The Colorado Rockies were the biggest surprise of the 2007
season. Everyone’s heard about their winning 21 of 22 and their 8-day layoff
before the World Series, but are they here to stay?
Strengths
Leading up to opening day, the talk was that Todd Helton
would be playing for the Red Sox in 2007, but those trade talks fell apart.
Once the season began, Helton proved that 2006 was a fluke that can be chalked
up to illness. His .320/.434/.494 line wasn’t back to his previous seasons, but
it is in line with his 2005 decline to .320/.445/.534. At 34 years old, Helton
is on the decline, and he isn’t getting any less expensive, but for the
present, he’s still an asset at first base. On the other side of the diamond,
Garrett Atkins started out slowly. After bottoming out with a .188/.259/.267
May, Atkins hit .349/.409/.532 post-All Star break (very similar to his 2006
rates) to reach his season line of .301/.367/.486. Next to Atkins, rookie Troy
Tulowitzki had a tremendous debut with both the glove and the bat. Tulowitzki
should win the gold glove award, although it wouldn’t surprise if he wasn’t
famous enough to win the vote (how else can Jeter win three straight?).
Tulowitzki got plenty of buzz during the postseason that he won’t be under the
radar for the gold glove next season.
Matt Holliday was another player that saw a surge in
popularity this postseason. A certain MVP candidate, Holliday hit
.340/.405/.607 while playing okay defensively in a spacious home outfield. The
only bad news for the Rockies is that Holliday only has two more seasons before
free agency. Across the outfield, Brad Hawpe slightly improved his numbers from
last year (.293/.383/.515 in 2006 to .291/.387/.539 in 2007), but he still
can’t hit lefties as his .220/.295/.398 line against them attests. If you mix
Hawpe with Ryan Spilborghs, you’ve got an outstanding right field platoon.
Spilborghs has hit lefties for a .338/.395/.510 clips in his major league
career. Once you add in Hawpe’s .315/.418/.585 clip against righties this year,
the Rockies would be a dominant force in right field.
If the Rockies get a lead, their bullpen has two strong
options going forward: Manny Corpas and Brian Fuentes. Fuentes had been the
closer since 2005, but he lost his job to Corpas around the All Star break. In
a ten-day span, Fuentes gave up 10 earned runs in only 4.1 innings before being
placed on the DL for just over a month. If you remove that horrid span, Fuentes
managed a 1.74 ERA over 57 innings. However, Corpas has taken the job and run
with it, posting a 2.08 ERA over 78 IP. This left-right combo in the bullpen
will only get one year together unless Fuentes is signed to an extension as he
becomes a free agent next offseason.
Getting that lead to the bullpen has always been a problem
for past Colorado teams, but they have finally been able to get some productive
arms in the starting rotation led by Jeff Francis. Other than Francis and Aaron
Cook, the rest of the rotation will be filled out by their young guns, a couple
of which who were seen this postseason: Ubaldo Jimenez and Franklin Morales.
From watching Jimenez, it is evident that he has major league quality stuff,
but he had trouble locating it in the strike zone. This year, he posted a 4.28
ERA over 82 major league innings, but that followed up a 5.85 ERA in 203 IP at
AAA. Morales was much better as he used 112.2 AAA innings with an ERA of 3.51
to propel him into the major league rotation, where he posted a 3.43 ERA over
39.1 regular season innings. The remaining spot in the rotation will most
likely be filled by Jason Hirsh, although Taylor Buchholz could be a fallback
option. Despite the increased talent in the Colorado rotation, there’s still a
tremendous amount of risk here.
Concerns
As I mentioned, Todd Helton isn’t getting any younger or
less expensive. They tried trading him last offseason, and although I’d suggest
them trying again, I doubt he’ll be as likely to waive his no-trade clause this
time around. It’s a shame because then the Rockies could move Atkins to first
base to make room for Ian Stewart. Instead, they have moved Stewart to second
base this offseason to try to fill the void left by Kazuo Matsui’s impending
free agency. If Stewart fails to make the transition, they’ll need to venture
into the free agent market. They could go try to re-sign Matsui or go after one
of Tadahito Iguchi and Luis Castillo. Yet another option is to let Jamey
Carroll try to hit enough to make his defense an asset.
Another potential free agent departure is Yorvit Torrealba.
With Chris Iannetta waiting in the wings, the Rockies should let Torrealba
walk. Unfortunately, most World Series teams overvalue what got them there, and
the Rockies could fall into that trap this year. Iannetta didn’t have a good
season by any means, but over a full season, he can be expected to easily
outproduce Torrealba at the plate. After all, Torrealba’s .255/.323/.376 line
this year is a pretty low mark to pass. Just remember, Iannetta did hit
.351/.447/.503 at AAA just one season ago.
With so many young arms expected to fill the rotation, the
Rockies should try to find a quality starting pitcher in free agency. It could
prove hard since some pitchers will probably still have reluctance to pitch at
Coors Field, but relying on Jimenez, Morales, and Hirsh to hold down three spots
in the rotation for the whole season is not a wise move.
The other concern that the Rockies must concern themselves
with is signing Holliday to an extension. As a Scott Boras client, will
Holliday break the trend and sign an extension instead of becoming a free
agent? If I’m the Rockies, I have to try.
Overall
It took me a while to figure out what I think the Rockies
should do. After all, they don’t have nearly as much young talent as the
Dodgers, and you can’t forget about the Diamondbacks or the Padres. Then again,
they don’t have Ned
Colletti running the show. If they could move Helton, I’d do it, and the
same goes for Holliday if they can’t get him signed to an extension. Since I
don’t think Helton will agree to a trade now that they’ve been to the World
Series, the Rockies should stay the course – replace Torrealba with Iannetta, hope that Ian Stewart can play
second base, and acquire a good #2 pitcher to slot into the rotation.
First Tier 1. Miguel Cabrera, Florida Marlins He's been a superstar for so long that it's hard to believe he's only 24. Although the Marlins were content low balling him at the start of arbitration, you shouldn't make the same mistake entering your draft. He's great across the board except stolen bases, where he's just average, but in the categories he's great, he's really great.
2. David Wright, New York Mets Take Cabrera, lose some batting average, add some steals, put him in New York, and you've got yourselves a superstar that will be there a while.
3. Alex Rodriguez, New York Yankees Take Wright, add some RBI, and lose some batting average, put him in New York, and you've got a media frenzy about how terrible a player he is for the Yankees. Forget the MVP he won. He's downright pathetic. Sorry, I began channeling the NY media. Ignore what the media says, look at his stats, and realize he's still one of the best players in the game.
4. Aramis Ramirez, Chicago Cubs Ramirez should enjoy the improvement in the lineup in the NL Central standings, but I'm not sure how much it will help him put up personal stats. They didn't add any great OBP guys ahead of him. What they gained in OBP going from Juan Pierre to Alfonso Soriano is lost when you consider that Soriano's driving himself in quite a bit. Pierre had an on-base without including HR 32.6% of the time last year. Soriano's on-base without including HR was 28.7% last year. Now, remember this doesn't mean the change won't help the Cubs. It just won't help Ramirez's fantasy production.
5. Garrett Atkins, Colorado Rockies Atkins seemed to come out of nowhere last year, but he did this last year without the help of the normal Coors Field. Take a look at statistics from last September, and you see that Coors was back to its gopher-like ways. Who knows what will happen there this year, but Atkins should be a good choice no matter what.
Second Tier 6. Ryan Zimmerman, Washington Nationals No one expected his power to develop this quickly, but it did despite what RFK had to say. He's another star at the position, but he's still behind Cabrera and Wright at this point.
7. Alex Gordon, Kansas City Royals He's been nearly handed the third base job despite Mark Teahen's breakout season last year, and for good reason. Teahen will move to the outfield (which is where I will rank him), making room for the guy who had a 1.015 OPS at AA last year.
8. Chad Tracy, Arizona Diamondbacks The oft-overlooked Tracy has been consistently productive the past two years in the desert. His HR totals fell back a little last year, but that will just be a one-year hiatus.
9. Adrian Beltre, Seattle Mariners Beltre will never approach the 48 HR again, but he'll drive in runs, steal some bases, and hit 20-30 HR. Just wait until his 2009 contract year.
Third Tier 10. Scott Rolen, St. Louis Cardinals 11. Chipper Jones, Atlanta Braves
Both guys have some constant injury questions. Neither will offer much above the listed replacement level, but you know they'll be there in the end.
Fourth Tier 12. Edwin Encarnacion, Cincinnati Reds 13. Joe Crede, Chicago White Sox 14. Eric Chavez, Oakland Athletics 15. Hank Blalock , Texas Rangers 16. Akinori Iwamura, Tampa Bay Devil Rays 17. Kevin Kouzmanoff, San Diego Padres
If Chavez is past his shoulder injury, if Crede can repeat his career year, if EdE continues to improve, if Blalock finally lives up to expectations, if Iwamura makes a smooth transition from Japan, if Kouzmanoff continues to prove people wrong (scouts weren't high on him as he was old for his level a lot), ... There's a lot of ifs that could push any one of these guys way up the chart. It's the ifs that keep them down here.
Other than Kouzmanoff, none of these guys will provide above average batting averages. Kouzmanoff and Crede are lacking in runs, but no one should stand out from this group in terms of runs. Crede has a little more pop, and Encarnacion and Iwamura are the only two with the threat of stealing. All six are solid, but they might not provide everything you want from a fantasy 3B.
Third base is a strong position that will have 3+ first rounders. If you don't get one of these guys early, you might be able to grab Alex Gordon a little later with someone like Eric Chavez as insurance.
This is baseball. Let's have some fun.
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MLB Trade Rumors, Baseball Prospectus, Cot's Baseball Contracts, Fan Graphs, Football Outsiders