Tuesday, May 4, 2010
Red Sox Week in Review: Sweep, then swept
Overall the Red Sox scored a lot of runs over the past week (7/game), but also gave up an awful lot (5.9/game). A few very high scoring games bumped these numbers up though, with a 13-12 and and a 17-6 win, as well as an ugly 12-9 loss. These three games accounted for 39 of the 49 total runs scored, while there were also three low scoring, one run games scattered across the week. Thus far the Red Sox have played in 11 one run games so far this season, the most in the majors, and have gone 6-5, which is about what you'd expect. One interesting note is that the Red Sox are 1-5 in extra inning games, including 0-2 this past week.
Despite the high scoring games and a couple of close losses, the back end of the bullpen pitched well, in particular, the power right handed arms. Ramon Ramirez, Manny Delcarmen, Daniel Bard, and Papelbon combined for 14 2/3 innings while only allowing 11 base runners and three runs, one of which were unearned. The rest of the bullpen was a disaster though, with Okajima, Atchison, Wakefield, and Schoenweiss all getting roughed up. The problems with the bullpen after the top setup guys may account for the Sox' poor record in extra inning games; once Tito gets past the trusted arms, things get ugly fast. This is a bit of a surprise considering the Sox brought in a lot of arms to compete for the last couple bullpen spots.
Offensively, both Beltre and Drew are hitting well (13/30 and 11/28 respecitvely), although what really caught my eye is Tito's use of the bench. Unlike in past years, the Red Sox have been pretty aggressive with the use of pinch hitters, pinch runners, and defensive replacements; over the past week the Sox have used an average of 11 position players per game. This is probably due to the injuries to Ellsbury and Cameron, which leaves the Sox without a solid hitting center fielder with adequate range. Also, Ortiz and Lowell have been platooned, with Ortiz in particular being removed from the game when a left-handed reliever comes in. It will be interesting to see how Francona juggles playing time over the next week or two; neither Ortiz nor Lowell seem to be happy with the platoon situation, but Lowell is hitting and Papi is not. With only two lefties coming up this week (Kazmir and Sabathia), we'll see if they stick with the hot bat and start cutting into Ortiz' share of the platoon.
Monday, April 26, 2010
Madness!
Or, how to ruin what had been labeled a potential dynasty.
You’ve probably already heard about Ryan Howard’s MAMMOTH contract extension for five years and $125 million. You may have even read some of the analysis that discusses just how crazy this contract is. Well, here are my two cents.
For starters, I just don’t understand why the Phillies are doing this now. Unless they have an economist on staff who is predicting that major league baseball salaries to spike, this is a bad deal now. According to FanGraph’s valuations, Howard has been worth just under $20 million per season over the last 4 years. Even if Howard maintains his current productivity, the Phillies will be paying a 25% premium for that production starting in 2012.
Of course, Ryan Howard won’t be able to maintain that level of production. Unlike some of the other players who have been locked up long term, Ryan Howard is already 30. The Phillies just committed $25 million per year until he’s 37 and baseball is typically not very kind to aging left handed sluggers. In fact, baseball is downright cruel to aging left handed sluggers. Ryan Howard’s top four comparable players coming into this season were Richie Sexson, Cecil Fielder, Mo Vaughn, and David Ortiz. If that list doesn’t make a Phillies fan’s blood run cold, I don’t know what would. Sexson was pretty good at 30 and 31, terrible by 32, and out of baseball after his year 33 season. Fielder was all right in his early 30’s, but was out of baseball following his age 34 season. Mo Vaughn is widely considered one of the biggest free agent busts in history, after signing an enormous deal with the Angels following his impressive age 30 season, Vaughn was mediocre, before missing his entire age 33 season and was out of baseball following a brief and ineffective appearance in his age 35 season. Sadly, David Ortiz’s struggles don’t really need much explanation. Every one of these players had sharp declines following their age 30 or 31 season. The Phillies have now committed money well beyond that.
To top it all off, the Phillies are an NL team, so they won’t be able to hide Howard at DH. They’re committed to trotting him out there every day until he is 37, or they eat enough of the guaranteed money on his contract to move him to a power starved AL team. He’s a tolerable defender at first right now, but given his size, I can’t imagine his defense holds up over the course of the contract.
The sad thing is that the Phillies were positioned perfectly to avoid this whole mess. Sexson and Vaughn ended up being tremendous busts, but their original teams knew when to pull the plug. The Red Sox and the Diamondbacks both let their star first basemen walk, even though neither team had a star prospect moving up to fill the role. In fact, what makes it even more depressing is that the Phillies went through all this when they traded Jim Thome to the White Sox following the 2005 season. For the mere cost of Thome and $22 million (about half the money left on his contract) the Phillies received Aaron Rowand, who put in two solid, relatively inexpensive (if you don’t hold the $22 million against him) years in center field, before moving west to become a free agent bust in his own right.
So, if you’ve skipped ahead to the end for a Cliff’s Notes summary, this is a terrible, terrible deal for the Phillies because:
- Howard is already pretty old (30)
- Howard was already under contract for next season, so there wasn’t any reason to rush this.
- Howard is likely going to be overpaid in year 1 of his new contract extension.
- The baseball gods hate large, unathletic, left-handed sluggers.
- Howard’s mediocre defense can’t be hidden in the NL.
- And finally, perhaps most depressingly, they’ve learned nothing from their own mistakes and mistakes of other teams within the last ten years.
By all accounts Howard is an exceptional person and a pretty damn good ballplayer right now, but there is no doubt in my mind that this contract bites the Phillies in the ass down the line. The Red Sox are in a tough situation with David Ortiz right now, a former face of the franchise, but imagine if the Red Sox owed him $25 million a year for another 3 years AND he had to play the field. It would not end well.
A Prospect Check Up - Lars Anderson and Anthony Rizzo
Thursday, April 22, 2010
Should we be concerned about Jon Lester?

The Red Sox have been struggling lately, even with two impressive walk-off wins against the Rangers, much of which is due to the heroics of Darnell McDonald. The Sox haven't been very good at just about everything so far this year, for a nice example, the Red Sox have caught 3% of the runners attempting to steal on them. Three. A 97% success rate is absolutely unheard of for a single player, but V-Mart and Tek are turning every baserunner into a super Ricky Henderson. But their starting pitching, which was supposed to be their greatest strength, has been particularly disappointing. The Red Sox rank 13th in ERA in the AL, just beating out the lowly Royals.
Jon Lester was supposed to be the ace of the staff. Despite a slow start to 2009, he ended up with a 3.41 ERA, a 1.23 WHIP, and 225 strikeouts. To top it all off, his FIP (Fielding Independent Pitching, which is calculated based on strikeout, walk, and home run rates) indicated he was a bit unlucky, as his peripheral stats indicated he should have had an ERA of 3.15. After 3 rocky starts, Lester is sporting an 8.84 ERA and a 1.88 WHIP. Obviously he isn't that bad, but can he recover to ace status?
First, the good. Started off poorly last year, and may simply be a slow starter. Lester's ERA didn't get below 5.00 until June 12 of last year, and his monthly ERAs for April and May were 5.40 and 5.86 respectively. For the rest of the season Lester didn't post a monthly ERA above 3.07. But, when you take a closer look, things aren't quite so rosy. In 2009, Lester's strikeout and walk rates were excellent - over the course of April and May he struck out 74 batters in 65 1/3 innings (10.2 K/9 IP, which is actually higher than his strikeout rate for the entire season), while only walking 24. Because of the good strikeout and walk rates, we can probably chalk up Lester's poor start in 2009 to bad luck, and some bad defense. So far this season, Lester seems to be being bitten by bad luck too, giving up a .364 batting average on balls in play (.300 is average, and previous studies have shown that pitchers have very little control over their BABIP).
Friday, April 9, 2010
Meet the new Javy Vazquez...
Despite being a stathead darling and having posted a 2.87 ERA and 1.03 WHIP last year with Atlanta, I'll admit I was ecstatic when the Yankees reacquired Vazquez. Sure, the Yankees didn't give up much in terms of prospects to get him, nor does he have a long term contract which will hurt the Yankees, but he sure can hurt the Yankees in 2010. Well, after the first start, Vazquez is now sporting a gaudy 12.71 ERA after giving up 8 runs in 5 2/3 innings. Vazquez pitched well with the bases empty, holding the Rays to a .214/.313/.286 line in 14 at bats, with 4 strikeouts. Unsurprisingly, Vazquez got annihilated with the runners on, with the Rays going 7/14, picking up 15 total bases good for a .500/.533/1.071 line.
It sure is nice to have Javy Vazquez back in the AL East.
Monday, April 5, 2010
Beckett's Extension
According to Fangraphs, Beckett has been worth just under $81 million over the last 4 years, with $73 million of that value coming in the last 3. If he can stay healthy and maintain his production the Sox could come out ahead. However, looking five years down the road is a guessing game for any player, let alone a pitcher. It worries me that the Sox are sinking over $30 million a year into 30+ year old pitchers from now until the end of the 2014 season. Last I checked, betting on pitchers in their mid thirties is what undid the Yankees...
Some thoughts from opening night
One down, eighteen to go. I'm not sure how I feel about the imbalanced schedule these days. It really does make it brutally hard for the O's, Jays, and Rays to compete when they're playing one quarter of their games against the Red Sox and the Yankees and their combined $378 million payroll. Plus, it seems to dilute the meaning of each Yankees/Red Sox regular season game.