Five Things I Liked (Or Didn’t Like) This Week, August 30

Rafael Suanes-USA TODAY Sports

Welcome to another edition of Five Things I Liked (Or Didn’t Like) This Week. I’m going to keep the introduction short and sweet today so I can get back to my once-annual guilty pleasure: spending all day watching the US Open. But while I’m going full Jimmy Butler, plenty of baseball is happening, so I’ve got my eyes on that as well. You couldn’t watch a game this week without seeing something spectacular. We’ve got great baserunning, awful baserunning, and phenomenal catches. We’ve got teams misunderstanding risk and reward, and GMs touching hot stoves over and over again. It’s a great week to watch baseball, because it always is. Shout out to Zach Lowe of ESPN as always for the column idea, and one programming note: Five Things will be off next Friday. Let’s get to the baseball!

1. Anthony Volpe’s Disruptive Speed
Another year, another below-average season with the bat for the Yankees shortstop. That’s turning him into a lightning rod for controversy, because he’s a type of player who often gets overlooked (defense and speed) playing for a team where players often get overrated. The combination of the two leads to some confusing opinions. “He’s a good player who will make fewer All-Star teams than you think because defensive value is consistently underappreciated” isn’t exactly a strong argument if you’re talking to an acquaintance at a sports bar.

One thing that everyone can agree on, though: After he reaches base, Anthony Volpe is a problem. I tuned into Monday’s Nationals-Yankees game to see Dylan Crews in the majors and to watch Aaron Judge and Juan Soto, but I ended up just marveling at Volpe for a lot of the afternoon. He got on base three times (that’s the hard part for him, to be clear) and tilted the entire defense each time. He wasn’t even going on this play, and his vault lead still dragged Ildemaro Vargas out of position:

I’m not quite sure how to assign value for that play. The ball found a hole there, but DJ LeMahieu could just as easily have hit the ball straight to Vargas. I’m not saying that we need an advanced statistical reckoning about the value of a runner bluffing a fielder into motion, but that doesn’t change how cool it is to watch Volpe spook good veteran infielders just by standing around and bouncing.

Some of his baserunning value is of the straightforward, look-at-this-fast-human-being variety. You don’t need to hit the ball very deep to drive him home from third:

Some of the value is effort-based. Volpe’s always thinking about an extra base. Even when he hits a clean single, he’s got eyes on the play. An innocuous outfield bobble? He’ll take the base, thank you very much:

Of course, if you show someone taking a bouncing lead in the first GIF, you have to show them stealing a base in the fourth: Call it Volpe’s Run. That double led to a pitching change, and after two looks at Joe La Sorsa’s delivery, Volpe helped himself to third base:

Not every game is like this, but most of his times on base are. He’s never content to go station to station. His instincts are finely tuned, his speed blazing. I’m rooting for Volpe to improve at the plate, and it’s for selfish reasons: I love to watch great baserunning, and I want to see him get more chances to do it.

2. Whatever the Opposite of That Is

Oh Washington. The Nats are near the top of my watch list right now. Their assortment of young offensive standouts makes for fun games, and now that Crews has debuted, the top of their lineup looks legitimately excellent. You can see the future of the team even before they’re ready to contend, and that’s just cool. They might even be good already – they won the series against the Yankees this week, with Crews hitting his first big league homer in the deciding game. But uh, they’re not quite ready for prime time yet. Take a look at this laser beam double:

Boy, it sure looks fun to pour on the runs when you’re already winning. Wait, I misspoke. Take a look at this long fielder’s choice:

Somehow, Joey Gallo didn’t score on a jog on that one. He slammed on the brakes at third base and realized he couldn’t make it home. Then he got hung out to dry because everyone else in the play kept running like it was a clear double (it was). What a goof! That meant the only question was whether he’d be able to hold the rundown long enough to let everyone advance a base. The answer was a resounding yes – to everyone other than Juan Yepez:

I think his brain just short circuited there. He was standing on third with Gallo completely caught in a rundown. All you have to do to finish the play is stand still. But for whatever reason, he started side-shuffling in retreat toward second, another base currently occupied by a runner (!). While Jazz Chisholm Jr. tagged Gallo out, Yepez was busy hanging José Tena out to dry. Famously, you can’t have two runners on the same base. The rest of the play was academic:

I feel bad hanging Yepez out to dry, because some clearer communication would have made this play a run-scoring double. First, Gallo was overly cautious tagging up on the deep drive to center. Then, he got bamboozled. Watch the base coach hold Yepez, only for Gallo to see the sign and think it was intended for him:

Just a disaster all around. I can’t get enough of the Gameday description: “José Tena singles on a sharp line drive to center fielder Aaron Judge. Juan Yepez to 3rd. José Tena lines into a double play, center fielder Aaron Judge to shortstop Anthony Volpe to catcher Austin Wells to first baseman DJ LeMahieu to catcher Austin Wells to third baseman Jazz Chisholm Jr. to second baseman Gleyber Torres. Joey Gallo out at home. Juan Yepez to 3rd. José Tena out at 2nd. Two Outs.”

Ah, yes, just your typical 8-6-2-3-2-5-4 double play. The Nationals are a lot of fun to watch – even when it’s at their expense.

3. We Get It, Rays

The whole never-trade-with-Tampa-Bay bit is overdone. The Rays lose plenty of trades. They win their fair share too, of course, but they are high volume operators in a business full of uncertainty. Sometimes, you get Isaac Paredes for almost nothing. Sometimes, you get Jonny DeLuca. When you churn your roster to the extent that they do, you can’t win them all, and that’s fine. But the Cardinals? Yeah, they should definitely not trade with the Rays.

First, in 2018, they sent Tommy Pham to Tampa Bay in exchange for some depth prospects, and Pham racked up 8 WAR in the next year and a half with the Rays. Then, before the 2020 season, the Cardinals swapped Randy Arozarena for Matthew Liberatore; Randy became the face of the postseason, and Libby turned into a long reliever. The most recent deal might not be the most damaging, but it’s an apt capper to a transaction trilogy.

Dylan Carlson was supposed to be the next big thing in St. Louis, but that ship had sailed long before the Cardinals jettisoned him at the deadline this year. His offensive game just broke down out of nowhere over the last two years, and he played himself out of St. Louis even as the team floundered for outfield depth this year. He had a 50 wRC+ in a part-time role when the team decided it was time to move on.

That’s fine, guys need changes of scenery all the time. But trading him to the Rays, of all teams, felt a little on the nose. The reliever they got back, Shawn Armstrong, is a perfectly good bullpen option. He made 11 appearances for the Redbirds and compiled a 2.84 ERA (2.78 FIP), a solid month’s work. But I’m using the past tense because they designated him for assignment earlier this week, hoping another team would pick up the balance of his contract and save them $350,000 or so. They’ve made a similar move with Pham, whom they also acquired at the deadline, since then. In Armstrong’s case, they also did it because he’d pitched two days in a row and they needed another fresh arm on the active roster; it was a messy situation all around.

We have their postseason odds at 1.1% after a desultory August, and they likely aren’t losing much of that value by moving on from Armstrong. It’s the signaling of it all, though: They traded for the guy, got exactly what they wanted from him, and still couldn’t keep him around for two months. Meanwhile, Carlson looks like a reasonable major leaguer again. He hasn’t been a world beater by any means, but he’s hitting the ball hard more frequently in a semi-platoon role that takes advantage of his ability to hit lefties. He already has three homers as a Ray after none all year as a Cardinal.

Carlson had to go, because something wasn’t working in St. Louis. Armstrong was a perfectly reasonable return, and he did exactly what the team hoped for when the Cardinals acquired him. The optics, though! They traded yet another pretty good outfielder who didn’t fit into the puzzle in St. Louis. Tampa Bay has two years to get the most out of him. As is customary, none of the players the Rays sent back to Missouri moved the needle. For appearances’ sake, if nothing else, the Cardinals can’t keep making these trades.

4. Outrageous Robberies

It feels weird that Jackson Chourio, a five-tool superstar with blazing footspeed, doesn’t play center. It seems like a knock on him, almost. Sure, this guy’s a prodigy, but he can’t handle the tough defensive position that you might expect him to play given his talent. Except, that’s not quite right. Why would you play him in center field when you currently have Spider-Man patrolling the grass? I mean…

Oh my goodness. I don’t even want to hear about catch probability on this one, because the difficulty of this play is the part where he gets over the wall in deep center. This isn’t one of those “robberies” where the fielder grazes the wall with his back and everyone celebrates. Blake Perkins can do those just fine – he has four robberies this year, and they weren’t all this hard – but he can also go the extra mile. He went all the way up and over to get this one:

That’s an 8-foot wall, so he probably got to the ball 9 or so feet in the air. He had to cover a ton of ground before getting there; 101 feet from his initial position, to be precise. He took a great route, which gave him time to decelerate and time the jump, but the ball kept carrying. In the end, he had to parkour up the wall a little bit to get enough height:

What more can I say? You can’t do it any better than that. Perkins reacted like he was shocked by his own play:

So no sweat, Jackson. You’re a pretty good outfielder too; you just can’t climb walls quite so nimbly. There’s no shame in second place when first place looks like that.

5. Getting by With a Little Help

Austin Riley is on the IL right now, and 2024 has been a down year for him. That’s largely an offensive issue, though his defense isn’t quite up to previous years’ standards, either. That said, he can still turn an absolute gem out there. Take a look at this beauty from two weeks ago:

That’s the area where he’s improved the most. His arm is below average for third base, so he compensates by getting his feet planted and putting his entire body into the throw. That ball had to travel forever, and to be fair, it two-hopped Matt Olson, but that’s an accurate ball given where he caught it and how quickly he had to let it go. That’s very nice, but watch Jo Adell at the bag. What is he doing?!? That isn’t how you’re supposed to run out a bang-bang play. If he went straight in, he’d beat the throw comfortably. Instead, he curled his way into an out.

In his mind, I’m sure that ball was a double right out of the box. That’s reasonable! Look at where Riley made the play:

Riley’s plant foot ended up all the way into the grass in foul territory. Not many baseballs get fielded there, and Adell hit that one on a line, so when he started out of the box, he was surely considering his options in regards to second base. He came out of the box looking down the line and taking a direct, rather than rounded, route. But as you can see from the high angle replay, he started to bend his path to cut the bag and head for second, right around the same time that Riley rose and fired:

The closeup of Adell is definitely a bad look:

But take another look at those last two shots and you’ll get a better idea of what happened. Adell probably couldn’t see the ball in the corner cleanly. There was a lot of traffic: baserunners, umpires, Riley himself, the pitcher, and so on. About halfway down the baseline, he looked away from the play to pick up first base coach Bo Porter, exactly what you should do when you can’t find the ball on your own. But Porter just plain missed it. He was pinwheeling Adell toward second, imploring him to arc out for extra speed. He clearly thought the ball was in the outfield and that Adell going wide could give him a shot at an extra base.

I’d put more blame on Porter than on Adell in this situation, but there’s blame to go around for both. I’d give credit to Riley, too, of course. Base coaches and baserunners make mistakes sometimes, and they aren’t always punished by outstanding defensive plays like that. But this is an unforgivable mistake given the game situation.

Adell’s run was far less important than the two in front of him. If there was any question at all about his being safe or not, any question about whether Riley had fielded it, the correct play was to book it to first and completely forget about the double. Reaching first safely is worth more than a run: the runner scoring from third plus the first and third situation that would’ve result from it. Teams have scored 0.52 runs after first and third with two outs this year, and 0.59 runs after second and third with two outs. Meaning, if Adell had taken a straight line path, the Angels would’ve scored a run and had that 0.52 on top of it, so making an out at first base cost them an expected 1.52 runs. Advancing to second would have gained them another 0.07 expected runs, but only if that runner on third scored, which didn’t happen because Adell was out at first. They would’ve needed to successfully advance to second 96 times out of 100 to make the math work there. It’s worse than that, though: Going from a one-run lead to a two-run lead is worth astronomically more than stepping up from two to three. Take that into account, and we’re looking at a play where you’d need to be right 98 times out of 100.

The Angels mistook playing hard for playing smart. The winning baseball play there is to ensure the run. It didn’t end up costing them, but it could have. They never scored again, and the Braves put plenty of traffic on the bases the rest of the way. The funny thing is, I’m sure that Adell will get knocked for not hustling on this play, and I don’t think that’s what went wrong. He and Porter just got greedy aiming for a hustle double when the right choice was to nit it up (play extremely conservatively, for the non-poker-players out there). It’s a strange way to make a mistake – but it’s definitely still a mistake.





Ben is a writer at FanGraphs. He can be found on Twitter @_Ben_Clemens.

42 Comments
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sadtrombonemember
15 days ago

I am really happy that someone finally came out and said that “you shouldn’t trade with the Rays” is bogus. But it’s also true that the Cardinals seem to be particularly bad at knowing what they have in their own players. They gave away Adolis Garcia, they traded Arozarena to the Rays, they traded Alcantara and Gallen to the Marlins…and now there is this.

Dylan Carlson with the Cardinals: .198/.275/.240, 50 wRC+
Dylan Carlson with the Rays: .230/.319/.410, 113 wRC+

I think the moral of the story is not that teams shouldn’t trade with the Rays, it’s that teams should always trade with the Cardinals.

EonADSmember
15 days ago
Reply to  sadtrombone

I don’t think it’s necessarily that you shouldn’t trade with the Rays as it is “you should be disappointed when your guys perform better with the Rays.” Because they have a habit of acquiring guys who seem flawed and getting the best they can out of them. Their development/skill coaching acumen, not the trades, is what they really ought to be known for.

sadtrombonemember
15 days ago
Reply to  sadtrombone

Of course Yankees fans would probably have a hard disagree on that one. And the Cards won the Arenado trade pretty handily.

PressXToJason
15 days ago
Reply to  sadtrombone

The Arenado trade isn’t a case against “always trade with the Cardinals”, it’s a case for “Absolutely, always, every single chance you get, trade with the Rockies.”

Greens
15 days ago
Reply to  PressXToJason

Funny enough one of the best trades the Rockies have made in recent memory was getting German Marquez from the Rays.

PC1970
15 days ago
Reply to  sadtrombone

At what point do we seriously question the Cards hitter development?

You mentioned a # of examples above & you can add Tyler O’Neill to the list, too. They have a 10WAR of outfielders playing for other teams and it seems like “top prospect goes bust” is a waayyy too recurring theme with them.

Waiting for the inevitable Nolan Gorman & Jordan Walker trades in the next year or 2.

EonADSmember
15 days ago
Reply to  PC1970

To be fair with O’Neill, he’s very streaky (and somewhat injury-prone), and was great as a rookie and elite in his first full year, and still solid in his third (worth about 2 WAR in a full season). The Cards cut bait on him earlier than they probably should have, but he didn’t actually bust with them.

Also RE: Arenado, if the Cardinals hadn’t won a trade that was a salary dump disguised as a star trade with the Rockies of all teams, the whole FO should have been fired.

Last edited 15 days ago by EonADS
sadtrombonemember
15 days ago
Reply to  PC1970

They had an incredible offense a couple years ago but the hitting coach left and nearly every hitter regressed. He’s now the director of hitting for the Mets. Clearly, whatever they did since he left has been a downgrade, but there might be deeper problems too.

Last edited 15 days ago by sadtrombone
Lanidrac
15 days ago
Reply to  sadtrombone

They still had a good offense last year. It was the pitching that sucked. This season is when Walker, Gorman, and Nootbaar have regressed, as well as further declines by Goldschmidt, Arenado, and Carlson.

At least Winn and Burleson have been nice surprises.

sadtrombonemember
15 days ago
Reply to  PC1970

IMO, what I would question first is the injuries on the position player side. We have now long past the point where we can chalk up the Cardinals’ injuries to bad luck. The team has a ton of very talented but injury-prone players, especially in the outfield (Bader, O’Neill, Nootbaar, Carlson) but also among their two most recent super-utility players (Donovan, Edman).

Something is seriously broken here. When something like this happens, it’s not clear whether it’s because their draft team isn’t appropriately weighting injury risk or if the training staff is very bad at their jobs. I thought it was the training staff, but then they picked JJ Wetherholt in the draft and I thought maybe it was the other one too. That pick could turn out great but it probably wasn’t an accident that the Cardinals–a team with a lot of talented but injury-prone players–picked a very talented player with injury concerns.

Lanidrac
15 days ago
Reply to  sadtrombone

Neither Donovan nor Edman can be considered injury prone. Donovan has had only one significant injury that ended his season early last year, while Edman had a very healthy track record before his offseason wrist surgery that took a lot longer to heal than expected.

formerly matt w
15 days ago
Reply to  sadtrombone

I don’t think the draft staff can be blamed for miscalculating injury risk with these players–O’Neill was a trade acquisition and Carlson was a 1st-round comp pick (33rd overall), but the others were 3rd/6th/7th/8th round picks and are all in the top 2 bbWAR for their round so far. Better an injury-prone Nootbaar than a healthy Tyler Cropley (who is the only other position player to make the majors from that round). Even Carlson has out-WARred the next 24 signees from that draft.

The issue is more whatever’s going on at the top of the draft, as Carlson has also out-WARred every other Cardinals first- or second-rounder since Jack Flaherty in 2014, though Winn will pass him soon. It’s tough to always be drafting in the 20s or late teens, but there’s only so many times you can pull off “trade scraps for a future HOFer who signs a below-market extension.”

sogoodlooking
14 days ago
Reply to  sadtrombone

Never discount the possibility that the answer is “both.”

Old Washington Senators Fanmember
14 days ago
Reply to  sadtrombone

Also traded Lane Thomas….

Lanidrac
15 days ago
Reply to  PC1970

Tyler O’Neill didn’t have any development issues. He just kept getting hurt or was playing hurt.

Lanidrac
15 days ago
Reply to  sadtrombone

Why does everyone only mention the bad recent trades made by the Cardinals? They’ve made even more good trades for players like Goldschmidt, Arenado, Gallegos (until the pitch clock ruined him), Romero, Quintana, Montgomery, Fedde, etc.

johndarc
15 days ago
Reply to  sadtrombone

The Rays don’t always win every trade, but it feels like the Cardinals always lose every trade. Though they did arguably win that Voit for Gallegos/Shreve trade. Voit is in Mexico, Gallegos only got cut this year.