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2015 in the NL West: Second base

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The D-backs hit the ground running in our position by position review of the division. Can they sustain that lead at second? Well...

As before, I'm using the projected numbers from Fangraphs at each position to determine the rankings.

1. Dodgers: 2.7 WAR (#9 overall)

Everyday starter: Howie Kendrick (2.4)
Backup: Justin Turner (0.2)

Not exactly a position of strength for the division, with the Dodgers representing the high-water mark for projected production. They acquired Kendrick from the Angels in a three-way trade, which also saw Dan Haren go to the Marlins. [Or retire. We don't know] Kendrick has been a solid performer, with a 116 OPS+ over the past four seasons, and cost LA quite a high price for one year of his service - Andrew Heaney, named the #25 prospect in all baseball by MLB just yesterday. While the Dodgers have wanted Kendrick for a while, and nearly traded for him at the deadline in 2013, it's questionable if he'll be much of an upgrade over Dee Gordon.

2. Padres: 2.0 WAR (#12)

Everyday starter: Jedd Gyorko (2.0)
Backup: Cory Spangenberg (0.0)

After bursting on the scene with 23 homers in 2013, the most by a Padre, Gyorko slumped badly last year, his OPS+ dropping from 113 to 79. Health may have been involved, as he suffered from plantar fasciitis in his foot - Mark Trumbo also contended with that, as well as his stress fracture, and we saw how his power evaporated in 2014. Gyorko's first half was particularly bad, with a .482 OPS, but he hit much better after coming off the DL, posting a .745 OPS in 55 games. Manager Bud Black said, "I think he started making some adjustments, some mechanical, some at-bat to at-bat in terms of pitch selection, Before, you saw him chasing pitches up in the strike zone and also sliders away. I think that a lot of that was him wanting to be aggressive and wanting to help the team."

3. Giants: 1.5 WAR (#22)

Everyday starter: Joe Panik (1.4)
Backup: Joaquin Arias (0.0)

[Insert "Panik" related pun here.] Part of the home-grown infield which helped the Giants win another even-year World Series title, in particular with a memorable double-play in Game 7, when the score was tied, Panik came out of nowhere to get Rookie of the Year mentions, despite not making his major-league debut until June 21. Hitting .305 will help do that. There were some rumblings he might end up moving to 3B to replace the obese raccoon, but the trade for Casey McGehee nipped that in the bud. May well end up overtaking Gyorko as the best young second-baseman in the division by the year's end.

4. Diamondbacks: 1.2 WAR (#23)

Everyday starter: Aaron Hill (0.9)
Backup: Cliff Pennington (0.2)

The legacy of KT lives on. There will likely be worse second-basemen in the majors this year than Hill. Heck, he's not even projected to be the worst in the division, as we'll see. But most of the ones below him are earning league minimum, and none of them are due to receive $12 million, as Hill is. Based on playing-time, the projection suggests we wouldn't be very much worse off playing Pennington - likely the best backup in the division - full-time, since he'd be worth 0.7 WAR, pro-rated to the same number of PAs. Maybe the best we can hope for is a rebound first half, and then ship Hill to a contender at the deadline? Otherwise, we may be stuck with him for 2016 as well.

5. Rockies: 0.8 WAR (#27)

Everyday starter: DJ LeMahieu (0.8)
Backup: Daniel Descalso (0.0)

Let's face it, your offense is problematic when 90% of your major-league career has been with Colorado, and you still have a lifetime OPS below .700. Take away the Coors advantage, and LeMahieu's career road line is .236/.271/.302, which works out at 117 OPS points below the same split for Pennington. He's clearly there for his defense, and won the Golden Glove at second last year, but that will only compensate so much. Colorado will be hoping he can hit better than the two home-runs in 77 home games LeMahieu managed for 2014. Juan Pierre is the only other player in Coors history to have had 280+ PAs there in a season, and two or fewer long balls.

Conclusions

Doesn't look quite as promising for the Diamondbacks here, as the first installment in this series, does it? But it's easy to forget that Hill is only one season removed from being pretty damn good for the D-backs - over 2012-13, he had an OPS+ of 130, and was worth a total of 6.2 bWAR, even though he missed almost half of the latter season. Aaron will turn 33 before Opening Day, which makes rebounding harder and less likely for him than, say, Gyorko, who is still on the right side of the aging curve to get some help. Also concerning, there's no obvious alternate ready should Hill struggle, with the departure of Didi Gregorius - unless you're on the Jake Lamb at second bandwagon?

However, it's also not a position where there appear to be an enormous disparity, with less than two wins separating the best and worst teams in the division. If the projections hold up, the Diamondbacks wouldn't lose that much ground on their rivals by being mediocre

The story so far

Below, you'll find a chart summarizing the findings, which we'll update as we continue this series. For each position, we have awarded the teams a rating of between one and five stars, depending on how strong they are projected to be at the position. Generally, a five-star rating requires them to be among the best in the majors; a four-star one is clearly one of strength; three stars would be about average; two stars is a position of concern; and one star is a gurgling vortex of suck.

ARIZONACOLORADOLOS ANGELES
SAN DIEGO
SAN FRANCISCO
First baseStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar icon
Second baseStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar icon
Shortstop
Third base
Left field
Center field
Right field
Catcher
Starter #1
Starter #2
Starter #3
Starter #4
Starter #5
Closer
Bullpen

Padres have interest in SS Luis Sardinas

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Ken Rosenthal has two rumors about the Padres that don't sound like they'll happen any time soon, if at all.  The first is that GM A.J. Preller has interest in trading for SS Luis Sardinas who was recently acquired by the Brewers in a trade with the Texas Rangers.  Preller wants a reunion.

But any excitement to come from the Padres filling their hole at shortstop is quickly dampened by Rosenthal's postscript when he says the teams have had no recent talks.  Then again the Brewers have only had Sardinas for two weeks, so if they've ever discussed him then it's fairly recent.

Also the Cole Hamels rumor still continues to float around for yet another month.  Everything I've read says that the Phillies are demanding far too much for Hamels and the Padres may not even have enough to offer. Yet here we are still talking about it, which can still be fun in its own way.

Cleveland Indians News and Notes: Attendance vs TV/radio ratings

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Could this be the year attendance snaps back to something resembling 1990s-levels?

Terry's Talkin' about how lots of fans watch the Cleveland Indians -- on television and even at Tribe Fest: Terry Pluto | cleveland.com

Pluto has some interesting analysis on the apparent disconnect between TV/radio ratings and attendance. As a percentage, Cleveland had one of the highest TV and radio ratings among major-league cities. Only Detroit, Pittsburgh, St. Louis. and Kansas City had higher TV ratings in 2014. Now that is a bit misleading, because mega-markets like New York and Los Angeles can have lower ratings (again, a percentage) but still have many more eyeballs/ears because of the sheer size of the market. Still, those high ratings are a sign that people are interested in the Indians.

TribeFest once again had a great showing; 8,000 fans attended the two-day event. The Indians are making major renovations to the ballpark, turning a severely underutilized section into hopefully a major draw. Perhaps the confluence of all those factors could break the attendance drought that has plagued this club since at least 2006.

Cleveland Indians talking to John McDonald about rejoining organization | cleveland.com

The Indians have in recent years have tried to add former players to their organization, so this would come as no surprise. McDonald would be a great resource to have in the organization as an infield coach, whether it would working with minor-leaguers or at the major-league level.

MLB News

Banks honored during memorial service in Chicago | MLB.com

Chicago said goodbye to Ernie Banks yesterday.

Report: Padres still exploring trades " Hot Stove

The Padres, who along with Oakland have been baseball's most active teams this winter, may not be done yet, as crazy as that seems. Cole Hamels is one of their targets, though they don't have the prospects other potential Hamels suitors have.

Padres have discussed trading for Brewers' Luis Sardinas

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The 21-year old shortstop may be a nice fit in San Diego, however a deal is not close to getting done.

San Diego General Manager A.J. Preller has been notably active this offseason, and despite the fact that pitchers and catchers report at the end of the month, he may not be done yet. According to FOX Sports' Ken Rosenthal, the Padres have internally discussed trading for Brewers shortstop Luis Sardinas, however the two clubs have not spoken recently.

Sardinas, 21, appeared in 43 games for the Rangers last season and posted a .261/.303/.313 batting line to complement eight RBIs and five stolen bases in 125 plate appearances. He was versatile defensively for the Rangers, seeing time at shortstop, second and third base in his rookie season. Sardinas' age could account for some of his offensive troubles in 2014, and he is regarded as a solid defender who has notable speed.

Sardinas, along with right-handers Corey Knebel and Marcos Diplan, were sent from Texas to Milwaukee two weeks ago in the Yovani Gallardo trade. Preller is familiar with Sardinas, as he worked for Texas before accepting the Padres job.

NBC Sports' D.J. Short notes that it is unclear whether the Brewers would consider trading Sardinas this quickly. However, Milwaukee is seeking bullpen depth, and the Padres may have a few arms to offer. The Brewers are also confident in their middle infield, with Scooter Gennett expected to be the starting second baseman and Jean Segura the starter at shortstop.

If they are unable to add a shortstop before the start of the season, the Padres are expected to use both Alexi Amarista and Clint Barmes at short.

In addition to looking for infield depth, the Padres have also been linked to Cole Hamels and James Shields. Rosenthal notes that he does not believe the Padres have the prospects necessary to complete a deal for Hamels, while he reported the organization is on the periphery of the Shields sweepstakes earlier this week.

Yasmani Grandal remarks on time with Padres

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I woke up at 3 a.m. and, since it was an hour too late to buy beer and I don't have anything better to do with my life, scrolled through tweets I'd missed the past eight hours. Somebody retweeted Inside SoCal Dodgers writer J.P. Hoornstra's tweet linking to his article which was ostensibly about Grandal being "blindsided" by being traded. While it's interesting that his wife found out about the trade on TV before they got a call from either A.J. Preller or Andrew Friedman, I was more drawn to his quotes about his time with the Padres. You know, so I'd know whether to just root against him like any run-of-the-mill Dodger I want to see strike out in every at-bat and commit an error on every play, or if he's deserving of vociferous, next-level derision the way Adrian Gonzalez is.

"The way I saw it, I went in and played 100 percent, gave them 100 percent every day I was there. I wanted to play and they knew that," he said. "They were really good to me. They supported me to the highest level. Josh Byrnes, who’s here right now, did a tremendous job. I have nothing bad to say about the Padres. The Padres were great with me, supporting me with the suspension. Getting me the right people to work on my knee when I got injured. Pre-operation and post. I’ve got nothing but good things to say about them."

Well, that was nice. He comes off as genuinely appreciative of his time in San Diego. He could have delivered a brief banality, or said nothing at all, but instead went into detail and repeatedly reiterated his gratitude. Even if he is just saying the right things to say the right things, that beats being an a'hole, right?

Grandal's kind words about the Padres certainly aren't to say he isn't happy to be where he is now, though.

Grandal said that the Dodgers are one of four teams he’s always wanted to play for, along with the Yankees, Red Sox and Cubs. "The four big teams with a history," he said.

Okay, I was trying so hard to be polite and even-handed, but hahahahahahaha

Here's Sarah Silverman in a Padres uniform

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Since today is Fred Lynn's sixty-third birthday I was going to write a post about him, so I started off by searching for a photo of him with the Padres to use. There were a few, but it was a photo showing him in a Red Sox jersey that really grabbed my attention. That's because of who was in the picture with him.

Yes! Sarah Silverman is way cooler to me than Fred Lynn is (sorry, fifty-year-old Bostonians), and this is a righteous addition to the collection of celebrities wearing Padres gear.

This photo was taken by Jonathan Daniel/ Getty Images. The description provided dates it to the 2003 All-Star Legends and Celebrity Softball Game, which was held at U.S. Cellular Field on the south side of Chicago.

Well, that's definitely not what I set out for, but it makes me glad I went to the bother of starting to do a post about Fred Lynn. And, hey, I still might get around to that.

2015 in the NL West: Shortstop

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Continuing our tour of the division by position, we move over on to the left-hand side of the infield.

As before, I'm using the projected numbers from Fangraphs at each position to determine the rankings.

1. Rockies:  5.8 WAR (#1 overall)

Everyday starter: Troy Tulowitzki (5.7)
Backup: Daniel Descalsio (0.1)

Frickin' Tulo. And it's not even close, with Andrelton Simmons the only other SS projected for more than three WAR [interestingly almost entirely all on his defense. If he was remotely adept at the plate, he'd be up there with Troy-boy. There haven't been many as reliable: 5+ WAR every year bar one since 2009, which would fully justify the $20m he's due every year through 2019. The exception was 2012, when injury limited him to 47 games, and that may be an issue, as he has averaged only 88 games over the past three years. But when healthy, there isn't a better shortstop on the major leagues.

2. Dodgers: 2.6 WAR (#12)

Everyday starter: Jimmy Rollins (2.4)
Backup: Justin Turner (0.2)

Part of the blizzard of Dodger activity this winter was trading for Rollins with the Phillies: it's going to be weird seeing him in Dodger Blue, since Rollins had spent the entirety of his 15 years in Philadelphia. He's a free-agent at the end of the season, after earning $11m for 2015 (one million of which will be paid by his old team) and LA have prospect Corey Seager waiting in the wings, so it may be a short stay for Rollins. He is now 36, but should still be a solid performer, having been worth 3.6 WAR for the Philies last year - a .243 average was fine for the position, and the 17 home-runs he hit certainly help his value.

3. Giants: 2.4 WAR (#14)

Everyday starter: Brandon Crawford (2.4)
Backup: Joaquin Arias (0.0)

In his first year of arbitration eligibility, Crawford agreed to a $3.175 million deal with San Francisco, and should easily be worth that this season. He did make 21 errors in 2014, the second-most at the position, but that's in part due to his great range. Overall, his projected Fld of +3.6 is fourth-best in the majors, behind Simmons, J.J. Hardy and Zack Cosart. If his offense can maintain his 2014 production, when his OPS+ increased from 93 to 104, that will only help his value, and I've got a feeling the 28-year-old Crawford may pass Rollins this season, as their careers go in different directions.

4. Diamondbacks: 1.2 WAR (#27)

Everyday starter: Chris Owings (0.8)
Backup: Cliff Pennington (0.5)

I tend to think Fangraphs may be underestimating Owings here, though how much of that is just my rose-tinted fan eye-wear, is hard to say. But since he put up a .706 OPS, over 91 games at age 22, it does seem pessimistic to expect, as the projection does, a .661 OPS  I think he'll outperform both those numbers, as he matures and with the sure and certain knowledge that he no longer have to compete with Didi Gregorius for a job. If you're interested, Fangraphs says we'd have been slightly better going with Didi, who is expected to be worth 1.0 WAR for the Yankees (ranked just above us, at #26) in the same amount of playing time

5. Padres 0.6 WAR (#28)

Everyday starter: Alexi Amarista (0.6)
Backup: Clint Barmes (0.0)

Even given both the limited offense generally expected from the position, and the offensive tundra which is Petco, a projected .630 OPS from your everyday shortstop is not good. But it would actually be an uptick for Amarista who, in 423 major-league games has a career OPS of just .615. That ranks him 293rd among the 304 active position players with 400+ appearances. When you're that weak at the plate, you'd need a Simmons-like level of defense to become a valuable player, and Amarista isn't that, with an expected Fld of -2.3. But at a height reported as low as 5'5", it's nice to see players shorter than me in the majors. Even if they suck.

Conclusions

With the departure of Gregorius, the Diamondbacks appear to have committed fully to Owings being the shortstop of the future going forward. With no others at the position in John's top 20 prospects, if Chris flames out, it might be a while until we are able to develop another one from within, making 2015 an important year for the team, as much as for Owings. Just bear in mind, he is still only 23, and will be until September. Only four NL players that age had enough PAs last year to qualify. With regard to the rest of the division, it's pretty much Tulowitzki way out in front, and then everyone else, with Rollins on his way down, and Crawford on his way up, hopefully along with Owings.

The story so far

Below, you'll find a chart summarizing the findings, which we'll update as we continue this series. For each position, we have awarded the teams a rating of between one and five stars, depending on how strong they are projected to be at the position. Generally, a five-star rating requires them to be among the best in the majors; a four-star one is clearly one of strength; three stars would be about average; two stars is a position of concern; and one star is a gurgling vortex of suck.

ARIZONACOLORADOLOS ANGELES
SAN DIEGO
SAN FRANCISCO
First baseStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar icon
Second baseStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar icon
ShortstopStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar icon
Third base
Left field
Center field
Right field
Catcher
Starter #1
Starter #2
Starter #3
Starter #4
Starter #5
Closer
Bullpen

Pat Neshek, Luke Gregerson, and Will Harris in an Astros uniform

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Catching up on the Astros new additions this offseason, Pat Neshek, Luke Gregerson, and Will Harris in an Astros uniform.

The Astros have had more recent player acquisitions, and said players have wondered the halls of Minute Maid park in uniform during Fan Fest. But my obsessive compulsive disorder won't allow me to complete a transaction mentally until they have a card of their own.

A wedding is a pretty good reason to be behind schedule, but it's time to catchup. First up is All-Star reliever Pat Neshek.

Pat_Neshek_card

Mr. Neshek will be fascinating to watch on a game by game basis with his unique arm slot. Neshek is also welcome addition to the high socks club. Moving on to a former teammate of Pat Neshek, Luke Gregerson.

Luke_Gregerson_Card

Hopefully, Gregerson brings back his Salvador Dali mustache during his time in Houston. Neshek, Gregerson, and returning Astro Chad Qualls were all teammates in San Diego while Astros manager A.J. Hinch was in the Padres' front office. The Astros bullpen isn't fixed for curtain but Hinch knows the weapons he has well. Finally, Will Harris was an under the radar selection off waivers.

Will_Harris_Card

Harris was born in Houston, and raised in Louisiana. The former Diamondback may be depth in the minors, a long man in the bullpen, or a key cog in the bullpen. The Astros roster appears to be set going into the season, so this maybe the last card post of the year. But you never know.


Padres rumors concerning Cole Hamels, James Shields and Andrew Cashner

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Don't get me wrong, I like Andrew Cashner plenty, but I want A.J. Preller to really put his stamp on every part of this team.  If he wants Cole Hamels over Cashner, then so be it.  He'll get no criticism from me, unless it blows up down the road.

How great would it be if Preller pulls off back-to-back trades again and gets both Hamels and James Shields in the same week?  I'd be all about that.  It's hard for me to get too attached to these studs on the farm, so if he must trade them for the Padres to be competitive this year, then I'm in!  All the way in.

Shields is supposed to sign a deal at the end of the week, which means the clock is ticking on Preller to make the Hamels deal at the same time.

Consider these rumors blogged!

UPDATE:

Poll
Would you trade Cashner to get Hamels?

  459 votes |Results

Padres Name Mark Prior, Moises Alou To Minor-League Staff

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Two former Cubs are now part of the farm system in San Diego.

Mark Prior and Moises Alou were Cubs teammates for a few years and both played key roles for the 2003 N.L. Central champions. (Let's leave a certain October game out of this discussion for now.)

The two ex-Cubs were named to minor-league positions by the San Diego Padres Wednesday, according to CSN Chicago:

Prior is the new pitching coordinator. He spent last season in a front office role with the Padres, working as an assistant in the baseball operations department. Though Prior did spend two years with the Padres organization in 2008 and 2009, his only major league appearances were with the Cubs, from 2002-2006.

Alou, meanwhile, will be the Padres’ special assistant, player development. Alou posted a career .303 batting average and 332 home runs over 17 Major League seasons. Alou spent three years with the Cubs.

Alou has held executive positions in winter ball in his native Dominican Republic but this will be his first front-office position with a major-league team. Prior, who is 34, might be starting to set himself up for a big-league coaching or managing position sometime in the future.

I wish them both well.

Marlins remain in the hunt for James Shields

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The 33-year old veteran could still possibly land in Miami.

Miami has been linked to James Shields since December, and the club appears to still be in the hunt. The former Kansas City Royal is expected to sign with a team before the end of the week, and according to MLB.com's Joe Frisaro, the Marlins are still interested.

The front office is in the process of finding out if a deal with Shields is possible. MLB.com has confirmed the Marlins and Shields continue to have ongoing conversations, but it is unclear if they are the front-runner.

While some outlets have reported the Marlins have not had a chance to sign Shields from the outset, the 33-year old veteran would be an upgrade to the front of the rotation that will not feature Jose Fernandez until the second half of the season. Since Shields has yet to sign, a four or five year deal worth $70 or $80 million may be enough to land one of the top free agent arms. However, the Marlins have to be willing to invest.

Shields reportedly would like to pitch on the West Coast, and as a result, the Marlins may not make sense. The Padres may be the best available option for him, however a young core that improved by 15 games in 2014 may rightfully be attractive to Shields. The opportunity to make half of his starts at spacious Marlins Park could also lure Shields to Miami.

Although he could get costly, Shields has proven to be durable throughout the course of his major league career. He has pitched at least 200 innings in each of the last eight seasons, but his age has raised several questions. Frisaro notes a three year deal would be ideal for the Marlins, who also took a chance on Mark Buehrle at 33 before trading him to Toronto.

Miami added a top arm in Mat Latos, however Latos will be a free agent after the season. It is still unclear if Dan Haren will pitch for the Marlins in 2015, as he would still like to be traded to a Western team. Financially, the Marlins will owe Latos either $9.4 or $10.4 million next season, and the outcome of his arbitration case may determine if the Marlins strongly consider signing Shields.

The Yankees, Cardinals, Padres, and Dodgers are all still interested in Shields. But at the right price, he could easily be a Marlin.

Matt Stairs is a Hall-of-Famer

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... in Canada.

The Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame announced yesterday their three new inductees for 2015. One of them is former Friar Matt Stairs, who holds the distinction of playing for more MLB teams (13) than any other position player in MLB history. One season of his 19-year MLB career was spent in in San Diego.

Stairs was part of that weirdly successful, then heartbreaking, 2010 Padres team. He appeared in 78 games, 17 of which had him in the starting lineup. The Padres signed him to a minor league contract in January of that year and gave him an invitation to Spring Training, where he'd hoped to make his way onto the 25-man roster. He did just that and made his first pinch-hit appearance of the season on Opening Day (April 5th), but failed to get on base. He spent a few weeks on the DL in June, but was back at it in the beginning of July. Then on August 21st, he hit his 21st pinch-hit home run, driving in two for the Padres (who would end up losing the game). But it gave him the lead over Cliff Johnson for most pinch-hit homers in MLB history.

After the end of the 2010 season while we were all mourning what could've been, Matt Stairs and the Padres parted ways. He played for the Nationals in 2011, mostly as a pinch-hitter with a few starts at first base. He was DFA in July of that year, released in August 1st, and then announced his retirement on August 3rd. But he's stayed in baseball since then, working as a studio analyst for the Red Sox before taking his current broadcasting job with the Phillies.

2015 First Base Rankings Rumble: Freddie Freeman

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Ray Guilfoyle and Brian Creagh discuss the pros and cons to valuing Freddie Freeman in 2015.

Note: This article was originally published on January 19, 2015, but I am reposting it today since it is First Base Week here at Fake Teams.

Round 2 of our rankings rumble series features Atlanta Braves first basemen, Freddie Freeman. In our inaugural post, we wrote about Freeman's former teammate, Evan Gattis and released the article the day he was traded to Houston. I don't expect the same level of fireworks when publishing this article, but the Gattis trade does throw an interesting wrench into the analysis of Freeman as a weak supporting cast just became even weaker.

2014 Stats:

G162
HR18
R93
RBI78
SB3
AVG0.288

Player Ray's Ranking Brian's Ranking
Freddie Freeman137

Case For Freddie Freeman (Presented by Brian Creagh):

Even in his worst season of power production, Freddie Freeman finished 8th in fantasy value for all eligible 1B in 5x5 formats. Freeman has been a consistent contributor for the past 4 years, and while he doesn't have the upside of other 1B players you would consider taking in the same spot (Adrian GonzalezJoey VottoPrince Fielder, etc), he also carries far less risk. 2015 will be his age 25 season and Freeman's best seasons are likely ahead of him - a scary thought for a two-time all star and 5th place finalist for the NL MVP award.

I expect to see regression to the mean in Freeman's power numbers next season, ending with 20-25 HRs. 2014's total of 18 HRs was the lowest total of his career and paralleled a career-low 6.6% HR/FB% compared to the 9.2% career average he had heading into last season. Freeman hit a career high 43 doubles last season so the power is still there and I expect some of those doubles to climb the fence and become HRs in 2015.

The most controversial part of Freeman's ranking is his supporting cast. I'll readily admit I don't believe much in weighing team offense too heavily in fantasy rankings. There are plenty examples of great hitters having exceptional seasons despite poor team offensive numbers. And there's a chance they aren't as terrible as we expect. Remember all the doubters in Giancarlo Stanton last year because of the poor Miami offense? They ended up being almost league average and didn't prohibit Stanton from having a monster season. I don't mean to compare Stanton and Freeman from a production standpoint, but I don't think the firesale in Atlanta will have much of a negative impact on Freeman's final numbers. In my opinion, Freeman is one of the safer bets in the second tier of fantasy 1B options once you get past Miggy, Abreu, Rizzo and Encarnacion.

Case Against Freddie Freeman (Presented by Ray Guilfoyle):

I ranked Braves first baseman Freddie Freeman as my 12th ranked first baseman in our consensus first base rankings, mainly due to the fact that he will be hitting in the middle of a decimated Braves lineup. The Braves are in a full rebuild and will have trouble scoring runs in 2015.

The Braves scored 573 runs last year, ranking 29th in MLB, 38 runs scored ahead of the last place Padres. They scored 573 runs with recently traded Jason HeywardJustin Upton and Evan Gattis in their lineup, so it is very possible they fail to reach 500 runs scored in 2015.

Last season, Freeman hit .288-.386-.461 with 18 home runs, 93 runs scored and 78 RBI. Among fantasy first baseman, according to FanGraphs eligibility which does not include some catchers like Buster Posey and DHs like David Ortizand Chris Carter, Freeman ranked sixth in batting average, 15th in home runs, second in runs scored, and 14th in RBI. I see him still putting up a high batting average next season, but see his runs scored and RBI total dropping some. There are several other first base eligible hitters that I would consider ranking ahead of Freeman including Carlos Santanaand Chris Davis mainly due to their power potential.

With Heyward, Upton and Gattis gone from the Braves lineup in 2015, Freeman could be one of the league leaders in walks in 2015, so he has solid value in leagues where OBP is a category. In standard roto leagues, Freeman's value is reduced as he will struggle to score and drive in runs next season.

2015 in the NL West: Third base

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For which teams will the hot corner be hot in the NL West this year, and for whom will it be more lukewarm?

As before, I'm using the projected numbers from Fangraphs at each position to determine the rankings.

1. Rockies: 3.8 WAR (#11 overall)

Everyday starter: Nolan Arenado (3.8)
Backup: Daniel Descalso (0.0)

To answer the intro question, nobody is exactly on fire at the hot corner, with no 3B found in the projected top ten. [The Blue Jays' Josh Donaldson is at the top, if you were wondering] Arenado is expected to be the best, and it's safe to say this side of the Colorado infield is an awful lot better than the other. He will still only be 23 on Opening Day, but hit 18 home-runs in only 111 and also won the Gold Glove at the position, so seems to offer an exciting blend of youth, hitting ability and defense. However, there's evidence one of those is a Coors Field mirage, with Arenado's career road OPS a woeful .662, and only one in four of his homers have been away from Denver.

2. Dodgers: 2.9 WAR (#16)

Everyday starter: Juan Uribe (2.3)
Backup: Justin Turner (0.6)

Uribe struggled with injuries over his first two years with Los Angeles, managing only 143 games and 0.5 WAR combined, but has been much better since, worth 8.8 WAR in 2013-14. Repeating that again will make him one of the upper-tier players at the position, but Uribe will turn 36 next month - likely giving the Dodgers the oldest left-hand side of the infield in the majors, or close to, between him and Jimmy Rollins. You can't go on forever, the projections seem to think, and they in particular expect Uribe's offense to drop off sharply, his average plummeting from .311 to .253. If so, this could be the first spot at which the Dodgers are not above average.

3. Diamondbacks: 1.5 WAR (#24)

Everyday starter: Jake Lamb (1.4)
Backup: Aaron Hill (0.3)

Obvious, there is a very large caveat here: the official statements from the team have Yasmany Tomas playing third for the Diamondbacks this season. There's no projection given for him at all, at any position, so that needs to be taken into account overall: I think it's a safe bet he'll help the team somehow... There may not be too much difference between Tomas and Lamb's projections, not least because we have no idea how the former will be on defense; his lack of experience there may negate some, all or even more of his offensive upside. With Lamb, we have a very small sample size at the major-league level - he'll still be a rookie in 2015 - so it's hard to say what we might get.

4. Padres 1.1 WAR (#27)

Everyday starter: Will Middlebrooks (0.5)
Backup: Yangervis Solarte (0.6)

Mr. Solarte, the man whose mother was apparently frightened by a kaiju, may have the best first name in the majors. The Padres might also be better off, based on this projection, going with him full-time, rather than what appears to be a platoon with Middlebrooks, now that Chase Headley is wearing pinstripes. It's an interesting contrast: Middlebrooks is a former MLB top-60 prospect who has seen his numbers implode since his 2012 debut, and turned into a "buy low" candidate from Boston while Solanges is a less-heralded international signing, who walked almost as much as he K'd in his rookie campaign. Victory in this battle may go to whoever sucks less.

5. Giants 1.1 WAR (#28)

Everyday starter: Casey McGehee (1.0)
Backup: Joaquin Arias (0.1)

San Francisco traded with Miami for McGehee, to fill the significant gravity well in the space-time continuum spot left by the departure of Pablo Sandoval for Fenway. McGehee, in turn, had become expendable with the Marlins' picking up former Diamondbacks Martin Prado off the Yankees. Small world, isn't it? However, despite picking up Comeback Player of the Year [he spent 2013 in Japan], Casey seems very unlikely to fill the big shoes (and even larger pants) of the Obese Raccoon. Since 2011, over 429 major-league games, he has an OPS+ of 83,. and at age 32, his best years are likely behind him.

Conclusions

I'm tempted to bail on awarding the Diamondbacks any kind of star rating, and just go with a big, black question-mark. We're apparently going into the season with a starting third-baseman in Tomas who has not only never faced a major-league pitch, he has no track record in the minors by which he can be judged, and on top of that, is moving to an unfamiliar position. This could hardly be more difficult to predict, and you can imagine a scenario where the results could be worth one star, five stars, or anywhere in between. It's certainly a position of flux, with the majority of the division sporting a different player on Opening Day this year, from the one there last season.

The story so far

Below, you'll find a chart summarizing the findings, which we'll update as we continue this series. For each position, we have awarded the teams a rating of between one and five stars, depending on how strong they are projected to be at the position. Generally, a five-star rating requires them to be among the best in the majors; a four-star one is clearly one of strength; three stars would be about average; two stars is a position of concern; and one star is a gurgling vortex of suck.

ARIZONACOLORADOLOS ANGELES
SAN DIEGO
SAN FRANCISCO
First baseStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar icon
Second baseStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar icon
ShortstopStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar icon
Third baseStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar iconStar icon
Left field
Center field
Right field
Catcher
Starter #1
Starter #2
Starter #3
Starter #4
Starter #5
Closer
Bullpen

Looking to the past to predict Kyle Kendrick's future with the Rockies

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The newest addition to the Rockies rotation could work out very well...or very poorly.

Veteran right-hander Kyle Kendrick became the latest in a long line of experienced pitchers to come via trade or free agency and attempt to ply their trade at Coors Field when he signed a one-year, $5.5 million deal with the Rockies earlier this week.

Some of those that came to Colorado to pitch succeeded and others failed, but here is a look at six guys Kendrick could become when he dons the purple pinstripes in 2015:

The Jason Marquis

Marquis came to the Rockies in 2009 via a trade with the Cubs prior to the 2009 season. Marquis, who like Kendrick was a 30-year-old righty in 2009 who had been up and down over his career, excelled in Colorado. He made 33 starts in his lone season as a Rockie, pitching 216 innings.

That alone would be plenty to get from Kendrick, but Marquis also pitched well for the Rockies, winning 15 games and going to the All-Star Game. He had a 4.04 ERA and 1.38 WHIP with 80 walks and 115 strikeouts, good for an ERA- of 87 and 3.5 rWAR as the Rockies made the playoffs.

The Rodrigo Lopez

If I was a betting man, this is what I'd put my money on Kendrick being. Lopez arrived from Baltimore in 2007, like Marquis, via trade. Lopez made just 14 starts in his only Rockies season, pitching 79 1/3 innings with a 4.42 ERA before going down with injury in late July and paving the way for young guys such as Ubaldo Jimenez and Franklin Morales to make their Rockies debuts.

That is where I see a similarity with Kendrick; I could see him holding down the fort for the first half of the season or so before making way via injury or trade for a Jon Gray or Eddie Butler. This section could also have just as easily been called "The Jason Hirsh."

The Bill Swift

The pioneer of veteran arms taking on Coors Field, Swift signed a three-year free agent contract with the Rockies prior to the 1995 season. Fresh off three seasons with the Giants that saw him win a total of 39 games and post a 2.70 ERA in 506 2/3 innings, Swift pitched just 189 1/3 innings over 35 starts in his three seasons with the Rockies.

Despite the struggles with injuries, Swift was actually a decent pitcher, posting a 5.47 ERA in pre-humidor Coors Field, good for an ERA- of 106 and 3.6 rWAR over his three seasons with the Rockies. His best season with Colorado was his first in 1995, when he had a 4.94 ERA in 19 starts.

The Josh Fogg

Fogg had two stints with the Rockies, but for the sake of comparing him we'll focus on the 2006-2007 stretch that saw him make 60 starts for the team rather than his return in 2009 when he was almost exclusively a reliever. Fogg was third on the Rockies in innings pitched over those two seasons with 337 2/3, posting a 21-18 record and 5.22 ERA with a similar K% and BB% to what Kendrick has posted in his career with the Phillies.

Fogg is best known to Rockies fans for starting Game 163 against the Padres in 2007, but should be lauded for his ability to eat innings as well. He was one of just three pitchers, along with Aaron Cook and Jeff Francis, to throw more than 220 innings for the Rockies between 2006 and 2007, doing so with a respectable ERA- of 108 and accumulating 1.1 rWAR.

The Mike Hampton

Sure, Hampton signed for a lot more years and money than Kendrick, but they do share a certain home run-prone tendency that could doom Kendrick in the thin air as it did Hampton. Hampton gave up 55 home runs in 381 2/3 innings in his two seasons as a Rockie, exactly the rate at which Steamer projects Kendrick to cough up gopher balls in 2015.

Hampton started well with the Rockies, earning a trip to the All-Star Game in 2001, but fell apart in the second half of the season and was even worse in 2002. He eventually wound up with a 5.75 ERA and 114 ERA- in his two seasons with Colorado, good for -1.7 rWAR.

The Jeremy Guthrie

This is obviously a worst-case scenario, but it merits a mention given the recency. Guthrie came to the Rockies in a trade with Baltimore in 2012 and it turns out that he and Coors Field were like oil and water, they just didn't mix. He posted a 9.50 ERA in 41 2/3 innings at Coors Field as a Rockies pitcher, giving up a whopping 14 home runs, more than one every three innings.

That abysmal home performance led to Guthrie posting a 6.35 ERA and 137 ERA- in his half season in Colorado before being shipped to Kansas City for Jonathan Sanchez. I can't see Kendrick ending up like Guthrie, but if he does, the alternatives to replace him midseason sure do look to be a lot better in 2015 than they were in 2012.

Poll
Which of these will most accurately describe Kyle Kendrick's 2015 season?

  197 votes |Results


Bob Nightengale talks about the Padres' chances

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My notes from Bob Nightengale's interview today on the status of the Padres

Bob Nightengale interviewed by the Loose Cannons (MP3)

  • Preller wants to win right now.  The moves he's made have certainly made the team a contender for this year and he's kept the payroll the same to boot.
  • James Shields wants to come to San Diego.  Nightengale thinks he'd be an outstanding pick up.  Getting him signed to a 3 year deal with a 4th as an option would be a steal.  He'll throw 200 innings a year.  If he comes to San Diego it'll make the Padres and Dodgers the favorites in the NL West.
  • If the Padres are contenders this year it'll be a whole lot easier to recruit players.  Players want to play for a winner.
  • Wil Myers has a chance to be very good but maybe not to the level that some people think.  He's a good player, maybe not a superstar.  Justin Upton is one of the top 10 players in the NL.  He'll hit 30 HRs and 90 RBI. 
  • Cole Hamels would love to pitch for a contender.  He would love to come back home.  It would cost the Padres their top 3 prospects.  "Sometimes these prospects are just prospects."  It may hurt a bit but Hamels is one of the top starters in baseball.
  • Nightengale would rather give up prospects than deal Andrew Cashner for Hamels.  "I think he's one of those special pitchers."  Cashner has so much promise he could win games in the playoffs or the World Series.  Combine him with a Hamels or Shields then they can stack up with the Dodgers' rotation.
  • The Dodgers don't look as strong on paper.  They'll need clubhouse chemistry.  If they need pieces though they can get them, because they have money from the new TV deal.  Nightengale thinks Matt Kemp is going to torment the Dodgers, make them pay for trading for him.
  • Nightengale thinks the Giants will fall off again this year.  They'll have a big drop off.
  • The Padres have a chance to contend as they stand.

Padres Caravan Tours San Diego This Weekend

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Before they head out to Peoria for Spring Training, the Padres are making a weekend tour of San Diego to promote their various community service activities. The Padres Caravan kicks off Friday morning at Mission Beach Park, where the team will introduce their new Toytoa-sponsored Padres Volunteer Team. That afternoon, fans will be able to grab a beer with Clint Barmes and Nick Vincent at Ballast Point's Little Italy location.

Saturday's big public event is a Pep Rally at Westfield UTC headlined by Matt Kemp and a bunch of other Padres who aren't Matt Kemp. After that, Barmes and Vincent will be joined by Dale Thayer for another round of beers at BJ's Restaurant in Hazard Center for a social hosted by the San Diego Madres.

Sunday starts with the distribution of Little League jerseys. After that the team does some border-hopping, with a large crew hanging out at the Otay Ranch Town Center while Joaquin Benoit greets fans at La Tienda de los Padres in Tijuana.

If you can't make it out to Arizona for spring training, this will be your last chance to see the Padres until FanFest on April 4th, so check out the whole caravan schedule here and join the caravan.

Should the Padres sign James Shields, trade for Cole Hamels, or stand pat?

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The Padres don't have to do anything, but they have a couple of San Diego natives who could make the roster substantially stronger.

Back in December of ... what was it? ... '14. Yes, December of '14, the San Diego Padres made approximately 38 different moves in the span of three hours. They had a new starting lineup, more or less, cobbled together from the sluggers their rivals didn't want. They had a new catcher and a new young outfielder, a third base prospect, starting pitching depth, and relief depth. They did it while keeping almost all of their top prospects. It was a dainty plié through an offseason minefield, and they came out the other side with something resembling a major league lineup. It was dizzying, dazzling.

Remember that?

That was awesome.

So. Now what?

It's been more than a month, and the Padres haven't done much. This might be the team. Is this the team? If it is, the computers have some bones to pick.

FanGraphs: 77-85
Baseball Prospectus: 83-79

Putting a symphony behind Robin Thicke would sound like Robin Thicke with a symphony behind it. The 2014 Padres hit .226/.292/.342 as a team -- basically a nine-lion Voltron that ended up swinging the bat like Carlos Zambrano. It was the Robin Thicke of offense. The Padres needed more than a symphony to paper over their crimes. Are Wil Myers, Justin Upton, Matt Kemp, Will Middlebrooks, and Derek Norris enough? Possibly. But there are still some options worth exploring. Namely, pitching.

The Padres can trade prospects, spend money, or stand pat. It sounds like an awful game show. Hey, do you know what I like? Awful game shows. So let's dive in.

Trade prospects

This is code for Cole Hamels. Who is from San Diego. Have you come across this piece of trivia? Oh, 30 times since Wednesday ... well, you shouldn't read that many baseball articles. They'll rot your brain.

The idea is simple: The Padres have prospects, the Phillies need prospects. The Phillies have an established ace; the Padres need an established ace. Swipe right, both of you! Swipe right!

The problem is that the Phillies are me with a Beckett's in 1989. The guide says these Mike Moore rookies are hot, hot, hot. I will not trade my Mike Moore rookie for anything less than 38 different rookies, preferably rated and/or with a golden cup on them. That's not a totally fair comparison, considering that Cole Hamels is awesome and has been for years, but all of the teams who would really, really, really like Cole Hamels really, really, really can't abide by the price the Phillies have put on his services.

The Phillies should ask for a lot. Hamels is exceptional, and he's a part of franchise lore like few others in a history that's more than a century old. That means something, you weirdos. Trading him for anything less than a blue-chip return is a good way for fans to look back in a decade or five and say, "Rick Wise? What in the ..." If you think it's inappropriate to compare Hamels to Steve Carlton, it really isn't. Not until we know what Hamels can't do.

The price for Hamels is high. Good. The question, then, is if the Padres want to cave. They have prospects, alright. They have a Gold Glove catcher who might not hit, a Mike Matheny-type who would have mortified statheads at the turn of the millennium, yet excites them now. They have projectable arms. They have outfielders with strikeout problems (shhhh) who are probably cool.

They can make a deal. There isn't a Kris Bryant or Byron Buxton in the bunch. There isn't a prospect that should make them wince and recoil. After the feverish offseason, though, the Padres might not be keen on ditching an entire farm system, Tigers-style.

Spend money

This is code for James Shields. Who lives in San Diego. Have you come across this piece of trivia? Oh, 30 times since ... wait a sec. I've heard this before.

So these are prodigal sons, plural. Both of whom would make the team substantially better. One would cost nothing but money and the #13 overall pick in the 2015 draft. One would cost several prospects, not just one, but he's the better pitcher. Both came into the league in 2006, so this is an easy comparison:


Cole HamelsJames Shields
IP18011910
ERA3.273.72
ERA+125111
FIP3.483.77
K/98.57.7
BB/92.32.1
WAR40.426.7

The most important stat might not be up there: Hamels is two years younger than Shields. The odds of Hamels pitching up to his contract in 2018 is much greater than of Shields doing the same. Maybe there's some sort of delivery quirk or biomechanical anomaly that would make the Padres shy away from Hamels, but I doubt it. Both pitchers are among the most consistent in the game, and both pitchers have a long record of staying healthy. One's clearly better, though.

Another one would cost nothing but money. Just walk into the James Shields dealership, laugh at the salesperson's stupid jokes, slam a few of Shields' doors, get some coffee in styrofoam cups, and drive him off the lot. You know the Padres would just screw up the draft pick anyway. There's a new front office, sure, but the curse of the Padres first-rounder is something that's passed down for generations, like an heirloom or genetic defect. Shields would cost nothing but money, and he would save the prospects for a possible deadline spree if the Padres really are jockeying with the Dodgers and/or Giants for first place.

Shields isn't as good as Hamels, no, but few pitchers are. You can eliminate four words from that sentence and make it much more enticing: Few pitchers are as good as Shields. It's not like the Padres are deciding between Hamels and Dillon Gee. There isn't really a way to go wrong, here, at least not without the benefit of hindsight. Though there's one more option ...

Stand pat

Keep the money. Keep the prospects. The projected rotation, as is:

  • Andrew Cashner
  • Tyson Ross
  • Ian Kennedy
  • Robbie Erlin
  • Brandon Morrow

There's Odrisamer Despaigne in reserve, and the only good thing about having six dozen prospects and young pitchers needing Tommy John surgery is getting them all back.

It's not a bad group, not in the slightest. Cashner is the de facto ace if he can stay healthy, but Ross looks good at the top of a rotation, too. Kennedy is now three years away from his last excellent season, but he continues to miss bats for 200 innings at a time. Erlin and Morrow have the right mix of risk vs. reward at the back end, and there's depth behind them that includes Casey Kelly. They don't need Shields to call themselves contenders. They're not a hot dog without a bun, looking to become a sandwich. They're a hot dog with a bun, looking for mustard to make the sandwich even better.

They don't need it. The difference between Shields and Morrow would be, what, three or four wins? And that's in the worst-case scenario for Morrow. If he can actually pitch a little (or if Corey Luebke comes back, or Josh Johnson, or ...), the difference might be two wins. Maybe less. That's not a lot of difference for scores of millions of dollars and a long-term commitment.

With the NL Wild Card, though, two wins is a huge deal when there are five or six other teams in the mix. Every win past 81 helps the team almost exponentially. Standing pat is a huge risk.

If I'm running the Padres, I'm already fired because I'm bad at predicting baseball, but before security escorts me out, I make the trade for Hamels. Choosing Shields makes a lot of sense, and on another day, perhaps that's the one that piques my curiosity. But there's no way to get as good, as quickly. The Padres have built a mighty fascinating team. They're just a swipe away from compelling, though, and that should be the goal.

cole

Swipe right, Padres! Swipe right!

There are reasons to have serious concerns about Anthony Rizzo’s production dropping in 2015

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Anthony Rizzo's quality of contact closely resembled an average hitter in 2014

Anthony Rizzo tore up the minor leagues in 2011 and 2012 as a member of both the Padres and Cubs farm systems and came to Chicago with a lot of hype. After a mediocre first 1,000 PA with the Cubs in which Rizzo generated a 108 wRC+, Rizzo put together a fantastic 2014 season. He hit .286/.386/.527 with 32 HR and a 153 wRC+. His 153 wRC+ was 8th best in baseball, his 32 HR was 9th best, and his 5.6 fWAR was 14th best. His results were elite.

However, results tell us what happened, but they don’t necessarily tell us what will happen in the future. In order to try to predict the future as best we can, we should look at the process behind the results. Good process will lead to good results in the future more often than shaky process will.

Sabermetric legend Paul DePodesta, currently working with the New York Mets, wrote this in 2008 as an executive for the Padres concerning process vs. results:

I'd like to write about the distinction between process and outcome, because this distinction permeates everything we do in baseball ops, never more so than in the draft.

Many years ago I was playing blackjack in Las Vegas on a Saturday night in a packed casino. I was sitting at third base, and the player who was at first base was playing horribly. He was definitely taking advantage of the free drinks, and it seemed as though every twenty minutes he was dipping into his pocket for more cash.

On one particular hand the player was dealt 17 with his first two cards. The dealer was set to deal the next set of cards and passed right over the player until he stopped her, saying: "Dealer, I want a hit!" She paused, almost feeling sorry for him, and said, "Sir, are you sure?" He said yes, and the dealer dealt the card. Sure enough, it was a four.

The place went crazy, high fives all around, everybody hootin' and hollerin', and you know what the dealer said? The dealer looked at the player, and with total sincerity, said: "Nice hit."

I thought, "Nice hit? Maybe it was a nice hit for the casino, but it was a terrible hit for the player! The decision isn't justified just because it worked."

Well, I spent the rest of that weekend wandering around the casino, largely because I had lost all of my money playing blackjack, thinking about all of these different games and how they work. The fact of the matter is that all casino games have a winning process - the odds are stacked in the favor of the house. That doesn't mean they win every single hand or every roll of the dice, but they do win more often than not. Don't misunderstand me - the casino is absolutely concerned about outcomes. However, their approach to securing a good outcome is a laser like focus on process...right down to the ruthless pit boss.

We can view baseball through the same lens. Baseball is certainly an outcome-driven business, as we get charged with a W or an L 162 times a year (or 163 times every once in a while). Furthermore, we know we cannot possibly win every single time. In fact, winning just 60% of the time is a great season, a percentage that far exceeds house odds in most games. Like a casino, it appears as though baseball is all about outcomes, but just think about all of the processes that are in play during the course of just one game or even just one at-bat.

In having this discussion years ago with Michael Mauboussin, who wrote "More Than You Know" (a great book - a link to Michael's strategy papers appears on my blogroll), he showed me a very simple matrix by Russo and Schoemaker in "Winning Decisions" that explains this concept:

We all want to be in the upper left box - deserved success resulting from a good process. This is generally where the casino lives. I'd like to think that this is where the Oakland A's and San Diego Padres have been during the regular seasons. The box in the upper right, however, is the tough reality we all face in industries that are dominated by uncertainty. A good process can lead to a bad outcome in the real world. In fact, it happens all the time. This is what happened to the casino when a player hit on 17 and won. I'd like to think this is what happened to the A's and Padres during the post-seasons. :-)

As tough as a good process/bad outcome combination is, nothing compares to the bottom left: bad process/good outcome. This is the wolf in sheep's clothing that allows for one-time success but almost always cripples any chance of sustained success - the player hitting on 17 and getting a four. Here's the rub: it's incredibly difficult to look in the mirror after a victory, any victory, and admit that you were lucky. If you fail to make that admission, however, the bad process will continue and the good outcome that occurred once will elude you in the future. Quite frankly, this is one of the things that makes Billy Beane as good as he is. He is quick to notice good luck embedded in a good outcome, and he refuses to pat himself on the back for it.

I bolded the final paragraph because of how important I think it is. The wolf in sheep’s clothing for the fantasy baseball player is the player who had fantastic results in the season directly prior but had a shaky process fueling those results. If you spend on this player based on his performance, there’s a good chance you’ll get burned and lose money.

I wrote about some of the processes that DePodesta and his boss Sandy Alderson use in their player evaluation here. The Cliff Notes of that is DePodesta and Alderson like to measure the type of contact a hitter generates. They use measures like exit velocity to see how fast the ball is coming off the bat, because hard hit balls are more likely to turn into hits and do damage than soft or medium hit balls. The players who generate the highest % of quality contact are the players they target. They’re less concerned with the results and more concerned with the process.

If this is what the really smart, highly paid professionals are doing for their player evaluation, the baseball public needs to try to mimic this as best we can. This is especially true for fantasy baseball players, who can win a lot of money playing daily leagues. Any little advantage a fantasy player can gain over the rest of the field can have a huge payoff.

Like DePodesta said above, you can’t guarantee a win in every baseball game, just like you can’t win all the time in daily fantasy leagues. But if you’re winning at a 60% clip, you’re doing great, and having a strong process can help tip the scale in our favor.

Contact types: Hard contact rules

These are the facts: the harder a ball is hit, the more likely it results in a hit. The batting average on hard hit balls is over .700. Medium hit balls result in a batting average of about .400, and soft hit balls result in a batting average of about .150.

The harder a ball is hit, the more likely it goes for extra bases, too. Almost 100% of home runs are hard hit. Over 80% of triples are hard hit, and over 70% of doubles are hard hit. Only 30% of singles are hard hit.

Hitters want to make a lot of hard contact. It’s good process. A good result backed by a good process (lots of hard contact) legitimizes the results. A good result backed by shaky process (not a lot of hard contact) makes for a murky future.

Rizzo’s hard hit% was amazingly below league average in 2014

It’s shocking that a first baseman who hit 32 HR with a 153 wRC+ would have a lower hard hit% than the average MLB hitter, but that’s what happened. Rizzo didn’t square the ball up as often as the results would lead you to believe. Rizzo’s hard hit% was 135th in baseball at 16.6%, below the league average of 17.2%.

For a small, loose comparison, here’s a list of the first 25 players with a hard hit% below league average (17.2%) in 2014 and their wRC+ (min. 200 AB):

Table 1

Player

Hard hit%

wRC+

Wellington Castillo

17.1%

91

Chris Coghlan

17.1%

123

Coco Crisp

17.1%

103

Chris Heisey

17.1%

77

Mike Moustakas

17.1%

76

Rickie Weeks

17.1%

127

Matt Carpenter

17.0%

117

Russell Martin

17.0%

140

Danny Santana

17.0%

133

Travis d’Arnaud

16.9%

103

Brian Dozier

16.9%

118

George Springer

16.9%

127

Nick Swisher

16.9%

75

Kolten Wong

16.9%

90

Brandon Crawford

16.8%

102

Bryce Harper

16.8%

115

Adam Jones

16.8%

117

Ryan Ludwick

16.8%

91

Curtis Granderson

16.7%

108

Brayan Pena

16.7%

77

Michael Choice

16.6%

55

David Freese

16.6%

106

Jhonny Peralta

16.6%

120

Jose Reyes

16.6%

102

Anthony Rizzo

16.6%

153

The average wRC+ from that table is roughly 106. I also extended the sample size to the first 50 players below average hard hit% instead of the first 25, and the wRC+ was roughly 106 again.

Compare this to Table 2, a table of the top 25 players in hard hit% and their wRC+s:

Table 2

Player

Hard hit rate

wRC+

Troy Tulowitzki

24.1%

171

Paul Goldschmidt

23.7%

155

David Ortiz

23.7%

135

Miguel Cabrera

23.3%

147

Devin Mesoraco

23.3%

147

Victor Martinez

23.1%

166

Andrew McCutchen

22.9%

168

Adrian Beltre

22.9%

141

Edwin Encarnacion

22.4%

150

Corey Dickerson

21.8%

140

Lucas Duda

21.6%

136

Josh Donaldson

21.4%

129

Albert Pujols

21.3%

124

Michael Brantley

21.3%

155

Josh Harrison

21.2%

137

Evan Gattis

21.0%

125

Freddie Freeman

21.0%

140

Anthony Rendon

21.0%

130

Buster Posey

20.9%

144

Carlos Santana

20.6%

131

Jose Bautista

20.5%

159

Giancarlo Stanton

20.5%

159

Justin Upton

20.4%

133

Kyle Seager

20.4%

126

Josh Reddick

20.2%

117

The average wRC+ in table 2 is 143. It’s no surprise that players who hit the ball hard more often had better results on average than players who hit the ball hard less often.

Rizzo’s medium hit% was also below league average in 2014

Once I saw that Rizzo’s hard hit% was so low, I figured his medium hit% had to be very high to compensate, because medium hit balls are good, too. Hitters bat .400 on average when they generate medium contact. But that isn’t what happened, either. Rizzo’s medium hit% was also shockingly below MLB average:

2014

Hard hit%

Medium hit%

Soft hit%

MLB avg.

17.2%

21.7%

41.9%

Rizzo

16.6%

20.2%

41.6%

Based on the quality of contact Rizzo generated in 2014, he looks like a league average hitter. And to further support that, the average wRC+ from the group of the first 25 and first 50 players directly below average in hard hit% is roughly 106, which is around league average.

Of course, a hard hit home run is worth more than a hard hit double. So if a higher % of Rizzo’s hard hit balls are going for home runs, that will explain some of the difference between him and the average MLB hitter. But a 153 wRC+ is extreme.

Compare Rizzo’s quality of contact to some other notable 1B:

2014

Hard hit%

Medium hit%

Soft hit%

Anthony Rizzo

16.6%

20.2%

41.6%

Freddie Freeman

21.3%

25.2%

29.9%

Miguel Cabrera

23.7%

27.3%

32.4%

Edwin Encarnacion

22.6%

21.4%

38.9%

Paul Goldschmidt

24.6%

18.0%

31.3%

I looked up other first baseman with comparable strikeout, walk and batted ball rates to Rizzo in 2014 and listed their type of contact rates along with their wRC+. Here’s the closest comparison I could find:

Player

BB%

K%

Hard hit%

Med. hit%

Soft hit%

FB%

GB%

LD%

IFFB%

wRC+

A

11.9%

18.8%

16.6%

20.2%

41.6%

41.8%

36.1%

22.1%

5.9%

153

B

14.0%

18.4%

20.9%

24.3%

37.4%

41.2%

36.6%

22.1%

4.9%

127

Player A is of course Anthony Rizzo, and Player B is Adam LaRoche.

LaRoche and Rizzo have nearly identical batted ball numbers, while LaRoche has a better walk rate, a slightly better strikeout rate, and significantly better quality of contact rates. Yet LaRoche’s wRC+ is significantly lower than Rizzo’s. LaRoche’s process is significantly better, yet Rizzo’s results are significantly better.

The next closest comparison based on walk rate and strikeout rate was Ike Davis.

Player

BB%

K%

Hard hit%

Med. hit%

Soft hit%

FB%

GB%

LD%

IFFB%

wRC+

Anthony Rizzo

11.9%

18.8%

16.6%

20.2%

41.6%

41.8%

36.1%

22.1%

5.9%

153

Ike Davis

14.8%

18.3%

15.8%

23.1%

40.6%

37.4%

39.5%

23.1%

13.1%

108

The differences between Davis’ profile and Rizzo’s profile are moderate, yet the difference between their wRC+s is extreme. It doesn’t add up.

I have no explanation for why Rizzo’s production was so offline from his quality of contact except for baseball randomness. I have serious questions about what type of hitter Rizzo truly is at this stage of his career.

Let me clarify that I am by no means suggesting Rizzo is not talented. And the fact that he didn’t hit the ball hard that often in 2014 doesn’t mean he won’t cream the ball in the future years as he gets older and more experienced. He has a strong prospect pedigree to lean on (MLB.com ranked him the #37 best prospect prior to 2012) and the raw abilities to succeed in MLB. But just by looking at the process behind the 2014 results, it doesn’t seem likely that his wRC+ of 153 reflected his true skill because his quality of contact rates closely resembled a league average hitter.

The wolf in sheep’s clothing in 2015 is paying for Anthony Rizzo like he’s a 153 wRC+ type hitter. Unless Rizzo’s quality of contact significantly improves in 2015, I’m predicting a significant decline in production.

Shields deal not imminent, Padres haven't talked to his agent ALL DAY!

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I thought for sure we were going to hear news today that the Padres had signed James Shields.  I asked the Gaslamp Ball staff to prepare for a blogasm and it didn't happen.  We'd heard on Tuesday that Shields would make a decision by the end of the week but time is running out for that.  Still, every Twitter rumor and news article has the Padres as the favorites and frankly no other team seems remotely close.

Then we hear from Dennis Lin of the UT tonight that the Padres haven't even talked to Shields' agent today because they were so busy doing a beach clean-up as part of their new volunteer program.  Ok, that last part probably has nothing to do with it, but still...

Sources: Nothing imminent on Padres and free agent James Shields | UTSanDiego.com

As rumors continue to engulf the Padres and free-agent right-hander James Shields, the two sides, as of late Friday, did not seem close to reaching an agreement. The Padres had not spoken with Shields' agent, Page Odle, in more than 24 hours, sources told the U-T.

I'm just hoping they were texting or snap chatting, if they weren't talking on the phone.

There was a rumor earlier in the day from some random dude on Twitter that said the deal was done, but that's being denied by the Padres.

One rumor said Padres employees had been notified to prepare for a Shields announcement, but a club source strongly denied that claim. Still, with catchers and pitchers reporting in less than two weeks, things could change quickly.

Random dude later backed away slowly from his rumor.

Yesterday Padres Chairman Ron Fowler said that the Padres payroll could be north of $100 million at the start of the season.  As it stands now it it's around $90.1 million.

Padres' Opening Day payroll to be higher in 2015 | UTSanDiego.com

In an email to the U-T, Padres executive chairman Ron Fowler confirmed a general payroll range for 2015: It will open above last season's figure and could top out at a little more than $100 million. Fowler added an important disclaimer: "However, with A.J. in the GM seat, things could change quickly. He continues to look at options to strengthen the team."

As Lin notes in the article a deal for Shields could be structured in a way that it'd hit the total that Fowler hinted at.

For now, let's everyone remain on high alert until Sunday and then if we hear nothing slowly we'll slip into a quiet despair.

Poll
Will Padres sign Shields before the cock crows on Sunday morning?

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