Nationals Arm Race

"… the reason you win or lose is darn near always the same – pitching.” — Earl Weaver

Why is the (insert MLB player here) DUI story such big news?

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Would a DUI arrest by Mickey Mantle have been such a big story? Photo: AP file

Why is ANY story about an athlete getting arrested for DUI that big of a news story?  While I do understand the ink about Miguel Cabrera‘s off-season DUI arrest (since his Alcohol issues caused him to miss games in a critical series two years ago for his team), recently I saw this link critiquing the reactions of three MLBers who got busted for DUI this past off-season (Cabrera, Austin Kearns and Adam Kennedy: side note is it ironic or just coincidental that the latter two are Nationals washouts?).  Then late last week one Coco Crisp was arrested for DUI as well.  I began to wonder; why are these revelations such big news stories?

Think about your job.  You probably sit in an office and stare at a computer 8 hours a day.  Your boss has no idea what you do the other 7-8 hours of your day, nor any idea what you do all weekend.  You could have a massive drug problem, or get arrested on a friday night and spend the whole weekend in jail … but as long as you show back up at work Monday, don’t miss any work and don’t miss any deadlines/don’t let it affect your work product … then who cares?

I guess the real answer is something along the following.  MLB players are celebrities now.  They’re for the most part multi-millionaries and live lives that most Americans cannot comprehend.  In today’s TMZ-inspired celebrity news cycle what used to pass as a personal matter is now rabidly reported as breaking, important news.  Do I care that Coco Crisp tied a few drinks on last weekend and (like a moron) got into his car and drove?  No, not really.  It may show bad judgement on his part but it has nothing to do with his performance on the field.  It certainly didn’t affect Wade Boggs‘ career (he was notorious for his beer drinking abilities, reportedly drinking “50-60” beers on cross country trips).

Written by Todd Boss

March 9th, 2011 at 8:58 am

Why exactly did we acquire Gorzelanny?

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Gorzelanny warming up; the closest we've seen of him on the mound. Photo: Copyright Ed Wolfstein

As I said in my good/bad/indifferent post over the weekend, I cannot fault a guy for getting sick at an inopportune time.  But newly acquired Tom Gorzelanny needs to get caught up to his competition for the 5th rotation spot very quickly, before he loses out on the competition altogether.  When two of your main competitors for the 5th rotation spot are showing up in Viera with crisp stuff and a good work ethic, and you cannot make it into a game because you’re so far behind … well you better step it up when you do get some innings.

I’m beginning to wonder though; Why did the Nats make the Gorzelanny acquisition?  He’s out of options, meaning that if he does NOT win the 5th starter role he either has to go to the bullpen or be exposed to waivers to pass him through to AAA.  Both scenarios are bad for the team; Gorzelanny would take away a bullpen spot from another deserving candidate if he is kept (likely Balester in the long man/spot starter role), and odds are that he’d be claimed if we exposed him to waivers, basically meaning we gave up 3 prospects for a few weeks of his Spring Training time.  Plus, Gorzelanny’s splits as a reliever aren’t really that promising.   The number of innings he’s pitched in relief over the past few years are probably not enough to make a judgement but he certainly hasn’t been immediately lights out in the role.

Meanwhile, the rest of the competitors for the #5 spot are taking big steps ahead.  Maya looked great in the DWL and has looked good so far this spring.  Detwiler‘s last outing was dominant, with lots of strikeouts and scouts raving about the speed on his pitches.  Gaudin‘s overall numbers look bad but he pitched 3 strong innings against the Yankees.  Only Wang seems to be out of the 5th starter competition for now (he’ll likely spend more time on the DL, which is fine for our roster construction purposes since he won’t burn a 25-man slot).

I suppose it is possible (acceptable?) that we traded away three prospects for the chance to let him compete with Maya, Detwiler, Gaudin and Wang for the #5 rotation spot.  But here’s the thing; if the Nats really though Wang was healthy and that Maya was improving and that Detwiler was going to live up to his promise … why sign a journeyman veteran without options, knowing that his inflexibility would affect the rest of your team’s construction?

Written by Todd Boss

March 7th, 2011 at 12:01 pm

Posted in Majors Pitching

Nats Pitching so far; the good, the worrisome and the incompletes

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Is this the year Jordan Zimmermann makes the leap? Photo dcist.com/(AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

The Nats spring training games so far have certainly seemed more promising this year than last.  Beat reporters talk about a more professional attitude, they talk about there being more talent in camp, and Riggleman talks specifically about having to “cut major league pitchers” when 25-man decision time rolls around.

At the risk of over-analyzing the first 6 spring training games, lets talk about some of the good, the worrisome and the “yet to be determined” performances of some key members of the pitching corps.  For reference, here’s a quick link to the Grapefruit league pitching stats for the team.

The Good

  • Livan, Zimmermann, Marquis: our 1-2-3 rotation members all looked decent to good in their first ST starts.  Marquis faced a weaker lineup but got lots of ground-outs (good indication for his sinker).  Zimmermann faced a tougher lineup of first-stringer Cardinals but worked his way out of jams.
  • Maya and Detwiler: starters-in-waiting both had decent first outings.  Maya has looked crisp, Detwiler’s new mechanics are giving him more bite on his fastball, and both may very well muscle their way into the rotation discussion.  Detwiler contined his good work today, getting 5 K’s in 3 innings against a strong Braves lineup to continue to put himself in the discussion for the rotation.
  • rule 5 pickup Broderick: 3ip and only two hits to show for it, albeit pitching later in games against scrubs.  Still, one has to wonder if Broderick can muscle his way into the bullpen discussion.

The Bad

  • Chad Gaudin: I realize that a 27-yr old hard-throwing player on a minor-league deal would be like found-gold if he pans out (sorry for that pun), but I don’t get testing him out at the expense of other arms in camp.  That being said, Gaudin has not looked great so far.  He’s had two up and down sessions, possibly undone by some untimely errors in the field.
  • Garrett Mock: I am not the only blogger in the Natmosphere who cannot quite understand the obsession the coaches and managers have with Mock.  Again this year, we’re hearing statements like, “2nd best arm in the organization” [behind Strasburg].  Here’s Mock’s first outing: 2/3 of an inning, 2 hits, 3 walks, 0 strikeouts with his vaunted “arm,” and 5 runs (only 1 earned because of an error in the field).  At some point you have to disregard the potential and focus on the results, and make a decision on those results.  Mock has been disappointing fans and coaches for years, and I hope we don’t overlook some other prospect to give Mock his next opportunity.
  • Drew Storen: Two outings, two innings pitched and two shellackings for our closer-in-waiting.  Not a good start for Storen, who needs to show some dominance to wrest control of the closer job away from 103-mph throwing Henry Rodriguez (who appears in the next section).  I’ve read someone postulating that Storen may start the season in the minors; i doubt that based on his 113 era+ figure and  8.9 k/9 numbers last year.  But if he wants that closer job, he needs to step up.
  • Chien-Ming Wang: *sigh*.  Another multi-million dollar contract on 100% spec, another spring training where it looks like this poor guy is done.  He’s reportedly only reaching the low 80s and had to cut his last session short because of “tightness” in his surgically repaired shoulder.  This may be more good money after bad.

The Incomplete/Unknown/Concerning because we don’t know anything yet

  • Tom Gorzelanny: I guess I can understand when a guy gets sick and it sets him back.  But when your two main competitors for the 5th rotation spot are showing up for ST with crisp stuff and a good work ethic, and you cannot make it into a game because you’re so far behind … well you better step it up when you do get some innings.
  • Elvin Ramirez and Henry Rodriguez.  I’ve gone off on this rant before in various comment sections.  But here goes again; how in the hell do these baseball players possibly suffer from these Visa issues year after year?  It really seems simple to me: if you know you need to be in another country, FOR YOUR JOB, on Feb 1st, aren’t you preparing all your paperwork and getting everything in line to make said trip on time?  It boggles my  mind that guys are delayed for weeks.  Spring Training is only 2 months long; if you are a pitcher and you miss the first two weeks, there is NO way you can catch up in time to really show what you have.   As far as the team goes, it is doubly insulting since Rodriguez has no options and HAS to make this team, so in reality he could have pulled a Brett Favre and skipped the entirety of spring training and basically still had a job.  Meanwhile, rule-5 pickup Ramirez might as well be returned to the Mets now.  How can he possibly out-pitch one of Storen, Clippard, Burnett, Coffey, Rodriguez, Slaten or Balester right now to make this team?  Plus, in reality he also has to outpitch Broderick (another rule5 guy) and Gorzelanny (out of options if he loses out on the 5th rotation spot) to make this team.
http://mlb.mlb.com/stats/sortable_player_stats.jsp?c_id=mlb&baseballScope=mlb&subScope=teamCode&teamPosCode=MON&statType=2&timeSubFrame=23&sitSplit=&venueID=&Submit=Submit&timeFrame=1

Written by Todd Boss

March 6th, 2011 at 1:48 pm

Posted in Majors Pitching

How about Morse-Bernadina-Werth in the OF?

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Is Morgan's time running short with the Nats?

I know its early in the spring, and I know that we’re only three games in, but I wonder if the team is seriously considering whether or not Nyger Morgan is the presumed starter in CF.  Jim Riggleman was quoted as saying (paraphrased) that if the season started today, Morgan is his center-fielder.

Last season was a disaster for Morgan.  Behavioral issues, the brawls, the suspensions, the antics in the outfield, plus his serious regression at the plate.  His slash line for 2010 was .253/.319/.314.  Two things jump out there; his slugging percentage was LOWER than his OBP, and his OBP was ridiculously low for a supposed table-setting lead-off hitter.  Even his defense regressed (per UZR/150 rankings) from his stellar 2009 season.

Meanwhile, Michael Morse hit the cover off the ball last year and Roger Bernadina, while slumping badly in September (his slashline for his final 107 plate appearances was .161/.243/.215 and took his season OPS+ from somewhere in the 110 range down to its season ending 86).  Bernadina bulked up in the off-season and came ready to compete for the left fielder job while Morse has picked up right where he left off with a 2-homer game earlier this week.

Here’s the thing though; perhaps it isn’t a straight up competition between Morse and Bernadina for left field.  Perhaps the right solution is to put Bernadina in center, Morse in left and have Rick Ankiel serve as the 4th outfielder.  It would mean the probable end of Morgan with the team though.  He has an option and can be sent down, but (based on his behavior last year) its hard to believe he’ll rise to the occasion of the demotion and earn his way back up.

Some other side-effects of such a move:

  • Morse can play 4 positions (1st, 3rd, left or right), meaning they’d have some infield cover if need be.
  • With only 4 outfielders on the 25-man roster, we would free up a roster spot that presumably for someone like Matt Stairs, who most beat writers seem to think is making this team.  We’d be able to keep two utility infielders (selecting from Hairston, Gonzalez and Cora presumably) PLUS Stairs coming off the bench.

There are some negatives to this arrangement:

  • We’d have no clear-cut leadoff man.  Bernadina does have some base stealing prowness (16 SB with only 2 CS in 2010) and showed yesterday his bunting ability.  But even during his best months in 2010 he was only maintaining about a .313 OBP.  That’s not enough for a leadoff guy.  Ian Desmond could be moved to leadoff but he makes more sense as a #2.  Danny Espinosa may eventually fit the bill as a leadoff guy but his power capabilities seem to lend him to being more of a #2 hitter himself.
  • We’d take a step back in defense in Center.  Bernadina *can* play center but he’s not nearly as good at it as Morgan.  Likewise, Werth *can* play center but is truly a right fielder.

Some have said that Mike Rizzo will force the team to stick with Morgan longer than expected since he was part of Rizzo’s first big trade and he wouldn’t want to admit defeat so quickly.  To those, I say that’s fairly ridiculous.  To purposely harm the team’s performance and force the use of a sub-standard player on a team that is still rebuilding and has rookies to test out just to protect one’s ego over a player move made 2 years ago is silly.  Besides, it is clear to me the Nats “won” that trade regardless of what happens to Morgan; Milledge was flat out released in the off season and Hanrahan has pitched well but not as well as Burnett.  Even if we drop Morgan tomorrow i’d still rather have Burnett over Hanrahan (both based on performance and lefty versus righty).

The question is; how committed is the team to Morgan?  If he puts up a .200/.250/.260 April at the plate, are we going to make a change?  Might it happen if Morgan can’t put together a decent spring?

Written by Todd Boss

March 3rd, 2011 at 11:54 am

Posted in Nats in General

Off Topic; Chelsea’s win over Man Utd huge for the EPL Race

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(ed note: thanks to commenter for pointing out error in headline! )

(Note; for those of you who don’t know me, not only am I an ardent Washington Nationals fan but I’m also an Arsenal supporter and a soccer fan in general.  I began to follow soccer in general when the World Cup came to America in 1994 and really started to get into the sport by the early 2000s, visiting European cities and seeing games with family and friends, watching the games from the 2002 World Cup in the middle of the night, and beginning to follow the three big european leagues in England, Italy and Spain).

Despite Arsenal’s lack of world class striking talent … they are hanging in on this year’s EPL race.   And, Tuesday’s 2-1 Chelsea victory over Man Utd at Stamford Bridge has suddenly thrust Arsenal firmly into the title race.

At the beginning of the season, it seemed that the Schedule makers were playing a cruel joke on Arsenal.  Of their matchups against their top rivals (the “big four” teams including themselves, Chelsea, Manchester United and Liverpool) as well as matchups against the newly arriving challengers in the EPL (Manchester City, Aston Villa and Tottenham), 5 of their first 6 matchups were away from home.  If Arsenal could keep pace, then having reverse matchups at the Emirates on the back-side of the season could prove to be a massive advantage in the title race.

Now, that’s seemingly exactly where we’re heading.  With a game in hand (at Tottenham, which upset Arsenal at the Emirates 2-3 back in December), Arsenal trails Man Utd by 4 points.  If Arsenal draws at Tottenham when they replay the game (a fully possible result given that Tottenham has zero chance of winning the league but is advancing in Europe), they’d be 3 back exactly.  Here’s the “big 4” game matrix as it stands now (home games read across, away games down, and scores listed as home-away in the European method of showing scores).

Arsenal Chelsea Liverpool Man Utd
Arsenal x 3-1 4/16 4/30
Chelsea 2-0 x 0-1 2-1
Liverpool 1-1 2-0 x 3/5
Man Utd 1-0 5/7 3-2 x

This leaves this “mini-table” of just big four results;

big4 rcrd big4 played big4 pts
Chelsea 2-0-3 5 6
Man Utd 2-0-1 3 6
Arsenal 1-1-2 4 4
Liverpool 2-1-1 4 7

Man Utd still has the best record against its biggest rivals … having taken 6 points from 3 games.  But they have the hardest schedule coming in:  Man Utd travels to the Emirates at the end of April.  Arsenal has already beaten Chelsea at home handily and would have to be considered favorites to take all 3 points.  Meanwhile, Man Utd still has Chelsea at home, and away games at Liverpool to deal with.

Arsenal’s slate is much easier; away game at Tottenham, home games against Liverpool (who they tied away earlier), Aston Villa (who they destroyed in Birmingham early in the season) and the Man Utd game.

The 4/30/11 Arsenal-Man Utd game may very well decide the title race.

Written by Todd Boss

March 2nd, 2011 at 11:07 am

Posted in Non-Baseball

Starting versus Closing

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Should we try Clippard as a starter? Absolutely! Photo: NationalsDailyNews/Meaghan Gay/DCist.com

Baseball writer extraordinaire Tom Verducci posted a fantastic article today talking about Neftali Feliz‘s proposed move from the Rangers closer to the starting rotation.  The article touches on a topic that I’ve been meaning to write about for a while; Starting versus Closing.  It also is literally the best summation I’ve seen yet describing why the save is over-rated, closers are overpaid and why you’d rather have starters versus relievers.

Lets face it; for the most part relievers are failed starters.  A few get drafted or signed as relievers (Washington’s Drew Storen being one local example), but most starters are drafted as starters and work their way through the minors as starters.  Some starters discover that they can’t develop secondary pitches, but their primary pitches are so fantastic that the club (rightly) turns them into relievers.  This especially allows hard-throwers (think someone like Joel Zumaya) to have a career despite the fact that they only really have one pitch and throw with such effort that they could not possibly last 6+ innings.

Minor league relievers definitely make the majors, but most often as either LOOGYs or rubber-armed replaceable right-handers (think Miguel Batista) out of the bullpen.  In recent  years the desire to have more and faster throwing arms out of the bullpen has led to more pitchers opting to become relievers sooner, but they still are converted out of starting roles for either performance or fragility.

Two items from his story that I’d like to comment on:

1. Managers don’t use Closers in the most high-leverage situations. I could not agree more.  When is the best spot to use your best, most reliable reliever?  In a one-run game in the 6th when your starter runs out of gas and loads the bases with one out?  Or at the beginning of the 9th inning of a 5-3 lead?  Verducci is right; managers in the modern game are slaves to the save statistic and will not bring in their closer unless its a “save situation.”   But he also notes what is common knowledge; that you could be putting out the 12th man in your bullpen and probably have only a slightly worse chance of getting 3 outs without losing the game for your team.  Per the article, 94% of 2-run leads in the 9th inning are won irrespective of who you put out there, and that percentage has not changed significantly over the past 50 years of baseball.  Joe Posnanski also wrote about this same topic in November with similar results, finding that teams in the 50s closed out games with the same regularity as teams now, but without high-priced one-inning closers.

Luckily for the Nats, we look to have 3-4 different guys who are of sufficient quality who we CAN bring in to a game in the 6th and get a high-leverage situation.  Storen, Clippard, Burnett or newly acquired Henry Rodriguez all seem to fit the bill.  But that doesn’t mean that we don’t have a manager in Riggleman who is in the “slave to the save” category.  Matt Capps was brought in to be the closer and he closed games.  That’s it.  It is safe to say that if Riggleman decides on a closer, that’s going to be his role and that’s that.

The save stat is ridiculous and most people know it.  You can get a save in a game where you give up 2 runs and 5 hits in a 1/3 of an inning.  You can get a save when you perform mop up duty but let the score get too close while you rubber-arm your way through a meaningless blowout.  The save takes nothing about the pitcher’s performance into account; only whether or not the game ended while he was on the mound and the win was preserved.

But the save stat, and its monster creation the specialized one-inning closer, are here to stay.  Prospects come up through the ranks specifically to be closers, free agent players will only play for certain teams if given “the chance to close.”  Closers are well paid, and their pay is directly tied to this flawed save statistic.  Statisticians have tried to create a better set of metrics for middle relievers (“Holds” mostly) but the reality is that closers have high leverage in salary situations while middle relievers are lucky to get paid a bit more than the veteran’s minimum.  Verducci touches on this ridiculousness, pointing out that Papelbon‘s higher salary in 2011 than Cole Hamels despite the relative levels of production for their teams.

Ironically, some Major League managers *know* this fact, but continue to trot out their best reliever for a 3-out save at the beginning of the 9th inning in a 3-run game.  They do the same as the other 29 managers because the radical idea that backfires directly leads to termination.  No manager is willing to risk their job to try to do something the right way.  To say nothing of the reaction of a highly-paid FA closer who is suddenly told he’s going to be primarily used in the middle of the 7th to clean up the starter’s mess.

It makes you wonder if there’s a better way.  Here’s two radical suggestions:

1. Comprise a bullpen with no named closer role, and tell the entire 7-man bullpen they’re doing closer-by-committee.  It may infuriate fantasy baseball players and the union (since saves translate to salary for their FAs), but it probably placates an entire roster of wanna-be closers.  Imagine if 5 of the 7 guys in your bullpen (leaving out the LOOGY and long-man) know they may be brought in to rescue a game in the 6th or close it out in the 9th, and their roles change on a daily basis based on use.  That to me is a far better situation than pre-naming a closer (which invariably is the best guy out there) and then never using him until the 9th.

2. Comprise an ENTIRE pitching staff of long-men relievers.  Imagine if you didn’t have starters at all, but an entire bullpen of guys who were geared to pitch 2-3 innings every other night.  You would never have a need for specialized closers or even high-priced starters.  You’d rotate through who got the start, the starter would go 2-3 innings, then the next guy would go, and you’d repeat this until the game was over.  It’s kinda like spring training but all year.  Since these guys are only throwing 2-3 innings, they should be able to repeat this task multiple times in a week.

There’s 54 regular innings to be had per week mid-season (6 games at 9 innings per).  54 innings divided out by 12 guys in the pen means about 4.5 innings per WEEK per pitcher.  If you split those 4.5 innings up across three games you’d be pitching (say) 2 innings on monday, 1 on thursday then 1.5 on saturday.  That’s pretty manageable.  Plus if everyone else is doing the same, you can rotate through the guys and slightly adjust based on how they’re pitching that day.

Plus, think about how CHEAP this pitching staff would be.  12 middle relievers could not possibly cost your team more than about $15-20M annually in salary, even if they were mostly on veteran contracts.  Roy Halladay makes more than that in 2011 just by himself.

Coincidentally, this is exactly what Tony LaRussa tried at one point in the early 90s with the Athletics.  Unfortunately his experiment ended quickly, failing less because of execution and more because of lack of support from his players and management.  Its just a matter of time before someone tries it again.


Here’s the second item i’d like to comment on:

2. Starters are FAR more valuable than Relievers or Closers.  Last year in the midst of Clippard’s fantastic middle-relief run I asked myself, “Why isn’t Clippard in the rotation?”  He pitched 91 innings spread out over 78 appearances and only gave up 69 hits.  He maintained an 11.1 K/9 ratio, which is better than any starter in 2010.  91 innings was good for 4th on the entire staff in 2010.

The leading argument i’ve read for Clippard staying in the bullpen relates to the nature of his stuff.  He’s got a sneaky good fastball, a decent curve but his bread and butter pitch is the change-up.  Apparently the knock on him is that hitters adjust to him more quickly and thus he makes more sense in a relief role.  In a starting role hitters would be getting their third crack at him in the 5th or 6th inning, right when he’s tiring and right when he’s vulnerable.  In relief, he can “show” all his pitches in one at bat and work each batter individually, then leave the game before his “stuff” is exposed.

Clippard was a starter his entire minor league career, and his minor league numbers were pretty good.  He always maintained a small hits-to-IP ratio, a good k/9 ratio.  It wasn’t until he reached the majors that suddenly he couldn’t start.  I think perhaps he’s either gotten pigeonholed or he’s psychologically set in the reliever mind-frame now.

A quality starter gives your team 6+ innings, works through the opposing team’s batting order nearly 3 full times and keeps your team in the game.  6-7 innings at a 3.00 era is invaluable for your team’s psyche as it tries to win game after game.  Leaving just 2-3 innings a night for a bullpen staff of 7 means that there’s fewer days when your staff is over worked and you have to give up games for lack of bullpen arms.

How about using career WAR as a bench mark?  I don’t really like the career WAR analysis (since it is an accumulator stat and a mediocre guy with 22 years of experience appears to be better than the best pitcher of his day who only had a 15 year career).  But it is telling in this situation.  Here’s a link to career WAR for pitchers at baseball-reference.com.  And here’s the rank of the 5 best relief pitchers of all time (the 5 relievers currently in the hall of fame), along with the rankings of some of their active contemporaries who seem likely for the hall.

Lname Fname Career WAR Rank
Smoltz John 38
Eckersley Dennis 46
Rivera Mariano 69
Wilhelm Hoyt 121
Gossage Goose 133
Hoffman Trevor 215
Wagner Billy 238
Sutter Bruce 315
Fingers Rollie 325

Smoltz and Eckersly both started for large portions of their career, hence the high rank.  Mariano Rivera is clearly (in my mind) the greatest reliever who has ever played and his career WAR shows.  But notice how low closer-only guys like Sutter and Fingers are on this list.  Both are currently below modern day starters Ted Lilly and Kevin Millwood, again guys who are hardly listed as being among the game’s elite.

By means of comparison, Trevor Hoffman, who is ranked 215th all time is ranked just ahead of one Freddie Garcia in all time WAR.  Now, is Freddie Garcia a serious hall of fame candidate?  Not likely; he’s currently on a minor league contract offer with the Yankees after nearly washing out of the game two years ago.


Oh, coincidentally, I absolutely think Felix should be in the rotation.  As should Aroldis Chapman in Cincinnati.  Because they’ll be able to help your team win on a much more frequent basis.  You always want the chance of 180 innings of quality versus 60.  Its that simple.

Bryce Harper struck out twice! What a waste of a draft pick!

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I'm going to miss the Warpaint. Photo thebiglead.com

I am being facetious of course.  You’ll probably never see more ink about a meaningless spring training game than this one, but phenom Bryce Harper‘s professional debut is worth the effort.  In the Nats 9-3 win yesterday over the Mets Harper batted twice and struck out twice.  He faced two journeymen relievers and fell victim to the same culpret that caused him to strike out frequently in the AFL: the off speed pitch.

It doesn’t mean he cannot hit them; it means he is still a jumpy, antsy 18-yr old who is probably like a kid in the candy store right now and he is over-eager to swing and show everyone who he is.  The key to hitting off speed stuff is patience.  You have to look for the fastball and adjust for the offspeed stuff.  He’s not there yet, and that (in the absence of all the other reasons) is the primary reason he needs minor league time.  He needs time to get into the routine, to learn how to play games every day for 4 months, to adjust for slumps, to play the game “slow” instead of excited fast.

Remember, if he was playing by the rules he’d be in his senior year of high school right now.  That’s hard to fathom really.  And we gloss over that fact all the time (kinda like the way we glossed over Michelle Wie competing on the LPGA as a 13 yr old.  A 13yr old!  She made the cut at the Womens US Open at the same age you and I were in 7th grade.  Still kinda amazing).  So, lets enjoy him in major league camp while he’s there and then wait for him to (hopefully) tear up Hagerstown and Potomac this summer.

Written by Todd Boss

March 1st, 2011 at 9:11 am

Posted in Nats in General

Why is Bernadina the presumed LF Starter over Morse?

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Morse did nothing but mash in 2010. Why are the Nats trying so hard to NOT use him in 2011? Photo hardballtalk.nbcsports.com

(Ironically, as I was penning/researching this posting all three leading Nats beat writers wrote similar articles.  Hmm.  Perhaps we’re all onto something.  Here’s links to Zuckerman, Goessling and Kilgore‘s similar articles.  Something must have happened in camp today…)

(Coincidentally, i’m also assuming that Rick Ankiel is a backup/fall back plan and nothing more.  He’s had exactly ONE impressive hitting season and was worse than Nyjer Morgan last year splitting time between the Royals, the Braves and the DL.  But it is concievable that Ankiel is “competing” for the LF job as well).

Mike Morse turned out to be one of the bright storylines for the team at the plate last year, posting a very respectable 2010 slash line of .289/.352/.519 and hitting 15 homers in just 293 at bats for a season OPS+ of 133 (3rd on the team behind Dunn and Zimmerman, just ahead of Willingham).   He’s a former infielder who moves around well despite being a big guy and can play four positions relatively easily (both corner infield and both corner outfield positions).

Roger Bernadina meanwhile posted this 2010 slash line: .246/.307/.384 in 461 plate appearances.  He had 11 homers and provided very good outfield defense with capabilities at all three positions.

So, given that the Nats traded away two of their best four hitters last year and clearly seem set to take a small step backwards in offensive production, why exactly is the presumed starter in left field not automatically going to be Morse?

The arguments i’ve heard are variations of three themes: lefty-righty splits at the plate, defense and balance of our lefty-righty hitters on the bench.  Lets discuss each item.

1. Lefty-Righty Splits: the knock on Morse is that he cannot hit right handed pitchers.  He mashes lefties but struggles against righties.  Is this true?  According to his 2010 splits, he clearly hits lefties better (he hit .295 versus .287 against right handers) but more significantly his slugging percentage split is significantly different (.466 versus .625 against lefties).  So clearly he doesn’t hit for as much power against right handers.

The thing is, his performance as a righty versus other righties is still pretty good as compared to the league.  His “sOPS+” values (sOPS+ being his Split league adjusted OPS value) was 126, meaning that he’s about 26% better than the league average for righty-righty matchups.

So, lets quickly look at Bernadina’s splits.  Turns out, Bernadina actually hits lefties BETTER than righties, but his best slugging figure (.429 against lefties) is worse than Morse’s weakest slugging figure.

Conclusion: Morse may be slightly weaker against righties, but he’s better against either arm than Bernadina.  He is closer to a #5 hitter in terms of power while Bernadina is a #2/#7 hitter.

2. Defense: Bernadina is clearly a better outfielder, and has a fantastic career UZR/150 rating in left.  He posted a 13.3 for 2010 and has a career 11.8.  Meanwhile Morse isn’t exactly Reggie Jackson patrolling left field but he’s not bad either.  In very limited LF career stats he has a 15.2 uzr/150 rating in left.  He’s significantly worse in Right … but then again that’s why we bought 7 years of Jayson Werth.

Meanwhile, Morse is also a very good first baseman and has logged time at SS and 3B.  Bernadina is purely an outfielder but can play center in a pinch.

But here’s the thing; you don’t NEED a star quality defender in left field!  Not at the expense of greatly needed offense anyway.  That’s why Josh Willingham still has a job and that’s why Manny Ramirez was able to play in Boston (and in the NL) for so long.

Conclusion: Bernadina’s better in left, but both bring defensive flexibilty to the table.

3. Lefty-Right balance in the lineup.  Morse is a righty, Bernadina a lefty.  Lets look at the probable 25-man roster out-field players.

  • Lefty only: Morgan, Bernadina, LaRoche, Ankiel
  • Righty only: Pudge, Ramos/Flores, Desmond, Zimmerman, Werth, Hairston, Gonzalez
  • Switch Hitters: Espinosa

But, of the presumed starters only Morgan and LaRoche are lefties.  Espinosa switch-hits but he’s probably stuck in the 8-hole until he improves on last year’s tailoff at the plate.  So, if we start Morse we’re looking at a lineup that probably goes L-R-R-L-R-R-R-S-Pitcher.  Three straight right-handed hitters after LaRoche.  If we replace Morse with Bernadina the lineup probably goes L-R-R-L-R-L-R-S-Pitcher, a much better balance.

Of course, we also have one Matt Stairs in camp and people are talking about him making the team as a designated pinch hitter.  I have an awful hard time believing this, but if it happens (at the probable expense of Albert Gonzalez), then having Morse on the bench as a right-handed hitting counterpart to Stairs makes a bit of sense.  Certainly having Bernadina, Ankiel AND Stairs on the bench makes no sense.  But, since Stairs brings no defensive value to the team we’d be incredibly thin at infield backup positions without Morse in the fold.

Conclusion: unclear until we see how Stairs looks in spring training.


In conclusion, there are arguments on both sides for/against either Morse or Bernadina in left.  Perhaps we’ll be surprised by Morse in left and Bernadina in center with Ankiel an able backup (certainly a possibility if Morgan does not improve on last year’s performance).  But I find it hard to believe we’re going to sit Morse over Bernadina or Ankiel at the beginning of the season.

What about Maya?

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Maya in his first start for the P-Nats. Photo William Yoder/thenatsblog.com

I like to think i’m reading just about every bit of Washington Nationals news there is to be had during Spring Training.  I follow all the beat writers I know of plus try to read just about every columnnist or blogger that I know to be down in Viera.  But nobody is talking about Yunesky Maya.

We know, for example, that John Lannan bulked up over the off season, that Livan shot a 65 and plans on playing in the Senior Golf tour when he turns 50, that Marquis feels better, that Detwiler has new mechanics, that Wang is healthy and that Zimmermann is rearing to go.  But what about Maya?

Last we had heard, Maya had gone down to the Dominican Winter League (DWL), played for Leones del Escogido and pitched well.  Baseball America’s Lacy Lusk wrote a rather promising report in December (insider only, sorry), and Maya was named the league’s best pitcher at the Winter’s end.  He finished the DWL 4-2 with a 1.32era, striking out 42 batters in 41 innings pitched.  And according to reports he had his fastball up to 93mph.  Now, the DWL may be the “best” of the winter leagues but its talent level has dipped significantly over the past 10 years.  At best, i’d say its a AAA-level quality league.  So take the stats with a slight grain of salt.

This slight uptick in speed is important.  In my review of Maya’s first four starts (posted here last September) he was barely breaking 90, sitting in the 88-89 range and relying more on nibbling than going after hitters.  I feel the uptick in velocity is clearly a result of gaining arm strength over the course of throwing innings, indicating that he was rushed to the Majors last September.  Rizzo has all but admitted the team screwed up by rushing Maya through the minors, and his results showed.

However, if Maya can hump it up to 93 and combine it with the amazing arsenal of pitches he seems to have (in his MLB debut he showed at least EIGHT different pitches), I think he can be a very dangerous pitcher in this league. Which is why the team risked an $8M contract on him.

Now, what does this mean for the 2011 season?  So far, its hard to tell; Ladson posted a biopic piece today but I’ve yet to see any reports on how he looks during his mound sessions or how he’s throwing.  Perhaps its a language barrier issue; he doesn’t really speak English so interviews are difficult unless the interviewer also speaks Spanish.

I think he’s still bound for AAA to start the season, simply because he has options and certain guys (Gorzelanny in particular) do not.  But he may be first in line when someone gets hit by the injury bug.

Written by Todd Boss

February 25th, 2011 at 9:56 am

Wainright’s injury a blow to the Cards…

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Not that I necessarily believe in the “Inverted W” theory of pitching mechanics … but Adam Wainwright certainly shows it. Photo: talksportsphilly.com

2/24/11 update: Wainwright is officially getting Tommy John surgery.  As other leading baseball columnists have mentioned, this could have some serious repercussions on the Cardinals both this season and in the future.

You hate to hear injury reports a week into spring training, but they’re starting to roll in.  Vincent Padilla is going to be out for an unspecified amount of time for elbow surgery (though this doesn’t hurt the Dodgers as much as an injury to someone like Kershaw or Billingsly would have), and now it looks as if St. Louis’ starter Adam Wainwright may have blown an elbow tendon.   I had not read previously the “slightly torn elbow ligament in 2010” item with regard to Wainwright.  Either way, the loss of Wainwright for the season adds to a growing list of concerns for the St. Louis franchise.

Just off the top of my head:

  • LaRussa‘s anti-union comments irritating his vets
  • LaRussa refusing to play Colby Rasmus for large stretches last year.
  • The team in general inexplicably not winning the NL Central last year despite having 3 of the best pitchers in the NL and a pretty good offense (6th in runs scored).
  • The team blatantly lowballs Pujols in FA talks.  By all accounts he was offered a contract that would have only made him about the 5th or 6th highest paid player.  Why in the world would your talks with Pujols not START with A-rod’s per-season figure?  Ok, perhaps 10yrs $300M is ridiculous but would you sign on for something like 7yrs $210M with 2 options based on performance year to year at the end of the deal?
  • Wainright’s injury: I havn’t seen confirmation yet of Tommy John, just seen news that says “significant elbow injury.”  There’s just no pitchers out there to be had as a replacement (just ask the Yankees) either.
  • St. Louis’ farm system has been down recently.  Most scouting establishments ranked it 29th or 30th in 2010 but in the 18-20 range for 2011.  So there’s not a lot of hope coming up.

The Cardinals under achieved as a team in 2010 (winning 86 but having a Pythagorean win total of 91) WITH Wainwright pitching at a Cy Young level.  Without him, the Cards could be sinking back to the middle of the pack, leaving the division for Cincinnati and Milwaukee to battle it out.

Rough waters ahead for the Cardinals.

Written by Todd Boss

February 23rd, 2011 at 2:03 pm