The Daily Something
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Written by Bill
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Thursday, 17 June 2010 09:00 |
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The All-Star Game is still nearly a month away and the halfway point for most teams is still 15 or 16 games away...but people have been filling out All-Star ballots for like a year now. So why not give you mine? (Also, the Baseball Bloggers Alliance is tabulating its members' All-Star ballots, so I wanted to get mine in before I forgot.)
American League Catcher: Joe Mauer (.316/.393/.445, 1.8 WAR) I generally believe that the last full year (All-Star break to All-Star break) should determine the All-Star rosters -- along with a heavy dose of good ol' subjectivity -- so Mauer would very likely get the nod even if he hadn't been the best catcher in the league so far this year...but he has been, pretty comfortably ahead of Victor Martinez. It's unlikely that he'll ever match his 2009, but even if he's reverted completely back to his 2008-and-earlier form, all you're left with is the best player in the American League.
First Base: Justin Morneau (.344/.455/.624, 4.0 WAR) But it's this guy who's been the best player in the AL for the first sixty-plus games. He's slipped a bit, as he had to, from his amazingly hot start with the bat, but he's still edging out Youkilis and Cabrera as the best hitter in the AL, and he's been the best defender at the position -- his 6.4 UZR is more than twice the next-best AL 1B's total (and that's Kendry Morales, who won't be adding to it any time soon). It becomes a lot closer between Miggy and Morneau if we consider the second half of last year...but I kind of think that when a guy's been the best player in the league and is generally recognized as an All-Star calibre player to begin with, he should start. Also, while Morneau was hurt for the end of the year, which nearly cost his team the pennant, Cabrera got drunk and blew off the end of the year, and very likely did cost his team the pennant. So there's that.
Second Base: Robinson Cano (.368/.414/.609, 3.8 WAR) This one's a runaway. Cano is hard on Morneau's heels for best WAR in the majors. His .435 wOBA is fourth in the majors and nearly 60 points ahead of the next best AL second baseman. I think Dustin Pedroia is your runner up; Orlando Hudson has the next-best WAR at 2.1, but Pedroia isn't far behind at 1.8, and he gets the nod on his second-half 2009 and just generally being a better player.
Third Base: Evan Longoria (.321/.391/.573, 3.3 WAR) If Mauer isn't the AL's best player going forward, Longoria is. I don't know where he stands on RBI and such, but he should probably be considered the favorite for MVP right now (Morneau or Cano would deserve it if the season ended today, but Longoria's more likely to sustain it). Adrian Beltre is your surprise runner-up, but again, it's not a hard choice.
Shortstop: Derek Jeter (.290/.346/.435, 2.0 WAR) He's come back a great deal toward his norms since his weird start, increasing his walk rate and swinging at fewer bad pitches. He's not done yet, and he's still the best in the AL (but like Mauer, he'd probably still deserve it if he were merely one of the best). Marco Scutaro is proving that last year wasn't (entirely) a fluke, and probably deserves the first bench spot.
Outfield: Alexis Rios (.315/.378/.568, 3.3 WAR), Carl Crawford (.300/.353/.478, 3.1 WAR), Ben Zobrist (.311/.379/.445, 2.4 WAR) Alex Rios is a phenomenal comeback story that probably deserves his own piece. Carl Crawford is very likely in his last year as one of the most underrated players in the game. Ben Zobrist is in a pretty tight race with Shin-Soo Choo, Magglio Ordonez and some others for that third spot, but Zobrist gets it as much for last year, when he was arguably the best player in the league, as for this year, when he's merely been among the best. What I love about this outfield is that none of these three guys is a center fielder [edit: nevermind, Rios is one this year, but he's been predominantly a RF throughout his career], yet it would have a decent chance of being the best defensive outfield in ASG history.
Designated Hitter: Vladimir Guerrero (.336/.370/.563, 2.0 WAR) Hasn't had a batting average this high since 2004, an OBP this high since 2007, or a SLG this high since 2005. On pace for a bit over 5.0 WAR, which would be his best since 2005 as well. I'm happy with this (re-)development.
National League Catcher: Miguel Olivo (.311/.379/.534, 2.5 WAR) He doesn't have enough PA to qualify for the batting title, yet he's racked up seven-tenths of a win more than Mauer or NL runner-up Brian McCann, based partly on his excellent hitting and partly on having thrown out 53% of baserunners. He's coming up on 32 years old and has never posted an OBP better than .292, so it's impossible for me to believe the batting line is for real. But in a slightly off year for McCann -- and it was a slightly off second half of '09 too -- I think he's earned the nod.
First Base: Albert Pujols (.309/.425/.559, 2.6 WAR) Joey Votto is having a phenomenal year, arguably as good as or better than Albert's, and deserves the spot on the team that I'm sure he'll get. But the starting job is Albert's for the foreseeable future, as it should be.
Second Base: Chase Utley (.260/.376/.461, 2.4 WAR) His protracted recent slump is really dragging down his overall numbers, but they're still pretty great numbers for a Gold Glove-quality second baseman. Brandon Phillips is right on his tail, but Utley gets the legacy vote.
Third Base: Ryan Zimmerman (.302/.393/.568, 3.0 WAR) Scott Rolen and David Wright have been great and deserve spots on the team, but Zimmerman is challenging Utley and Hanley for the title of best non-Pujols in the NL. If you don't already consider him one of the five or six best position players in baseball, there's a pretty good chance you will be by the end of this year.
Shortstop: Hanley Ramirez (.290/.374/.492, 2.1 WAR) Flip a coin between Hanley and Troy Tulowitzki to determine who's been best this year, and Tulo is building up some long-term cache of his own, but Hanley still gets the edge based on past performance.
Outfield: Marlon Byrd (.329/.374/.536, 3.0 WAR), Josh Willingham (.279/.422/.507, 2.5 WAR), Andrew McCutchen (.314/.381/.479, 1.9 WAR) This is a really tough call. Andres Torres leads all NL outfielders in WAR, but is 32 and a career .272/.362/.396 hitter in the minor leagues, but is now hitting .297/.398/.496 -- exactly the kind of fluke performance I don't really care to reward with an All-Star appearance. At least Byrd is a former top prospect who's established himself as a pretty good hitter. I picked Josh Willingham because I don't think anybody realizes how good this guy has been, but any of the Cardinals' outfielders (Colby Rasmus, Ryan Ludwick or Matt Holliday, probably in that order) are about as deserving. McCutchen does relatively poorly (10th) by FanGraphs WAR but very well by BBREF WAR, leading all NL outfielders. It's time to standardize this stuff. Another guy I should mention is Angel Pagan, who's been great, but falls in the same I-just-can't-buy-it category that Torres does. It amazes me that I'm not putting Jason Heyward in the lineup, but he's just not quite been at that level. He'd probably qualify for a bench spot, especially since there are approximately 78 of them per league available this year.
So that's that! |
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Written by Bill
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Tuesday, 15 June 2010 09:00 |
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 I was back in Minnesota this weekend, watching the Twins struggle against the NL East-leading Braves while the Tigers swept away the dreadful Pirates. On the out-of-town scoreboard, I noticed the Yankees were destroying the Astros, maybe the most hopeless team in baseball, while the Red Sox had to tackle the two time defending NL champ Phillies (and handled them pretty well, but still). So it occurred to me again why (first among many other reasons) I despise interleague play: it's really, really unfair.
If you've got four to six teams competing for one division title, they should play essentially the same number of games against the exact same opponents. Interleague play has always thrown that off thanks to the stress on "rivalry" series, but lately it seems that they've gotten even further away from giving teams in the same division an equal shot.
To show the kind of difference Bud Selig's stupid little game can make, I thought I'd take a look at the top contenders in each division right now (all teams currently within 5 games of first place) and the relative strengths of their interleague schedules, based on their opponents' records right now (through June 13). If a team has their "rival" twice on the schedule, of course, I counted that team's record twice, so it's sort of a weighted W/L% for each team's interleague opponents. It's not meant to actually prove anything -- teams who play the Phillies would have shown a much tougher strength of schedule a couple weeks ago, for instance, and I'm pretty confident they will again a couple weeks from now. It also doesn't matter that But I do think it suggests which teams stand to benefit or be harmed, and if nothing else, it's illustrative of the problem.
Here are the AL contenders:
| East |
Weighted W-L |
Wpct. |
Opponents |
| Yankees |
189-189 |
.500 |
NYM(6), Hou, LAD, Ari, Phi |
| Rays |
187-194 |
.491 |
Fla(6), Hou, Atl, SDP, Ari |
| Red Sox |
194-180 |
.519 |
Phi(6), Ari, LAD, Col, SFG |
| Central |
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| Twins |
189-188 |
.501 |
Mil(6), Atl, Col, Phi, NYM |
| Tigers |
188-193 |
.493 |
Was, Ari, NYM, LAD, Pit, Atl |
| West |
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| Rangers |
158-222 |
.416 |
Hou(6), CHC, Mil, Fla, Pit |
| Angels |
193-185 |
.511 |
LAD(6), Mil, CHC, Col, Stl |
| A's |
191-186 |
.507 |
SFG(6), CHC, Stl, Cin, Pit |
The Red Sox do have a significant disadvantage to the Yankees, one that will probably look bigger by the end of the year when the Phillies and Rockies start playing better. But the Rays get an even bigger boost than the Yankees. The big deal is the Rays and Yankees getting to play the Astros rather than the Rockies or Giants.
The Twins are at a slight disadvantage too, but neither of those divisions is anything close to what's going on in the West, where the Rangers have, by far, the easiest interleague schedule of any "contender." The main culprit is the Astros yet again, and the Rangers get them six times, while their chief competitors are stuck playing six games against two of the tougher teams in the weaker league. If the Rangers win the West by a couple games, there's a good chance that the nonsensical scheduling will have played a big part in that.
The NL is a little trickier:
| East |
Weighted W-L |
Wpct. |
Opponents |
| Braves |
164-150 |
.522 |
Min, TB, KC, CHW, Det |
| Mets |
191-185 |
.508 |
NYY(6), Cle, Det, Min, Bal |
| Phillies |
209-173 |
.547 |
Bos(6), NYY, Min, Cle, Tor |
| Central |
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| Reds |
133-183 |
.421 |
Cle(6), KC, Sea, Oak |
| Cardinals |
153-169 |
.475 |
LAA, Sea, Oak, KC, Tor |
| West |
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| Padres |
139-177 |
.440 |
Sea(6), Tor, Bal, TB |
| Dodgers |
182-140 |
.565 |
LAA(6), Bos, NYY, Det |
| Giants |
152-170 |
.472 |
Oak(6), Bal, Tor, Bos |
| Rockies |
170-152 |
.528 |
KC, Tor, Bos, Min, LAA |
Because there are two more teams in the NL, 12 of the 14 have to play another NL team during one otherwise-interleague series, so those 12 play just 15 interleague games rather than 18. The unlucky two this year are the Mets and Phillies, who need to play the full 18-game interleague schedule. This means that (a) the Mets' strength of schedule advantage vis-a-vis the Braves, if it existed at all, is probably pretty well erased; and (b) the Phillies really got screwed. Not only do they get the second-highest opponents' W% on the board, but they need to play an extra series against the stronger AL. It's already hurt them, as they've dropped four of six to the Red Sox.
The Reds have the second-easiest schedule. The Cards aren't technically that far behind, but replacing six games against Cleveland with three against the Angels and three against the Blue Jays sure feels like a big deal. It's kind of fun that the Reds and Padres, the two teams nobody expected to contend, get the biggest interleague breaks.
And that West...oy. The Dodgers have the toughest schedule here (at least before you consider the Phils' three extra games). They get their usual six tough games against the Angels, but then they get three more series against really good AL teams. And the thing is, it's not like there are any surprise teams on that list. Most people would've told you before the season started that the Angels, Red Sox, Yankees and Tigers, at least collectively, were going to be pretty good teams. Fate, or somebody, just had it in for the Dodgers this year. And schedules shouldn't just let fate (or somebody) have it in for the Dodgers (or anybody). Schedules should give teams at least roughly equal shots at proving themselves. |
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Written by Bill
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Friday, 11 June 2010 09:00 |
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Don't blame Roy S. Johnson, Special to ESPN.com. He's just saying what everyone else is saying.
Johnson's article, "2010: Year of the Dominant Pitcher," asserts, as you might expect, that "By now, it should be clear that 2010 is the Year of the Dominant Pitcher." His evidence:
- Stephen Strasburg was really awesome on Tuesday;
- The Pirates' hitters were really bad
always on Tuesday;
- Three no-hitters, two perfect games, and whatever it was Armando Galarraga did;
- There are currently 25 pitchers with ERAs under 3.00, when there were just 11 at the end of 2009; and
- Ubaldo Jimenez.
I can totally see where Johnson, and everybody, gets that idea. Three perfect games in one season is just insanely unlikely (John Dewan, at statoftheweek.com, puts the odds at 16,033-to-1; Tommy Bennett of Baseball Prospectus used a different method that suggested it was about forty times less likely than even that). Strasburg and Jimenez and Halladay are awesome. And scoring is lower right now than it was at the end of last year, or even through June of last year.
I just don't think anything we've seen so far proves anything. And I realize that that gives writers a lot less to write about, but I think it's true anyway.
David Pinto's excellent Day By Day database tells me that MLB hitters have put up these lines from opening day through June 9 of the last four years:
2007: .261/.331/.411 2008: .260/.332/.407 2009: .261/.335/.415. 2010: .259/.330/.408
I mean, I know that Johnson's point is that it's the year of the dominating pitcher, but the undercurrent is that scoring is way down everywhere, and sentiment there and elsewhere seems to be that it's the Year of the Pitcher, generally. And if that's the case, don't you think we'd see some meaningful difference between those numbers that actually lead to the scoring of runs? If there's an outlier there at all, it's last year, when scoring was actually up a bit early and went down late in the year. In those other years, what happened is about what I expect will happen this year; offense was down in the cold months, and went up in the warm months.
I also just don't think people understand how much this stuff can fluctuate, month to month, even across the entire league. Here's the scoring by month, in runs per game per team, figured from BBREF's MLB-wide splits:
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Mar/Apr |
May |
June |
July |
Aug. |
Sept./Oct. |
Total |
| 2007 |
4.54 |
4.65 |
4.81 |
4.81 |
4.95 |
5.00 |
4.80 |
| 2008 |
4.53 |
4.47 |
4.54 |
4.90 |
4.69 |
4.80 |
4.65 |
| 2009 |
4.84 |
4.67 |
4.37 |
4.56 |
4.78 |
4.50 |
4.61 |
| 2010 |
4.55 |
4.44 |
4.37 |
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4.47 |
A statistician might be able to tell you what that meant in some detail: all I can tell you is that those numbers are kind of all over the place, and as such, that I don't think we should be reading anything at all into two months plus nine days. 2010 has started out almost exactly like 2008 did, and 2009 started out with much more offense...but 2008 actually ended up with more runs per game than 2009 did. It's entirely possible that as the weather keeps warming up over the next several weeks, teams start scoring close to five runs a game, and the overall offensive levels approach or surpass 2008 and 2009.
What about all those dominant performances? Shutouts through June, 2007-09: 19, 21, 27. So far in 2010: 23. High, considering we've got three weeks left in June, but not crazy high. No guarantee we'll end up with more shutouts this year than last.There were 28 shutouts through June in 2006, too. This isn't hugely out of the ordinary.
And Johnson's point that there are 25 guys with a sub-3.00 ERA and only 11 at the end of 2009 is very flawed: it's obviously much easier/more likely to post a low ERA through 12 or 13 starts than through 30 or 33 of them. But at the same time, strangely, it might be his one point that sort of hits home. Going back to the Day by Day Database, it tells me there were 17 pitchers with a sub-3.00 ERA who qualified for the ERA title (roughly estimated) at this point last year...not 11, but actually closer to 11 than 25. In 2008 there were just eight sub-3s at this point (the same number they ended with), and in 2007, 15 (but ended with just one, Jake Peavy). So there are more individuals putting up low ERAs this year than there have been at this point in the last few...but as 2007 shows, that doesn't tell us anything about how they're going to end up.
The bottom line is that the evidence that this year is actually meaningfully different from the last (or the one before that, or the one before that) is pretty thin. It's possible that offense is down and pitching is up, but nobody can know that yet. There certainly have been a lot of really impressive and noteworthy pitching performances, an unusually high number of them, but the fact that a handful of memorable games have happened so far doesn't mean they're likely to keep happening, or that (as Johnson suggests) we'll see a lot more 2-1 and 1-0 games than we're used to. I think it's more likely that league scoring winds up just about exactly where it's been for the last three or four seasons. |
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Written by Bill
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Thursday, 10 June 2010 09:00 |
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Believe it or not (and maybe this is totally believable to you, but it seems crazy to me), it's been five years, eight months and seven days since there has been a Major League Baseball team known as the Montreal Expos. And while baseball doesn't typically take the toll on the human body that football and some other sports do, six years is still an awfully long time. Rosters turn over several times over in six years (especially true, I suppose, when the team six years ago went 67-95). Thirty-seven players played for the last Expos team in 2004 and had not yet turned 30 when that season ended; I count twenty-five of those thirty-seven -- including four starting position players and five of the six pitchers who started at least 15 games -- who have not played in the major leagues in 2010.
One thing this means is that at some point -- and probably a point sooner than you'd think -- there will be no players left in MLB who have played a home game in Montreal. So: who, at this point, is likely to be the last Expo (le dernier Expo, I think)?
It turns out that there are exactly 20 hitters and 20 pitchers who BBREF classifies as "active" and who once played for Les Expos de Montreal. Here they are, with their Expos statistics:
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Read more... [The Last Expo]
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