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Baseball Primer Newsblog — The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand Saturday, January 19, 2008Yahoo! Sports: Gennaro: Santana not worth the tariffThe Economics of Winning the Johan Santana Trade…
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Posted: January 19, 2008 at 09:00 AM | 26 comment(s)
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That and the idea of Miguel Cabrera in CF for the Yankees (even if it is a typo)...
How do you mean?
Aren't the weakest defensive regulars worth roughly -20 runs a year? If that figure describes Derek Jeter, or Carlos Lee, then wouldn't David Ortiz be closer to -50? How many runs would a team with a .950 OPS score? Could it possibly be enough to make up for a -300 defense?
1) Merchandise sales are centralized -- dispersed evenly to all 30 clubs;
2) The value of YES revenues is locked in, for the most part. The player with drawing power would not come via YES until the contract expires (ad space, the exception).
Also, I'm surprised Vince didn't mention the brand draw of the Yankees by themselves. If a player has star power, then so do the Yankees.
Now, Vince could not have known that Clemens would be injured this year, but when this analysis model he have hits reality... looking back, the model is not quite correct, based one and two above (From Fortune:
2. I believe Vince is considering the change in market value of YES as well as revenues.
The source on this (very good, by the way) was 99% sure that this was the method by which merchandise sales are calculated...
Merchandise sold in the park, or in a team store within X miles from the park is local revenue (and subject to the Revenue Sharing Plan). Merchandise that is sold through BAM or team websites is BAM revenue.
Licensed merchandise sold by a retailer is the retailer's revenue but generates licensing revenue for MLB Properties, which is then centrally distributed.
On the BAM revenue... it is a centralized source, as well. But, as mentioned, I said the ballpark revenues as centralized, which is incorrect.
As to #2, the Yankees would have to be able to feel confident that they could weather the loss of key prospects, which would in turn allow them to be competitive over time. Santana, by himself, is a nearly futile endeavor in calculating viewership. Santana is simply a cog over time. He can draw at a certain level, but there is the cumulative impact of players cycling up and down over time. The market value of YES has risen, as has nearly all the others, not due to star draw, but other factors. Brand has far more relevance, as does the other programming made available on RSNs.
Just looking at how he calculates the prospective values of the players, the graph he presents with Santana's value keeps going up, which is in direct contrast to his PECOTA and MORP projections. I think if the acquiring team had something close to a guarantee that Santana would maintain his current performance/value they would be much more inclined to meet the Twins demands.
He addresses the inherent risk in all of the players, but doesn't quantify it with a dollar value. Simply assuming that Hughes will be as good as Matt Cain for 3 years seems simple enough, but the error bars on a projection for a young pitcher should be wide enough to be accounted for in the dollar evaluation.
On your second point, I think you underestimate the importance of star players in maintaining the Yankees brand (or in economics-speak "goodwill"). I would maintain that most of the reason the Yankees are worth more than other clubs has to do with the players and the success those players have brought. Obviously having a large market is important as well, but if they had sucked for the last thirty years it wouldn't matter that much (see Marlins and Rays). Santana may just be a cog, but if they stopped getting cogs, the value of the Yankees would fall. As Cblau points out, the value of YES matters along with the contract. If the Yankees are very successful over the next few years, YES will be worth more and the next contract will be worth more.
I can't possibly estimate how bad Ortiz would be at SS. Would it be -50 runs? -150 runs? I have no idea. I am absolutely sure he would not hit like the Ortiz we know if he had to try playing SS for a full season. I think Rosenheck was saying recently on some thread that there is no evidence players lose any offensive ability when at a tougher position. I cannot imagine how Ortiz would not lose anything playing SS, unless he simply made no effort except on balls hit directly at him.
Slightly worse than Renteria in 2005?
Using Ozzie's career line (262/336/328) you get a team that scores almost exactly four runs a game. That's, uh . . . 648 in a season? That's math in my head. Is that right?
These are all of course unadjusted, not taking into account baserunning, and just for fun. What was Oz worth in a good year? 25 runs with the glove? More? Eight times twenty-five is 200. So a team with average pitching, eight guys conservatively as good as Ozzie Smith, would give up 594 runs in the 2007 AL. I think that runs scored number assumes nine Ozzies, so that team would out-score its opponents by about fifty runs. That's a winning team.
I think Ozzie may be too good a hitter to make this example work. You may want Rey Ordonez to approximate Papi.
How many runs would having no SS at all cost? There has to be some limit. Is that limit higher or lower than having a hitter who does nothing but make outs every time he's up?
Are a significant number major league hitters good enough to hit the ball right at the hole created by having no SS?
Are you sure about this? The Red Sox decided not to pursue Alex Rodriguez this winter, and he most certainly would have improved the team. There is a definite limit to what they are willing to pay for those marginal wins.
How many runs would having no SS at all cost?
Roughly 700 total chances over the course of 162 games? Even if those 700 outs are all turned to singles, that's a whole bunch of runs... I wouldn't be at all surprised if David Ortiz were -100 runs defensively as a shortstop.
You'd have to think at least some of those chances would be covered by the 3B or 2B or even the LF/CF. The SS tends to take control of a certain percentage of plays that other players on the field defer to.
I'm not denying that Ortiz would be a terrible, terrible SS. I don't know if -100 runs bad is realistic becausea pretty significant portion of the plays made by any SS are pretty routine and I think almost any ML player could make those plays. I think David Ortiz the SS would have little trouble throwing out, say, David Ortiz the runner, on a slow roller to short.
Rey had a mark of 2.8 RC/g per BBREF "good" for an OWP of .260
So a team of all St Rey's would score 458 runs
Let's say he saved 25 runs per year with his glove, a team of all ST Reys would save 200 runs, and give up 565
The Pythag for an all Rey team would be: 64-98
BBREF had St Rey at +65 fielding runs for his career- about +11.75 per year
If Rey is only +11.75 then an all Rey team is only +94 on defense- meaning it gives up 671 runs while scoring 458
and it's pythag is : 51-111
As every Mets fans knows, Ordonez blew chunks
Actually a team made up of terrible fielders would be worse than the sum of its parts. On popups to the shallow OF, if Ortiz was playing SS then the 2b, 3b, and outfielders would know they have to do some extra work, and they could catch many of the ones that a shortstop normally handles, but if everyone on the team was a a terrible defender, then nobody is going to catch those.
Where do you find fielding runs on BB-REF?
You don't I screwed up, that's BPro's fielding runs
Let's assume Rey was +11.75 over the average SS (per 162 9 inning games),
and that he created 2.8 runs per 27 outs (as per BBREF)
His run context was about 4.7 per game
SS's create on average about 0.5 runs per game less than the average player
So an Average SS would create 4.2 runs/game
Rey "loses" 1.4 runs per every 27 outs he made
2558 outs- average SS would create 398 runs, he created 268
130 runs below average
23 runs below average per 162 9 inning games (459 batting outs)
that made him 11 runs below average per season.
Essentially he would have to have fielded like peak Ozzie- each and every season- to simply break even on his career.
Rey would have had value as a defensive sub. (as a starter he was probably right at replacement level)- but he refused to be used that way, and in fact retired because no team would promise him a starting job- good riddance.
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