Reasons for Yankee Fans to Laugh, and Cry
February 27, 2009 by jeff · Leave a Comment
As we whiff the freshly cut grass of George Steinbrenner Field, the best named and most grandiose of all the Spring Training Complexes from Tampa to Tuscon, Yankee fans have much to be happy about. Despite a sub-par end to the season that saw the club miss the playoffs for the first time since I was learning algebra in the 6th Grade, the Yankees have re-tooled and spend enough money to bail out the economy of Costa Rica on AJ Burnett, CC Sabathia and Mark Texiera. This should effectively shore up two major problems that the club had last year- namely run production and starting pitching, and, unless you’re hallucinating vividly, the Yankees are certainly a bona fide title contender any way you slice it given these moves.
But not so fast.
These aren’t the Paul O’Neill/ Bernie Williams Yankees that were able to gel as a cohesive unit no matter who, or what befell them (see Wells, David). Not in the least. If the Yankees are to win this year, they need to learn to be selfless and help each other, not act as the most expensive, ego-driven assemblage of baseball talent in the Universe. If there is not a serious alteration in the way the Yankee clubhouse is run, I am still worried about the team I have spent an inordinate of time watching, analyzing and defending for my entire adult life.
It is for this reason that I like what Joe Girardi is doing with his centerfield situation, and to a less extent, with his bullpen. With the rest of the lineup pretty much established, and Jasper’s favorite ballplayer Phil the Phranchise destined to at least begin the season in AAA, a bona fide position battle might, at the very least serve to invigorate.
In one corner, you have Melky Cabrera, who, despite flashes of brilliance, has not been able to hold onto the job since the reigns were handed to him last season. Melky has shown a penchant for untimely strikeouts and poor plate discipline combined with the occasional defensive gaffe that got him demoted last season. Too much palling around with fellow slacker Bobby Cano might have something to do with that.
In the other, you have Brett Gardner, who reminds you of Rey Ordonez without the jaw-dropping defensive acumen. In 1923, Gardner would have been a great asset to any team- a classic slap and dash hitter who plays good defense and is tough on the basepaths. In the 2009 Al East, I’m not too sure. This kid has one thing on his side- he hustles like there is no tomorrow. That’s something you can’t teach, not matter how hard you try.
But at the very least, these two guys duking it out will hopefully serve to remind us all of the spirit of friendly competition that makes baseball great. On a team of highly compensated megastars, this can sometimes seem lost. Maybe if everyone can channel some of their inner Brett Gardner, I would feel a little better about the 2009 Yankees.
Joba - A Bullpen Liability?
February 26, 2009 by Jasper Kassay · 1 Comment
JOBA GAME LOG FROM LAST YEAR (AS A STARTER)
|
START # |
Date |
Opponent |
IP |
ER |
Total Pitches |
Pitches/Inning |
Pitches Per 9 |
IP / 100P |
IP / 110P |
|
1 |
6/3/2008 |
Blue Jays |
2.1IP |
1ER |
62 |
26.5 |
|
|
|
|
2 |
6/8/2008 |
Royals |
4.1IP |
2ER |
78 |
18.0 |
|
|
|
|
3 |
6/13/2008 |
Astros |
6.0IP |
1ER |
88 |
14.7 |
|
|
|
|
4 |
6/19/2008 |
Padres |
5.2IP |
1ER |
100 |
17.6 |
|
|
|
|
5 |
6/25/2008 |
Pirates |
6.2IP |
0ER |
114 |
17.1 |
|
|
|
|
6 |
7/1/2008 |
Texas |
4.0IP |
2ER |
91 |
22.8 |
|
|
|
|
7 |
7/6/2008 |
Red Sox |
6.0IP |
3ER |
101 |
16.8 |
|
|
|
|
8 |
7/11/2008 |
Blue Jays |
6.2IP |
3ER |
108 |
16.2 |
|
|
|
|
9 |
7/19/2008 |
A’s |
6.0IP |
1ER |
96 |
16.0 |
|
|
|
|
10 |
7/25/2008 |
Red Sox |
7.0IP |
0ER |
103 |
14.7 |
|
|
|
|
11 |
7/30/2008 |
Orioles |
6.0IP |
1ER |
98 |
16.3 |
|
|
|
|
12 |
8/4/2008 |
Texas |
4.2IP |
5ER |
93 |
22.1 |
|
|
|
|
TOTALS |
INCLUDES |
GAME 1 & 12 |
5.1IP |
|
|
17.3 |
156 |
5.2IP |
6.1IP |
|
TOTALS |
EXCLUDES |
GAME 1 & 12 |
6.0IP |
|
|
16.5 |
148 |
6.1IP |
6.2IP |
I don’t really count starts #1 or #12 because Joba was on a serious pitch count (and got injured game 12 and was obviously pitching hurt) but whatever - you can if you want - I have included stats for both.
This game log proves that Joba is consistant. Here is the stat breakdown. With the pitch count games, and the injury game Joba still averaged 5.1 innings per start. If you take away those two games (and really I could take away more on this argument because he really didn’t get a decent pitch count till game 4) Joba averages 6.0 innings per game, which is pretty economical for this stage in a power pitchers career. With time, Joba should learn how to decrease his walk totals, and learn how to be more efficient in getting batters out, but his existing numbers show that he is currently economical in getting through innings with relatively few pitches.
Another way to look at this is in terms of quality starts. According to this game log Joba had 7 quality starts in 12 opportunities (58%). Again, three starts can be taken off the bottom end of this due to pitch count limits from being translated from the bullpen to the starter roll (and the injury game), which would give him 7 quality starts in 9 opportunities (78%).
Now if we take these numbers and translate them to ask the question - based on Joba’s average pitch count how deep would Joba go in a ball game with a 100 or a 110 pitch limit? If you look at the above chart, you can see that this pitch average brings Joba to 6+ innings pitched in most situations.
Bottom line, the Yankees want Joba for 200 innings a year rather than 70. He may only be with 10 wins out of the rotation this year - but not everything is about this year. Next year his innings pitched count can rise if he meets 170 this year, then he will rise to 200 next year.
Love it or hate it, this is the new breed of baseball. All young talent will be brought up and broken into the major leagues this way. If a starter can go six innings consistently - that should take away any questions about him being a consistent bullpen liability because any team would be jumping through hoops to find a 5th starter to deliver a 6 inning performance to the tune of an ERA under 3.
Depth Chart Analysis – Cleveland Indians
February 24, 2009 by Jasper Kassay · Leave a Comment
When analyzing the roster for the current Cleveland Indians team – one may have to consider the high expectations and disappointment of the 2008 team. The American League Central is not a particularly strong division, with no clear cut favorite to take the division. But is it possible for one to look toward the 2007 Central Division Champions to take on this crown?
Big Leagues or Bust
February 11, 2009 by Jasper Kassay · Leave a Comment
The Boston Globes, Tim Cafardo recently released a list of MLB players that are out of options. This means, that the player can no longer be sent down to the minors without first passing through wavers. This year’s list contains an interesting set of players, that could be changing uniforms bearing a slow start.
MLB Trade Rumors has put together a list of all these players. When you glance over the list, several names pop out at you as players that have not preformed at the major league level, but could one day still become productive major leagues.
Ben Sheets: The Bargain of 2009?
February 11, 2009 by Jasper Kassay · Leave a Comment
Today, the New York Mets re-signed Oliver Perez for 3 years 36 million dollars yet I can’t help but to wonder why Ben Sheets has not been signed. If you rank this years starting pitcher free agent class (CC Sabathia, AJ Burnett, Derek Lowe, Ben Sheets, and Oliver Perez as the Top 5) Ben Sheets certainly seems to be a high end option, especially when one considers the bargains that have been coming out of the 2009 Free Agent Class.
Mt. Rushmore of Baseball
February 11, 2009 by Jasper Kassay · 1 Comment
Jasper: Babe Ruth, Pete Rose, Cy Young, Willie Mays
John: Cy Young, Pete Rose, Jackie Robinson, Willie Mays
Cathy: Babe Ruth, Ted Williams, Jackie Robinson, Roberto Clemente
Tim G: Cy Young, Babe Ruth, Jackie Robinson, Ken Griffy Jr.
Dan-O: Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Jackie Robinson, Willie Mays
Jeff: Pete Rose, Hank Aaron, Babe Ruth, Nolan Ryan
Chris: Babe Ruth, Ted Williams, Jackie Robinson, Willie Mays
Jack: Babe Ruth, Willie Mays, Ted Williams, Walter Johnson
Kevin D: Ruth, Cy Young, Ted Williams, Hank Aaron
Joe W: Babe Ruth, Ted Williams, Sandy Koufax, Jackie Robinson
The state of the 2009 New York Mets
February 11, 2009 by Jasper Kassay · 1 Comment
Are the 2009 New York Mets ready to put down the critics, and quiet the World Champion Philadelphia Phillies? If they start the season with the current roster, I do not think so.
The acquisitions K-Rod and JJ Putz have helped to strengthen the primary weakness that forced the Mets collapse last season, but does it completely fix the problem? The Mets have undoubtedly, the best back end in MLB, but what about the rest of the bullpen? If you compare this middle to long relief to last years it doesn’t look much better, unless you count the absence of Aaron Heilman in the Mets pen as an improvement (though, it could very well be). Pedro Feliciano is an unreliable option at best, while Duaner Sanchez proved that he was no longer the dominant middle reliever he was in 2006, before injuries kept him out of the next two seasons. Read more




