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Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Thursday, September 24, 2009
I agree with Tango: Kansas City’s Chris “Disco” Hayes has officially taken the lead from Brian Bannister for the title of Sabermetric Player of the Year.
Three Questions for you, Dear Readers:
1. Who is Chris “Disco” Hayes?
He’s a 26-year-old submarining reliever who wasn’t drafted out of Northwestern but signed with an independent team and eventually earned a professional contract with the Royals. Last year in the Double-A Texas League, he went 5-2 with a 1.64 ERA. This year he pitched even better in Double-A, but got cuffed around after a promotion to Triple-A Omaha. This likely explains why he wasn’t a September call-up. Another explanation: Hayes doesn’t throw nearly as hard as Brad Ziegler (for example), and Dayton Moore is probably too young to remember Daniel Raymond Quisenberry.
and
3. How did two players as smart as Hayes and Bannister wind up in such a stupid organization?
I haven’t the foggiest idea. The universe is full of mysteries.
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1. Brandon in MO (Yunitility Infielder) Posted: September 24, 2009 at 04:42 AM (#3330751)Dayton Moore is 42. So unless he forgot most of what he saw in baseball before he was 21, he'd probably remember the closer on the team he grew up watching.
Given the potshots the Royals seem to make against writers and their fans, it seems pretty fitting.
The Royals (not the ones in uniform) are a petty organization. They deserve even less respect than the scraps Neyer/Posnanski/Jazayerli have thrown them.
(I swear, I'm not a teenage girl. I SWEAR.)
I'm not sure what you're talking about, but "Gilmore Girls" sounds like a bunch of chubby middle aged single women running a coffee shop or book store and complaining about men, while "Veronica Mars" sounds like a stripper, so I concur.
Pretty sure they both died the same ignominious death at the same time. What they kept was "Everwood". And "Smallville". And "Supernatural". And . . .
That's good outside the box thinking, I've sort of indirectly thought about this before. I figured it's (a) gotta be very tiresome on the outfielders to be shuttling back and forth across the outfield, specially with so many L-R-L-R lineups, and (b) make for additional (if small) game delays. I guess one could argue that they'd do that just for the dead pull hitters.
But Gilmore Girls is a very good show. You need to give it some time to wash over you, to get used to its rhythms and yeah, quirks, but at its heart Gilmore Girls is perhaps the best dramatic representation of a healthy, loving relationship between a mother and a daughter in the last decade of television. There are vanishingly few female characters on television that have the sort of depth Rory and especially Lorelai did, and even fewer shows on television that take female characters that interesting and explore their relationships not with the men that are supposed to be the centers of their lives, but with each other.
I like having Gilmore Girls on the tivo when I get home. It's just really pleasant to sit down with the people on that show.
That said, the musical possibilities for Disco's entrance are fantastic, though "Disco Inferno" has a certain gasoline-on-the-fire quality that might be all too fitting.
I'm rooting for him though - how can you not!
Gilmore Girls - It had definite merits - I thought the two leads were skilled and worked well together plus the writing was occasionally crisp. That said - it was never something I'd go out of my way to watch and my understanding is that it declined pretty precipitously after awhile.
I recently found out my sister-in-law liked Logan. I may have to entirely reevaluate what I think of her. Logan.
Says the wrestling fan.
Funny...that's exactly what people said about Quisenberry.
Hayes' BABIP has typically been well below .320, until he got to AAA where it soared to something like .380, so to a certain extent he got jobbed by the luck fairy. That said, I have my doubts too, but am definitely pulling for him.
My girlfriend liked him too, and I thought he was a complete heel. Serious WTF moment.
Re "Disco" Hayes - that blog post three links back from TFA above is pretty fascinating. He's obviously a student of the game and has more than a passing familiarity with advanced metrics. I hope he sticks around for a while.
But I couldn't find anything on Staub or Mattingly in Retrosheet.
When Neyer writes obvious filler like this, it's probably just prudent to ignore it and not link to it. His "bonding episodes" with Joe and Tango and Rany are simply not newsworthy (as the swift hi-jacking of this thread clearly indicates). It's better to link to stuff that Rob hasn't cherry-picked from someone else...
You have to watch tv with the mother-in-law? Oof. I don't mind my girl's mother, but that's just not something I'd want to do. May the in-laws stay their current 1200 miles away for many, many years.
I haven’t the foggiest idea. The universe is full of mysteries.
Those two guys may actually read here so my apologies if so. But a player's stated philosophy have very little to do with their utility on the field. We like them (I do, at least) but if you're looking to pick up players neither is exactly a dominating star. IOW, a stupid organization is a stupid organization for having too many players who top out where these two top out. If it were a matter of character, insight, etc., the KC players would rock. But it isn't about that.
Again, I don't mean to slam these two. I root for them and hope they have great careers (hell, I'm already extremely jealous of the careers they've had).
The thing that got me about Lorelai is that her success in overcoming a teen pregnancy without using her parents money was really hard to believe given her character. I liked her more than Petunia did, but I don't that that person raises such a good kid and has as much success as she has. She would have led a really troubled life. So, while Rory was depicted realistically, which was cool, it clashed with the portrayal of her mother.
I mean, er, what is Gilmore Girls?
Happens all the time in softball. You put your best outfielder in left most of the time and when a lefty is up you move him over to right.
Here are the two Mattingly games where he switched:
August 29, 1986
August 30, 1986
The next day, he played a whole game at 3B. Four assists and he even fielded a bunt cleanly and threw out the runner at second.
This game has been referenced before for some bizarre swtiching. I'm still trying to wrap my head around the image of Pat Borders playing 2B.
Happens all the time in softball. You put your best outfielder in left most of the time and when a lefty is up you move him over to right.
Yea, but those are softball players, some of the most well-conditioned athletes in the world. Baseball players are likely to get tired from such exercise.
If your defensive specialist OF'er is getting tired by jogging 200 feet he needs to lay off the ring-dings and he isn't your defensive specialist.
As for delays, it takes something like a minute to get that first pitch off anyway and since when have managers cared about delays? They did create the modern usage of the bullpen afterall.
edit: owe a HFCS coke to the the big fat idiot.
Another common-sense reason: the "weaker" outfielder probably wouldn't appreciate the obvious, public attention called to his inferiority on a regular basis.
And if you are regularly playing an OF who is bad enough to make this switch beneficial, you probably have bigger problems than swapping outfielders can reasonably be expected to address.
Another common-sense reason: the "weaker" outfielder probably wouldn't appreciate the obvious, public attention called to his inferiority on a regular basis.
So what? I'm sure hitters don't like being pinch hit for on a regular basis either. But they somehow manage.
And if you are regularly playing an OF who is bad enough to make this switch beneficial, you probably have bigger problems than swapping outfielders can reasonably be expected to address.
Like Jason Bay?
Veronica Mars is simply the hottest fictional character ever created, sir. You watch yourself.
That is a possibility but I'm sure they had the same problems when they introduced the DH and I think the players got over the stigma.
edit: Galldarnit! I'm going to end up owing a case to the big fat idiot.
Expecting people to replicate what Quiz did is well, not realistic (not that you're suggesting it is, cpass). Regardless, if he does well in AAA - give him a look. [for that matter, I wouldn't be above giving Swindle another shot, should he right his course in AAA (he really struggled after moving to the Cleveland org).
Are you sure it's Pat Borders at 2nd, and not Cecil Fielder, or Cecil Fielder, you're thinking of?
The article also contains references and/or links to tango, Fangraphs, Hardball Times and Bill James. Which leads me to wonder whether he has ever been a lurker here?
Really, in normal, non-emergency situations, what exactly is accomplished by swapping OFers that couldn't also be accomplished by simply shifting them within their current positions instead? Throwing arm is about the only difference there, and if the situation is dire enough that you absolutely need the marginal gains in corner outfielder arm strength/accuracy, you are probably better off just making an outright defensive substitution anyway and removing the weak defensive link from the field entirely.
In the original article, Hayes discusses the limited types of situations in which his ideas would be most useful. It's not any more arcane in principle than defensive replacements, and he doesn't take it to an absurd extreme (ie, switch back and forth all game).
When Neyer writes obvious filler like this, it's probably just prudent to ignore it and not link to it. His "bonding episodes" with Joe and Tango and Rany are simply not newsworthy (as the swift hi-jacking of this thread clearly indicates). It's better to link to stuff that Rob hasn't cherry-picked from someone else...
Hayes's article was more interesting than the vast majority of things posted here. But if you're just saying link to it directly rather than through Neyer, I agree.
Agree with both. Hayes has had a number of interesting bits - and his 1 min post conceit is a clever one.
Hayes talks about the limited situations in which it would be most useful. His example is a slow righty pull hitter up with nobody on in the late innings of a tie game (ie, a situation in which there's little advantage to having a good RF b/c the odds of a play at third are slim).
I guess then the question is how often non-routine flyballs go the opposite way - I'd guess that a lot of the time when a righty hits a fly to RF, Jeremy Reimercaviglia could catch it, so the shift wouldn't make a difference.
If you read Hayes' blog post, he is not saying that it would definitely work -- he is really asking/wondering whether it might not work in some circumstances, based on all of the available data, which he admits he does not have.
Okay -- but how often does this situation actually happen? And how often does it happen when the LF and RF have a significant difference in overall defensive abilities? And how much does outfielder-swapping matter in light of the prevailing strategy in such a situation, that is, to play the outfield deep anyway to prevent any kind of extra-base hit?
It's an interesting thought exercise, the kind that idle fans like myself often ponder, and it is very cool to see an actual player share the thought. But the actual, real-world benefit of such a strategy seems very, very small, if it exists at all.
Also, to clarify, by "wouldn't make a difference" I was talking about a situation in which the shift could hurt (Cecil Fielder hits a fly ball to right), and then wondering whether a greater percentage of RHB flies to RF are routine - thus the shift wouldn't hurt the team, and "wouldn't make a difference".
I wouldn't be surprised if Hayes does lurk here, but he wouldn't make a big deal of it. Disco Hayes doesn't advertise.
Again, if you read the article, he admits the differences are small -- but suspects they are non-zero, and given that a lot of baseball strategies have very small advantages, why not try these, if the situation presents itself.
I don't know. There are a lot of sensible strategies, both currently utilized and not, which have limited practicality. I'd think it comes up often enough that it's worth thinking about. More importantly, it might generate other ideas.
And how much does outfielder-swapping matter in light of the prevailing strategy in such a situation, that is, to play the outfield deep anyway to prevent any kind of extra-base hit?
Wouldn't it be better to have the guy with the better range and arm in LF in that situation, regardless of the fact that you're already being careful by playing deep?
Arm, that I could see making a real difference. But it the batter is a "slow, pull-hitting righty," how likely is he to try to take second base anyway?
I was mostly being a devil's advocate here anyway, but I was just going off the quoted text. Put in its proper context, I agree that players could be deployed more creatively for optimal results.
I remember the Quiz, hell I remember Tekulve
I specifically remember the Leach
700 MLB IP, ERA+ of 120, and yet seemingly never made an opening day roster...
In 1981 he went 10-3 2.28 in the minors.
In 1982 he had a 2.96 ERA in AAA, when he was brought up, I saw him throw a 10 inning one hit shutout... (last or next to last game of the 1982 season)
For a team that went 65-97, for team that had 1 starter with an ERA+ over 100
He spent the entirety of the next two years in the minors.
In 1984 he went 11-4 3.03 in AAA
In 1985 he had a 1.59 ERA in AAA, in 1986 it was 2.49
(for his career 950 IP in the minors, 2.89 ERA, 44 starts 300 relief appearances)
In 1985 he had a 2.91 in mlb ip (inc 4 starts)
1986- back in the minors
Think of that, through 1985 he'd thrown 136 MLB innings to a 3.23 ERA, and had even thrown a 10inninng one hitter, coming off a year where he'd posted a 1.59 ERA in AAA and 2.91 in the majors, and he goes back down to AAA the next year.
1987- injuries forced the MEts to put him in the rotation awhile, he goes 11-1 3.23
the next year, back in the pen, 92 ip, 2.52 ERA, but he was already 34, later pitched for KC, Minny and the Whitesox, he was ALWAYS effective- any role,
The Mets traded him to KC, KC released him, Twins had him for a year, didn't re sign him, Expos signed him- never pitched, they released him- That year he went 1.95 in 72 ip for the white sox
He was, you guessed it, a submariner.
But I have always been baffled, I can't recall anyone else, who
1: PLayed well in the minors; and
2: Played well (sometimes brilliantly) in the majors; and
3: gets demoted anyway; and
4: Plays well again in the minors; and
5: Is promoted again, plays well again; and
6: Gets traded and almost immediately released;
7: signs with someone else, plays well, gets released; and
8: repeat.
The Royals had a couple decent submariners/sidearmers in the late 80s/early 90s that did okay, but they just discarded. Leach, Rusty Meachem would experiment with odd arm angles including sidearm, Steve Shifflett, a KC native who was awesome in '92 and the team just got rid of after that. Its like they completely forgot how Quiz had his success.
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