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Everything posted by Willihammer
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Podcasting: Talking Tanaka, Twins & Rockcats
Willihammer commented on Twins Fan From Afar's blog entry in Blog Twins Fan From Afar
"Sir would you turn off your radio please" -
ARod, Selig, Bosch, Yankees, CBS: Nuke ‘em All
Willihammer commented on Jim Crikket's blog entry in Knuckleballs - JC
The most disappointing thing from my point of view is that the Commissioner's office seems to have lost sight of the end game - to eliminate PED use in baseball. They never even got a positive test from Rodriguez - the drugs are too sophisticated. Trying to clean up baseball player by player through testing seems pretty foolish at this point. But they did have a supplier in their grasp (Bosch). They should have brought down the hammer and made an example of him, to others in the sports medicine field. All this with Rodriguez is just a sideshow and won't solve anything in the long-term. -
He broke his ankle in 2011, had surgery later in the year and the recovery spilled into the 2012 season. He wasn't 100% for much of 2012. Last year, he returned to 100% and picked up where he left off in 2011. So from where I'm standing, all his troubles resulted from the ankle injury and that seems to be fixed now. Obviously when healthy, Drew's a very solid SS.
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Can Terry Ryan Truly Change His Stripes?
Willihammer commented on Jim Crikket's blog entry in Knuckleballs - JC
Doogie tweeting today that the draft pick is a sticking point. -
Interesting read. I think the low pitch counts result from PTC as much as any health preservation measure. If you PTC, you get through PAs quicker. In games where that goes poorly, you're pulled early (probably with a low pitch count). In games where that goes well, you've mowed down the lineup three times using 75 pitches. Its in that fourth trip through the order when batters will start to figure out pitchers though, especially contact pitchers, and it becomes worthwhile for the manager to put in a reliever.
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I like Phil Hughes too. He's like a slightly worse version of Matt Garza.
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Are the Twins Missing Out on Starting Pitchers?
Willihammer commented on jay's blog entry in Blog jay
How does that chart look for guys tied to a draft pick? Those are guys who sign late and the Twins aren't interested in them, reportedly. -
http://i.imgur.com/PtibbKp.jpg .654 OPS and -0.5 career WAR player, Denny Hocking.
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Volquez is intriguing, he has a huge xFIP-ERA gap, good regression candidate but man is he wild sometimes. Personally I would prefer Roberto Hernandez. He's just outside all of your criteria but has really cut down on walks recently and has a more enormous GB rate. And he can dial it up to 94-95 when he has to. I've always liked his stuff.
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Haha, oh man, I know it but I don't know if I should say. Its equal parts hilarious and depressing. He was basically the Nick Punto before Nick Punto was the Nick Punto.
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Knoblauch?
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White Sox Sign Jose Abreu: Donkey Kong Part II
Willihammer commented on twinsfan34's blog entry in Blog twinsfan34
I wouldn't get hung up on his walk rate at the WBC or anywhere really. His game is power and to that end his ISO has floated around .400 which is insane. If Cuba's league is comparable to High A, a .400 ISO would be .080 points better than Giancarlo Stanton or Miguel Sano - and Sano's ~.320 ISO is the best for a season in High A since fangraphs started tracking minor leaguers in 2006. Re: bat speed -its one part of the equation but not the be all end all. Just look at the various bat speeds from 2013: ESPN Home Run Tracker :: 92013 Top Home Runs, Speed Off Bat - Full List. There are good hitters all over that spectrum. Force is a product of velocity and mass. Maybe Abreu is swinging a 40 ounce bat in Cuba? -
White Sox Sign Jose Abreu: Donkey Kong Part II
Willihammer commented on twinsfan34's blog entry in Blog twinsfan34
In a bigger sample of Serie Nacional games, Abreu compares favorably to some of the best players of this decade. For example, Puig posted a .330/.431/.581 line, to Cespedes' .333/.424/.667, to Abreu's .453/.597/.986 in 2009-2010 (the last year they all played together). That's better than a .400 lead in OPS over Cespedes, for anyone counting at home. Note: Cespedes and Abreu held or shared the lead in nearly every major hitting category that year. And Abreu hasn't let off the gas since. This guy just mashes. -
FIP. Fielding Independent. Really?
Willihammer commented on jorgenswest's blog entry in Blog jorgenswest
Last night was a case in point. Kershaw lost some calls on good pitches. Whereas Wacha, with one or two exceptions, didn't. Wacha also appears to have gotten a couple extra out of zone strike calls. http://www.brooksbaseball.net/pfxVB/cache/location.php-pitchSel=477132&game=gid_2013_10_18_lanmlb_slnmlb_1&batterX=&innings=yyyyyyyyy&sp_type=1&s_type=&league=mlb.gif http://www.brooksbaseball.net/pfxVB/cache/location.php-pitchSel=608379&game=gid_2013_10_18_lanmlb_slnmlb_1&batterX=&innings=yyyyyyyyy&sp_type=1&s_type=&league=mlb.gif Could have been home field advantage, hitter bias, etc. If you looked closely though, you could see Ellis did the exact same head ducking as Doumit. Wouldn't surprise me to see Butters taking over next year. -
A Look At The Numbers: Yu Darvish vs. Masahiro Tanaka
Willihammer commented on twinsfan34's blog entry in Blog twinsfan34
I think you are splitting hairs a little to say Tanaka's k-rate has declined. [TABLE=width: 256] [TD=class: xl65, width: 64]Year[/TD] [TD=width: 64]K%[/TD] [TD=width: 64]BB%[/TD] [TD=width: 64]HR/BIP[/TD] [TD=class: xl65, align: right]2007[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]24.5%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]8.5%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]3.2%[/TD] [TD=class: xl65, align: right]2008[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]21.9%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]7.4%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]1.8%[/TD] [TD=class: xl65, align: right]2009[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]22.2%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]5.6%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]2.4%[/TD] [TD=class: xl65, align: right]2010[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]18.5%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]5.0%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]1.9%[/TD] [TD=class: xl65, align: right]2011[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]27.8%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]3.1%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]1.3%[/TD] [TD=class: xl65, align: right]2012[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]24.3%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]2.7%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]0.8%[/TD] [TD=class: xl65, align: right]2013[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]22.1%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]3.9%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]1.2%[/TD] [TD=class: xl65]7 Seasons[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]23.3%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]5.2%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]1.8%[/TD] [/TABLE] By comparison, Darvish: [TABLE=width: 256] [TD=class: xl65, width: 64]Year[/TD] [TD=width: 64]K%[/TD] [TD=width: 64]BB%[/TD] [TD=width: 64]HR/BIP[/TD] [TD=class: xl65, align: right]2005[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]12.7%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]11.7%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]2.3%[/TD] [TD=class: xl65, align: right]2006[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]18.3%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]10.2%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]2.7%[/TD] [TD=class: xl65, align: right]2007[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]26.6%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]6.2%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]1.7%[/TD] [TD=class: xl65, align: right]2008[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]27.2%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]5.8%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]2.2%[/TD] [TD=class: xl65, align: right]2009[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]23.8%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]6.4%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]1.9%[/TD] [TD=class: xl65, align: right]2010[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]27.6%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]5.8%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]0.9%[/TD] [TD=class: xl65, align: right]2011[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]31.2%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]4.1%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]0.9%[/TD] 7 sesaons [TD=class: xl66, align: right]25.1%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]6.7%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]1.7%[/TD] [/TABLE] Then again, here are Colby Lewis's 2 seasons in Japan [TABLE=width: 256] [TD=class: xl65, width: 64]Year[/TD] [TD=width: 64]K%[/TD] [TD=width: 64]BB%[/TD] [TD=width: 64]HR/BIP[/TD] [TD=class: xl65, align: right]2008[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]26.1%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]3.8%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]2.5%[/TD] [TD=class: xl65, align: right]2009[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]26.0%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]2.7%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]2.6%[/TD] 2 seasons [TD=class: xl66, align: right]26.0%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]3.2%[/TD] [TD=class: xl66, align: right]2.6%[/TD] [/TABLE] -
A Look At The Numbers: Yu Darvish vs. Masahiro Tanaka
Willihammer commented on twinsfan34's blog entry in Blog twinsfan34
What's maybe most impressive is that Tanaka maintained a miniscule HR rate this season in spite of the livelier balls. -
Halloween costume idea: Slap on a name-tag, 10 different points of flair, carry a serving plate, say "Hello, welcome to Perkins" and go as Terry Ryan
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Acquiring Talent the Twins Way: Terry Ryan vs. the AL (part 3 of 3)
Willihammer posted an article in Twins
We're taking a look at how the Twins acquired their talent using the 6 methods of talent acquisition. In Part 1 we looked at Twins position players. In Part 2, we looked at the pitchers. Today, we'll compare the Twins' successes in the 6 methods of talent acquisition versus the rest of the American League. 1. Amateur Draft We already know the Twins have acquired the most positional talent and the 2nd most pitching talent from the Amateur draft, as measured by WAR. But roster space is limited. How does the average Amateur Draftee stack up against the rest of the AL? [PRBREAK][/PRBREAK] http://i.imgur.com/qLqHjp0.png The big outlier here is the Red Sox, whose draftees have been a half-win better than average. The rest of the AL is grouped fairly closely, with the Twins very much in the middle. Their positional draftees have been .02 WAR worse than average, while their pitchers have been .09 WAR better. Overall, they're slightly (.07 WAR) better than average at drafting amateur talent under Terry Ryan. 2. Amateur Free Agency Overall, the average Amateur Drafted-pitcher is worth .78 WAR. The average Amateur Free Agent pitcher? .80 WAR. For position players - 1.25 WAR for the average Draftee, and 1.10 for the average Amateur FA. However the distribution of Amateur FA talent has been very uneven. http://i.imgur.com/i8CHiMM.png The Twins are 2nd to last in average WAR, but its not really for a lack of trying. For example, the Twins and White Sox have both signed 16 Amateur FAs. The Twins have gotten just 11 WARs to the White Sox's 61.2. What gives? http://i.imgur.com/CsRPX8u.png Couple of things. First, the Twins didn't dip their toes in the Amateur FA water till 2000 when they acquired Luis Rivas - one year after the Sox acquired Carlos Lee, and three years after they got Magglio Ordonez. Culprit no. 1 is late timing. Culprit 2, it appears, is the Twins' reluctance to hand out signing bonuses and multiyear contracts, combined possibly with poor scouting. After the Twins became active in Amateur Free Agency, talents like Alexei Ramirez, Fernando Rodney, Joaquin Benoit, Felix Hernandez, Roberto Hernandez, Rafael Soriano, Omar Infante, and Victor Martinez managed to fall into the competition's hands. Some signed contracts with half-million or greater bonuses, others signed for much less. In general, the pricier contracts went to better players. 3. Rule 5 Draft The results of the Rule 5 Draft are curious. They ought to be skewed by a self-selecting sample. Players who are able to stick on their team's 40 man roster for an entire year should be pretty good right? Wrong. Only 3 of the 67 players who "stuck" on the drafting team's rosters have posted cumulative WARs of 5 or more - a rate of 4.4%. A worse rate than the Amateur Draft (16%), Trades (15%), Amateur Free Agency (14%), and Free Agency (9.1%). Only Waiver pickups produce 5+ WARs at a worse rate (3.4%). 4. Trades Total player-seasons from trades outnumber all other avanues of talent acquisition except the Draft (3094 to 3274). Unlike the Draft, however, there is not a lot of variance in the output from tradees: http://i.imgur.com/6mFJJKG.png The Twins average exactly 1 WAR per season from players returned in trade. This puts them 0.07 WAR above average in the AL, boosted again by the acquisition of Johan Santana. In fact, only 3 trades have worked out better: Pedro Martinez for Carl Pavano and Tony Armas in 1997 in a deal between the Expos and Red Sox; ARod to the Yankees for Alfonso Soriano and Joaquin Arias; and Miguel Cabrera (and Dontrelle Willis) from the Marlins to the Tigers in exchange for Dallas Trahern (minors), Burke Badenhop, Frankie De La Cruz, Cameron Maybin, Andrew Miller and Mike Rabelo in 2007. 5. Waivers The Twins have relied on waivers for 35 player-seasons since 1995, third most in the American League. They have not, however, gotten as much production from those players as other teams. http://i.imgur.com/btG8Vuw.png The White Sox have only taken 10 waiver pickups since 1995, but gotten some decent production out of 4 of them - De Aza (4.5 WAR), Rios (6.1), Bobby Jenks (8.7) and Phil Humber (2.3). For the rest of the AL, waivers are the least reliable method for acquiring talent, and the Twins are no exception. Of the 20 waiver claims the Twins have made since 1995, 10 have produced negative WAR. At 7.5 WAR, Matt Guerrier is by far the best of the 20 waiver pickups since 1995. 6. Free Agency The Twins have signed 104 Free Agents since 1995. On average, the FA player-season has been worth just .42 WAR, last among AL teams (excluding the Astros). http://i.imgur.com/BVJ7w3K.png As with Amateur Free Agency, the production from Free Agents has mirrored prices. http://i.imgur.com/ChaTiAd.png The Yankees have proven that with enough money, you can build a roster from free agency. Since 1995, their FAs have produced at a clip of 1.1 WAR player season - identical to the Twins average Amateur Draftee - and it only cost them $981 million to get it. On the other hand, the Red Sox, Angels, Athletics, Rangers, and White Sox have gotten tremendous value through the Draft and Amateur Free Agency whereas the Twins have gotten average talent out of the Draft and almost no talent out of Amateur Free Agency. What are Red Sox scouts doing that the Twins' aren't? Does Terry Ryan know? Is he willing to change? Is he the guy to diversify and uncover new pockets of talent before others get to them, or will he keep on the boom and bust cycle with each crop of Amateur Draftees? -
In Part 1, we looked at the Twins history of acquiring positional talent via the Amateur Draft, Amateur Free Agency, the Rule 5 Draft, Trades, Waivers, and Free Agency, during the Terry Ryan era (1995-2013). Here we will do the same for pitchers. PITCHERS 1. Amateur Draft Since 1995, the Twins trail only the Toronto Blue Jays in their reliance on the Amateur Draft for pitching talent, getting 136 player-seasons from 39 pitchers, good for 120 WAR. Notably, Brad Radke owns a full third (45.5 WAR) of that total. Overall, the average Twins Amateur Draftee has pitched to a .88 WAR season. But take Radke out of the equation, and the average drops to .60 WAR. http://i.imgur.com/MG4siqR.png 2. Amateur Free Agency The Twins have given 24 player-seasons to Amateur FA pitchers since 1995. Juan Rincon and Jose Mijares share the top 7 highest WAR seasons. Others in this category include Liam Hendriks, Grant Balfour, Michael Nakamura, Rob Delaney, and Cole DeVries. Together they average a 0.29 WAR season. http://i.imgur.com/73gC0Tm.png 3. Rule 5 Draft The five Rule 5 Twins player-seasons since 1995 are owned by Scott Diamond (3), Ryan Pressly (1) and Travis Baptist (1). Together they have pitched 432.1 innings for a WAR of 1.9. http://i.imgur.com/9ni3gmd.png 4. Trades Trades account for 90 (pitcher) player-seasons since 1995. Of all other AL teams to have existed for the period 1995-2013, only the Angels have been less-reliant on trades to fill their pitching staffs. But, the Twins own the best WAR-average at 1.36, boosted by the acquisitions of Johan Santana (35.4 WAR over 8 seasons), Eric Milton (14.7/6), Joe Nathan (18.3/7), Joe Mays (10.6/6) and Francisco Liriano (9.9/6). http://i.imgur.com/uVp33wI.png 5. Waivers Jeremy Guthrie owns the distinction of most productive pitcher acquired by Waivers since 1995. He was worth 16.5 WARs for the Orioles from 2007-2011. The next closest is Darren O'Day at under 10 WAR. For the Twins, 13 waiver-wire pitchers have been worth 7.6 WAR over 25 player-seasons. Matt Guerrier (7.5 WAR) has been the most productive pickup, with the other 12 players producing just 0.1 WAR. http://i.imgur.com/2CN4lbQ.png 6. Free Agency Bob Tewksbury remains the best free agent pickup for the Twins. He produced 6.5 WAR at a price of 3.75 million over the 1997-1998 seasons. Overall, Twins FA pitchers average .47 WAR per season, good for 8th in the AL http://i.imgur.com/VmwNq1Y.png So, in order of average WAR, the Twins most successful means of acquiring pitching talent since 1995 are: 1. Trades (1.36) 2. The Amateur Draft (.88) 3. Free Agency (.47) 4. The Rule 5 Draft (.38) 5. Waivers (.30) 6. Amateur Free Agency (.29)
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@WiseOne: The Twins have actually retained their draftees at a higher rate than the Red Sox. They've paid for 68 player seasons to draftees above and beyond the first 5 team-controlled years (22 players), to Boston's 30 player-seasons (12 players). The Twins have outspent any other AL team on their draftees' salaries, with the exception of the Yankees. The Twins entire model is based around drafting, developing and retaining amateur draft talent. So the Twins were just as aggressive as the BoSox at keeping their good homegrown talents if not moreso. Your point might apply better to the As actually. They've only paid for 6 players to stay beyond their first 5 team-controlled years (Chavez, GIambi, Suzuki, Harden, Zito, Crosby). 19 player seasons. They've relied more heavily on trades than the Draft (263 player seasons to 237). Its remarkable, really. They're model is based on trading away home grown talents while they're in their primes and yet they've still managed to hold the 3rd best avg. WAR from draftees. Clearly, IMO, these teams are doing something the Twins aren't, or doing something better than the Twins, and not just getting lucky all the time.
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Awardin' 2013: The American League!
Willihammer commented on Brad Swanson's blog entry in Kevin Slowey was Framed!
Question: who stands more upright at the plate, Wil Myers or Evan Longoria? -
Resuming where we left off, we're now going to compare the Twins' successes in the 6 methods of talent acquisition versus the rest of the American League. Part 1: here Part 2: here Data: here TWINS VS AMERICAN LEAGUE 1. Amateur Draft We already know the Twins have acquired the most positional talent and the 2nd most pitching talent from the Amateur draft, as measured by WAR. But roster space is limited. How does the average Amateur Draftee stack up against the rest of the AL? http://i.imgur.com/qLqHjp0.png The big outlier here is the Red Sox, whose draftees have been a half-win better than average. The rest of the AL is grouped fairly closely, with the Twins very much in the middle. Their positional draftees have been .02 WAR worse than average, while their pitchers have been .09 WAR better. Overall, they're slightly (.07 WAR) better than average at drafting amateur talent under Terry Ryan. 2. Amateur Free Agency Overall, the average Amateur Drafted-pitcher is worth .78 WAR. The average Amateur Free Agent pitcher? .80 WAR. For position players - 1.25 WAR for the average Draftee, and 1.10 for the average Amateur FA. However the distribution of Amateur FA talent has been very uneven. http://i.imgur.com/i8CHiMM.png The Twins are 2nd to last in average WAR, but its not really for a lack of trying. For example, the Twins and White Sox have both signed 16 Amateur FAs. The Twins have gotten just 11 WARs to the White Sox's 61.2. What gives? http://i.imgur.com/CsRPX8u.png Couple of things. 1. The Twins didn't dip their toes in the Amateur FA water till 2000 when they acquired Luis Rivas - 1 year after the Sox acquired Carlos Lee, and 3 years after they got Magglio Ordonez. Culprit no. 1 is late timing. Culprit 2, it appears, is the Twins' reluctance to hand out signing bonuses and multiyear contracts, combined possibly with poor scouting. After the Twins became active in Amateur Free Agency, talents like Alexei Ramirez, Fernando Rodney, Joaquin Benoit, Felix Hernandez, Roberto Hernandez, Rafael Soriano, Omar Infante, Victor Martinez, managed to fall to the competition. Some signed contracts with half-million or greater bonuses, others signed for much less. In general, the pricier contracts went to better players. 3. Rule 5 Draft The results of the Rule 5 Draft are curious. They ought to be skewed by a self-selecting sample. Players who are able to stick on their team's 40 man roster for an entire year should be pretty good right? Wrong. Only 3 of the 67 players who "stuck" on the drafting team's rosters have posted cumulative WARs of 5 or more - a rate of 4.4%. A worse rate than the Amateur Draft (16%), Trades (15%), Amateur Free Agency (14%), and Free Agency (9.1%). Only Waiver pickups produce 5+ WARs at a worse rate (3.4%). 4. Trades Total player-seasons from trades outnumber all other avanues of talent acquisition except the Draft (3094 to 3274). Unlike the Draft, however, there is not a lot of variance in the output from tradees: http://i.imgur.com/6mFJJKG.png The Twins average exactly 1 WAR per season from players returned in trade. This puts them 0.07 WAR above average in the AL, boosted again by the acquisition of Johan Santana. In fact, only 3 trades have worked out better - Pedro Martinez for Carl Pavano and Tony Armas in 1997 in a deal between the Expos and Red Sox; ARod to the Yankees for Alfonso Soriano and Joaquin Arias; and Miguel Cabrera (and Dontrelle Willis) from the Marlins to the Tigers in exchange for Dallas Trahern (minors), Burke Badenhop, Frankie De La Cruz, Cameron Maybin, Andrew Miller and Mike Rabelo in 2007. 5. Waivers The Twins have relied on Waiviers for 35 player-seasons since 1995, 3rd most in the AL. They have not, however, gotten as much production from those players as other teams. http://i.imgur.com/btG8Vuw.png The White Sox have only taken 10 waiver pickups since 1995, but gotten some decent production out of 4 of them - De Aza (4.5 WAR), Rios (6.1), Bobby Jenks (8.7) and Phil Humber (2.3). For the rest of the AL, waivers are the least reliable method for acquiring talent, and the Twins are no exception. Of the 20 waiver claims the Twins have made since 1995, 10 have produced negative WAR. At 7.5 WAR, Matt Guerrier is by far the best of the 20 waiver pickups since 1995. 6. Free Agency The Twins have signed 104 Free Agents since 1995. On average, the FA player-season has been worth just .42 WAR, last among AL teams (excluding the Astros). http://i.imgur.com/BVJ7w3K.png As with Amateur Free Agency, the production from Free Agents has mirrored prices. http://i.imgur.com/ChaTiAd.png The Yankees have proven that with enough money, you can build a roster from free agency. Since 1995, their FAs have produced at a clip of 1.1 WAR player season - identical to the Twins average Amateur Draftee - and it only cost them $981 million to get it. On the other hand, the Red Sox, Angels, Athletics, Rangers, and White Sox have gotten tremendous value through the Draft and Amateur Free Agency whereas the Twins have gotten average talent out of the Draft and almost no talent out of Amateur Free Agency. What are Red Sox scouts doing that the Twins' aren't? Does Terry Ryan know? Is he willing to change? Is he the guy to diversify and uncover new pockets of talent before others get to them, or will he keep on the boom and bust cycle with each crop of Amateur Draftees?
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In Part 1, we looked at the Twins history of acquiring positional talent via the Amateur Draft, Amateur Free Agency, the Rule 5 Draft, Trades, Waivers, and Free Agency, during the Terry Ryan era (1995-2013). Here we will do the same for pitchers. PITCHERS 1. Amateur Draft Since 1995, the Twins trail only the Toronto Blue Jays in their reliance on the Amateur Draft for pitching talent, getting 136 player-seasons from 39 pitchers, good for 120 WAR. Notably, Brad Radke owns a full third (45.5 WAR) of that total. Overall, the average Twins Amateur Draftee has pitched to a .88 WAR season. But take Radke out of the equation, and the average drops to .60 WAR. http://i.imgur.com/MG4siqR.png 2. Amateur Free Agency The Twins have given 24 player-seasons to Amateur FA pitchers since 1995. Juan Rincon and Jose Mijares share the top 7 highest WAR seasons. Others in this category include Liam Hendriks, Grant Balfour, Michael Nakamura, Rob Delaney, and Cole DeVries. Together they average a 0.29 WAR season. http://i.imgur.com/73gC0Tm.png 3. Rule 5 Draft The five Rule 5 Twins player-seasons since 1995 are owned by Scott Diamond (3), Ryan Pressly (1) and Travis Baptist (1). Together they have pitched 432.1 innings for a WAR of 1.9. http://i.imgur.com/9ni3gmd.png 4. Trades Trades account for 90 (pitcher) player-seasons since 1995. Of all other AL teams to have existed for the period 1995-2013, only the Angels have been less-reliant on trades to fill their pitching staffs. But, the Twins own the best WAR-average at 1.36, boosted by the acquisitions of Johan Santana (35.4 WAR over 8 seasons), Eric Milton (14.7/6), Joe Nathan (18.3/7), Joe Mays (10.6/6), Francisco Liriano (9.9/6). http://i.imgur.com/uVp33wI.png 5. Waivers Jeremy Guthrie owns the distinction of most productive pitcher acquired by Waivers since 1995. He was worth 16.5 WARs for the Orioles from 2007-2011. The next closest is Darren O'Day at under 10 WAR. For the Twins, 13 waiver-wire pitchers have been worth 7.6 WAR over 25 player-seasons. Matt Guerrier (7.5 WAR) has been the most productive pickup, with the other 12 players producing just 0.1 WAR. http://i.imgur.com/2CN4lbQ.png 6. Free Agency Bob Tewksbury remains the best free agent pickup for the Twins. He produced 6.5 WAR at a price of 3.75 million over the 1997-1998 seasons. Overall, Twins FA pitchers average .47 WAR per season, good for 8th in the AL http://i.imgur.com/VmwNq1Y.png So, in order of average WAR, the Twins most successful means of acquiring pitching talent since 1995 are: 1. Trades (1.36) 2. The Amateur Draft (.88) 3. Free Agency (.47) 4. The Rule 5 Draft (.38) 5. Waivers (.30) 6. Amateur Free Agency (.29)
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Acquiring Talent The Twins Way: Position Players (Part 1 of 3)
Willihammer posted an article in Twins
Last Friday Terry Ryan spoke to Paul Allen about Free Agency: Free Agency is only one of the 6 most common methods of acquiring talent. The others are the Amateur Draft, Amateur Free Agency, Rule 5 Draft, Trades, and Waivers. Using Baseball-references Player registry data, I will examine the Twins' successes at acquiring positional talent via these 6 methods during the period 1996-2013 - the Terry Ryan era. (data here) POSITION PLAYERS The Amateur Draft Since 1996, the Twins have 194 player-seasons from players acquired via the Draft, most of any AL team. They have paid these players a combined $389,248,998, 2nd only to the Yankees. These players have put up an average of 1.26 WAR, good for 6th in the AL. http://i.imgur.com/gKvQamF.png 2. Amateur Free Agency This includes signing international prospects. Sixteen player-seasons have been worth an average of just .26 WAR. Bobby Kielty, Luis Rodriguez, and Luis Rivas own most of those seasons. Josmil Pinto and Oswaldo Arcia own one apiece. http://i.imgur.com/BPAcyJd.png 3. Rule 5 Draft Brian Buscher and Jason Pridie are the two Rule 5 position players to stick on the 40 man roster during Ryan's and Smith's tenures. Combined, they provided 0.3 WAR over 5 player-seasons at a cost of just under 2 million. The most active Rule 5 team during this time was the Baltimore Orioles, who kept Jay Gibbons on as DH/outfielder for the 2001-2007 seasons. http://i.imgur.com/pUgIpiT.png 4. Trades The Twins have given 70 player-seasons to players acquired by trade since 1996. Jason Bartlett, Lew Ford, and Christian Guzman accumulated 9.1, 8.4, and 7.4 WARs over 15 player seasons. On the other end, Ron Coomer, David Ortiz, and Alexi Casilla accumulated between 2 and 4 WARs over 6+ seasons each. Overall, the average player-season was worth .54 WAR, last among AL teams (excluding Houston and Milwaukee.) http://i.imgur.com/0M6YzGI.png 5. Waivers The Twins have played 7 Waiver claims in positions 2-9 since 1996. They are (WAR in Parenthesis): Augie Ojeda (1.2), Casey Blake (-0.2), Clete Thomas (0.2), Corky Miller (-0.2), Darin Mastroianni (0.3), Erik Komatsu (-0.2), and Pedro Florimon (3.8). The average waiver claim-season has been worth 0.42 WAR, boosted largely by Florimon's 2013 season which has so far been worth 2.2 WAR. http://i.imgur.com/YQ4cjv5.png 6. Free Agency Since 1996, the Twins have 84 Free Agent position player-seasons. WAR likes Paul Molitor (5.2), Josh Willingham (3.9) and Jamey Carroll the most (3.5). On the other end are Rondell White (-1.5), Butch Huskey (-1.0), and Kevin Maas (-0.8). Overall, the Twins average a 0.38 WAR season from Free Agent position players. This is the worst average in the AL (excluding Houston and Milwaukee). Interestingly, they also pay their Free Agents the least of any AL team. http://i.imgur.com/MxJJnAt.png So, in order of average WAR, the Twins' most successful means of positional talent acquisition under Terry Ryan (and 4 seasons of Bill Smith): 1. Amateur Draft (1.26 WAR) 2. Trades (0.54) 3. Waivers (0.42) 4. Free Agency (0.37) 5. Amateur Free Agency (0.26) 6. Rule 5 Draft (0.06) *Note about the Salary figures - rather than look up days spent on the active roster for all the minimum wagers, I assumed they were paid a full season's worth. Therefore salary figures are a little inflated, specially for waivers, rule 5, and amateur draft guys.

