Archive for November, 2010

Four to Call About: Panda Plus Three

All sorts of rumors are flying around out there, mostly about free agents. But there is a fair amount of stuff about younger, team-controlled players potentially being moved. This isn’t a rumors site, nor do I have any special connections that would allow me to divulge scenarios posited by “anonymous scouts” or “unnamed executives from rival teams.” However, there are some interesting things being said about players that teams might want to try and acquire if they are available at a reasonable cost. I’m not talking about completely ripping off the other team. Speculating and analyzing about hypothetical “ripoff” trades isn’t interesting. Obviously, if a team can “get one over” on another team, they should probably do it. Executives are kicking the tires on players all the time, and while I don’t know what it would take to get them, I want to highlight four relatively young ones that plenty of teams should be calling about.

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Offseason Notes: Charlie Blackmon > Brandon Belt

Use images to liven up your blog posts.

This edition of Offseason Notes contains:

1. An invitation to take my, Carson Cistulli’s, money.
2. Some notable ZiPS projections for the Florida Marlins.

and

3. By popular demand, the return of the Bryce Harper Watch.

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What the Rangers Can Do With $90 Million

In 2009 the Rangers opened the season with a $55 million payroll, fourth lowest in baseball. They added some salary along the way, but it amounted to little over $5 million. A bankruptcy proceeding, an ownership change, a new TV deal, and a World Series appearance later and the team finds itself in a bit more favorable financial position. According to Ken Rosenthal and Jon Morosi of Fox Sports, that could mean a 2011 payroll that exceeds $90 million. That will help the Rangers as they pursue another AL pennant.

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The Forgotten Horrible Bullpen

The Arizona Diamondbacks bullpen was historically bad in 2010. In 439 innings, they allowed 307 runs to score, 280 of which were earned. That comes out to a 5.74 ERA, over a full run more than the next worst team (the Cubs, 4.72). On top of that, the Diamondbacks also allowed 78 of 189 inherited runners to score, a 41% mark which ties the Dodgers for the worst in the Majors. It shouldn’t be surprising, then, that the Diamondbacks’ -8.37 WPA is nearly three wins lower than second worst and the worst WPA for any team since the 1999 Kansas City Royals, a team which featured such stalwarts as Tim Byrdak, Scott Service, and Jeff Montgomery.

The pure, unadulterated incompetence of this past year’s Diamondbacks team has allowed another bullpen to go under the radar. The Seattle Mariners bullpen put up a paltry -5.51 WPA, a number that would typically be in a dogfight for worst in the league. Mariner relievers were also the only other team unit to go below replacement level in 2010, with the run suppressing effects of Safeco Field masking just how poor they pitched, keeping their ERA at a merely mediocre 4.23.

What is most remarkable about Seattle’s bullpen struggles is how it required a vastly superior clutch performance to reach a WPA mark that typifies the worst bullpen teams in the league. The Mariners ranked fourth in clutch, as measured here by WPA/pLI – WPA/LI, only behind the Rays, Cubs, and Royals. Without that clutch factor, the Mariners posted an unbelievably horrible -9.13 WPA/LI over four wins worse than the Diamondbacks and worse than any team in the millennium, and even worse than those aforementioned 1999 Royals.

Mostly thanks to the total ineptitude of the Mariners’ offense, Seattle relievers entered the least high-leverage situations in the American League, at 134. They also have by far the least relief appearances in the Majors. Due to the fact that, by and large, these relievers were entering in unimportant situations, the Mariners weren’t quick with their hooks at all. Seattle saw the fewest outings of fewer than three outs in the whole league and were near the bottom in percentage of appearances lasting less than a full inning (20% vs. 29% average). It appears that the willingness of the Mariners to leave their relievers in once they entered – particularly in low-leverage situations – was a major factor for why their leverage-neutral results appear so much worse than their actual results.

Take Chris Seddon, for instance. He appeared in 14 games (22.1 IP) and pitched like a minor leaguer, with a 5.64 ERA and a 5.32 FIP. Despite allowing tons of runs, Seddon recorded one of the few above-average WPAs on the team, at +0.11, which is because most of the beating that Seddon took – 1 IP, 2 ER against CLE, .2 IP, 3 ER against NYY, and 1 IP, 3 ER against TB – all came with pLIs below 0.14 and even with one as low as 0.00. Those appearances account for 57% of Seddon’s earned runs but only added up to -.032 WPA . In his only four games facing a pLI above 0.5, Seddon faced 20 hitters and only two of them reached base as he compiled a +.199 WPA in those situations.

It’s hard to blame Seattle for having long leashes as they trotted out multiple awful bullpen arms over the course of a long season. In high leverage situations, they could turn to David Aardsma and Brandon League – two talented pitchers who had at least respectable seasons in 2010. In low leverage situations, though, the Mariners were scraping the bottom of the barrel. The Mariners weren’t as historically bad as the Diamondbacks, partially because they didn’t give up as many runs and partly because they picked their spots better. But just looking at the performance of the bullpen as a whole, without regard for leverage, the 2010 Mariners were easily the worst bullpen of recent memory and possibly the worst in history.


Blum in Arizona

Timing is everything with analyzing signings like this one. The signing of Geoff Blum probably has little to do with the knowledge that Mark Reynolds is much on the market, but until that other string is tied in a knot, the two will dangle next to each other. That dangling state leads folks to wonder whether Blum is the Diamondbacks’ new third baseman or if he’s just the placeholder. And that line of thinking is unfair to Blum and unfair to the Diamondbacks, unless Blum being the starter is the plan, in which case this whole ordeal is just unfair to Diamondbacks’ fans.

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Contract Crowdsourcing Results: Juan Uribe

Juan Uribe, playoff hero*, is not worth much more than Jhonny Peralta, says the crowd. Or, at least, the expectation is that the contracts they sign this winter will be similar, which either bodes well for whoever signs Uribe or quite poorly for the Tigers. On to the results.

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The Real Truth Behind Derek Jeter’s Gold Glove — Revealed!

Yesterday, Major League Baseball announced that Derek Jeter just won his fifth Gold Glove at the age of 36. Many people greeted this news with a grin or an eye-roll; Aaron Gleeman pretended to be incredulous that Jeter was “denied a National League Gold Glove award,” while baseball-reference.com briefly posted a comment that said “We can’t believe it either.”

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Detroit Tigers Prospects: System Depth

This is an article providing detail on the prospects in the Detroit farm system that were not ranked among the top 10 by Marc Hulet.

We are seeing some consistency with the organizations at the back end of Marc Hulet’s farm system rankings: prospect depth is a problem for this group. However, the reason it’s clear that Detroit is the best organization we’ve written up yet — and, in my opinion, perhaps better than a few in front of it — is that I see three players that had good arguments for the top 10, and a couple others that are solid prospects.

While David Chadd’s early-round strategy leaves his team strong in the top tier, the team needs influences (like Eddie Bane) to help change the reliever-heavy strategy that Chadd has employed in the middle rounds. There are a lot of pitchers in this system that did well enough at big-time college programs, but just seem like longshots to ever contribute beyond a fifth starter role in a big league rotation. Depth in the middle relief department is nice, but it should play a smaller part in roster construction than it seems to in Detroit.

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Getting Out of the Cellar: Arizona Diamondbacks

Before they knew it, the Diamondbacks were out of it. Before the calendar even flipped to June they were double digit games back in the NL West. They got to 20 games behind just after the All-Star break. They did hit something of a stride in August, going 16-13, but an 11-18 September/October put a fitting end to a bitter season. The Diamondbacks have plenty work ahead of them if they’re going to make up the 15 games that separated them from fourth place.

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FanGraphs Chat – 11/11/10