Archive for Mets

2024 ZiPS Projections: New York Mets

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 first team up is the New York Mets.

Batters

At the very least, there’s a good sense of clarity when looking at the Mets depth chart. Francisco Lindor and Brandon Nimmo are plug-and-play options — just stick them in, and if they’re your biggest problem, you’re doomed anyway. Pete Alonso qualifies as that as well, though the Mets are not long from having to make a decision on whether it’s better to offer him a potentially ludicrous contract extension or find a new polar bear (they’re endangered after all!). Jeff McNeil will likely have a season somewhere in between his 2022 and 2023. Francisco Alvarez has a hold on the starting catching job now that he’s outlasted his predecessor (Tomás Nido) and the guy who really, really liked playing said predecessor (Buck Showalter). It’s also obvious that this is a crucial season for Mark Vientos and Brett Baty; the Mets don’t have infinite patience. There likely need to be better solutions in left field, and it’s time to start thinking about a post-Starling Marte right field.

While people are looking for the Mets to make big, splashy signings, it’s also a team that could use an extra bat or two in reserve. With questions at third and in left and right, it’s really hard from a roster standpoint to keep a platoon DH with no defensive value hanging around unless he absolutely crushes his side of the platoon (and Daniel Vogelbach really doesn’t). Eduardo Escobar was traded for good reasons, but he was handy to have around. The fixes to the offense might be low-key because of the need in the next section of this article. There aren’t any young phenoms really threatening to seize a roster spot from any of the offensive stragglers; the Mets have four offensive prospects in our Top 100 who are about a year away from making a real impact in the majors. The fifth, Ronny Mauricio, certainly has upside at second, but then the question becomes how much value McNeil really has as a corner outfielder.

Pitchers

There’s a lot of work to be done here. Kodai Senga is written in with permanent marker, and while ZiPS is very lukewarm — to be nice — about José Quintana, he’s certainly going to be in the rotation as well. After that, the Mets have a deep stable of just-a-guy types; the rotation is probably the biggest hurdle preventing the team from having a nice little bounce-back season. Not to pick on Mike Vasil, who I think will be a serviceable fourth/fifth starter for a while, but if Mike Vasil is this high in the projections, you’ve got some slots to fill. The Mets may have been relieved of the worry of Max Scherzer and Justin Verlander’s inevitable aging curve cliffs, but even if their time with the team didn’t go exactly to plan, without them, the rotation looks like a smoking crater. The good news is that while the free agent market has a real lack of impact bats, starting pitching is well-stocked, even before you consider the availability of Yoshinobu Yamamoto and Shōta Imanaga.

A healthy Edwin Díaz is a boon for the bullpen, though he’s not enough to single-armedly make this a plus unit. The relief corps is less of a smoking crater than the rotation, and ZiPS is more or less is cool with the rest of the group in Brooks Raley, Drew Smith, Trevor Gott, and Phil Bickford. ZiPS sees Josh Walker as a pretty decent swingman option, if a very low-ceiling one. Still, there’s room to improve. I don’t think the starters who fail to make the rotation next spring have electric enough stuff to be overly enthused about their bullpen chances, so the Mets will likely need to find an arm or two here. It doesn’t have to be a Díaz-like arm — good luck finding that — but a couple of mid-tier relievers might keep the wheels from coming off this apple cart.

Ballpark graphic courtesy Eephus League. Depth charts constructed by way of those listed here.

Batters – Standard
Player B Age PO PA AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB CS
Francisco Lindor B 30 SS 646 568 95 146 27 3 27 91 62 123 20 4
Brandon Nimmo L 31 CF 615 530 84 144 27 5 19 66 70 124 3 3
Pete Alonso R 29 1B 646 559 88 141 26 1 40 115 66 140 4 1
Jeff McNeil L 32 2B 575 519 66 147 30 2 10 57 38 63 6 1
Francisco Alvarez R 22 C 483 422 61 97 18 0 23 73 51 131 2 1
Mark Vientos R 24 3B 486 441 55 107 20 2 22 69 37 144 1 1
Brett Baty L 24 3B 509 457 67 113 18 0 19 66 44 139 2 2
Ronny Mauricio B 23 2B 600 565 69 138 25 3 20 74 29 145 18 7
Rafael Ortega L 33 CF 415 361 49 85 18 1 9 37 48 91 12 6
Omar Narváez L 32 C 306 268 31 67 13 1 6 27 31 61 0 1
Danny Mendick R 30 2B 421 382 49 92 15 1 8 43 34 83 7 2
Starling Marte R 35 RF 403 368 55 99 17 2 10 45 23 81 22 5
Daniel Vogelbach L 31 DH 364 306 39 71 12 1 14 48 56 93 0 1
Luisangel Acuña R 22 SS 560 514 73 122 21 2 8 52 42 134 31 7
Jett Williams R 20 SS 547 462 64 99 19 6 11 58 68 156 21 4
Jeremiah Jackson R 24 3B 455 413 47 88 19 1 14 54 34 145 11 5
Zack Short R 29 2B 412 351 46 69 16 0 11 48 53 125 5 2
Rhylan Thomas L 24 LF 344 308 32 81 12 1 2 28 28 37 4 7
Wyatt Young L 24 SS 542 486 58 110 18 2 4 42 50 128 8 2
Luis Guillorme L 29 2B 269 234 25 58 10 1 2 19 31 48 1 1
Drew Gilbert L 23 CF 522 467 65 107 20 2 14 58 44 119 7 4
Matt Rudick L 25 LF 311 268 43 62 12 1 5 33 34 60 7 1
Lorenzo Cedrola R 26 CF 411 375 51 93 14 4 5 44 19 65 11 5
Tim Locastro R 31 LF 203 178 29 39 8 1 4 19 10 51 8 2
Luke Ritter R 27 2B 442 387 47 76 12 1 15 53 43 162 3 1
Tomás Nido R 30 C 251 233 26 53 8 0 5 21 12 64 0 1
Khalil Lee L 26 RF 397 339 46 69 19 1 9 50 43 144 9 5
Nick Meyer R 27 C 282 249 31 54 7 0 4 24 25 69 5 2
Abraham Almonte B 35 RF 290 249 39 53 11 0 10 32 39 84 3 1
Jose Peraza R 30 1B 228 212 24 49 11 1 3 23 8 42 2 1
Carlos Cortes L 27 LF 438 391 48 83 21 1 10 46 40 117 1 1
Jonathan Araúz B 25 SS 439 392 48 85 13 2 10 42 40 106 2 1
Brandon McIlwain R 26 CF 483 428 47 95 19 2 8 53 38 142 10 5
Jaylin Davis R 29 RF 349 307 41 60 12 2 10 38 34 126 2 2
DJ Stewart L 30 RF 378 339 39 75 13 1 13 45 30 104 3 1
Kevin Parada R 22 C 456 415 43 90 19 3 12 52 29 148 0 1
Hayden Senger R 27 C 302 272 28 54 13 1 4 30 21 112 1 1
Mikey Perez R 24 2B 243 216 24 39 7 0 8 27 21 77 6 2
William Lugo R 22 3B 470 428 44 94 19 2 10 49 33 129 3 2
Stanley Consuegra R 23 RF 455 423 50 88 19 3 15 55 25 152 4 3
Daniel Palka L 32 1B 403 364 48 79 14 1 14 45 37 116 2 1
Matt O’Neill R 26 C 254 223 22 37 6 1 4 19 28 111 0 1
Joe Suozzi R 26 1B 348 313 37 66 9 2 6 37 24 120 6 2
Rowdey Jordan B 25 2B 468 414 49 87 18 2 7 44 44 126 13 4
D’Andre Smith R 23 2B 249 228 27 44 11 1 3 24 15 89 4 1
JT Schwartz L 24 1B 347 314 33 72 14 2 3 34 27 75 2 1
Branden Fryman R 26 SS 223 209 19 41 7 1 2 16 8 65 4 2
Jose Mena R 27 C 228 219 14 45 8 0 2 17 7 67 0 1
Alex Ramirez R 21 CF 555 510 58 111 22 2 8 49 39 149 11 6
Mateo Gil R 23 3B 404 375 42 76 17 2 8 39 24 124 3 2
Ryan Clifford L 20 1B 506 441 52 89 15 0 16 59 48 175 2 1
Agustin Ruiz L 24 RF 440 396 46 77 15 1 13 50 31 151 1 1
Jaylen Palmer R 23 LF 463 408 54 67 11 2 10 42 45 212 15 4

Batters – Advanced
Player PA BA OBP SLG OPS+ ISO BABIP Def WAR wOBA
Francisco Lindor 646 .257 .336 .458 117 .201 .285 8 4.7 .341
Brandon Nimmo 615 .272 .367 .449 124 .177 .323 2 3.9 .356
Pete Alonso 646 .252 .345 .517 134 .265 .266 0 3.1 .363
Jeff McNeil 575 .283 .347 .407 108 .123 .307 0 2.5 .330
Francisco Alvarez 483 .230 .321 .436 107 .206 .276 0 2.4 .327
Mark Vientos 486 .243 .307 .447 105 .204 .309 0 1.7 .323
Brett Baty 509 .247 .321 .411 101 .164 .314 0 1.6 .320
Ronny Mauricio 600 .244 .285 .405 88 .161 .295 4 1.4 .297
Rafael Ortega 415 .235 .327 .366 91 .130 .291 3 1.2 .307
Omar Narváez 306 .250 .331 .373 95 .123 .303 1 1.2 .310
Danny Mendick 421 .241 .309 .348 82 .107 .289 6 1.1 .292
Starling Marte 403 .269 .328 .408 102 .139 .321 1 1.1 .321
Daniel Vogelbach 364 .232 .352 .415 111 .183 .286 0 0.9 .337
Luisangel Acuña 560 .237 .295 .333 73 .095 .306 2 0.9 .278
Jett Williams 547 .214 .329 .353 89 .139 .298 -10 0.8 .306
Jeremiah Jackson 455 .213 .277 .366 76 .153 .291 7 0.6 .280
Zack Short 412 .197 .304 .336 77 .140 .270 3 0.6 .286
Rhylan Thomas 344 .263 .326 .328 82 .065 .294 9 0.5 .293
Wyatt Young 542 .226 .299 .296 66 .070 .299 5 0.5 .269
Luis Guillorme 269 .248 .337 .325 85 .077 .304 0 0.4 .297
Drew Gilbert 522 .229 .305 .370 86 .141 .278 -3 0.3 .296
Matt Rudick 311 .231 .334 .340 87 .108 .281 1 0.3 .305
Lorenzo Cedrola 411 .248 .302 .347 79 .099 .289 0 0.3 .287
Tim Locastro 203 .219 .308 .343 80 .124 .285 2 0.2 .293
Luke Ritter 442 .196 .290 .349 76 .152 .290 -1 0.1 .283
Tomás Nido 251 .227 .267 .326 63 .099 .293 2 0.1 .261
Khalil Lee 397 .204 .317 .345 83 .142 .323 -1 -0.2 .299
Nick Meyer 282 .217 .297 .293 65 .076 .284 -2 -0.2 .269
Abraham Almonte 290 .213 .321 .378 92 .165 .277 -5 -0.2 .310
Jose Peraza 228 .231 .278 .335 68 .104 .275 4 -0.2 .270
Carlos Cortes 438 .212 .288 .348 75 .136 .277 5 -0.2 .280
Jonathan Araúz 439 .217 .288 .337 72 .120 .272 -5 -0.2 .277
Brandon McIlwain 483 .222 .304 .332 76 .110 .313 -4 -0.2 .285
Jaylin Davis 349 .195 .287 .345 74 .150 .292 3 -0.3 .281
DJ Stewart 378 .221 .296 .381 85 .159 .279 -4 -0.4 .296
Kevin Parada 456 .217 .283 .364 77 .147 .306 -11 -0.5 .284
Hayden Senger 302 .199 .275 .298 59 .099 .321 -3 -0.5 .258
Mikey Perez 243 .181 .264 .324 62 .144 .237 -4 -0.7 .262
William Lugo 470 .220 .283 .343 72 .124 .291 -5 -0.7 .276
Stanley Consuegra 455 .208 .259 .374 72 .165 .285 3 -0.7 .274
Daniel Palka 403 .217 .290 .376 83 .159 .278 -2 -0.7 .291
Matt O’Neill 254 .166 .264 .256 45 .090 .306 0 -0.7 .238
Joe Suozzi 348 .211 .287 .310 65 .099 .321 3 -0.7 .269
Rowdey Jordan 468 .210 .293 .314 68 .104 .285 -6 -0.7 .273
D’Andre Smith 249 .193 .261 .289 52 .096 .301 -1 -0.7 .248
JT Schwartz 347 .229 .300 .315 71 .086 .292 1 -0.7 .275
Branden Fryman 223 .196 .232 .268 38 .072 .275 1 -0.8 .221
Jose Mena 228 .205 .237 .269 40 .064 .287 -2 -1.0 .225
Alex Ramirez 555 .218 .277 .316 64 .098 .292 -3 -1.0 .264
Mateo Gil 404 .203 .253 .323 58 .120 .280 -1 -1.1 .252
Ryan Clifford 506 .202 .296 .345 77 .143 .292 -6 -1.3 .286
Agustin Ruiz 440 .194 .266 .336 65 .141 .276 -2 -1.5 .264
Jaylen Palmer 463 .164 .258 .275 48 .110 .306 5 -1.5 .243

Batters – Top Near-Age Offensive Comps
Player Hit Comp 1 Hit Comp 2 Hit Comp 3
Francisco Lindor Marcus Semien Ryne Sandberg Ian Kinsler
Brandon Nimmo Earle Combs Robin Yount Phil Cavarretta
Pete Alonso Glenn Davis Justin Morneau Tino Martinez
Jeff McNeil Placido Polanco Fernando Vina Jim Gantner
Francisco Alvarez Gary Carter Stan Holmes Ozzie Virgil
Mark Vientos Austin Riley Juan Guerrero Jeff Hamilton
Brett Baty Chad McDonald Edwin Encarnación Jedd Gyorko
Ronny Mauricio Jordany Valdespin Mike Edwards Paul Dade
Rafael Ortega Nemo Leibold Len Johnston Nick Capra
Omar Narváez Robert Fick Jacob Stallings Michael LaValliere
Danny Mendick Marty Malloy Rod Booker Corey Jones
Starling Marte Howie Bedell Carl Crawford Skeeter Barnes
Daniel Vogelbach John Wockenfuss Erubiel Durazo Pete Ward
Luisangel Acuña Elvis Andrus Rafael Furcal Mike Sharperson
Jett Williams Zeke DeVoss Tommy Harper Sean Rodriguez
Jeremiah Jackson Duncan Campbell Gene Davis Gene Freese
Zack Short Steve Curry Eddie Joost Kelly Heath
Rhylan Thomas Brent Keys Ron McNeely Richard Giallella
Wyatt Young Mark Raynor Nate Mondou Tyler Smith
Luis Guillorme Jerry Browne Ed Giovanola Tim Flannery
Drew Gilbert Everett Graham Brian Kowitz Joe Gaines
Matt Rudick Gerald Bosch Josh Alley Mark Marquess
Lorenzo Cedrola Joe Orsulak Shooty Babitt Alex Diaz
Tim Locastro Juan Ciriaco Brian Hunter Adron Chambers
Luke Ritter Ryan Roberts James Russin Emerito Lopez
Tomás Nido Humberto Quintero Ronnie Freeman Bob Barton
Khalil Lee Al Chambers Nick Plummer Willie Argo
Nick Meyer Jeff Farnham Phil Avlas Darren Niethammer
Abraham Almonte Dwayne Murphy Jose Cruz Jason Bay
Jose Peraza Brent Butler John Wathan Derrick Pyles
Carlos Cortes Caleb Gindl Trey Dyson Gary Borg
Jonathan Araúz Kevin Polcovich Ronnie Merrill Mike Reynolds
Brandon McIlwain Ryan LaMarre Darnell McDonald Brian Turang
Jaylin Davis George Kopacz Mike Berger William Thomas
DJ Stewart Keith Brachold Jay Gainer Sam Vico
Kevin Parada Ryan Luzinski Creighton Gubanich Dennis Paepke
Hayden Senger John Nester Casey Snow Doug Davis
Mikey Perez J.E. Cruz Donald Kinzel Heinie Scheer
William Lugo Rob Sperring Craig Seegmiller Ty Waller
Stanley Consuegra Collin DeLome Bobby DeLoach Edwin Neal
Daniel Palka Brad Nelson Pat Putnam Mike Jacobs
Matt O’Neill Dan Plante Paul Bradley Buddy Pryor
Joe Suozzi Cameron Monger Juan Rodriguez Taylor Kohlwey
Rowdey Jordan Harry Chappas Mike Myers Andy Fox
D’Andre Smith Justino Cuevas Glenn Osinski Jason Stidham
JT Schwartz Mark Manering Dan Arendas Derek Nicholson
Branden Fryman Niko Gallego Kenny Krey Kyle Padgett
Jose Mena Jayson Hernandez Tony Gilmore Carlos Dominguez
Alex Ramirez Ted Parks Gorkys Hernandez Mickey Stanley
Mateo Gil Alex Valdez Joseph Monty Greg Sinatro
Ryan Clifford Brant Colamarino Brad Pounders Joey Votto
Agustin Ruiz Joe De Berry Chad Townsend David Mowry
Jaylen Palmer John Cotton Angelo Dagres Tom Johnson

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
Francisco Lindor .278 .358 .514 135 6.3 .233 .311 .411 99 3.3
Brandon Nimmo .294 .390 .504 142 5.2 .246 .340 .405 106 2.6
Pete Alonso .276 .372 .580 156 4.8 .229 .321 .461 113 1.4
Jeff McNeil .308 .373 .445 124 3.6 .257 .325 .365 92 1.4
Francisco Alvarez .256 .348 .496 130 3.7 .200 .292 .379 87 1.3
Mark Vientos .270 .332 .515 130 3.1 .216 .277 .383 83 0.4
Brett Baty .273 .348 .465 123 2.9 .223 .296 .361 82 0.3
Ronny Mauricio .267 .309 .464 108 2.9 .222 .261 .360 72 0.0
Rafael Ortega .262 .357 .414 109 2.1 .208 .297 .316 71 0.2
Omar Narváez .277 .357 .422 113 1.9 .222 .305 .325 73 0.4
Danny Mendick .270 .334 .389 100 2.1 .216 .282 .306 66 0.3
Starling Marte .297 .355 .457 120 2.1 .244 .303 .368 86 0.3
Daniel Vogelbach .258 .379 .472 129 1.8 .203 .325 .367 91 0.1
Luisangel Acuña .265 .321 .374 91 2.1 .212 .269 .295 57 -0.2
Jett Williams .242 .358 .409 109 2.1 .191 .305 .306 70 -0.5
Jeremiah Jackson .240 .301 .416 94 1.7 .190 .254 .318 57 -0.4
Zack Short .225 .330 .390 95 1.6 .170 .274 .296 57 -0.4
Rhylan Thomas .294 .354 .369 99 1.3 .236 .300 .297 66 -0.2
Wyatt Young .248 .321 .329 80 1.4 .200 .276 .265 53 -0.4
Luis Guillorme .275 .362 .369 102 0.9 .218 .304 .286 67 -0.2
Drew Gilbert .254 .330 .421 104 1.6 .205 .280 .325 68 -0.8
Matt Rudick .256 .361 .383 106 1.0 .209 .310 .300 74 -0.3
Lorenzo Cedrola .279 .328 .392 98 1.2 .225 .278 .309 62 -0.6
Tim Locastro .247 .336 .388 99 0.7 .191 .283 .290 61 -0.3
Luke Ritter .226 .318 .404 97 1.2 .169 .265 .297 56 -0.9
Tomás Nido .261 .302 .378 85 0.7 .199 .239 .286 46 -0.5
Khalil Lee .228 .339 .390 100 0.6 .174 .289 .294 65 -1.0
Nick Meyer .250 .332 .334 85 0.6 .188 .267 .257 47 -0.8
Abraham Almonte .236 .350 .427 111 0.5 .187 .290 .322 72 -0.9
Jose Peraza .262 .308 .383 87 0.3 .206 .253 .294 51 -0.7
Carlos Cortes .237 .313 .393 94 0.8 .188 .260 .302 56 -1.2
Jonathan Araúz .245 .314 .385 90 0.7 .188 .261 .292 52 -1.3
Brandon McIlwain .244 .328 .368 90 0.6 .199 .279 .291 59 -1.3
Jaylin Davis .221 .317 .400 94 0.5 .170 .256 .298 55 -1.2
DJ Stewart .250 .329 .440 109 0.6 .194 .269 .328 67 -1.3
Kevin Parada .245 .307 .413 99 0.7 .191 .256 .318 60 -1.5
Hayden Senger .229 .307 .343 79 0.3 .171 .247 .252 40 -1.2
Mikey Perez .209 .292 .401 88 0.2 .155 .242 .274 46 -1.2
William Lugo .247 .311 .382 89 0.4 .196 .258 .298 56 -1.6
Stanley Consuegra .236 .285 .423 91 0.4 .185 .235 .329 55 -1.6
Daniel Palka .242 .317 .436 107 0.5 .187 .261 .324 62 -1.7
Matt O’Neill .195 .292 .308 64 -0.1 .137 .229 .217 27 -1.3
Joe Suozzi .234 .309 .354 82 0.0 .184 .260 .271 48 -1.4
Rowdey Jordan .235 .320 .356 86 0.4 .186 .271 .277 53 -1.6
D’Andre Smith .220 .285 .334 70 -0.2 .170 .234 .245 34 -1.3
JT Schwartz .253 .327 .358 88 0.0 .206 .279 .284 57 -1.3
Branden Fryman .222 .259 .309 55 -0.2 .168 .204 .228 20 -1.3
Jose Mena .241 .268 .311 60 -0.4 .178 .206 .234 23 -1.5
Alex Ramirez .242 .300 .354 79 0.1 .192 .252 .275 46 -2.2
Mateo Gil .226 .278 .370 75 -0.1 .176 .229 .285 41 -1.9
Ryan Clifford .224 .323 .391 94 -0.3 .173 .272 .305 59 -2.5
Agustin Ruiz .223 .295 .382 84 -0.5 .170 .242 .288 47 -2.5
Jaylen Palmer .190 .284 .322 64 -0.6 .139 .231 .232 28 -2.6

Batters – Projected Splits
Player BA vs. L OBP vs. L SLG vs. L BA vs. R OBP vs. R SLG vs. R
Francisco Lindor .262 .341 .470 .255 .334 .452
Brandon Nimmo .268 .356 .439 .273 .372 .453
Pete Alonso .247 .350 .505 .255 .343 .523
Jeff McNeil .275 .343 .383 .286 .348 .416
Francisco Alvarez .235 .338 .449 .226 .306 .425
Mark Vientos .251 .321 .462 .236 .294 .434
Brett Baty .239 .313 .390 .252 .325 .423
Ronny Mauricio .237 .280 .384 .249 .288 .419
Rafael Ortega .222 .315 .333 .239 .330 .375
Omar Narváez .241 .328 .328 .252 .332 .386
Danny Mendick .240 .315 .342 .242 .305 .352
Starling Marte .262 .321 .417 .272 .331 .404
Daniel Vogelbach .203 .321 .362 .241 .360 .430
Luisangel Acuña .238 .303 .333 .237 .290 .332
Jett Williams .213 .333 .362 .215 .326 .347
Jeremiah Jackson .219 .287 .385 .209 .270 .352
Zack Short .205 .323 .343 .189 .286 .330
Rhylan Thomas .256 .323 .291 .266 .328 .342
Wyatt Young .221 .296 .290 .229 .301 .299
Luis Guillorme .238 .324 .270 .251 .342 .345
Drew Gilbert .221 .299 .352 .232 .306 .377
Matt Rudick .224 .327 .294 .235 .338 .361
Lorenzo Cedrola .255 .309 .378 .241 .296 .316
Tim Locastro .221 .302 .377 .218 .313 .317
Luke Ritter .200 .304 .352 .194 .280 .347
Tomás Nido .230 .272 .333 .226 .265 .322
Khalil Lee .201 .318 .321 .205 .317 .361
Nick Meyer .214 .302 .295 .219 .294 .292
Abraham Almonte .207 .317 .356 .216 .323 .389
Jose Peraza .237 .275 .329 .228 .279 .338
Carlos Cortes .209 .277 .328 .214 .293 .358
Jonathan Araúz .212 .284 .322 .220 .291 .346
Brandon McIlwain .225 .313 .337 .220 .299 .328
Jaylin Davis .198 .298 .344 .193 .278 .347
DJ Stewart .218 .292 .356 .222 .298 .389
Kevin Parada .215 .282 .348 .218 .284 .374
Hayden Senger .204 .280 .327 .195 .271 .277
Mikey Perez .183 .269 .312 .179 .261 .333
William Lugo .223 .290 .349 .217 .278 .340
Stanley Consuegra .213 .269 .388 .204 .252 .363
Daniel Palka .209 .283 .348 .221 .293 .390
Matt O’Neill .165 .276 .275 .167 .255 .242
Joe Suozzi .217 .294 .333 .207 .283 .293
Rowdey Jordan .210 .296 .308 .210 .292 .317
D’Andre Smith .191 .265 .270 .194 .258 .302
JT Schwartz .212 .284 .303 .237 .307 .321
Branden Fryman .200 .244 .294 .194 .223 .250
Jose Mena .213 .245 .287 .200 .231 .256
Alex Ramirez .221 .283 .315 .215 .273 .316
Mateo Gil .203 .259 .320 .203 .249 .324
Ryan Clifford .191 .293 .322 .206 .298 .353
Agustin Ruiz .189 .262 .315 .197 .268 .346
Jaylen Palmer .166 .264 .278 .163 .253 .272

Pitchers – Standard
Player T Age W L ERA G GS IP H ER HR BB SO
Kodai Senga R 31 11 8 3.63 28 28 161.0 132 65 18 76 190
Edwin Díaz R 30 4 2 2.62 56 0 55.0 36 16 4 18 87
David Peterson L 28 6 7 4.49 29 24 126.3 120 63 15 58 138
Mike Vasil R 24 5 5 4.40 25 24 110.3 107 54 14 41 102
Coleman Crow R 23 4 6 4.47 19 19 100.7 100 50 12 33 87
Dominic Hamel R 25 6 7 4.65 25 24 110.3 107 57 14 50 107
Tylor Megill R 28 7 9 4.83 26 25 128.7 137 69 19 51 111
José Quintana L 35 5 5 4.61 22 19 99.7 108 51 12 39 86
José Butto R 26 6 7 4.86 25 23 116.7 118 63 16 51 100
Tyler Stuart R 24 4 5 4.83 21 21 100.7 107 54 13 36 75
Joey Lucchesi L 31 5 8 4.93 22 21 107.7 113 59 15 47 87
Denyi Reyes R 27 3 4 4.90 24 17 93.7 104 51 13 28 68
Peyton Battenfield R 26 5 6 5.02 21 20 100.3 108 56 15 40 69
Josh Walker L 29 4 3 4.40 25 8 59.3 60 29 7 23 55
Landon Marceaux R 24 5 7 4.97 19 19 83.3 95 46 11 28 49
Justin Jarvis R 24 6 10 5.13 23 23 108.7 112 62 16 58 98
Humberto Mejia R 27 4 6 4.92 16 15 71.3 78 39 10 25 54
Adam Ottavino R 38 4 3 3.98 57 0 52.0 46 23 5 25 55
Nate Lavender L 24 4 4 4.00 40 1 54.0 44 24 6 27 69
Robert Colina R 23 4 6 4.90 22 9 68.0 71 37 10 24 60
Dylan Bundy R 31 4 5 5.15 17 17 80.3 86 46 14 21 61
Dylan Tebrake R 24 2 2 4.02 25 1 40.3 37 18 4 21 44
Jose Chacin R 27 4 6 5.28 23 18 92.0 104 54 15 30 64
Junior Santos R 22 5 9 5.31 26 16 95.0 107 56 11 43 57
Phil Bickford R 28 4 4 4.22 59 0 64.0 55 30 8 26 71
Jordan Geber R 24 3 4 5.06 15 8 58.7 67 33 10 15 39
Connor Grey R 30 3 4 5.29 17 14 68.0 73 40 9 29 52
Blade Tidwell R 23 6 10 5.44 24 24 101.0 98 61 15 64 100
Joander Suarez R 24 5 9 5.46 21 19 87.3 89 53 13 47 80
Sean Reid-Foley R 28 2 2 4.76 26 6 45.3 39 24 7 29 61
Oscar Rojas R 25 4 6 5.35 17 13 67.3 75 40 10 27 48
Trevor Gott R 31 3 3 4.35 41 0 39.3 36 19 5 15 41
Drew Smith R 30 4 4 4.36 54 0 53.7 48 26 8 23 56
Brooks Raley L 36 1 2 4.40 56 0 45.0 41 22 5 20 50
Eric Orze R 26 3 4 4.55 36 1 55.3 50 28 7 31 59
Daniel Juarez L 23 3 3 4.82 36 2 52.3 50 28 6 25 48
Dennis Santana R 28 4 5 4.70 44 3 51.7 48 27 6 27 53
Carlos Carrasco R 37 4 7 5.62 18 18 81.7 96 51 14 32 68
Grant Hartwig R 26 5 7 4.58 46 0 59.0 55 30 6 29 59
Bryce Montes de Oca R 28 2 2 4.78 29 1 32.0 26 17 3 22 41
David Griffin R 27 3 6 5.52 20 14 73.3 82 45 11 35 51
Benito Garcia R 24 3 4 5.11 27 3 49.3 56 28 8 13 34
John Curtiss R 31 1 2 4.78 31 1 37.7 37 20 6 16 38
Josh Hejka R 27 2 3 4.89 27 1 46.0 49 25 5 16 32
Dedniel Núñez R 28 2 4 4.91 33 1 51.3 51 28 7 26 51
Bubby Rossman R 32 2 4 5.30 27 5 37.3 38 22 5 23 34
Nolan Clenney R 28 2 3 4.84 32 0 57.7 58 31 8 25 57
Tyler Thomas L 28 1 2 4.85 26 0 39.0 38 21 5 19 37
Sam Coonrod R 31 1 1 5.40 28 2 25.0 24 15 2 16 23
Trey McLoughlin R 25 3 4 4.89 31 0 46.0 48 25 8 16 41
Reed Garrett R 31 2 2 5.24 28 0 34.3 37 20 4 17 30
William Woods R 25 2 2 5.18 35 0 48.7 49 28 7 22 43
Tommy Hunter R 37 1 1 5.40 17 0 23.3 27 14 5 7 18
Jimmy Yacabonis R 32 2 4 5.45 30 1 36.3 38 22 5 19 33
Tony Dibrell R 28 2 4 6.20 11 9 40.7 46 28 7 25 32
Matt Minnick L 28 2 3 5.40 26 0 35.0 35 21 5 19 31
Eli Ankeney L 23 3 4 5.48 31 1 42.7 41 26 6 28 41
Brian Metoyer R 27 1 2 5.95 15 0 19.7 17 13 3 16 24
Hunter Parsons R 27 3 4 5.29 33 0 49.3 49 29 7 27 48
Tyler Jay L 30 1 1 5.71 21 1 34.7 38 22 6 16 33
Jeff Brigham R 32 2 3 5.40 42 0 45.0 41 27 8 24 48
Paul Gervase R 24 2 4 5.36 36 0 50.3 42 30 6 42 60
Justin Courtney R 27 2 3 5.61 23 0 33.7 38 21 6 16 27
Marcel Rentería R 29 1 1 5.96 18 0 25.7 27 17 4 16 21
Brendan Hardy R 24 1 2 6.11 24 0 28.0 24 19 4 24 34
Luis Moreno R 25 2 4 5.75 25 1 51.7 57 33 9 22 41
Wilkin Ramos R 23 2 5 5.58 34 0 50.0 48 31 6 38 45
Joey Lancellotti R 26 1 1 6.34 28 1 44.0 49 31 8 29 35
Troy Miller R 27 2 6 7.16 12 11 49.0 58 39 13 32 38
Quinn Brodey L 28 0 2 7.71 20 0 25.7 30 22 6 22 21

Pitchers – Advanced
Player IP K/9 BB/9 HR/9 BB% K% BABIP ERA+ FIP ERA- WAR
Kodai Senga 161.0 10.6 4.2 1.0 10.9% 27.3% .287 122 3.86 82 3.4
Edwin Díaz 55.0 14.2 2.9 0.7 8.2% 39.7% .299 169 2.29 59 1.6
David Peterson 126.3 9.8 4.1 1.1 10.4% 24.8% .311 98 4.16 102 1.6
Mike Vasil 110.3 8.3 3.3 1.1 8.6% 21.3% .296 100 4.25 100 1.4
Coleman Crow 100.7 7.8 3.0 1.1 7.6% 20.1% .297 99 4.24 101 1.3
Dominic Hamel 110.3 8.7 4.1 1.1 10.2% 21.9% .301 95 4.46 105 1.2
Tylor Megill 128.7 7.8 3.6 1.3 9.0% 19.5% .307 92 4.76 109 1.2
José Quintana 99.7 7.8 3.5 1.1 8.8% 19.4% .318 96 4.33 104 1.1
José Butto 116.7 7.7 3.9 1.2 9.9% 19.4% .297 91 4.84 110 1.0
Tyler Stuart 100.7 6.7 3.2 1.2 8.1% 16.9% .300 91 4.67 109 0.9
Joey Lucchesi 107.7 7.3 3.9 1.3 9.8% 18.2% .301 90 4.84 112 0.9
Denyi Reyes 93.7 6.5 2.7 1.2 6.9% 16.7% .306 90 4.63 111 0.8
Peyton Battenfield 100.3 6.2 3.6 1.3 9.0% 15.5% .293 88 5.08 114 0.7
Josh Walker 59.3 8.3 3.5 1.1 8.9% 21.2% .308 100 4.15 100 0.7
Landon Marceaux 83.3 5.3 3.0 1.2 7.5% 13.1% .302 89 4.91 112 0.7
Justin Jarvis 108.7 8.1 4.8 1.3 11.7% 19.8% .304 86 5.02 116 0.6
Humberto Mejia 71.3 6.8 3.2 1.3 8.0% 17.3% .305 90 4.74 111 0.6
Adam Ottavino 52.0 9.5 4.3 0.9 11.0% 24.1% .295 111 4.12 90 0.5
Nate Lavender 54.0 11.5 4.5 1.0 11.6% 29.7% .297 110 3.92 91 0.5
Robert Colina 68.0 7.9 3.2 1.3 8.0% 20.0% .305 90 4.68 111 0.5
Dylan Bundy 80.3 6.8 2.4 1.6 6.1% 17.7% .293 86 4.90 117 0.5
Dylan Tebrake 40.3 9.8 4.7 0.9 11.7% 24.4% .308 110 3.92 91 0.4
Jose Chacin 92.0 6.3 2.9 1.5 7.4% 15.7% .303 84 5.09 120 0.4
Junior Santos 95.0 5.4 4.1 1.0 10.0% 13.3% .304 83 5.01 120 0.4
Phil Bickford 64.0 10.0 3.7 1.1 9.6% 26.3% .287 105 4.02 96 0.4
Jordan Geber 58.7 6.0 2.3 1.5 5.8% 15.1% .302 87 4.96 115 0.3
Connor Grey 68.0 6.9 3.8 1.2 9.5% 17.1% .303 83 4.99 120 0.3
Blade Tidwell 101.0 8.9 5.7 1.3 13.8% 21.5% .297 81 5.31 123 0.3
Joander Suarez 87.3 8.2 4.8 1.3 11.8% 20.0% .302 81 5.21 124 0.3
Sean Reid-Foley 45.3 12.1 5.8 1.4 14.3% 30.0% .308 93 4.62 108 0.3
Oscar Rojas 67.3 6.4 3.6 1.3 8.9% 15.9% .304 83 5.14 121 0.2
Trevor Gott 39.3 9.4 3.4 1.1 9.0% 24.7% .295 102 4.12 98 0.2
Drew Smith 53.7 9.4 3.9 1.3 10.0% 24.5% .284 101 4.56 99 0.2
Brooks Raley 45.0 10.0 4.0 1.0 10.3% 25.8% .305 100 4.08 100 0.2
Eric Orze 55.3 9.6 5.0 1.1 12.6% 23.9% .295 97 4.61 103 0.2
Daniel Juarez 52.3 8.3 4.3 1.0 10.8% 20.7% .295 92 4.52 109 0.2
Dennis Santana 51.7 9.2 4.7 1.0 11.7% 22.9% .298 94 4.46 106 0.2
Carlos Carrasco 81.7 7.5 3.5 1.5 8.6% 18.4% .324 79 5.14 127 0.1
Grant Hartwig 59.0 9.0 4.4 0.9 11.2% 22.7% .301 97 4.36 104 0.1
Bryce Montes de Oca 32.0 11.5 6.2 0.8 14.9% 27.7% .303 92 4.44 108 0.1
David Griffin 73.3 6.3 4.3 1.4 10.5% 15.3% .303 80 5.45 125 0.1
Benito Garcia 49.3 6.2 2.4 1.5 6.0% 15.7% .304 86 4.96 116 0.1
John Curtiss 37.7 9.1 3.8 1.4 9.8% 23.2% .301 92 4.66 108 0.0
Josh Hejka 46.0 6.3 3.1 1.0 8.0% 15.9% .301 90 4.71 111 0.0
Dedniel Núñez 51.3 8.9 4.6 1.2 11.3% 22.1% .308 90 4.62 111 0.0
Bubby Rossman 37.3 8.2 5.5 1.2 13.3% 19.7% .306 83 5.10 120 0.0
Nolan Clenney 57.7 8.9 3.9 1.2 9.8% 22.3% .309 91 4.54 110 0.0
Tyler Thomas 39.0 8.5 4.4 1.2 11.0% 21.4% .300 91 4.79 110 0.0
Sam Coonrod 25.0 8.3 5.8 0.7 13.9% 20.0% .306 82 4.74 122 0.0
Trey McLoughlin 46.0 8.0 3.1 1.6 7.9% 20.3% .299 90 4.78 111 -0.1
Reed Garrett 34.3 7.9 4.5 1.0 10.8% 19.1% .317 84 4.59 119 -0.1
William Woods 48.7 8.0 4.1 1.3 10.2% 20.0% .298 85 4.84 117 -0.2
Tommy Hunter 23.3 6.9 2.7 1.9 6.8% 17.5% .306 82 5.53 122 -0.2
Jimmy Yacabonis 36.3 8.2 4.7 1.2 11.5% 20.0% .311 81 5.04 123 -0.2
Tony Dibrell 40.7 7.1 5.5 1.5 13.0% 16.6% .310 71 5.91 140 -0.2
Matt Minnick 35.0 8.0 4.9 1.3 12.0% 19.6% .297 82 5.23 122 -0.2
Eli Ankeney 42.7 8.6 5.9 1.3 14.4% 21.0% .294 81 5.27 124 -0.2
Brian Metoyer 19.7 11.0 7.3 1.4 16.5% 24.7% .292 74 5.54 135 -0.2
Hunter Parsons 49.3 8.8 4.9 1.3 11.9% 21.2% .302 83 5.04 120 -0.2
Tyler Jay 34.7 8.6 4.2 1.6 10.2% 21.0% .317 77 5.25 129 -0.2
Jeff Brigham 45.0 9.6 4.8 1.6 12.0% 24.0% .282 82 5.30 122 -0.3
Paul Gervase 50.3 10.7 7.5 1.1 17.7% 25.3% .290 82 5.22 121 -0.3
Justin Courtney 33.7 7.2 4.3 1.6 10.3% 17.3% .311 79 5.48 127 -0.3
Marcel Rentería 25.7 7.4 5.6 1.4 13.1% 17.2% .299 74 5.98 135 -0.4
Brendan Hardy 28.0 10.9 7.7 1.3 17.6% 25.0% .294 72 5.68 138 -0.4
Luis Moreno 51.7 7.1 3.8 1.6 9.3% 17.4% .304 77 5.44 130 -0.5
Wilkin Ramos 50.0 8.1 6.8 1.1 16.2% 19.1% .294 79 5.60 126 -0.5
Joey Lancellotti 44.0 7.2 5.9 1.6 13.6% 16.4% .304 70 6.14 144 -0.7
Troy Miller 49.0 7.0 5.9 2.4 13.6% 16.2% .300 62 7.17 162 -0.7
Quinn Brodey 25.7 7.4 7.7 2.1 16.9% 16.2% .308 57 7.70 175 -0.9

Pitchers – Top Near-Age Comps
Player Pit Comp 1 Pit Comp 2 Pit Comp 3
Kodai Senga David Cone Bob Lemon Bob Gibson
Edwin Díaz Robb Nen Duane Ward Tom Henke
David Peterson David Purcey Roenis Elías 엘리아스 Francisco Liriano
Mike Vasil Enrique Gonzalez Kris Benson Ben Sheets
Coleman Crow Buddy Harris Pat Cristelli Jackson Todd
Dominic Hamel Jeff Hoffman Dave Freisleben Brian Holman
Tylor Megill Wily Peralta Pete Hernandez Jose Urena
José Quintana Tommy John Chet Johnson Danny Jackson
José Butto A.J. Cole Eddie Butler 버틀러 Wade Davis
Tyler Stuart Henderson Alvarez III Leslie Bass Bryse Wilson
Joey Lucchesi Paul Splittorff Tom Zachary Shane Rawley
Denyi Reyes Mark Ciardi Tyler Wilson윌슨 Jason Stephens
Peyton Battenfield Doyle Lade Keith Couch Steve Comer
Josh Walker Jose Alvarez Jon Switzer Tyler Olson
Landon Marceaux Erskine Thomason Shawn Purdy Jonathan Johnson
Justin Jarvis Nathan Bumstead Brett Marshall Chris Reed
Humberto Mejia Ismael Ramirez Jim Melton Mark Johnson
Adam Ottavino Al Worthington Stu Miller Salomon Torres 토레스
Nate Lavender Tim Collins Bill Wilkinson Chasen Shreve
Robert Colina Victor Arano Mickey Sinks Tom Johnson
Dylan Bundy Chad Ogea Ismael Valdez Glenn Abbott
Dylan Tebrake Rick Carriger Miguel Valdez Kurt Mattson
Jose Chacin Walker Lockett Reggie McClain Greg Beck
Junior Santos Dick Calmus Steve Anderson Nick Struck
Phil Bickford Pat Dobson Jim Brosnan Ryan Tepera
Jordan Geber Gonzalo Sanudo Brad Tippitt Ricky Bennett
Connor Grey Jorge De Paula Logan Bawcom Oswaldo Verdugo
Blade Tidwell Connor Graham Dan Cortes Chuck Murray
Joander Suarez Steve Watkins Eddie Watt Mike Anderson
Sean Reid-Foley Spencer Patton Mark Corey Fernando Cabrera
Oscar Rojas Eric Boudreaux Dale Spier Travis Risser
Trevor Gott Mike Schooler Johnny Murphy Tim Scott
Drew Smith Ryan Tepera Dave Tobik Pedro Baez
Brooks Raley Rheal Cormier Neal Cotts Mike Stanton
Eric Orze Roger Weaver Dayan Diaz Yoervis Medina
Daniel Juarez Doug Stockam Dennis DeBarr Oscar Alvarez
Dennis Santana Scott Medvin Kevin Campbell Yoervis Medina
Carlos Carrasco Joe Orrell T.J. Mathews General Crowder
Grant Hartwig Ryan Pressly Tim Drummond Dave Klenda
Bryce Montes de Oca Horacio Pina Bill Wilson Todd Schmitt
David Griffin James Avery Gary Goldsmith Hansel Izquierdo
Benito Garcia Ricky Bennett Gonzalo Sanudo Brandon Berl
John Curtiss Don Cooper Jack Aker Claude Raymond
Josh Hejka Ron Rightnowar Ivan Zavala Dave Smith
Dedniel Núñez Justin Huisman Chad Paronto Tim Lavigne
Bubby Rossman Mike Buddie Jay Powell George Culver
Nolan Clenney Scott McGough Mark Serrano Dave Gil
Tyler Thomas Bob Buchanan Frank Gailey Dick Luebke
Sam Coonrod Jack Berly Luis Peraza Juan Cerros
Trey McLoughlin Keith Cantwell Kevin Ponder Chris Niesel
Reed Garrett Blaine Boyer Bob Trowbridge Casey Daigle
William Woods Cam Hill Matty Ott Ken Kendrena
Tommy Hunter Clint Brown Dennis Eckersley Dick Hall
Jimmy Yacabonis Chris Resop Chris Bodishbaugh Terry Pearson
Tony Dibrell Aaron Wilson Jeff Letourneau Sean Black
Matt Minnick Joe Harris Mike Santiago Sean Runyan
Eli Ankeney Adam Bright Carlos Cabassa Jamie Eppeneder
Brian Metoyer Johnny Humphries Dick Drott George Smith
Hunter Parsons Matt Peterson R.J. Seidel Steve Cline
Tyler Jay Zach Baldwin Rommie Lewis Dallas Mahan
Jeff Brigham Wes Stock Ron Schueler Vicente Romo
Paul Gervase Tommy Kahnle Zac Houston Matt Anderson
Justin Courtney Ernie Baker Joe Maskivish William Drummond
Marcel Rentería Mike Heinen Daryl Patterson Bradley Meyring
Brendan Hardy Steven Lovins Mike Barba Lon Morton
Luis Moreno Bob Davidson Zac Reininger Tom Kibbee
Wilkin Ramos Don O’Riley Ben Ford Vic Martin
Joey Lancellotti John Thompson Justin Ferrell Wander Alvino
Troy Miller Noah Piard Brad Purcell Mickey Reichenbach
Quinn Brodey Jaime Escamilla Ben Griset Eric White

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
Kodai Senga .220 .321 .361 .217 .297 .353 4.6 2.2 2.99 4.37
Edwin Díaz .157 .257 .281 .202 .273 .294 2.3 0.6 1.69 4.37
David Peterson .234 .308 .375 .248 .338 .399 2.6 0.5 3.81 5.19
Mike Vasil .243 .309 .421 .254 .323 .395 2.2 0.6 3.82 5.13
Coleman Crow .258 .330 .429 .249 .308 .385 2.0 0.5 3.89 5.24
Dominic Hamel .251 .336 .402 .247 .328 .411 1.9 0.4 4.20 5.29
Tylor Megill .284 .363 .486 .249 .309 .401 2.0 0.3 4.29 5.41
José Quintana .250 .311 .365 .276 .343 .444 1.7 0.4 3.88 5.52
José Butto .270 .365 .435 .246 .317 .412 1.7 0.1 4.31 5.57
Tyler Stuart .286 .354 .438 .247 .311 .419 1.6 0.3 4.26 5.45
Joey Lucchesi .243 .333 .346 .271 .341 .461 1.5 0.0 4.34 5.87
Denyi Reyes .277 .338 .463 .274 .321 .428 1.3 0.2 4.38 5.51
Peyton Battenfield .267 .338 .445 .271 .335 .448 1.2 0.1 4.59 5.61
Josh Walker .219 .284 .370 .273 .341 .422 1.2 0.1 3.70 5.36
Landon Marceaux .261 .333 .416 .299 .344 .480 1.0 0.2 4.55 5.54
Justin Jarvis .257 .346 .432 .264 .351 .438 1.2 -0.1 4.70 5.79
Humberto Mejia .286 .356 .474 .260 .315 .422 1.1 0.1 4.35 5.64
Adam Ottavino .273 .385 .429 .205 .295 .320 1.1 -0.2 3.10 5.25
Nate Lavender .221 .321 .324 .215 .323 .378 1.1 -0.1 3.27 4.97
Robert Colina .277 .336 .423 .250 .329 .450 1.0 0.0 4.20 5.75
Dylan Bundy .284 .329 .471 .253 .304 .464 0.9 -0.1 4.61 5.81
Dylan Tebrake .247 .341 .390 .231 .315 .359 0.8 0.0 3.35 4.80
Jose Chacin .263 .332 .468 .292 .341 .470 1.0 -0.1 4.72 5.88
Junior Santos .292 .374 .456 .268 .336 .413 0.8 -0.2 4.90 5.91
Phil Bickford .233 .322 .369 .221 .295 .386 0.9 -0.3 3.52 5.17
Jordan Geber .281 .325 .491 .282 .323 .460 0.8 -0.1 4.41 5.87
Connor Grey .270 .366 .443 .267 .335 .433 0.7 -0.2 4.74 6.00
Blade Tidwell .253 .376 .411 .245 .347 .436 0.9 -0.6 4.91 6.21
Joander Suarez .278 .382 .489 .237 .328 .385 1.0 -0.3 4.80 6.07
Sean Reid-Foley .224 .353 .412 .230 .333 .402 0.7 -0.2 3.89 5.88
Oscar Rojas .280 .363 .432 .273 .335 .481 0.6 -0.2 4.84 5.99
Trevor Gott .258 .338 .424 .224 .295 .376 0.6 -0.2 3.51 5.40
Drew Smith .231 .327 .374 .237 .313 .439 0.8 -0.4 3.61 5.30
Brooks Raley .193 .281 .281 .259 .351 .431 0.8 -0.5 3.17 6.53
Eric Orze .226 .360 .387 .244 .321 .395 0.7 -0.4 3.81 5.45
Daniel Juarez .227 .307 .333 .255 .348 .423 0.6 -0.3 4.20 5.70
Dennis Santana .241 .347 .414 .239 .331 .372 0.5 -0.4 4.12 5.69
Carlos Carrasco .285 .363 .487 .288 .344 .480 0.6 -0.6 4.99 6.53
Grant Hartwig .240 .360 .365 .242 .321 .387 0.6 -0.4 3.91 5.39
Bryce Montes de Oca .218 .368 .364 .215 .350 .338 0.4 -0.3 4.01 5.94
David Griffin .275 .353 .478 .278 .368 .443 0.5 -0.5 5.03 6.28
Benito Garcia .289 .340 .495 .272 .321 .447 0.5 -0.3 4.34 5.81
John Curtiss .250 .320 .397 .253 .333 .481 0.3 -0.3 4.06 5.75
Josh Hejka .275 .359 .438 .262 .330 .398 0.3 -0.3 4.33 5.52
Dedniel Núñez .268 .360 .464 .240 .322 .385 0.5 -0.5 4.11 5.81
Bubby Rossman .250 .349 .375 .267 .371 .480 0.3 -0.4 4.58 6.29
Nolan Clenney .260 .359 .450 .252 .314 .402 0.5 -0.5 4.11 5.74
Tyler Thomas .250 .328 .442 .250 .356 .400 0.4 -0.4 4.03 5.71
Sam Coonrod .267 .400 .422 .231 .339 .346 0.2 -0.2 4.64 6.12
Trey McLoughlin .247 .312 .424 .276 .327 .490 0.4 -0.5 4.11 5.88
Reed Garrett .262 .357 .443 .273 .345 .416 0.2 -0.4 4.42 6.30
William Woods .272 .362 .424 .242 .315 .434 0.2 -0.5 4.44 5.81
Tommy Hunter .298 .353 .596 .271 .321 .458 0.0 -0.4 4.44 6.59
Jimmy Yacabonis .266 .382 .453 .263 .341 .425 0.2 -0.5 4.57 6.38
Tony Dibrell .263 .378 .434 .292 .379 .517 0.1 -0.6 5.51 6.96
Matt Minnick .256 .360 .419 .255 .355 .436 0.1 -0.6 4.72 6.31
Eli Ankeney .241 .359 .389 .250 .361 .438 0.2 -0.6 4.69 6.35
Brian Metoyer .216 .383 .351 .237 .362 .447 0.0 -0.5 4.80 7.40
Hunter Parsons .279 .386 .453 .231 .328 .398 0.1 -0.7 4.65 6.25
Tyler Jay .262 .354 .452 .276 .357 .480 0.1 -0.6 4.93 6.78
Jeff Brigham .235 .354 .457 .239 .330 .413 0.1 -0.8 4.65 6.56
Paul Gervase .223 .392 .415 .219 .356 .333 0.2 -0.9 4.54 6.54
Justin Courtney .279 .362 .459 .280 .353 .507 -0.1 -0.7 4.96 6.51
Marcel Rentería .265 .400 .490 .264 .365 .434 -0.2 -0.6 5.28 6.81
Brendan Hardy .250 .400 .462 .204 .371 .352 -0.1 -0.7 5.21 7.33
Luis Moreno .308 .373 .549 .248 .336 .410 -0.1 -0.8 5.09 6.45
Wilkin Ramos .241 .394 .434 .252 .373 .378 -0.1 -0.9 4.93 6.35
Joey Lancellotti .287 .398 .483 .264 .364 .473 -0.4 -1.1 5.65 7.25
Troy Miller .296 .402 .561 .282 .370 .544 -0.3 -1.1 6.40 8.05
Quinn Brodey .265 .419 .382 .296 .427 .606 -0.6 -1.2 6.89 9.35

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.


Brooks Raley on Being a Pitching Nerd

Brooks Raley
Eric Hartline-USA TODAY Sports

Brooks Raley has been an effective reliever since returning to MLB in 2020 after five seasons as a starter with the KBO’s Lotte Giants. He’s been especially good for the past two. Taking the mound for the Tampa Bay Rays in 2021 and for the New York Mets this past season, the 35-year-old left-hander has logged a combined 2.74 ERA and a 3.21 FIP over 126 relief appearances. Moreover, he’s allowed just 81 hits and fanned 122 batters in 108.1 innings. Working primarily in a setup role, he’s been credited with a pair of wins and nine saves.

Raley is also a bona fide pitching nerd. That wasn’t the case when he got cups of coffee with the Chicago Cubs in 2012 and ’13, but then came a career-altering adoption of analytics when he was overseas. Looking to optimize his talents, the Texas A&M University product schooled himself on how his pitches played best, and what he could add, subtract or tweak in order to attack hitters more effectively. The result was a successful return to the big leagues, and not only has he put up a good FIP and a solid SIERA, but he also knows exactly what those acronyms mean.

Raley discussed his analytics-influenced evolution as a pitcher when the Mets visited Fenway Park this summer.

———

David Laurila: You played five years in Korea. What was that experience like?

Brooks Raley: “I loved it. I learned a lot. We’re talking analytics, and I went over there not very polished. I was a starter but didn’t have a changeup or a cutter, so I started watching YouTube videos of all the different shapes, spin rates, tilts, extension — all that stuff. For a little bit, I tried to throw like Chris Sale. I kind of leaned over and tried to create some different angles and see what kind of shapes I could get. I really got into that side of the sport. I found my cutter, found my arm slot, and then the sinker got better. My slider also got better. That all happened when I was in Korea. It’s how I got back [to MLB].”

Laurila: Why hadn’t you gotten into analytics and begun making changes prior to going to the KBO?

Raley: “I wouldn’t change anything about my career, but coming across analytics and what defines your strengths better… when I was coming through the minors, it was ‘sinkers down and away are safe’ and ‘ground balls over strikeouts.’ But I actually and naturally pitch better inside. That’s to both sides. To righties, I throw the cutter and the slider and have the changeup and sinker to keep them honest. To lefties, I’ve got the running sinker. It’s been inconsistent this year, I can’t really figure that out, but it’s been between 14 to 19 horizontal and probably anywhere from eight to two vertical. It’s kind of a unique pitch because it spins 2,400 [RPMs] or so. It’s got some life and late dart to it.

“I always struggled with changeups before I went over there, because I’d always try to throw the 10 miles an hour off [from the fastball]. Now I throw a Viulcan change, so I don’t really kill spin but I put it on the horizontal axis. I get around 19 and I’m either on the line or under the line. Basically, I found some unique shapes to really broaden my left and right, because I can throw a slider at 22 inches of horizontal and a changeup at 20 [in the opposite direction].” Read the rest of this entry »


My 2023 National League Rookie of the Year Ballot

Corbin Carroll
Arizona Republic

The first of MLB’s major awards to be announced for 2023, the Rookie of the Year awards, were given out Monday evening, with Arizona’s Corbin Carroll and Baltimore’s Gunnar Henderson taking the laurels in the NL and AL races, respectively.

Getting inappropriately annoyed with year-end awards — more specifically in 1995, the year Mo Vaughn beat Albert Belle in the AL and Dante Bichette confusingly finished second in the NL — was one of the things that got me reading Usenet. A high schooler at the time, I had little idea that it was the start of a surprising career path. And even back then, I was frustrated that the writers who voted for these awards didn’t always make convincing arguments about their picks and, occasionally, offered no justifications at all.

I still believe that this kind of transparency is crucial for the legitimacy of any type of award. This is ostensibly an expert panel; if it’s not, there’s no purpose for the award to exist. As such, a secret ballot is not appropriate the way I believe it is for, say, a presidential or parliamentary election. So, as usual, this is my explanation (or apologia depending on your point of view) of why I voted the way I did. I don’t expect 100% of people to agree with my reasoning, which I doubt has happened for any opinion I’ve expressed ever, but that doesn’t mean I don’t owe you, the reader, the details of my vote.

This is my fifth Rookie of the Year vote. Previously, I gave my first-place votes to Spencer Strider, Trevor Rogers, Pete Alonso, and Corey Seager. This year, my ballot, starting at the top, was Carroll, the Mets’ Kodai Senga, and the Reds’ Matt McLain. Let’s start at the top. I’m also including preliminary 2024 ZiPS projections because, hey, why not? (They didn’t have any bearing on my vote, nor did the preseason projections.)

The Easy Part: Corbin Carroll

My last two first-place votes were close for me, and it took a while to decide on them. But this one was the easiest since Seager in 2016 (and I’m not forgetting Alonso versus Michael Soroka). Everyone expected Carroll to steamroll the league, and that’s just what he did. And while he didn’t have a Mike Trout-esque rookie season, who does?

For much of the season, Carroll logically was part of the MVP discussion, though by the time September rolled around, Ronald Acuña Jr. and Mookie Betts had an obvious advantage, with Freddie Freeman and Matt Olson being clearly superior, too. But if I had voted for the NL MVP, Carroll would have still landed somewhere in the back of my ballot. He hit .285/.362/.506, clubbed 25 homers and stole 50 bases, and played all three outfield positions at least respectably. He is the type of player for whom the phrase “speed kills” makes sense, because his skill set is broad enough that he can actually weaponize that speed. For the season, he was seventh in sprint speed, had dominating baserunning numbers beyond stolen bases, and in 90-foot splits, he was bested only by Elly De La Cruz.

ZiPS Projection – Corbin Carroll
Year BA OBP SLG AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB OPS+ DR WAR
2024 .279 .362 .485 555 99 155 27 12 21 90 61 141 39 129 10 5.4
2025 .275 .359 .480 571 104 157 28 10 23 94 64 139 39 127 10 5.4
2026 .272 .358 .474 570 104 155 28 9 23 95 65 133 37 125 10 5.2
2027 .273 .361 .479 568 105 155 29 8 24 95 67 129 36 127 9 5.4
2028 .272 .363 .479 566 105 154 29 8 24 94 69 125 33 128 9 5.3

The Still Pretty Easy Part: Kodai Senga

I’m inclined to like Senga considerably more than his WAR simply because he has a significant history of outperforming his peripherals in Japan as well, so there’s more basis for believing in his ERA than for the typical pitcher in this position. Because of that, I’m closer to bWAR on Senga (4.4) than I am to fWAR. If forced at gunpoint to name the Dan’s Brain WAR for Senga, I’d probably put him at 3.8–4.0 or so. Also, that’s a very weird use of a firearm.

There’s always a writer or two who complains about Japanese players being eligible for the RoY award, but I think the idea that they shouldn’t be is preposterous. Nippon Professional Baseball appears a bit closer to the majors than Triple-A ball in the U.S. is — something like Triple-A 1/2 — but it’s a very different kind of league. While Triple-A hitters may be easier than NPB hitters, you’re also facing a rather different style of play and plate approaches, and now that some of the recent rule changes have hit in the majors, Triple-A ball is roughly a not-as-good MLB.

Despite facing different types of hitters, a spate of different rules, and against the backdrop of New York pressure and a collapsing team behind him, Senga was one of the few players who could really be counted on there. He had some issues with walks early on, and to his credit, he adjusted. But it wasn’t actually his control that was the issue; he actually threw more strikes earlier in the season! Instead, the issue was that after putting up an out-of-zone swing rate above 30% in each of his last two seasons in Japan, he was down in the low-20s early on with the Mets. As time went on, he got a better feel on how to lure MLB batters to their doom; in the second half, his 31.1% out-of-zone swing rate was right where it was in Japan.

ZiPS Projection – Kodai Senga
Year W L ERA FIP G GS IP H ER HR BB SO ERA+ WAR
2024 11 8 3.63 3.87 28 28 161.0 132 65 18 76 190 122 3.4
2025 10 7 3.72 3.94 26 26 150.0 126 62 17 69 171 119 3.0
2026 9 7 3.82 4.06 24 24 141.3 124 60 17 63 156 116 2.7
2027 8 7 3.98 4.24 22 22 129.0 118 57 17 58 138 111 2.3
2028 7 8 4.21 4.46 21 21 124.0 118 58 17 56 128 105 1.9

The Excruciating Part and the Fifth Wheel: Matt McLain versus Nolan Jones versus James Outman

I don’t see Rookie of the Year as necessarily meaning Most Valuable Rookie, but as Best Rookie. As such, in a kind of small-scale examination of Hall of Fame candidates’ peak versus career numbers, I don’t necessarily think measures against replacement are as important as in the MVP voting, which has directions that more strongly imply an emphasis on quantity.

Outman was probably the most valuable of the three hitters I listed above, but he also got a lot more playing time, winning the job from the start. Both McLain and Jones out-hit him from a quality standpoint, with a 128 wRC+ from McLain, a 135 from Jones, and a 118 from Outman. I might discount this if there were evidence from their minor league time that the major league time was flukier, but both played in Triple-A just about how you’d expect from their actual major league performances. Outman was an excellent player and a big part of why the Dodgers survived the loss of a lot of players, but I would have him fifth in a larger ballot because he wasn’t quite as good as McLain or Jones. Per WAA on Baseball-Reference, both McLain and Jones were well ahead of him.

McLain versus Jones was very difficult for me, and I went back and forth on it the entire Sunday I made my vote (the last day of the season). And it still wasn’t an obvious result, more a 51%–49% judgment; if asked on a different day, I might have said Jones instead of McLain. But at the end of the day, I had to pick one. McLain hit almost as well as Jones did and played the hardest non-catcher defensive position. I don’t like deciding based on small things, but it’s inevitable if the big things can’t settle the score. The slight nudge to McLain comes on the balance of having the more valuable defensive versatility (2B/SS for him versus 3B/OF for Jones) and the fact that he played for a team that was playing higher-leverage games all season, with a deep roster of prospects that could push him off a job at any time. The Rockies, meanwhile, were a basement dweller without a lot in the cupboard.

Jones may have just missed my ballot, but it’s no negative reflection on what was an excellent season. I was quite perturbed that he didn’t start the season in Colorado, with the Rockies apparently deciding that Mike Moustakas was nine years better in age than Jones, but they at least weren’t stubborn after he crushed pitchers in the Pacific Coast League. That wRC+ of 135 was an OPS+ of 138 if you like the simpler approach, and both numbers are park-adjusted, so he was Actual Good, not merely Coors Field Good.

ZiPS Projection – Matt McLain
Year BA OBP SLG AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB OPS+ DR WAR
2024 .245 .332 .444 482 73 118 25 4 21 83 55 148 18 107 3 3.4
2025 .250 .339 .457 501 78 125 27 4 23 88 59 147 18 112 3 3.9
2026 .249 .341 .458 518 81 129 28 4 24 92 63 148 17 113 3 4.1
2027 .246 .339 .453 528 83 130 28 3 25 94 65 147 16 111 4 4.1
2028 .244 .339 .445 528 83 129 28 3 24 93 66 146 14 109 4 4.0

ZiPS Projection – Nolan Jones
Year BA OBP SLG AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB OPS+ DR WAR
2024 .272 .366 .485 474 77 129 30 4 21 80 66 157 13 118 3 3.1
2025 .271 .365 .484 479 78 130 30 3 22 82 67 154 13 118 3 3.1
2026 .271 .366 .483 480 78 130 30 3 22 83 68 151 12 118 2 3.0
2027 .268 .363 .480 477 77 128 29 3 22 81 67 147 10 116 2 2.8
2028 .266 .362 .474 466 75 124 28 3 21 78 66 143 9 115 2 2.6

ZiPS Projection – James Outman
Year BA OBP SLG AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB OPS+ DR WAR
2024 .244 .337 .437 501 85 122 22 3 23 79 62 185 12 108 3 3.3
2025 .243 .337 .435 503 85 122 22 3 23 80 63 181 11 107 3 3.3
2026 .244 .340 .445 499 86 122 22 3 24 80 63 177 10 110 2 3.5
2027 .237 .333 .429 490 82 116 21 2 23 77 62 172 9 104 2 3.0
2028 .234 .330 .417 475 78 111 20 2 21 72 60 166 8 100 2 2.6

Short on Pitching: Bobby Miller, Eury Pérez, and Andrew Abbott

Outside of Senga, no pitcher was close to making my ballot, though these three came closest. The Dodgers should be greatly pleased about having Miller’s services, but his numbers weren’t enough to balance out a rather low innings total. Pérez not being called up until May was a handicap, and while the Marlins being cautious with his workload to the extent of giving him a bit of a mini-vacation in July may be good for his future, it’s hard to give a Rookie of the Year vote to someone who threw less than 100 innings. Abbott’s mid-rotation performance was absolutely needed by the Reds, but again, not quite enough.

ZiPS Projection – Bobby Miller
Year W L ERA FIP G GS IP H ER HR BB SO ERA+ WAR
2024 10 7 3.76 3.57 26 26 138.7 119 58 13 38 128 114 2.4
2025 11 7 3.75 3.55 27 27 144.0 122 60 13 38 133 114 2.5
2026 11 7 3.77 3.56 28 28 150.3 128 63 14 39 138 114 2.6
2027 12 7 3.76 3.58 30 30 155.7 133 65 15 40 143 114 2.7
2028 11 8 3.87 3.65 30 30 156.0 134 67 15 40 140 111 2.5

ZiPS Projection – Eury Pérez
Year W L ERA FIP G GS IP H ER HR BB SO ERA+ WAR
2024 8 6 3.72 3.85 27 27 121.0 106 50 16 42 138 120 2.5
2025 8 7 3.67 3.77 29 29 130.0 113 53 17 42 143 122 2.7
2026 9 7 3.66 3.72 30 30 137.7 119 56 17 41 147 122 3.0
2027 9 8 3.58 3.69 32 32 145.7 125 58 18 41 151 124 3.2
2028 10 7 3.58 3.67 32 32 148.3 128 59 18 39 150 125 3.3

ZiPS Projection – Andrew Abbott
Year W L ERA FIP G GS IP H ER HR BB SO ERA+ WAR
2024 8 9 4.60 4.17 29 29 144.7 130 74 22 53 161 95 1.7
2025 8 9 4.48 4.08 29 29 144.7 129 72 21 50 160 98 1.8
2026 8 9 4.50 4.08 29 29 148.0 135 74 22 49 161 97 1.9
2027 8 9 4.53 4.11 30 30 147.0 136 74 22 47 156 97 1.8
2028 8 9 4.60 4.16 30 30 146.7 139 75 22 47 152 95 1.7

The Sixth Man: Patrick Bailey

Of the rest of the field, the closest to making my ballot was Bailey, who was absurdly good defensively in 2023. I could have voted for a player short on playing time; I clearly did with McLain and was close with Jones. But to vote for a hitter at any position who slashed .233/.285/.359 over Outman, McLain, and Jones, I’d need a lot more certainty with defensive numbers than I have. We’ve made great progress in evaluating defense, but it remains extremely volatile, meaning that we simply can’t count on a small sample of defensive data to the same degree as a small sample of offensive data.

I have little doubt that Bailey is an elite defensive catcher, but just how elite is crucial to advancing him over the others with only 97 games played. And it was just a bridge too far for me; if he had been the catcher at the start of the season, there would have likely been a little more flexibility on how to deal with a defense-only candidate.

ZiPS Projection – Patrick Bailey
Year BA OBP SLG AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB OPS+ DR WAR
2024 .228 .291 .366 382 45 87 18 1 11 45 32 112 2 81 13 2.7
2025 .233 .299 .382 377 46 88 18 1 12 46 33 108 2 87 13 3.0
2026 .234 .300 .387 367 45 86 18 1 12 45 32 103 2 89 13 3.0
2027 .234 .302 .390 354 44 83 17 1 12 44 32 99 2 90 13 3.0
2028 .229 .298 .379 340 42 78 16 1 11 42 31 94 2 86 12 2.6

The Best of the Rest: Spencer Steer, Francisco Alvarez, Elly De La Cruz, Ezequiel Tovar

Steer played the entire season but was basically a league-average starter — something that had value, but he was clearly behind several others in quality. Alvarez hit a lot of homers (25) but was rather one-note in his offensive contributions, though he really surprised with his framing numbers. Tovar was brilliant defensively, and it was nice to see him as a Gold Glove finalist, but his offense was well behind his glove.

De La Cruz was arguably the most exciting of the prospects, maybe even more than Carroll, but he still has some serious holes in his game that were exposed with time in the majors. At the very least, he’s going to need to shore up his plate discipline or become better at effectively connecting with junk in the way Tim Anderson was able to do at his peak.

ZiPS Projection – Spencer Steer
Year BA OBP SLG AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB OPS+ DR WAR
2024 .249 .331 .436 534 76 133 28 3 22 85 56 129 8 104 4 1.9
2025 .250 .330 .436 525 75 131 28 2 22 84 55 124 8 104 4 1.9
2026 .250 .332 .434 511 73 128 27 2 21 81 54 119 7 104 4 1.9
2027 .250 .332 .433 492 70 123 26 2 20 77 52 114 6 104 3 1.7
2028 .250 .331 .429 464 64 116 25 2 18 72 49 107 5 103 3 1.5

ZiPS Projection – Francisco Alvarez
Year BA OBP SLG AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB OPS+ DR WAR
2024 .230 .321 .436 422 61 97 18 0 23 73 51 131 2 107 0 2.4
2025 .236 .329 .449 441 67 104 19 0 25 79 56 131 2 112 1 2.9
2026 .240 .334 .459 442 69 106 19 0 26 82 57 126 2 116 1 3.2
2027 .241 .338 .461 440 69 106 19 0 26 83 59 122 2 118 1 3.4
2028 .244 .344 .466 438 70 107 19 0 26 84 61 119 2 121 1 3.6

ZiPS Projection – Elly De La Cruz
Year BA OBP SLG AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB OPS+ DR WAR
2024 .236 .298 .434 564 91 133 24 8 24 89 48 190 39 94 -2 2.4
2025 .239 .303 .441 585 98 140 26 7 26 97 52 185 40 97 -1 2.8
2026 .243 .308 .450 606 106 147 27 6 29 104 56 181 40 101 -1 3.3
2027 .247 .314 .465 608 110 150 28 6 31 107 59 173 38 106 0 3.8
2028 .248 .317 .465 606 111 150 29 5 31 108 61 166 35 107 0 3.9

ZiPS Projection – Ezequiel Tovar
Year BA OBP SLG AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB OPS+ DR WAR
2024 .258 .300 .416 551 75 142 31 4 16 75 29 145 11 83 10 2.5
2025 .264 .307 .433 561 79 148 33 4 18 79 31 141 11 89 11 3.1
2026 .268 .313 .443 567 82 152 34 4 19 82 33 136 11 93 11 3.5
2027 .269 .315 .448 572 84 154 34 4 20 84 34 132 10 95 12 3.6
2028 .271 .318 .454 573 86 155 34 4 21 85 36 128 10 97 12 3.9

2024 Contemporary Baseball Era Committee Candidate: Davey Johnson

Davey Johnson
Brad Mills-USA TODAY Sports

This post is part of a series covering the 2024 Contemporary Baseball Era Committee Managers/Executives/Umpires ballot, covering candidates in those categories who made their greatest impact from 1980 to the present. For an introduction to the ballot, see here. The eight candidates will be voted upon at the Winter Meetings in Nashville on December 3, and anyone receiving at least 75% of the vote from the 16 committee members will be inducted in Cooperstown on July 21, 2024, along with any candidates elected by the BBWAA.

2024 Contemporary Baseball Candidate: Manager Davey Johnson
Manager G W-L W-L% G>.500 Playoffs Pennants WS
Davey Johnson 2443 1372-1071 .562 301 6 1 1
AVG HOF Mgr* 3662 1968-1674 .540 294 7 6 2.6
SOURCE: Baseball-Reference
* Average based on the careers of 21 enshrined AL/NL managers from the 20th and 21st centuries

Davey Johnson

Like Billy Martin before him, albeit with far less drinking and drama, Davey Johnson was renowned for his ability to turn teams around. He posted a winning record in his first full season at four of his five managerial stops and took four of the five franchises that he managed to the playoffs at least once. But after six-plus seasons managing the Mets, he never lasted even three full seasons in any other job and never replicated the success he had in piloting the 1986 Mets to 108 wins and a World Series victory. Read the rest of this entry »


Here Comes Your Manager: Three Teams Pick New Skippers

Craig Counsell
Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel

An entire offseason’s worth of managerial reshuffling took place early Monday afternoon, as the most coveted managerial role was filled and the most coveted managerial candidate found a home — just not how you’d think.

The Guardians first announced the hiring of Mariners bullpen coach and golden-voiced baritone Stephen Vogt. Shortly thereafter, news broke that the Cubs were hiring outgoing Brewers manager Craig Counsell, despite already having David Ross under contract for that position. Counsell had been expected to follow former Brewers baseball ops boss David Stearns to the Mets, but when he landed in Chicago, the Mets unveiled Yankees bench coach Carlos Mendoza as their new manager.

Counsell, regarded as one of the top skippers in the sport, has reset the market for manager salaries with a five-year, $40 million contract. A free agent after his Brewers contract expired, he interviewed with both New York and Cleveland and was regarded as both teams’ top choice. When he made his unexpected switch to Chicago, that made the other teams’ decisions easier, and thus followed the busy afternoon on the coaching carousel. Read the rest of this entry »


Giants’ Gabe Kapler, Mets’ Buck Showalter Pay the Price for Underachieving Teams

Gabe Kapler
Darren Yamashita-USA TODAY Sports

Two years ago, the Giants won 107 games, and Gabe Kapler was voted NL Manager of the Year. Last year, the Mets won 101 games, and Buck Showalter was voted NL Manager of the Year. But both teams were bounced out of the postseason in their first playoff series nonetheless, and with both teams struggling to return to such heights thereafter, the two managers lost their jobs this past weekend after their teams asked in effect, “What have you won for me lately?” The Giants fired Kapler on Friday with the team holding a 78–81 record; the Mets (then 74–86) announced before Sunday’s finale that they were moving on from Showalter.

Kapler and Showalter were the first two managers to lose their jobs in 2023, but not the last, as the Angels decided to move on from Phil Nevin, who was in the last year of his contract, on Monday after a 73–89 finish. The Padres and Yankees haven’t officially confirmed the status of their incumbents, but Bob Melvin and Aaron Boone remain under contract through next season, with the Yankees holding an option on Boone for 2025 as well. Read the rest of this entry »


Steve Cohen Stearns Over a New Leaf

David Stearns
USA Today

If I were an image-conscious billionaire with a disappointing baseball team on my books and unlimited financial resources, David Stearns is one of the first people I’d call to run it. The Mets won 101 games in 2022, and while 2023 represents a monumental step back for the franchise, this team still has tons of talent both in the majors and high minors. It’s also better-funded than any other team in the league.

So with Stearns due to join the Mets as president of baseball operations, we get a talented, rich team being run by one of the top executives in the sport. I don’t know if it will work, because nothing with the Mets is straightforward, but I see no obvious better idea. Read the rest of this entry »


Pondering a Possible Pete Alonso Trade

Wendell Cruz-USA TODAY Sports

The idea of the Mets trading Pete Alonso would have seemed positively preposterous six months ago. Coming off a 101-win season, the Mets committed to a half-billion dollars in new contracts over the winter, entering the season with the most expensive team in history. But rather than battle the Braves for NL East supremacy, they’ve instead been fighting to stay ahead of the Nationals for fourth place, a mêlée they’re currently losing. The Mets have already traded off some of their veterans, including both Justin Verlander and Max Scherzer, so the idea of parting with Alonso doesn’t seem quite as farfetched as it once did.

There have been some sports radio rumblings about Alonso-related clubhouse issues, but I tend to not take those things too seriously. And even if I did, it’s not a surprising development in the context of a wreck of a season; unless you’re the late 1970s Yankees, winning tends to make people get along better. What I do take seriously are the reports from Ken Rosenthal at The Athletic. No deal was close, but the Mets reportedly talked to at least the Brewers and Cubs around the trade deadline, getting to the point where the players to be sent to New York were discussed.

The facts on the ground, divorced from any specific rumors, also make such a trade plausible this winter. Players a year from free agency are frequently discussed in trades, and while there’s no reason to think the Mets are going to tear the team down to a small, long-term core, a 75-win season — and that’s only if the Mets play decent baseball in September — makes some kind of short-term retool quite possible. In that case, trading the unsigned Alonso for players who can contribute past 2024 is an idea with considerable merit. Read the rest of this entry »


Max Scherzer Has Changed Along With the Game (But He Hasn’t Changed Much)

Max Scherzer
Jerome Miron-USA TODAY Sports

Max Scherzer was 26 years old and pitching for the Tigers when I first interviewed him. Thirteen seasons and three Cy Young awards later, he’s taking the mound for the Rangers, the sixth team he’s played for in what has been an illustrious career. Scherzer’s accolades include eight All-Star berths, and just this week, he moved into 11th place on MLB’s all-time strikeout list. Already at 72.0 WAR, he has a Hall of Fame plaque in his future.

In our initial interview, which ran on today’s date back in 2010, Scherzer described himself as “a power pitcher” and “a very mathematic guy” who appreciated, but didn’t overly rely on, analytics available at that time. How does the veteran right-hander approach his craft all these years later, and how has he evolved along the way? I caught up with him to address those questions shortly before he was dealt from the Mets to the Rangers at the August trade deadline.

———

David Laurila: We talked pitching in 2010. How differently do think about your craft 13 years later?

Max Scherzer: “Way different, but the game is also way different. In 2010, it was much more based on what the human eye can see, what’s going on in the field, and listening to the pro scouts. We were understanding some of the numbers back then, but nowhere near what it has blossomed into. It’s almost the inverse now. In 2023, so much of the game is just number, number, number, number, number. I actually think it’s gone too far, that we’ve forgotten some of the human aspects that go into baseball. It’s become, ‘Follow the numbers, they have to be right.’ But no. There is actually a human component that doesn’t get enough credit.”

Laurila: Can you elaborate on that?

Scherzer: “There are times where what you’re seeing on the field matters more than what the data says. There are times to execute based on what you see. For me, that’s been a maturation process over the course of my career.

“I’ve evolved in what I’m looking for and what I’m trying to ascertain. I’m always trying to figure out what I actually want to know on the mound. There is a limit to how much thought you can have about the hitter before you start taking away from yourself. There is a limit to how much bandwidth… like, you want to know what the hitter hits and what he doesn’t hit, but you also need to know what you do well. You need to understand, ‘When I execute this pitch, that’s when I’m at my best,’ and ‘When I put these sequences together, that’s when I’m at my best.’ As much as you want to scout your opponents, scouting yourself is just as important.” Read the rest of this entry »


Francisco Lindor’s Hot Summer Has Put Him Back on Track

Francisco Lindor
Dale Zanine-USA TODAY Sports

Since the beginning of 2021, when Francisco Lindor joined the Mets, he ranks fifth in position player WAR (16.2) behind Aaron Judge (20.4), Freddie Freeman (17.9), Mookie Betts (16.8), and José Ramírez (16.5). While others at his position have seen their production tail off for one reason or another, he has remained excellent thanks to his all-around game.

In recent seasons, though, Lindor has struggled at the plate for prolonged periods. But this year and last, he has made up for slow starts with excellent second halves. From an overall production standpoint, he is an extremely similar hitter from both sides, but since the most advantageous platoon split comes as a left-handed hitter, his bouncebacks have often been driven by adjustments on that side of the plate. That story tracks this season, too, as Lindor is on one of the best stretches of his career as a lefty. Here are the differences between his left-handed production before and after the start of July:

Lindor Left Handed Production
Split wRC+ xwOBA xwOBACON K% BB% SwSp% SwSp EV
Apr-Jun 93 .344 .399 22.8 10.2 43.2 94.8
July-Aug 182 .380 .422 20.0 13.1 41.0 95.6

Lindor’s SweetSpot% from this side is top notch; that wasn’t — and never has been — an issue for him. His adjustable bat path and swing decisions propel him to launch the ball consistently at an ideal angle. Oddly enough, despite this consistency in his spread of launch angles, his performance was still down in the first few months of the year, and even despite a couple of percentage points decrease in SweetSpot%, his performance and expected outcomes on balls in play still ticked up from July on because of a rate that is still high relative to his peers. To understand why that resulted in more success recently than at the beginning of the year, we have to do some digging into those sweet spot batted balls. Read the rest of this entry »