Now that the trade deadline has passed, let's assign grades to each team for their in-season moves (April through today).
Los Angeles Angels of
Anaheim – A
Acquired 1B Mark Teixeira for 1B Casey Kotchman and RHP
Steve Marek
Oakland Athletics
– B
Signed DH Frank Thomas
Acquired RHP Sean Gallagher, C Josh Donaldson, 2B/LF Eric
Patterson, and OF Matt Murton for RHPs Rich Harden and Chad Gaudin
Acquired 2B Adrian Cardenas, LHP Josh Outman, and OF Matt
Spencer for Joe Blanton
Like Billy Beane, I believe that you’re either contending or
you’re rebuilding. You can’t do both at the same time. I would have probably
gone the other way and chose to contend, but if you’re going to go the
rebuilding route, at least they didn’t hold anything back.
Toronto Blue Jays
– D
Released DH Frank Thomas
They had no reason to cut Frank Thomas. He wasn’t doing well
to start the year, but it’s not like they had a better alternative on their
roster. It’s also disappointing they weren’t able to move any of their spare
parts at the deadline. A.J. Burnett’s contract is a poison pill. If he stays
healthy, he’s probably going to opt for free agency at the end of the season.
If he gets hurt, you’re on the hook for the next two years at $12 million each.
They also had Gregg Zaun and David Eckstein come up in rumors. I don’t know if
these guys will be Type-B free agents or not, but my guess is not. If that is
correct, there’s no reason these guys shouldn’t have been moved for something,
anything.
Cleveland Indians
– A-
Acquired OF Matt LaPorta, LHP Zach Jackson, RHP Rob Bryson,
and PTBNL for LHP CC Sabathia
Acquired C Carlos Santana and RHP Jonathan Meloan for 3B
Casey Blake and about $2 million
Acquired RHP Anthony Reyes for RHP Luis Perdomo
While there were many different takes on the Sabathia deal,
I think it was a good move by the Indians. It could have been better if they
had waited and let teams bid up the price, but LaPorta is most likely going to
be better than the two draft picks they would have gotten from Sabathia’s free
agent compensation. While I like the acquisition of LaPorta, I love the Casey
Blake deal. Blake would have probably been gone in the offseason, and the
Indians would have gotten a compensation sandwich pick. Both of the players
they got are better than that sandwich pick.
Seattle Mariners
– D+
Signed C Kenji Johjima to a 3-year, $16.5 million extension
Acquired RHP Gaby Hernandez for LHP Arthur Rhodes
At the time of the Johjima extension, the Mariners were
still in the playoff race and Jeff Clement was still in the minors. With
Clement being highly regarded by scouts and continuing to pound down the door
to the majors, it was clear that Johjima was just holding the starting catcher
spot for Clement. There was no reason to sign him to an extension. If you had
known that Johjima was going to be terrible all season back in April, that’s
just one more reason to not sign him to an extension. The Rhodes deal is just
your typical left-handed reliever being moved at the deadline. I have no idea
why Jose Vidro is still around; if his vesting option for 2009 vests, it is
just terrible management. If Raul Ibanez is a potential type-A free agent, I
can see why he didn’t get traded. The Mariners would have had to get something
better than the two draft picks, but other teams wouldn’t want to give up that
much to get Ibanez. Even considering that, Jayson
Stark mentioned that the Mariners’ trade demands were “outrageous.” They
should still be able to pass Jarrod Washburn through waivers and move him, but
I have my doubts about the same being possible with Adrian Beltre.
Baltimore Orioles
– C-
The Orioles made no big moves, but they didn’t really have
to make any. Kevin Millar and Jay Payton are free agents after the year, but
are they really of interest to any of the contenders? It could be argued that
they should have traded George Sherrill at the top of his value, but the rumors
suggest that other teams were making offers as if he is your typical
left-handed middle reliever. That makes sense since he’s not really anything
more than a typical left-handed middle reliever masquerading as a closer.
Aubrey Huff, Ramon Hernandez, Melvin Mora, Jamie Walker, Chad Bradford, and
Sherrill probably won’t be around on the next contender in Baltimore, but
they’re all under contract for next year. That means they should be working the
phones in the offseason to see if they can turn their mediocre veterans into
something of future value. If they don’t start to do something, Nick Markakis
might be a free agent before the Orioles become a playoff team.
Texas Rangers – C
The Rangers went into the trade deadline with a surplus of
catching, and they came out without making any moves. That’s okay, since
they’re all going to be around for a while. Gerald Laird is under team control
through 2010, while Jarrod Saltalamacchia, Max Ramirez, and Taylor Teagarden
all have through at least 2013. They’ve got time to make their moves. Hank
Blalock and Michael Young also came up in trade rumors. Young is a bit of a
surprise, but his contract does get ridiculous starting next year. From 2009 to
2013, Young will be paid $16 million a season. For comparison, PECOTA profiles
him as worth $35 million over that time frame. That’s an excess of $45
million he’s owed. In addition to Blalock and Young, it would have been nice to
see Milton Bradley get moved. Given what they had to move outside the catchers,
it just wasn’t likely to see anything get done.
Tampa Bay Rays –
C+
Exercised the 2009 option on LF Carl Crawford’s contract;
the option was worth $8.25 million with a $2.5 million buyout
Declined the 2009 option on OF Rocco Baldelli’s contract;
the option was worth $6 million with a $4 million buyout
Signed RHP Dan Wheeler to a 3-year $10.5 million extension
through 2010 with a $4 million club option for 2011 ($1 million buyout)
Some people are upset that the Rays didn’t make a move to
enhance their postseason chances in 2008, but I wonder something along the
lines of what Derek Jacques suggested in the Baseball Prospectus
Roundtable. Since they’re so loaded with prospects, were teams asking for
more from the Rays than they were from other teams in hope that they would cave
under pressure to contend now? Regarding the contracts done on April 1st,
the Rays might have changed their mind about the Rocco Baldelli option
decision. At the time, nobody knew if he’d be able to come back from
mitochondrial disease and play again, so it was an easy decision to decline the
option. With Rocco nearing his return to the majors, he might be worth that
option. While he’s probably not going to be worth $6 million next year, you’re
already on the hook for $4 million of it. Is he worth having on the roster for
$2 million? That answer might be different than it was on April 1st.
Boston Red Sox –
B-
Acquired LF Jason Bay for LF Manny Ramirez, RHP Craig
Hansen, OF Brandon Moss, and $7 million
This is one trade where I disagree with a lot of people. The
difference between the 2008 version of Manny Ramirez and the 2008 version of
Jason Bay just isn’t that much. WARP has it at 0.5 wins. When you add in that
Bay is under contract for 2009 at $7.5 million, going from Ramirez to Bay is an
upgrade. Was that upgrade worth Hansen, Moss, and a lot of cold hard cash?
Probably not, but I think the Red Sox just felt that Ramirez had to go. Don’t
get me wrong; Hansen and Moss were never going to be worth much to the Red Sox,
but they still had value. For 2008, the Red Sox got slightly worse. For 2009, this
was a great move.
Kansas City Royals
– C
Jose Guillen and his contract were unlikely to be wanted by
other teams, but there were others that could have been traded. Mark
Grudzielanek, Ron Mahay, and Miguel Olivo would have made sense to move. There
probably wasn’t much interest in Grudzielanek, but Mahay and Olivo definitely
generated some rumors. Mahay and Olivo are under team control for 2009, so the
urgency to move them just wasn’t there.
Detroit Tigers –
C
Acquired RHP Kyle Farnsworth for C Ivan Rodriguez
The Tigers were in a tough situation this trade deadline.
Their chances at the postseason aren’t that great (currently 6 GB of the White
Sox and Twins), but they spent the offseason mortgaging the future for 2008.
They were all-in before the season even began. Having already moved their top
prospects in the offseason, they had nothing left to trade for in-season help.
They did the best they could by sending Pudge to the Yankees for Farnsworth.
They aren’t losing much by using Brandon Inge behind the plate in Rodriguez’s
stead while adding another flamethrower to their bullpen. Not a bad move, but
not really an impact one either.
Minnesota Twins –
D
Recalled LHP Francisco Liriano from AAA Rochester;
Designated RHP Livan Hernandez for assignment
Livan Hernandez proved that he wasn’t worth keeping in the
rotation over a month ago, but the Twins refused to make a move. That was okay
at the time because Liriano was coming off consecutive outings where he gave up
5 runs in 5 IP and 5 runs in 5.1 IP. With Liriano not yet ready to return to
the majors, it was acceptable to keep giving the ball to Hernandez. After Livan
gave up 6 runs in 4.1 IP on July 9th, it should have been time to
make this move. Prior to Livan’s next start on July 19th, Liriano
had given up 1 run in his last 28 IP. Instead, Liriano got two more minor
league starts. So what changed since July 19th, the trade deadline
passed and the Twins found that nobody would trade for Hernandez. Wasn’t that
known two weeks ago though?
On the no-trade front, it should have been pretty easy for
the Twins to make upgrades. The exciting Carlos Gomez isn’t putting any runs on
the scoreboard by hitting .257/.289/.353, but he is leading the team in
at-bats. Plus, Brendan Harris has 336 at-bats while hitting .262/.321/.381.
It’s hard for defense to make up for those numbers, but it’s not hard to
improve your team when you have two guys hitting like that.
Chicago White Sox
– I
Acquired OF Ken Griffey, Jr. and ~$4 million for RHP Nick
Masset and 2B Danny Richar
I give this one an incomplete because it’s going to depend
on how Ozzie Guillen sets up his lineups. If they follow through on their
promise to Griffey and play him every day in center field, it’s possible that
this trade actually makes them worse. If they quickly realize what everyone
else has – that Griffey can’t play center anymore – Griffey could be a nice
platoon partner for Paul Konerko at first base. For this trade to improve the
White Sox, it’s going to take convincing Griffey that he should play first.
Given how long it took the Reds to move Griffey to right, that will probably
take too long.
New York Yankees
– B-
Signed 1B Richie Sexson
Acquired OF Xavier Nady and LHP Damaso Marte for RHPs Jeff
Karstens, Daniel McCutchen, Ross Ohlendorf, and OF Jose Tabata
Acquired C Ivan Rodriguez for RHP Kyle Farnsworth
I’m sure there are a lot of people upset with the Yankees’
unwillingness to trade away their farm system for a better shot at the 2008
playoffs, but Brian Cashman has a plan. He was able to pull off some minor
moves without giving up much, but the big question is do they have enough to
make the playoffs? I don’t think so, but it’s going to be close.
Last
Sunday, I wrote about the flawed All-Star selection process. Before getting
into today’s topic, I want to respond to a few comments from last week. First,
I used Joe Crede as the example because Alex Rodriguez should have been a
unanimous selection at 3B. For Crede to be elected because some players
couldn’t see that Rodriguez is the best AL 3B is ridiculous. I’ll admit that
Jason Varitek would have been a better example than Crede, but Rodriguez was a
better example than Joe Mauer.
The second issue is with the start of All-Star balloting. I
have no problems with voting starting at the beginning of May. The point
brought up against it was that Carlos Quentin wasn’t on the ballot because he
hadn’t stepped in as starter yet. Actually, that’s false. Quentin has been
starting since April 3rd. Instead of listing Quentin on the ballot,
Jerry Owens was listed, and he hasn’t even had a single plate appearance in
2008. This isn’t really an issue of when the voting starts; it’s an issue of
“how did MLB end up listing Jerry Owens on the ballot without a single plate
appearance?”
The last issue is that several of the comments were
complaining about the fan vote with many of you suggesting that the players and
managers have a better idea of who should be on the All-Star team. That is the
main topic of this post.
Instead of looking directly at the players the fans voted
in, I decided to look at the rosters as a whole and find the players that don’t
belong objectively. When people choose All-Stars, there are two separate paths
that are usually used. The first is the most common, and that is to select the
All-Stars based completely on the first half of the season. The second is the
one I generally use, and that is to pick the players that are most likely to
put together the best season, which takes into account both their
season-to-date stats and expectations on whether or not they’re likely to keep
it up. For example, Ryan Ludwick and Ryan Braun are performing similarly, but
Braun would get my vote well before Ludwick would. Back to the objective
process, I wanted to incorporate both of those selection methods, so using the
players’ WARP totals from 2005 to 2008 (minor league numbers included), I
computed the average 2008 WARP and the average 2005-to-2008 WARP for the
All-Stars. I have listed all of the players that have WARP totals worse than
one standard deviation below average in either category.
Poor All-Star
Selections by 2008 WARP: Joe Crede, Derek Jeter, David Ortiz, Carlos
Quentin, Alfonso Soriano, Jason Varitek, Billy Wagner
Poor All-Star
Selections by 2005-to-2008 WARP: Justin Duchscherer, Josh Hamilton, Tim
Lincecum, Nate McLouth, Dioner Navarro, Joakim Soria, Edinson Volquez, Kerry
Wood
Poor All-Selections
by Both Methods: Cristian Guzman, Carlos Marmol, George Sherrill, Brian
Wilson
Let’s look at how those players made the All-Star team,
starting with those selected by the fans.
Poor Fan Selections: Josh
Hamilton, Derek Jeter, David Ortiz, Alfonso Soriano (4 out of their 17 selections,
or 23.5%)
Poor Player
Selections: Joe Crede, Tim Lincecum, Nate McLouth, Carlos Quentin, Joakim
Soria, Jason Varitek, Edinson Volquez, Brian Wilson, Kerry Wood (9 out of 33,
or 27.3%)
Poor Manager
Selections: Justin Duchscherer, Cristian Guzman, Carlos Marmol, Dioner
Navarro, George Sherrill, Billy Wagner (6 out of 12, or 50%)
The data suggests that the managers are the ones screwing up.
If we want to look at just the players that don’t are worse than one standard
deviation below average in both categories, that’s one player selection and
three manager selections. No matter how I look at the data, it doesn’t appear
to me that it’s the fans screwing up.
Looking at it more subjectively, Varitek, Crede, Guzman, and
Sherrill are the players that don’t belong on the All-Star team. As I’ve
already stated, I think Varitek and Crede were selected because Joe Mauer and
Alex Rodriguez were close to unanimous selections at their positions, which
resulted in Varitek and Crede only needing a handful of player votes to make
the team. This is a problem that needs fixed. Guzman is the Nationals’ rep, and
looking at their roster, there’s not really anyone else to pick. I have no
problem with requiring one player from each team even when it means that
Cristian Guzman is a 2008 All-Star. Likewise, Sherrill is the Orioles’ rep, but
Brian Roberts would have been a much better selection. If Roberts were selected
instead of Sherrill, the 12-pitcher restriction would have knocked Dioner
Navarro off the team. Roberts and CC Sabathia (an AL player at the time) are
better choices than Sherrill and Navarro. In total, I find that to be two bad
choices by the player vote process (not the players), one bad choice by
necessity, and one bad choice by Terry Francona.
If two bad choices were in fact by the player vote process,
how do we go about fixing it? As I suggested
last Sunday, I think it can be fixed with one easy change: make the players
vote for two players at every position. That should remove any chance of a
player making the All-Star team because someone else (Joe Mauer or Alex
Rodriguez) was a near-unanimous selection.
Oh, and we should have Senator Mitchell look into how Jerry
Owens got listed on the All-Star ballot.
Now that the All-Star teams have been announced, you have probably seen and will see articles complaining about All-Star snubs and/or undeserving All-Stars. This is inevitable no matter what. While I surely don't agree with all of the selections and non-selections, it is the process I want changed. This year, it is Joe Crede's selection that demonstrates this best. Let me repeat. I'm not upset with the fact that Crede was selected; I'm upset with the process.
So how exactly was Crede selected to the All-Star team? Much like the fans vote for the All-Star team, the players also vote. If the fans' selection and the players' selection are identical, the players' second choice is selected to the All-Star team. Now, if we were to examine the players' voting results (which I don't think are released), I'd imagine that over 90% of the players voted for Alex Rodriguez at 3B. Since the fans selected Rodriguez, it goes to the players' second choice. Let's say that 95% of players chose Rodriguez. That means that the players' second choice received less than 5% of the vote. Going deeper into that and assuming that all players were voting for who they thought was the best AL 3B, we are looking at the 5% of the player population that think Alex Rodriguez is not the top AL 3B. Should we really be relying on those players to make an All-Star selection?
Putting that aside, just how many votes did Joe Crede receive? If we're using the above example, 5% would mean that there were only 38 votes for non-A-Rod third basemen. Let's say they were nearly split between Mike Lowell and Crede. That means that Crede would have only needed 20 votes to make the All-Star team. Now, if we consider other percentages of A-Rod votes (as shown below), you'll see that a second selection at a position with a clear #1 still doesn't require a whole lot of votes. Basically, with Alex Rodriguez being the clear #1 AL 3B, it's very easy for an undeserving player to be selected to the All-Star game. Consider this: AL 3B Frank Cheater could slip his teammates a few bucks to have them vote for him. That's 25 votes going his way. If most votes are for Rodriguez, Mr. Cheater could slip his way onto the All-Star team. I certainly don't think anyone has ever done this, but it's certainly possible for a player to do this when there's a clear #1 at his position.
95% => 2.5%, or 20 votes, required for selection 90% => 5%, or 38 votes, required for selection 85% => 7.5%, or 57 votes, required for selection 80% => 10%, or 75 votes, required for selection
If the idea is to include both the fans' and the players' opinions, there are a couple different ways to tweak the current system to make it better. [1] Only include the players' first selection. If it's the same as the fans', then that leaves one more roster spot for the manager to select a player. OR [2] Have the players vote for twice as many guys as the fans. In this way, no one will get selected while receiving less than 100 votes as I suspect Crede has. Official Birk's Blog Announcement: The Buyer or Seller series has been canceled. Birk's Blog HQ simply doesn't have the resources to continue its production. We thank you for your support.
Back to being serious, I find that people are more interested in what teams are going to do and not what I think they should do. My hope was to generate discussion about the teams and what they should do. While that was successful for the Mariners and Cubs, the other 5 posts have had very little response.
First, I’d like to point out Ken Pomeroy’s BracketBreakdowns
at the start of the NCAA tournament. Using his Pomeroy Ratings and log5
computations, he posted the chances of each team getting to each round. So why
am I bringing this up now? If you had simply used those odds to make your
picks, you would have ended up with the top score in Yahoo’s Tournament
Pick’em.
Originally, I was going to say that I was going to be
putting this blog on the backburner while I go through a career transition, but
I’m going to try my best to keep this going. I’m not going to promise anything
regularly getting posted, but we’ll see how it goes. I still have the Balancing
the Market series to finish. While I plan on completing that series, it takes
quite a bit of work for me to assemble the information in one place so don’t be
surprised if it doesn’t get finished for a while.
For today, I just want to tie up some loose ends. A while
back, I had promised that I would post my projected standings before the
season. While it’s obviously not before the season anymore, I will post my picks
I made in BP’s Predictatron.
In making these picks, I leaned on the PECOTA projections, which you can get a
fairly close look at here
(although those are updated every day by taking games completed into account).
In adjusting away from those projections, I used a combination of things: how I
disagree with PECOTA about certain teams, expectations of teams to improve via
trade, and expectations of teams to dump FA-bound players at the deadline.
AL East
1.
New York Yankees (94-68) – a lot of risk in the
pitching staff, but they’ve got the arms and front office ability to get the
job done
2.
Boston Red Sox (91-71) – same as above, but less
likely to make a big deal at the deadline
3.
Tampa Bay Rays (84-78) – maturation at the plate
and among the pitching prospects, and improved defense over last year
4.
Toronto Blue Jays (78-84) – lack big-time star
to put them over the top, but they do have plenty of big-time injury risks
5.
Baltimore Orioles (67-95) – doing the right
thing by getting younger and their 2008 team will get worse if Brian Roberts
finally leaves town
AL Central
1.
Cleveland Indians (93-69) – I think I made a
mistake here as the 2007 IP increases for C.C. Sabathia and Fausto Carmona
could hurt their 2008 chances
2.
Detroit Tigers (90-72) – if C.C. and Carmona
falter, the Tigers will end up on top of the division
3.
Chicago White Sox (78-84) – several players on
the wrong side of 30 could offset the acquisitions of Orlando Cabrera and Nick
Swisher
4.
Kansas City Royals (76-86) – the Royals are
starting to turn things around, and they might get out of the basement again in
2008
5.
Minnesota Twins (71-91) – after losing Torii
Hunter and Johan Santana, the Twins will be lucky to stay out of the basement,
which makes the Joe Nathan extension a bit of a head-scratcher
AL West
1.
Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim (86-76) – the
Angels have been hit hard with injuries, but they’re lucky they don’t have much
competition here
2.
Oakland Athletics (80-82) – the A’s weren’t as
bad as their record in 2007, and they just might regret trading away Haren and
Swisher as the season progresses
3.
Seattle Mariners (76-86) – unlike the A’s, the
Mariners weren’t as good as their record in 2007; they couldn’t even outscore
their opponents, and it’s not like they have youth on their side (lineup’s
average age is 31)
4.
Texas Rangers (74-88) – after last year’s trades
of Mark Teixeira, Eric Gagne, and Kenny Lofton, the Rangers went completely
into rebuild mode, and they’ll be there for a couple more years
NL East
1.
New York Mets (91-71) – after acquiring Johan
Santana, how can you not pick the Mets here?
2.
Atlanta Braves (86-76) – very good lineup and SP
depth
3.
Philadelphia Phillies (84-78) – very good lineup
and no pitching depth
4.
Florida Marlins (75-87) – without Miguel Cabrera
and Dontrelle Willis, I guess Marlins fans will have to celebrate that they
still have Hanley Ramirez
5.
Washington Nationals (74-88) – new park, but
they still don’t have their farm system completely rebuilt; at least they’re
getting closer
NL Central
1.
Chicago Cubs (91-71) – I’d be more confident
here if they could fix their lineup (hint: OBP guys go at the top)
2.
Milwaukee Brewers (90-72) – could take the
division once they figure out that Jason Kendall is no longer a starting
catcher; yes, he’s done well, but he has a .375 BABIP with only a 14.6% line
drive rate (expected BABIP of .266)
3.
Cincinnati Reds (82-80) – despite Corey
Patterson’s hot start (5 doubles and 4 home runs), he still has the lowest OBP
in the lineup and is still batting leadoff
4.
St. Louis Cardinals (77-85) – Albert Pujols and
the gang won’t keep up this 111-win pace
5.
Pittsburgh Pirates (71-91) – new management was
still sorting things out this offseason; if several of their players restore
some of their trade value early, don’t be surprised if they end the season in
different uniforms midseason
6.
Houston Astros (70-92) – if you ignore pitching
staffs, the Astros might be contenders
NL West
1.
Arizona Diamondbacks (90-72) – although they
were outscored last year, nearly all Diamondbacks players are on the upswing
portion of their careers; they’ll outscore their opponents this year
2.
Los Angeles Dodgers (86-76) – plenty of top
young talent; if they learn to bench Juan Pierre, the Dodgers have the talent
to win the division
3.
Colorado Rockies (81-81) – my expectations from
Ubaldo Jimenez and Franklin Morales aren’t too high, and they don’t have the
depth behind them
4.
San Diego Padres (76-86) – I’m probably
expecting too little from the Padres (I always do), but their outfield is a
mess as they don’t really have a capable CF as Jim Edmonds doesn’t really
qualify anymore
5.
San Francisco (68-94) – Q: How long until the Bay Area writers start to
wish Barry Bonds was still around? A: It won’t happen; they’re too stubborn to
admit it.
For those curious, my mortal lock picks are the Red Sox and
Giants. The Red Sox are possibly the best run organization in baseball, so I’m
confident they can finish around 91 wins. The Giants have Tim Lincecum, Matt
Cain, and nothing else, so I’m pretty confident they’ll end up around 68 wins.
My only worry is that they’ll end up with a lot less.
My World Series pick is the Boston Red Sox crushing Cubs’
fans spirits.
This is baseball. Let's have some fun.
Recommended Websites:
MLB Trade Rumors, Baseball Prospectus, Cot's Baseball Contracts, Fan Graphs, Football Outsiders