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Spring Training Articles


Following are the one hundred most recent articles for the category Spring Training .

06/18/2013: And That Happened

by Craig Calcaterra

06/18/2013: The Verdict: absolute power corrupts absolutely

by Michael Stein

06/18/2013: All-time two-first-names team

by Greg Simons

06/18/2013: AL East division update: June edition

by Nick Fleder

06/18/2013: THT Awards

by John Barten

06/18/2013: The Rangers have painted themselves into a corner

by Jeff Moore

06/17/2013: Closer watch

by Karl de Vries

06/17/2013: And That Happened

by Craig Calcaterra

06/17/2013: Fantasy Waiver Wire: Week 12, Vol. I

by Jack Weiland

06/17/2013: 30th anniversary: Bob Welch does it all

by Chris Jaffe

06/17/2013: The Hot Seat

by Scott Strandberg

06/17/2013: Red Line doubleheaders (part I)

by Chris Jaffe

06/15/2013: 30th anniversary: Keith Hernandez for Rick Ownbey and Neil Allen

by Chris Jaffe

06/14/2013: The daily grind: 6-14-13

by Brad Johnson

06/14/2013: And That Happened

by Craig Calcaterra

06/14/2013: 18 again!

by Shane Tourtellotte

06/14/2013: Fantasy Waiver Wire: Week 11, Vol. III

by Karl de Vries

06/14/2013: 50th anniversary: Willie Kirkland brings the clutch

by Chris Jaffe

06/14/2013: Traders Corner: Oakland Elixir, V is for Victor

by Jonah Birenbaum

06/14/2013: Card Corner: 1973 Topps: Amos Otis

by Bruce Markusen

06/13/2013: And That Happened

by Craig Calcaterra

06/13/2013: The daily grind: 6-13-13

by Brad Johnson

06/13/2013: The clutchiest hitter of all?

by Carl Aridas

06/13/2013: The all-decade team: the ‘50s

by Richard Barbieri

06/13/2013: 40th anniversary: the Garvey-Lopes-Russell-Cey infield begins

by Chris Jaffe

06/12/2013: The daily grind: 6-12-13

by Brad Johnson

06/12/2013: And That Happened

by Craig Calcaterra

06/12/2013: Fantasy Waiver Wire: Week 11, Vol. II

by Jack Weiland

06/12/2013: Helping their own cause

by Shane Tourtellotte

06/12/2013: Hub fans bid Kid redo

by Frank Jackson

06/11/2013: The daily grind: 6-11-13

by Brad Johnson

06/11/2013: And That Happened

by Craig Calcaterra

06/11/2013: Call-up season is upon us

by Jeff Moore

06/11/2013: THT Awards

by John Barten

06/11/2013: 10th anniversary: Houston no-hits the Yankees

by Chris Jaffe

06/11/2013: The Steel City power outage of 1917

by Dave Vocale

06/10/2013: The daily grind: 6-10-13

by Brad Johnson

06/10/2013: And That Happened

by Craig Calcaterra

06/10/2013: NL East division update: June edition

by Brad Johnson

06/10/2013: Fantasy Waiver Wire: Week 11, Vol. 1

by Karl de Vries

06/10/2013: When a $9 ticket costs $20

by Chris Jaffe

06/10/2013: The Hot Seat

by Scott Strandberg

06/10/2013: 15,000 days since Luzinski rings the Liberty Bell

by Chris Jaffe

06/09/2013: Visualization: the 2013 MLB draft

by Dan Lependorf

06/08/2013: Four teams, 38 innings, one historic day

by Shane Tourtellotte

06/07/2013: The daily grind: 6-7-13

by Brad Johnson

06/07/2013: Jose Canseco’s independents daze

by Frank Jackson

06/07/2013: Roster Doctor: Two to sell high

by Jonah Birenbaum

06/07/2013: Fantasy Waiver Wire: Week 10, Vol. II

by Karl de Vries

06/07/2013: Cooperstown Confidential: Horace Stoneham’s real legacy

by Bruce Markusen

06/06/2013: The daily grind: 6-6-13

by Brad Johnson

06/06/2013: And That Happened

by Craig Calcaterra

06/06/2013: Stolen base attempts: an algorithm for allocating run value

by Greg Rybarczyk

06/06/2013: The Roto Grotto: catching up with pitcher stats

by Scott Spratt

06/06/2013: 50th anniversary: walk-off homer by pitcher Lindy McDaniel

by Chris Jaffe

06/05/2013: Ignoring suspension noise

by Derek Ambrosino

06/05/2013: Does MLB have a case this time?

by Eugene Freedman

06/05/2013: And That Happened

by Craig Calcaterra

06/05/2013: The daily grind: 6-5-13

by Brad Johnson

06/05/2013: Currently historic: So many walks and strikeouts

by Jason Linden

06/05/2013: Fantasy Waiver Wire: Week 10, Vol. I

by Jack Weiland

06/05/2013: Three True Outcomes too common?

by Alex Connors

06/05/2013: BOB:  Spring training war update

by Brian Borawski

06/04/2013: The Verdict: not all trades are created equal

by Michael Stein

06/04/2013: The daily grind: 6-4-13

by Brad Johnson

06/04/2013: And That Happened

by Craig Calcaterra

06/04/2013: 25th anniversary: three-run walk-off error

by Chris Jaffe

06/04/2013: Revisiting pre-arb contracts

by Greg Simons

06/04/2013: Ike Davis and comfort at the plate

by Matt Filippi

06/04/2013: The Hot Seat

by Scott Strandberg

06/04/2013: Astros set to repeat their draft philosophy

by Jeff Moore

06/04/2013: THT Awards

by John Barten

06/03/2013: The daily grind: 6-3-13

by Brad Johnson

06/03/2013: And That Happened

by Craig Calcaterra

06/03/2013: AL West: pretty much what we thought going in

by David Wade

06/03/2013: 10th anniversary: Sosa’s corked bat

by Chris Jaffe

06/03/2013: What WPA can tell us

by Chris Jaffe

06/01/2013: 10th anniversary: worst one-game hitting WPA performance ever

by Chris Jaffe

05/31/2013: Traders Corner: Conundrums Kemp and otherwise

by Jonah Birenbaum

05/31/2013: And That Happened

by Craig Calcaterra

05/31/2013: Shut ‘em out, hit a home run: “Pappas games”

by James Gentile

05/31/2013: Fantasy Waiver Wire: Week 9, Vol. III

by Jack Weiland

05/31/2013: Card Corner: 1973 Topps: Joe Pepitone

by Bruce Markusen

05/30/2013: And That Happened

by Craig Calcaterra

05/30/2013: 100th anniversary: leadoff homers in both ends of doubleheader

by Chris Jaffe

05/30/2013: Lohse goes for pitching history tonight

by Chris Jaffe

05/30/2013: Trapped in the minors: Dean Anna

by John Kochurov

05/30/2013: The Roto Grotto: z-scores applied

by Scott Spratt

05/30/2013: Currently historic: Rick Ankiel and Dave Duncan form a new connection

by Jason Linden

05/29/2013: On Jon Heyman and the Oakland Coliseum

by Dan Lependorf

05/29/2013: Job opening at Bloomberg Sports

by Dave Studeman

05/29/2013: And That Happened

by Craig Calcaterra

05/29/2013: BOB: A new chapter in the spring training wars

by Brian Borawski

05/29/2013: Fantasy Waiver Wire: Week 9, Vol. II

by Karl de Vries

05/29/2013: Triage in the Bronx

by Shane Tourtellotte

05/28/2013: And That Happened

by Craig Calcaterra

05/28/2013: 40th anniversary: The day Wilbur Wood became a legend

by Chris Jaffe

05/28/2013: National League West:  Questions, answered?

by Steve Treder

05/28/2013: Pay me now, or pay me later

by Greg Simons

05/28/2013: Fantasy Waiver Wire: Week 9, Vol. I

by Jack Weiland

<< Click here to return to the category list.



February 06, 2013

Seeking surplus value: Risk-free wins

At every level of every organization, baseball teams have a group of players they call "organizational players," or more accurately, "non-prospects." At best, they exist to provide depth for the team, and at worst, they exist to put a team on the field so the prospects can get plate appearances and innings pitched.

However, when organizational players make the leap to prospect status—or even major league regular—it's seen as a huge surplus value for the organization. Turning 30th-round draft picks into average major leaguers is something that not only the Tampa Bay Rays and Houston Astros can get jazzed about. For each cost-controlled player produced in this way, the New York Yankees and Los Angeles Dodgers can spend that many more millions of dollars on free agents, draft compensation and international pool spending.

Surplus value drives everything that front offices do when it comes to player acquisition and retention. However, while teams continue to pour money and understanding into the scouting and analytical departments, player development continues to lag. As I mentioned in my previous articles about how baseball failed two non-prospects, players who are no longer considered to be part of the pipeline to the big leagues tend to get shoved to the wayside.

Two anecdotes follow about my experiences with training baseball players:

An acquaintance of mine was a top-five-round draft pick as a pitcher out of college, and he earned a significant bonus as a result. However, after a few years of declining velocity, he began to fall out of favor in the organization. Desperate for help, he found out that the organization had a very expensive biomechanics facility where multiple high-speed cameras could film and digitize his pitching motion. Not knowing much about this, he tracked down the pitching coordinator and arranged to go through the lab.

After he did so, the researchers handed him and his coaches a printout with the relevant mechanical data (kinematics, kinetics, joint loads, angular velocities, etc) and he inquired on how this data could be used to improve his pitching performances. The coaches had no idea, and basically trashed the report, leaving him with a stack of paperwork that required an advanced understanding of kinesiology to grasp.

A current client of mine has been in the minor leagues for some time, having already been involved in a trade for another non-prospect. He sought out our program to improve/maintain fastball velocity, and despite having been in two "progressive" organizations, he said that the information I passed on to him was completely lacking at the professional level. He will be attending his first big league camp in an attempt to break into the parent organization's bullpen, and he felt he needed to look outside the organization for a reasonable fastball development program.

In a blog article I wrote titled Making the Sabermetric Argument for Increasing Fastball Velocity, I discussed what it would be worth to an organization to increase a replacement-level pitcher's fastball velocity from 86 to 90 mph (a common drop in velocity in journeymen pitchers—a great example being Scott Kazmir). The not-so-surprising answer is that it's worth a heck of a lot!

And so, I propose a basic risk-free model to adding surplus value: Take the group of pitchers you plan on releasing from baseball due to declining fastball velocity (this is a large group in any organization, I promise you), and offer them the chance to go through an experimental program in extended spring training or another venue to improve their arm strength. If they refuse, release them. If they accept (and many would, knowing the writing was on the wall), test out a six-to-eight-week program designed to improve their velocities. What do you have to lose?
Posted by: Kyle Boddy


March 26, 2012

Spring training DUIs

They are almost as popular as spring training elbow injuries. This spring Alex White, Matt Bush, and Bobby Jenks have all been arrested and charged with at least drinking while driving.
{exp:list_maker}Alex White—Extreme DUI, twice the legal limit
Matt Bush—Injury to man on motorcycle.
Bobby Jenks—Hit a parked car. {/exp:list_maker}
Now, I am not here to preach about driving while under the influence. Where the question lies is who should be responsible for putting things in place to stop it.

All major league teams, reportedly, will provide transportation for the players, several practically begging the players to call the team if they need a ride. I question whether baseball can do more than that. I don't see Bud Selig and the owners imposing some conduct policy on the players. That's not just because the players union will rightfully be against it. The league and the owners know that imposing a conduct policy on the players would only bring resistance and resentment from the players. They can just look toward the NFL and see the reactions to the personal conduct policy imposed by the commissioner.

MLB has learned that this type of issue should be addressed by the players association. It only makes sense. The employer—here the team—will provide a ride. The MLBPA needs to start working with the players, and if needed, recommending enhancements to the collective bargaining agreement to include punishment for this type of conduct. In the end, it is the players who look bad, not baseball.

This is a real test for the MLBPA. The spring training DUI issue gives the union a chance to address an issue for the league. Major League Baseball and the MLBPA have grown to be fairly cooperative in recent years, to the benefit of baseball. I wonder if the union now is willing to take steps to address an issue before an event happens that forces the league to step in.
Posted by: Mat Kovach


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