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Otto von Ballpark

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Everything posted by Otto von Ballpark

  1. How are those contracts similar? All for 4 years, but Nolasco is $4.5 mil AAV ahead of O'Day's deal, and Santana is a full $6 mil AAV ahead. If $9 mil is large enough to block an addition to a hypothetical 2018 star-studded team, isn't a $4.5-$6 mil AAV contract difference pretty important?
  2. Just FYI, but $9 mil (and O'Days $7.75 mil AAV) isn't that much in modern MLB. It should never prevent you from signing the final piece like your 2018 hypothetical, and frankly shouldn't prevent you from betting against PECOTA in what's expected to be a tight division in 2016. And the Twins seemed to be drawing a hard line well south of that this winter, without a rumored offer or strong rumored interest in any reliever beyond a $4 mil total commitment.
  3. Uribe it is! http://www.mlbtraderumors.com/2016/02/indians-to-sign-juan-uribe.html
  4. Yeah, Ordonez career K rate: 11%, career worst: 13.5% Park was up to 25% his last two years in Korea. That would be a heck of an adjustment. For reference, Kang's K rate as a rookie last year was basically the same as his recent rates in Korea.
  5. You're asking me to prove the usefulness of BABIP by making a personal prediction for Danny Santana's 2016 stat line. If I said that early childhood education was a leading indicator of future academic success, would you respond, "Prove it, hotshot -- what's my nephew Danny's GPA going to be next year?" it's absurd.
  6. No, we're justifying the consideration of BABIP (along with other stats, of course) because of mountains of research like this: http://www.beyondtheboxscore.com/2011/9/1/2393318/what-hitting-metrics-are-consistent-year-to-year
  7. I might take a peek at that if I get some time. Again, though, I'd probably be looking at a subset of MLB teams, those trying to compete and not early/mid rebuild. Personally, I'd like Berrios at #6 and May in the mix too, but I don't see it right now. May is almost 100% slated for the pen, and until we see they are truly willing to bury Nolasco, I think Berrios is #7. That's a key distinction, because while you might prefer one group over another, Latos/Johnson/Danks aren't that much different than Milone/Duffey/Nolasco (particularly if you're at all pessimistic about Duffey as a starter going forward). And beyond that, Dean/Rogers/Darnell are not appreciably different as MLB SP fill-ins than Carroll/Beck/whomever either. Berrios vs Nolasco here is the key to the Twins depth advantage. Will be very interesting to see how that unfolds.
  8. I meant projected/expecting to compete, sorry. Teams like Philly and Colorado who aren't even trying to compete or establish a reliable top 6 starters really aren't comparable to teams like the current Twins and White Sox.
  9. But what were their projections for those same players in 2015? Probably about the same, and yet they posted OPS figures of .718 (Mauer & Arcia) and .626 (Vargas).
  10. Steamer has Park projected for 20 HR, but they're not really trying to project playing time. The Fangraphs depth chart projection uses Steamer rate stats but tries to project playing time too. With those PAs, he would be projected to hit 30. Park: http://www.fangraphs.com/statss.aspx?playerid=18717&position=1B Depth Charts: http://www.fangraphs.com/depthcharts.aspx?position=ALL&teamid=8 However, I have no idea how they arrived at that projection. If that was his median projection (to be a top 50 hitter in MLB by wRC+), he certainly would have warranted more than a 4/24 commitment, no? I guess if you base it primarily off of Kang's success, you could get there, but with so little data and such massive error bars, that seems high for a median projection. Were Tomas, Rusney Castillo, etc. simply projected to hit like Abreu, Cespedes, and Puig?
  11. But if Arcia, Vargas, or Palka plays a more prominent role, that would almost certainly mean injury / less playing time for some of your starters, likely Sano and Park.
  12. Among near contending teams with top half rotations, like the Twins and White Sox? It might not be much more than that. It's not particularly relevant to this discussion if teams like the Rockies and Phillies churn through a bunch of starters in lost seasons.
  13. I removed him because it's not really relevant to a discussion of projecting pitcher health/depth. PED suspensions for MLB SP are like lightning strikes. Obviously the Twins depth helped cover for it, but that doesn't mean much going forward if it's incredibly unlikely to happen again.
  14. I don't know if the common refrain has only focused on one month, or on one side of the ball. The Twins may have been lucky to escape April last year with a 10-12 record, given that their runs rank outpaced their wRC+ rank for the month, and their RA9-WAR outpaced their FIP WAR (which it did again in May). I don't know that their BaseRuns performance was ever isolated to the month of May (I don't even think that split is available anywhere).
  15. In 2015, the White Sox top 6 starters to open the season made all but 9 of their starts. If not for Santana's PED suspension, the Twins top 6 starters to open the season would have possibly made all but roughly 11 of their starts. Having Berrios on the depth chart, where the White Sox don't have a comparably ready top prospect waiting in the wings, is an advantage for the Twins, but if he's 7th on the depth chart, it might only make a relatively small difference in 2016.
  16. But not all equal AVG and OPS figures are created equal. With fewer strikeouts and a lower BABIP, it would have been possible for Santana to have the exact same AVG and OPS in the exact same number of plate appearances in 2014. But that would have been evidence of a real change in skill (reduced strikeouts) rather than luck (abnormally high average on balls in play) and would have projected better going forward. So there is value in digging deeper beyond just AVG and OPS, and I see no problem with including BABIP in that deeper analysis. Heck, you yourself referenced OPS in your evaluation of Santana, another stat introduced by "stat geeks" 30 some years ago.
  17. Pretty sure we've heard from the Twins, perhaps indirectly, about how bad it is to sign relievers for more than one year. And I can only imagine what quality of free agents will be available during spring training...
  18. That's a pretty fair statistical comp, based on Kepler's 2015 season. Hayes played most of his career around his listed 185 weight, though. Likely more speed and more willing to use it. But the power emphasis on doubles/triples, controlling the strike zone, and moving as needed between corner OF, 1B, and even CF, that was very much Kepler in 2015. Although maybe adjusting for era, the weights are pretty similar? Would also need to adjust Hayes' strikeout rates too, I suppose. EDIT: Fun essay and comments on Von Hayes here: http://www.fangraphs.com/not/the-pictorial-odyssey-of-von-hayes/
  19. Given his draft pedigree and left-handedness, I think it's fair to project a floor of MLB reliever for Jay if the starting conversion doesn't work out. I don't know how good he'd be or how long he'd stick, but barring injury he'd probably get a long look there. Similar for Gonsalves and even the RHP Stewart. That would make more sense within your rankings too, and it seems like the most useful definition of floor for these guys. It was the "dominant" and then "late innings" things that threw me off. That can't be anyone's floor from A-ball. Maybe a guy like Meyer, back when he was succeeding in AAA as a starter, you could say if he doesn't stick in MLB as a starter, he could fall back to being a pretty darn good reliever. (Of course Meyer illustrates how things such as ceiling/floor can change over time too!)
  20. That would be fun to see. Add Buehrle, cut Danks?
  21. Who are some other left handed relievers that you'd be comfortable with in the 8th or 9th innings, below Smith, Perkins, and vintage Thornton? Bastardo? Not sure why you use the term "floor", it rather seems like you are describing his reliever upside when you are invoking names like Smith, Perkins, and vintage Thornton. Those guys are/were 11-12 K/9 all-star setup men and closers. Unless you honestly think his upside is all-time great like Chapman or Miller, in which case his #9 rank seems WAY too low.
  22. FYI, by that criteria, John Hicks is also still eligible. Given that he is only a year older than Garver, has already reached MLB with apparently well regarded defense, and has also matched Garver's offensive performance in AFL, I might have expected him in your expansive honorable mention list.
  23. Jay seems too low on your list based on your own comments. "Floor appears to be a dominant left-handed reliever with the best slider in the organization" but you have him 9th? Just ahead of Walker, and behind Polanco, Burdi, Gonsalves, and Park? You must think Jay has near zero potential to start or something, to rank him that low with that floor. For clarification, what exactly do you mean by "dominant left-handed reliever"? Is there a MLB comp for what you call Jay's floor?
  24. Is there a source that updates those numbers year to year? Kepler is still listed at 205 everywhere.
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