my favorite mistake
July 19, 2009 at 4:40 pm | In Baseball | 1 CommentTags: Julio Lugo, Kevin Towers, Orioles, Padres, Red Sox, Robert Andino
This week’s entry is shorter than what I’d gotten used to writing, but I think it’s fair to blame most of that on the light schedule this week due to the All-Star break. Perhaps I’ll get back to trying to blog mid-week about politics or top five lists to make up for my weekend laziness, or maybe this will be the week with a transaction big enough that it demands instant review, rather than delayed analysis.
Underrated Cut: Who else could it be, really? There’s no question that Julio Lugo’s defense had become a liability, but there was no reason the Red Sox couldn’t have waited to bring up Jed Lowrie until Lugo was traded or proved he couldn’t recover from injuries. His bat was still useful enough – he was 5th among AL shortstops in OBP, and his power wasn’t altogether unacceptable for the position – and yet Boston turned to a rookie who had already been optioned to AAA this year and designated Lugo for assignment. Besides his defensive shortcomings, critics point to Lugo’s exorbitant contract, but this was known to be a blunder by the Sox years ago and is already a sunk cost.
Lowrie may well be the better player in the near future, but he’s given absolutely no evidence of that this year – abysmal numbers at both AAA and MLB in an injury-plagued season – and his 2008 success basically amounted to a BABIP-aided August. While Lugo’s glove has certainly hurt the club, his bat has to be trusted over that of career minor leaguer Nick Green, whose success this year is as unsustainable as it is inexplicable (and who has struggled quite a bit since May). If Lowrie must be up already, the argument for Green has been his utility, but the Sox didn’t even tried Lugo at second base, where he could play between two plus defenders in Lowrie and Kevin Youkilis (nor is the club particularly open to playing Green away from short, even when the walking carcass who is Mark Kotsay continues to occupy a roster spot). I’m not as quick to blame the Red Sox’ mistake here on habitual racism as some, but whatever the cause, they seemed curiously intent upon throwing away a useful ballplayer in deference to two other imperfect options, only one of whom has upside.
Why Do You Still Have A Job? It’s obvious at this point that the Orioles aren’t going anywhere in 2009; they’re one of only four MLB clubs with more than 50 pythagorean losses, and their best starter has been finesse-pitching rookie Brad Bergesen. In short, there’s little purpose in reminding anyone that Baltimore is bad. Still, it’s rather remarkable how many chances they’ve given to SS Robert Andino to demonstrate that he’s as bad as his career numbers say, and just how conclusively he did so (if Lugo clears waivers, there’ll be a nice cheap option with something to prove in the AL East…). When given more playing time in June, he managed to get on base at an unbelievably bad .259 pace while hitting just one home run on the way to a .333 slugging percentage. Still, manager Dave Trembley actually praised his “contributions!” Andino’s minor league numbers give no indications that he can hit any better than this, and while he has modest defensive value, there’s certainly not enough there to make up for an OPS in the bottom 4% of MLB players with at least 80 at-bats. The only answer to my own question: Andino remains employed because he manages to make Cesar Izturis’ bat look good. And that is a notable accomplishment.
Shrewd Move of the Week: Had I done a weekly round-up last weekend, there’s no question that I would have torn into Padres GM Kevin Towers for the scant bounty he received for outfielder Scott Hairston. Just 29 and under team control for two more seasons, Hairston represented cheap power for a club that needed it. The two prospects San Diego acquired were… far less useful, to put it very gently; Craig Italiano is a low-minors guy with control issues, while Ryan Webb’s mediocre stats point to a career of trips up from AAA when the regular mop-up reliever is hurt. It was inexplicable until news came down that the Player To Be Named Later in the deal was pitcher Sean Gallagher. Suddenly, Towers’ reputation was salvaged: at just 23, Gallagher already looks like a decent option at the back end of a respectable rotation; for the 2009 Padres, he could practically be an ace. He’s still young enough to develop into a solid middle-of-the-rotation guy (again, by the standards of a better team than these Padres), and with just one year in the majors, he represents a cheap arm for a couple of seasons, at which point he could either help a contender or be dealt to continue a rebuilding process. What looked like another robbery by Billy Beane suddenly seems, at worst, a fair trade; considering Hairston’s age and San Diego’s last-place status this year, finding a pitcher like Gallagher could easily be argued an outright win for Kevin Towers.
it’s just bad news, bad news, bad news
May 24, 2009 at 7:44 pm | In Baseball | Leave a CommentTags: Aaron Miles, Cubs, Jody Gerut, Jonny Gomes, Kevin Towers, Marlins, Padres, Reds, Ricky Nolasco, Tony Gwynn Jr.
This is an awfully pessimistic selection of news items in a week that saw the Red Sox finally move into first place, the Padres extend their winning streak to nine games (and still end up as far from a division lead as the Orioles are), and the Braves start to make some noise in the NL East. Still, it’s hard to avoid the fact that there have been some truly pointless moves made this week by executives who should know better.
Rhetorical Question of the Week: How much longer must Red Sox fans suffer through Dennis Eckersley? This is actually a case in favor of him sticking around at NESN; if he was just full of inappropriate slips of the tongue, I could enjoy him. Instead, his color commentary gives Joe Morgan a run for his poorly-earned money.
Much-needed Journalistic Smackdown of the Week: Joe Posnanski ridicules Steve Phillips and those who make up subjective criteria to insist great players aren’t that good.
Why Do You Still Have A Job? It’s hardly news, but that doesn’t mean it shouldn’t be criticized: the Cubs should never, ever have given Aaron Miles a major-league deal, much less a two-year contract at almost five million dollars. Miles is a fringe bench player who, at 32, is coasting on a flukishly productive 2008 (a year in which he almost posted a league-average OPS). This year, he’s regressed to the worst offensive production in his career, reaching base at just a .253 clip. On top of that, his only extra-base hits are six doubles, putting his slugging percentage at a paltry .269 – third worst among NL second basemen with more than 10 at-bats. Even if we give him an extra double and four extra singles to bring his BABIP up to .300, his OPS stands at a nauseating .636. This isn’t bad luck, this isn’t a bad start – this is a bad baseball player. That Chicago is paying him like an above-average bench presence – let alone giving him 21 starts! – is an insult to the intelligence of Cubs fans.
Mistake of the Week: I love Kevin Towers, but… this has not been a good week for the Padres’ GM. His reported trade bounty for starter Jake Peavy was, at best, a fair return – which begs the question of why he’d bother to take it rather than hold onto his under-contract ace. Still, it was the sort of deal that would have only slightly disappointed me had Peavy not vetoed the trade. But one under-the-radar trade did occur that makes me wonder what Towers is thinking. Disclosure of possible compromise to objectivity: my fondness for outfielder Jody Gerut is biased by having met the man at a Fall League game. But while his offensive production this year is underwhelming, it’s also out of line with what he demonstrated last year with only a little BABIP luck. More importantly, he has brought tremendous defensive value and helped cover the spacious outfield at Petco Park. Scott Hairston deserves more playing time, but Chase Headley isn’t gonna be a defensive asset in the outfield, and 3B Kevin Kouzmanoff has been a far greater offensive disappointment than Gerut.
Still, despite being the least of San Diego’s problems, Gerut’s hardly a guy who should be considered untouchable in trade talks. The real problem here is the return: outfielder Tony Gwynn Jr. is not the hitter his father was. He’s had a solid 2009 at AAA, but it’s his fourth year at the level, and he’s never demonstrated a consistent ability to get on base or hit for power. His moderate speed might make him a fun player to watch, but his most optimistic upside would seem to be a slightly slower Juan Pierre. Unless Towers is assembling young talent for a larger deal, my faith is considerably shaken.
Underrated Cut: Like the Padres, the Marlins are a generally smart ballclub. They undermined my faith in them this offseason, but there’s little reason to think they’re a bumbling group of incompetents. Yet that’s the only way one can really justify the demotion of starter Ricky Nolasco, who will reportedly make at least two starts at AAA before returning to Miami. On one hand, the Marlins don’t have much to lose; after a hot start, they’ve fallen into a pretty solid fourth place. On the other hand, a tiny dent in Ricky Nolasco’s service time isn’t worth putting the big-league team at a considerable disadvantage this early in the season. Nolasco’s ERA stands at an atrocious 9.07, but I simply don’t think he’s been terrible as much as bad and unlucky. His strikeout and walk rates are in line with those of useful pitchers, and his XFIP stands at an acceptable 4.32. The surge in line drives and dip in grounders are worrisome, but to me, it’s far too early in the year to conclude that those wouldn’t return to normal.
Perhaps Nolasco has lost his ability to command his stuff, but the bottom line is this: If I’m wrong, the Marlins would keep him around to continue giving up a few too many homers. If I’m right, they’re insulting a 26-year-old who was their best pitcher last year, hurting his confidence while giving him no reason to feel any loyalty to the team when he reaches free agency. And for what? An early look at the raw, erratic arm of Sean West? With Rick VandenHurk and Anibal Sanchez on the DL, there’s really no way anyone the Marlins promote will be as good as Nolasco. The six-year cycle has been broken; 2009 is not going to be a fun year for Marlins fans.
Underrated Addition: Not to end this on such a negative note, it’s worth noting that the wildcard-contending Reds finally did something about their thin outfield. After a quarter season of Darnell McDonald – an experiment whose failure should surprise no one – the team recalled Jonny Gomes, who declined sharply after a great rookie campaign in 2005, but remains young enough, at 28, to be a very good hitter. While he struck out quite a bit at AAA Louisville, he could add some power to the Reds’ bench, and at least be an upgrade from McDonald. He and Laynce Nix give Cincy what I believe is their best shot of winning this year, and that dark horse chance at a playoff berth gives me my only real interest in the NL Central.
‘08 rooting hierarchy vii: good times never seemed so good
March 30, 2008 at 10:50 pm | In Baseball, Rooting Hierarchies | 2 CommentsTags: Indians, Kevin Towers, Padres, Red Sox
Well, I’m now 0-1 in my era of rooting for the Braves. Go figure. But after some 6,000 words, the 2008 hierarchy is complete, and full schedules of games are not even a day away!
3. San Diego Padres 93.10% unweighted; 98.43% weighted (100/100/85.71)
Last year: #2. 89-74, 3rd in NL West (lost one-game playoff)
In 2008: Despite a few shortcomings this winter, Kevin Towers is clearly one of the best GMs in the game – possibly the best. The Padres are competitive in a tough division on a payroll consistently dwarfed by that of the Dodgers or Giants, and Towers’ ability to find the very best cheap, unwanted players is even better than Billy Beane’s. This winter, the team: picked up fly-ball-troubled P Enrique Gonzalez (who should benefit from Petco’s deep outfield) off waivers; acquired 25-year-old 1B/OF Justin Huber for a player to be named later; added two Rule 5 draftees (young players who cost more than a negligible marginal cash cost) to the team’s 2008 plans; signed the best second baseman on the free agent market; brought in OF Jody Gerut, whose defense is an asset and who can provide decent offense when healthy; and gave a small, reasonable incentive-filled contract to injured SP Mark Prior. On top of that, the club extended ace Jake Peavy’s contract at a very reasonable rate. The Padres’ mistakes this winter, other than those of omission (namely, the failure to land OF Kosuke Fukudome or keep Mike Cameron or Milton Bradley), can be rationalized as calculated risks (SP Randy Wolf’s incentive-laden deal; Jim Edmonds’ ability to help the outfield if healthy; 1B Tony Clark’s ability to hit righties).
Prediction: 88-74; 1st in NL West, lose NLCS
2. Boston Red Sox 97.93% unweighted; 97% weighted (100/93.33/100)
Last year: #1. 96-66, 1st in AL East, won World Series
In 2008: If not for the 2007 ALCS letting me see what would happen if push came to shove, we’d have a tie for first place. As it is, the Sox fall to a very close second, touting an unmatched combination of likable veterans, dynamic young players, and a general manager who was part of my favorite Neil Young cover and campaigned for John Kerry. I wish I could expect them to easily defeat the Yankees – which I have called for the ALCS – but I simply can’t be that liberal and optimistic with my predictions. Still, while it may not be the most expected, empirically valid prediction, there are plenty of reasons the Yankees could fall to second in the AL East (I’ve already briefly detailed their weaknesses/risks). While the Sox admittedly have veterans about whom to worry, Jason Varitek has been in a gradual slide, there are similarly low expectations for J.D. Drew, Mike Lowell’s regression is already accounted for, and I view more than 80 innings from Curt Schilling as a bonus. If Clay Buchholz and Jacoby Ellsbury are the stars that most of Red Sox Nation believes them to be, and Josh Beckett stays fairly healthy, a repeat of 2007 is possible.
Prediction: 91-71; 2nd in AL East, win World Series
1. Cleveland Indians 98.62% unweighted; 98% weighted (100/95.55/100)
Last year: #3. 96-66, 1st in AL Central, lost ALCS
In 2008: I’d like to close the rooting hierarchy by singing the praises of the Cleveland front office… but after this winter, I just can’t do it. The Indians are inarguably a good club with plenty of young talent, and continue to produce All-Star caliber players. But the offseason moves were largely mind-boggling. Reliever Aaron Fultz had his option picked up, only to be released after nothing worse than a bad spring; the team brought in reliever Masahide Kobayashi, rather than trusting a pitcher in the farm system or a free agent; OF Brian Barton was left unprotected in the Rule 5 Draft; and IF Jamey Carroll, who slugged just .300 while playing for the Rockies in 2007, was acquired in a trade. On top of that, the development of 3B Andy Marte remains a concern, and “gets it done…with an ERA over 5.00″ Joe Borowski remains the closer. However, the Tribe still has a very talented young core, with plenty of pitchers to help the bullpen and enough position players that a breakthrough season could boost them into the playoffs. The disappointment, then, is only that they have thus far failed to make the sort of move that could put them over the top after their near-miss in last year’s ALCS. The Indians make enough questionable decisions that an objective evaluation could not place them at #1, but my native team is still shrewd enough that I have no cognitive dissonance as I root for them to give me closure on my World Series-disappointment-filled childhood.
Prediction: 89-73; 2nd in AL Central
‘07 spaces: a few days down
December 22, 2007 at 8:37 pm | In Space Awards | Leave a CommentTags: Craig Ferguson, John Edwards, Kevin Rudd, Kevin Towers, Mandy Moore, Padres, thick lustrous hair
2007 Space Awards ~ People of The Year: Part IV
10. Kevin Rudd: The first official act by Australia’s new Prime Minister was the signing of the Kyoto Protocol, and came out very strongly in his quest to end Japanese whale hunts. Perhaps less meaningful in the grand scheme of things, but still fun: he is the Best Employer of Peter Garrett Since Midnight Oil Disbanded (The political band never really caught on in the US, outside of “Beds Are Burning,” but its lead singer is now Australia’s Minister for the Environment, Heritage, and the Arts).
9. Craig Ferguson: The events of the past week have me questioning how tolerant I should be of the Spears family, but I see Ferguson’s serious monologue last spring as less of a defense of Britney and more of an offensive strike against a tabloid media that does not merely sensationalize and lower our culture, but seems to go so far as revelling in watching disturbed stars suffer serious breakdowns. In the Best Arbitrary Line-Drawing of the year, Ferguson noted that humor should generally be used to mock those in power, rather than kicking those already down. Whether or not one agrees with him regarding Spears, his frank discussion of his own past was still a rather brave, classy moment that seems too rare in our popular culture.
8. Mandy Moore: The year’s Best Musical Shock was the one-time pop star who collaborated with the likes of Rachael Yamagata and sang a version of “Umbrella” that actually made me forget how bad Rihanna’s original is. It is both appalling and remarkable that in a musical mainstream seemingly dominated by whining, melodramatic men, Moore’s poignant and mature lyricism, with the genuine emotionality and humanity lacking in myriad cookie-cutter bands, was largely overlooked.
7. John Edwards: While his campaign has inexplicably faltered – perhaps damned from the start as a white male running against Obama and Clinton – I refuse to give up hope for the most qualified and principled of the viable candidates. While I’m used to the idea of rooting for the least objectionable politician, that Edwards has a legitimate longshot of a chance at coming back is something of a blessing (I am aware of a certain National Enquirer article currently causing some doubt, but refuse to take it seriously or give it more than a passing mention unless given good reason to do so). He is also the Best Candidate for Voters With Thick, Lustrous Hair, which is just an extra reason for me to like him.
6. Kevin Towers: Not only is the general manager of the Padres my Best Legible Autograph Signer (perhaps because, in such an unheralded position, he has not suffered signature fatigue), but he may also be the most shrewd GM in the game. As well as his knack for assembling bargain bullpens, Towers recently helped the Padres lock up ace Jake Peavy to a contract that stands as one of the winter’s best bargains. While he has missed out on a few players lately, he also has not given out a huge mistake of a contract – a trait that seems particularly valuable when his team’s payroll gives little room for error.
2007 rooting hierarchy vii: you better find somebody to love
April 1, 2007 at 12:58 pm | In Baseball, Rooting Hierarchies | Leave a CommentTags: Indians, Kevin Towers, Padres, Red Sox, Theo Epstein
Four hours till the season’s first game, so I best finish this up and then take my nap. The top three are so closely clustered that I honestly can’t say who I’d root for in a playoff series, and instead have been ranked by how closely I’ll follow each team through the season. It’s just impossible to know where my loyalties would land if push came to shove, yet rooting for these teams all year is, in effect, hoping to be forced into that position.
3. Cleveland Indians I find it impossible to impugn anyone’s loyalties to their native ballclub. Hell, I won’t even hold anything against New Yorkers who like the Yankees. Having spent the formative years of my baseball fandom watching the Indians, it’s pretty much unavoidable that I’ll have a soft spot for them. If they do reach the playoffs, however, I just dread how many times Fox will show “highlights” of the 1997 World Series heartbreaker. I debated myself a lot about this spot in the hierarchy, and as I’ve said, maybe they’ll still be #1 in a postseason matchup.
Of course, the Tribe is also worthy of attention in a solely merit-based way. The majority of their valuable players came through the team’s farm system, not free agency, and were often part of lopsided trades (MVP candidate Travis Hafner for Einar Diaz and Ryan Drese, #2 starter Jake Westbrook for David Justice) or came up through the team’s farm system (C.C. Sabathia, Victor Martinez, and I’ll include Grady Sizemore since he was but “a single-A outfielder” when traded). I don’t mean to say there’s anything wrong with free agent signings, but the team’s foray into that market is notably marred by this winter’s overpaying of several aging relief pitchers.
2. San Diego Padres Yuma is now being called “the nexus of GM brilliance” thanks to Arizona’s Josh Byrnes and San Diego’s Kevin Towers (not to be combined into Toronto’s Josh Towers). Towers, as well as producing the most legible autograph I’ve ever seen, is Byrnes’ rival in the “best GM in baseball” race and the National League West. To detail Towers’ awesomeness, I need only point at the team’s small number of moves this winter – signing David Wells and Greg Maddux for a combined $17 million in 2007 – and the fact that the Padres do not have a weak spot. They lack any spectacular position player, but not a single man in their lineup projects to be below average for his position. While this is not a perfect metric by any means, and only gives a limited amount of information, the Padres are the only team with a full above-average lineup (the Yankees also have 8 such players, but look to give 1B Doug Mientkiewicz too much playing time). They don’t have the best offense in the NL, but my point is that Towers has done his best to fill any holes, and done so without financial extravagance.
As rankings this high are a confluence of rational and emotional appeal, I should also note that the Padres have a gorgeous ballpark, an historically awesome closer (Trevor Hoffman) who enters games to AC/DC’s “Hell’s Bells,” and a bunch of individually likable players.
1. Boston Red Sox My faith has been tested, but when it comes down to it, I simply can’t choose any other team. The team uses statistics so much that it hired sabermetrics legend Bill James as a consultant, and many of their more maligned decisions – J.D. Drew’s contract, the overall cost of signing Daisuke Matsuzaka – are exactly what I would have done, so it’s tough to criticize the team even if things turn out wrong.
Theo Epstein is not the best GM in the game – his evaluation of free agent shortstops, notably, is suspect – but he is the coolest. Anyone who campaigns for John Kerry after winning a World Series is pretty great, and that he was part of the best-ever cover of “Rockin’ In The Free World” expands his dominance to yet another of my spheres of interest. This multi-category awesomeness, in the end, is why I love this team. To call the Red Sox simply a team understates the issue – there is a culture that goes with the team. From the musical (“Sweet Caroline,” “Dirty Water,” and “Tessie”) to the political (the entire Sox-Yanks rivalry can be seen as an allegory for the compromises made by the Democratic party in order to stop a great evil from prevailing), the Red Sox are a larger-than-life franchise who, so long as they complement this coolness with intelligence, aren’t going to leave this spot on the hierarchy anytime soon.
all along the watchtower
March 12, 2007 at 12:11 am | In Baseball | Leave a CommentTags: Kevin Towers, Padres, photos
A few days delayed, because 1) I’m lazy, and 2) being on spring break compounds that laziness. But I figured I’d post pictures from my Friday journey to the LA Angels’ (of Anaheim, not Harlem) spring training because they’re of no less interest to my readers than many other things.
In that vein: I am proud to have added San Diego’s Kevin Towers, named baseball’s best GM by a notable analyst, to my GM autograph collection. Having him and Billy Beane is like… well, it’s like something (and you know something’s indescribably awesome to me when there’s no easy PSE analogy). That I got the autograph while wearing my run expectancy t-shirt just added to the geeky delight I felt.
Anyhoo: spring break is fun. Yuma is as… um, three-channelled, isolated, and pointless as ever (though it’s getting another Wal-Mart in April!). But I do get to see the dogs! And go to San Diego (perhaps to take Quincy to the beach)! And eat good Mexican food! And I’ve got 20% off at the used book/DVD store here! My spring breaks are always so wild and unpredictable, but it’s just an extension of my dynamic, outgoing personality in everyday life.
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