Archive for Dodgers

Los Angeles Dodgers Top 49 Prospects

Joe Camporeale-USA TODAY Sports

Below is an analysis of the prospects in the farm system of the Los Angeles Dodgers. Scouting reports were compiled with information provided by industry sources as well as my own observations. This is the fourth year we’re delineating between two anticipated relief roles, the abbreviations for which you’ll see in the “position” column below: MIRP for multi-inning relief pitchers, and SIRP for single-inning relief pitchers. The ETAs listed generally correspond to the year a player has to be added to the 40-man roster to avoid being made eligible for the Rule 5 draft. Manual adjustments are made where they seem appropriate, but we use that as a rule of thumb.

A quick overview of what FV (Future Value) means can be found here. A much deeper overview can be found here.

All of the ranked prospects below also appear on The Board, a resource the site offers featuring sortable scouting information for every organization. It has more details (and updated TrackMan data from various sources) than this article and integrates every team’s list so readers can compare prospects across farm systems. It can be found here. Read the rest of this entry »


A Dodgers Favorite Returns After Manuel Margots to Minnesota

Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports

When the Dodgers traded for Tyler Glasnow this offseason, he wasn’t the only player the Rays sent west. Manuel Margot also joined Los Angeles, where he would to fill Jonny DeLuca’s old role as a righty-hitting outfielder capable of playing any of the three spots. Yet, Margot wasn’t exactly a snug fit for the Dodgers; his inclusion in the trade felt more like a way for Tampa Bay to shed salary. It seemed likely that Los Angeles would flip him to another team before the start of the season.

That’s exactly what happened on Monday, when the Dodgers sent Margot and minor league infielder Rayne Doncon to the Twins in exchange for minor league shortstop Noah Miller. Los Angeles also agreed to cover $6 million of Margot’s $10 million salary for 2024, along with the $2 million he’d be owed if Minnesota doesn’t exercise its team option for 2025, as Aaron Gleeman reported. So, in trading Margot, the Dodgers are saving $4 million; naturally, they promptly turned around and signed Enrique Hernández to a one-year, $4 million deal.

You can almost analyze the Dodgers’ side of this trade in a box, because the things being exchanged are so similar. In fact, to make my analysis make sense, you have to know how close the prospects are in value, so let’s start there. Doncon is a 20-year old middle infielder who spent 2023 at Single-A Rancho Cucamonga struggling against older pitchers. Want a prospect novel? Eric Longenhagen has one for you:

Doncon was a 2021 and 2022 backfield prodigy who looked like he could become a slugging middle infielder. His bat speed, body projection, as well as his struggles on defense and with chase, prompted Alfonso Soriano pipe dreams and more level-headed Esteury Ruiz comparisons at the time. Doncon had a mediocre 2023 with the bat – .215/.283/.368, albeit with a career-high 14 homers – but looked much better on defense. He currently has the actions and arm strength for shortstop, but he’s still young and has a lot of room on his frame, which means he may yet outgrow that position and move to either second or third. Doncon’s pitch recognition is not great, and he’s a bit more chase and whiff prone than is ideal, but he has good power for a hitter his age and is probably going to grow into more. The longer he can stay at short, the better chance he gives himself at being a useful big leaguer despite his flaws. The Twins have two seasons to develop Doncon before they have to decide whether to expose him to the Rule 5 draft, and realistically, they have another year or two beyond that to let him barbecue on the 40-man if they really want to. He adds an element of upside to their system as well as an element of risk. He is not likely to have a meteoric rise. Instead, he is a slow-burning, high-variance prospect.

Read the rest of this entry »


Clayton Kershaw Is a Dodger — Again

Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

With the additions of Shohei Ohtani and Yoshinobu Yamamoto on deals lasting 10 and 12 years, respectively, the Dodgers are entering a new era when it comes to their headlining superstars — not to take anything away from Mookie Betts and Freddie Freeman, both of whom remain at or near the top of their respective games. On Monday, we learned that the next stage of Dodger baseball will also include another familiar superstar: The New York Post’s Joel Sherman and Jon Heyman reported that free agent Clayton Kershaw will return to the only team for which he’s ever pitched.

The exact terms of the deal — which is pending a physical on Thursday — have yet to emerge at this writing, but USA Today‘s Bob Nightengale reported that the deal is a “one-year, incentive-laden contract,” while The Athletic’s Andy McCullough added that the contract includes a player option for 2025. If exercised, that would allow Kershaw to join Ohtani — who won’t pitch in 2024 after undergoing reconstructive surgery on his UCL this past September — in the Dodgers’ rotation.

Player options tend to carry advantages when it comes to Competitive Balance Tax accounting, a significant concern for the Dodgers, who rank second in payroll (both actual and CBT-based) only to the Mets and are nearly $12 million over the fourth-tier tax threshold of $297 million even before adding Kershaw’s salary. For example, Justin Turner’s two-year, $21.7 million deal with the Red Sox last year called for a base salary of $8.3 million for 2023, then a $13.4 million option and $6.7 million buyout. By opting out, Turner made $15 million on a deal whose average annual value was just $10.85 million. Read the rest of this entry »


The Dodgers Shake up Their Bullpen With a Pair of Moves

Kiyoshi Mio-USA TODAY Sports

The reliever merry-go-round rarely stops spinning, and one team’s castoff might be another’s potential cog. Case in point: on Monday the Dodgers re-signed righty Ryan Brasier, whom they plucked from the scrapheap in mid-2023, to a two-year deal. To add him, they dealt lefty Caleb Ferguson to the Yankees for itinerant lefty Matt Gage and righty prospect Christian Zazueta Jr.

The 36-year-old Brasier, who made $2 million last year, his final one before free agency, is guaranteed $9 million for 2024–25, with a maximum of $4 million in incentives possible as well. At this writing, the specifics of the annual breakdowns and the benchmarks for those bonuses aren’t known, but suffice to say, this represents a big upgrade in his standard of living. The Angels, Cardinals, Red Sox, and Yankees all showed interest in him this winter as well, according to The Athletic’s Fabian Ardaya.

Such an outcome would have been almost unthinkable back in May, when Brasier lost his job with the Red Sox, for whom he’d pitched since 2018 with varying degrees of success. Though he made 68 appearances for Boston in 2022, he posted a 3.61 FIP but a 5.78 ERA in 62.1 innings, with a .335 BABIP — owing to too many hard-hit balls — playing a significant role in the discrepancy between those two run prevention figures. Through the first six weeks of his 2023 season with the Red Sox, it was more of the same: a 7.29 ERA, a 4.35 FIP, and a .344 BABIP in 21 innings.

On May 15, a day after Brasier had allowed three runs in a season-high 2.1 innings of garbage-time duty against the Cardinals, the Red Sox designated him for assignment; six days later, they released him. The Dodgers signed him to a minor league deal in early June, with Rob Hill, the team’s director of minor league pitching, and Brent Minta, their pitching analytics coordinator, suggesting he add a cut fastball to a repertoire that also includes a four-seamer that averages almost 96 mph and mid-80s slider.

Brasier spent about two weeks working on the new pitch at Camelback Ranch, then made two appearances for Triple-A Oklahoma City, during which he struck out five of nine hitters without allowing a baserunner. The Dodgers called him up, and he was outstanding, pitching to a 0.70 ERA and 2.48 FIP in 38.2 innings the rest of the way. Throwing the new pitch to lefties 46.8% of the time (though just 6.2% to righties), he held batters to a .152 average and .273 slugging percentage with a 16.4% whiff rate. Meanwhile, he cut his four-seam fastball usage in half, got better results on contact and higher whiff rates on all of his pitches:

Ryan Brasier Pitch Comparison, Red Sox vs. Dodgers
Pitch Type Team Pitch % PA BA xBA SLG xSLG wOBA xwOBA Whiff
Cutter LAD 23.2% 35 .152 .232 .273 .371 .208 .281 16.4%
4-Seam BOS 51.9% 43 .342 .311 .605 .547 .434 .401 21.6%
4-Seam LAD 25.5% 30 .231 .193 .269 .295 .282 .275 30.2%
Slider BOS 38.4% 39 .171 .238 .200 .307 .216 .283 27.5%
Slider LAD 33.2% 52 .083 .147 .125 .224 .109 .191 41.7%
Sinker BOS 9.7% 13 .455 .465 .455 .628 .451 .514 4.5%
Sinker LAD 18.1% 25 .136 .192 .136 .223 .162 .240 10.4%
SOURCE: Baseball Savant

Brasier had been scorched at a .389/.463/.611 clip by the 41 lefties he faced with the Red Sox, striking out just three of them while walking five. Once he joined the Dodgers, lefties hit just .123/.167/.211 in 60 plate appearances, with three walks (one intentional) and 18 strikeouts.

Overall, Brasier’s strikeout-walk differential doubled, and his results on contact improved dramatically:

Ryan Brasier Results Comparison, Red Sox vs. Dodgers
Split K% BB% K-BB% EV Barrel% HardHit% xERA
BOS 18.9% 9.5% 9.5% 92.4 3.0% 53.0% 5.10
LAD 26.6% 7.0% 19.6% 87.4 4.3% 35.1% 1.89

All of which is to say that we can add Brasier to the ever-growing list of pitchers — Tyler Anderson, Andrew Heaney, Evan Phillips, Alex Wood — whom the Dodgers were able to get far more out of than other teams thanks to various tweaks in mechanics and repertoire. Noah Syndergaard and Lance Lynn are proof that they’re not always successful at doing so, but they’ve helped enough hurlers to justify their effort. As Phillips, the owner of a 7.26 ERA and 5.37 FIP in 57 innings at three previous stops before arriving in mid-2021, told the Los Angeles Times’ Mike DiGiovanna earlier this month, “When the Los Angeles Dodgers come calling and say, ‘Hey, we think you can be great,’ you tend to listen. They really forced the envelope and said, ‘You’re gonna need to do these things to pitch well,’ and I was in no position to argue with them.”

Phillips is now the closest thing the Dodgers have to a regular closer; he led the team — which had the majors’ third-best bullpen ERA (3.42), second-best FIP (3.73) and best WAR (7.6) last season — with 24 saves. Brasier is now in the mix for a late-inning role, along with fellow righties Brusdar Graterol and Joe Kelly. The latter, whom the Dodgers reacquired in the Lynn trade with the White Sox on July 28, then re-signed to a one-year, $8 million deal in December, has a notoriously spotty health history, as does Blake Treinen, who’s hoping to return to action after throwing just five innings in 2022 and none last year due to labrum and rotator cuff tears that required surgery. A healthy Brasier offers some insurance within that group.

The Dodgers haven’t cleared a roster spot yet for Brasier; they’ll likely just wait until Thursday, the first day that the team can move Tommy John surgery recipients Tony Gonsolin and Dustin May — not to mention newly re-signed Clayton Kershaw — to the 60-day injured list, where they won’t count against the 40-man roster limit. The team did already make a bit of room for Brasier within the bullpen and on the payroll by trading Ferguson to the Yankees. The 27-year-old lefty, who had been in the Dodgers organization since being drafted out of high school in 2014, set career highs in appearances (68), innings (60.1), and WAR (1.3) in 2023 while posting a 3.43 ERA and 3.34 FIP. As Davy Andrews pointed out in August, he restored a cutter to his arsenal in 2023. In his case, he ditched a reasonably effective curveball to do so, though it didn’t work too well against lefties:

Caleb Ferguson Pitch Comparison, by Handedness
Season Pitch Type Batter Hand Pitch % PA BA SLG wOBA Whiff
2022 4-Seam RHH 66.1% 65 .140 .246 .229 31.3%
2022 Curve RHH 33.9% 33 .207 .276 .268 20.8%
2023 4-Seam RHH 68.5% 126 .294 .367 .335 24.0%
2023 Cutter RHH 27.9% 50 .217 .326 .270 30.9%
2022 4-Seam LHH 68.8% 29 .261 .391 .366 23.6%
2022 Curve LHH 31.2% 15 .214 .214 .223 18.2%
2023 4-Seam LHH 62.2% 60 .240 .280 .308 30.6%
2023 Cutter LHH 36.6% 30 .310 .586 .388 20.7%

In fact, Ferguson has yielded a higher wOBA to same-side hitters than he has to those of the opposite hand in each of the last two seasons and three out of five in a career that’s been interrupted by the pandemic and a late-2020 Tommy John surgery, his second. (His first was in 2014, just a week before he was drafted.)

Caleb Ferguson Splits by Handedness
Season LH TBF LH wOBA RH TBF RH wOBA
2018 77 .317 125 .284
2019 85 .303 119 .350
2020 26 .278 49 .287
2022 44 .317 98 .242
2023 90 .334 180 .315
Total 322 .315 571 .300

For the Yankees, who last week lost stalwart lefty Wandy Peralta to the Padres, that’s something of step backwards. Peralta had been very effective against lefties (.217 wOBA in 174 PA in 2022–23) while also being pretty effective against righties (.300 wOBA in 276 PA over those two seasons), though that composite masks a 70-point year-to-year jump (from .266 in 2022 to .336 in ’23) against the latter. Ferguson, who will make $2.4 million in 2024, his last year before free agency, is less expensive, so there’s that for the Yankees.

Interestingly enough, Ferguson will join another former Dodgers lefty, 28-year-old Victor González, in New York’s bullpen; he was traded to the Yankees on Dec. 11 along with infield prospect Jorbit Vivas in exchange for another infield prospect, Trey Sweeney. Ferguson figures to be the higher of the two in the pecking order, in the setup mix along with righties Jonathan Loáisiga and Tommy Kahnle, ahead of closer Clay Holmes. It’s worth noting that Loáisiga and Kahnle combined for just 58.1 innings last year amid injuries, so manager Aaron Boone could call Ferguson’s number with some frequency.

As for the more experienced of the two pitchers the Dodgers received in exchange for Ferguson, the 30-year-old Gage is now in his eighth organization since being drafted by the Giants in the 10th round in 2014. He’s passed through the hands of the Mets, Rockies, Diamondbacks, Blue Jays, Astros, and Yankees while totaling just 16 games in the majors, 11 with Toronto in 2022 and five with Houston last year; he was optioned four times for his trouble. He’s pitched pretty well in his limited major league opportunities using a fastball-cutter combo with an occasional slider in the mix, posting a 1.83 ERA and 3.97 FIP in 19.2 innings while striking out 26% of hitters. He got knocked around at Triple-A Sugar Land last year, however, posting a 4.58 ERA and 5.29 FIP with a 23.4% strikeout rate; though he held lefties to a .203/278/.328 line in 73 PA, righties hit .333/.425/.559 in 121 PA against him. If you’re getting the sense that he’s a guy on the fringe of the 40-man roster who’s likely to change addresses multiple times in 2024, you’re probably right. He might be one free agent signing or a couple of bad — or even long — outings away from being sent down or out at any moment. It’s not entirely out of the question that he could be DFA’d to make room for a more experienced lefty reliever, as Alex Vesia and Ryan Yarbrough, the pair currently penciled in for the active roster, don’t exactly strike fear into anyone.

As for Zazueta, he’s the 19-year-old son of Christian Zazueta Sr., a still-active 15-season veteran of the Mexican League who spent last year with El Aguila de Veracruz. The younger Zazueta, also a native of Mexico, is listed at 6-foot-3 and 163 pounds. He’s spent the past two seasons in the Dominican Summer League, where last year he posted a 3.29 ERA and 4.59 FIP while striking out 23.6% of all hitters in a team-high 52 innings. He earned an honorable mention spot on the Yankees’ Top 36 Prospects List in December, where Eric Longenhagen lumped him among the swingmen while noting, “He has the pitch movement foundation to break out if he can throw harder as he matures. He currently has a rise-and-run upper-80s fastball, a shapely mid-70s curveball, and a precocious changeup, all of which have bat-missing promise.”

Bringing Brasier back is a nice move for the Dodgers, but by trading Ferguson, they still have a significant number of higher-leverage innings to fill, and may need another addition to the bullpen. Likewise, Ferguson probably shouldn’t be the last move the Yankees make in what’s been a rather underwhelming winter when it comes to patching their pitching staff.


MLB Hitters Get Stuck On Their Backside Too

Jayne Kamin-Oncea-USA TODAY Sports

A lot of my thoughts on hitting are rooted in my own experiences playing, for better or for worse. When I was in school playing ball, I was constantly working through a particular mechanical issue. Traditionally, it is called “getting stuck on the back side,” but I always said I got stuck on a pedestal. When I got to the highest point of my leg kick (which was moderately high), I sometimes transferred too much of my weight over my back foot – it was a swing path killer. Because of my extensive experience with it, I’ve always been keen on identifying hitters who have a similar issue.

Rotational movements like hitting and pitching have linear components, but hitters need to do more than just move on the coronal plane (from left to right or right to left) in order to have a deep entry into the hitting zone. A hitter has to rotate with his hips and/or spine while moving along that linear plane to create rotational power and an ideal bat path. In the case of pedestal hitters, they reach their peak leg lift while sometimes neglecting those other aspects of movement.

Take Will Smith, for example. He uses a high leg kick to create space in his swing and fell into the pedestal hitting habit during the second half of last season:

October 9th

September 22nd

September 7th

A few hittable pitches in the heart of the zone with no barrels to show for it. On the middle-middle heaters, his path was cut off and he only skimmed the bottom of the ball, rather than hitting it flush. That led to can-of-corn fly balls to right field instead of barreled line drives. This was a persistent issue for Smith throughout 2023 – the worst offensive season of his five-year career and the first with an ISO below .200.

When you transfer too much weight over your back foot, you either get stuck and create a path which leads to lazy fly balls to the opposite field or you fall too heavy on your front side and hit grounders like Smith did against Manaea. You lose depth in your bat path and can’t cover as much of the zone with your barrel. For Smith, that negatively impacted his wOBA on outer third pitches. For the bulk of his career, he has been able to cover those pitches, so this should be something he can fix. To do that, he’ll have to get back to his early 2023 swings where he was balanced and creating space for his bat to work through the zone.

April 30th

Smith is a good enough hitter that he still posted a 119 wRC+ last year despite his mechanical flaw. Not everyone has that much room for error, though. Enrique Hernández has had a wRC+ below 75 in consecutive seasons after running a 109 mark in 2021. Like Smith, he typically relies on a big leg kick to create space, rhythm, and timing in his swing. And while the size of his leg kick fluctuates more than Smith’s, it’s still a key driver in his process. Here are a few swings from 2023 before he was traded to the Dodgers:

April 11th

June 25th

July 2nd

Even if you want to cut Hernández some slack on the high quality changeup from Shane McClanahan, that swing is still a good example of how his lack of balance causes him to land heavily on his lead leg. The heavy landing is even more obvious in his swing against Jesse Scholtens in the second clip. With that swing in particular, his leg kick works straight up and down, which causes him to force a lead hip external rotation.

What do I mean by that? If you’re trying to explode your lead leg open, you would create the counter movement (internal hip rotation) first. That way, you’re creating a reciprocal pattern that leads to smooth external rotation. Staying neutral at the beginning of the swing creates an imbalance, causing the hitter to stand on the pedestal instead of rotating into and then out of it as he swings. Hernández has hyper mobile external rotation, which is seen by his tendency to stride open. To control it, he needs to create sufficient counter rotation with his hips. Unsurprisingly, when he went to Los Angeles, he made a clear change in his leg lift that allowed him to stack his center of mass over his midpoint instead of his back leg. Pay attention to the direction he works his leg kick:

August 19th

September 9th

His leg lift started working on an angle towards his back leg, which allowed him to have a controlled explosion and balanced swing. With the Dodgers, he had a 96 wRC+ – much more in line with his career 94 mark. Yes, it was over a sample of 185 plate appearances, but the movement quality improvement is undeniable.

The last example I’ll use to portray pedestal hitters is Guardians outfielder Steven Kwan. His case is a bit more complicated. In his rookie season, he splashed onto the scene with a 126 wRC+. However, his peripherals suggested there would likely be a regression – his .341 wOBA was considerably higher than his .312 xwOBA. In 2023, those numbers almost completely converged. He had a .313 wOBA and .318 xwOBA. From a mechanical point of view, this wasn’t completely surprising.

His big leg kick is a crucial component of his swing. It keeps him stable, which plays a key role in his great plate discipline. However, the movement also makes him heavily reliant on his hands to do most of the work to get on plane. Given his elite bat-to-ball skills, he can successfully do that more than other players, but he doesn’t have much room for error. If he gets stuck on his back side, his hands can only do so much. If he identifies a pitch too late, even just slightly, then he puts himself in a tough position to make flush contact. Here are a few swings showing that:

July 9th

August 30th

September 22nd

Each of these fastballs were thrown between 96 and 97 mph, but were right down the middle. Kwan couldn’t get his hands on plane despite the hittable locations. This was a trend for him all year. In 2023, he saw 190 four-seamers with a velocity of at least 96 mph and had a .155 wOBA against them. This is another example of why rotational hitters like Kwan, Hernández and Smith need to be on top of their mechanics at all times. Pedestal hitting gives batters even less margin for error than other hitters against high velocity.

Every hitter has his weakness, and for this trio of players, theirs is directly related to how they load with their leg kick. As I watch each of them in 2024, I’ll be looking for any potential adjustments they might have made over the offseason, or might make as the season progresses.


Veteran Left-Handers, like Randy Newman, Love L.A.

Bob DeChiara-USA TODAY Sports

Every free agent left-handed pitcher entering his age-35 season is headed to Southern California. Canadian bird magnet James Paxton has agreed to a one-year deal with the Dodgers, with base compensation of $11 million and another $2 million (half of it fascinatingly attainable) available in bonus. Another top pitching prospect from the 2010s, Matt Moore, is returning to the Angels for $9 million.

These were two of the premier left-handed pitching prospects in baseball in the early 2010s, and their current fates really illustrate how far in the past that was. Nevertheless, Paxton’s ability continues to tempt teams into thinking, “No, this time will be different, he’ll stay healthy, I know it.” Meanwhile, Moore has reinvented himself into one of the best in baseball at a different job than the one he trained for. Read the rest of this entry »


Teoscar Hernández Bound for L.A. On One-Year Deal

Nathan Ray Seebeck-USA TODAY Sports

Like the wealthiest man in the grocery store, whose cart is so full of expensive foodstuffs that an extra block of aged cheese merely blends into the bill, the Dodgers have signed Teoscar Hernández. This deal allows them to fill the J.D. Martinez-shaped void in the lineup by replacing him with the other corner outfield/DH guy the mid-2010s Astros gave up on too early.

Hernández, 31, will make a sticker value of $23.5 million over his one-year contract, though — and you might want to make sure you’re sitting down for this one — the practical value of the deal will be lowered to roughly $20.4 million by deferrals. Hernández probably will not register as more than an afterthought in an offseason that brought in Shohei Ohtani, Yoshinobu Yamamoto, and Tyler Glasnow. (I’m old enough to remember the 2000-01 free agent class being billed as: Alex Rodriguez, Mike Mussina, Manny Ramirez, Mike Hampton… and also Darren Dreifort!) But Teoscar brings necessary right-handed pop to a lineup that could have used a little extra power, particularly from that side of the plate. Read the rest of this entry »


2024 ZiPS Projections: Los Angeles Dodgers

For the 20th consecutive season, the ZiPS projection system is unleashing a full set of prognostications. For more information on the ZiPS projections, please consult this year’s introduction and MLB’s glossary entry. The team order is selected by lot, and the next team up is the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Batters

Even after committing something in the neighborhood of a billion dollars to bring in Shohei Ohtani and Yoshinobu Yamamoto, inspiring the chattering classes to bemoan the super team that’s buying a World Series — as if that would be possible in a sport as volatile in baseball — if you look at the Dodgers depth chart, you see an awesome team, but a rather ordinary awesome team. The Dodgers are solid everywhere, but when looking at the Braves, the natural comparison, they’re short in the projections in terms of their best player (Ronald Acuña Jr. practically laps the field in ZiPS), and the computer likes Austin Riley a lot better than the combination of Max Muncy and Miguel Vargas.

The weakest spot is likely left field, even with the addition of Teoscar Hernández, but it’s better than it looks. In the original version of this depth chart, left field was listed at 1.4 WAR rather than the current 1.8, but the total gain, once you calculate the domino effect of how the other positions change, combines for nearly a full win. Chris Taylor was an adequate stopgap, but the offensive workload of a corner outfielder is quite heavy and his .239/.326/.412 line over the last three years is not really what you want to see out there. In any case, one of the best things about Taylor is his versatility, and just sticking him in an outfield corner and calling it a day would be a bit like buying a Swiss army knife just to use the nail file. Signing Hernández makes it easier to make use of Taylor’s versatility and frees up Margot for more time in right field, with Mookie Betts available more often at second base. Hernández’s $20.4 million AAV is a bit steep in terms of rough $/WAR, but it’s hard to really overpay anyone on a one-year deal. Plus, the Dodgers need certainty more than dice rolls, and only $15 million of the deal is in 2024 salary, with the rest deferred.

You might be a bit disappointed with Ohtani’s projection as a DH, but it’s important to remember that his 180 wRC+ in 2023 can’t be assumed to be a baseline quite yet. As magical as he is, all players, from metahuman to Bill Bergen, are subject to the whims of the Roman god Mediorus, the deity of scales and balance and regression toward the mean, who I may have also just made up this minute.

Elsewhere, there are no real surprises. Betts projects well as a second baseman because, well, he’d project well doing anything in life, and Freddie Freeman and Will Smith receive the expected top-notch forecasts. ZiPS is a little cool on Gavin Lux in light of his lost 2023, but I can hardly quibble with that.

Pitchers

There has been quite a bit of upheaval here, more than just the additions of Yamamoto and Tyler Glasnow, and the eventual one of Ohtani. None of the pitchers in the rotation graphic last year return to the Dodgers in 2024 (remember, Tony Gonsolin is out with Tommy John surgery). It’s especially sad to see Clayton Kershaw no longer listed here, as he’s unsigned and likely to miss a huge chunk of the season after surgery, and there’s still a chance he decides to hang it up. Whether or not The Claw’s ever again in Dodger Blue — Game 1 of the NLDS is a bad place to leave it — he’s got my Hall of Fame vote.

Yamamoto’s projection may not seem particularly aggressive, but that’s in large part because projection systems know the attrition rate of pitchers. ZiPS has only given out three four-WAR projections for pitchers, and it doesn’t yet know that one of those hurlers (Sandy Alcantara) is already out for the season. Yamamoto does show up on the depth chart graphic past this threshold, but ZiPS tends to be more suspicious of general pitcher health than our depth charts. If Yamamoto isn’t a good bet to be a top starter, than very few pitchers are, whether they play in the US or Japan. Ohtani obviously won’t meet the pitching projection listed in the table below this season; it’s just there for the curiosity value.

There’s certainly some risk with the Dodgers. They have a lot of talented arms, but they have very little certainty in terms of who will be available, when, and for how long. If they manage to get five of Yamamoto, Glasnow, Bobby Miller, Walker Buehler, Gavin Stone, and Emmet Sheehan all in the rotation at the same time, this is a very dangerous unit. The Dodgers have been happy to assemble rotations on the fly, but while that has worked out in recent years, it’s no guarantee going forward.

ZiPS isn’t as high on the ‘pen as Steamer is. Joe Kelly’s projection is one of the biggest sources of disagreement between the two projection systems when it comes to pitchers. ZiPS sees a few warning signs, such as the occasional spikes in his walk rate and the fact that he’s entering his late 30s. It’ll be interesting to see which system is right, but I’m personally closer to Steamer than ZiPS on this one.

ZiPS does like the quartet of Evan Phillips, Brusdar Graterol, Caleb Ferguson, and Alex Vesia, who will get most of the rest of the high-leverage innings. The computer isn’t in on Yency Almonte, but then again, Steamer’s not particularly enthralled either.

Right now, ZiPS sees the Dodgers as the second-best team in baseball, behind the Braves. But they’re not in different tiers; it’s not a 90/10 probability, but something more along the lines of 60/40. Many writers and teams have made the mistake of underestimating them in spots where they don’t look deep in the past. The Dodgers aren’t just a dangerous team, but a creative dangerous team, one with a shockingly good record of turning straw into gold, making them a deadly foe.

Ballpark graphic courtesy Eephus League. Depth charts constructed by way of those listed here. Size of player names is very roughly proportional to Depth Chart playing time.

Batters – Standard
Player B Age PO PA AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB CS
Mookie Betts R 31 2B 649 550 112 153 33 2 31 100 86 101 12 3
Freddie Freeman L 34 1B 664 578 109 173 39 2 25 94 73 107 14 1
Will Smith R 29 C 555 471 74 122 24 2 21 78 61 94 2 1
Shohei Ohtani L 29 DH 615 528 91 137 27 5 38 122 80 149 17 7
James Outman L 27 CF 578 502 85 123 22 4 23 81 61 183 12 3
Michael Busch L 26 3B 564 497 80 121 28 2 24 88 53 151 3 1
Max Muncy L 33 3B 548 458 80 98 19 1 27 78 79 140 1 1
Teoscar Hernández R 31 RF 614 566 78 149 26 1 30 107 37 173 8 3
Miguel Vargas R 24 2B 591 522 82 132 29 3 17 74 57 118 8 2
Austin Gauthier R 25 3B 533 460 74 110 21 4 7 53 64 114 8 3
Miguel Rojas R 35 SS 429 394 43 98 21 1 6 44 26 53 8 3
Amed Rosario R 28 SS 584 552 73 147 25 6 11 74 26 104 14 2
Dalton Rushing L 23 C 369 310 44 67 18 1 12 52 44 108 1 1
Kolten Wong L 33 2B 385 341 48 84 18 2 9 49 30 71 8 4
Trey Sweeney L 24 SS 474 424 58 92 17 3 11 58 43 116 11 4
Gavin Lux L 26 2B 405 363 56 91 15 4 8 43 39 86 5 2
Andy Pages R 23 CF 464 405 53 89 23 2 16 61 43 140 5 3
J.D. Martinez R 36 DH 494 445 60 109 27 1 22 78 41 141 1 1
Taylor Young R 25 2B 511 447 57 95 16 4 5 48 51 129 27 3
Jason Heyward L 34 RF 339 305 41 75 17 1 10 39 30 65 3 1
Chris Taylor R 33 LF 428 376 54 87 19 2 13 52 45 137 12 2
Manuel Margot R 29 CF 391 360 45 95 19 2 8 49 26 63 10 4
Enrique Hernández R 32 SS 474 427 57 98 24 1 12 57 37 96 2 1
Drew Avans L 28 CF 516 461 71 105 20 4 8 52 47 140 17 5
Óscar Mercado R 29 CF 392 357 47 82 19 2 10 54 26 88 16 4
Jake Marisnick R 33 CF 231 210 23 47 11 3 5 29 13 68 7 3
Austin Barnes R 34 C 228 201 25 43 8 0 4 20 22 50 2 1
Griffin Lockwood-Powell R 26 1B 381 333 41 72 18 1 11 46 39 107 0 1
David Peralta L 36 LF 410 378 40 94 22 3 10 53 26 81 2 1
Chris Newell L 23 CF 376 339 48 70 15 2 16 51 35 139 7 6
David Dahl L 30 RF 346 320 41 78 20 1 9 45 22 79 2 1
Bryson Brigman R 29 SS 374 342 38 82 14 2 4 42 24 76 5 3
Yeiner Fernandez R 21 C 450 407 48 99 14 2 6 44 32 74 2 1
Steven Duggar L 30 LF 309 277 39 56 11 1 8 34 29 118 7 1
Patrick Mazeika L 30 C 266 243 22 56 12 0 4 29 15 46 0 1
Ryan Ward L 26 LF 551 507 67 112 21 3 20 69 38 163 6 3
Justin Yurchak L 27 1B 375 335 42 86 15 1 6 40 34 75 1 1
Hunter Feduccia L 27 C 359 323 42 73 15 1 10 40 34 92 0 1
Alex Freeland B 22 SS 471 424 48 86 14 2 9 47 39 162 17 5
Diego Cartaya R 22 C 431 387 50 78 16 0 16 57 32 145 0 1
Pat Valaika R 31 1B 348 322 34 70 12 0 8 37 22 92 1 1
Wladimir Chalo R 24 C 148 136 11 25 5 0 2 12 8 53 0 1
Kody Hoese R 26 3B 367 343 31 76 12 2 6 35 17 91 1 1
Imanol Vargas L 26 1B 477 424 50 86 18 1 16 57 48 188 1 1
David Freitas 프레이타스 R 35 1B 137 123 13 29 5 0 3 16 11 30 0 1
Luis Yanel Diaz R 24 3B 407 378 47 77 13 3 9 45 22 154 13 6
Hamlet Marte R 30 C 129 118 11 21 3 0 2 11 9 48 1 1
Ismael Alcantara R 25 RF 387 354 42 72 9 3 6 39 22 126 9 6
Josh Stowers R 27 LF 359 326 38 61 14 2 8 40 24 124 10 3
Brandon Lewis R 25 1B 411 383 42 76 16 0 14 50 22 143 1 1
Kenneth Betancourt R 24 2B 383 359 39 82 15 0 2 30 17 80 6 2
Lolo Sanchez R 25 LF 365 321 39 68 12 0 5 40 29 70 6 4
Julio Carrion R 25 RF 229 208 22 37 7 0 4 24 14 97 1 1
Damon Keith R 24 RF 466 421 49 83 19 2 9 48 38 175 2 2

Batters – Advanced
Player PA BA OBP SLG OPS+ ISO BABIP Def WAR wOBA RC
Mookie Betts 649 .278 .381 .515 141 .236 .292 -3 5.4 .382 111
Freddie Freeman 664 .299 .384 .503 139 .204 .332 0 4.3 .377 115
Will Smith 555 .259 .355 .452 118 .193 .284 5 4.2 .348 76
Shohei Ohtani 615 .259 .359 .545 142 .286 .290 0 3.7 .374 110
James Outman 578 .245 .337 .442 110 .197 .338 3 3.3 .338 79
Michael Busch 564 .243 .326 .453 109 .209 .301 -2 2.5 .336 74
Max Muncy 548 .214 .336 .437 108 .223 .244 -5 2.0 .335 68
Teoscar Hernández 614 .263 .314 .472 110 .208 .328 -2 1.8 .335 87
Miguel Vargas 591 .253 .331 .418 102 .165 .297 -7 1.8 .325 74
Austin Gauthier 533 .239 .336 .348 87 .109 .304 1 1.4 .307 57
Miguel Rojas 429 .249 .301 .353 78 .104 .275 6 1.3 .287 45
Amed Rosario 584 .266 .301 .393 87 .127 .311 -5 1.3 .301 69
Dalton Rushing 369 .216 .336 .397 99 .181 .289 -6 1.2 .325 42
Kolten Wong 385 .246 .323 .390 93 .144 .287 0 1.1 .312 46
Trey Sweeney 474 .217 .297 .349 75 .132 .273 4 1.1 .287 48
Gavin Lux 405 .251 .323 .380 91 .129 .309 0 1.1 .309 46
Andy Pages 464 .220 .310 .405 93 .185 .293 -2 1.0 .310 53
J.D. Martinez 494 .245 .310 .458 106 .213 .309 0 1.0 .327 64
Taylor Young 511 .213 .305 .300 66 .087 .288 7 1.0 .275 48
Jason Heyward 339 .246 .319 .407 96 .161 .283 4 1.0 .315 41
Chris Taylor 428 .231 .320 .396 94 .165 .327 2 0.9 .313 51
Manuel Margot 391 .264 .315 .394 92 .131 .301 -3 0.8 .308 48
Enrique Hernández 474 .230 .295 .375 81 .145 .270 -3 0.6 .292 48
Drew Avans 516 .228 .304 .341 75 .113 .310 1 0.6 .287 53
Óscar Mercado 392 .230 .292 .378 81 .148 .278 0 0.6 .292 44
Jake Marisnick 231 .224 .287 .376 79 .152 .307 3 0.5 .289 25
Austin Barnes 228 .214 .300 .313 68 .100 .265 3 0.5 .277 20
Griffin Lockwood-Powell 381 .216 .307 .375 85 .159 .284 4 0.4 .301 39
David Peralta 410 .249 .298 .402 88 .153 .293 2 0.3 .300 46
Chris Newell 376 .206 .279 .404 83 .198 .293 -2 0.3 .295 42
David Dahl 346 .244 .292 .397 85 .153 .297 2 0.2 .297 38
Bryson Brigman 374 .240 .298 .327 70 .088 .298 -1 0.1 .277 36
Yeiner Fernandez 450 .243 .307 .332 74 .088 .284 -6 0.1 .284 42
Steven Duggar 309 .202 .282 .336 67 .134 .318 4 -0.1 .273 28
Patrick Mazeika 266 .230 .287 .329 67 .099 .269 -3 -0.1 .273 23
Ryan Ward 551 .221 .279 .393 80 .172 .284 2 -0.2 .290 58
Justin Yurchak 375 .257 .328 .361 88 .104 .315 -3 -0.2 .306 40
Hunter Feduccia 359 .226 .298 .372 81 .146 .285 -11 -0.3 .294 36
Alex Freeland 471 .203 .276 .309 59 .106 .304 -1 -0.4 .260 42
Diego Cartaya 431 .202 .278 .367 74 .165 .274 -11 -0.5 .282 40
Pat Valaika 348 .217 .267 .329 61 .112 .279 6 -0.6 .262 29
Wladimir Chalo 148 .184 .243 .265 39 .081 .284 -1 -0.6 .229 9
Kody Hoese 367 .222 .262 .321 58 .099 .285 0 -0.7 .255 29
Imanol Vargas 477 .203 .287 .363 76 .160 .318 0 -0.7 .285 45
David Freitas 137 .236 .299 .350 76 .114 .289 -6 -0.8 .286 13
Luis Yanel Diaz 407 .204 .256 .325 57 .122 .316 0 -0.8 .255 37
Hamlet Marte 129 .178 .240 .254 35 .076 .279 -4 -0.9 .224 8
Ismael Alcantara 387 .203 .261 .297 52 .093 .297 7 -0.9 .249 32
Josh Stowers 359 .187 .254 .316 54 .129 .273 3 -0.9 .252 29
Brandon Lewis 411 .198 .251 .350 61 .151 .274 4 -1.0 .261 34
Kenneth Betancourt 383 .228 .264 .287 50 .058 .289 -1 -1.1 .244 29
Lolo Sanchez 365 .212 .288 .296 60 .084 .256 -3 -1.3 .264 30
Julio Carrion 229 .178 .249 .269 41 .091 .308 -3 -1.5 .235 15
Damon Keith 466 .197 .273 .316 60 .119 .312 -3 -1.6 .263 37

Batters – Top Near-Age Offensive Comps
Player Hit Comp 1 Hit Comp 2 Hit Comp 3
Mookie Betts Craig Biggio Chase Utley Joe Morgan
Freddie Freeman Paul Waner Dixie Walker Augie Galan
Will Smith Bill Freehan Carlton Fisk Mickey Cochrane
Shohei Ohtani Chuck Klein Jack Fournier Earl Torgeson
James Outman Mack Jones Rick Monday George Springer
Michael Busch Jack Howell Jeff Blauser Doug DeCinces
Max Muncy Eddie Mathews Darrell Evans Harlond Clift
Teoscar Hernández Laurence Miller George Kelly Bing Miller
Miguel Vargas Lou Boudreau Rob Refsnyder Lou Whitaker
Austin Gauthier Yandy Díaz Rance Mulliniks Hoy Park
Miguel Rojas Erick Aybar Larry Bowa Eddie Kasko
Amed Rosario Erick Aybar Mark Grudzielanek Jean Segura
Dalton Rushing Darren Daulton Jim Pagliaroni Ian Rice
Kolten Wong Marlon Anderson Nelson Liriano Keith Lockhart
Trey Sweeney Cole Tucker Thomas Coyle Andy Fox
Gavin Lux Legrant Scott Lou Whitaker Bobby Fenwick
Andy Pages Colby Rasmus Brian Goodwin Charlie Robinson
J.D. Martinez Tony Perez George Crowe Luke Easter
Taylor Young Al Ryan Dave Gelatt David Lozano
Jason Heyward David Murphy Jorge Orta Al Spangler
Chris Taylor Fred Lewis Danny Taylor Chris Dickerson
Manuel Margot Jason Ellison Russ Snyder Miguel Dilone
Enrique Hernández Ed Lyons Hal Rhyne Chris Stynes
Drew Avans Matt Angle Guy Rose Jermaine Mitchell
Óscar Mercado Gary Varsho Felix Pie 피에 Oddibe McDowell
Jake Marisnick Dewayne Wise Jeff Stone Peter Bourjos
Austin Barnes Bob Swift Frank Calo Brian Schneider
Griffin Lockwood-Powell Ian Rice Pat Magness Steve Goodell
David Peralta Chuck Tanner Tom Umphlett Bill Virdon
Chris Newell Nelson Mathews Ernie Young Joe Benson
David Dahl Carlos Paula Lonnie Chisenhall Steve Brye
Bryson Brigman Andy Stankiewicz Brad Wellman Paco Figueroa
Yeiner Fernandez Charlie Jennings Josh Thole Wayne Jinske
Steven Duggar Michael Johnson Scott Samuels Tarrik Brock
Patrick Mazeika Zane Chavez Tom Harmon Joey Martin
Ryan Ward Jerry Zuvela Dan Murphy Doug DeVore
Justin Yurchak Bob Sheldon Phil Trombino Jim Eppard
Hunter Feduccia Lou Berberet Jason Hagerty Bryan Anderson
Alex Freeland Anderson Machado Marcus Sanders Jonathan Villar
Diego Cartaya Bobby Estalella Doug Simunic Eddie Taubensee
Pat Valaika Paul Torres Jose Arcia Joey Gomes
Wladimir Chalo Juan Nunez Russ Cleveland Josh Davis
Kody Hoese Ronnie Giddens Craig Da Luz Michael Bertram
Imanol Vargas Pat Adams Nick Delvecchio Nate Rolison
David Freitas Erick Almonte Kevin Grijak Larry Biittner
Luis Yanel Diaz Junior Lake Leury García Brian Ruggiano
Hamlet Marte Don Pinciotti John Nathans Jose Gonzalez
Ismael Alcantara Shannon Coppell Jerry Bond Chris Roberson
Josh Stowers John Ramistella Nolan Lane Darontaye Hollins
Brandon Lewis Angel Villalona Kiel Roling John Curl
Kenneth Betancourt Gersan Jarquin Mike Ramsey Benjamin Perez
Lolo Sanchez Kenny Reed John Mountain Stephen Dichter
Julio Carrion Dave Cardona Mike Bradish Eddy Hernandez
Damon Keith Alex Delano Trey Michalczewski Gator McBride

Batters – 80th/20th Percentiles
Player 80th BA 80th OBP 80th SLG 80th OPS+ 80th WAR 20th BA 20th OBP 20th SLG 20th OPS+ 20th WAR
Mookie Betts .299 .407 .575 160 6.9 .254 .352 .463 120 3.7
Freddie Freeman .322 .406 .555 156 5.7 .275 .360 .457 121 2.7
Will Smith .282 .379 .514 138 5.6 .230 .329 .404 99 2.9
Shohei Ohtani .281 .386 .617 165 5.4 .233 .333 .485 120 2.0
James Outman .269 .364 .500 130 4.7 .219 .312 .395 92 2.0
Michael Busch .266 .350 .512 128 3.8 .221 .302 .398 91 1.3
Max Muncy .238 .359 .492 127 3.3 .191 .312 .370 90 0.8
Miguel Vargas .278 .358 .471 122 3.3 .231 .310 .374 87 0.6
Austin Gauthier .262 .360 .392 103 2.5 .213 .304 .307 68 0.1
Teoscar Hernández .288 .340 .520 129 3.3 .237 .288 .420 89 0.1
Miguel Rojas .274 .326 .391 93 2.1 .220 .276 .312 61 0.3
Amed Rosario .294 .327 .436 105 2.6 .240 .274 .348 69 -0.2
Dalton Rushing .247 .367 .465 124 2.3 .186 .308 .341 77 0.3
Kolten Wong .273 .348 .435 110 2.0 .217 .295 .340 73 0.2
Trey Sweeney .241 .321 .396 92 2.1 .193 .273 .308 58 0.1
Gavin Lux .277 .351 .423 109 2.0 .224 .295 .334 72 0.1
Andy Pages .246 .336 .460 113 2.2 .194 .286 .348 72 -0.2
J.D. Martinez .272 .335 .514 127 2.3 .219 .286 .402 87 -0.2
Taylor Young .237 .330 .343 84 2.1 .187 .284 .265 52 0.1
Jason Heyward .275 .351 .470 118 1.9 .217 .292 .352 74 0.1
Chris Taylor .255 .343 .443 112 1.8 .205 .290 .338 75 -0.1
Manuel Margot .291 .343 .438 109 1.6 .240 .290 .350 75 -0.1
Enrique Hernández .254 .324 .425 100 1.7 .202 .271 .329 62 -0.5
Drew Avans .253 .325 .374 89 1.6 .201 .275 .292 55 -0.7
Óscar Mercado .259 .319 .434 102 1.6 .204 .263 .325 60 -0.4
Jake Marisnick .253 .318 .432 101 1.2 .197 .260 .322 59 0.0
Austin Barnes .240 .330 .363 85 1.0 .182 .270 .268 48 -0.1
Griffin Lockwood-Powell .244 .334 .422 103 1.3 .190 .279 .333 68 -0.5
David Peralta .278 .325 .450 109 1.4 .222 .268 .355 69 -0.7
Chris Newell .231 .304 .463 103 1.2 .181 .255 .350 64 -0.6
David Dahl .275 .322 .440 103 1.1 .220 .267 .350 68 -0.5
Bryson Brigman .268 .323 .365 88 0.9 .212 .268 .284 53 -0.7
Yeiner Fernandez .271 .335 .378 94 1.2 .219 .278 .295 57 -1.0
Steven Duggar .233 .315 .396 90 0.8 .176 .249 .294 48 -0.8
Patrick Mazeika .268 .324 .385 91 0.7 .197 .254 .282 47 -0.8
Ryan Ward .249 .303 .451 101 1.2 .197 .255 .341 61 -1.6
Justin Yurchak .282 .355 .398 104 0.5 .231 .303 .320 71 -1.0
Hunter Feduccia .256 .327 .425 101 0.6 .201 .273 .314 60 -1.2
Alex Freeland .226 .302 .358 78 0.7 .177 .252 .263 41 -1.5
Diego Cartaya .233 .310 .431 98 0.8 .174 .248 .317 55 -1.5
Pat Valaika .246 .296 .377 80 0.3 .192 .242 .287 45 -1.3
Wladimir Chalo .212 .271 .301 55 -0.2 .155 .214 .219 19 -0.9
Kody Hoese .245 .287 .371 75 0.1 .196 .237 .283 40 -1.5
Imanol Vargas .227 .313 .415 93 0.4 .174 .262 .314 55 -1.9
David Freitas .271 .328 .402 97 -0.5 .205 .272 .299 56 -1.2
Luis Yanel Diaz .231 .281 .382 77 0.3 .177 .228 .278 37 -1.8
Hamlet Marte .210 .274 .311 59 -0.5 .153 .212 .219 19 -1.2
Ismael Alcantara .235 .289 .339 70 0.0 .181 .239 .258 37 -1.5
Josh Stowers .213 .283 .368 75 0.0 .164 .232 .275 38 -1.6
Brandon Lewis .227 .278 .393 80 0.0 .173 .225 .298 42 -2.0
Kenneth Betancourt .255 .291 .324 66 -0.3 .207 .239 .256 36 -1.9
Lolo Sanchez .239 .313 .337 76 -0.6 .186 .260 .260 44 -2.1
Julio Carrion .204 .275 .320 60 -0.9 .149 .220 .225 23 -2.0
Damon Keith .223 .300 .362 79 -0.5 .172 .248 .274 43 -2.7

Batters – Projected Splits
Player BA vs. L OBP vs. L SLG vs. L BA vs. R OBP vs. R SLG vs. R
Mookie Betts .280 .390 .529 .277 .377 .509
Freddie Freeman .284 .365 .477 .306 .392 .515
Will Smith .259 .358 .456 .259 .353 .450
Shohei Ohtani .248 .348 .503 .264 .364 .564
James Outman .236 .329 .424 .251 .343 .453
Michael Busch .232 .318 .425 .252 .332 .472
Max Muncy .210 .327 .411 .216 .339 .446
Teoscar Hernández .268 .320 .486 .261 .312 .465
Miguel Vargas .262 .344 .451 .246 .319 .389
Austin Gauthier .243 .349 .359 .237 .327 .341
Miguel Rojas .254 .312 .357 .246 .297 .351
Amed Rosario .279 .319 .425 .260 .293 .378
Dalton Rushing .216 .340 .375 .216 .335 .405
Kolten Wong .235 .308 .346 .250 .328 .404
Trey Sweeney .207 .287 .326 .221 .302 .360
Gavin Lux .237 .306 .351 .256 .330 .391
Andy Pages .221 .315 .407 .219 .306 .403
J.D. Martinez .256 .331 .481 .241 .301 .449
Taylor Young .211 .313 .307 .214 .301 .295
Jason Heyward .235 .303 .358 .250 .324 .424
Chris Taylor .231 .325 .410 .231 .318 .388
Manuel Margot .272 .324 .416 .260 .311 .383
Enrique Hernández .237 .311 .385 .225 .285 .368
Drew Avans .217 .292 .313 .234 .310 .356
Óscar Mercado .236 .302 .389 .225 .284 .371
Jake Marisnick .229 .297 .386 .220 .281 .370
Austin Barnes .213 .308 .325 .215 .294 .306
Griffin Lockwood-Powell .216 .317 .368 .216 .301 .380
David Peralta .227 .281 .364 .255 .303 .414
Chris Newell .200 .267 .389 .209 .284 .410
David Dahl .230 .271 .350 .250 .301 .418
Bryson Brigman .241 .302 .331 .239 .293 .324
Yeiner Fernandez .248 .317 .333 .240 .300 .331
Steven Duggar .195 .279 .312 .205 .283 .345
Patrick Mazeika .225 .284 .300 .233 .288 .344
Ryan Ward .212 .270 .375 .226 .285 .402
Justin Yurchak .244 .317 .331 .264 .335 .380
Hunter Feduccia .216 .281 .336 .232 .307 .391
Alex Freeland .197 .279 .307 .206 .274 .310
Diego Cartaya .201 .281 .377 .202 .277 .360
Pat Valaika .223 .280 .345 .213 .257 .316
Wladimir Chalo .183 .246 .267 .184 .241 .263
Kody Hoese .222 .265 .313 .221 .259 .327
Imanol Vargas .188 .273 .316 .210 .294 .385
David Freitas .241 .311 .333 .232 .289 .362
Luis Yanel Diaz .208 .266 .346 .201 .248 .311
Hamlet Marte .184 .245 .265 .174 .237 .246
Ismael Alcantara .204 .269 .320 .203 .256 .280
Josh Stowers .189 .262 .324 .185 .247 .309
Brandon Lewis .196 .254 .363 .200 .248 .340
Kenneth Betancourt .230 .268 .291 .227 .261 .284
Lolo Sanchez .213 .296 .291 .211 .281 .300
Julio Carrion .183 .262 .280 .174 .238 .261
Damon Keith .202 .291 .333 .194 .260 .304

Pitchers – Standard
Player T Age W L ERA G GS IP H ER HR BB SO
Yoshinobu Yamamoto R 25 14 7 3.52 26 26 171.3 130 67 22 35 167
Shohei Ohtani R 29 11 5 3.29 24 24 139.3 109 51 18 45 157
Walker Buehler R 29 10 6 3.56 25 25 154.3 134 61 19 37 150
Julio Urías L 27 13 8 3.70 27 26 146.0 129 60 19 31 139
Bobby Miller R 25 11 6 3.74 26 26 137.3 119 57 14 40 128
Tyler Glasnow R 30 10 5 3.43 22 22 118.0 97 45 16 37 148
Clayton Kershaw L 36 10 6 3.46 22 21 114.3 103 44 16 28 115
Tony Gonsolin R 30 7 6 4.26 21 21 105.7 94 50 15 36 88
Gavin Stone R 25 6 5 4.46 26 21 115.0 111 57 16 41 115
Emmet Sheehan R 24 6 4 4.35 25 19 101.3 86 49 14 45 111
Dustin May R 26 4 2 3.72 12 11 55.7 46 23 7 18 57
William Cuevas 쿠에바스 R 33 7 6 4.76 24 22 126.7 136 67 23 34 102
Michael Grove R 27 3 2 4.46 21 16 78.7 77 39 12 28 82
Landon Knack R 26 4 3 4.48 20 20 82.3 83 41 11 28 68
Kyle Hurt R 26 4 4 4.44 24 15 77.0 65 38 11 39 95
Nick Frasso R 25 5 5 4.58 25 25 90.3 90 46 13 29 78
Brusdar Graterol R 25 4 2 3.69 62 1 61.0 57 25 7 15 49
Evan Phillips R 29 4 2 3.51 57 0 56.3 47 22 8 18 64
Caleb Ferguson L 27 6 3 3.88 63 6 58.0 52 25 7 21 63
Ryan Yarbrough L 32 7 6 4.67 24 13 98.3 103 51 16 21 81
River Ryan R 25 4 3 4.77 24 22 88.7 88 47 13 39 76
Alex Vesia L 28 5 3 3.86 63 1 60.7 49 26 9 24 78
Ricky Vanasco R 25 3 3 4.66 24 12 56.0 54 29 9 31 58
Ryan Brasier R 36 2 1 4.15 52 0 52.0 47 24 7 17 45
J.P. Feyereisen R 31 4 3 4.34 42 1 45.7 40 22 8 20 49
Blake Treinen R 36 4 3 4.12 45 0 43.7 40 20 6 16 43
Shelby Miller R 33 2 2 4.37 37 4 45.3 41 22 7 20 46
Ben Casparius R 25 5 5 5.15 23 18 87.3 90 50 14 45 74
Daniel Hudson R 37 3 2 4.18 30 0 28.0 25 13 5 11 34
Eduardo Salazar R 26 4 4 5.11 31 11 81.0 86 46 12 36 59
Joe Kelly R 36 3 2 4.46 38 0 34.3 29 17 5 17 44
John Rooney L 27 4 5 4.91 35 6 66.0 67 36 10 29 56
Carlo Reyes R 25 2 2 4.85 29 3 42.7 44 23 7 19 34
Robbie Erlin L 33 2 3 5.37 17 13 65.3 76 39 11 24 45
Yency Almonte R 30 2 2 4.53 44 0 45.7 39 23 6 20 50
Mark Washington R 28 3 2 4.80 32 2 45.0 45 24 7 19 38
Kevin Gowdy R 26 3 3 5.12 25 6 51.0 55 29 8 23 38
Gus Varland R 27 3 3 4.89 41 4 53.3 53 29 8 25 51
Kendall Williams R 23 5 6 5.46 20 18 84.0 91 51 13 43 53
Orlando Ortiz-Mayr R 26 7 7 5.28 23 10 87.0 94 51 13 35 59
Aaron Ochsenbein R 28 2 2 4.79 28 1 35.7 36 19 6 15 32
Tyler Cyr R 31 2 2 4.67 32 0 34.7 32 18 5 19 38
Mike Montgomery L 34 3 4 5.61 16 13 61.0 69 38 10 33 43
Alec Gamboa L 27 5 6 5.24 30 5 67.0 70 39 10 37 52
Ken Giles R 33 1 1 5.40 27 2 26.7 25 16 5 18 32
Braydon Fisher R 23 5 4 4.87 44 1 57.3 51 31 8 37 61
Keegan Curtis R 28 3 2 5.29 22 1 34.0 36 20 5 15 25
Trevor Bettencourt R 29 3 2 4.89 37 1 49.7 54 27 8 20 37
Zack Burdi R 29 0 1 5.16 19 0 22.7 23 13 4 12 23
Ryan Sherriff L 34 2 3 5.40 28 0 26.7 27 16 4 14 25
James Jones L 35 1 2 5.96 19 2 22.7 24 15 4 14 19
Jack Little R 26 1 1 6.10 19 1 20.7 23 14 4 12 14
Jimmy Nelson R 35 1 1 6.15 24 2 26.3 25 18 5 22 30
Jake Reed R 31 2 2 5.50 30 0 36.0 38 22 6 16 30
Aldry Acosta R 24 3 4 5.48 35 0 44.3 50 27 7 19 25
Robbie Peto R 25 3 3 5.90 23 8 68.7 76 45 12 41 47
Ben Harris L 24 2 3 5.56 42 1 45.3 38 28 7 40 55
Antonio Knowles R 24 3 4 5.55 42 0 47.0 45 29 7 32 46
Ryan Sublette R 25 3 3 5.61 38 1 43.3 41 27 7 34 44
Jake Pilarski R 26 1 2 6.03 33 0 37.3 40 25 6 26 28
Tanner Dodson R 27 4 5 5.75 41 0 51.7 58 33 8 33 35

Pitchers – Advanced
Player IP K/9 BB/9 HR/9 BB% K% BABIP ERA+ FIP ERA- WAR
Yoshinobu Yamamoto 171.3 8.8 1.8 1.2 5.2% 24.7% .244 118 3.57 85 3.8
Shohei Ohtani 139.3 10.1 2.9 1.2 7.8% 27.3% .265 129 3.82 78 3.1
Walker Buehler 154.3 8.7 2.2 1.1 5.9% 23.9% .276 119 3.73 84 3.0
Julio Urías 146.0 8.6 1.9 1.2 5.3% 23.6% .276 115 3.80 87 2.7
Bobby Miller 137.3 8.4 2.6 0.9 7.0% 22.4% .277 114 3.74 88 2.5
Tyler Glasnow 118.0 11.3 2.8 1.2 7.5% 30.1% .289 124 3.45 81 2.5
Clayton Kershaw 114.3 9.1 2.2 1.3 6.0% 24.5% .283 122 3.85 82 2.4
Tony Gonsolin 105.7 7.5 3.1 1.3 8.1% 19.9% .263 100 4.57 100 1.3
Gavin Stone 115.0 9.0 3.2 1.3 8.3% 23.3% .300 95 4.19 105 1.2
Emmet Sheehan 101.3 9.9 4.0 1.2 10.5% 25.8% .279 97 4.37 103 1.2
Dustin May 55.7 9.2 2.9 1.1 7.9% 25.0% .269 114 4.03 88 1.0
William Cuevas 126.7 7.2 2.4 1.6 6.3% 18.8% .296 89 4.93 112 1.0
Michael Grove 78.7 9.4 3.2 1.4 8.2% 23.9% .304 95 4.30 105 0.8
Landon Knack 82.3 7.4 3.1 1.2 7.9% 19.3% .294 95 4.43 106 0.8
Kyle Hurt 77.0 11.1 4.6 1.3 11.5% 27.9% .292 95 4.36 105 0.8
Nick Frasso 90.3 7.8 2.9 1.3 7.5% 20.2% .293 93 4.69 108 0.8
Brusdar Graterol 61.0 7.2 2.2 1.0 6.0% 19.4% .279 115 4.12 87 0.7
Evan Phillips 56.3 10.2 2.9 1.3 7.8% 27.6% .279 121 3.95 83 0.7
Caleb Ferguson 58.0 9.8 3.3 1.1 8.6% 25.8% .296 109 4.05 91 0.7
Ryan Yarbrough 98.3 7.4 1.9 1.5 5.1% 19.6% .296 91 4.61 110 0.7
River Ryan 88.7 7.7 4.0 1.3 9.9% 19.4% .290 89 5.00 112 0.6
Alex Vesia 60.7 11.6 3.6 1.3 9.5% 30.8% .286 110 3.95 91 0.6
Ricky Vanasco 56.0 9.3 5.0 1.4 12.4% 23.1% .298 91 5.04 110 0.4
Ryan Brasier 52.0 7.8 2.9 1.2 7.8% 20.6% .272 102 4.37 98 0.3
J.P. Feyereisen 45.7 9.7 3.9 1.6 10.3% 25.1% .274 98 4.70 102 0.2
Blake Treinen 43.7 8.9 3.3 1.2 8.6% 23.1% .286 103 4.31 97 0.2
Shelby Miller 45.3 9.1 4.0 1.4 10.2% 23.5% .281 97 4.69 103 0.2
Ben Casparius 87.3 7.6 4.6 1.4 11.3% 18.5% .295 82 5.36 121 0.2
Daniel Hudson 28.0 10.9 3.5 1.6 9.2% 28.3% .294 102 4.43 99 0.1
Eduardo Salazar 81.0 6.6 4.0 1.3 9.9% 16.2% .294 83 5.35 121 0.1
Joe Kelly 34.3 11.5 4.5 1.3 11.3% 29.3% .296 95 4.33 105 0.1
John Rooney 66.0 7.6 4.0 1.4 9.9% 19.2% .294 86 5.07 116 0.1
Carlo Reyes 42.7 7.2 4.0 1.5 10.1% 18.0% .289 87 5.20 114 0.1
Robbie Erlin 65.3 6.2 3.3 1.5 8.2% 15.3% .308 79 5.31 127 0.1
Yency Almonte 45.7 9.9 3.9 1.2 10.3% 25.6% .282 94 4.35 107 0.0
Mark Washington 45.0 7.6 3.8 1.4 9.5% 19.1% .288 88 5.06 113 0.0
Kevin Gowdy 51.0 6.7 4.1 1.4 10.0% 16.5% .297 83 5.33 121 0.0
Gus Varland 53.3 8.6 4.2 1.4 10.5% 21.5% .300 87 4.92 115 0.0
Kendall Williams 84.0 5.7 4.6 1.4 11.2% 13.8% .289 78 5.76 129 0.0
Orlando Ortiz-Mayr 87.0 6.1 3.6 1.3 8.9% 14.9% .293 80 5.39 124 0.0
Aaron Ochsenbein 35.7 8.1 3.8 1.5 9.6% 20.4% .294 88 4.99 113 0.0
Tyler Cyr 34.7 9.9 4.9 1.3 12.3% 24.5% .297 91 4.67 110 0.0
Mike Montgomery 61.0 6.3 4.9 1.5 11.6% 15.1% .304 76 5.80 132 -0.1
Alec Gamboa 67.0 7.0 5.0 1.3 12.0% 16.8% .294 81 5.39 124 -0.1
Ken Giles 26.7 10.8 6.1 1.7 14.5% 25.8% .303 79 5.43 127 -0.1
Braydon Fisher 57.3 9.6 5.8 1.3 13.9% 22.8% .287 87 5.03 115 -0.1
Keegan Curtis 34.0 6.6 4.0 1.3 9.9% 16.4% .295 80 5.28 125 -0.2
Trevor Bettencourt 49.7 6.7 3.6 1.4 8.9% 16.4% .299 87 5.13 115 -0.2
Zack Burdi 22.7 9.1 4.8 1.6 11.4% 21.9% .306 82 5.37 122 -0.2
Ryan Sherriff 26.7 8.4 4.7 1.4 11.7% 20.8% .303 79 5.36 127 -0.2
James Jones 22.7 7.5 5.6 1.6 13.2% 17.9% .299 71 6.12 140 -0.3
Jack Little 20.7 6.1 5.2 1.7 12.4% 14.4% .292 70 6.45 144 -0.3
Jimmy Nelson 26.3 10.3 7.5 1.7 17.3% 23.6% .299 69 6.41 145 -0.4
Jake Reed 36.0 7.5 4.0 1.5 9.9% 18.6% .299 77 5.51 130 -0.4
Aldry Acosta 44.3 5.1 3.9 1.4 9.4% 12.4% .293 77 5.67 129 -0.4
Robbie Peto 68.7 6.2 5.4 1.6 12.6% 14.5% .294 72 6.12 139 -0.5
Ben Harris 45.3 10.9 7.9 1.4 18.3% 25.2% .284 76 5.88 131 -0.5
Antonio Knowles 47.0 8.8 6.1 1.3 14.3% 20.5% .292 76 5.60 131 -0.5
Ryan Sublette 43.3 9.1 7.1 1.5 16.5% 21.4% .291 76 6.02 132 -0.5
Jake Pilarski 37.3 6.8 6.3 1.4 14.5% 15.6% .296 70 6.17 142 -0.6
Tanner Dodson 51.7 6.1 5.7 1.4 13.4% 14.2% .301 74 6.06 136 -0.8

Pitchers – Top Near-Age Comps
Player Pit Comp 1 Pit Comp 2 Pit Comp 3
Yoshinobu Yamamoto Dave Stieb Julio Teheran Denny McLain
Shohei Ohtani Ewell Blackwell John Smoltz Jack Kramer
Walker Buehler Jordan Zimmermann Don Sutton Josh Johnson
Julio Urías Steve Avery Bobby Shantz Ken Holtzman
Bobby Miller Michael Fulmer Michael Wacha German Marquez
Tyler Glasnow Pat Malone Virgil Trucks Mort Cooper
Clayton Kershaw Harry Brecheen Rube Marquard Jerry Reuss
Tony Gonsolin Ray Culp Dixie Leverett Oral Hildebrand
Gavin Stone Todd Stottlemyre Bob Anderson George Moton
Emmet Sheehan Gary Bell Hal Gregg Moe Drabowsky
Dustin May Johnny Morrison Michael Pineda Tony Gonsolin
William Cuevas Bobby Jones Mike Smithson Ricky Nolasco
Michael Grove Apolinar Garcia Lil Stoner Sean Bergman
Landon Knack Dave Bennett Asher Wojciechowski Jeff Shaver
Kyle Hurt Joel Hanrahan Mike Corkins Greg Harris
Nick Frasso Cody Anderson Chad Bettis Luis Andujar
Brusdar Graterol Jesse Crain Jeremy Accardo Manny Corpas
Evan Phillips Jonathan Papelbon Bruce Sutter Trevor Hoffman
Caleb Ferguson Steve Kline John Franco Aaron Bummer
Ryan Yarbrough Jeff Francis Matt Tomshaw Terry Mulholland
River Ryan Jefry Rodriguez Tony Runion Kyle Wright
Alex Vesia John Hiller Brad Kilby C.J. Wilson
Ricky Vanasco Sergio Valenzuela Travis Lakins Kevin Richards
Ryan Brasier LaTroy Hawkins Santiago Casilla Ellis Kinder
J.P. Feyereisen Jeff Russell Rich Garces Kerry Ligtenberg
Blake Treinen Dave Veres Santiago Casilla Joaquin Benoit
Shelby Miller Ricky Bottalico Xavier Hernandez Matt Karchner
Ben Casparius Chris Rojas Francisco De La Cruz Doug Schaefer
Daniel Hudson Todd Worrell Tom Henke Barney Schultz
Eduardo Salazar Chris Beck Warwick Saupold 서폴드 Lou Marietta
Joe Kelly Sam Jones Kerry Wood Toby Borland
John Rooney Rob Zastryzny Todd Fiegel Bill Pulsipher
Carlo Reyes Brian Evans Andrew Wilson Jeff Harris
Robbie Erlin Mike Kusiewicz Gavin Osteen Roy Merritt
Yency Almonte Jose Veras Bob Long Ryan Cook
Mark Washington Jaime Bluma Justin Pope Mark Hutton
Kevin Gowdy Jose Vargas Angel Nesbitt Andy Kimball
Gus Varland Randy Fontanez Kevin Comer Chris Leroux
Kendall Williams Michael Lorenzen Thomas Randecker Pat Bayless
Orlando Ortiz-Mayr Paul Clemens Heath Fillmyer Kyle Lloyd
Aaron Ochsenbein Jimmy Marrujo Jeff McCurry Gary Haught
Tyler Cyr Erik Goeddel Horacio Pina Chris Schroder
Mike Montgomery Travis Blackley 트레비스 Russ Swan Michael Tejera
Alec Gamboa Cole McCurry Wandy Peralta Victor Garcia
Ken Giles Bill Campbell Bob Babcock Rick Huisman
Braydon Fisher Matt Herges Billy Sadler Zach Jackson
Keegan Curtis Steve Phoenix Jimmy Marrujo Joe Morvay
Trevor Bettencourt Thomas Atlee Brandon Reed Matt Bischoff
Zack Burdi Del Hill Hal White Dar Smith
Ryan Sherriff Chet Nichols Bob Chipman Micah Bowie
James Jones Sid Monge Sean Fesh Dan Runzler
Jack Little Eddie Moore John Brown Chuck Kolotka
Jimmy Nelson Dave Baldwin Jim Hughes Alan Mills
Jake Reed Dick Pole Milo Candini Jim Dickson
Aldry Acosta Bo Kent Rodolfo Aguirre Joe Davenport
Robbie Peto Moose Marris Lou Trivino Widd Workman
Ben Harris Jose Alvarado Robbie Beckett Ryan Buchter
Antonio Knowles Jhondaniel Medina Jason Garcia Eduardo Sierra
Ryan Sublette Warren Magee Robert Bishop Chris Thompson
Jake Pilarski Gene Escat Daniel Tillman Jon Keller
Tanner Dodson Chris Beck Marco Albano Hal Garrett

Pitchers – Splits and Percentiles
Player BA vs. L OBP vs. L SLG vs. L BA vs. R OBP vs. R SLG vs. R 80th WAR 20th WAR 80th ERA 20th ERA
Yoshinobu Yamamoto .218 .275 .385 .205 .260 .345 5.0 2.6 3.03 4.10
Shohei Ohtani .224 .297 .396 .198 .267 .332 4.1 2.0 2.76 4.01
Walker Buehler .229 .283 .374 .228 .274 .381 3.9 2.0 3.07 4.23
Julio Urías .215 .265 .403 .237 .282 .380 3.6 1.8 3.21 4.28
Bobby Miller .217 .283 .371 .238 .296 .356 3.3 1.6 3.27 4.26
Tyler Glasnow .219 .281 .372 .218 .273 .384 3.4 1.4 2.82 4.23
Clayton Kershaw .223 .275 .394 .238 .285 .401 3.0 1.6 2.90 4.33
Tony Gonsolin .234 .303 .378 .232 .298 .428 2.0 0.6 3.71 4.93
Gavin Stone .250 .314 .415 .246 .310 .415 2.1 0.4 3.86 5.10
Emmet Sheehan .210 .302 .355 .239 .324 .421 2.0 0.1 3.77 5.15
Dustin May .235 .327 .429 .207 .258 .324 1.4 0.6 3.18 4.35
William Cuevas .279 .337 .493 .259 .302 .453 1.7 0.1 4.22 5.42
Michael Grove .263 .338 .453 .240 .296 .415 1.4 0.2 3.84 5.16
Landon Knack .234 .313 .400 .274 .320 .441 1.3 0.3 3.99 5.05
Kyle Hurt .232 .327 .399 .216 .320 .379 1.5 0.1 3.86 5.31
Nick Frasso .247 .323 .428 .261 .329 .426 1.4 0.2 4.04 5.23
Brusdar Graterol .275 .342 .471 .218 .266 .323 1.2 0.2 3.11 4.33
Evan Phillips .214 .294 .347 .228 .288 .421 1.3 0.1 2.76 4.53
Caleb Ferguson .230 .318 .351 .236 .313 .399 1.3 0.0 3.23 4.81
Ryan Yarbrough .224 .287 .378 .276 .321 .474 1.4 0.0 4.01 5.33
River Ryan .262 .359 .417 .244 .317 .439 1.2 0.0 4.27 5.32
Alex Vesia .192 .276 .295 .228 .310 .436 1.2 -0.2 2.98 4.99
Bryan Hudson .230 .310 .351 .245 .327 .430 1.0 -0.1 3.55 5.16
Ricky Vanasco .231 .331 .413 .263 .356 .447 0.8 0.0 4.09 5.31
Ryan Brasier .256 .337 .442 .221 .270 .363 0.7 -0.3 3.34 5.32
J.P. Feyereisen .250 .333 .475 .213 .286 .383 0.7 -0.4 3.49 5.76
Blake Treinen .250 .329 .461 .228 .294 .359 0.8 -0.3 3.23 5.46
Shelby Miller .250 .337 .464 .222 .304 .367 0.7 -0.3 3.61 5.35
Ben Casparius .259 .361 .458 .261 .341 .439 0.7 -0.5 4.71 5.81
Daniel Hudson .224 .309 .388 .241 .308 .448 0.5 -0.2 2.87 5.85
Eduardo Salazar .270 .361 .447 .262 .342 .445 0.5 -0.5 4.67 5.76
Joe Kelly .217 .329 .400 .229 .321 .400 0.5 -0.4 3.41 6.01
John Rooney .238 .330 .345 .267 .347 .477 0.6 -0.5 4.32 5.69
Carlo Reyes .260 .349 .438 .260 .327 .458 0.3 -0.2 4.29 5.52
Robbie Erlin .282 .345 .474 .286 .349 .487 0.4 -0.4 4.80 6.02
Yency Almonte .250 .352 .408 .206 .291 .371 0.5 -0.5 3.69 5.50
Mark Washington .244 .330 .410 .263 .339 .455 0.4 -0.4 4.19 5.58
Kevin Gowdy .287 .370 .500 .255 .331 .409 0.3 -0.3 4.68 5.70
Gus Varland .256 .358 .444 .252 .328 .420 0.4 -0.4 4.24 5.64
Kendall Williams .277 .366 .447 .266 .356 .463 0.4 -0.5 5.07 6.00
Orlando Ortiz-Mayr .278 .360 .443 .262 .342 .459 0.5 -0.6 4.76 5.86
Aaron Ochsenbein .270 .352 .508 .247 .314 .403 0.3 -0.4 4.16 5.76
Tyler Cyr .222 .319 .397 .254 .349 .437 0.3 -0.4 3.82 5.83
Mike Montgomery .286 .370 .471 .277 .371 .463 0.3 -0.6 5.03 6.34
Alec Gamboa .262 .351 .429 .264 .357 .445 0.4 -0.7 4.59 5.98
Ken Giles .229 .351 .458 .255 .364 .455 0.2 -0.5 4.31 7.14
Braydon Fisher .230 .366 .380 .235 .333 .412 0.4 -0.8 4.17 5.72
Keegan Curtis .268 .369 .464 .266 .337 .443 0.1 -0.5 4.62 6.17
Trevor Bettencourt .268 .345 .454 .275 .330 .461 0.2 -0.6 4.33 5.64
Zack Burdi .262 .367 .452 .255 .345 .447 0.0 -0.5 4.46 6.18
Ryan Sherriff .237 .326 .342 .269 .383 .507 0.0 -0.6 4.41 6.80
James Jones .259 .394 .444 .270 .373 .492 0.0 -0.5 5.04 7.19
Jack Little .268 .388 .463 .286 .367 .500 -0.1 -0.4 5.44 6.81
Jimmy Nelson .255 .426 .553 .236 .368 .382 0.0 -0.7 5.00 7.70
Jake Reed .305 .406 .576 .238 .323 .381 -0.1 -0.7 4.75 6.50
Aldry Acosta .294 .371 .424 .266 .340 .500 -0.2 -0.7 4.97 6.07
Robbie Peto .258 .377 .469 .289 .371 .483 0.0 -1.0 5.28 6.62
Ben Harris .236 .400 .382 .216 .378 .414 0.0 -1.0 4.70 6.48
Antonio Knowles .253 .381 .402 .240 .362 .438 -0.1 -1.0 4.94 6.50
Ryan Sublette .235 .386 .457 .253 .383 .414 -0.2 -1.0 4.97 6.58
Jake Pilarski .282 .407 .521 .256 .366 .397 -0.3 -0.9 5.36 6.83
Tanner Dodson .270 .373 .450 .284 .392 .468 -0.4 -1.2 5.17 6.44

Here are how the ZiPS percentiles worked out in 2023 for pitchers and hitters in in 2023.

Players are listed with their most recent teams wherever possible. This includes players who are unsigned or have retired, players who will miss 2024 due to injury, and players who were released in 2023. So yes, if you see Joe Schmoe, who quit baseball back in August to form a Belgian Death Metal Skiffle Band that only plays songs by Franz Schubert, he’s still listed here intentionally. ZiPS is assuming a league with an ERA of 4.33.

Hitters are ranked by zWAR, which is to say, WAR values as calculated by me, Dan Szymborski, whose surname is spelled with a z. WAR values might differ slightly from those that appear in the full release of ZiPS. Finally, I will advise anyone against — and might karate chop anyone guilty of — merely adding up WAR totals on a depth chart to produce projected team WAR.

As always, incorrect projections are either caused by flaws in the physical reality of the universe or by the skillful sabotage of our friend and former editor. You can, however, still get mad at me on Twitter.


JAWS and the 2024 Hall of Fame Ballot: Adrián González

Cary Edmondson-USA TODAY Sports

The following article is part of Jay Jaffe’s ongoing look at the candidates on the BBWAA 2024 Hall of Fame ballot. For a detailed introduction to this year’s ballot, and other candidates in the series, use the tool above; an introduction to JAWS can be found here. For a tentative schedule, see here. All WAR figures refer to the Baseball-Reference version unless otherwise indicated.

2024 BBWAA Candidate: Adrián González
Player Pos Career WAR Peak WAR JAWS H HR AVG/OBP/SLG OPS+
Adrián González 1B 43.5 34.6 39.1 2,050 317 .287/.358/.485 129
SOURCE: Baseball-Reference

Joe Mauer isn’t the only number one pick on this year’s ballot. In 2000, one year before the Twins took Mauer with the first pick, the Marlins used the top pick to select Adrián González out of Eastlake High School in Chula Vista, California. He would turn out to be one of the more successful number one picks, making five All-Star teams, winning four Gold Gloves, and receiving MVP votes in eight different seasons in his 15-year major league career spent with the Rangers, Padres, Red Sox, Dodgers, and Mets. He never played a major league game for the Marlins, however, and was traded five times, including twice at the center of his era’s biggest blockbusters. Along with his two older brothers, he also continued the legacy of his father, David González Sr., by representing Mexico in international competition.

Adrián Sabin González was born on May 8, 1982 in San Diego, California, the youngest of three sons of David and Alba González. His father had been a star first baseman in his own right for the Mexican National Team, and when the family lived in San Diego, he commuted daily across the border to Tijuana, Mexico, where he owned a successful air conditioning business. All three of the couple’s sons were born in the United States and all three would play baseball. The oldest, David Jr., was a shortstop who made it as far as college baseball but injured his arm and never played professionally. The middle son, Edgar (b. 1978), had a 15-year professional career himself (2000-15), including two seasons as Adrián’s teammate in San Diego. Read the rest of this entry »


Sunday Notes: My Friend Sam Has an Interesting CBT/Bird Rights Idea

Last Sunday’s column included my opining that Joey Votto should retire rather than sign with a team other than the Cincinnati Reds, thus making him a one-franchise player. My friend Sam — a bona fide baseball nerd — read the column and proceeded to share an interesting thought when I ran into him at the coffee shop we both frequent. Being of the belief that players sticking with one team is a good thing — I think most fans would concur — Sam wonders if tweaking the Competitive Balance Tax in a manner that would incentivize teams’ ability to re-sign their free agents might be possible. For instance, if player X were to sign a one-year $20M contract with a new team, the entire amount would factor into the team’s payroll. Conversely, if Player X re-signed with his old team, a lesser amount ($10M?) would count toward it.

Sam didn’t mention Mookie Betts, but he may well have had him in mind. With their superstar outfielder one year away from free agency, and the CBT an acknowledged factor, the Red Sox traded Betts, along with David Price, to the Dodgers, thereby slashing over $40M from their forthcoming 2020 payroll. The deal put them a reported $18M below the threshold. Whether or not Betts would have opted to re-sign with Boston is another question, but the CBT clearly played a role in his departure.

Ben Clemens brought up basketball’s “Bird Rights” as a parallel when I asked for his thoughts on Sam’s idea. As my colleague pointed out, NBA teams get to exempt hometown stars from the salary cap in some situations. Of course, MLB doesn’t have a ceiling. Nor does it have a floor, which further complicates the issue. Read the rest of this entry »