it was the heat of the moment

July 31, 2009 at 12:02 pm | In Baseball | 9 Comments
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Trade deadline live-ish blogging!

4:32: Whoa. Late in the game, Padres pull off biggest deal of the day. Pitchers Clayton Richard, Aaron Poreda, Adam Russell, and Dexter Carter for Peavy. Peavy’s locked down through 2012, but he’s currently injured, and that’s a lot of talent – mostly Poreda – for such a question mark. If the Padres wanted to shed payroll, they did a nice job doing so with no leverage against Chicago.

4:27: Is this an elaborate joke by a few writers on Twitter (notably Jon Heyman) and MLB Trade Rumors? Apparently, Jake Peavy has been traded to the White Sox, despite being on the DL for the last few months. This is the weirdest thing I’ve ever seen this late in the game.

4:19: Chase Weems, not Austin Jackson, for Jerry Hairston. Much better for Yankees, alas; Weems would have to be a great defensive catcher for his offensive abilities to portend anything but minor league fodder. Reds also gave up too much for Scott Rolen – Edwin Encarnacion just isn’t that bad, and they gave up two near-ready arms in Josh Roenicke and Zachary Stewart. I don’t see future superstars there, but two solid relievers and Encarnacion looks steep, unless the Blue Jays are paying some of Rolen’s $10 million for 2010. That said, I am also jealous; I was hoping Rolen was Boston-bound if they could flip Lowell.

4:16: I’m a bit frustrated that the Red Sox didn’t go after Nick Johnson instead of Casey Kotchman, but it mighta taken too much time to find another taker for LaRoche. Plus, Kotchman’s defense essentially makes this a lateral move for 2009. Now, I’m just waiting for confirmation that Halladay’s staying in Toronto and that the Padres and Yankees have been stagnant.

4:09: Clarifying my last comment: I meant for Johnson and for the Marlins. Certainly not for the Nationals, as prospect Aaron Thompson is a pretty laughable return for Johnson. 22 and struggling at AA? Ugh.

4:03: Rumors of Nick Johnson to Marlins. I like this on both ends; very glad to see Florida actually going for it and Johnson moving to a possible contender.

3:58: Apparently not Austin Jackson for Hairston, and Rolen’s for Encarnacion plus a minor leaguer. Okay, back to Cincy not having a great day, but not a BAD day, depending on prospects.

3:48: Austin Jackson for Jerry Hairston? Looks like a big overpayment by Yankees; I’ll retract what I implied about Cincy not knowing what it’s doing if this report is accurate.

3:40: Rolen to Reds. Seems odd that they’re trying this “win now” stuff in Cincy while dealing a big piece of their bench (Hairston), and presumably Edwin Encarnacion heading north.

3:28: Adam LaRoche for Casey Kotchman? That’s a downgrade for the 2009 Red Sox, but cheaper in the future. Of course, Sox + cheap = WHY?

3:23: Stuff coming fast and furious now, but with no idea what prospects are involved in any of these deals. Rockies added a nice bullpen arm in Joe Beimel.

3:20: This Gonzalez-to-Dodgers thing has to be made up. How could Padres walk away from that with anything less than Kershaw? Yankees add Jerry Hairston, Jr.; should be a nice piece off the bench, and sadly, no schadenfreude about an Arroyo acquisition yet.

3:12: Bryan Price as third pitcher to Cleveland… college reliever moved back to starting; looks very good in A-ball, but it’s A-ball. Seems like another Knapp for Cleveland – high upside, no guarantees. Meanwhile, Gordon Edes says Adam LaRoche to Braves; I’m hoping this means bullpen help for Red Sox.

2:56: MLB Network reports that Dodgers may have a chance at Adrian Gonzalez. If that happens and if they don’t get completely taken, I’ll be crushed that the Sox didn’t make that deal instead of getting Martinez.

2:40: Reportedly Justin Masterson on top of Hagadone. Still looking like a nice deal for Red Sox, as Masterson’s problems vs. left-handers limit his value quite a bit and Hagadone is still a ways off. Remains to be seen what else is involved or if Boston will target a new long man.

2:35 PM: Matthew Pouliot throws out the name of Nick Hagadone; Clay Buchholz and Daniel Bard reportedly not involved. If this is true, sounds hard for Boston to screw it up.

2:02 PM: Still waiting on confirmation and price of Victor. Also increasingly terrified of how much time the Yankees have to counter-punch here.

1:57 PM: Sounds like Red Sox finally about to pull trigger on Victor Martinez. After all the Adrian Gonzalez and Halladay talks, this is a bit anticlimactic, I’m sad to say. Dare I dream this isn’t all?

Yes, I dare. I’m an idiot.

1:30 PM: It comes to my attention that Orlando Cabrera’s glove isn’t even good anymore. Starting to seem that Beane didn’t get something for nothing; he got something for less than nothing.

1:19 PM: Los Angeles Dodgers traded P Claudio Vargas to Milwaukee Brewers for C Vinny Rottino. Nothing but a depth move here; Vargas has been through Milwaukee once before and they know he’s not a great bet to give much. Rottino’s 29 and has seen his bat decline since 2006 and 2007.

1:14 PM: “According to Tim Brown of Yahoo! Sports, the Twins have acquired Orlando Cabrera from the A’s for 21-year-old shorstop Tyler Ladendorf.” Unless Ladendorf stays at shortstop, don’t see him making the bigs; Cot’s Contracts informs me that the A’s agreed not to offer arbitration if Cabrera is a Type A free agent, so draft picks wouldn’t be an issue; looks like trying to get something instead of nothing, plus save a million bucks or so.

1:01 PM: Rumblings of SS Orlando Cabrera being traded from Oakland A’s to Minnesota Twins. Nice glove, but with his bat (and at his age), I’m just glad the Red Sox are apparently staying out of this.

11:40 AM: Seattle Mariners traded SP Jarrod Washburn to Detroit Tigers for SPs Lucas French and Mauricio Robles.

First reaction: “CRAP! The Yankees didn’t get Washburn!” I was fairly confident he’d be eaten alive in a hitter-friendly ballpark in New York, and believe his low-strikeout, flyball tendencies were in one of the best ballparks for a pitcher of such abilities.

Even so, this is a bit disappointing for Seattle; French might be able to serve as a back-end starter right now, but Robles’ high strikeouts in the low minors are accompanied by some iffy control. With a pretty solid 23-year-old as well as a higher-upside young guy, Seattle didn’t walk away empty-handed, but I again expected there was more of a market for this pitcher and one could have found a bit better of a prospect package.

Now it’s time to hope the Yankees “address” their “problems” with Bronson Arroyo.

Yesterday, Pittsburgh Pirates traded RP John Grabow and SP Tom Gorzelanny to Chicago Cubs for Ps Kevin Hart and Jose Ascanio and 2B Josh Harrison.

I don’t have much to say here; Grabow’s 30 and has major walk problems, while Gorzelanny’s low strikeouts would need to be accompanied by vastly superior control for him to have any sort of upside. The latter pitcher went completely off the rails in 2008, but like Ian Snell, has looked good at AAA and could improve. Still, Hart and Ascanio are less of question marks – they could probably help from the bullpen right now – and Harrison, while old for his league, was a college draft pick just last year and could have a nice bat if he can stick at second base. Solid pickup by the Pirates for a free agent to be and a guy about to get more expensive.

why don’t we ever believe ourselves?

April 26, 2009 at 11:08 pm | In Baseball | 3 Comments
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We’re coming in close to the deadline here, but it has been a busy weekend – a little time at The Prog (special shout-out to Suege, whose disposable income is exceeded only by his generosity, or maybe vice-versa), a little spring cleaning, some family commitments, plus some four-hour games too riveting to allow multitasking. But if ever there were a time when I could blog intensely about baseball, it’s now, when the Red Sox are making like Adam Lambert and looking so far beyond the competition that… wait, an American Idol analogy? That’s the best I can do?

Clearly, writing everything but this intro drained me, and that’s even though I lack enough conviction in any of my reflections to make a prediction this week; I’m as worn down as the Yankees’ bullpen.  Hey, that’s more like it…!

Underrated Cut (Or, “This Is As Pointless As Not Bothering To Pick Up The Hundred-Dollar Bill You Just Dropped In A Puddle”): Not surprisingly, the Washington Nationals aren’t the brightest team out there. In the case of reliever Saul Rivera, their bad luck saved them from their stupidity; after being optioned down, Rivera returned to Washington when fellow reliever Joe Beimel ended up on the disabled list. There’s no question that Rivera has had a terrible year – with two home runs and as many walks as strikeouts in under eight innings, he’s hurt the Nationals tremendously. But sending him to the minors was a premature move; after all, his problems have come in a very small sample size, and he plays for the Nationals. Rivera was a solid late-innings guy in the past two seasons, and while he is too old to turn into anything more than that, he has plenty of value to a franchise starved for pitching. Instead, the hapless club seems to prefer retreads like Kip Wells and Julian Tavarez, or respectively failed and iffy prospects like Mike Hinckley and Garrett Mock – whose walks and strikeouts are no better than Rivera’s this year. That the team immediately recalled Rivera, whose bad outcomes may stem largely from a .481 BABIP, after placing Beimel on the DL would seem to validate that there isn’t an injury issue at hand, and that they simply became impatient and thought Rivera wasn’t one of their seven best relievers. It’s very little wonder that they’re baseball’s losingest team right now, and I can only hope that a club like San Diego is inquiring about Rivera at a low price.

Underrated Addition (Or, “Incompetent People Haven’t Turned To A Choice This Obvious Since Donald Rumsfeld Was Secretary of Defense”): There weren’t many players changing teams this week, so I’ll highlight Brian Bannister’s return to the big-league club in Kansas City as a very good, if very overdue, move. While the Royals’ pitching has been more than a little surprising in its quality this year, there was no reason to keep Horacio Ramirez as a fifth starter when the 28-year-old Bannister was performing adequately at Triple-A Omaha. Bannister had significant home run problems last year, but his solid rookie year in 2007 gives me reason to think he can still be a nice back-of-the-rotation arm. At the very least, he’s a safer bet than the perpetually usefulness-challenged Ramirez – and in a division with so many contenders, even one win of improvement could make a difference if the Royals somehow keep getting by with such a weak offense. (For the record, I still scoff at their status as a trendy postseason dark horse, but with Zack Greinke getting help from Gil Meche and Kyle Davies [!] at the front of the rotation, it’s not as absurd a concept as it was a month ago.)

Why Do You Still Have A Job? (Or, “They Need This Guy Like Kat Dennings Needs A Tan”) The Javier Lopez Award for Excellence in Futility could very easily be called “Giant of the Week,” and I was sorely tempted to just give it to San Francisco GM Brian Sabean. But because monumentally bad ballplayers can quickly become non-issues, I’ll err in favor of spotlighting one of several deserving “baseball players:” first baseman Travis Ishikawa. Ishikawa played seven seasons in the Giants’ farm system, and rarely showed much reason to think of him as a top prospect. It’s not that he has no record of hitting (2008 was a career year), but that his defensive deficiencies limit him to playing first (if that; at this point, he may not cut it even there). As a first baseman, reasonable hitting expectations from his minor league record would make him an awful starter… and his 2009 year has been terrible beyond any expectations. In 42 at-bats, he has managed just nine hits – and only two that weren’t singles. His on-base percentage is the worst among MLB first basemen with over 5 at-bats, and his slugging percentage is in the bottom five. With his thirteen strikeouts to one walk, his average on balls in play stands at a very reasonable .310, giving no reason to believe this dreadful start is just bad luck. With no homers and so little plate discipline, there’s no explanation other than “he’s playing horribly,” and no excuse for the Giants not to simply sign a veteran until Ishikawa shows that he can come close to replacement level.

Question of the Week: Is Erik Bedard back? Yes. Bedard missed most of his first season in Seattle thanks to shoulder problems, but through four starts in 2009, he is every bit the ace for whom they believed they traded several very good young players. With more than 10 strikeouts per nine innings and just more than a tenth as many walks, Bedard has a perfectly sustainable BABIP of .294. The only way in which he has been lucky is the low rate of home runs on fly balls, but even with a normalized rate, Bedard should complement Felix Hernandez very well at the front of the rotation. There is, of course, the caveat of small sample size, but Bedard’s dominance is as valid as anything one can conclude in April. His value doesn’t absolve former Mariners GM Bill Bavasi of a bad trade – the thirty-year-old is heading into free agency, and came at far too high a cost of younger, cost-controlled talent – but gives new GM Jack Zduriencik an All-Star caliber arm to keep or deal as he sees fit.

Player of the Week (Or, “I Haven’t Seen Anything This Hard-Hitting Since That CNN Reporter Showed How Clueless Those Tea Partiers Were”): It should be noted that this award is by no means an objective reflection on who has had the best week, but rather a spotlight on someone who has made a large impression this week. Objective measures of hot weeks are the sort of unequivocal facts that have made me hesitant to blog about baseball, so while it’s hardly the best analytical method, it’s nice to just take a player who may not be getting his due and give him, in my tiny corner of cyberspace, that due.

Braves catcher David Ross was limited to eight at-bats with the Red Sox last year, and because I felt he was shortchanged, I’m pleased to see him hitting this year – not to spite Boston, who are doing quite nicely with a resurgent Jason Varitek, but because he is too good a player to stay so unnoticed. While, like everything here, it comes with the caveat that it’s a very small sample, his Atlanta career has gone amazingly well so far. In just eighteen at-bats, he has four extra-base hits, including two homers, and has walked six times to just four strikeouts. There’s no way he continues his .417 BABIP and posts a full-season OPS well over 1.000, but with Brian McCann on the DL, Ross may finally get the playing time to establish himself as one of baseball’s best backup backstops.

we’ll be back in the high life again

February 27, 2009 at 12:01 am | In Baseball, Rooting Hierarchies | Leave a Comment
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7. Atlanta Braves (88.68% schedule-weighted support)
Last Ranking:
7
Added: SPs Derek Lowe, Javier Vazquez, and Kenshin Kawakami; RPs Boone Logan, Eric O’Flaherty, and Emiliano Fruto; C David Ross; LF Garret Anderson
Lost: SPs John Smoltz, Mike Hampton, and Chuck James; RPs Will Ohman, Jorge Julio, Julian Tavarez, Royce Ring, and Elmer Dessens; IF Ruben Gotay; SS Brent Lillibridge
Strengths: The imported Kawakami is an expensive question mark, but the front of the Braves’ overhauled rotation looks to be a significant strength. While neither is much of an ace, Vazquez and Lowe are likely to each give the team 200 innings of solid pitching, and if 23-year-old Jair Jurrjens can give something similar to his 2008 production, the team is in fine shape even with the final rotation spots looking like a shaky mix of veterans and unspectacular youngsters. The biggest question looks to be whether Jorge Campillo’s breakout season at age 30 is somehow repeatable; because of his unremarkable strikeout and home run rates, they shouldn’t be counting on him for too much, but even a solid #4 would go a long way towards making a very good rotation even better. The team also picked up a nice pair of young left arms for the bullpen in Logan and home run-averse O’Flaherty, though lefty closer Mike Gonzalez might mean only one of the southpaws will make the team out of spring training.

The big assets in the lineup are soon-to-be-37-year-old 3B Chipper Jones and 25-year-old C Brian McCann, though I like 1B Casey Kotchman’s glove and walk/strikeout ratio enough to consider him a breakout candidate.
Weaknesses: While the infield is pretty unobjectionable, the Braves’ outfield situation is just awful. RF Jeff Francoeur is just 25, but has not, in three and a half seasons, brought his walks and home runs up to justify his strikeout totals. LF Garret Anderson is an upgrade from Matt Diaz, who should never have been considered more than a fourth outfielder, but he’ll be 37 in June and lacks the power and defense to make up for his poor on-base abilities. Neither Josh Anderson nor Gregor Blanco has shown enough at the plate to be considered worth starting in CF – and since both are lefties, a platoon situation would seem to be out. The team has failed to sign numerous free agent outfielders this winter before finally settling with Anderson, and considering the low price tags on players like Eric Hinske, Bobby Abreu, and Pat Burrell, this mistake is pretty hard to forgive.

While there are plenty of good arms competing for bullpen spots, the injury situation may still make the relief corps a liability for the team. Closer Mike Gonzalez’s 2008 season was shortened as he returned from Tommy John surgery, Rafael Soriano was ineffective in 14 games before undergoing elbow surgery in August, and Peter Moylan is trying to come back after Tommy John surgery last May. While the team can provide four more relievers to complement them, continued injury troubles could start to give too many innings to too many bad pitchers; Buddy Carlyle is a fine guy to have in the middle of one’s bullpen, but if he ends up with save opportunities at any point, it’s a very bad sign.
My Stake: The Braves stopped getting credit for their smart front office when their playoff appearance streak broke, but they’ve continued to make good moves despite some weaker results. Considering the decent value of large contracts like those given to Vazquez, Jones, and Lowe, it seems that their problem is in identifying the right complementary talent. But with McCann locked up through 2013 and nice small free agent moves like grabbing O’Flaherty off waivers, they seem to have a good, not great, team.

Their system benefited immensely last winter when the Tigers decided, against all reason and logic, that one year of SS Edgar Renteria was worth six each of rookie Jair Jurrjens and CF Gorkys Hernandez, but this winter Atlanta failed to land SP A.J. Burnett and were spurned at the last minute by SS Rafael Furcal (who signed with the Dodgers), and reportedly low-balled long-time Brave SP John Smoltz before he took Boston’s offer. More recently, they reportedly came close to signing LF Ken Griffey Jr. before a reporter’s early scoop allegedly drove Griffey to return to Seattle instead. One or two near misses are understandable, but failing to close so many deals in one offseason reflects poorly on the front office, and, along with a general lack of strong interest in the franchise, keeps them from moving any higher.
‘09 Predictions: Like it or not, the Braves have been a strong factor in the National League for too long to be written off because of an outfielder shortage and iffy relief pitching; if they can just find an acceptable center fielder – be it Jim Edmonds, Nick Swisher, or a spring training castoff from an outfielder-rich club – they should be fine. While the bullpen is a legitimate concern, and I’m surprised they didn’t look to add one more arm this winter, the rotation has gained enough that some of the team’s younger arms might be tried out in relief, and it’s unlikely they’ll repeat last year’s underperformance of seven wins compared to their Pythagorean record. Because of the new starting depth, the potential for a healthier bullpen, and how little their departing players contributed last year, I’m calling the 2009 Braves an 85-win team, which could be enough to start a new streak of playoff appearances.

‘08 rooting hierarchy v: i am rotten to my core if they’re to be believed

March 28, 2008 at 11:19 pm | In Baseball, Rooting Hierarchies | 2 Comments
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The rooting hierarchy hasn’t clustered with any real themes until tonight: guilty pleasure teams! Also: I’m inordinately pleased that I got to use a Garbage lyric for a title.

12. Washington Nationals 63.45% unweighted; 65.41% weighted (60/72.73/57.14)
Last year: #11. 73-89, 4th in NL East

In 2008: The Nationals don’t do much right, but are in an interesting situation: they’re so far from a serious contender that short contracts to aging veterans don’t do much damage. Case in point: the fact that the team’s catching situation was ugly enough that Paul Lo Duca is an acceptable one-year stopgap. The signing of Aaron Boone and the team’s dearth of prospects is more representative of the fact that GM Jim Bowden has a long way to go before he has a decent franchise, while the release of SP John Patterson is a sad reminder that even though the club picked up young outfielders Lastings Milledge and Elijah Dukes at very low costs, the Nats aren’t particularly competent. Still, by a combination of being pathetic and having a sabermetrics-friendly manager in Manny Acta, the Nationals defy their front office’s merits and earn a soft spot in my heart.
Prediction: 71-90; 5th in NL East

11. Florida Marlins 64.14% unweighted; 67.61% weighted (65/72.73/57.14)
Last year: #6. 71-91, 5th in NL East

In 2008: The Marlins got some nice players in the Miguel Cabrera trade (though it could be argued that they would have gotten more by trading Dontrelle Willis separately), but it’s apparent that unless ownership changes hands, they need to get used to trading away their stars. With a shoestring budget, the team has to play still-developing prospects and hope that in a couple of years, everything breaks right during the same season. To a casual baseball fan living in Miami, this state of affairs would be understandably miserable. To a devoted lover of the game, it’s actually an entertaining cycle to watch, and it’s hard to root against a team in such difficult circumstances.
Prediction: 73-89; 4th in NL East

10. Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim 70.34% unweighted; 62.85% weighted (46.67/70/75)
Last year: #22. 94-68, 1st in AL West, lost ALDS

In 2008: I used to think that Bill Stoneman was a good GM and his staff just fell short at player evaluation sometimes. But the new GM, former Director of Player Development Tony Reagins, seems to have a far better handle on things than his predecessor. The team has been fairly quiet, but Reagins showed he wasn’t afraid to shake things up when he traded popular shortstop Orlando Cabrera for starting pitcher Jon Garland. Garland’s acquisition was a smart move at the time, but looks even bigger now that Kelvim Escobar’s shoulder problems are flaring up. The team has enough farm depth that, should Escobar miss the season, they may be able to find another arm. Even if they can’t, they’ve got a better-than-good chance at making the postseason.
The signing of Torii Hunter is an interesting point of debate, but while everyone expected him to be overpaid, he received a fairly reasonable deal given the market (certainly not bad compared to other big center fielder contracts) and helped the team address an easily improved area (Reagins has thus far failed to complete the process, however; he has kept surplus outfielders Reggie Willits and Juan Rivera). With that in mind, I like what I’ve seen from Reagins enough that I’m finally willing to give up the antipathy I’ve held for years based on the team’s love of small ball and rivalry with the A’s.
Prediction: 90-72; 1st in AL West, lose ALDS

9. Texas Rangers 71.03% unweighted; 65.05% weighted (53.33/70/75)
Last year: #14. 75-87, 4th in AL West

In 2008: When I think of divisions with a lot of likable teams, the AL West doesn’t usually spring to mind. But if I’ve come to like the Angels as much as I have, the Rangers have to rank even higher. While they certainly have pitching problems, their offseason was rather productive (aside from the inexplicable signing of 1B Ben Broussard). They added SPs John Patterson and Jason Jennings, each recovering from elbow surgery, for fairly inexpensive rotation help, and extended reliever Joaquin Benoit’s contract; hours ago, they traded a walk-prone A-ball pitcher for reliever Dustin Nippert. An overhaul of the outfield included signing Milton Bradley (like the Cubs and Kosuke Fukudome, this hurt me as a Padres fan) and trading a pair of expendable, unremarkable pitchers to the Reds for 27-year-old CF Josh Hamilton, who should be one of the AL’s best center fielders if he stays healthy. The team needs a lot more pitching to even contend for a wildcard, but GM Jon Daniels is starting to live up to his potential.
Prediction: 78-84; 4th in AL West

8. Atlanta Braves 75.86% unweighted; 84.58% weighted (100/72.73/71.43)
Last year: #17. 84-78, 3rd in NL East

In 2008: The Braves’ offseason was much more inconsistent than most of these upper half teams’; Atlanta got a nice return when trading overpaid, free-agent-at-the-end-of-the-season Edgar Renteria, and avoided any particularly foolish signings. On the other hand, they traded away a pair of solid major leaguers (Willy Aybar, Joey Devine) and got essentially nothing (for Devine, they added replacement-level CF Mark Kotsay, who should not be on a contending team) in return. Still, I’ve spent too long forgiving the 1995 team and getting past the “dynasty” hype to let a few missteps stop me from liking a franchise that has lost 75 games only twice since 1991; I would love to see them make a return to the postseason. From the “don’t know what you’ve got till it’s gone” category, my fondness for the Braves is growing as TBS’ coverage of the team wanes; I have a surprising amount of memories related to the national TV coverage of a team I wasn’t rooting for.
Prediction: 88-74; 2nd in NL East, lose NLDS

2007 rooting hierarchy iii: i’m a loser, baby, so why don’t you kill me?

March 28, 2007 at 3:21 pm | In Baseball, Rooting Hierarchies | 1 Comment
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Today’s entry is a painfully tedious one: the below-average teams for whom I don’t see any reason to dislike.

21. Pittsburgh Pirates I have been reminded that I’m allowed to harbor some antipathy for an unconsummated Nate Cornejo/Mike Gonzalez trade that I overheard while at an Arizona Fall League game. But harboring Pirates antipathy is like holding a grudge against Dennis Kucinich or something – they’re too far from any sort of relevance to waste any thought.
20. Seattle Mariners David and Buck both see this as baseball’s third-least competent organization. It’s hard to disagree. But the rooting hierarchy isn’t about competence – the Mariners’ pitifulness, combined with a likable city and a few likable players, gets them all the way to the 33rd percentile.
19. San Francisco Giants Perhaps the ultimate case of likability prevailing in the face of incompetence, and almost entirely for city-based reasons. The players certainly aren’t favorites, and the ballpark, while scenic, isn’t an absolute great. But I just love San Francisco and, by extension, the team avoids being any lower. They sadly did allow the Cubs to sign SP Ted Lilly, so the dream of a Lilly-Cain double-header tandem and Veronica Mars promotion seems dead. It’s fair to say I have different dreams than, say, Gandhi.
18. Toronto Blue Jays What can I say about GM J.P. Ricciardi? Check that: what can I say about J.P. Ricciardi that isn’t a profanity? A former disciple of A’s GM Billy Beane, one expects stat-geekiness and competence. Instead, one gets flashes of genius (signing SPs Tomo Ohka and John Thomson to bargain contracts in an inflated market) in a record of horrible decisions (releasing Thomson in favor of proven failure Josh Towers, hugely overpaying the soon-past-peak Vernon Wells).
17. Atlanta Braves On organizational competence alone, one has to concede the Braves should be in the top 10 – they had a dynasty without overpaying and a solid farm system. But memories of their 1995 World Series triumph over the Indians remain painful, and more recently, they are using Bob Wickman, their third-best reliever, in what is assumed to be the most important bullpen role. “Begrudging respect” is the name of the game, though, as they also signed SP Mark Redman to a spectacularly small contract for what should be solid #4-5 starting.
16. Kansas City Royals Perhaps the icon of “too useless to dislike,” new Royals GM Dayton Moore has not done much to make me expect a turnaround, and gave SP Gil Meche one of the most mind-boggling contracts I have ever seen. It wasn’t an easy mistake to make – Meche is easily the worst signing of the winter when we factor in the “he’s terrible” consensus of stats and reputation. But still, the team has a scenic ballpark and is somewhat lovable in its lameness.

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