Tag Archives: yankees

The Morning Edition (May 15, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

 

From Last Night:

  • Bailey goes the distances, punches out 10 Marlins in 6-2 win
  • McCutchen walks off in 12
  • Kershaw dominates the Nationals, but comes one out shy of the CGSO
  • Felix outduels CC, but the Mariners bullpen gives it back as they lose to the Yanks

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Lester draws Price at the Trop (7p Eastern)
  • Shelby Miller faces the Mets (8p Eastern)
  • Greinke returns to action (10p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • Will Greinke be on his game after missing a month?

I miss Brandon Inge and he is Mr. Utility this year. Entering Tuesday, he has played 2.1 innings at 1B, 58.2 innings at 2B, 18 innings at 3B, and 13 innings in RF. Tuesday, he played SS. That appearance at short now completes his collection of positions in his MLB career. Brandon Inge has done everything but pitch at the MLB level (which he did in college). Love that guy. He’s also hitting .273/.304/.318 in 47 PA as I write this. That’s nothing special, but it’s a very nice utility player. I’ll always be rooting for him.

The Morning Edition (May 15, 2013)

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From Last Night:

  • Hicks hits 2 HR and robs one for good measure as Twins beat the White Sox
  • Masterson delivers a CGSO as the Tribe split a DH with the Yanks
  • Upton mashes in his return to Arizona
  • Harper injured as the Nats roll

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Felix and CC face off in NY (7p Eastern)
  • Matt Moore welcomes the Red Sox to the Trop (7p Eastern)
  • Corbin tries to quiet the Braves in Arizona (930p Eastern)
  • Kershaw gets the Nats in LA (10p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • How do you think Dbacks fans liked Upton’s homecoming?

Here are the four best teams by wRC+ as of 12:19am (May 14): Indians, Tigers, Red Sox, Rays. The Tigers certainly fit, but I don’t know how many people would have said the Indians, Sox, and Rays were top level offenses when the seasons started. The Marlins and White Sox are the worst, but that Nationals are 28th, which is exactly how we all saw it six weeks ago. I’m a big fan of the Anthony Rizzo extension because I think he’s going to be a star and he’s about to be paid like less than $7 million AAV during his prime. In the last calendar year, he’s played 124 games in the big leagues and has 24 HR and a .283/.345/.485 line good for 124 wRC+. Among players below Rizzo by wRC+ over the last year are: A-Gon, Trumbo, Adam Jones, and Carlos Gonzalez. Rizzo is good and now he is cheap.

The Morning Edition (May 13, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

From Last Night:

  • Sale makes a run at perfection, but loses it in the 7th on a Trout single
  • The bullpen spoils McCarthy’s gem as the Dbacks fall to the Phils in 10
  • Lincecum dominates the Braves over 7 innings, wins 5-1
  • De La Rosa leads the Rockies to a win to avoid the sweep
  • After Gio allows no runs, the bullpen gives it away to the Cubs
  • Harvey delivers a pedestrian 7 IP, 5 H, 2 ER, 2 BB, 4 K outing as the bullpen coughs it up for the Mets

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Indians and Yankees play a REAL doubleheader in Cleveland (12p Eastern)
  • Under the radar Burnett faces the Brewers (7p Eastern)
  • Jordan Zimmermann takes the Nats to LA to face Beckett and the Dodgers (10p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • Which AL 3B is your early season standout, Longoria, Machado, or Cabrera?

The top 3 position players in the AL by Wins Above Replacement (WAR) are all third basemen; Evan Longoria (2.5), Manny Machado (2.1), and Miguel Cabrera (2.1). Cabrera leads the way with 186 wRC+ while Longoria (180 wRC+) is close behind with Machado (141 wRC+) trailing despite a very strong year at the plate. Longoria separates himself from Cabrera with better defense and Machado gets into the conversation with defense above and beyond what Longoria has brought to the table so far. This debate is purely an academic exercise because they are all fantastic in slightly different ways. Cabrera certainly is the most reliable offensive minded standout of the bunch, while Longoria is a brilliant hitter with a great glove who can’t always be counted on to stay healthy. Machado is great for his age, but remains young and slightly unproven. For a 20 year old, Machado is great, as seen in Dave Cameron’s recent Fangraphs post, but I’d like to see him demonstrate a little better plate discipline in the big leagues before I’m ready to put him in the company of Cabrera and Longoria. He’s not Trout or Harper as a 20 year old, but he’s a very good player for his age and including him in this conversation is compliment enough for now.

The Morning Edition (May 12, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

 

From Last Night:

  • Wainwright nearly no-hits the Rockies, settles for a CGSO
  • The bullpen nearly blows Darvish’s W in Houston
  • Longoria bails out Hellickson with a walk off HR against the Padres
  • Stasburg allows 4 unearned runs, but loses anyway to the Cubs
  • Buehrle outduels Buchholz as Lind’s HR saves the day

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Matt Harvey against the Pirates (1p Eastern)
  • Kuroda and Santana match up in KC (2p Eastern)
  • Wilson and Sale try to buoy struggling teams on Sunday Night Baseball (8p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • Cardinals or Tigers staff, which is better?

If you evaluate the above question by WAR, it’s the Tiger easily. They’re first in baseball at 9.5 (11p Eastern Saturday), more than 2 WAR ahead of second place. The Cardinals are 5th, a full four wins back. Yet the Cards ERA is a sparkling 2.92 while the Tigers are at 3.45. If you look at FIP, the Tigers are ahead 2.58 to 3.06. This is a good lesson in run prevention and expected run prevention. The Tigers out pitch the Cardinals in two of three areas in which the pitcher has control; strikeouts and homeruns. What’s funny is that the Cardinals don’t have a much better defense. It appears that they are getting a little better sequencing than the Tigers right now. Additionally, the Tigers starters have 7.5 to the Cardinals 5.6 WAR – so the Cardinals are weighed down by a terrible bullpen. They are 1 and 2 in SP WAR and 3 and 27th in reliever WAR. It’s a fun debate however you wish to slice it and I wouldn’t mind having either starting staff, though I’m partial to the Tigers.

The Nine Players I Wish I Had Been Alive to See

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

In baseball more than other sports, we are captivated by history. The great players who came before us are mythical figures.  Bart Starr is pretty much just a football player, but Babe Ruth is something else entirely. We pass down stories to our children of the players we got to see and marvel at how certain players seemed to dominate their era.

Below is a list, entirely my own and entirely subjective, of players I wish I had been alive to see. Anyone who played after 1990 is ineligible and the qualifications are not necessarily based on anything other than who I find to be the exciting and tantalizing figures whom I was unable to see.

9. Brooks Robinson (35th All-Time in position player WAR)

Advanced defensive statistics aren’t particularly reliable before the last several seasons of in depth video analysis, but plenty of baseball statisticians have worked through the data of yesteryear to provide a decent approximation. What those metrics tell us is that Brooks Robinson was 5% more valuable on defense than the second best defender in baseball history. He was a slightly above average hitter, but a preposterously impressive defender. Any old-school eyeball influenced observer would tell you the same. Robinson is quite possibly the best glove man to ever put on a pair of cleats.

8. Jackie Robinson (133rd All-Time in position player WAR)

Jackie is of no relation to Brooks, but that doesn’t make him less interesting. Robinson’s story isn’t one that requires much explanation. He broke baseball’s color barrier and was both a very good player and a man who could restrain his emotions and conduct himself with grace, such that he may be one of the most influential figures of the 20th century. A career 135 wRC+ doesn’t hurt either.

7. Ted Williams (8th All-Time in position player WAR)

Williams’ modest personal goal was to be the greatest hitter whoever lived. Perhaps the only person who can contend for that title with Williams is Babe Ruth. Williams career 188 wRC+ is 2nd only to Ruth and has the highest career OBP in baseball history and is second in slugging percentage to the same. It’s hard to imagine a more impressive plate appearance than what Ted Williams could offer in his prime.

6. Willie Mays (4th All-Time in position player WAR)

Many consider Mays to be the greatest player to ever put on a uniform and I won’t argue with anyone who thinks so. He was a superb defender in centerfield (7th best defender in history according to advanced metrics) and hit a measly 660 homeruns while posting a 154 wRC+. Maybe I wouldn’t say he was best player to ever live, but I couldn’t name too many who’d be in that conversation along with him.

5. Roberto Clemente (34th All-Time in position player WAR)

Clemente’s career was also cut short like Koufax’s, but his was cut short tragically while on an aid mission. He was a fine hitter (career 129 wRC+), but he is on this list for his defense, especially his arm. It was a magic arm. One of the best two of all time and the other contender is two spots below him on this list. Clemente is 5th all time by advanced defensive metrics and trails just one outfielder (Andruw Jones). I’d pay a good amount of money to watch him stand at the warning track and throw baseball’s to third base.

4. Sandy Koufax (62nd All-Time in pitcher WAR)

Now you may think that the only pitcher on this list should be higher on the all time WAR list than 62nd, but Koufax’s low total is the function of a short career and not a brilliant prime. The Dodger lefty is the pitcher most deserving of a spot on this list because 1) many of the game’s best arms pitched during my lifetime and 2) he’s among a small number of Jewish players to truly excel in sports. Among pitchers who were predominantly starters who qualify, he’s 9th all-time in K/9 and he’s at the top of that list if you restrict it to players whose careers ended before 1990. He is the strikeout king of pitchers before my time. He had three 9.8+ WAR seasons. The only other pitcher who can make that claim was Silver King who played in the 1880s! He was awesome.

3. Al Kaline (25th All-Time in position player WAR)

Mr. Tiger gets extra points for being the greatest Tiger to ever live (IMO, take that Cobb!) and being my father’s favorite player growing up. But he’s also everything I love in a player. A fine hitter (134 wRC+) with good plate discipline (11.0% BB rate) and an excellent defender with a brilliant arm. Kaline ranks as the 19th best defensive player ever and has an arm at which Tigers fans still marvel. He used to throw behind runners rounding first base and get them out. I’ve never seen that happen in my years of watching baseball. Additionally, Kaline is an exemplary citizen who has literally worked for just one company since he graduate high school: the Detroit Tigers. Takes “Always a Tiger” to a new level.

2. Joe DiMaggio (33rd All-Time in position player WAR)

DiMaggio was a great player, no question, and a great hitter (career 152 wRC+), but his reason for being on this list is simple. He owns the most impressive record in sports history. I’m very fond of Ripkin’s games played streak, but DiMaggio’s 56 game hit streak is quite simply the pinnacle of human athletic achievement. Hitting a baseball is widely regarded as the most difficult single task in sports and DiMaggio got a base hit or more in 56 consecutive games, when most players rarely make it 10. Yet what makes this record so spectacular is that it is so far ahead of its challengers. It’s 27% longer than the second longest streak ever. 27%! Let me put it this way, Hank Aaron’s 755 homeruns rank second most all time. In order to be 27% better than that, Bonds would have had to hit 959 homeruns.  DiMaggio’s accomplishment is without equals.

1. Stan Musial (10th All-Time in position player WAR)

Stan Musial was a brilliant hitter and a brilliant citizen. Ruth, Hornsby, Williams, and Gehrig are the only players in history to exceed Musial in average, on base percentage, and slugging percentage. That’s the whole list. He was a solid defender and was one of the nicest men to ever play professional sports. During his career, hitters struck out 11% of the time. He struck out 5.5% of the time. Relative to league average, he’d be a 10% type strikeout guy today who walked 20% of the time. There is no one even close to that type of ratio. Not even a little. That level of plate discipline belongs on Mount Rushmore.

Who are on your wish you had seem them list?

The Morning Edition (May 9, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

 

From Last Night:

  • A’s lose 4-3 to the Indians after umpires fail to correctly overturn a double that should have gone for a homerun in the 9th
  • Vernon Wells homers as the Yanks beat the Rockies, but also plays third base! (?!)
  • Twins and Red Sox play football at Fenway and the Twins win by a touchdown, 15-8, as Ortiz’s streak is snapped
  • Felix outduels Burnett for a 2-1 win at PNC
  • Kershaw gives up 1 ER in 7 innings, but doesn’t get the necessary offense to win

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Bartolo Colon faces Scott Kazmir in what I can only assume is a game from 2005 (12p Eastern)
  • Dickey and Price face off in a battle of underperforming reigning Cy’s (7p Eastern)
  • Hamels and Corbin in the desert (930p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • How will the league handle the incorrect upheld double in Cleveland?

I’ve been pretty outspoken about the need for more replay in MLB, but the umpiring crew in Cleveland on Wednesday couldn’t even use the replay they have properly. It’s really hard to imagine what they saw that didn’t result in a homerun, and if they didn’t have the right angle to overturn the call, why didn’t they have that angle? But the more exciting news from Wednesday was Vernon Wells playing 3B for the Yankees. He had played 1592 games in his career entering the day and none of them had been anywhere but the outfield or designated hitter. That ended as he played 3B in the 9th inning Wednesday. I don’t have the resources to look this up at the moment, but I’m very interested in players who play only one inning at a position in their career like Wells did tonight that was clearly out of strange necessity. Who remembers when Pudge Rodriguez played 2 innings at 2B back in 2006?! He caught a popup in his only chance.

The Morning Edition (May 5, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

 

From Last Night:

  • Lorenzo Cain drives in 2 in the first to back Guthrie’s CGSO against the White Sox
  • Jose Fernandez allows 1 hit in 7 innings while striking out 9 Phillies in his first ML win
  • Strasburg gives up 2 homeruns in 7 innings, but the Nats score 1 in the top of the 9th to outlast the Bucs
  • Wainwright struggles for the first time (5 ER in 5.1 IP), but the Cards deliver in the 9th to win
  • Dickey gets lit up by the Mariners, Blue Jays fall 8-1
  • Hughes throws 8 scoreless as the Yanks top the A’s

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Hudson tries to an encore to his 200th win against Niese and the Mets (1p Eastern)
  • Halladay looks to straighten out again against the Marlins (230p Eastern)
  • Jon Lester. Yu Darvish. Arlington, Texas. (3p Eastern)
  • Alex Cobb takes his hot start to Coors Field (4p Eastern)
  • Strikeout happy Ryu gets struggling ace Matt Cain at AT&T (8p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • On a day in which Strasburg and Wainwright were on the mound, how did Guthrie, Fernandez, and Hughes headline the night? (Well, Scherzer did his part!)

R.A. Dickey…what’s going on? I certainly expected some regression from the 2012 peak in moving to the AL and a hitter friendly park, but this is pretty serious so far. We’re not deep enough into the season to totally dismiss a small sample size issue, but it’s getting to the point where it just doesn’t look like he’s going to pitch at or around ace levels for the foreseeable future. He’s 2-5 in 7 starts over 42 IP with a 7.07 K/9 and 3.64 BB/9 to go with a 5.36 ERA and 5.19 FIP. Granted, FIP isn’t a great judge of knuckleballers, but the other numbers don’t exactly hearten Blue Jays fans or Dickey fantasy owners (the present author included). If you go back to the much more reasonable 2010-2011 seasons, Dickey’s numbers this year don’t match those either. His strikeouts are up, but his walks are too. His ERA is way up, but his groundball rate is down considerably. That’s the item on the list that catches my attention the most. I haven’t watch Dickey enough to know, but I’m curious if this is the league figuring him out. Maybe he’s not much different and hitters are just getting smarter. I’m not sure, and I know there is some injury talk, but either way, the Mets are starting to look like even better for the offseason deal. The Jays can still turn it around if Dickey finds his groove, but I’m starting to wonder if he will.

The Morning Edition (April 28, 2013)

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From Last Night:

  • Giancarlo Stanton hits his first HR of the season, but the Fish fall to the Cubs 3-2
  • Westbrook throws 6 scoreless innings, but the bullpen gives it away to the Pirates
  • Harper homers as the Nats back Dan Haren in a 6-3 win over the Reds
  • Matt Moore strikes out 9 in 6 innings as the Rays been the White Sox 10-4

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Dickey tries to find Cy Young form in the Bronx (1p Eastern)
  • Hamels and Niese hook up in a battle of NL East lefties (1p Eastern)
  • Shelby Miller tries to keep the rookie magic alive against the Bucs (2p Eastern)
  • Clayton Kershaw faces the Padres (4p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • Is Stanton’s big homerun enough to silence the worriers? (Mostly fantasy owners, because the Marlins don’t really have fans anymore)

As I write this, the two highest position players on the WAR leaderboard are Justin Upton and Shin Shoo Choo. I’ve written about both in this space previously, but the point I’d like to make today is that both were traded this offseason and both trades involved the Arizona Diamondbacks. Obviously, we know the Dbacks dealt Upton to the Braves in a package deal that saw Martin Prado as the key return. They also played a role in the Choo deal, as they sent Bauer to Cleveland and got Gregorious from the Reds (via Choo). I’m not sure how long it would take me to verify this, but I can’t imagine that the two best players in the league in a given season had ever been involved in trades made by the same team during the previous winter. Now this doesn’t mean the Dbacks won’t make the playoffs, but I would have to imagine they would have a better shot if they have Upton and/or Choo right now. I mean, Parra is a very good outfielder, but he only has a spot in the lineup because of injuries to Eaton, Ross, and Kubel so far. The Diamondbacks might not understand outfielders.

The Morning Edition (April 27, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

From Last Night:

  • Normally we don’t talk Tigers here, but check out Anibal Sanchez striking out 17 Braves in a 10-0 win
  • Jordan Zimmermann twirls a CGSO against the Reds in a 1-0 win (91 pitches, 1 hit)
  • Kyle Kendrick also delivers a CGSO in a 4-0 win over the Mets
  • Rizzo delivers 2 homeruns in a 4-3 win over the Fish

What I’m Watching Today:

  • Lefties face off in New York as Sabathia and Happ duel (4p Eastern)
  • Under-the-radar standouts, Burnett and Garcia, battle in St. Louis (4p Eastern)
  • Must-see Matt Moore faces the White Sox (7p Eastern)
  • Felix Hernandez takes the hill (9p Eastern)

The Big Question:

  • Which great performance was your favorite, Sanchez, Zimmermann, or Kendrick?

Friday was a fun night if you like pitching. You can read about Anibal Sanchez’s 17 strikeout night here, but Zimmermann and Kendrick delivered excellent performances as well. Sorry, Kendrick, but yours was the least interesting. Sanchez went 8 and struckout 17 and Zimmermann went 9 and only needed 91 pitches. Textbook examples of two kinds of domination. Sanchez overpowered and went with strikeouts and Zimmermann just induced easy out after easy out. If you have the time, go watch the highlights and enjoy. Man, great pitching is fun. Sorry to Rizzo, Encarnacion, and Beltran, but multi-homer games don’t measure up.

The Morning Edition (April 26, 2013)

Clip art illustration of a Cartoon Tiger with a Missing Tooth

 

From Last Night:

  • Valbuena homers in the 9th to lift the Cubs over the Marlins 4-3
  • Buehrle continues to struggle, allows 3 HR to the Yankees in 5-3 loss
  • Harper and Espinosa power Gio to a win over the Reds
  • Buchholz K’s 10 Astros enroute to a 7-2 victory

What I’m Watching Today:

  • After a terrible first start, Scott Kazmir takes another shot on the comeback trail against the Royals (8p Eastern)
  • Chen and Milone face off as last year’s Cinderella’s meet in Oakland (10p Eastern)
  • Lincecum looks to stay on track against hard throwing Cashner and the Padres (10p Eastern)

The Big Question:

As I often do in the space below the Morning Edition, I’d like to highlight a weird early season set of statistics. Most would tend to consider wRC+ the best catch-all offensive metric, and as I sort the 2013 leaderboard by said metric a variety of names expected and unexpected rise to the top. The player who ranks 11th as I write this (11:21pm April 25) is Braves 3rd basemen Chris Johnson with 176 wRC+. I’m not going to make the case that this makes Johnson an MVP candidate or anything silly like that, but I would like to point out that he is, by out best single number, one of the best dozen hitters in baseball over the first four weeks. What makes that so interesting is that he is doing so while walking a preposterously small amount, just 3% of the time. Usually when someone is near the top of the leaderboards this early, we talk about negative regression to the mean, but Johnson’s walk rate is so low it can only regress upward. Don’t get me wrong, the dude doesn’t walk, but he’s never walked less than 4% of the time in the major leagues, so that should get marginally better, or at least not worse. The next player on the list who walks less than Johnson is JP Arencibia, who is 44th ranked. Johnson’s line looks like this: .397/.424/.556. He has the same wRC+ as Prince Fielder who has walked 17% of the time while hitting for more power! How is this so? Well Johnson is hitting .397, which is very high and very BABIP driven (.460). He is a high BABIP guy (career .353), but that should come down to some degree and he’ll settle in closer to his career mark of 104 wRC+, which is nothing at which to sneeze. Now if only he could play defense (career UZR -34.9 in 365 games).