TONY RANDAZZO NO MISTER ROCK AND ROLL, MR. COMMISSIONER.
Read More...Major League Baseball should immediately adopt reforms to the umpiring system. MLB is now a $7 billion dollar industry awash in cash so the costs of these changes can hardly be the reason to defer making them.
1. MLB should buy the umpire schools and take over the training and development of all umpires in professional baseball. The recruitment, training and compensation of minor league and major league umpires should be controlled ...
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1. Walt Davis posted on December 29, 2012 at 07:27 AM # hit 0 | hit 0Doesn't work with the 2014 "cap".
If their entire OF wasn't LH, Kubel would look nice on a 1-year w/option deal for RF/DH.
Theoretically they could add Kubel and a RH OF, but the roster gets crowded if/when ARod comes back.
Fangraphs has his WAR the last three years as 1.9, 1.0, and 0.3.
BBref has his WAR as 0.8, 0.5, and -0.5.
By both sites, he's a below average player over the last three years. He's 30 years old and projects to get worse. He's getting paid 7.5 million per year, which (if we use 5.5/WAR), means he has to put up around 3 WAR over the next two years to be worth it. He has zero surplus value, even if you use the Fangraphs numbers.
In addition, I would be very wary of any claim that below average players should be calculated at the same 5.5 mil/WAR number that we use for above average players. Someone who contributes 1 win above replacement is generally a guy in danger of losing his job, not having any kind of job stability.
Finally, teams seem to be evaluating Upton as a 5 win player. If you do that, he has massive surplus value.
I think this is a really bad article.
Then why not use WAA?
That was my thought as well, but in TFA, he explains that he's looking at what players tend to get, rather than what they are worth (sort of like discussing who will make the HOF vs who should). It's a short but interesting read.
Yeah, but it's silly. He thinks that Upton would tend to get 15 million, but on the open market, it's quite doubtful that his salary goes below 20 (as can be seen by what the proposed trades look like). Similarly, is there any evidence that Kubel would be given a 9 million deal today? Everyone said that the 7.5 million base salary was an overpay for the D-Backs.
Yes, but that was after getting a no-hit SS from the A's. I'm operating under the theory that Towers wants 7 no-hit SS, 8 if he can convert one to C, because the NL West is always won with pitching and defense.
Then why not use WAA?
I'm not sure what you were getting at here. But WAA is problematic over short periods of time because it doesn't account for playing time. A guy who's been average in 100 PA and a guy who's been average in 600 PA both have 0 WAA for the season.
So WAA is really only useful when comparing guys with roughly equal playing time. So it can be quite handy in evaluating bench players. For example, everybody likes to pick on little Nicky Punto. Punto has 3.7 WAR over the last 3 years ... but, controlling for playing time, that's 1.8 WAA. What more could you possibly want out of a bench player than for him to perform as well or better than an average player. You'd reach the same conclusion by just noting those 3.7 WAR come in just 645 PA but using WAA takes one less step.
For his career Punto has 1.4 WAA. That doesn't mean he's as good as David Eckstein (career 2.6 WAA in 5700 PA) nor necessarily that Punto deserves a starting job but it certainly means he's been a top bench player. His value of course is almost entirely defense, he's not a good choice to pinch-hit which limits his bench value a bit.
But, now me suspicious. It's hard to define bench players in PI but I did a search on "expansion era, min 2000 PA, PA<300*WAR (so above-average), at least 20% of games at each of 2B, SS, 3B. That turned up only 7 names, all starting 1985 or later. I thought it might be the "estimated/regressed Rfield" vs. the recent Rfield thing meant old school players couldn't make it ... but only a couple of these guys are relying solely on defense to make the list and the others are at least decent hitters for their position (i.e. hit about like a starting SS). And getting rid of the WAR/PA criterion only increses the list to 17 and nobody started before 1977. I suppose smaller pitching staffs may have meant fewer guys who backed up all three IF positions.
Velarde, Counsell, Carroll, Punto, M Izturiz, Grebek and Reboulet. Counsell, Punto and Reboulet are the pure defense guys ... and even they hit at least as well as Brendan Ryan, Adam Everett, Rey Ordonez, etc. Still I suspect something odd is going on in terms of timeline.
Yes, it's a Nick Punto hijack -- who saw that coming?
Jerry Hairston Jr: -1.2 WAA over 7+ full seasons of PA (15 years), 100+ starts at 2B/SS/3B/LF/CF. He's had one full-time season and another three with 400+ PA. That's pretty much your perfect bench player.
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