Archive for April, 2012

Thursday: 04.12.2012

How’d You Do That?

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I love this kind of stuff.  Probably because I’m a nerd.  This is Felix Doubront and Daniel Bard discussing pitching in the Red Sox dugout during Wednesday afternoon’s game in Toronto.  I know this probably happens in every dugout from the Majors to Single-A ball so I’m not pretending it’s rare, I just like when they show us on camera.  I’m already a huge Doubront fan and while I was down on Bard coming into the season, his debut against the Jays was impressive as it included 17 swing-and-misses.  One start isn’t enough to completely change my opinion, but I’m at least slightly more intrigued than I was during Spring Training.

Thursday: 04.12.2012

Josh Johnson Thru Two Starts

Josh Johnson labored a bit through his Opening Day start last Wednesday against the St. Louis Cardinals allowing three runs on 10 hits and two walks while striking out four.  He threw mostly fastballs (74% of his 91 pitches) while his velocity continued its downward trend sitting at 92.7 MPH (95 in ’09; 94.9 in ’10; 93.8 in ’11), though he did max out at 95.4 MPH.  Was it rust as he returns from injury or is something amiss?  Johnson excited fantasy players with his Spring Training numbers that included a 2.42 ERA and 24 strikeouts against 10 walks in 22 innings of work.  At the same time, he did allow 21 hits.

I don’t put much stock into Spring Training numbers at all.  There are some instances where they matter a bit.  If a pitcher is returning from injury, I’m checking to make sure he is getting his allotted work in without incident.  I don’t even really care if he is getting knocked around, but if they say Johan Santana is supposed to go four innings or X-amount of pitches today, I want to see that fulfilled.  The other instance is in a job battle.  It doesn’t matter if marginal player X hit .904/.998/1.964 in his 20-something at-bats as that’s not at all indicative of his future performance, but it matters that he excelled if that is securing him a job for at least the near future.

Johnson was getting in his allotted work which was encouraging, but I didn’t change his ranking based on the numbers we saw.  I don’t know who the 24 Ks came against nor do I know if the 21 hits were tons of line drives or bloops and bleeders.  After seeing what can only be classified as a mediocre outing in last Wednesday’s opener, I looked forward to seeing Johnson face off against Roy Halladay Wednesday night in Philly for their second starts of the year.  Here are my observations from the outing:

  • 40 of his 80 pitches were fastballs (50%); down from his first start when he threw 74% heaters
  • His fastball averaged 92.4 MPH; down slightly from the 92.7 MPH mark in his first start
  • He threw almost only fastballs & changeups (68 of 80 pitches; 85%)
  • He only threw breaking balls 14% of the time and didn’t even throw a curveball until the 3rd
  • He threw just 6 sliders and 6 curveballs
  • He struggled to get ahead of batters going just 9-for-21 in first pitch strikes
  • That no doubt contributed to his struggles Wednesday including 11 H allowed & just 1 K
  • For his career, Johnson has a 7.4 K/BB after 0-1 counts; just 1.2 K/BB after 1-0 counts
  • For his career, Johnson allows a .220 AVG & .558 OPS after 0-1; .245 AVG & .739 OPS after 1-0
  • He failed to put away batters w/just the 1 K despite 9 batters (of 23) facing counts w/2 strikes
  • For his career, Johnson has struck out 43% of the batters who are faced w/2 strikes during a PA

This clearly wasn’t Johnson’s best outing.  The fact that it came near the beginning of the season tends to give it more weight in the eyes of some since it is 50% of his entire sample so far.  That is always dangerous for obvious reasons.  Adding it all up, he has two starts that aren’t exactly Josh Johnson-esque and given his injury history, it does raise the antennae a bit.  Right now the velocity is down and he isn’t getting the swing-throughs (just 1 on Wednesday) we’re used to seeing.  The lack of breaking pitches thrown could be an indication that he is being timid with his breaking stuff in an effort to avoid getting hurt again.  In the previous four years, he threw sliders more than a quarter of the time so he needs it to be successful.

For now, you can only stay the course with Johnson unless a full value trade comes along which is unlikely in most leagues.  I look forward to his upcoming starts to see how (if?) he progresses back toward the Johnson we are used to seeing.  I will post another update before the month is out.  He faces the Cubs at home, Nationals on the road and Diamondbacks at home in his next three starts.

Wednesday: 04.11.2012

This is Real

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Toronto Blue Jays left fielder Eric Thames is purposely styling his facial hair in this manner. I think it could’ve been enough to get him sent to Las Vegas in favor of Travis Snider but then I forgot about his remarkably unfortunate mustache from last year. Meanwhile, Jason Collette told me on Twitter that he believes Thames should be celebrated for the facial hair.

Wednesday: 04.11.2012

National League Predictions

I meant to get this up before leaving town for the Easter Weekend, but I didn’t so here it is now.  Since these predictions come from a contest form I turned in several weeks before the season, I don’t mind sharing them even 5-6 games into the season.  Of course, even if they weren’t something I locked in beforehand, my opinion would NOT be changed by less than a week of games.  So without further ado, here are my NL predictions.

NL East

Philadelphia Phillies 90-72

Washington Nationals 87-75*

Atlanta Braves 84-78

Miami Marlins 81-81

New York Mets 76-86

 

Anytime you have Roy Halladay, Cole Hamels and Cliff Lee heading up your rotation, you are going to be around to make some noise in your division.  Their neutered lineup is a bit of a concern without question especially with Juan Pierre leading off, but that rotation can mask a lot because even Vance Worley and Joe Blanton offer something at the back end.  I love what Washington did with their rotation this winter acquiring Gio Gonzalez and Edwin Jackson to pair with their aces in Stephen Strasburg and Jordan ZimmermannBryce Harper, if ready and that’s a reasonable assumption, serves as a mid-season trade acquisition as I suspect he should be ready around June 1st.

Most of what Atlanta does pitching-wise is excellent, though I can’t have much faith in any team purposely giving Livan Hernandez innings.  Their offense gives me pause outside of Brian McCann/Dan Uggla/Michael Bourn.  The key, obviously, is Jason Heyward.  Miami made some great additions to their team and while some are seeing playoff potential, I’m not sure they are in the right division for such a surge.  Even an 81-81 record represents a 9-win improvement from 2011 which is pretty significant.  It’s painfully obvious to say that Josh Johnson is the key to their season, but this 81-81 record has him staying healthy.  I’m not sold on the rest of the rotation or their bullpen holding leads that the strong offense should be able to obtain.  I don’t think the Mets are complete failure that many see them as, but again they are in a tough division to make noise in as a scrappy upstart.  They will have some nice stretches, but when push comes to shove, they don’t have enough.

 

NL Central

St. Louis Cardinals 90-72

Cincinnati Reds 85-77

Milwaukee Brewers 85-77

Pittsburgh Pirates 80-82

Chicago Cubs 64-98

Houston Astros 61-101

 

Sure the Cards lost Albert Pujols and that stings in general, but it certainly doesn’t decimate the team.  Off the bat, they “replace” him with Adam Wainwright returning and Carlos Beltran coming in via free agency.  Then you factor in Rafael Furcal at short for Ryan Theriot (Furcal had a better WAR in 50 G for the Cards than Theriot did in 132), David Freese in at third base full-time for Daniel Descalso (who had a 0.5 WAR in 148 G) and more production from Allen Craig when he returns from injury.  Yes, the loss of Chris Carpenter and potential regression of Lance Berkman takes some of those gains away, but you could also add to Matt Holliday’s production as he played just 124 G last year and still managed 5.0 WAR.  This team is loaded.  Not to mention that Shelby Miller should be ready to bolster the rotation in the summer.  Cincinnati could make more noise than this if things gel properly.  I think they have a deep lineup especially if Zack Cozart pans out as expected while the addition of Mat Latos should be huge.  I worry about the rotation outside of him as they could really go either way (well, except Arroyo, he’s only going one way).

The top of the Milwaukee rotation with Yovani Gallardo and Zack Greinke features two NL Cy Young contenders.  They didn’t quite replace Prince Fielder as thoroughly as StL did with Pujols, but switching him, Yuniesky Betancourt and Casey McGehee out for Aramis Ramirez, Alex Gonzalez and Mat Gamel could be a net gain if Gamel pans out to a level commensurate with his AAA stats.  The additions the Pirates made this offseason weren’t blockbusters, but they were all legitimate positives including Clint Barmes’s defense at short and a pair of strikeout pitchers in Erik Bedard and A.J. Burnett.  Can they score enough for it to make it matter, though?  Outside of a handful of appealing pieces, this Cubs roster is a disaster.  I sure hope Theo Epstein is planning on moving a bunch of these veteran pieces throughout the season, including ace Matt Garza.  Houston’s move of Brett Myers to closer was a poor one in my estimation as they now need to find 215 innings elsewhere, but I guess they think he’s more tradable as a closer.  I sincerely disagree, but I’m not in charge.

NL West

Los Angeles Dodgers 88-74

Arizona Diamondbacks 86-76*

San Francisco Giants 83-79

San Diego Padres 81-81

Colorado Rockies 76-86

The Dodgers winning the division isn’t based on their sale especially since I’m not sure that has a 2012 impact on the field.  In 2011, they managed 82 wins (and 79 losses, didn’t make up a game) and were underachievers for all intents and purposes.  They have two of the absolute best players in the game and they were peak performers last year, but even some regression from Clayton Kershaw and Matt Kemp should be offset by regression up to the mean for several other guys including Andre Ethier, Chad Billingsley and Mark Ellis.  The Chris Capuano and Aaron Harang signings were solid moves to shore up the rotation and the bullpen is sneaky strong, too.  Not satisfied with their breakout season from 2011, the Diamondbacks went out and got Trevor Cahill and Jason Kubel.  Cahill was a great addition, but I’m not sure Kubel is a huge positive after the development of Gerardo Parra in 2011.  They aren’t going 28-16 in 1-run games again, though.  The return of Buster Posey and additions of Angel Pagan and Melky Cabrera should help the Giants offense, but it won’t make it anything close to reliable and they also have some 1-run regression headed their way after a 33-22 record in those situations last year.

The Padres might take a while to get going, but they are better than many realize in my opinion.  The rotation is always given a boost by the home ballpark, but they have some real talent with Cory Luebke and Edinson Volquez as the 1-2 while the lineup is getting incrementally better especially after adding Yonder Alonso and getting Nick Hundley back for a full season.  They were also rated as the best farm system in all of baseball by multiple outlets meaning reinforcements are on the way, too.  I really like Robbie Erlin and Joe Wieland to come up during the season and replace the weaker parts of their rotation.  It is hard to be down on the Rockies with two superstars in Troy Tulowitzki and Carlos Gonzalez as well as other appealing bats, but the pitching is just so uninspiring.  There is some long-term promise, but I think they will struggle to compete in 2012.  This division is regarded as weak, but I think it’s quite a bit stronger than many (any?) give it credit for being from what I’ve read and heard.  At 37 years old, Rafael Betancourt isn’t someone the Rockies need to keep around for the long haul so if he excels in the closer’s role, he should be moved which would open the door for 24-year old flamethrower Rex Brothers, one of my favorite middle relievers this year.  Yes, I have favorite middle relievers.

NL Playoffs

Wildcard – Nationals defeat Diamondbacks

Division Series – Dodgers defeat Phillies 4-2; Cardinals defeat Nationals 4-1

Championship Series – Dodgers defeat Cardinals 4-3

World Series – Rangers defeat Dodgers 4-2

 

NL Awards

MVP – Matt Kemp, Ryan Zimmerman, Troy Tulowitzki, Joey Votto, Hanley Ramirez

Cy Young – Cole Hamels, Zack Greinke, Jordan Zimmermann

ROY – Zack Cozart, Robbie Erlin, Bryce Harper

Thursday: 04.5.2012

American League Predictions

I realize this is the third Opening Day of the season when you consider the games in Japan between Oakland and Seattle last week as well as last night’s St. Louis/Miami game, but I’m certainly not the only one who considers today the real Opening Day.  And while there aren’t nearly enough games (just seven games), we’re not here to focus on the negative.  The important thing is we have seven games sprinkled throughout the day including Justin Verlander vs. Jon Lester today at noon central!  With that, it’s time for the most important part of the season: predictions.  These mean SO much and they are very scientific.  I expect to be held accountable to these, punishable by death.

AL East

New York Yankees 92-70

Boston Red Sox 91-71*

Tampa Bay Rays 90-72

Toronto Blue Jays 85-77

Baltimore Orioles 62-100

The Yankees would obviously be in better shape if Michael Pineda had dominated throughout Spring Training and was slotted into to their #2 slot, but Hiroki Kuroda is still an upgrade there.  Even with some age regression factored into the lineup, it is still one of the best in all of baseball.  A lot of people are sleeping on Boston for some reason.  First let’s be clear that Andrew Bailey going down doesn’t matter AT ALL.  It’s a complete non-factor and easily the most replaceable piece of the team.  The guy hasn’t topped 50 innings the last two years so Bailey is especially easy to replace, but even if he were a 65-inning stalwart it wouldn’t be a problem.  Few things are more overrated than closer.  Their lineup is amazing, but I worry about the non-Lester rotation pieces given Josh Beckett’s health track record and the general uncertainty of the other three (Buchholz, Doubront and Bard).

This division is just so filthy.  It is hard to look at that Tampa Bay rotation and not have them in the playoffs, especially since the lineup is improved from 2011, too.  Honestly with a three game split from first to third, the top of this division could easily finish in any order.  My guess happens to be in this order, though I would love to see Tampa-Boston-New York.  Don’t sleep on Toronto, either.  I don’t think they quite have the rotation to stack up top to bottom.  I love Ricky Romero and Brandon Morrow, but it drops off from there especially compared to Tampa Bay.  There are some nice pieces in the Baltimore lineup, but the pitching staff remains rough.  They need to see some major improvement from their former prospects (Brian Matusz, Jake Arrieta, Zach Britton and Chris Tillman).

AL Central

Detroit Tigers 92-70

Chicago White Sox 82-80

Cleveland Indians 79-83

Kansas City Royals 73-89

Minnesota Twins 66-96

I know most of the world has my beloved Tigers going 170-0 (yes, we’re going to win 8 more games than anyone even plays) and frankly it disturbs that everyone thinks the team simply can’t lose and will run away with the AL Central.  When the general public thinks a team simply cannot lose, that’s usually when they lose.  Even with the curse of expectations, this is a really strong team with an amazing lineup, killer rotation and solid bullpen so it isn’t hard to see them among the AL’s best.  The infield defense as a liability is massively overrated.  For the few that aren’t bought in on the Tigers, this is their only real reason, but the next time that an infield defense dooms a team will be the first time.   If you’ve got “Sox” in your name, it seems you’re being slept on.  The White Sox are the opposite of the Red Sox in that their strength is the rotation while the lineup has some questions, but this is a great 1-5.  On offense, Adam Dunn and Alex Rios simply cannot be as bad as they were in 2011.

The Indians have some really nice pieces, especially on offense, but I’m not entirely sold on the rotation top to bottom.  What Ubaldo Jimenez are they going to get?  Will Justin Masterson’s continued issues with lefties doom him in ’12?  I like the lineup, but the rotation will keep them below .500.  Kansas City isn’t quite ready for the big time, either.  Love Eric Hosmer and Alex Gordon leading the lineup, but the rotation is still a mess.  The bullpen will cover up some of the mess, but they need some of their pitching prospects to make an impact this year.  Everyone is excited for Francisco Liriano’s 2012 based on his impressive Spring Training (33 K, 5 BB in 27 IP with 2.33 ERA and 1.11 WHIP).  I’m not so sure it portends regular season success, but even if he’s peak Liriano, they still don’t have nearly enough in the rotation to compete.  Add in the major injury risks littered throughout the lineup and it’s going to be another long season in the Twin Cities.

AL West

Texas Rangers 91-71

Los Angeles Angels 90-72*

Oakland Athletics 70-92

Seattle Mariners 70-92

It’s a two-horse out west with the incredibly deep Rangers powered by their disgustingly good lineup and the new look Angels led by their elite rotation and some guy named Albert.  Don’t overlook the Texas rotation, though.  They replaced CJ Wilson with Yu Darvish and they’ll enter the season with eight starters on the staff as Alexi Ogando, Scott Feldman and Robert Ross have all been starters during their career yet find themselves in the bullpen for now.  I think Ogando is better than Neftali Feliz, but the Texas can afford to see the experiment through with Feliz since they have so much depth.  LA’s lineup is hardly Albert & The Scrubs.  Howard Kendrick is going to explode for a big year while Kendrys Morales finally appears ready to contribute again.  Like Dunn in Chicago, Vernon Wells simply can’t be that bad again (.248 OBP in 529 PA) while Chris Iannetta and Peter Bourjos make up a hell of an 8-9 combo at the bottom.

Oakland and Seattle both have a handful of intriguing pieces, but neither has the team to contend especially in this division.  Brandon McCarthy’s profile has been raised this offseason with mainstream exposure through ESPN and I like him for a big year.  Yoenis Cespedes should enjoy some success, too, but a Coco Crisp/Seth Smith combo at 3-4 in the lineup is telling.  I’m a huge Dustin Ackley fan and see big things for him with the M’s, but the rotation stalls out quickly after Felix Hernandez.  Help is on the way with some great pitching prospects on the rise, but they are unlikely to make a big dent in 2012 making another down season likely in the Great Northwest.

AL Playoffs

Wildcard – Angels defeat Red Sox

Division Series – Tigers defeat Angels 4-3; Rangers defeat Yankees 4-2

Championship Series – Rangers defeat Tigers 4-3 :sadface:

AL Awards

MVP – Miguel Cabrera, Evan Longoria, Albert Pujols, Brett Lawrie, Dustin Pedroia

Cy Young – David Price, Dan Haren, Justin Verlander

ROY – Matt Moore, Joe Benson, Yu Darvish

I’ll do the National League next.