Closer to Closing in on a Closer?
As we ring in 2007, the Red Sox find themselves in a very similar situation to the one they faced at the outset of 2006. They have constructed a team that seems poised to compete in 2006, albeit with a large, glaring hole. In early 06, it was a CF; in 07, it’s a dominant reliever. Last year, they eventually made a deal for Coco Crisp. What will happen this year? It’s hard to say but there are a few possibilities that jump out:
1. Go with what they’ve got. This one seems unlikely. They have some decent guys who might work out as the closer. Timlin’s done it before, but it looks like he’s not the pitcher he used to be. Donnelly has also been great in the past but age appears to have caught up with him. Delcarmen and, to a lesser degree Hansen, look like they have a chance to step up into the role, but both are pretty risky. It just doesn’t seem likely that the team was willing to spend $150 mil on the roster and then just hope one of these guys does the job.
2. The old switcheroo. Eric M. Van wrote over on SOSH that he’s been asked to analyze some SP to see if they’d make good relievers. SABREJoe says that Pineiro’s a done deal--maybe he’s the pitcher in question. There’s always a chance that they think Jeff Weaver’s got the right stuff to dominate for an inning or two, although that strikes me as unlikely. Again, it would be a pretty risky proposition to try this with this team.
3. Pay the Price. This seems like the likeliest option to me: the Red Sox will trade for a good to excellent reliever before ST. Maybe it will be the much-discussed deal to bring in Chad Cordero for some of the team’s better prospects. Maybe Houston will part with one of their three very good relievers in return for a young OF. Or maybe there’s another team out there looking to get younger, who will deal a good reliever for a prospect or two. Florida might be an option. Whatever the case, I doubt the Red Sox let a decent to good prospect stand between them and a pennant shot.
4. Wait it out, or the ‘2003 revisited plan.’ Perhaps the Sox are willing to go into the season with what they have and see if they strike gold with one of their current pen members or if some poor teams drops out of the race and wants to sell. This too seems more risky than the team should be in their situation.
I say option 3 happens within a month.
Sorry if this is somewhat repetitive of past threads, but I think this is the most pressing issue for the 2007 Red Sox, unless you want me to compose a 2,000-word essay on why Roger Clemens would be the dreamiest Red Sox player ever.
Darren
Posted: January 02, 2007 at 05:33 PM |
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BRING BACK DAN DUQUETTE!
Well, I suppose one solution to the problem of throwing away prospects for little return is to stop developing prospects, though I'm not sure that's the direction I'd go. ;)
One (but probably not both) of those guys could become good--maybe even great--pitcher some day. But as a Yankee fan, I'd love nothing more than to see Boston open the season with the bullpen they have
That wasn't the Globe as much as it was Nick Cafardo's head. At the time his head was in the midst of a visual prostate exam. Though Tavarez as closer remains a possibility, take it for what it's worth.
I say option 3 happens within a month.
I'll take the over.
Any team with a "proven" closer will not want to part with him for a small or even middling price. I don't think a decent-to-good prospect will get it done. And I don't think the Sox FO wants to pay more than that, if they want to pay that at all.
Ultimately I think they opt for #4, under the veil of #2, and if/when they get to May and find it's not working, they go for #3. To elaborate, I think they will approach the season with 6-7 starting candidates, at least one of which is not currently with the team. They have a tryout of sorts for closer during ST, and whittle it down to 1 (publicly) or 2 (privately) by the start of the season. If option 1 fails in week 1, they go to option 2. (Note, this is not much different from last year when Foulke was the nominal closer at the start but Papelbon was inserted quickly when Foulke's short sample appeared unfit.) If that doesn't work, they either switch things around again and find an option 3 from within, or they switch back to option 1 or bounce between 1 and 2 until they can make a trade.
I would be very surprised, given how much effort they appear to be putting into NOT doing #3, that #3 would be done in a month. I recall quotes from Epstein a couple of years ago along the lines that the 2003 bullpen experiment was a failure of execution, not a failure of concept - that they'd had the right idea but the wrong guys. Doesn't mean they have the right guys now.
Interesting question... Is the 2007 personnel as it currently stands (if you assume Pineiro) better than the personnel in 2003? In 2003 they entered the season with a bullpen of Timlin, Embree, Fox, Howry, Mendoza, Lyon, and Woodard. Here's some fun:
Player WPA w/BOS 03 WPA since then
Timlin + 2.15 + 2.27
Embree + 0.77 - 0.30
Woodard + 0.17 n/a
Howry - 0.51 + 2.75
Fox - 1.08 + 0.66
Lyon - 1.25 + 1.53
Mendoza - 1.51 + 0.70 </pre>
In 2003 they had a knack for either (a) getting otherwise good players to suck, or (b) giving up on players too early. Maybe they didn't have the wrong personnel in '03 (unless it was Cloninger/Wallace).
He wouldn't have to be a proven closer, just a proven good reliever. That alone would make their pen much better. However, the 'decent to good' part was probably wishful thinking for a closer. It'd be more realistic for someone like Gregg or Qualls.
I would be very surprised, given how much effort they appear to be putting into NOT doing #3, that #3 would be done in a month.
But isn't this exactly what they did with Coco last year at this same time? They gave up a bunch to get back something they desperately needed. I'd say they overpaid a bit but it was worth it (or so it seemed to me) because it filled such a huge need.
Interestingly, at the time they dealt for Coco, they had already let two pretty good stopgaps go off the board: Davanon and Byrnes. Both had better years than Coco and cost very little. Still wish they could have snagged one of them.
WPA really bothers me. Why do people use it when it introduces so much context-dependent stuff into the data?
1) He's a damn good closer and the Sox would be better with him BUT
2) As a Nats season ticket holder, they're gonna suck regardless, so why the hell do they need a closer anyway and prying a prospect or two from Boston would be a major coup.
However, he's quite popular in DC and I doubt the front office would deal him without asking for a king's ransom in return.
I had it handy, and I didn't expect other measures would tell a materially different story. Either that, or I'm a small part of a vast conspiracy to irritate you.
But isn't this exactly what they did with Coco last year at this same time? They gave up a bunch to get back something they desperately needed.
From Boston's perspective, yes. From Cleveland's perspective, the Indians had an outfield surplus and were willing to spend that surplus to get worthwhile players/prospects from Boston. I just don't see as good a fit this year, if only because we're talking about quality relievers instead of outfielders. From the perspective of a trading partner, be it Washington or any other team, nobody has a "surplus" of quality relievers.
The Cubs finally appeared to have learned their lesson on counting on Wood to be healthy to begin a season.
I think that some teams do. The Astros, for instance, have 2 closer types, and a couple additional good relievers. They could certainly find innings for each of them, but at some point, they are going to have good pitchers throwing low leverage innings. If they have a hole elsewhere, they'd be better off trading away one of their many good relievers to fill it.
I think you're right though that not too many teams are in this position.
Everything they've said is that he's starting this year. There's some debate over whether it's health-related or whether they just think he's more valuable there. If they sign Clemens, what they do with Pap will answer that question.
The Pirates are in this position as well, with Gonzalez, Torres, Capps and Sharpshorbaylisslef. And, fortunately for the Red Sox, the Pirates are almost certainly to do exactly the worst possible thing when making decisions about which ones to trade and for what.
Don't worry... Whether we get a closer or not I'm sure we'll have good pitchers throwing low-leverage innings, too.
Yeah, but the Red Sox are guaranteed to acquire exactly the wrong relief pitchers as well. Sort of an immovable object/unstoppable force thing. In the past, the Pirates' stupidity has been trumped by the Red Sox poor relief pitcher judgment (Sanchez trade).
Plus, the Pirates might yet find a stupider deal with the Yankees, who like Gonzalez. Maybe they'll deal for this year's version of Shawn Chacon, whoever that is.
I believe this to be the most likely outcome if Paps gets lit up in the first month, and the Sox get off to a slow start..
When you have a closer who posts an ERA under 1.00, why would you want to leave him in that role? It's much more fun to put him into a DIFFERENT role. Just think how smart everyone will think you are if it works!
Next up: David Ortiz to CF!
sounds like a good idea. let's move manny from right to left.
oops...
Bingo. I'm not sure if THIS pen is particularly better suited for that then THAT pen, fwiw.
As a reliever
06: 24.1 IP, 19 H, 3 HR, 10 BB (5 IBB), 20 K, 4.81 ERA
Career, 70 IP, 51 H, 5 HR, 35 BB (5 IBB), 62 K, 3.21 ERA
Eh. Nothing here screams great or awful. I'd put a lot more stock in the scouting report on him.
I mean, let's assume for a moment that this goes reasonably well. Pineiro throws 70 IP at a 4.00 ERA. That has to be considered a good result with him. But the Red Sox are paying $4-6 mil for that. That's just not a great value.
Of course, I'll be happy to eat my words if he throws 80 IP at a 3.00 ERA.
Timlin, Donnelly, Okajima, Pineiro, Delcarmen, Romero, Tavarez
That's seven relievers, six on guaranteed contracts and one who's gotta be assumed on the roster. There's no room for that long-rumored closer. There's upside there, but, jeez, this makes a weird little bullpen. I hope the Sox know what they're doing, but, well, there aren't a ton of reasons to assume that they do.
That wasn't the Globe as much as it was Nick Cafardo's head.
Tavarez seems more likely to start (based on his sneakily-good, GB-happy stint at the end of last year) than close, imo.
And Hansen. With Bryce Cox the darkhorse.
Most of that was before he got "hurt" and lost it.
That said, the bullpen is still a shaky proposition, so . . .
The bulk of pitchers who end up in relief are inconsistent. If they were consistently good, they'd be made into starters, closers, setup guys, or even OOGYs. If they were consistently bad, they wouldn't make any MLB rosters. What's left are inconsistent pitchers: enough flashes of brilliance to be still employed, but not so much as to be moved to (and kept in) a more important role.
Each year as far back as I can remember, the Red Sox have stocked the last few spots in their pen with such pitchers. So has every other team. I'm not so sure that the 2006 bullpen's failure was due to the injuries in the rotation, as each of their veteran relievers going into the season (except Timlin) had an inconsistent past. But, yes, because the rotation had 5-inning pitchers subbing for the numerous injured starters - and one of the non-injured pitchers (Beckett) couldn't seem to pitch deep into games, either - the bullpen was asked to do too much.
In 2007, if Wake's back is back, they'll have three pitchers (Schilling and Matsuzaka being the others) who can pitch deep into games with consistency. If Papelbon makes the transition well, they'll have four. If the team can increase the average starter IP by 1 inning over what they did in 2006, the bullpen workload will drop by 30 to 40 percent. And that is a recipe for success: reducing the time your (theoretically) worse pitchers are in the game. This was one of the points of getting Schilling and keeping Wake: they get you deep into games.
So, yeah, maybe Timlin and Donnelly are done, and maybe Pineiro and Romero were done a couple of years ago. But if the starters can get the job done, I don't think we're really going to care. If the starters can go 7 it would take a colossal failure of the entire pen for the whole season to make a dent in their playoff chances.
I think you've mentioned this before, and while it's a good point in general, I think you're reaching with the starters going 7. Nobody goes seven anymore save the most durable and effective starters. Barry Zito, who just got an 8/126 contract based largely on his consistency and durability, has never averaged 7 IP per game. Only rare workhorses like Livan and Buehrle have repeatedly averaged 7 IP per game.
To expect that even three of the Sox starters to do so (or even fantasize about it) is unrealistic. If the team averages 6.5 per start, I think they'd be in excellent shape, and I'm pretty sure it'd be above average. It would mean that the started soaked up ~1050 innings, leaving 410 for the pen, which is very doable.
When I said 7, I was operating under the (incorrect) recollection that they were averaging 6 per start in 2006. They were actually just under 5.8 IP/start last year. The White Sox led MLB last year at 6.4... so, yes, 6.5 would be above average.
And I think they have the personnel to get there. Last year Schilling averaged 6.6; in Wake's last full season (2005) he averaged over 6.8. Matsuzaka could conceivably average in that neighborhood. If the rest of the staff can average ~6.1 or better they're in range of 6.5.
If 6.4 was the best in the league, I'd be thrilled if they matched it or even came in at 6.3. One thing they may do if they get Clemens is go with a 6 man rotation and let their horses (Schilling, Matsuzaka, Wake) go longer in games.
MLB.com sortable team stats. You can get splits; choose "as starter". You have to divide IP by G, but if that's the worst part... Anyway, league average last year was just over 5.8, meaning the Red Sox were just below average.
Anyway, this linky should get you there.
The drop-down boxes to the left don't let you choose earlier years, but if you fiddle with the URL you can get it. In 2005 the White Sox led the league with a 6.6; Boston was 9th in MLB with 6.2. League average was 6.0. In 2004, the A's led with 6.4; Boston was 3rd with 6.2; league average was 5.9. So...
Year MLB avg High Boston Boston Rank2006 5.8 6.4 5.8 17th
2005 6.0 6.6 6.2 9th
2004 5.9 6.4 6.2 3rd
Even after losing Pedro, and with Schilling only getting 11 starts, they managed to maintain their IP/G levels in 2005. Credit David Wells with that, as he averaged around 7 1/3 per start. Wow. I keep pointing to Wake's injury having a big impact in 2006, but losing Wells was huge, too.
What is UP with the Dennis and Callahan show on WEEI? Is there a bigger pair of loathsome, disgusting, imbecilic cretins in all of US media? I sometimes get the urge to listen to sports radio, but all these guys do is rant about how liberal ideals are destroying the country, ted kennedy is worse than hitler, all Muslims and Brown People want to kill us, the ACLU wants to take away your christmas tree...oh, and they are the world's worst baseball analysts.
Can't we have some sort of concerted effort to get these asshats fired? Why do they have a sports talk show anyway?
Dennis is a local sports TV guy; Callahan writes for the Boston Herald. You probably know that much, though - you live in the Boston area, no?
darren's plan to cut internet traffic is working. everyone is doing so much thinking, there just isn't enough time for posting.
Yeah, that'll show 'em.
Just don't listen to D & C. They're not worth the effort. Their politics don't irritate me as much as it irritates many people I know. What irritates me is Gerry Callahan's overwhelming indignation toward anyone not like him. I've met John Dennis; he's not entirely likeable, but it's in a relatively harmless way.
I used to listen more to Glenn Ordway, but now his show is about 10% worthwhile radio, 10% stupidity, and 80% several-people-trying-to-shout-over-each-other-indecipherably-until-your-ears-bleed. I'm not a big fan of the latter two. (And of the 10% worthwhile, 8% is the whiner line.)
By far, Dale & Holley are the reason to listen to WEEI. Mostly Holley.
They're simulcast into the Hartford area now. I pretty much agree with vi
I try to learn the EEI schedule just so I can be sure never to have to listen to him. When the Herald put all their columnists behind the subscription wall, it was a nice little relief.
In an interview with the Boston Globe’s Gordon Edes that will air Wednesday on NESN, Red Sox GM Theo Epstein hinted that Jonathan Papelbon remains an option to be the team’s closer this season.
There's some speculation that Papelbon may soon be named the team's closer, with owner Tom Werner indicating that a decision on the role had already been reached. If Papelbon is going to close, then it's likely Jon Lester, Joel Pineiro and Julian Tavarez would compete for the fifth spot in the rotation. Feb. 20 - 12:59 pm et
Source: Boston.com
Edes also added that the "revelation" of Papelbon not being completely ruled out as a closer is nothing new.
party pooper
sounds crazy to me ... pineiro seems like he's putting it together.
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