Reality has not made an appearance in the stats of Jered
Weaver just yet but if you trust the stats it is indeed coming. His fastball
velocity, K/9, FIP are all going in the wrong direction. In September Weaver
experienced shoulder soreness in a season where he had also experienced bicep
tendinitis, which had already likely contributed to his 4.24 July FIP, 4.12
August FIP and his 4.67 September/October FIP. He was shut down in October with
what was described as general fatigue.
Weaver is now 30 years old and trusting more and more on his ballpark
and defense to carry the day. A disaster
probably is not in the cards in 2013 but it may be time to move him in keeper
leagues.
Friday, January 25, 2013
Monday, January 21, 2013
2013 Sleeper: Erik Kratz
Erik Kratz has been around for a while. He has a great
reputation as a defensive catcher. Supposedly, pitchers love to throw to him.
His bat looks a better than the average catcher and the power looks like it
could be around league average if not a bit better. Last season in the minors
he hit .266/.326/.540 with eight homers in 141 plate appearances. He was called
up to the Phillies and received 157 PA in which he batted .248/.306/.504 with
nine homeruns. He was scheduled to spend 2013 in the majors as a back-up but
thanks to Carlos Ruiz getting himself suspended, Kratz figures to get an extra month
of starter at-bats. He should be more than worth his purchase price.
UPSIDE: 350abs, .250/.310/.460 with 15 homers and a few
stolen bases.
Thursday, January 10, 2013
Betting on Ryan Howard
I was reading an article on BaseballHQ.com about Post-Injury
Best Bets by Dan Becker when I found myself growing annoyed. All the players on
the list were listed under an injury that ended their season except one. Ryan
Howard was listed as a longshot to cover from the injury with which he began
the 2012 season. The torn Achilles kept him of out action until early July
(rather than the late May that was estimated). But he did return. He broke his
toe when he dropped a weight at the end but that should not hold him back much.
He was not great upon his return but after several months
away a little rust could be expected. But Dan Becker thinks that Howard is not
worth investing in for the 2013 season.
There
were a number of red flags in regards to Howard's declining skills even before
he tore his Achilles. Now he's just a bad investment. His slash numbers have
wilted across the board since 2009 and he's helpless against LHP. The PX
remains terrific so he's likely to remain a nice source of HRs, but at what
cost to other categories? It wouldn't be shocking to see Howard enjoy a mild
bounce back season, but the decline phase of big sluggers is too ugly to risk
for such limited upside.
Sure, I know Howard is not the greatest player in the game.
He certainly has his share of flaws. He does not have a very good contact rate.
He is a slow and lumbering sort of player. He is not a good defensive player.
But how much of that actually matters to Howard’s fantasy value?
Over his career Howard has averaged a .271/.364/.551 slash with
33-plus homers in his nine major league seasons. In 2011, his last healthy
season, he hit .253/.346/.488 with 33 homers and 116 RBI. Is it really so
unreasonable that a healthy Howard could repeat that line? He has a reputation
as a hard worker who will do what it takes to play the best first base possible
and to take his spot in the lineup. He has basically performed like the
slightly flawed slugger he is in every season of his career until he was hurt. He
does not have any speed he needs to recover. All he really needs is healthy
legs and he is good to go.
Excluding the 2012 season, Howard has been worth between $23
and $33 every season since 2007. If he looks healthy going into the season, anything
less than $25 strikes me as good bet on Howard’s rebound.
The Re-Birth of Chris Tillman
Fantasy baseball owners love cheap starting pitching,
especially when that pitcher comes with ace potential. While Chris Tillman’s
days of being thought of as a frontline pitcher may be over, we probably have
not seen the best of him. But we did see a few hints at the end of the 2012
season. In Fantasy Baseball
nothing is as intriguing as a sleeper and Chris Tillman is emerging as a nice
one.
Chris Tillman was drafted by the Seattle Mariners in the
second round of the 2006 draft. He was one of their better prospects when he
was traded along with Adam Jones and others to the Orioles for Erik Bedard.
This was a trade the Mariners surely came to regret. Jones has become a regular
in the Orioles lineup and is developing into a major star. Tillman was expected
to lead the Orioles great group of pitching prospects into a bright future for
Baltimore. That did not happen.
Instead of success, Tillman went back and forth from the
minors to the majors and back again. He was usually brilliant in the minors but
got bombed after his call-ups. This pattern repeated itself throughout 2009 and
2010. It only got worse in 2011 when the velocity which had been at 95-plus MPH
continued its decline into the 80s. He was now getting bombed just as bad in
the minors and the majors. The experts were speculating that he was hiding an
injury.
Before the 2012 season the Orioles hired Rick Peterson as
their director of pitching development. He would oversee the organization's
pitching development program and introduce the organization to biomechanical
analysis.
"So
when we have a lab in spring training, we get a guy in the bullpen at game
speed and you have markers on him so the equipment will pick up angular
measurements, linear measurements and rotational measurement. It's not video
analysis, but you are getting true measurements of things like stride length,
of external rotation, hip rotation velocities, the bend of knee at ball release…There
are 40-some measurements in this testing. When you get the results back, you
literally have the MRI of the pitching delivery. Then you can pinpoint very
specifically, is there a flaw, No. 1, and if there is a flaw or flaws, is it
mechanical, medical or conditioning? It's literally like ESPN's sports science
for pitching."
After a slow start to the 2012 season Tillman was scheduled
to meet
with Peterson in mid-May. They worked on adjusting some movement patterns
so he could be clean to the pitching rubber. They fixed the path and timing of
his leg kick and his hands so that he could stay on time and be in rhythm. This
allowed Tillman to better repeat his delivery. He now had a more consistent
release point and eventually his velocity started to rise again.
"His
throwing routine and his long-distance throwing, coupled with the ability to
repeat his delivery," Peterson said. "We have seen this over the
years with guys that have gone through this program. If you get a high-end
velocity talent like Chris, and then you get the delivery clean, you start to
see higher velocities and you see them maintained. (Miguel) Socolovich is a
prime example and Miguel Gonzalez is an example of guys that have made these
adjustments…If you looked at the delivery (of Tillman) prior to the ASMI
analysis and look at it now, it is very apparent what the ASMI research has
allowed us to identify to adjust."
Soon his ERA had dropped and his confidence was back. He was
called up to face the Seattle Mariners in July and was so pumped that he
pitched in the mid-90s and even hit 97mph. While his velocity did not stay at
that level he was back in the 91-94mph range and pitching effectively. His
swinging strike rate jumped from under six percent in 2011 to 8.1 percent in
2012. An increasing Swinging Strike Rate is an excellent indicator of a coming
increase in overall strikeout rate.
Tillman was slowed a bit at the very end of the season by
what was called right elbow stiffness. An MRI was performed which indicated his
Ulnar Nerve was inflamed but the MRI did not show any damage.
"I
thought it was real good news," Orioles manager Buck Showalter said.
"The exam, [team orthtopedist] Dr. Wilckens and the MRI showed the same
thing, just some inflammation at the most. All the structure is good, the
ligament everything. The ulnar nerve is a little imflamed, which is normal this
time of year."
Tillman finished the season with a 9-3 record and a 2.93 ERA
in 86 innings pitched in the majors after 89.1 pitched in the minors. His half
season was worth about $10-12 in a standard AL-only league. If you can get him
for that price it would appear to have some profit potential. It may not be
necessary. Early ADPs have Tillman going very late in drafts despite his recent
resurgence. This may change a bit after the various expert sites release their
magazines and draft guides.
The Dynasty Guru
(one of my new favorites and hopefully one of yours too) recently wrote an
article comparing Tillman to another pitcher who seemed to get his mojo back in
2012. Check
it out.
Tuesday, January 08, 2013
Fixing Drew Stubbs
When Paul O’Neil
was still with the Cincinnati Reds he was not yet the player who led the New
York Yankees during their 90’s Dynasty Years. Instead he was pressured by then
manager Lou Piniella to pull the ball as often as possible in hopes that he
would hit more homeruns. The results were mediocre. When the Yankees traded
Roberto Kelly (my favorite player at the time) for O’Neil, I was quite mad
about it. I would have bet anything at Sportsbetting.ag
that the Yankees had just set back their re-building project by several years.
I soon learned that Paul O’Neil was a much better player than I realized. The Yankees
freed O’Neil to return to an all fields approach. Now Paul O’Neil is a
treasured Yankee and is remembered as a great player.
I do not mean to suggest that Drew Stubbs will magically
transform into the modern day Paul O’Neil (Ryan Braun?) now that he is in
Cleveland. However, I do think he is a better player than the one the Reds
basically threw away. The Reds tossed the Indians a player that was nearly without
value at the plate in 2012. Stubbs batted just .213/.277/.333 last season. He
walked less and struck out more. He hit more groundballs and infield flies and
his lowest line drive rate ever. It was the worst season of a young player’s
career.
Stubbs has a long swing that causes him to struggle to hit breaking
pitches but especially the curveball and the changeup. He swings at fewer pitches out of the zone
than most players but he also makes worse contact when he does. He also swings
at fewer pitches than most players both in and out of the zone and makes worse
contact.
Stubbs was drafted in 2006 out of the University of Texas.
He was drafted just after players like Evan Longoria and Clayton Kershaw and
before Tim Lincecum. According to Baseball America he was considered the best
athlete, best defensive player, second-fastest base runner, and third-best
power hitter among collegians. With a little tweaking and some hard work the
Reds might have made Stubbs a better player before graduating him to the
majors. Apparently the Reds were happy with Stubbs as he was and rushed him
through the system in just over two seasons. He was placed into the hands of a
manager who seemed to have little patience with young players.
Since his call-up, Stubbs has displayed an excellent glove
in center field, homerun power and a bunch of stolen bases. He has never hit
for average in the majors (and did not do it much in the minors either) but his
decent walk rates made his on-base percentage acceptable when combined with his
other skills. Fantasy owners had no problem with his .250-.260 batting average
because usually it came with around 15 homers and 30 stolen bases. But just
like the Reds, fantasy owners abandoned him in droves when his average fell to
.213 during the 2012 season.
As a player with both power and speed Stubbs can be expected
to have a slightly higher than average BABIP and his career .323 BABIP fits. In
2012 his BABIP was just .290 which may be around average for most players but
not for Stubbs. If nothing changes but his BABIP returns to the .330 level,
Stubbs should have stats that resemble his 2010 and 2011 seasons. Hopefully is walk rate will rise back to its former level. His linedrives return and and he reduces those infield fly balls. The Indians
would probably be happy with that. But if the Indians actually put some time in
with Stubbs and worked on shortening his swing and improving his approach at
the plate he could be even more than he was with the Reds. He could be the
Cleveland version of Paul O’Neil.
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