simonitsch. Those are the established starters the Twins have who could fill it at the big-league level. Don't be surprised if you see most of these guys pass through the majors in 2007. In a lot of systems, they'd have a spot in the rotation.

What do you do with disappointing/extraneous starters? Why, you turn them into relievers, of course? It worked swimmingly with Matt Guerrier (3.36 ERA) and could do so in the future for Willie Eyre (5.31 ERA). But either way, the Minnesota bullpen is just fine. I don't quite agree with the long-term extension given to Dennys Reyes, but the Twins like him as a LOOGY (0.89 ERA and 49 K in 50.2 IP), and it's easy to see why. Juan Rincon (age 27, 2.91 ERA in 74.1 IP) and Jesse Crain (24, 3.52 ERA in 76.2 IP) are the cornerstones of the setup corps right now and should be for some time. Look for more relief prospects (Pat Neshek) as well as some young starters (Glen Perkins) start in the bullpen in 2007.
But the ace, of course, is closer Joe Nathan. Nathan has been the Twins' closer for three seasons now; his saves totals are 44, 43, and 36, and he's never thrown less than 68 innings. He's given up 11 HR over the entire three years, and has never allowed more than 23 walks. The best part? His strikeout totals: 89, 94, 95. And his ERAs: 1.62, 2.70, 1.58.
Oh yeah.

With this pitching staff, the Twins would be contenders with their Triple-A offense (which roughly describes their 2005 season). But they would be well-told to take some this excess pitching talent -- which is in very high demand right now -- and turn it into some young offense with some upside. We may be dreaming to see the Twins signing Barry Bonds or trading for Miguel Cabrera. But the Twins have an embarassment of riches in the pitching department. It will mean more than just rounding out a great staff, but hopefully offering some chance to trade for offense.

Offseason Game Plan:
As I've mentioned often, the Twins really need one or even two impact bats. The free agent market is basically bereft of them, not that the Twins could or would pay market price. So that leaves a creative trade. If the Twins want to take a step forward with teams like Cleveland, Detroit, and Chicago, then they must improve their offense by more than just a run or two.

Other than that, the Twins just need to keep their young pitchers healthy and cross their fingers for Liriano's rehab.

Sunday, December 10, 2006

Looking Ahead: Kansas City Royals

  • The Cubs signed Jason Marquis to a 3-year deal worth reportedly $21 million. On the face of it, that's not bad. With Gil Meche getting 5/55 and Adam Eaton getting 3/24, Marquis is one of the cheapest free agent starters signed this offseason.
    That all sounds great. The problem is that there's a reason that Marquis came so cheap. All of Marquis' vital signs have been heading steadily southward for the past two years. And his work before that wasn't inspiring, either.
    Marquis started off as a big prospect in the Braves' organization who soon became famous for not getting along with Leo Mazzone. Talk about a really terrible way to make a name for yourself. Marquis' numbers would seem to confirm the idea that he wasn't listening to Leo. Marquis pitched parts of four seasons in Atlanta, and only once did he keep his ERA below 5.00. He never logged more than 22 starts or 130 innings, mainly because he was usually the team's 5th starter and didn't pitch well enough to move up in the world. Even in his one good season, 2001, Marquis' 3.48 ERA was belied by a 59:98 BB:K ratio in 129.1 IP. As time went on, Marquis' walk rate stayed high and his strikeout rate started to fall. The Braves wisely shipped him off to St. Louis in the J.D. Drew trade.
    Marquis experienced a semi-renaissance in St. Louis, at least in ERA terms. Perhaps because of the Cardinals' better defense, or simply due to luck, Marquis finished 2004 with a respectable 3.71 ERA. He also finally managed to stick in the rotation; he threw 201.1 IP in 32 starts. He finished the season with a Game 4 loss in the World Series, but it still seemed as though he had come a long way.
    Not so fast. Marquis' BB:K ratio in 2003 was 70:138, or little better than it was before. He also allowed 26 HR, a lot for Busch Stadium. In looks like, in retrospect, Marquis' ERA was better than it should have been given what he was doing on the mound.
    Over the past two years, all of his numbers have degenerated. He went from a still-decent ERA of 4.13 in 2005 to a 6.02 mark last year. His home runs increased to 29 in '05 and 35 in '06 (making him the league leader in home runs allowed and earned runs allowed). His BB:K ratio got worse; in 2005, he lost 38 strikeouts despite pitching more innings (69:100 in 207 IP) and in 2006 it was just as poor (75:96 in 194.1 IP).
    Let me get this straight -- you've got a guy who gives up a lot of walks and a lot of homers, and yet is one of the worst strikeout pitchers in the league? A guy whose peripherals (BB, K, HR) have all headed sharply downward in recent years? Yes, he's just 28 years old, but he's also already managed to alienate two of the best pitching coaches in baseball, Mazzone and the Cards' Dave Duncan.
    And you're going out of your way to sign this fellow?
    If Marquis can bounce back to his 2004-5 form (4.00-ish ERA), then he will be worth $7 million. But that's very doubtful. His peripheral stats don't suggest someone likely to rebound; they suggest someone likely to stay just as bad as he is. Which doesn't even take Wrigley Field into account; if Marquis gave up 35 jacks in Busch Stadium last year, how will he do in the Friendly Confines? How will his high number of baserunners and fly balls survive over on the North Side?
    Marquis is a terrible fit for the Cubs. There are several arms out there with a better short- and long-term future. Miguel Batista may be older, but he's at least effective. The Cubs could have put together a couple "B" prospects and gotten Rodrigo Lopez from the Orioles. Lopez is similar to Marquis, except he has stronger peripherals and has pitched against much tougher competition. He's also much cheaper.
    There are only two real consolations to this deal: 1) Marquis is at least durable. Even if his ERA is around 5.00 (which is most likely), he can still eat up innings. Not that that will really help the ballclub, or be worth $7 million annually. And 2) he's relatively cheap. At least the Cubs didn't go all in with Gil Meche for $55 million. But even Meche has a better upside than Marquis, who has every sign of a pitcher headed south -- not just for the winter, but for good.
    The Cubs' are the consensus "winners" of the offseason so far, judging by the comments I've heard from columnists and commentators. This just goes to show that everyone still thinks that the best thing a GM can do is be active. Whether all of that action really helps the team is irrelevant.
    I've even heard talk that the Cubs are the favorites in the NL Central. Pshaw. The Cubs lost 96 frickin' games last year. They'd have to improve by at least 18-20 wins to win the division. That's a lot of wins, folks.
    Let's make a quick comparison to see how much better the 2007 Cubs look than their predecessors.
    Center Field: '06: Juan Pierre (5.2 WARP3); '07: Alfonso Soriano (10.2 WARP3)
    (Soriano's WARP3 is his 2006 number)
    Looks like 5 wins right there, correct? But Soriano's 2006 numbers were as a left fielder. Given his (perceived) trouble in shifting to center field, we can likely revise that number slightly downward.
    2006 was also a career year for Soriano. His WARP 3 in the two previous seasons were 5.7 and 5.0. So it's more likely that the Cubs will be gaining at most one or two wins with Soriano in center field. And that's not even taking age-related decline into account.
    EST. WINS ADDED: 1.5 (let's be generous)
    Second Base: '06: Todd Walker (2.3 WARP3); '07: Mark DeRosa (5.7 WARP3)
    Looks like a gain of about 3.5 wins here, right? In fact, since Walker shared the position with the terrible Ronny Cedeno (1.7 WARP3), it could be as much as 4 wins added!
    But again, not so fast. DeRosa's 2006 was a giant career year (yet another signed to a big contract by Hendry). It was, in fact very far outside of his expected performance. DeRosa's WARP3 in the 3 years prior to last year were: 1.2, 0.1, 2.0.
    So even assuming that DeRosa doesn't lose any offensive or defensive value as he ages next year, he's only a marginal improvement over the Walker/Cedeno team. But let's be optimistic and assume that DeRosa keeps some of his unlikely offense from 2006.
    EST. WINS ADDED: 0.5 (generous again)
    Starting Pitcher: '06: Greg Maddux (3.4 WARP3); '07: Ted Lilly (5.6 WARP3)
    Two wins added here, right? In fact, it's probably a little more than that, since Maddux was traded to Los Angeles for the last two months of the season, and his spot was taken over by awful pitchers. So even assuming that Lilly takes a step back from his strong 2006 performance, the Cubs should get 2 wins here.
    EST. WINS ADDED: 2
    Starting Pitcher: '06: Sean Marshall (1.7 WARP3); '07: Jason Marquis (1.4 WARP3)
    It looks like the Cubs are just breaking even here. This gives us even more insight into the Marquis deal; the Cubs already had some marginal starting pitchers who were just as productive as Marquis without having to go out and spend $21 million. Even if we assume that Marquis takes a step forward (not likely), there's no reason to expect that he'd do much better than the fleet of marginal pitchers the Cubs trotted out there last year. And those guys at least had the advantage of being younger, cheaper, and with better upside.
    EST. WINS ADDED: 0, for $21 million
    GRAND TOTAL OF WINS ADDED THIS OFFSEASON: 4
    Jim Hendry has spent nearly $200 million to add about 4 wins to his team (and 4 is the optimistic answer).
    That is not a victory.
    Granted, there are some other areas where the Cubs can improve besides free agency next season (a healthy Derrek Lee, for one). But to me, they're still about a 70-75 win team, and that won't win even the NL Central. To statheads and mainstreamers alike: jump the hell off the Cubs bandwagon and put your thinking caps back on.
  • The Tigers signed Brandon Inge to a 4-year, $24 million contract extension. Inge was scheduled to be a free agent after 2007, I believe, so this was their effort to lock him up long-term.
    I don't mind the money so much; $6 million isn't bad at all for a solid third baseman. But I'm not sure why they'd extend it to four years. Inge will be 29 next year, so the deal will lock him up through his age 33 season. There's not much reason to extend it that far; Inge is a career 241/302/398 hitter, and once he starts to decline, he'll be a big liability. I know that the Tigers don't have any third base prospects breathing down his neck. But I still question the wisdom of locking up a marginal player for four years, well past the point where he's due to decline.

That's all the big news. Things should be pretty quiet over the holidays, at least in terms of free agent deals. The Red Sox and Matsuzaka are still rumored to be a couple miles apart in negotiations. I've read some interesting views on this, especially from Peter Gammons and Nate Silver. But this will make for some interesting headlines in the weeks to come.

And now for the slightly less dreadful but still pretty much hopeless Kansas City Royals.

2006 W-L Record: 62-100
2006 pW-pL Record: 63-99
Runs Scored: 757 (12th in AL)
Runs Allowed: 971 (14th in AL -- dead last by a mile)
Free Agents: Doug Mientkiewicz, Mark Redman

2007 Projected Lineup:
1B -- Ryan Shealy
2B -- Mark Grudzielanek
SS -- Angel Berroa
3B -- Mark Teahen/Alex Gordon
LF -- David DeJesus
CF -- Joey Gathright
RF -- Emil Brown/Reggie Sanders
C -- John Buck/Jason LaRue
DH -- Mike Sweeney/Billy Butler

2007 Proj. Rotation:
Gil Meche
Scott Elarton
Zach Greinke?
Luke Hudson
Odalis Perez/Brian Bannister/??

2007 Proj. Closer: Octavio Dotel

Offense/Defense:
The defense may still be wretched, but there are encouraging signs that the Royals' offense is getting better. This is due to some shrewd trading (Teahen, Shealy) as well as some (gasp) farm products such as uber-prospect Alex Gordon and professional hitter Billy Butler. The Royals also have more outfield prospects than you can shake a stick at, which certainly means that guys like Emil Brown, Reggie Sanders, and even the venerable Mike Sweeney could be traded to make room for them. The Royals right now are dealing with the clash of "old, bad team" and "young, good team," at least in their lineup. It creates a lot of gridlock, but there are worse problems you could have than having too many big-league hitters.
With Sweeney stuck at DH (and the possibilities of a team taking his contract next to nil), the Royals will have to fit all of their prospects onto the diamond. Ryan Shealy will be at first base. He was purloined from Colorado in the deal that sent disappointing pitchers Jeremy Affeldt and Denny Bautista over. There was no place for Shealy in Denver with Todd Helton around, but he's got a spot with his name on it in KC. The Rockies' system is hitter-friendly, but even then, Shealy's numbers look good, with his career minor league stats at 319/408/591. He started out 2006 in Colorado Springs (284/351/568) and spent 5 games with the big club before getting trade to KC. He hit well enough there, a 280/338/451 clip. Shealy is old for a prospect (27 next year), but that's mainly due to being blocked by Helton. He projects as a quality hitter and will be cheap for several years now. The Royals may want to look into trading him, though, if the outfield gets too crowded and no one wants to take Reggie Sanders.
At third base, the incumbent (for now) is Mark Teahen. Teahen became famous in the Moneyball draft and unfortunately had to live up to that as he ascended to the majors. Teahen's first season in the majors was a disappointment (246/309/376), and he got off to a slow start in 2006 before he went on an absolute tear. He finished the season at 290/357/517 and was one of the league's best third basemen despite ending the season early due to injury. Teahen will be just 25 next year, and most of the signs are that his breakout was for real.
In a way, though, Teahen's success complicates things, because the Royals' #1 prospect is also a third baseman. Actually, you could argue that Alex Gordon is the majors' best prospect. He's the only #1 overall pick the Royals have ever had, and statheads and scouts alike salivate over him. Gordon starred with the University of Nebraska before signing with the Royals. The soon-to-be 23-year-old has only spent one season in the minors: 2006 with Double-A Wichita, where he was dominant (325/427/588). The Royals believe that he's ready for the majors right now, and it's hard to argue with that.
The only question is where the Royals will play him. Teahen has good defense at third, and with his productive 2006, it's hard to move him. Gordon is also strong defensively, but his superior bat may get him moved to right field. Either way, it's good news, as Gordon projects not only as a star but as a possible MVP. The only trouble is that it complicates the outfield picture.
But we'll get to that in a minute. The middle infield, as compared to the corners, looks pretty dismal. There was even some talk (perhaps idle) of moving the athletic Teahen to shortstop, but I doubt that would ever happen. It wouldn't be a bad idea, though, since the Royals' incumbent shortstop is Angel Berroa.
If you took a poll among statheads to elect the worst player in baseball, Berroa would likely win. Yes, there are worse guys playing as part-timers. But none as bad as Berroa play everyday, nor were they given long-term contracts based on one good year.
Berroa won the 2003 Rookie of the Year Award (which should have gone to Hideki Matsui), and then got a 4-year, $11 million contract from KC. Unfortunately, Berroa's 2003 was an aberration, and he's been thoroughly awful ever since. The Royals owe him $8 million over the next two years, and no team in baseball would take a player so worthless. If the Royals can afford to pay Gil Meche $55 million, then they can afford to eat that $8 million and release Berroa. Because no one else can combine poor conditioning, poor work ethic, and poor defense with such awful hitting (234/259/333 last year).
At second base, the incumbent is Mark Grudzielanek. Grudz did a good job with the Royals last year (297/331/409 with solid defense). So good, in fact, that the team didn't just exercise his 2007 option -- they signed the 36-year-old to a new contract with a 2008 option. That's a bit overeager for a middle-aged second baseman.
But Grudzielanek was pushed last year by Esteban German. German doesn't have Grudz's reliable glove, but he did bring a good batting average and superb on-base skills to the job in 2006, hitting 326/422/459. That may be a bit over his head, but his minor league numbers support his OBP. He's cheap and will be just 28 next year. I'm hoping that the Royals will use German primarily (he'd be a fine leadoff man) at second, with Grudz as his defensive backup. But since they've given him a new contract, I fear the offensively inferior Grudzielanek will get the lion's share of playing time.
Behind the plate, the Royals supplemented disappointing rookie John Buck (career 242/292/400 in 3 seasons) with disappointing veteran Jason LaRue (194/317/346 in '06). The Royals may be tired of waiting for Buck to develop; he was supposed to be a major-league ready catcher, but he turns 27 next year, and we may have already seen his best. LaRue is a free agent after next season, but came cheap from Cincinnati, obtained for a PTBNL, with Cincy even picking up a chunk of his salary. LaRue is normally a good source of power with a penchant for leaning into one now and then (93 career HBP) to give him a decent OBP. He struggled mightily in '06, but he's a good pickup and should give the team a bit of a boost from behind the dish.
As far as the outfield goes, let's start with the incumbents. David DeJesus was stretched as a center fielder and was eventually moved over to left last year when the team got Joey Gathright. DeJesus has very little power, but he hits for a decent average and draws some walks (career 292/362/434 hitter). He's not a bad solution in left field, but may soon be pushed out of the role by the likes of Billy Butler. DeJesus may be one of the more desirable trade chips the Royals have; he's still arbitration-eligible, can play center field in a pinch, and has a strong offensive game.
The trouble is that the Royals' true center fielder, Joey Gathright, just isn't much of a hitter. He hit a woeful 262/332/328 with the team after being traded from Tampa Bay. His speed had made him a very overrated prospect in the Tampa Bay system, and it was the Royals who took the gamble on bringing him in. His minor league stats show strong plate discipline and good contact hitting. But his defense in center just isn't that good. If he can't handle the position defensively, then there's really no point in using someone like Gathright as more than a fourth outfielder. If his defense doesn't improve, he may not keep the job; and that's even if his offense does come around.
In right field, you've got free agent Reggie Sanders and Emil Brown. Sanders was another in a long line of useless free agents signed by the Allard Baird regime. He didn't sign for much money, but it was for a two-year deal, and the Royals were never really lacking for corner outfielders. Sanders looked like he was ready to decline when he left St. Louis, and did he ever: 246/304/425 in only 88 games due to injury. The 39-year-old isn't going to get any better, and the Royals would love to trade him if anyone will take him. I doubt it. They'd probably be better off releasing him and freeing up the roster spot.
(This may be off the subject, but do you know those people who are embarassed of their middle name? Add Sanders to the list: his full name is Reginald Laverne Sanders. And Laverne & Shirley was on right when he was a kid. Ouch.)
Emil Brown is, like David DeJesus, a talented player who still isn't quite good enough to fit into your long-term plans. He's defensively limited, so he's not going to take over center anytime soon. But like DeJesus, he has a strong offensive game; he hit 287/358/457 last year. He has a little more power than DeJesus (15 HR in '06) but not as much plate discipline (95 strikeouts). He's another one of those guys who's great to have when you're losing, but is also ripe for an upgrade. His name will likely be mentioned in trade rumors, as the Royals can't play all of these guys.
The player most likely to elbow his way into the outfield scene is Billy Butler. Butler is a defensive loss; he'd be better served as a DH, which makes it more likely that Mike Sweeney will be leaving somehow. He started as a third baseman, but wasn't even in the same hemisphere as Teahen and Gordon, defensively. Since then, he's been an outfielder/DH, but Baseball Prospectus 2006 quotes one scout as saying that Butler was the worst defensive outfielder he'd ever seen. So right now, he's a player without a position.
But his big bat will likely force the issue, meaning that somebody's going to get benched or traded. At the wee age of 20, Butler spent 2006 in Double-A Wichita and hit 331/388/499 with 15 HR and 33 doubles. He hits for a high average, has great power potential, and has much better plate discipline than you'd expect for such a slugger (41:67 BB:K ratio in '06). The fact that he hasn't reached Triple-A yet, combined with the lack of a spot for him on the big league roster, may mean that Butler starts 2007 in the minors. But it won't be long before he swats his way into the big-league lineup, and he's the kind of corner outfield stud that GMs can salivate over. And he'll just be 21!!
There are some other outfield prospects making some noise in the minors (Shane Costa, Chris Lubanski, Mitch Maier) as well as another 1B/DH type, Justin Huber. Having this much hitting talent isn't just good news for the Royals, whose offense should vastly improve in the next couple years; it also means that there are a lot of useful spare parts around to potentially make a trade for pitching. This should be one of the organization's top priorities. Hitters like Gordon and Butler will be ready soon. Unfortunately, the Royals' pitching staff looks abysmal in the short term, long term, and any other term, for that matter.

Pitching:
I've already ranted about the signing of Gil Meche. But, as marginal a pitcher as he is, he's also probably the best starting pitcher the Royals have, making him their de facto ace. That's a dubious compliment for Meche, just as it was for Mark Redman last year.
Behind Meche is . . . well, another nice Meche. They've still got free agent hurler Scott Elarton. But the Elarton signing was similar to the Meche signing (minus about $30 mil.); the Royals couldn't afford to sign good free agent pitchers, so they signed bad ones. Elarton was coming off a 2005 with Cleveland where he posted a 4.61 ERA -- and that was a career year! Coming to Kansas City, Elarton was just a hair better than replacement level, making 20 starts and posting a 5.34 ERA with a 52:49 BB:K ratio -- yes, he actually walked more batters than he struck out, which is a bad pitcher's badge of honor. The 31-year-old will be back again in 2007. Uggh.
The status of Zach Greinke, who was supposed to be the Royals' ace of the future, is still uncertain. Greinke broke through with an excellent debut in 2004, but then struggled mightily through a dreadful sophomore campaign in 2005. In the midst of the 2006 season, Greinke left the team to deal with "personal issues." He never came back. The team has refused to comment on the nature of these "issues," but they've gone on record as supporting Greinke and hoping that he will return.
We can all speculate as to what these "issues" are, but unless we know for sure, we can't guess when he will be back, or at what level of effectiveness. Greinke still has the potential to be a very effective starter, so the Royals are holding out hope. But until he does return, hope is all that any of us can do.
Those are the three "stars" of the Royal rotation (which is pretty hideous). Behind them, the Royals will be scraping the bottom of the barrel for anyone or anything that can keep an ERA under 5.00. The likely fourth starter will be Luke Hudson, the former prospect who turns 30 next year. He's in Kansas City now after the Reds gave up on him (!). He threw 102 innings last year with a 5.02 ERA, which is at least good enough for thr #4 spot in this rotation.
Brian Bannister, obtained from the Mets, is a possible #5. The Royals also have Odalis Perez, obtained from the Dodgers in a trade. The Dodgers may be picking up a chunk of his big salary, but still, you'd rather watch a pitcher spontaneously combust on someone else's nickel.
The Royals may not be done picking up starters on the free agent market. But with the Meche contract in mind, let's hope that they are.

The Royal bullpen was equally culpable in the 2006 team's near-1000 runs allowed (the next-worst team allowed 899, 72 runs less than KC). The woeful defense also deserves mention (12th in the league in defensive efficiency). But the bullpen certainly wasn't doing anybody any favors.
One of the culprits was woeful closer Ambiorix Burgos. But, despite the fact that he still has good potential, Burgos is gone, replaced by free agent Octavio Dotel.
Dotel didn't cost much and is a good choice for a low-payroll team looking for some stability in the closer's role. Dotel hasn't had a lot of success closing, but has been one of the top strikeout pitchers in all of baseball for several years now, posting good ERAs along the way.
The troubling aspect of the Dotel deal is health. Dotel is supposed to be recovered from the health problems that limited him to 10 IP last year, but that's a questionable issue for any 33-year-old. He also had problems in 2005, where he only pitched 15.1 IP. So Dotel hasn't pitched a full season since 2004, the last time he was tried as a closer (in Oakland). Despite his strikeouts (72 K in 50.2 IP), he pretty much bombed (4.09 ERA).
But I'm guessing that the Royals knew the risks with Dotel. And even if he does post a 4.00 ERA, he's still a strikeout machine. And it's not like the Royals will give him as many save chances as Oakland did. You could do worse.
Behind Dotel is a very, very questionable bunch. Andy Sisco was, like every other Royals pitcher, rushed through the minors under the Allard Baird regime. He was still supposed to be a future star, but after struggling in 2005, Sisco's 2006 in Kansas City was even worse: a 7.10 ERA in 58.1 IP (4o walks allowed). One thing we can all agree upon is that when your ERA starts looking like an airplane, you're in trouble.
Jimmy Gobble, having failed in the starting rotation, moved into the Royals' bullpen as the long-relief man last year. He posted a 5.14 ERA, but also ate up 84 innings and struck out 80. He's no star, but he's necessary on this team, especially if the starters end up being a bunch of 5-inning men again.
The reliever who had the most success with KC last year was Joel Peralta. Peralta was a minor league veteran in the Angels' system when he finally got the call to the majors in 2005 (3.89 ERA). His time in Kansas City was less successful (4.40 ERA), but his peripherals are encouraging enough (17:57 BB:K ratio despite 10 HR allowed) that he should do about as well again in 2007.
By the way -- One of the "bad" kind of surprises: it was recently discovered that Peralta is four years older than he originally claimed. This sort of "mistake" is common among Latin American prospects, anxious to improve their chances of getting signed. So Peralta went from 26 to 30 overnight (he'll be 31 next year).
Former Cub Todd Wellemeyer posted the best ERA in the bullpen, a 3.63 mark. But in his 57 innings of work, he managed a dead even BB:K ratio of 37:37; not a good recipe for future success.
And behind these guys, the Royals have the same band of cast-offs as usual. There will be plenty of chances for an outsider to win a job during Spring Training.
The Royal bullpen of 2007 should be somewhat better than that of 2006, if for no other reason than because it can't get a whole lot worse.

Offseason Game Plan:
You've done enough damage already; keep that wallet in your pants.
Shop around your spare outfielders to see what kind of pitching you can get. It may be a longshot, but it's at least worth the effort.
Small Market 101: get as many possibilities as you can invited to Spring Training. Avoid signing major league deals when a minor league deal will suffice.
In short: get pitching. If at all possible.

Thursday, December 07, 2006

News bits

The end of the Winter Meetings has seen a good deal of action, almost entirely on the free agent front. All of the deals that nearly happened (Astros getting Jon Garland, Brewers getting Jon Lieber, etc.) far outnumbered the one trade that took place on the final day of the meetings (the Braves fleece the Mariners). Down to business:

  • Barry Bonds returns to the Giants for a 1 year, $16 million deal. I'm surprised that Bonds got this much, since the Giants were the only team actively bidding for him. A couple of teams had kicked the tires on Bonds (supposedly the Cardinals), but I don't know of any other offers made for him. So the Giants are once again making 2007 do-or-die, pinning their hopes (and a possible $20 million, with incentives) to Mr. Bonds.
    Honestly, though, they didn't have much choice. The Giants backed themselves into this corner a couple years ago, and Bonds was the only option still out there capable of putting big runs up on the board. Not only do the Giants need him, but this will make things a lot more comfortable if/when Bonds passes Hank Aaron's record. San Francisco will be more receptive than any other city by far to the milestone, and Bonds should know that.
    Bottom line, this was a necessary deal for the Giants, and it's a good thing for them that they made it. I'm just surprised it cost them so much.
  • Andy Pettitte will be going back to the Yankees for a 1 year, $16 million. No, I don't think that Andy Pettitte is as valuable as Barry Bonds. But the $16 million was likely a trade-off for keeping the contract to one year. The Yankees, remember haven't spent any money yet this off-season. They've exercised admirable restraint, and so they've got the money to spend on Pettitte. The Yanks need some stability for their starting rotation until prospect Phillip Hughes is ready, and I guess they're ready to pay for it.
    I haven't found out yet who it was that wanted it to be a 1-year deal, the Yanks or Pettitte. Pettitte was supposedly considering retirement this offseason, so he may just want a 1-year commitment. It's also possible that the Yankees don't want to make a long-term commitment to a pitcher who turns 35 next year when they've got the phenom Hughes on the rise.
    It should be noted that Pettitte has a player option for 2008, which is also for $16 million. So if Pettitte wants to play another year, it will be the Yankees on the hook for a rather exorbitant amount.
  • Whither Roger Clemens? That's the subtext of any deal for Pettitte. Reports are that if Clemens does play in 2007, it will most likely be with Pettitte, i.e. with the Yankees. This is good news for New York, who could always use a potential ace in the second half of the season. They can also pay the price.
    I've also heard that if the Red Sox fail to sign Daisuke Matsuzaka (which is starting to look more and more likely), they might aggressively target Clemens. This would not only fill their hole in the starting rotation, but help mollify the angry mobs at Fenway.
  • Whither the Astros? I've heard from several places that Pettitte was willing to take just $14 million to stay in Houston, but that the Astros wouldn't budge from their offer of $12 million.
    The Astros look really bad now, having lost out on a big-time pitcher for $2 million (which you can find in owner Drayton McLane's couch cushions). It's also bad news, because the Astros need starting pitching much more than the Yankees do. The Astros have been contenders on and off for more than ten years now, but their roster of talent is thinning out, which is why they doled out $100 million of desperation money to Carlos Lee. Understandable, but this is also a starting rotation that currently consists of Roy Oswalt and his Merry Men. The Astros only have one established starting pitcher behind Oswalt, and that's a risky old fellow named Woody Williams. They needed Pettitte bad, and now they're going to have to look for help elsewhere.
    The Astros were rumored to be near a deal for White Sox starter Jon Garland involving Willy Taveras and one of their pitching prospects (Jason Hirsh, Taylor Buchholz), but that fell through at the last minute. In my opinion, it's damn lucky for the Astros that it did. Not that Taveras is any big loss, but there's absolutely no reason to trade out a young pitcher with the promise of Hirsh (or even Buchholz) for an overrated, expensive Jon Garland. The Astros would be much better off suffering through Hirsh and Buchholz's growing pains than paying $22 million for 2 years of LAIM.
    But GM Tim Purpura is most likely going to aggressively hunt for veteran starting pitching, now that he's lost Pettitte. This puts the Astros in a bind, since they're already a team on the way down and can't afford to lose any of the few prospects they have.
    Jayson Stark of ESPN.com suggested that the Astros may have felt pressure not to go whole hog on Pettitte after spending so much on Carlos Lee. The MLB is apparently not too thrilled with that contract. Really Mr. Selig, if you're angry about salary inflation, don't get mad at Drayton McLane and Carlos Lee. Talk to the Colletti-Pierre connection.
  • Ted Lilly has signed with the Cubs for 4 years and $40 mil. Lilly is a prime example of salary inflation at work. His contract isn't nearly as bad as that given to Adam Eaton, but while it's not a total loss, it's still a potential blunder. Lilly doesn't have the advantage of being very good (career 4.56 ERA, ERA+ of 99) or very durable (0 seasons of 200 IP; only 3 seasons of more than 130).
    But you could do a lot worse. Lilly will have the advantage of moving from the AL East to the NL Central, which will knock half a run off his ERA at least. He's just going to be 31 next year, so 4 years isn't too dreadful. And he's perfectly capable of giving you above-average work, just not with great staying power. My guess is that while the Cubs may end up regretting the contract, Lilly will probably give them one or two good years. And with a starting rotation pretty bare behind Carlos Zambrano, the Cubs need that.
  • If Ted Lilly's contract is understandable, Gil Meche's contract isn't. It's easily the worst contract given to a pitcher this off-season and even rivals the Double-Uglies of Matthews, Jr. & Pierre.
    The Royals will be paying Meche for $55 million for 5 years. Even in context, this is absurd; Gil Meche isn't nearly as good as Ted Lilly or Jason Schmidt, and yet he's getting a longer commitment for more overall money than either man. Meche is pretty much the AL's answer to Adam Eaton, except getting paid more than twice as much.
    Meche, spending his entire career in a pitcher's park, hasn't had a better-than-average ERA since 2000. He was barely average in 2003 and 2006, and even then he didn't throw 200 innings (he's never topped 186.2). Sandwiched between that were two pretty awful seasons in 2004 and 2005 (5.01 ERA, 5.09 ERA). Meche did set a new career high in strikeouts last year with 156; he also set a career high in walks (84). Three times he's allowed more than 20 HR in a season (he allowed 30 overall in '03), despite never throwing many innings and enjoying the spacious confines of Safeco Field.
    Meche is a pretty bad pitcher with little room to improve. And he's been given a huge contract from perhaps the one team in baseball that can least afford it.
    I've heard two main defenses of the Meche deal. One is that, at age 28, Meche is one of the youngest pitchers on the free agent market. But youth is irrelevant if it doesn't also equal quality. Meche's youth indicates that he won't start deteriorating for a while yet. Which is great, because he doesn't have much room to deteriorate.
    The other defense is that the Royals are trying to spend money to lure free agents to the club. Kansas City isn't a very attractive destination for free agents, and the Royals are trying to solve this problem with money.
    Bad idea.
    A lot of parallels have been drawn with the Tigers, who went out and spent a lot of money after losing 119 games and ended up winning the pennant. Bad comparison. The Tigers overpaid yes -- but they overpaid on good players like Ivan Rodriguez and Magglio Ordonez. If the Royals had overpaid to bring in Jason Schmidt or even Ted Lilly, this would have been more understandable. But there is no realistic way to justify giving a lot of money to a marginal player.
    The next few years will see the Royals trying desperately to justify Meche's deal. Just wait: if Meche gets off to a good start this year, even if only for a month, everyone will say that the deal is turning out well for the Royals. But I'm not a big fan of looking for silver linings where they don't exist. The Royals just spent more than last year's entire payroll ($47.3 million) to get a player that could be replaced by half a dozen Triple-A pitchers. Not only did they get a poor player, they spent more money to get him than other teams spent to get infinitely better pitchers such as Schmidt and even Lilly.
    There is no positive way to spin this deal. That's not to say that Meche won't have a good year or maybe even two -- but the Royals just can't justify committing this much money to such a player. They may think they're seeing light at the end of the tunnel, but that's not a tunnel; it's a hole.
  • The White Sox traded Freddy Garcia the Phillies for Gavin Floyd & Gio Gonzalez. This works out fairly well for both clubs; Garcia was expensive and easily replaceable by Brandon McCarthy. The Phillies need starting pitching desperately (preferably those that can keep the ball on the ground) and are probably getting a bargain in Garcia, who's only under contract for one more year.
    The Phillies didn't have to give up a whole lot for him. That's partially because of the one-year commitment, but also because Garcia is coming off a bad year with some troubling peripherals. But I think that Garcia -- who's been pretty reliable throughout his career in terms of both quality and productivity -- is a good pickup for Philadelphia.
    Gavin Floyd is a top-shelf talent who hasn't yet turned that into major league production. It was starting to look like Floyd was never going to get big league hitters out in Philadelphia. But he's young yet (24 next year) and not a bad guy to take a chance on. Gonzalez is a good pitching prospect that the White Sox actually developed themselves; they sent him to Philadelphia last year in the Aaron Rowand deal, and are now getting him back. The acquisition of two pitching prospects may make someone else expendable, as evidenced by GM Kenny Williams' attempts to trade Jon Garland to Houston.
    My only problem with this deal is that I wonder if the White Sox couldn't have gotten more for Garcia. This deal hurts them in the short run, but not as much as people have said; the difference between Garcia's performance next year and that of Brandon McCarthy isn't likely to be too far apart, and the long-term advantages were worth making the trade. But I wonder if Williams couldn't have gotten more for a legitimate #2 pitcher (or #3, if you're skeptical) in a market like this. But I don't know; maybe this was the best he could get.
  • Luis Gonzalez signed a 1-year deal with the Dodgers for $7 million to take over as their left fielder. Now Gonzalez isn't the player he once was, but he's still pretty productive, as evidenced by his 52 doubles and .352 OBP last year. It's not a lot of money, really. And it would be a great deal for a team that really needed a left fielder.
    But the Dodgers don't need a left fielder. They especially don't need a left fielder with very little defensive value who throws a baseball like it's a shot put. They've already got, in Matt Kemp, a young prospect who looks perfectly capable of ascending to the major leagues -- and for the minimum salary, no less.
    This is another example of GM Ned Colletti's neglect (or ignorance) of his young talent. He's already closed off first base to prospect James Loney by acquiring Nomar Garciaparra; it's debatable whether Garciaparra will hit better than Loney in the short term, without even considering the long term problems of blocking him. He's done the same thing in left field with Gonzalez, although thankfully it's just a 1-year commitment. Still, every step forward looks like Colletti wants to turn this team into the Giants, and that's a very bad thing.
    Luckily, the team shouldn't suffer too much in the short run. Both Nomar and Gonzo are still productive enough, and the sweet Jason Schmidt deal will keep the team contenders. The only real clunker of a contract was the abomination handed out to Juan Pierre. But the long-term implications of Colletti's actions are troubling. Especially when all of the Dodgers' top young talent is rumored to be on the trading block, especially since these free agent deals are rendering them obsolete.
  • The Braves traded Horacio Ramirez to Seattle for reliever Rafael Soriano. It was rumored that the Braves were shopping first baseman Adam LaRoche for relief pitching help, but that didn't pan out. Instead, the Braves were able to trade their injury-plagued, non-strikeout-getting #5 starter for one of the best arms in the AL.
    Wha' happen'?
    I guess John Schuerholz just happened in on Mariners GM Bill Bavasi when he was in a particularly gullible mood. Soriano has had some injury problems of his own, it's true, and missed the last part of 2006 after getting hit in the head by a line drive. But while there are some questions about his future, they're more than outweighed by his high upside. Soriano has an electric arm and has produced great relief work for the M's in recent years. Soriano's career ERA (2.89) is 50% better than the league average, even adjusting for his friendly ballpark. And in 171 career innings, he's struck out 177 batters against just 53 walks and 16 HR.
    If there's anything but a ready-made closer here, I don't see what it is.
    Even considering Soriano's injury problems, Bavasi has to get back something better than Horacio Ramirez. The Mariners need starting pitchers, yes, but they don't need to replace Gil Meche with his younger, National League counterpart who strikes out no one (less than 1 K every 2 innings, which is unacceptable in the big leagues, unless you're a freak like Chien-Ming Wang).
    The Braves were entering the season with nearly-retired 38-year old Bob Wickman as closer. And while Wickman might retain that title for a few months, there's no question who their closer of the future is. The Braves just made their future a good deal brighter and didn't have to give up their first baseman for it. Gnarly.
  • Matt Stairs has reportedly agreed to a 1 year deal with the Toronto Blue Jays. I haven't confirmed a dollar amount. Stairs is still a useful hitter, especially as a lefty on a team filled with righties. He's also 39, slower than molasses in January, and a defensive impossibility.
    Did the Jays really need another one of these?
  • The Giants resigned third baseman Pedro Feliz for a 1-year, $5 million deal. Remember when I said how much trouble the Giants were in if Rich Aurilia was their starting third baseman? Feliz is worse. Feliz isn't bad defensively and does have some power (22 HR last year). But he's also got a career OBP of .288 and a BB:K ratio that would do Dave Kingman proud (33:112 last year). He's going to be 32 and isn't really significantly better than Tony Batista.
    I know I've wondered in this space whether the Giants can get any worse. But I'd like to clarify something for GM Brian Sabean:
    "IT WAS A RHETORICAL QUESTION!"
  • The Padres are hoping that Todd Walker will accept arbitration and fill their hole at second base. Walker's glove isn't made; it's smelted. But he's the best offensive solution to second base on the market, and he's a much better idea than giving any sort of multi-year deal to Ronnie Belliard (as the Padres were rumored to be considering). Rumors had the Padres pursuing Braves 2B Marcus Giles via a trade, which would have been great, but you can't always get what you want. The Padres are also trying to talk David Wells out of retirement. It's better than nothing, I guess, but really, how much does Wells have left?

With the Winter Meetings over, it looks like things will be quiet for a time. We'll soon find out who's accepted arbitration from their teams, and we'll also find out who's getting tendered a contract. There could be some interesting names set free, but probably no one more desirable than Kevin Mench.
I should also mention the Rule 5 draft, which took place at the Winter Meetings. The Rule 5 draft enables a team to draft players not on a major league team's 40-man roster. It's a chance for players lost in the minor leagues to get a chance with a new team. The team gets the player for one year and has to keep him one level above where he was drafted (I believe). At the end of the year, the team can either return the player to the old organization or pay a fee to keep him.
One big change in the new CBA (Collective Bargaining Agreement) extended by one year the number of years a player is exempt from the Rule 5 draft. The draft only includes players with a certain number of years in the minor leagues. It was originally intended not just as a way for teams to look for bargains, but as an avenue for talented players to escape if a team had kept them trapped in the minors (all those Yankee first base prospects from 1925-1938 can identify). Unfortunately, the change in the CBA allows teams to keep players longer, making the Rule 5 draft much less interesting. Most of the players taken were long-shot prospects with only outside chances of contributing.

There's plenty more to come though, as these players are (as of now) still on the market:

Barry Zito, Roger Clemens, Eric Gagne, Miguel Batista, Trot Nixon, Cliff Floyd, Jeff Suppan, Mark Loretta, Keith Foulke, Kenny Lofton and many, many more.

We can also look forward to the public fireworks as the deadline for signing Daisuke Matsuzaka nears. It may be an ugly way to enjoy oneself, but then I'm not always proud of my glee.

Cheers.

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

More action from Orlando

There are no big trades to report, as it looks like Manny Ramirez is mos' definitely a Boston Red Sox for 2007. There were several free agent signings, and some other tasty newsbites:

  • The Dodgers signed free agent Jason Schmidt to a 3-year deal for $47 mil. $15 mil/year is a lot of money, but this contract is still a steal. Schmidt is still capable of pitching like a Cy Young candidate, and the Dodgers were somehow able to limit him to a 3-year contract, which is ideal for him. Schmidt's contract will end up being infinitely more reasonable than that given to Barry Zito, who isn't as good a pitcher, and whose only advantage over Schmidt is a better health record and 5 years of age. That's not insignificant, but trust me when I say that the Dodgers will enjoy their Schmidt deal much more than Zito's team will, especially if it's the Rangers. All of the teams that end up losing out on the Zito sweepstakes should kick themselves for not pursuing Schmidt harder.
  • Mike Piazza signed a 1-year, $8.5 million contract with the A's to be their DH and semi-backup catcher. Let's just go ahead and call this the Frank Thomas deal of 2007, because it sure looks that way. The A's will be using Piazza almost strictly as a DH, which will enhance his durability and get him in the lineup more often. And they somehow managed to nab him for just 1 year and an utterly reasonable $8.5 million. Piazza was supposed to be mulling another offer from the Rangers, and I have to wonder if they offered him two years. Maybe they should have, because Piazza is still an offensive presence. His 283/342/501 batting line last year was dampened by playing in Petco Park; he hit 332/372/564 on the road. The A's needed a jolt of offense and they got it. This deal also means that Barry Bonds won't be signing with Oakland, so it looks like it really is just the Giants or nothing.
  • The Indians signed Joe Borowski to be their closer -- 1 year, $4.25 million was the final number. Borowski is one of those "proven closers" who actually isn't very good at all. The Indians seem to realize this given that low-ball contract, but the problem will be when they actually stick him out there in the 9th inning. Borowski did admittedly have a rebound year with Florida last year, notching a 3.75 ERA with a 33:64 BB:K ratio in 69.2 IP. But that was in Florida; now, he's going to have to pitch in the real major league. The good news is that the Indians are fully capable of shifting him out of the job and replacing him with a kid if (when) he tanks.
  • The Giants signed catcher Bengie Molina for 3 years and $16 million. I often make fun of the Giants for their signing of tired, old players, but really -- it's not funny anymore. Molina was a free agent (obviously), and I wrote in his Toronto entry that he should be stamped "Don't Open After Age 30." Well, Molina will turn 33 next year, and is already the slowest player in baseball, even by a catcher's standards. And while he still hits relatively well (284/319/467 in '06), don't count on much durability. And with his "athleticism," his health should take a sharp turn for the worse in the years to come.
    Incidentally, Molina will be replacing Mike Matheny, the last old catcher the Giants signed to a 3-year deal. That was a dismal failure, too. ::Sigh::
  • The Dodgers were busy today; they also nabbed Mike Lieberthal to be their backup catcher for 1 year and $1.25 mil. Lieberthal's days as a full-time starter were done, but he's a good fit to be a backup, especially for that money. He hits pretty well for a backup, and isn't a defensive loss either.
  • Words is that the Twins are trying to talk starter Brad Radke out of retiring. I don't know how much stock to put in this rumor, especially since Radke pretty much shot his shoulder all to hell in the stretch run last year. He did this with the knowledge that he wouldn't be coming back in 2007. And after that, I'm surprised the Twins would really want him back for anything other than sentimental reasons.
  • Reports are that the Red Sox & Daisuke Matsuzaka are still far apart in their negotiations, and the clock is ticking. The sticking point is that the Red Sox, having already committed $51.1 million in their posting fee, don't want to pay Matsuzaka full market price. Because if they do agree on a (justifiable) contract for, let's say, 5 years and $90 million, it will actually be 5 years and $141 million (about $28 mil./year) for Boston, because they have to factor in that posting fee. Matsuzaka's agent, Scott Boras, could give a shit about the posting fee; that money goes to the Seibu Lions, and Matsuzaka doesn't get a cent of it. His attitude is, "I don't care how much you paid for the rights to Matsuzaka. You're going to pay him full market price, or you won't get him at all." And Boras isn't the sort to bluff on something like that. He totally has the whip hand, too. Because if the Red Sox fail to sign Matsuzaka after all of this hoopla and he goes back to Japan, Theo Epstein & Co. will be roasted in the Boston press for missing out on a Cy Young-caliber pitcher. It's hard for me to imagine the Sox not signing Matsuzaka, if only because they've got so much invested in the process beyond their pitching staff.
    This process should be very informative for teams looking to sign Japanese players in the future.
  • Whither Andy Pettitte? Pettitte decided today (after much hand wringing) that he will return to baseball in 2007, after threatening to retire after last season. The only real possibilities are the Yankees and Astros, with Pettitte reportedly favoring New York. Pettitte should probably come at a pretty reasonable price, making him a much better bet than Ted Lilly. And the Yankees and Astros are perfectly aware that wherever Pettitte goes, he's likely to bring along his old friend, Roger Clemens (remember him?), who is indeed a free agent. Clemens will likely do the same routine as last year, waiting to join the team in May and working a limited schedule. It was tremendously effective last year, and I've just resigned myself to the fact that Clemens could pitch until he's 90 and still win games. So the Clemens Factor will be the strong subplot of any Andy Pettitte discussions.
  • Whither Richie Sexson? The Mariners are rumored to be shopping around their expensive first baseman, and the Yankees are rumored to be interested. New York needs a first baseman, and Sexson appears to be available. But this appears to be more rumor than substance. The Yanks really aren't looking to add any more big-money hitters, and while Sexson isn't that expensive, the Yankees are focused first and foremost on pitching. I have to take the opportunity to congratulate Brian Cashman and the Yankees for exercising a remarkable amount of restraint in recent years. For better or worse, the George Steinbrenner heyday is over, and the Yankees are no longer going to pursue free agents like a 5-year-old on a Toys R Us shopping spree.
  • In my earlier report on the Mets-Royals trade, I apparently expressed too optimistic a view of Brian Bannister. My view was that Bannister had some potential to develop into a quality pitcher, but reports I've heard since then (from those wiser than I) say that he's a #4-5 starter at best. But even if it is a good trade for the Mets in terms of talent exchanged, they're still losing something they need (starting pitching) and getting something they don't so much need (relief pitching). But the ceiling on Burgos is high, and the Mets may be eyeing him as the eventual replacement for Billy Wagner as closer, either that or as a Zumaya-esque Setup-Superman.
  • Medical reports from Boston are that Jon Lester, diagnosed with lymphoma a few months ago, appears to be cancer free. There's been nothing official, but I've heard that his MRI has come back clear, and his cancer appears to be in remission. This is fabulous news, no question, and best wishes as always to Lester and his family that he can stay cancer-free. For the Red Sox, it's good news, of course. There's also the added benefit that they don't have to rush Lester along in his recovery. The Sox will have 5 or 6 starting pitchers going into 2007 without considering Matsuzaka. So there's no hurry for Lester, who still has a ton of potential.

There will probably be more in the weeks to come, and I'll try to stay ahead of it. In general, I try to avoid reporting on rumors, unless they're particularly strong and reliable, or unless they just interest me in a humorous or bizarre way. Most observers have remarked that this edition of the Winter Meetings have been so silent that the most random rumor can become absolute fact in no time at all. When you've got a fleet of news people with no news to cover, this is what happens. So forgive me if I don't have all the hot n' juicy gossip. For every deal that happens, there are 10 or 15 that don't, and it would be tiresome to talk about them all.

I've also been quite remiss in recent weeks in not giving credit to the sources of all of my information. My primary source for baseball stats is still Baseball Reference.com, which is currently redesigning itself and adding more features to become even more fabulous -- if that's possible. Most of my minor league stats come from The Baseball Cube, which reports minor and major league stats that are quite useful to the statistically-inclined. Doing my reports on future stars would be impossible without a quick reference to the Cube. I also use the sortable stats available at Baseball Prospectus where I am, at long last, a subscriber. There you can get pretty much every sophisticated sabermetric stat, sortable for every season back to 1973. It's like a wet dream. (I will also periodically pull out Lee Sinins' computer program, the Sabermetric Encyclopedia. It's a bit superfluous given all the benefits of BR, but it is still useful).
Historically speaking, we'd all be at a loss without Retrosheet.org, which has box scores for every game going back more than 100 years, and play-by-play data for every game for the past 30+ years (they're constantly adding more games and completing more seasons). They're the ground-level, grass-roots organization that makes all of the game-level details available to all of us geeks who care. They also chart random bits of interest, such as every inside-the-park home run and every instance of the hidden ball trick and every time a team was penalized for batting out of turn.
Almost all of the commentary and analysis I get from Baseball Prospectus (BP, from now on), The Hardball Times, and espn.com. It would be impossible to list all of the valuable contributors from each site. But I try to check in on these as often as I can for my daily dose of insight. There are also a ton of blogs and secondary websites that offer news, criticism, and commentary. I listed only those that I visit regularly, so it's not an exhaustive list by any means.
For strict baseball news, I'm pretty much a devotee of espn.com. With invaluable insiders like Peter Gammons, Buster Olney, Jayson Stark and many others, you often know what happens before it happens there. They're also very good at getting things right, and at labelling rumor and speculation as such. MLB.com is also valuable for every press release and any sort of official information about award selections and news. Their sortable stats are probably the easiest to navigate if you're just looking for the basic baseball card stats such as AVG, HR, ERA etc.
And for baseball humor, there is nothing like The Brushback, which is an online source of humorous fake news for sports (much like The Onion). They've recently published a book of their collected columns and headlines, and it is freakin' hilarious. I couldn't begin to list all of the hilarious stories, but here's a small sampling of some of their fake news headlines:

Confused Manny Ramirez Thinks He's Being Traded to Disney World

Naive Scott Boras Thinks He's Not Going to Burn in Hell

Congress Drafts Bill To Punish Those Who Don't Cry During National Anthem

Recruit Scared Off By University's High Graduation Rate

$7 Milion Worth of Jewelry Stolen from NFL Player's Glove Compartment

Player Heckles Underachieving Fan

Only 3 Date Rapes at This Year's Maxim Party

Visiting Team Rattled by Repeated Playings of "We Will Rock You"

It would be more appropriate to credit each of these sources in every one of my entries, as they all provide the data and insight to make me sound much smarter than I am. There's a great deal of baseball wisdom available over the internet, and I can only hope that after taking so much of it, I can start giving back.

Deal or No Deal Redux

  • After discussing it for over a week, the Red Sox have finalized a deal with J.D. Drew for 5 years and $70 million. Drew is a better player than overrated guys like Carlos Lee and Alfonso Soriano and, despite the fact that he's pretty much the same age (31), he only got a 5-year deal for less money per year than both of the above. Drew's deal seems to me to be much wiser than the Soriano deal and better even than the commitment to Carlos Lee.
    But the aspect of J.D. Drew that could make this deal a mistake is durability. Despite having a great deal of talent (career 286/393/512 hitter with good defense), Drew has only topped 110 games four times in his 9-year career. J.D. Drew for 150 games is a big bargain at $14 million; but if he plays less than 120 games, he's not at all.
    There's been a lot of doubt surrounding the Drew deal, and while some of it is totally justified, I'm going to come down in favor of the deal. It's not ideal to give J.D. Drew a contract stretching into his age 35 season, but it's much more realistic when you consider the going rate for offense in this market. And I'm not quite as pessimistic about Drew's durability as others. Two of Drew's last three seasons have been his most productive; 2004 with Atlanta (305/436/569) and 2006 with the Dodgers (283/393/498). His 2005 in L.A. only saw him play 72 games, but that was mainly due to a broken wrist rather than nagging injuries.
    Perhaps I'm being overly optimistic, but it seems to me that too much has been made of Drew's lack of durability. It's an issue, but I think it was much more of a problem early in his career rather than in recent years. Yes, he's not going to get any healthier as he ages, but his profile -- an athletic player with good defense and a good batting average -- is a much better bet to age gracefully than the likes of Carlos Lee. Drew is a very patient hitter who should fit in very well in Boston. He'll also have the added benefit of the Designated Hitter, a luxury which he's never had before. That position is currently occupied by David Ortiz, but it would certainly be feasible for the Sox to sacrifice some defense and put Ortiz at first if Drew was day-to-day and couldn't play the field.
    The J.D. Drew deal isn't ideal, and there is the possibility that the Red Sox will regret it, but it makes much more fiscal sense than most of the deals being signed this offseason, including the deal the Sox will eventually reach with Daisuke Matsuzaka.
  • It now looks more and more like Manny Ramirez won't be traded. I know -- a couple weeks ago it was supposed to be inevitable, but now it seems totally evitable. The Sox seem to be asking a high price for Manny -- understandable -- and few teams seem willing to meet it. One of the sticking points seems to be Manny's desire for a contract extension. The Sox assure people that Manny won't make any demands if he's traded, but can we really be sure? Manny's contract is only guaranteed for two years and $38 million; not too shabby for an MVP-level hitter in this year's market. But the contract does have club options for 2009 and 2010 at $20 mil. per. No club in their right mind will exercise them, but many clubs fear that Manny will make a stink if they don't. They also fear that Manny may want a big-time contract extension before he agrees to any trade. The Red Sox are providing assurances that this is not the case, and Manny does seem willing to leave Boston by any means, but you can understand a team's hesitation.
    As for me, I've already gone on record that the Sox should keep Manny. The change in economic climate makes his contract almost seem reasonable, and they shouldn't trade him away unless they're getting a big return. They were rumored to be asking the Dodgers for young reliever Jonothan Broxton (one of the best relief prospects in baseball) along with Matt Kemp and either Andy LaRoche or James Loney. This would be a good deal for Boston and a terrible one for L.A. The Dodgers have balked at giving up so much, which surprises me, given that GM Ned Colletti seems to value young talent as nothing more than a Plinko chip on The Price is Right.
  • The Red Sox also signed shortstop Julio Lugo to a 4-year, $36 million deal. I've always been a Lugo fan, and have pressed teams for a long time to get him on the cheap from the Devil Rays. Well, apparently, the market has finally agreed with my evaluation of Lugo, despite a very disappointing finish to 2006 with the Dodgers (219/278/267, after hitting 308/373/498 in TB). Lugo is 31 years old, and while this is more money than I would have given him, it's not so bad given the context. The Sox may regret that fourth year, but I think Lugo will keep them happy for three years. He's a strong defender with excellent range, and he hits well for a shortstop. He's a career 277/340/402 hitter, although it should be noted that he's done much better in recent years. He's also a fairly efficient basestealer, going 24/33 (73%) last year.
  • The Barry Zito sweepstakes continue, with almost half the teams in baseball expressing interest in one form or another. The only thing we know for sure is that Zito is going to be obscenely wealthy after teh deal is signed. The Mets still look like a good possibility, although the Rangers sound like they're threatening to trump everyone by offering a mega-deal (which worked so well with A-Rod). We don't know anything for sure, and it may be a while yet before Zito (read: Scott Boras) decides.
    There's a real split opinion about Zito among the statheads. I've heard him referred to dismissively as a #3 or #4 starter, which seems harsh, even to me. I've always thought Zito was overrated, since he took home an ill-gotten Cy Young Award in 2003. But I also think he's one of the 10-15 best pitchers in the AL, which sounds more like a #2 than a #4 starter. He won't deserve the contract he gets, and he'll probably be overpaid by as much as $4-5 million per year. He's not the ace that people think he is, but he's not as bad as some think. A lot depends on what you think of his durability (which has been great, but then he's logged a lot of innings on his still-young arm) and which ballpark he ends up in. Arlington would be terrible for Zito, who allows a lot of walks and a lot of home runs. He should be pushing hard for San Diego or New York, somewhere with distant fences and preferably solid defense behind him. It would make a big difference in his ERA.
  • The Padres have signed Greg Maddux to a one-year, $10 million deal. In a world where Adam Eaton gets $8 million a year, Greg Maddux is easily worth $10 million, especially when limited to one-year. Petco Park is a great place for Maddux, as he's been giving up more balls in play as he gets older. Home runs plagued him in Chicago, but he looked much better in Dodger Stadium in the last half of 2006. He should provide stability and some league-average innings-munching to San Diego, who could use it behind Jake Peavy, Chris Young, and Clay Hensley. And if some of his brilliant baseball wisdom happens to rub off on the young 'uns, so much the better.
  • Vicente Padilla agreed to a 3-year, $34-million contract with the Texas Rangers. He's overpaid, etc. etc., but I think he's overpaid even considering the context. The 29-year-old Padilla has only been a starting pitcher for 5 years, and yet he's only had three healthy seasons. He was productive in Philadelphia in 2002 and 2003, then suffered through two injury-plagued seasons before somewhat rebounding in Texas last year (200 IP, 4.50 ERA). The 4.50 ERA isn't too far off from Padilla's level of real ability (his career ERA is 4.06, compiled mostly in the NL), but the 200 innings is a big leap of faith. It's very arguable that Padilla is worth this much money even if he throws 200 innings of roughly league-average ball, but there's no indication that he'll throw 600 innings over the life of the deal. Padilla's hasn't demonstrated an ability to stay healthy beyond last year, and he has some self-destructive issues. On the field, he allows too many walks and is one of the most hot-headed pitchers in baseball (even Ozzie "Attilla" Guillen called him a headhunter). Off the field, Padilla has a rumored drinking problem that is certainly cause for concern.
    Perhaps I'm making too much of this. It's nice that the Rangers limited his contract to just 3 years, when Ted Lilly and Gil Meche (?!) might get four years. But the Rangers don't have any room for speculation in their pitching staff, and they shouldn't be signing contracts like they're contenders.
  • The Cardinals have signed Chris Carpenter to a contract extension/reconstruction that will amount to 5 years and $63.5 million. The money isn't really a problem. Carpenter has proven that he can stay healthy after coming back from Tommy John surgery and withstanding heavy workloads, and if you can get one of the best pitchers in baseball under contract for about $13 mil. per, then you're some kind of miracle worker.
    But Joe Sheehan of Baseball Prospectus put forth an argument that makes sense. Carpenter wasn't due to become a free agent for two more years. The Cardinals were in no rush to sign him up for the 2009-2011 seasons. In fact, considering that Carpenter will be 32 next season and is shouldering a heavy workload, it would seem to be much more prudent for the Cardinals to wait and see what Carpenter looks like in the years to come. It's not the dollars that trouble me -- it's that the Cardinals are playing weather forecaster into the far-too-distant future.
  • A small trade was consummated yesterday, with the New York Mets sending young starter Brian Bannister to Kansas City for closer Ambiorix Burgos. I don't really get this from the Mets' point of view. Bannister is young and cheap, and while he's no Cy Young, the Mets need everyone they have to fill out their starting rotation. They don't need a closer; they have Billy Wagner. They could use a young middle reliever with good upside, yes, but I think they need stability in the rotation even more.
    This is a good deal for the Royals, who get a young option for their barren starting rotation. Burgos will be a loss at closer, but it's more of a loss in potential; Burgos was rushed so fast through the minor league system that he still hasn't gotten used to the big leagues (5.52 ERA in '06 along with 16!! HR allowed in just 73.1 IP).
  • With Ryan Howard taking home the NL MVP award, Albert Pujols was quoted as saying that the MVP should come from a contending team. One could infer that he was referring to himself. It was an uncharacteristic remark from the usually classy Pujols, and he's since offered an apology to Howard. But the event has gotten a lot of play in the media. This happens every time someone in sports says anything challenging -- it will be mentioned and discussed on hundreds of TV and radio shows within 24 hours. Regardless of what opinion the talking heads (or headless voices) put forth, the quote itself will catch fire and take off regardless of the extent of the remark itself.
    This is silly, and it reminds us how we take sports far too seriously. Pujols got mad (justifiably so, I think) and popped off, making a stupid remark that he shouldn't have said. It was a bad move, but he has at least apologized. Luckily, the rest of us don't have a microphone shoved into our faces when we're in the foulest of moods.
  • I heard a rumor that the Reds had offered Mark Loretta a two-year free agent contract. We're talking about the Reds, so we have to step Through the Looking Glass to examine their "logic." Coming into the season, the Reds had Brandon Phillips and Ryan Freel as middle infielders. Since then, they've signed Alex Gonzalez and Juan Castro to be their shortstops (why you need two backup shortstops is beyond me; I'll ask the White Knight). And now they want to bring in another second baseman? As if Phillips and Freel weren't enough?
    But I read somewhere that the justification was that the Reds wanted Loretta to platoon at first base with Scott Hatteberg.
    Do what?
    I know that the Reds think that they need 18 middle relievers and 15 middle infielders, and maybe Humpty Dumpty has assured them of the logic behind that. But I assure you that there is no good reason in this or any reality to make Mark Loretta (285/345/361 in '06, 68 career HR) your first baseman.
    I have to quote a section from Will Carroll's column on Baseball Prospectus here.
    So far, [Cincinnati GM] Wayne Krivsky's not making friends. "He's signing guys no one wants and pushing the bar up." I can't print the rest of the quote from an NL official.
    Thank you, Wayne, for carrying on the proud Cincinnati tradition of Jim Bowden and Dan O'Brien. Somewhere, Marge Schott is smiling.
  • Finally, the fate of Barry Bonds, the best hitter available this offseason, is still up in the air. With the Oakland A's going after Mike Piazza as their DH, it looks more and more likely that Bonds' only real home is in San Francisco. Apparently, his agent is throwing around figures like $18 million for a one-year contract. Even Giants' GM Brian Sabean isn't that crazy. Nobody else is interested in Bonds, and everyone knows it.
    It is odd that no one else is (apparently) willing to take a flyer on what will likely be the best bargain of the offseason. The more paranoid observers might conclude that there's a conspiracy to keep Bonds from breaking Aaron's record. That might be a part of the issue, but I don't think it's an organized conspiracy so much as a personal dislike for Bonds and the hoopla he generates. I myself would sign Bonds for my team, but then I've never met the man, nor have I had to deal with his s***. And we've seen many times before that, in sports, self-interest often overcomes personal dislike. For instance, when pitcher Andy Messersmith filed the arbitration case that eventually led to free agency, the owners wanted to blackball him from the game. But Messersmith was still a good pitcher, and Ted Turner spoiled the owners' machinations by signing Messersmith to play for the Braves (Ted was like that).
    An oft-ignored issue was mentioned by Nate Silver at Baseball Prospectus. He put forth the reasonable fear among baseball executives that Barry Bonds may be going to jail. We must remember that there is still a grand jury investigation pending into Bonds' activities, and it's a big possibility that Bonds might be indicted in the near future. There is certainly, as well know, plenty of evidence against him, be it perjury, tax evasion, what have you. And there would be no recompense for an owner who spends $10 million on Bonds only to see him playing for the California Penal League.

Sunday, December 03, 2006

Looking Ahead: Detroit Tigers

2006 W-L Record: 95-67
2006 pW-pL Record: 95-67
Runs Scored: 822 (5th in AL)
Runs Allowed: 675 (1st in AL)
Free Agents: Matt Stairs, Jamie Walker, Dmitri Young


2007 Projected Lineup:
1B -- Sean Casey/Chris Shelton

2B -- Placido Polanco
SS -- Carlos Guillen
3B -- Brandon Inge
LF -- Craig Monroe/Marcus Thames
CF -- Curtis Granderson
RF -- Magglio Ordonez
C -- Ivan Rodriguez
DH -- Gary Sheffield

2007 Proj. Rotation:
Justin Verlander

Jeremy Bonderman
Kenny Rogers
Nate Robertson
Zach Miner/Wil Ledezma

2007 Proj. Closer: Todd Jones/Joel Zumaya

Offense/Defense:
The Tigers hit a lot of home runs and rarely get on base. That's the team in a nutshell. Last year, they finished 3rd in the league in home runs but only 8th in doubles. That indicates a slow power team, one which isn't likely to repeat such a ratio. But their Slugging Percentage of .449 was 5th in the league, thanks in part to a league-leading 40 triples. That would indicate a fast team in a big ballpark. Can the Tigers be simultaneously slow and fast? Yes, it's split pretty evenly in the lineup.
As for the OBP, the Tigers drew 430 walks last year, which was next to last in the AL. Their .329 OBP was 12th of 14, boosted somewhat by a .274 batting average (which is itself about average).
So the Tigers are built almost entirely on home runs and triples. It wasn't a terrible formula last year; in fact, the Tigers finished 5th in the league in scoring despite playing in a big ballpark. But I wouldn't put any money on the triples-and-homers formula long-term. And, sure enough, neither are the Tigers.
Detroit traded three pitching prospects to the Yankees for Gary Sheffield in November. It seems like Sheffield would be the answer to their problems; his career OBP is .398, and he does of course manage a lot of power as well. The trouble is that Sheffield is coming off an injury-shortened 2006 that saw him hit 298/355/450. That's not bad, but it's not really worth $28 million over two years. Considering that Sheffield is 39 years old, and it's even more risky. A lot of people praised the Sheffield trade, but I think that's because they were expecting Sheffield to bounce back to his 2005 quality (291/379/512). That's possible, but I don't think it's that likely, what with his aging wrist. Sheffield will be an improvement, no doubt, but I don't think it's a $28 million improvement.
Sheffield will likely be the team's DH, which will move Marcus Thames somewhere into the outfield. Thames is like almost everyone else on the Tigers; good power, but little else. His 256/333/549 batting line isn't bad, but he's limited defensively and isn't helping the team's OBP troubles. If Thames doesn't end up in left field, that spot will likely go to incumbent Craig Monroe. Monroe has many of Thames' attributes, except that he's not quite as good and is coming off a poor 2006 (255/301/482). If one of them has to be traded, I'd go with Monroe.

The Tigers wisely installed Curtis Granderson in center field last year, after they realized that the only thing Nook Logan can do is run really fast. Granderson is . . . well, the same as everyone else on this team (260/335/438) but is also a good center fielder. That almost makes up for the league-leading 174 strikeouts. Granderson is a valuable guy, but he probably shouldn't be leading off, not with those numbers.
RF Magglio Ordonez actually managed a .350 OBP, good enough for 2nd on the team. Although he's getting paid an obscene amount of money, Ordonez did manage to stay healthy in 2006 and proved quite productive (298/350/477). He's no wizard with the glove, but so long as he can combine power and patience, he'll be worth keeping around.
In the infield, the Tigers seem to be settling for . . . well, something. The only superstar they have is team MVP Carlos Guillen. Guillen isn't more than adequate at shortstop, but his offense is superb: 320/400/519 with a team-leading 20 steals. Guillen is one of the more underappreciated talents in baseball, and isn't too far below Mr. Jeter on the AL Shortstop Totem Pole.

At second base, the Tigers will be waiting to see which version of Placido Polanco shows up. Will it be the guy who was a dynamite contact hitter down the stretch in 2005 (338/386/461)? Or will it be the oddly disappointing guy from 2006 (295/329/364). Polanco has his charms, but he's not worth keeping around if he's hitting like that. His career batting line is 300/344/409, and if he can approach that, he'll prove valuable, especially if he can get on base at the top of the lineup.
Third base will be manned by Brandon Inge. Inge is a loss offensively; his 253/313/463 in 2006 was actually a notch better than his career batting line. Inge is the same story; power, with little else. To be fair, though, he is a sharp defender at the hot corner. And there's no need for the Tigers to get rid of him unless they've got someone better on hand.

First base is the position where the Tigers could most easily upgrade, but so far have failed to do so. The easiest thing would be to give the starting job back to Chris Shelton. Shelton got off to a red-hot start in 2006, but slumped his way out of the starting lineup. His final batting line was 273/340/466; about averagefor a first baseman.
The Tigers' mistake was replacing Shelton with Sean Casey. Casey is a defensive loss who's as fast as an IV drip. Even worse, his offense is deteriorating from bad to YECCH. After being traded to Detroit in mid-2006, Casey hit an abysmal 245/286/364. This is the first baseman, not the backup catcher.
But for some reason, the Tigers decided to re-sign Sean Casey to a 1-year deal for $4 million. Casey is, at this point in his career, utterly useless except for the occasional pinch-hitting appearance. If the Tigers decide to give Casey the job ahead of burgeoning prospect Chris Shelton, they will have fired the first shot in their foot in their quest to repeat as AL Champions.
There aren't really any young hitters making their way toward the majors in the Detroit system. Most of them are already in the majors. So it's fair to say that the fate of the 2007 Tigers rests entirely on the pitching staff.


Pitching:
Luckily the Tigers have a strong pitching staff that will make them competitive even in a worst-case offensive scenario. They allowed the fewest runs in the AL last year -- thanks in part to a solid defense -- and while I do expect a certain regression in 2007 (a regression named Kenny Rogers), the Tigers are still in fantastic shape.
The two bright lights of the starting staff are Rookie of the Year Justin Verlander and Jeremy Bonderman. Verlander made a much-anticipated debut in 2006 and was quite productive, finishing with a 3.63 ERA in 186 innings. His strikeout rate was a bit low -- only 124, surprising for someone with his stuff -- but there's every reason to believe he'll be equally potent next year. The only real worry is work, as Verlander pitched a lot of innings down the stretch and into the postseason.
Jeremy Bonderman may not be as glamorous as Verlander, but he's nearly as productive (4.08 ERA, 64:202 BB:K ratio in 214 IP) and he's only four months older than Verlander, even though he's been in the majors for 4 years now. The Tigers are well set with these two young guns atop their rotation and should be for years to come.
Behind these two, the Tigers have a couple functional guys. Nate Robertson won't be mistaken for a star, despite his 3.84 ERA last year. He's not much of a strikeout pitcher (137 in 208.2 IP last year), and his career 4.56 ERA is more indicative of his talents. But he's still a guy who can make 32 starts (his exact total for three straight years) and keep his team in the ballgame.
I'm more dubious about Kenny Rogers. I expected that the Tigers would regret signing the 42-year-old Rogers to a free agent deal, since his 2005 Texas season had all the signs of collapse except for his ERA (which was 3.46). Well, Rogers was pretty much the same pitcher in 2006; he struck out very few hitters (99 in 204 IP) gave up more HR (23 in '06, 15 in '05), and yet his ERA was still a quality 3.84. Rogers benefits from roomy Comerica Park and a good defense, but at some point you have to figure that all those balls put into play are going to hurt him, especially as he starts drawing Social Security. But then I said that last year . . .

The Tigers are set 1-4 and have some room to play with the #5 spot. One possibility is young Zach Miner, who filled that role in 2006. Miner's 4.84 ERA and 32:59 BB:K ratio weren't exactly enthralling, but he's still young, and the bar is low for a #5 starter.
Another possibility is the returning Mike Maroth. Maroth missed most of 2006 with injury, but appears to be on track f0r a 2007 return. The problem is that Maroth is just a slightly less effective version of Nate Robertson -- very few strikeouts, and a career 4.78 ERA. He's not a bad guy to have as your #5 starter, but the Tigers do have other options.
A less likely scenario, but one that would help the team, would see reliever Wil Ledezma return to the rotation. Ledezma has a great deal of potential and will just be 26 next year (the Tigers seem to be growing young pitchers on trees). He's become more and more of a reliever in recent years (17 of his 24 appearances last year were in relief), but he has the ability to start and pitch quite well.
Either way, the Tigers are set in their rotation, giving them both quality and a good deal of stability. It's a pretty young rotation that projects well in the future. Although it is odd; four of the five starters next year are younger than 30 -- the exception is the 42-year-old Rogers.


The bullpen is also looking sharp in Detroit, thanks to a young flame-thrower named Joel Zumaya. Everyone pretty much realizes that Zumaya is the best choice for closer that the Tigers have, but Detroit management stubbornly sticks with "proven closer" and much-less-effective pitcher Todd Jones. Jones saved 37 games last year, so everyone anointed his head with oil. Of course, he was playing for the pennant winners, and his 3.94 ERA and 11:28 BB:K ratio in 64 innings were ignored. He's a big candidate for disappointment in 2007, when he'll be 39. And maybe then people will actually realize how disappointing he is.
Zumaya is a great weapon to be able to release in the middle innings, but even then he would be best served as a closer. He notched 97 strike0uts in 83.1 IP with a 1.94 ERA, and his amazing stuff was well-documented in the postseason (as was his wildness; 42 BB allowed).
Behind Zumaya, the Tigers have Ledezma (if he doesn't start) and Fernando Rodney, both of them very capable middle relievers. A lot has been made of the fact that the Tigers are losing LOOGY (Left-handed One-Out GuY) Jamie Walker. And while Walker was a good piece of the puzzle, he'll also be turning 35 next year. Better to let some dumb team pick up the tab on his declining years (Baltimore, of course, to the tune of 3 years and $12 million).
The Tigers have the benefit of a young, cheap, and very productive pitching staff. If they can find adequate offense and continue to get solid defense to back them up, they're contenders for the short- and long-term future.


Offseason Game Plan:
The Tigers have already filled their most pressing offensive need by getting Gary Sheffield. They also got Sean Casey, who doesn't fill a need, but they think he does, so that's that.
In fact, the Tigers have the benefit of having some spare parts that could be traded. The corner outfield situation is getting crowded, with Craig Monroe, Marcus Thames, Brent Clevlen, and a couple others all jockeying for position. Monroe's name has been tossed about in trade talks recently. This would be terrific for Detroit; trade away one of your least valuable and most expensive (arbitration-level) players who can easily be replaced from within. In exchange, you could get some relief help or a quality backup infielder.

The Tigers may not be as potent as the Indians and may even find themselves finishing in fourth place in 2007. But there will be little shame in that, considering the strength of the AL Central. The Tigers do have some shortcomings offensively, but they're at least taking a few halting steps to remedy that. And their team has a brighter long-term future than both Chicago and Minnesota, so there's some consolation there. The good news for all baseball fans is that the AL Central will be closely contested again next year, and the Tigers should be right at the center of things.

Looking Ahead: Cleveland Indians

  • The Giants signed Dave Roberts and Rich Aurilia to free-agent deals. Roberts was signed for a 3-year, $18 million deal, and Aurilia to a 2-year, $8 million one.
    These deals are both products of the Giants' desperation to fill the lineup, but with little of the upside associated with the Durham contract. Neither contract is especially deadly, but both contracts serve the purpose of making the team much older (both men will be 35 next year) without getting any significant production in return. Roberts could play left or center field, but his greatest asset (speed) isn't going to improve, especially by his age 38 season. He's not the man to fill a big outfield hole on a team that needs the new Barry Bonds.
    Aurilia would be better served as a backup player, and may yet end up there if the Giants sign someone else. But as it is, Aurilia looks to be the team's starting third baseman, and even if he does hit well enough to stay there (which is debatable), his poor glovework will negate that production.
  • Sources have the Mariners agreeing to a one-year deal with Jose Guillen. It's only for $5 million, so the M's are at least limiting their liability. But Guillen is a tricky person to depend on for big production, especially if he's going to be the starting right fielder (which looks likely). The good news is that his one-year deal won't seriously block the progress of prospect Adam Jones. And at least the Mariners looked for a fix that fit their budget instead of going all Adrian Beltre on us again.
  • The Orioles have re-signed 1B Kevin Millar to a low-end, one-year contract. Millar's not awful, but Orioles fans should be singing the "Status Quo Blues."
  • The Indians took steps to shore up their bullpen by signing free agents Roberto Hernandez and Aaron Fultz. Both men were signed to one-year deals with a club option for 2008. It's not much money at all, and it's good to hear that the Indians are trying to fix their bullpen without committing to multi-year deals.
  • Investigator George Mitchell is saying that his probe into steroid use has stalled due to lack of power. Mitchell does not have the power to subpoena or to order testimony, nor can he guarantee that any "testimony" will remain confidential. So no one is coming forward to admit that they took steroids.
    Imagine my surprise.

The Cleveland Indians:
2006 W-L Record: 78-84
2006 pW-pL Record: 89-73
Runs Scored: 870 (2nd in AL)
Runs Allowed: 782 (7th in AL)
Free Agents: Aaron Boone, Arthur Rhodes

2007 Projected Lineup:
1B -- Ryan Garko?
2B -- Josh Barfield
SS -- Jhonny Peralta
3B -- Andy Marte
LF -- David Dellucci/Jason Michaels
CF -- Grady Sizemore
RF -- Casey Blake
C -- Victor Martinez
DH -- Travis Hafner

2007 Proj. Rotation:
C.C. Sabathia
Cliff Lee
Jeremy Sowers
Paul Byrd
Jeremy Guthrie?

2007 Proj. Closer: Ed Mujica?

Offense/Defense:
Well, there's not a whole lot to complain about here. The Indians finished second in the AL in runs scored last year, and there's no reason to believe that they'll be any worse in 2007. The Indians' great advantage is that all of their key contributors (except for DH Hafner) are playing the skilled defensive positions. There's CF Grady Sizemore, one of the all-around best players in baseball with an MVP in his future. Sizemore, who will be 24 next year, hit 290/375/533 last season, going 22/28 in steals. Comparisons to Carlos Beltran are valid, except that Sizemore isn't quite as good with the glove.
Catcher Victor Martinez is possibly the best-hitting backstop in all of baseball. Martinez is still young (28 next year) and has compiled a career batting line of 301/373/463. He's also been quite durable for the position, getting at least 500 ABs in all three of his full major league seasons. The only bump on the horizon for Martinez might be a move to a different position, since he's not the best defensive catcher, and the Indians would love for him to retain his durability.
The Indians don't have an All-Star middle infield, but they do have two high-quality young (and cheap) players capable of more than holding their own. Jhonny Peralta has shown flashes of very good work on defense, but also suffers from inconsistency. That and his size (he's listed at 6'1", 180, but that's pretty doubtful) could mean a move. The problem is that his hitting is equally inconsistent. Peralta had a brilliant year at the plate in 2005, hitting 292/366/520 with defense good enough to rate him one of the league's 10 best players. Unfortunately, the power and batting average were an illusion, as he fell back to a more typical (for him) season in 2006 (257/323/385). Peralta's young enough to keep growing, and we may see more of that 2005 season in the future, but right now he's just an above-average shortstop, and you can't take that for granted.
At second base, the Indians wisely traded for Josh Barfield. I discussed Barfield in my entry on the Padres, and later when discussing the trade that sent him to Cleveland. He's not wowing anyone on defense and isn't a well-rounded hitter yet (280/318/423 in San Diego), but there's a lot of room for growth. And even if Barfield's development does stall, he's still a perfectly acceptable solution at second making little more than the league minimum.
Third base (the middle of the defensive spectrum) had been a problem for the Indians, and Aaron Boone turned out not to be a very good solution. But the Indians were able to get arguably the best third base prospect in the game, Andy Marte, in a trade with Boston. Marte is still very young, at 23 next year, and hasn't yet taken to the major leagues (226/287/421 in 50 2006 games). But he projects as well as anyone with his well-rounded skill set and should be a bargain of a third baseman in the process.
As I said, the exception to all of this is DH Travis Hafner. Hafner is, simply put, the greatest hitter in the American League. The parallels between Hafner and fellow DH David Ortiz are striking, especially when you consider that Hafner has been demonstrably better. Hafner, who turns 30 next year, is a career 297/402/583 hitter in a slightly pitcher-friendly ballpark. Ortiz, who will be 31 next year, is a career 283/374/550 hitter with the benefit of Fenway Park. The only edge Ortiz holds over Hafner is durability; Ortiz runs like clockwork, whereas Hafner has never reached 500 ABs in a season.
Where the Indians have run into trouble is filling in the hitter-first positions of 1B-LF-RF. Temporary placeholders like Ben Broussard, Jody Gerut, Casey Blake, and Jason Michaels were never a problem, but they also never offered anything significant offensively. Well, Broussard and Gerut are gone, and the Indians are starting to replace them with more productive players.
At first base, the Indians will likely go with young Ryan Garko. As if their infield weren't young and cheap (and good) already, the Indians will almost certainly start Garko there in 2007. Garko is a bit old, turning 26 next year, but his lack of time in the majors isn't really his fault. Garko turned the minors into his own personal playground, hitting 298/386/505 over his minor league career. Garko finally reached the majors to stay in 2006 when the Indians traded Broussard, and he responded well: 292/359/470. Garko is already good enough to hold down the first base job, and he could turn out to be even better than that.
In left field, the Indians will probably combine the incumbent Michaels (267/326/391 in '06) with free agent David Dellucci. The platoon advantage would work out well, with Dellucci facing righties and Michaels starting against the southpaws. The extra man would then be on the bench as a potent pinch-hitting possibility. The Indians should get much better production out of the position either way, even sweeter since the two players combined will be earning about $5-6 million.
The Indians picked up outfielder Casey Blake's option, and they're hoping to get one more year of good work from the 33-year-old, who hit 282/356/479 as the right fielder last year. The Indians have a number of good outfielders making their way through the system, meaning that Blake will likely be replaced after the season, if not during.
With all due respect to the Yankees, I think the Indians will have the best lineup in all of baseball next year. The advantage becomes even more pronounced when you consider defense, one area where Cleveland has the Yankees licked. And not only are the Indians a great-hitting team, but they're a young great-hitting team that should be together for a few years yet.
Wow.

Pitching:
This was obviously the team's #1 problem in 2006. A lot can be made of the fact that the Tribe had bad luck. But when bad luck runs for two or three years, you start to wonder if maybe there's more to it than that (Cleveland's 11-win deficit in Pythagorean is reminiscent of the team's equally inexplicable bad record in one-run games in 2005). It's not readily apparent what it is that's keeping the Indians from matching their Pythagorean record. But the most likely culprit is pitching.
While the Indians have several good arms advancing through the minors, it's still questionable how much they'll contribute at the big-league level in 2007. The Indians' returning starting pitchers, C.C. Sabathia, Cliff Lee, and Paul Byrd, aren't too bad, but they're a pretty disappointing 1-2-3 in your starting rotation, especially considering the competition in the AL Central. Word is that the Indians would like to bring in a value-priced free agent to contribute in the short run while the kids develop. But then they tried that last year with Paul Byrd, and it backfired (4.88 ERA).
No, if anything the Indians are going to get help from within. The most likely candidate is Jeremy Sowers. Sowers sailed through the minor leagues and into Cleveland in two seasons, proving absolutely dominant from Kinston all the way to the bigs. The Indians were (and are) desperate for someone to suck up some innings in the starting rotation, so Sowers should have a spot in the rotation set aside for him. He came up at the end of 2005 and performed well in 14 starts, posting a 3.57 ERA. There was a troubling drop in strikeout rate, both in Triple-A and the majors, but the Indians hope that's just growing pains. Either way, Sowers will be the biggest bargain in the entire rotation, and may end up their #1 starter sooner rather than later.
For the #5 spot in the rotation, the Indians will be trying out the young pitchers emerging from the minors with less fanfare than Sowers. One possibility is Jeremy Guthrie. Guthrie has the advantage of already being exposed to big-league hitting. The problem is that he was crushed in late-season callups in 2004, 2005 and 2006. At age 28, it's not very likely that Guthrie is going to be taking any big steps forward. But he'll be one of the options in Spring Training.
He also has the advantage of big-league exposure. The best pitching prospect in the organization, Adam Miller, has only thrown 4.2 innings in Triple-A. The 22-year-old rebounded from a poor 2005 to put together a dynamite season at Double-A Akron. But considering his youth, and with his weak 2005 still in mind, Miller will most likely start the season in Triple-A. There's no reason to jeopardize the organization's prize pitching prospect just to put him in the #5 slot. The Indians will likely fill that hole through free agency.

The Indians' bullpen was terrible in 2006, at least partially explaining how they were able to outscore their opponents over the course of the season, but still lose a lot of close games. The Indians have taken some steps to correct this problem with the addition of free agents Roberto Hernandez and Aaron Fultz. Both men came cheap, but that's partly for a reason; neither one possesses the magic bullet of relief dominance.
The team did get good work from Rafael Betancourt (3.81 ERA, 48 K in 56.2 IP) and former starter Jason Davis (3.74 ERA). But they found it nearly impossible to get anyone to help these guys out. It seemed that everyone they tried didn't just fail, but failed miserably. The most unfortunate example of this would be prospect Fausto Carmona, whose abortive run as closer ended with 9 HR and 31 BB allowed in 74.2 IP. He finished with a 5.42 ERA. But all is not lost for the Indians. A couple pitcher who struggled in 2006 should do better, among them Thomas Mastny and Fernando Cabrera.
Since trading away Bob Wickman, the Indians have struggled to come up with a closer. It's doubtful that they'll want to pay market prices to get a free agent (although I wouldn't rule out a 1-year deal to Eric Gagne, or somesuch). But while the Indians haven't officially named a closer for 2006, it looks to me like they've got a great candidate already in the 'pen, prospect Ed Mujica.
Mujica is another Indian pitcher who tore through the minors, going from Kinston to Cleveland in two years after being converted to relief. He never posted an ERA above 3.00, and his strikeout rate varies from above-average to brilliant. His control is phenomenal; in 112 innings since becoming a reliever, Mujica has issued a mere 23 walks. Over that same period, he allowed just 6 HR.

Offseason Game Plan:
The Indians are pretty well set with all their big pieces except possibly another starting pitcher. GM Mark Shapiro continues to make fabulous decisions, improving his team in the short run without sacrificing the long run.
It must be noted, though, that the Indians for two years now have consistently underperformed. In 2005, it was just in one-run games, leaving the Indians just a couple games out of the postseason. But in 2006, it affected everything, and they dropped to fourth place. It's easy to dismiss this as bad luck, but there could be something more here that we're just not seeing. If it happens again in 2007, it will certainly be the sign of something wrong, and there will likely be repercussions in the clubhouse and possibly the front office.
But there's every reason to believe that the Indians will rebound and come into 2007 as favorites in the very tough AL Central. You'll find statheads everywhere picking the Indians, and most of us were embarassed and disappointed in 2006. But I don't think it will happen again in 2007.

Saturday, December 02, 2006

Looking Ahead: Chicago White Sox

A few bits of activity on the free agent market:
  • I don't think I've mentioned this yet, but the Indians signed outfielder David Dellucci to a 3-year, $11.5 million contract. This easily trumps the Moises Alou deal as the best of the off-season. The Indians needed temporary help in the outfield corners. The problem was that they needed big help but couldn't pay big prices. Enter Dellucci, who hits just as well (or better) than most of the guys signed to $75 million blockbusters this offseason. Dellucci's a career 263/348/449 hitter who's become especially potent in recent years (251/367/513 with Texas in '05, 292/369/530 with Philly in '06).
    This is really a great deal in every sense of it, which makes it even more puzzling that it was signed in this off-season. Dellucci isn't a star, and at age 33, he's due to decline. But the Indians aren't paying him like a star. He should provide a temporary jolt to a part of the Cleveland lineup that needed it. And even if Dellucci's skills do decline somewhat, he's won't be much of a drag on the payroll as well, and can easily be eased into a backup outfielder role if someone better comes along.
    More evidence that Cleveland GM Mark Shapiro is one of the cleverest executives in the game.
  • As I'll discuss below, the White Sox signed outfielder Scott Podsednik to a one-year contract extension for about $3 million. This isn't a bad contract in any sense except that Podsednik takes up space that should be occupied by someone productive. Podsednik would be great if he were a defensive whiz, but no left fielder is good enough defensively to justify a 261/330/353 batting line, even if he is really cheap.
    The move is especially odd since word is that the Sox were looking to trade or replace Podsednik. GM Kenny Williams wisely targeted left field as the position most in need of an upgrade and was said to be pursuing other options. Of course, this contract doesn't mean that the Sox won't still trade Podsednik. It could also mean that they're signing him to be a backup for whatever left fielder they do get. Stay tuned on this one.
  • The Giants re-signed second baseman Ray Durham to a 2-year deal for about $14 million. My reaction to this deal is mixed. It's a lot less money than I expected Durham to get, since he's by far the best second baseman available and he's also coming off a big career year. But even if he is a bargain, he's still a defensively limited second baseman who's 35 years old.
    In the Giants' defense, they're desperate to put a set of 9 warm bodies on the field, and they could have done a lot worse than Durham. However, the Durham signing is just a temporary solution to the Giants' aging roster, and may even end up contributing to it.
  • The Rockies signed pitcher Jeff Francis to a 4-year, $13.5 million contract extension. More and more teams are doing this, signing up players for their arbitration years. Most teams prefer knowing that a player's salary going forward rather than negotiating it every year. Francis is a solid pitcher whom the Rockies really need, so this deal is quite sensible. It's also fuelled speculation that the Rockies will trade Jason Jennings, who is soon approaching free agency.
  • But the biggest news is probably that the Mets signed Tom Glavine to a 1-year deal for $10.5 million. You may ask, "Why did Glavine decline his $7.5 million player option for 2007 with the Mets to enter free agency, only to resign with the team for a $2.5 million raise? How could he decide to enter the biggest bull market for free agents in recent history and not at least get a 2-year deal?"
    The answer to this is -- apparently -- that Glavine wanted to see what he could get from the Atlanta Braves. But word is that the Braves didn't even extend Glavine an offer. So he had no choice but to go back to New York (I hear that Glavine didn't want to go anywhere else but Atlanta). This is a great deal for the Mets, along the lines of the Alou deal. Like Alou, Glavine is an aging player (41 next year), but has shown good productivity in recent years. Even if Glavine does take a step back, the contract will still be a winner for New York, who somehow managed to limit their liability to one year. And the Mets really need starting pitchers.
  • There are plenty of rumors leading into the Winter Meetings in Orlando. We'll see what happens.

The Chicago White Sox:

2006 W-L Record: 90-72
2006 pW-pL Record: 88-74
Runs Scored: 868 (3rd in AL)
Runs Allowed: 794 (10th in AL)
Free Agents: Dustin Hermanson, Cliff Politte

2007 Projected Lineup:
1B -- Paul Konerko
2B -- Tadahito Iguchi
SS -- Juan Uribe
3B -- Joe Crede/Josh Fields
LF -- Scott Podsednik?
CF -- Brian Anderson
RF -- Jermaine Dye
C -- A.J. Pierzynski
DH -- Jim Thome

2007 Proj. Rotation
Jose Contreras
Mark Buehrle
Jon Garland
Freddy Garcia
Javier Vazquez

2007 Proj. Closer: Bobby Jenks

Offense/Defense:
The Sox planned to upgrade their offense after their 2005 World Series victory, and they did indeed. Not only did Jermaine Dye have a career year (315/385/622 at a sweet $5 mil.), but Jim Thome did wonders (288/416/598) and Paul Konerko kept going (313/381/551).
But having three hitters as good as this masked some forthcoming problems with the Chicago lineup. Their key contributors are getting older (Konerko will be 31 in '07, Dye 33, Thome 36), and Konerko and Thome are expensive and tied up long-term (Dye will be back in '07 for a bare $6 mil.). The Sox also got very poor production from many of the other spots in the lineup. Apart from the three listed above, only catcher A.J. Pierzynski was average, offensively. Third baseman Joe Crede had a decent year (282/323/506 with good defense), but was playing far above his head. Speculation is that Crede, who reaches free agency in 2008, will be traded while his stock is at its highest. Prospect Josh Fields (305/379/515 in Triple-A) appears to be ready.
Juan Uribe was as strong defensively as Crede, but suffered through the worst offensive season of his career (235/257/441). Uribe is usually a good source of power and defense, which isn't to0 bad, but as he starts getting more expensive, he's going to look more and more like a target for an upgrade.
Second baseman Tadahito Iguchi is, like Crede and Uribe, reasonably priced, but he too wasn't providing any excellent production. He hit 281/352/422, which is good for his position, but he's not helping on defense. But like Uribe, the Sox will probably just settle with what they've and focus on the position most in need of an improvement.
That would be left field. Left fielder Scott Podsednik was, at one time, one of the most overrated players in baseball. This peaked when the White Sox won the World Series, and every sportswriter slobbered over Podsednik and his stolen bases without noticing that -- even at his best -- Podsednik doesn't hit well enough to play left field. And at his worst, he's absolutely untenable (261/330/353 in '06). The good news is that GM Kenny Williams realizes this and is looking for a replacement. The bad news is that it's rumored to be the Angels' Chone Figgins, who is only a slightly better version of Podsednik himself (although that rumor would have Figgins replacing Crede at third, with some other move to bring in a left fielder).
The Sox do have a few loose outfielders who have shown some good work at Triple-A (Jerry Owens, Ryan Sweeney), but none of them look strong enough to take over the everyday left fielder's job. And the White Sox already have one young player floundering in the outfield -- CF Brian Anderson (225/290/359) -- and really can't afford another. The good news with Anderson, though, is that he's a very talented ballplayer who can only improve.

All that said, the Sox shouldn't begin to see a significant downturn in offense for a while yet. They run the risk of taking a step back from 2006, but they were so successful last year that they can probably handle a slight regression (keyword: slight). No, what it all depends on is fixing the same problem they had last year: pitching.

Pitching:
The Sox won the World Series in 2005 because of their very strong pitching staff. Any credit given to the offense is truly incidental; they ranked 9th in the league in runs scored despite their hitter-friendly ballpark. So it was to everyone's surprise (especially my own), when every pitcher in the White Sox rotation took a step back.
There's really not much a manager or GM can do when you've assembled five solid starting pitchers and they all inexpiclably start sucking. The Sox returned four starters from their 2005 World Championship squad, and they all gained at least a half-run in ERA; some of them more than a full run.
Jose Contreras started out strong but then went into a puzzling tailspin, finishing with a disappointing 4.27 ERA that was, unfortunately, the best on the staff (his 2005 ERA was 3.61). Contreras is a historically mercurial pitcher who turns 35 next year. While he's still got the excellent stuff, there's also a very good chance that he'll need more than that to be the ace the Sox are paying him to be. (The Sox signed him to an ill-advised 3-year, $29 million contract extension in April).
Jon Garland was the only guy on the starting staff who looked like he was due for a regression; his 2005 ERA of 3.50 was not only out of line with his peripheral stats, it was out of line with his past. Surpisingly, though, Garland rebounded from a rough start to finish with a nearly-respectable 4.51 ERA. His peripherals, though, suggest that the 2006 version was the real deal (only 112 K in 211.1 IP).
Freddy Garcia seemed like a solid bet for a good season, even if his 2005 (3.87 ERA) was a little better than expected. But he finished the season with a 4.53 ERA (48:135 BB:K ratio in 216.1 IP) and now sounds like the most likely Sox pitcher to get traded this off-season.
The other name bandied about most often is Javier Vazquez. Vazquez was the only new face on the 2006 staff, having spent 2005 providing the metropolitan Phoenix area with souvenir baseballs (35 HR allowed + 192 K = 4.42 ERA). Vazquez didn't allow nearly as many home runs in 2006 (23), but that didn't stop his ERA from jumping to 4.84, despite a still-strong BB:K ratio (56:184 in 202.2 IP). Vazquez is, like Garcia, in the midst of a long-term deal, and so is the other candidate to get traded. Vazquez is puzzling, because his peripherals suggest someone who is just unlucky. I (for one) thought Vazquez just needed to lower his home run total to succeed. I (for one) was wrong. Because Vazquez's bizarre formula of non-success has now followed him from New York to Arizona to Chicago, which suggests more than bad luck. His last successful season, 2003 with Montreal, seems like a very distant memory.
But the most surprising failure of the 2006 White Sox was also the worst -- Mark Buehrle. Buehrle's 2005 ERA was 3.12, and he was easily the team's best starter both in the regular season and in the postseason. His career ERA is 3.83, so you'd expect a bit of an "adjustment" in 2006. Unfortunately, that adjustment ended with a 4.99 ERA and a sharp drop in strikeout rate (2005: 149 in 236.2 IP, 2006: 98 in 204).
It seems like Buehrle's been around forever (2000), but he's just going to be 28 next year. He's been one of the most reliable pitchers in baseball since his big-league debut, something which is very nice to have around, especially when it's a reliable 200+ innings and an ERA closer to 3.50 than 4.50. It would be easy to suggest that Buehrle was just having a bad year in '06, and that may still be the case. But while I'm no scout, the sharp drop in strikeout rate troubles me (though it must be said that Buehrle never had a very high one). And the opinions I have heard from scouting-type people is that there was more wrong with Buehrle than just bad luck. It could certainly be the cumulative effect of throwing 200+ innings for 6 straight years before your 28th birthday. Let's hope that Buehrle can rebound, not just for his sake, but for Chicago's; he's their biggest hope.
If (or when) either Garcia or Vazquez is traded, he will likely be replaced by Brandon McCarthy. McCarthy has been ready for some time but has yet to win a full-time job in the rotation. GM Williams' justification is that you can't have too much pitching, which is true. But considering the down years suffered by the Sox' very expensive rotation, the young and cheap McCarthy should get a job. His minor league track record is very strong, and he'd be an asset to any rotation.

The downfall of the White Sox' bullpen was much easier to see coming. The 2005 World Champions got a lot of good performances from very unlikely sources (Dustin Hermanson, Neal Cotts, and Cliff Politte especially). There's nothing wrong with that; in fact, getting great performances from marginal pitchers is a credit to the pitching coach (Don Cooper) and should serve as an example for every big-league GM who hurls millions at expensive relievers. The problem comes when you need them to repeat that performance. Bad luck there. Hermanson and Politte are leaving as free agents; in fact, they're the team's only free agents (kudos there). But the Sox are currently in the market for relief pitching, as they know that they can't count on their starters for everything anymore (although they will still have the league's most durable rotation even if they're not great).
Closer Bobby Jenks looks like he's going to be reliable, but his Postseason Halo is still there, making people lump him in with the elite closers of the game. Not so fast. Jenks is an overweight young fellow who still has a penchant for wildness and finished with an ERA of an even 4.00, which is pretty poor for a closer. Hopefully Kenny Williams can see past saves (41 for Jenks) better than the short-sighted press corps.

Now, having said all that, I'm going to have to say that the Sox' rotation should be better next year. They had everything go wrong in 2006 and still won 90 games; slotting Brandon McCarthy in there and getting a rebound from one or two of these guys should make the Sox contenders, so long as their offense can maintain itself. But there's a lot to be cautious about here, even if it's a cautious optimism.

Offseason Game Plan:
You can't live with the production of Scott Podsednik, and he needs to be replaced in the lineup by someone not named Figgins. The Sox look pretty set for big boppers (their 236 team HR led the league last year), but could use a true leadoff man who can do more than steal bases (they ranked 6th in team OBP).
Williams seems poised to avoid the free agent market altogether, which is a good move. The only problem that may need a free agent solution is the bullpen, and there's no need to spend a small fortune to bring in Alan Embree and Jose Mesa. Hey, if you wait long enough, there won't even be any expensive relievers left on the market, if the Orioles have anything to say about it.
The White Sox aren't built for the long run, and GM Williams is going to have to keep phasing in talented youngsters like McCarthy, Josh Fields and Brian Anderson if the team is going to have any long-term viability in the youth movement that is the AL Central. But considering the bare state of the Sox farm system, it may be best to go ahead and leverage a lot to win now, while guys like Thome and Konerko are still producing, and before teams like Cleveland and Detroit really get rolling.