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Sunday, June 01, 2008

Waiver Wire: American League (Week 9)


Not a very exciting week for the American League. Let's take a look.

American League

Dan Wheeler | TB | CL - With Percival on the DL, Dan Wheeler should get most of the save opportunities for the Rays. He blew his first opportunity last night, but is still probably the favorite going forward.
Recommendation - Should be owned in all leagues.

Al Reyes | TB | RP - Reyes is worth owning in case Wheeler blows another save. If he does, Reyes could start seeing some opportunities. Wheeler has the skills to hold down the job, but all it might take is a little bit of bad luck to propel Reyes into the role. Speculate if you wish.
Recommendation - Should be owned in 14-team mixed leagues. Should be owned in all AL-only leagues.

Troy Percival | TB | CL - Percival hit the DL this week, but it wasn't an arm injury as we said was a possibility back in March. He should jump right back into the closer's role when he returns, so if his owner drops him, snatch him up now.
Recommendation - Should be owned in all leagues.

Scott Baker | MIN | SP - Baker could be returning to the Twins rotation this week. We've talked about him a few times before, and if he was dropped in your league, it's time to snatch him up. He has good control and should post a strikeout rate of at least league average, if not better. Unspectacular, but he's a very solid pitcher to own. Look for an ERA of around 4.00
Recommendation - Should be owned in all leagues.

Clay Buchholz | BOS | SP - With Daisuke Matsuzaka hitting the DL, the Red Sox will need a replacement pitcher on Tuesday. It could go to Masterson, but Buchholz deserves to be in the majors. Even if he isn't the guy to get called up, he will at some point and is worth stashing. He has incredible talent.
Recommendation - Should be owned in all leagues.

Justin Masterson | BOS | SP - Masterson has pitched just 18.1 innings above Double-A, but he could make a good pickup if you're looking for a spot starter (assuming he gets called up on Tuesday). He is an extreme groundball pitcher and gets a good amount of strikeouts (although, strangely, had just a 5.3 K/9 in Advanced-A at the start of 2007 and jumped up to 9.2 in Double-A). His strikeout rate was down and his walk rate was up this year in Double-A, but not to awful levels. Decent pickup, but he won't be higher than seventh on the Sox totem pole once Buchholz reestablishes himself, so he shouldn't be looked at as a long-term option.
Recommendation - Should be owned in 14-team mixed leagues, for now. Should be owned in all but shallow AL-only leagues, for now.

Kyle Davies | KC | SP - Davies is replacing Brett Tomko in the Royals' rotation, but don't expect too much out of him. He's long been looked at as a guy with potential, but there isn't much to like with his 5.88 K/9 and 3.18 BB/9 in Triple-A this year. I'm staying away except in the deepest leagues.
Recommendation - Should be avoided in mixed leagues. Should be owned in 14-team AL-only leagues.

Jose Contreras | CHW | SP - Contreras has been pretty bad in the past, but he's actually looking half-way decent this year. He's got a lucky .258 BABIP and 5 percent HR/FB, and all it would take is a small increase in his walk rate and decrease in his strikeout rate for him to regress to his 4.70 LIPS ERA of 2007. No room for error here, but for now he might be worth owning.
Recommendation - Should be considered in 14-team mixed leagues. Should be owned in 10-team AL-only leagues.

Dontrelle Willis | DET | SP - Talk is beginning of taking D-Train out of the bullpen. They're going to start him on Tuesday for the first four or five innings and then bring in Armando Galarraga. Jim Leyland said, "I’ve got to try to get Dontrelle going. We have three years invested in this guy. This guy has credibility as a major-league pitcher." Credibility, maybe. Above average talent? No. AL-only pickup at best.
Recommendation - Should be avoided in all mixed leagues. Should be considered in 10-team and owned in 12-team AL-only leagues.

Jake Westbrook | CLE | SP - There was talk of Westbrook adding a change-up this year, but Pitch f/x shows that he threw one last year. It looks pretty similar this year to last year, so I wouldn't be expecting that increase in his strikeout rate to come now that he's off the DL. He's worth owning in some leagues, but I don't see a ton of upside here.
Recommendation - Should be owned in 14-team mixed leagues. Should be owned in 10-team AL-only leagues.

Marcus Thames | DET | OF - Thames was expected to get a look in left field, but there are already signs that the team doesn't trust him. For example, Carlos Guillen started in left field tonight to allow Brandon Inge to play third. Thames is a guy known for a lot of power but a low average, but HitTracker shows that his raw power is down from 2006 and 2007. His contact rate is improved this year, but in 76 at-bats and at 31 years-old, it probably isn't for real. Speculate if you wish, but Thames probably isn't the best pickup.
Recommendation - Should be owned in deep mixed leagues. Should be owned in 10-team AL-only leagues, for now.

Jeff Larish | DET | UT - Jeff Larish was recalled this week to start at DH versus righties, but he isn't a very good pickup. He only had a 70 percent contact rate in Triple-A this year and doesn't put up very good BABIPs. He has very good power and takes walks, but the fact that he's only eligible at UT makes him ignorable in many leagues. He's batted sixth once and seventh twice since being recalled, not the best spots for RBIs and runs.
Recommendation - Should be ignored in mixed leagues. Should be considered in 10-team and owned in 12-team AL-only leagues.

Ben Francisco | CLE | OF - We discussed Francisco in week six, but he's starting to get picked up now. Back then, I said, "In the majors, at least initially, expect maybe a .260-.265 batting average (though with the potential for much better) with 12 homers and 20 steals (assuming a baseline of 550 plate appearances)." That batting average upside is being fulfilled with a better-than-expected 83 percent contact rate and .352 batting average, though he isn't stealing many bases. The BABIP is likely too high, and in only 88 at-bats, the contact rate might not be for real. He has been hitting in the second and third spot in the order recently, though, which should help with runs and RBIs. There's potential, but also some risk here.
Recommendation - Should be owned in 14-team mixed leagues. Should be owned in all but shallow AL-only leagues.

Frank Thomas | OAK | UT - Man, my players just keep getting injured. One league I've got 11 DLed players. Luckily it's a league with unlimited slots. Thomas was a guy I was very big on this offseason, and he has looked very good this year. Chris Neault thinks he could out for four weeks, though, and if you don't have a DL spot or more than three or four bench spots, you can drop Thomas. If you can hold onto him, he'll put up a respectable batting average with a good number of homers and RBIs. If you have room for him and his owner drops him, scoop him up.
Recommendation - Should be owned in 12-team mixed leagues. Should be owned in all but shallow AL-only leagues.

Carlos Gonzalez | OAK | OF - Gonzalez got called up this week, but I wouldn't get too excited. He puts up okay contact rates and has a good BABIP history, but he doesn't steal many bases, doesn't have much power, and is hitting in the last few spots in the order. He's got potential, but I don't see him having much fantasy value this year.
Recommendation - Should be avoided in all mixed leagues. Should be owned in 12-team AL-only leagues.

Posted by Derek Carty at 3:06pm

Wednesday, June 04, 2008

Player spotlight: Cliff Lee (Part 1)


One of the biggest surprises of the 2008 season thus far has been Cliff Lee. The Indians' pitcher currently boasts seven wins in nine starts and a 1.50 ERA. It's pretty clear that his ERA is lucky, but it isn't all luck. Lee has made some changes and does indeed look like a better pitcher than he has been in the past. Today, let's take a look at what changes have been made and what Lee's true skill level appears to be. As we did with Johnny Cueto the other day, we'll bring Pitch f/x into the discussion to see what Lee has been doing on a deeper level.

Note to readers

After reading this article, I'd love to hear your opinions on some things. I'd be interested to hear what you guys think of the Pitch f/x stuff so far. I think it adds a lot to the analysis, but I'd love to hear any comments or suggestions you guys have. Requests are also welcome.

Furthermore, these posts seem to be running kind of long. I'd also be interested in hearing your take on this matter. I ultimately decided to split this one into two posts. Should I leave them as one going forward? Should I write less and let the numbers and charts speak more for themselves? Or is it okay the way it is? Let me know what you think.

Numbers

Note: All numbers in this article exclude Lee's start from May 30. I don't currently have the PITCH f/x data for that start, so for the purpose of continuity, all stats exclude this start. Nothing materially changes, however.

Surface Numbers
+------+----+----+-------+------+------+----+----+
| YEAR | G  | GS | IP    | ERA  | WHIP | W  | SV |
+------+----+----+-------+------+------+----+----+
| 2004 | 33 | 33 | 179.0 | 5.43 | 1.50 | 14 |  0 |
| 2005 | 32 | 32 | 202.0 | 3.78 | 1.21 | 18 |  0 |
| 2006 | 33 | 33 | 200.6 | 4.39 | 1.40 | 14 |  0 |
| 2007 | 20 | 16 |  97.3 | 6.28 | 1.52 |  5 |  0 |
| 2008 |  9 |  9 |  66.0 | 1.50 | 0.88 |  7 |  0 |
+------+----+----+-------+------+------+----+----+
Skill Set
+------+----+----+-------+----------+-----------+------+------+---------+------+
| YEAR | G  | GS | IP    | LIPS ERA | DIPS WHIP | K/9  | BB/9 | K-BB RI | xGB% |
+------+----+----+-------+----------+-----------+------+------+---------+------+
| 2004 | 33 | 33 | 179.0 |     4.73 |      1.43 | 8.09 | 4.07 |    0.26 |   34 |
| 2005 | 32 | 32 | 202.0 |     3.91 |      1.26 | 6.37 | 2.32 |    0.13 |   36 |
| 2006 | 33 | 33 | 200.7 |     4.61 |      1.38 | 5.79 | 2.60 |   -0.07 |   32 |
| 2007 | 20 | 16 | 97.3  |     4.85 |      1.46 | 6.10 | 3.33 |   -0.14 |   33 |
| 2008 |  9 |  9 | 66.0  |     2.92 |      1.02 | 7.36 | 1.23 |    0.62 |   46 |
+------+----+----+-------+----------+-----------+------+------+---------+------+
Luck Indicators
+------+----+----+-------+-------+--------+-------+------+------+----------+
| YEAR | G  | GS | IP    | BABIP | LOB%   | HR/FB | LD%  | RS   | TEAM R/G |
+------+----+----+-------+-------+--------+-------+------+------+----------+
| 2004 | 33 | 33 | 179.0 | 0.309 |  70.17 | 12.35 |   21 | 5.78 |     5.30 |
| 2005 | 32 | 32 | 202.0 | 0.282 |  72.03 |  7.91 |   21 | 6.46 |     4.88 |
| 2006 | 33 | 33 | 200.7 | 0.300 |  70.92 |  8.79 |   19 | 6.50 |     5.37 |
| 2007 | 20 | 16 |  97.3 | 0.304 |  62.78 | 10.49 |   15 | 6.84 |     5.00 |
| 2008 |  9 |  9 |  66.0 | 0.260 |  83.64 |  4.76 |   19 | 4.75 |     4.09 |
+------+----+----+-------+-------+--------+-------+------+------+----------+

We see that from 2004 (Lee's first full season in the majors) to 2007, he was never really a great pitcher. He flashed some potential at times, striking out 8.09 batters per nine in 2004 and walking just 2.32 in 2005 and 2.60 in 2006, but he never was really able to do well with both at one time. Additionally, given that he consistently put up below-average groundball rates, success always eluded Lee.

Then 2008 came, and something seemed to click. Not only has Lee posted his highest strikeout rate since 2004, but he's also showing incredible control. To add to all of this is his above-average 46 percent ground ball rate. He has never broken 40 percent before, and now he's more than half-way to 50 (Note: After his most recent start, this rate has actually increased to 48 percent).

His 1.50 ERA is obviously very lucky, but his 2.92 LIPS ERA confirms that he is indeed having a magnificent season. Even if he were receiving neutral luck instead of his current .260 BABIP, 84 percent LOB%, and five percent HR/FB, he would still have one of the best ERAs in the majors. In fact, that 2.92 LIPS ERA actually leads all pitchers with at least six starts.

He's receiving just a little bit of luck in terms of run support, and surely the 1.50 ERA is helping things, but Lee should continue to collect wins.

His 0.88 WHIP is a little lucky, but even with that low BABIP, a regression would only see his WHIP rise a little bit to a still-stellar 1.02. His control rate is big in keeping it this low.

The control is one of the biggest questions surrounding Lee. The strikeout rate isn't really unprecedented for him, but can he keep up a walk rate this low, or close to it?

Well, for what it's worth, just two pitchers have held a BB/9 over 1.23 or lower in the past two years (Greg Maddux in 2007 and Ben Sheets in 2006). If we look back to 2004, we see nine more pitchers, though. And if we raise our standards to 1.50, we get 24 pitcher seasons total (assuming at least 12 starts made in the year). So while Lee would be in a pretty elite club, it isn't unfathomable that he could keep it this low. Perhaps Pitch f/x can give us a better idea if this is sustainable, but first let's look at his True Quality Starts.

True Quality Starts

If you're new around here, you can read up on True Quality Starts here. If you're not looking to read a long, detailed explanation, True Quality Starts basically uses linear weighted run values on a pitcher's skills (strikeouts, walks, batted ball breakdown) to calculate a "TQS Score" and takes a standard deviation approach to classify every start a pitcher makes into one of six categories: Great, Good, Above Average, Below Average, Bad and Awful.

Here are Cliff Lee's TQS numbers.

True Quality Starts
Year	GS	Great	Good	AbAv	BlAv	Bad	Awful	TQS*	GG*	BA*	GG/BA*
2004	33	0%	9%	33%	42%	15%	0%	42%	9%	15%	0.60
2005	32	0%	9%	44%	38%	9%	0%	53%	9%	9%	1.00
2006	33	0%	6%	27%	48%	18%	0%	33%	6%	18%	0.33
2007	16	0%	6%	19%	50%	19%	6%	25%	6%	25%	0.25
2008	9	33%	22%	33%	0%	11%	0%	89%	56%	11%	5.00
Note 1: Lee's starts were plugged into the 2007 run environment because it is simpler this way and deals with a larger sample size. It is also probably more reflective of what the final 2008 run environment will look like than the current 2008 run environment would be.

*Note 2: TQS is the number of Above Average or better starts. GG is the number of Good plus Great starts. BA is the number of Bad plus Awful starts. GG/BA is simply a ratio of the two.


TQS shows just how unexpected this year's breakout was. Lee improved from 2004 to 2005, but didn't really dominate in either year, never turning in a TQS Great start and not even posting that many Good starts. Then he dropped off in 2006 and again in 2007, posting his first couple of Awful starts and seeing his True Quality Start percentage fall to 25 percent. That means just 25 percent of his starts were merely above average. That is horrendous, yet in 2008, he has posted several Great starts. More than half have been either Good or Great, and he's had just one that was below average.

Lee has truly been amazing this year, and his TQS stats show that he's been consistently good.

Concluding thoughts

As I said earlier, I ended up splitting this article into two parts. Part two should already be up if you haven't noticed it yet, so go take a look. Or, just click here for part two, using Cliff Lee's Pitch f/x data to see how he has been doing the things we just discussed.

Posted by Derek Carty at 2:10am

Player spotlight: Cliff Lee (Part 2)


If you missed part one of this series on Cliff Lee, check it out here. For part two, we'll bring in some Pitch f/x data and see how Lee is doing what he is doing this year.

Pitch f/x

So, we know that Lee has been good this year. You probably didn't need to read all of part one to realize that, but hopefully it gave some insight you weren't yet aware of. But the question remains: how is he doing it? What has changed? Well, luckily, we now have Pitch f/x to help us try and figure this out. Let's first look at Lee's movement charts.

image
image


Speed and Movement - 2007
TYPE	%	SPEED	X MOVEMENT	Z MOVEMENT
FB	73%	90.3	4.17		11.72
CB	7%	76.4	-4.09		-4.36
SL	4%	85.6	-0.92		6.93
CU	16%	83.3	8.58		8.91

Speed and Movement - 2008
TYPE	%	SPEED	X MOVEMENT	Z MOVEMENT
FB	77%	91.3	6.06		11.56
CB	8%	75.6	-6.11		-5.21
SL	4%	83.9	-3.36		5.30
CU	11%	83.3	8.87		9.19

Well, we immediately see differences in the movement of Lee's pitches. We see that he has added a good deal of horizontal movement to all four of his pitches. We see the least difference in his change-up, but a couple of things have been done to improve that pitch. First, let's look at the fastball, though.

Fastball
As I said with Johnny Cueto last week (with his change-up and slider, although I believe it applies here as well), added variability in a pitcher's movement seems—to me anyway—like a good thing. Even if a batter can identify that the pitch coming in is a fastball from speed or release point or whatever, a wider range of horizontal movement means that they have less of an idea about where it's actually going to end up.

Before, batters could have expected Lee's fastball to move from 0 to eight inches (with a few spares ones around 10). Now, Lee is throwing them from -1 all the way out to 12 and 13 inches. That wider range means increased unpredictability. This year, batters could see the fastball coming in and have it break a full 12 inches in at them. Or, they could see it coming in and have it barely move at all. Or, they could see it coming in and actually see it break away from them slightly. Or, it could be somewhere in between. There wasn't nearly this much guesswork last year.

Furthermore, we see a little bit of additional vertical movement on the fastball. It doesn't come through in the average tables below the graph, especially when you consider that the grouping of fastballs and changes in 2007 that had vertical movement around 20 likely weren't tracked correctly and should be shifted down (moving the 2007 average down in turn).

Still, this year, the grouping of fastballs is on more of a diagonal. The pitches without much horizontal movement are "rising" more than they did last year, but the pitches with more horizontal movement are sinking more than they did last year (well, he never actually got that kind of horizontal movement last year; rather, these pitches are sinking more than any of his fastballs did in 2007). While this sink isn't all that severe, I do think this could be a contributing factor to the increased ground ball rate.

Here, the astute reader might be saying to him or herself, "Well if the pitches without much horizontal movement are rising, and those with a lot of horizontal movement are sinking, then the batter would have a better idea how the pitch is going to move horizontally by observing its vertical movement coming in, right? The whole notion of the wide variability decreasing predictability doesn't really apply to Lee." Excellent thought indeed.

Let's examine the trajectory of these pitches, though, to see if this is really true. In the below graph, I separated his fastballs into those with horizontal movement of six inches or more and those with six inches or less.

image


As you see, while the thought above certainly could have made sense, it appears that the two follow an identical path to the plate (from the side) right up until the end when the additional movement is witnessed. And because it isn't very severe at all, a batter would really need to pay attention to notice it. If you'd like to skip ahead to the fastball portion of the "Late break" section, feel free. It ties in well here.

While from the side there is no difference between the two, check out what the top looks like:

image


Much different. Here, we see that Lee is releasing the balls that are getting the sink from a different horizontal release point, and the two don't overlap at any point as they approach the plate. The vertical release point is identical (as seen in the side view graph), but this is something that a batter could pick up on. So while Lee is able to hide this a little, he isn't doing it perfectly, and he may never be able to. If he shifts the horizontal release point, there's a chance that the additional horizontal movement would go away, which seems to me would be more important than the vertical.

Overall, though, I think that the net effect of all of this is positive.

Fastball - Basic - To LHB
YEAR	TOTAL	PERC	SS/BALL	SWG/BIP	CALL%	SWG%	BALL%	FOUL%	BIP%	BABIP	runs100*
'07	274	72%	0.12	2.21	20%	4%	34%	21%	21%	.102	-1.29
'08	437	75%	0.23	2.70	22%	7%	32%	22%	17%	.254	-1.90
Fastball - Basic - To RHB
YEAR	TOTAL	PERC	SS/BALL	SWG/BIP	CALL%	SWG%	BALL%	FOUL%	BIP%	BABIP	runs100*
'07	83	73%	0.35	2.61	16%	10%	28%	25%	22%	.333	-1.66
'08	203	82%	0.41	3.16	29%	9%	22%	25%	16%	.167	-0.94
Note: runs100 was invented by John Walsh. You can read more about runs100 here. It essentially measures the numbers of runs saved per 100 pitches, so the lower, the better.

His runs100 improved from -1.29 to -1.90 against lefties (despite a worse BABIP), as we might expect given the extra movement in towards lefties. It decreased a little versus righties (even with a better BABIP), but he is getting a lot more called strikes and forcing the batter to work more to put the ball in play.

While the results aren't drastic, I think the changes to the pitch had a very positive effect on his change-up as well. Let's take a look.

Change-up
Lee's change-up has changed the least of all four of his pitches, but it has been more effective than it was last year. The pitch is getting a little bit more inward movement on lefties and is rising a little more than it did last year.

Aside from this, though, if you look back at the movement graph, you see the change-ups sitting all alone in 2007. This year, though, they overlap the "sinking" fastballs. This reminds me of the interaction between Tom Glavine's fastball and change, as looked at by Josh Kalk last year, as well as Bronson Arroyo's, as looked at yesterday by Josh.

This isn't exactly like Glavine because some of Lee's fastballs are off on their own, but the change-ups are completely concealed within the one sect of heaters. Let's check out the pitch trajectories for the fastballs with at least 6 inches of horizontal movement and the change-ups.

image
image


We see that the fastball and change have identical release points and nearly identical trajectories. They are identical from the top, but the two deviate as the ball approaches the plate when we look at it from the side. This is another good time to go check out the "Late break" section, this time for the change-ups.

Overall, there is a lot going on to confuse the batter here.

What we see is that the batter is only given a little bit of information on the coming pitch in the form of horizontal release point (and overall flight path, although if you miss the release point it might be tough to decipher the two paths). If the batter doesn't pick up on the release point, there are several things that can happen. It can be a fastball that could show a wide array of horizontal movement but coming in will exhibit identical vertical movement until very late. Or, it could be a change-up that is masked by half of the fastballs in its release point, horizontal movement, and vertical movement until very late.

Then, in the last quarter second of flight, the fastball may sink exactly as it did last year or far more than it did last year and is capable of breaking horizontally (in both directions) more than it did last year. If it's a change-up and the batter hasn't identified it as such yet or is off with his timing, the bottom will fall out more severely than the vast majority of his fastballs will.

To make things even more complicated, Lee has added an extra miles per hour to his fastball, cranking the difference between the fastball and the change-up to a full 10 mph. And since he uses the fastball so often (77 percent), when a change-up does come it can't help but be a little unexpected. Oh, and all of this is ignoring that Lee also throws two other pitches.

Change-up - Basic - To LHB
YEAR	TOTAL	PERC	SS/BALL	SWG/BIP	CALL%	SWG%	BALL%	FOUL%	BIP%	BABIP	runs100
CU	79	21%	0.28	1.94	15%	11%	41%	10%	23%	.267	2.81
CU	89	15%	0.09	1.58	21%	3%	36%	12%	27%	.167	-3.36
Change-up - Basic - To RHB
YEAR	TOTAL	PERC	SS/BALL	SWG/BIP	CALL%	SWG%	BALL%	FOUL%	BIP%	BABIP	runs100
CU	2	2%	0.00	----	0%	0%	50%	50%	0%	----	2.25
CU	0	0%	----	----	----	----	----	----	----	----	

Lee doesn't use the change-up against right-handers, but it has been a devastating pitch to lefties this year. According to runs100, he has saved an additional 6.17 runs per 100 pitches over last year. This can be partly attributed to a low BABIP, but that is insane. In John's original piece on runs100, he found the best change-up of 2007 belonged to Jeff Francis at -2.4. Lee has saved nearly a full run more than that.

Slider and Curveball
Overall, Lee appears to be much more consistent with the movement on his curveball and slider this year. They are clustered closer together (possibly one reason for the improved control), and he is also getting additional horizontal movement on them.

Slider - Basic - To LHB
YEAR	TOTAL	PERC	SS/BALL	SWG/BIP	CALL%	SWG%	BALL%	FOUL%	BIP%	BABIP	runs100
'07	13	3%	0.00	1.50	8%	0%	46%	15%	31%	.333	5.85
'08	21	4%	0.86	6.50	5%	29%	33%	24%	10%	.500	-1.68
Slider - Basic - To RHB
YR	TOTAL	PERC	SS/BALL	SWG/BIP	CALL%	SWG%	BALL%	FOUL%	BIP%	BABIP	runs100
'07	9	8%	0.25	3.00	22%	11%	44%	11%	11%	1.000	6.04
'08	13	5%	0.20	2.00	15%	8%	38%	15%	23%	.333	-1.66

Curveball - Basic - To LHB
YEAR	TOTAL	PERC	SS/BALL	SWG/BIP	CALL%	SWG%	BALL%	FOUL%	BIP%	BABIP	runs100
'07	13	3%	0.00	1.67	8%	0%	54%	15%	23%	.333	2.28
'08	33	6%	0.07	1.44	15%	3%	45%	9%	27%	.556	4.92
Curveball - Basic - To RHB
YR	TOTAL	PERC	SS/BALL	SWG/BIP	CALL%	SWG%	BALL%	FOUL%	BIP%	BABIP	runs100
'07	19	17%	0.13	5.00	5%	5%	42%	37%	11%	.500	-0.09
'08	33	13%	0.44	1.77	3%	12%	27%	18%	39%	.154	-7.45


We see in these numbers that the slider has improved dramatically this year, although it's still his least frequently used pitch. Many of his sliders looked pretty flat last year, not really exhibiting much horizontal movement. This year, I think the combination of the added movement, late break, the identical release point and similar path to the plate as the fastball and change (here if you're interested in seeing it), and the fact that it is unexpected when it comes (being used just 4 percent of the time overall) has made it a very effective pitch for Lee. He's getting 29 percent swinging strikes on it against lefties, and runs100 drastically improved against both types of batters.

The curveball looks good against righties in terms of runs100, though the .154 BABIP is surely helping it along. He's allowing it to be put into play a ton against righties, so once that BABIP evens out the curve doesn't look all that great. The movement is certainly a little better this year, so this all looks a little strange.

Release point
This added horizontal movement across the board might lead us to believe that Lee has altered his mechanics. I first thought that he might have lowered his arm slot to get that added side-to-side movement, but that's not the case. Check out his release point graph.

image


Aside from the fastballs we observed earlier, it doesn't look like Lee has changed his release point much at all. I can't explain how he's added all of that movement to his pitches. He's obviously throwing them differently, but my guess would be as good as yours as to how he's accomplishing this. Any thoughts on this matter (or on any matter, really) would be welcome.

Late break
Now let's check out his late break. In case you didn't get a chance to read the Cueto piece, here's Mike Fast's description of late break again:
The goal is to show something close to what the hitter perceives as the break or movement of the pitch. I calculate the deflection of the pitch due to two forces, spin and gravity, in the last 0.25 seconds of its trajectory before it crosses the plate, an idea I got from Tom Tango. I chose a quarter second because that’s roughly the reaction time of a batter executing a swing. I chose to include the effect of gravity because I believe that more accurately reflects what hitters see. Hitters don’t attempt to hit a gravity-less pitch; they attempt to hit a pitch that’s being affected by gravity and being deflected by spin.

image
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As with his movement, we see that Lee has added a good deal of late break to his pitches.

Fastball
We first notice that, like with the overall movement on the fastball, this pitch has a wider range for its late break as well. Extra variability overall is good, and extra variability in the last quarter of a second before the ball crosses the plate is even better.

We saw earlier that some of Lee's fastballs have picked up some additional downward movement. When we looked at the pitch trajectory graph, though, we saw that this added vertical movement didn't come until the ball was almost at the plate. Late break! We see in Lee's late break graphs that he is indeed getting additional late sink on his fastball this year and that the fastballs roughly follow the diagonal pattern that they showed in the movement graph.

While it doesn't move (in general) or break late as drastically as a true sinker might, Lee has indeed added a good deal more late sink than it had last year, and this seems to be another reason for the higher ground ball rate in 2008. I don't know if this could cause an additional 13 percentage points on his ground ball rate, but it certainly should be adding some. Not only do batters now have to deal with the additional late horizontal break on the ball, but the bottom is also falling out more than it used to.

Change-up
As we also observed in our pitch trajectory graph comparing Lee's fastball to his change-up, we see that the change has a good deal more late vertical break than this fastball. This will become especially confusing to a batter who hasn't yet identified that the pitch is a change-up, which is entirely possible given the fact that it has an identical release point to the fastball, the same horizontal and vertical movement, and follows an identical path to the plate (from all angles) up until this point.

In addition to the obvious benefits of this, I would have to think that this late sink is another factor driving the higher groundball rate this year.

Slider and Curveball
The slider had very little horizontal late break last year, but this year's he's getting not only some horizontal break but also a lot more vertical break. He's getting just a tiny bit more horizontal and vertical late break on the curve.

Control
So while this explains the additional strikeouts, I don't know if it necessarily explains the control.

Let me first note that control is not the easiest thing to pin down, even using Pitch f/x. In fact, one could make a case that it is actually the most difficult to pin down. You see, control is all about intention. If a pitcher throws the baseball and it just clips the corner of the plate for a called strike, this is a good thing. But is that what the pitcher was trying to do? Who's to say he wasn't aiming for the complete other side of the plate and the pitch got away from him? The result was a good one, but if he wasn't trying to do that, his control wasn't truly good.

So while we may now be able to see the final result, we still have no idea about a pitcher's intentions, and we never will with absolute certainty. We'd need to be inside the pitcher's head on every single pitch. One thing I would love to see Pitch f/x track at some point is where the catcher is setting up. Is he setting up inside? Low and away? This could at least give us a rough estimate as to where the pitcher is likely aiming. Wouldn't be perfect, but it would give us more information than we currently have.

Using the information that we do currently have—and keeping in mind that this is far, far from perfect, so take it for what it's worth—let's see if we can't find anything out about Lee's stellar control thus far.

The first column in the following table shows how often Cliff Lee hits the edge of the zone with one of his pitches. I defined the "edge" as 1/6 of the width or height of the rulebook strike zone added to either side of the given boundary (vertical boundaries mapped to average as given in this John Walsh article). The immediate outside corners were also included.

The second column gives the percentage of balls that were either on the edge (either in the zone or out) or outside the zone completely. The balls that are out of the zone but don't hit the edge—I'm assuming for the sake of this analysis—are balls that the pitcher was trying to locate on or near the edge but that got away a little bit and traveled further outside the zone. Of course not all of them will be—some pitchers were probably actually meant to be outside to work around certain hitters or something like that—and of course there will be some that land fully inside the zone that were meant for the edge. Hopefully this will serve as a fair enough estimate without going through pitch-by-pitch.

The third column gives the number of balls that were outside the zone but didn't hit an edge divided by these same balls plus the number that did hit an edge. This will hopefully give us a rough idea of how many balls that were meant for an edge got away from the pitcher. Again, not perfect for the same reasons mentioned above, but let's take a look anyway.
Year	Edge%	Edge+OOZ%	OOZ/(Edge+OOZ)
2007	21%	56%		62%
2008	21%	56%		63%

We see that Lee has performed almost identically this year to last year. He hit the edge at the same frequency as last year, "attempted" to hit the edge at the same frequency, and let just about as many get away from him.

Now let's look at the percentage of the pitches that hit the edge that were actually in the strike zone. Since pitchers really don't have pin-point control, I would think that pitches hitting the edge would be at the mercy of chance as to whether it falls just within the strike zone or just out of it. Let's take a look.
Year		In Zone%	Out of Zone%	
2007		56%		44%
2008		56%		44%
Lg. Avg.	47%		53%

Identical both years, though a little better than league average. Could be random chance, but a pitcher with good control might be able to do a little better than league average. Now let's look at the balls and called strikes Lee is getting on these edge pitches.
Year		Ball%	Called Strike%	
2007		67%	33%
2008		58%	42%
Lg. Avg.	68%	32%

We see that Lee is getting more called strikes on edge pitches than he was last year and is now doing significantly better than league average. This could explain part of his good control.

If I had more trust in these numbers, I would say that Lee was due to regress here, but there are so many things to consider that I really don't know how much weight I would really put in this. These numbers are far from perfect. Umpires are human and don't call the exact rulebook strike zone that we are using (as John Walsh pointed out in his article cited above), the Pitch f/x data isn't complete, the data we do have isn't perfect, plus all the disclaimers I gave earlier about intention and everything.

Honestly, I almost took this entire section out because of all this uncertainty, but I had it written up and ultimately decided to leave it in as at least something to think about. Make of it what you will.

Here's one more thing that I think might have something to do with Lee's decreased walk rate this year. The following graphs show how he's using his pitches in different counts.

image
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While Lee obviously uses his fastball a lot, you'll notice that he is now using it more in two-ball counts and almost exclusively in three-ball counts (though he did that last year as well). Fastballs, in general, are easier to control, and Lee's is no exception. He gets the least number of balls using his fastballs and throws it in the zone the most often (along with the slider).
Pitch		Ball%	In Zone%
Fastball	29%	59%
Curveball	36%	52%
Slider		35%	59%
Change-up	36%	42%

Therefore, it makes sense that if he is using the fastball more on two-ball counts, he will get to three-ball counts less frequently because he isn't getting as many called balls. And when he is using it a lot on three-ball counts, he'll be walking fewer batters. Of course, once batters know that they can wait on a fastball in these counts, he'll be getting fewer strikeouts and giving up more hits. To this effect, he has started using the change-up on three ball counts a little bit, but he may end up needing to start using his off-speed stuff in two-ball counts more often going forward.

Overall, I don't know if we can really draw anything meaningful out of this discussion of control. As I said, I almost didn't include any of this. Even if all it does is get people thinking, though, perhaps some new ideas will show up down the line.

Final outlook on Cliff Lee

Overall, Lee has looked very good this year. He's made some nice changes to his repertoire and increased his strikeout and groundball rates. I'm not sure if the changes will allow the groundball rate to stay this high, but the increase (in general) certainly seems legitimate.

Lee is also displaying stellar control this year, although I don't think I'm really in a position to say whether or not it's for real. He has shown good control at times in the past, and others have kept walk rates as low as Lee's before, so perhaps it is for real. Just based on the fact that we're looking at a 66 inning sample and regression to the mean, I would expect it to climb at least a little.

Overall, Lee definitely appears to be a better pitcher than he was a year ago. I don't necessarily view him as a sell high candidate, although there are certainly cases where it would be a good move. If you can get a top pitcher, do it. It's not as if he's putting up elite strikeout numbers. Or, if you're dealing with someone who trusts peripherals more than surface numbers and believes that Lee's control is for real, that might also provide a good trading opportunity. The control may very well be for real, but if I can get someone with a longer track of similar performance, I'm doing it.

Concluding thoughts

I put this note at the top of part one as well in case some readers didn't make it this far, being that (I'm pretty sure) this is the longest article I've ever posted here.

I'd be interested what you guys think of the Pitch f/x stuff so far. I think it adds a lot to the analysis, but I'd love to hear any comments or suggestions you guys have. Requests are also welcome.

Furthermore, these posts seem to be running kind of long. I'd also be interested in hearing your take on this matter. I ultimately decided to split this one into two posts. Should I leave them as one going forward? Should I write less and let the numbers and charts speak more for themselves? Or is it okay the way it is? Let me know what you think.

Posted by Derek Carty at 2:42am

Saturday, June 07, 2008

Economics of trading: Buy early, sell late


Last year, I wrote an article discussing the concept of making your trades now rather than closer to the deadline. This year, I'd like to expand on this idea and look at it in economic terms.

A fundamental economic concept is that of supply and demand. Essentially, it says that in a given market, the price of a good will be determined by the interaction of supply and demand, which are influenced by the buyers and sellers of the good. Supply, in a market, is simply how much of the good in question is available for purchase at a particular price. Demand is how much of the good buyers are willing to purchase at a particular price.

Here is a basic supply and demand graph that we'll be using throughout this article.

image


The point where the supply and demand curves intersect (in a properly functioning market) determines the price and quantity of the good. For today, the price is what we really want to focus on. In this case, we'll say that the average market price of a player is five (where the curves intersect). The numbers on the axes of the graphs we'll use today are arbitrary and don't refer to anything specific. They are just there to provide some context for later when we start shifting the supply and demand curves.

While the above graph shows the average yearly trade market, things can look very different at various points in the season. When working with supply and demand models, there are several determinants of both that, when examined, can tell us how the curves would shift in a given situation and how price would be affected. Let's take a look at these determinants and put things into the context of the fantasy baseball trade market.

Demand

Here are the five primary determinants of demand:
  1. Income
  2. Price of related goods (substitutes/complements)
  3. Tastes and preferences
  4. Expectations of buyers
  5. Number of buyers

First, I should point out that we'll be examining these things in the context of the market as a whole. If a single person begins to like a product more (tastes and preferences), his individual demand for that product might rise, but we won't concentrate too much on this. For the market demand to increase for that good, the aggregate preference for a product must increase. A single person liking the product more would increase the market demand a tiny bit, but not significantly.

That being said, let's look at these determinants of demand in the context of fantasy baseball and how changes in each would affect the trade market as a whole.

Income
Income is essentially the means that a person has to make a purchase. In real life, this refers to money. In fantasy baseball, it refers to the players (or draft picks, FAAB dollars, etc. in keeper leagues) that are available to trade. This will fluctuate from person to person, but as we're looking at the market as a whole, it won't change much through the year. It might change a little bit with minor league call-ups or player injuries or other roster moves, but to simplify things we'll say that this remains the same throughout the year.

Price of related goods
Price of related goods deals with two types of goods: substitutes and complements. As an example of a substitute, assuming people don't have a preference, if the price of Coke goes up, the demand for Pepsi will rise. In fantasy, let's say that the owner of Carl Crawford is demanding a David Wright-caliber player in return. Since few people would pay that, the demand for a guy like Jacoby Ellsbury would increase as the people who were interested in Crawford have shifted their attention to other base-stealers.

Complementary goods aren't really very relevant in fantasy baseball.

Tastes and preferences
Tastes and preferences can vary from league to league. Maybe you have a couple of owners who love New York Mets players. That would drive the market demand for Mets up. Maybe you have a few owners who like to own five closers at a time, or maybe a few teams are bunched up in the saves pack and would like to acquire another closer to jump ahead. The demand for closers would increase here. Maybe you're in a league with a bunch of stat nuts and DIPS followers. Last year, that might have meant an increase in demand for guys in the Javier Vazquez/-Kelvim Escobar mold.

You can account for these things on your own, but for right now, we're going to assume that tastes and preferences are the same from league to league. Also, when looking at the market as a whole, this stays constant.

Expectations of buyers
Expectations of buyers has to do with the individual views of each owner. If you have a bunch of owners who use metrics like BABIP and LOB percentage, the demand for a guy like Johnny Cueto or Brett Myers will be higher than in a league where owners think that a guy with a 5.00 ERA will continue to post a 5.00 ERA. Looking at the market as a whole, though, these expectations will likely remain constant throughout the year (unless owner change philosophies mid-year).

Number of buyers
Number of buyers is where the primary point of this article comes into play. In real life, let's say six billion people would be willing to buy a computer for $1. The computer company, seeing such a high demand, realizes that it can raise the price and still get a lot of people to buy it. The company will lose some people willing to buy at $1, but make more money overall as long as the price doesn't go too high. Maybe the company raises the price to $1,000 and now only 500 million people are willing to buy one. Even so, the computers will now bring in $500 billion total as opposed to $6 billion.

The same goes for fantasy. If five people are interested in Brett Myers and offering equal deals, the owner of Myers can increase his asking price. All he needs is one person to pay the price, so he can keep raising it until one person remains. If he goes too high and asks for Lance Berkman, then we see the effect of "price of related goods." Instead of Myers, those buyers might instead try to trade for Bronson Arroyo. But until Myers' owner asks for too much, the price rises when we see a lot of potential buyers.

This leads me into the heart of today's article. The number of buyers in the trading market is at its lowest right around now. Through May, owners are reevaluating their teams and making trades to fill spots that they realize weren't adequately filled on draft day. In July and August, the trade deadline approaches and owners are scrambling to acquire whatever they need for the stretch run. Right now, though, there is a lull in many leagues.

Since there are fewer buyers, market demand decreases. Here's how our demand curve would shift from it's average yearly position at this time of year.

image


As you see, when demand decreases, so does the price (look at where the new demand curve intersects the supply curve; the price is now four, down from five).

If you choose not to make your trades now, but rather wait until the trade deadline when there are a lot of buyers (and aggressive ones, at that), here is what would happen to the price as demand increases.

image


As you can see, price rises as demand increases.

So how should you best take advantage of this? Buy early and sell late! Now, every trade has to involved two parties, but in many, there is a distinct buyer and seller. Just last night I played the buyer in my favorite league. Here's the trade; you try to figure out which side is the buyer and which is the seller. Keep in mind that it's a keeper league.

Jose Reyes, Carl Crawford, and Micah Owings
for
Evan Longoria, Hiroki Kuroda, Wladimir Balentein, a fourth round pick, and a 10th round pick (both in a minor league draft the league will hold in a couple of weeks to draft the players just taken in the MLB amateur draft).

Here, I think it's pretty obvious that I'm "buying" Reyes, Crawford and Owings, as I'm playing to win this year, and the other owner is "selling" these players for parts that will help him in the future.

I think I got a pretty good deal by buying now, but this isn't even what I like most about the deal. If I am to compete this year, I need to catch up in steals and runs. Reyes and Crawford should help me do this, but if come deadline day I don't think I can win, I can trade these two. There will always be owners looking for steals, and because of the economic concepts we've just discussed, I think there's a pretty good chance I'll be able to spin these two off for a good deal more than what I paid for them.

Essentially, because of my understanding of these concepts, the decision to make this trade didn't come down to whether I thought I could compete this year, as it normally does in a keeper league (and as it would had I waited until the deadline). It came down to how little I could acquire these two for. I can trade for them now and try to compete this year. I should be able to, but if I catch some bad luck or a few injuries, I didn't throw away my future. I essentially get to test drive these guys for the next couple of months, see if I can win, and if I don't think I can win, I have the option of trading them for—quite likely—more than what I started with.

Additional benefits of this strategy

Even if we were to completely ignore supply and demand, there are some very good reasons for buying now and selling later. Read this quote from Andy Behrens in a recent article over at Yahoo!'s RotoArcade blog:

Lots of owners also refuse to deal now, in May, when the players you might acquire have four months of stats ahead of them. Instead, people tend to wait until deadlines approach in August...and then they realize that the 25 steals they need are either A) prohibitively expensive, or B) impossible to get from any single player.

Scott Swanay discussed a similar idea related to FAAB planning two weeks ago at the Fantasy Cafe:

Think about it for a moment—a player added at the halfway point of the season will carry approximately half the weight over the course of the season on your team’s results as a player you add at the end of the first week. Thus, a rational fantasy owner should budget nearly twice as much for acquisitions at the end of Week 1 as they would for acquisitions at the end of Week 13. Of course, many owners do exactly the opposite...

This makes lots of sense. Right now, if you're 15 steals out of the pack, picking up Ichiro Sukuzi would make it a lot easier to catch up than if you were to trade for him at the end of July. Getting him now might net you 30 or 35 steals by year's end; trading for him in July might get you only 15 or 20, at a time when you might have fallen to 40 out of the pack. Ever heard the expression "too little, too late"?

This is also excellent reasoning for holding onto your best players until the trade deadline. Not only will you maximize your return on the player, but you will reap his stats until then. Let's say you're in the middle of the pack in pitching, but this is mostly due to bad luck. Maybe you own Josh Beckett and Johnny Cueto and Bronson Arroyo and Clay Buchholz. You know that they should be expected to provide good stats going forward, but you're current team stats are mediocre. So instead of trading your Johan Santana now, you wait until the trade deadline to trade him.

His excellent stats should help bring your ERA and WHIP down for the time being (since you have ground to make up), but then you can trade him for hitting at the deadline once you're caught up in pitching. You won't receive as much hitting help as you might receive now, getting only a couple of months of production, but you need to allocate your resources in the best way you can. Maybe hitting isn't as big a priority as catching up with pitching. And when you do trade for the hitting, you won't get as much time out of it, but the quality should be better.

Words of warning

In our discussion of supply and demand up until this point, we've kept supply constant. In real life, though, things aren't always held constant. Supply and demand can shift simultaneously, so I'd like to make you aware of some situations where supply will shift, potentially making this an unfavorable strategy to pursue.

Here are the five primary determinants of supply:
  1. The prices of inputs used to produce the product
  2. Technology
  3. Taxes and subsidies
  4. Price expectations
  5. Number of suppliers

Price of inputs, technology, and taxes and subsidies
These three really don't have a parallel in the fantasy baseball trade market. Minor league call-ups increase the supply of available players (and injured players decrease it), and you could maybe classify this as technology, but overall there isn't much here to discuss.

Price expectations
Here is where we could run into some trouble. If you have an owner who understand these supply and demand concepts, he'll be far less likely to sell his good players early, knowing that he'll be able to get more from them closer to the trade deadline. When he restricts which players he's willing to sell, the overall supply of players decreases. Here is a graph showing what happens when supply decreases:

image


Price rises!

Number of suppliers
In the case of the fantasy baseball trade market, this is very similar to "price expectations."

I mentioned earlier that at this time of year, the number of buyers is reduced in a lot of leagues. When examining your league's trading market, you must also see if the teams that aren't buying are also unwilling to sell. If some teams simply don't want to trade at all at this point in the season, supply will decrease along with demand. What happens to price depends on how much each moves. If, for example, all the teams that are unwilling to buy are also unwilling to sell (and visa-versa), supply and demand would decrease at the same rate, leaving price the same. Look:

image


This looks a little confusing, so the big black dot marks where the new supply and demand curves intersect. Quantity drops, but what we're really concerned with is price, which stays exactly the same. If the situation were different and demand falls more than supply, price falls. If supply falls more than demand, price rises.

We need to remember, however, that this is assuming other owners know that the overall market supply has decreased. In real life, this is pretty obvious to firms. In fantasy leagues... not necessarily.

For example, the owner of Jacoby Ellsbury would need to know that Carl Crawford's owner isn't interested in trading before he raises his price because of this. If he thinks Crawford is on the market, in his mind supply is the same, and he doesn't have this justification to raise his own price (he might due to other reasons, but not because he knows that other owners looking for steals have one less option).

If you're in an active league where owners are constantly talking to each other, you will likely see an increase in price because they'll know which owners are willing to trade and which aren't. If you're in an inactive league or in a league where owners think only about their own teams, then price could stay the same.

This logic applies to all of our determinants of demand as well. For the market to shift the way it theoretically should, owners in the league need to be aware of what's going on (though they needn't be aware of how supply and demand actually works; that will work itself out).

Examine your league's trading market

No league's trading market is exactly the same, but I hope the concepts we discussed today can help you to evaluate your specific league's trading market. Factor everything in, and if it seems like now is a more favorable time to buy than a few months from now will be, then do it!

Concluding thoughts

We'll be looking further into the trading market in terms of economics in the coming weeks. If you have questions on today's discussion, feel free to send me an e-mail.

Posted by Derek Carty at 9:07am

Waiver Wire: American League (Week 10)



American League


Joel Zumaya | DET | RP: A closer simply cannot survive with a 3.8 K/9 and 4.2 BB/9 without some excellent luck. That's what Todd Jones is doing now, sporting a lucky 4.64 ERA. It won't last forever, and with Joel Zumaya nearing a return (likely by the All-Star break), his term as closer could be coming to a close. Someone might already be stashing him on the DL, but if not, definitely do it. He's even worth stashing in leagues with five or more bench spots. There's a decent chance he'll be saving games by the last week of July.

Brandon Morrow | SEA | RP: J.J. Putz is really struggling with his control (7.13 BB/9). Brandon Morrow seems very close to becoming next in line, if he isn't already. I have a hard time seeing the Mariners removing Putz, but it isn't unfathomable that they would if he continues on like this. There are definitely better speculative picks out there, but if all the obvious ones are gone, Morrow could be worth owning. Just be aware of Morrow's own control problems. His BB/9 is 3.94 in 16 major league innings this year and he's striking out a ton of batters, but that control has been downright awful in the past.

Mike Mussina | NYY | SP: Mike Mussina is seeing some pickups, and they aren't completely unwarranted. He's striking out batters at a rate lower than league average, but his excellent control is keeping his ERA respectable. Not a great pickup if you need Ks, but decent otherwise.
Recommendation: Can be owned in deep mixed leagues. Should be strongly considered in 8-team and owned in 10-team AL-only leagues.

Aaron Laffey | CLE | SP: With Jake Westbrook out for the year, Aaron Laffey should have a permanent rotation spot (assuming Jeremy Sowers doesn't pull out some luck in the next couple of weeks and take it from him). He gets lots of ground balls and has good control to make up for a sub-par (though not awful) strikeout rate.
Recommendation: Should be considered in 12-team and owned in 14-team mixed leagues. Should be owned in all AL-only leagues.

Jeremy Sowers | CLE | SP: Sowers should have a spot until Fausto Carmona returns, but will likely get demoted after that. His skills aren't good, and he isn't really worth owning in many leagues.
Recommendation: Should be avoided in mixed leagues. Should be owned in 14-team AL-only leagues.

Jeremy Guthrie | BAL | SP: After a surprise 2007, Guthrie started 2008 off terribly with five TQS "Below Average" starts in his first six outings. He has since posted two "Good" starts and has posted a 6.75 K/9 and a 2.62 BB/9 in his last 10 starts. Not great, but in line with last year (a little better, even), although his ERA is being aided by a lucky BABIP and LOB percentage. Still, Guthrie is owned in just 16 percent of ESPN leagues and deserves a pickup in more.
Recommendation: Should be owned in 14-team mixed leagues. Should be owned in all AL-only leagues.

Coco Crisp | BOS | OF: With David Ortiz injured, it looks as though Crisp will start most games in the outfield while Manny Ramirez DHes. Of course, this is after Crisp serves his suspension for his part in the events of the other night. Look for a .260-.270 average and a whole bunch of steals, though he doesn't have much power and the runs won't come with Jacoby Ellsbury entrenched atop the order.
Recommendation: Should be owned in 14-team mixed leagues. Should be owned in all but shallow AL-only leagues.

Kenny Lofton | FA | OF: Lofton was never signed this offseason, but his skills were still good last year and now there's talk that a number of teams could look to sign him. This is the time when teams start thinking about trades, but why trade a valuable chip when it would cost only dollars to get Lofton? I'd have to think a major league team will sign him, followed by a fantasy team in most leagues. Owners will receive a .300 batting average and lots of steals and runs if he's given enough playing time.
Recommendation: Monitor in all leagues. Can be stashed in very deep leagues.

Josh Fields | CHW | OF: With recent quotes like "If we think we are going to win with the offense we have, we are full of s---" and talk of making changes from Ozzie Guillen, it might be time to start watching Josh Fields again. There doesn't appear to be room for him now, but a guy like Joe Crede could easily be traded, creating an opening for him. Definitely keep an eye on this situation.
Recommendation: Monitor in all leagues. Can be stashed in very deep leagues.

Esteban German | KC | 2B/3B/OF/SS: German will get an extended look at KC's shortstop, but don't expect much fantasy-wise. Even if his contact rate returns to the level it was the past couple years, he might hit only .270. He doesn't have much speed or power and will likely bat eighth or ninth, so the only real value he'll have is from a decent batting average and a fair number of RBIs and runs just because he'll get at-bats.
Recommendation: Should be avoided in mixed leagues. Should be owned in 14-team AL-only leagues.

Alexi Casilla | MIN | 2B: This power isn't for real, though Casilla does have a lot of speed. He hasn't stolen many bases yet this year, but he has the potential for a bunch. He might hit only .260 or so (although the potential is there to do better), but if he can steal bases he'll have a little value. He takes a good amount of walks and has spent a lot of time in the No. 2 spot of late, so he could score some runs as well.
Recommendation: Should be owned in deep mixed leagues. Should be considered in eight-team and owned in 10-team AL-only leagues.

Alexei Ramirez | CHW | OF/2B/SS: Ramirez appears to be the everyday second baseman for the White Sox, although he isn't a great option. His .280 batting average is definitely for real, though the .303 BABIP doesn't look so legitimate given his 11 percent line drive rate. This could easily rise, but be careful for now. He's two-for-three in steal attempts and could grab a few more, and while he has a little power, it hasn't looked great so far. So you're basically looking at a .280 average and a handful of steals and homers out of a guy hitting mostly out of the No. 8 spot. Playing second helps his value.
Recommendation - Should be avoided in mixed leagues. Should be considered in eight-team and owned in 10-team AL-only leagues.

Posted by Derek Carty at 10:01pm

Sunday, June 08, 2008

Waiver Wire: National League (Week 10)


Sorry if the player analysis isn't as detailed as usual. I tried to get this out before midnight for those with deadlines, which I realize is cutting it very close. I'll definitely have them up by Friday next week.

National League


Rafael Soriano | ATL | CL: With John Smoltz done for the year, Soriano becomes the closer in Atlanta. He has good skills and needs to be owned in all leagues. Just be aware that he has health issues himself.
Recommendation: Should be owned in all leagues.

Mike Gonzalez | ATL | CL: Smoltz going down brings Gonzalez one step closer to some save opportunities. He should be back very soon, and once he establishes himself would become next in line. With Soriano an injury risk, Gonzalez could have significant value this year.
Recommendation: Should be owned in 14-team mixed leagues. Should be owned in all but shallow NL-only leagues.

Manny Acosta | ATL | RP: With Soriano ailing a little bit, Acosta could get some save opportunities over the next few days. He needs to be owned until Soriano is ready to go.
Recommendation: Should be owned in all leagues, for now.

Taylor Buchholz | COL | RP - With the Rockies dwelling in last place, there's a very good chance Brian Fuentes gets traded. With the way Manny Corpas has been pitching, it seems unlikely he'll get his job back this year. If Fuentes is traded, Buchholz will likely step into the closer's role. If you're looking for a guy to speculate on, Buchholz is an excellent choice. He's not a dominant pitcher, but his 3.51 LIPS ERA is certainly good enough to hold down a job.
Recommendation: Should be strongly considered in 12-team and owned in 14-team mixed leagues. Should be owned in all NL-only leagues.

Josh Banks | SD | SP: In two starts this year, Banks has posted two TQS "Good" starts. Not bad at all. He has good control, but he doesn't strike a ton of batters out or induce many ground balls. He might be useful in some leagues, but he doesn't have very much upside.
Recommendation: Should be owned in deep mixed leagues. Should be owned in 10-team NL-only leagues.

Paul Maholm | PIT | SP: 1 percent owned in ESPN leagues? Honestly? He doesn't strike a ton of batters out, but he has good control and gets a bunch of ground balls. He currently has a 4.25 LIPS ERA and a 1.34 DIPS WHIP.
Recommendation: Can be considered in 12-team and should be owned in 14-team mixed leagues. Should be owned in all but shallow NL-only leagues.

Andy LaRoche | LAD | 3B/1B/2B: LaRoche could be getting called up any day now. That the Dodgers have him playing both first and second shows that when they do call him up, they want to find a way to get him in the lineup. He would gain a good amount of additional value if he gains second base eligibility. Time to add him if you'd like to pick him up.
Recommendation: Should be owned in 14-team mixed leagues. Should be owned in all but shallow NL-only leagues.

Troy Tulowitzki | COL | SS: Tulo could be back by the All-Star break. It's unlikely he was dropped in your league, but if he was, go grab him.
Recommendation: Should be owned in all leagues.

Brad Hawpe | COL | OF: Hawpe is back from the DL and has pounded two homers since he returned two days ago. He's got good power and, like Tulowitzki, probably wasn't dropped in your league. If he was, go get him.
Recommendation: Should be owned in all leagues.

Aaron Boone | WAS | 1B/3B: Boone will be getting the majority of the playing time at third with Ryan Zimmerman out. He might hit only .260 or so, but he has some decent power and is batting cleanup. RBIs and runs value should benefit from hitting there. Recommendation reflects the short-term situation of him starting.
Recommendation: Should be owned in 14-team mixed leagues. Should be owned in all but shallow NL-only leagues.

Chris Coste | PHI | C: Coste is getting some playing time, and his skills are pretty good. A batting average above .300 is a pretty good bet, and for a catcher, that is fantastic. Plus he's hitting 45 percent fly balls, has a career 13 percent home run per fly ball, and HitTracker shows he's hitting the ball a decent way. We're not dealing with very large sample sizes here, but given what we have, 20-25 home runs over 500 at-bats would be a good guess. He's splitting time with Carlos Ruiz and hitting in the bottom half of the order, but for a catcher, you could do worse.
Recommendation: Should be avoided in single-catcher mixed leagues. Should be considered in 12-team and owned in 14-team, two catcher mixed leagues. Should be owned in 12-team, single catcher NL-only leagues. Should be owned in all two-catcher NL-only leagues.

Chad Tracy | ARZ | 1B/3B: Tracy has decent skills, but playing time is a question. It's hard to recommend picking him up with Conor Jackson and Mark Reynolds manning the corners in Arizona.
Recommendation: Should not be owned in mixed leagues, for now. Should be owned in 12-team NL-only leagues.

Posted by Derek Carty at 4:47pm

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Luck leaders: Week 10


Last year, we ran an occasional column here entitled "Luck leaders." I realized that I haven't been doing it this year, so I thought it would be a good idea to start this week. These numbers don't change much from week-to-week, so maybe we'll make this a biweekly thing.

We'll look at starting pitchers in four categories to determine which have been aided the most by luck and which have been hurt by it. For this installment, a pitcher must have made at least eight starts to be eligible. If you're not familiar with some of the indicators we'll be using, here is a brief primer.

Luck indicator primer


Batting Average on Balls in Play (BABIP): It's been known for a while now that major league pitchers don't have a whole lot of influence on how many hits they allow on balls that are put into play. Pitchers who are showing abnormally high or abnormally low BABIPs should be expected to regress going forward. League average is generally around .300.

Left on Base Percentage (LOB): This measures how many runners who reach base off a given pitcher actually come around to score. This isn't influenced by luck quite as heavily as BABIP, and some pitchers do consistently put up LOB percentages above or below league average, but those significantly higher or lower without a track record of it are likely in for some regression. League average is generally around 72 percent.

Home Run per Fly ball Rate (HR/FB): Pitchers have a lot of control over the percentage of fly balls they give up, but they don't have very much control over how many of these fly balls clear the fences for home runs. As with BABIP and LOB, pitchers above or below league average are due for regression. League average is generally around 11 percent.

Luck Independent ERA (LIPS ERA): LIPS ERA was created by David Gassko; click here for a full explanation. LIPS ERA essentially shows what a pitcher's ERA would look like given neutral luck. It takes into account only the things that aren't influenced by a pitcher's defense (i.e., strikeouts, walks, batted ball distribution) and adjusts to give the pitcher a league average line drive rate (another stat a pitcher has little control over) and HR/FB.

Pitchers who appear on this list will likely be on at least one of the other lists. If you're curious why one isn't, it's likely because he's receiving bad luck in two (or maybe all three) categories but not enough in any to warrant inclusion on one of these lists.

Additional notes


Please be aware that relief pitchers don't have to follow all of these rules, so don't hold them to these standards. For this reason (and because most relievers aren't ownable in many leagues), only starting pitchers are included on these lists.

I know that there are a lot of numbers here, but hope I've organized this well enough that you can just skim down the lists or simply do a search for pitchers you own. If you think there's a better way of doing this, feel free to let me know.

Batting Average on Balls in Play


Unucky
LAST            FIRST               ERA             LIPS ERA       BABIP
Arroyo          Bronson             5.74            3.56           0.378
Miller          Andrew M.           5.65            4.36           0.376
Snell           Ian D.              5.65            4.66           0.374
Buchholz        Clay                5.53            3.32           0.365
Washburn        Jarrod              6.56            4.19           0.351
Pelfrey         Mike A.             4.65            5.18           0.351
Hernandez       Livan               5.32            4.88           0.351
Sabathia        C.C.                4.81            3.70           0.349
McGowan         Dustin M.           4.26            3.94           0.347
Zito            Barry               5.87            5.29           0.345
Jimenez         Ubaldo              5.43            4.30           0.344
Chico           Matthew B.          6.19            4.61           0.344
Millwood        Kevin               4.65            4.08           0.343
Blackburn       Nick N.             3.94            4.40           0.342
Batista         Miguel              6.06            5.24           0.342
Pettitte        Andy                4.99            4.07           0.341
Marquis         Jason               5.02            4.59           0.338
Sonnanstine     Andy                4.88            3.81           0.337
Burnett         A.J.                4.98            3.34           0.336

Lucky
LAST            FIRST               ERA             LIPS ERA       BABIP
Galarraga       Armando             3.76            4.12           0.186
Floyd           Gavin C.            3.15            4.93           0.199
Marcum          Shaun M.            2.52            3.64           0.215
Dempster        Ryan                2.90            4.22           0.221
Olsen           Scott M.            3.44            4.90           0.223
Saunders        Joe                 2.63            4.53           0.237
Matsuzaka       Daisuke             2.53            4.18           0.238
Hamels          Cole                3.36            3.55           0.245
Feldman         Scott               4.31            4.53           0.247
Contreras       Jose                2.76            4.06           0.249
Bush            David T.            5.85            4.71           0.251
Redding         Tim                 4.15            4.89           0.253
Wellemeyer      Todd                2.92            3.85           0.254
Santana         Ervin R.            3.02            3.42           0.255
Duchscherer     Justin              2.32            4.23           0.255
Byrd            Paul                4.46            4.68           0.256
Wainwright      Adam P.             3.14            3.54           0.259

Left on Base Percentage


Unlucky
LAST            FIRST               ERA             LIPS ERA        LOB%
Bonser          Boof                6.00            4.38             53%
Tomko           Brett               6.34            3.77             58%
Kennedy         Ian Patrick         7.41            5.48             58%
Sampson         Chris K.            5.56            4.53             59%
Trachsel        Steve               8.39            6.23             60%
Silva           Carlos              5.96            4.56             61%
Badenhop        Burke               6.38            4.49             62%
Ponson          Sidney              3.88            4.64             63%
Washburn        Jarrod              6.56            4.19             63%
Sonnanstine     Andy                4.88            3.81             63%
Hendrickson     Mark                5.33            4.34             64%
Jimenez         Ubaldo              5.43            4.30             64%
Buehrle         Mark                4.80            4.29             65%
Buchholz        Clay                5.53            3.32             65%
Penny           Brad                5.45            4.75             65%
Burnett         A.J.                4.98            3.34             65%
Zito            Barry               5.87            5.29             65%
Bannister       Brian P.            4.98            3.98             65%
Verlander       Justin B.           5.05            4.76             65%
Wang            Chien-Ming          4.57            4.68             65%
Gorzelanny      Tom                 6.83            6.19             65%
Miller          Andrew M.           5.65            4.35             65%
Kendrick        Kyle                4.87            4.97             66%
Mussina         Mike                4.01            4.11             66%

Lucky
LAST            FIRST               ERA             LIPS ERA        LOB%
Volquez         Edison              1.32            3.42             88%
Sheets          Ben                 2.62            3.70             83%
Peavy           Jake                2.91            3.01             83%
Santana         Johan               3.08            3.40             82%
Danks           John W.             2.88            3.90             82%
Marcum          Shaun M.            2.52            3.64             82%
Litsch          Jesse               3.45            4.33             82%
Matsuzaka       Daisuke             2.53            4.18             81%
Hernandez       Felix A.            3.07            3.88             80%
Lincecum        Tim                 2.15            3.77             80%
Saunders        Joe                 2.63            4.53             80%
Backe           Brandon             4.66            4.65             80%
Greinke         Zack Z.             3.56            4.00             79%
Zambrano        Carlos              3.01            4.13             79%
Perez           Odalis              4.09            4.63             79%
Wellemeyer      Todd                2.92            3.85             79%
Lannan          John E.             3.47            4.12             79%
Padilla         Vicente             3.73            4.31             79%
Carmona         Fausto C.           3.10            5.75             78%
Hudson          Tim                 2.86            3.88             78%
Cabrera         Daniel A.           3.98            4.67             78%
Olsen           Scott M.            3.44            4.90             77%
Vazquez         Javier              3.64            3.39             77%

Home run per fly ball rate


Unlucky
LAST            FIRST               ERA             LIPS ERA       HR/FB
Oswalt          Roy                 5.38            4.08           21.05
Badenhop        Burke               6.38            4.49           19.44
Cueto           Johnny              5.06            3.55           17.58
Myers           Brett               5.13            4.07           16.48
Villanueva      Carlos M.           5.63            3.97           16.44
Reyes           Jo-Jo               4.80            3.73           16.22
Perez           Oliver              5.37            5.20           15.79
Trachsel        Steve               8.39            6.23           15.63
Chico           Matthew B.          6.19            4.61           15.38
Backe           Brandon             4.66            4.65           15.31
Byrd            Paul                4.46            4.68           15.24
Glavine         Tom                 4.47            4.81           15.09
Bush            David T.            5.85            4.71           15.00
Beckett         Josh                4.07            2.97           14.47
Arroyo          Bronson             5.74            3.56           14.29
Moyer           Jamie               4.56            4.35           14.10

Lucky
LAST            FIRST               ERA             LIPS ERA        HR/FB
Carmona         Fausto C.           3.10            5.75            2.94
Duchscherer     Justin              2.32            4.23            3.51
Lincecum        Tim                 2.15            3.77            3.57
Lohse           Kyle                3.87            4.59            3.66
McGowan         Dustin M.           4.26            3.94            4.00
Eveland         Dana J.             3.82            4.23            4.48
Matsuzaka       Daisuke             2.53            4.18            4.71
Contreras       Jose                2.76            4.06            4.76
Olson           Garrett A.          3.86            4.21            5.26
Lee             Cliff               2.45            3.12            5.33
Duke            Zach                4.19            5.04            5.33
Laffey          Aaron S.            2.98            3.70            5.45
Volquez         Edison              1.32            3.42            5.45
Pelfrey         Mike A.             4.65            5.18            5.48
Ponson          Sidney              3.88            4.64            5.88
Zambrano        Carlos              3.01            4.13            6.00

LIPS ERA


Unlucky
LAST            FIRST               ERA             LIPS ERA       LIPS ERA-ERA
Tomko           Brett               6.34            3.77           -2.57
Washburn        Jarrod              6.56            4.19           -2.37
Buchholz        Clay                5.53            3.32           -2.21
Arroyo          Bronson             5.74            3.56           -2.18
Trachsel        Steve               8.39            6.23           -2.16
Kennedy         Ian Patrick         7.41            5.48           -1.93
Badenhop        Burke               6.38            4.49           -1.89
Robertson       Nate                6.03            4.30           -1.73
Villanueva      Carlos M.           5.63            3.97           -1.66
Burnett         A.J.                4.98            3.34           -1.64
Bonser          Boof                6.00            4.38           -1.62
Chico           Matthew B.          6.19            4.61           -1.58
Cueto           Johnny              5.06            3.55           -1.51
Lilly           Ted                 5.23            3.75           -1.48
Silva           Carlos              5.96            4.56           -1.40
Francis         Jeff W.             5.53            4.19           -1.34
Miller          Andrew M.           5.65            4.35           -1.30
Oswalt          Roy                 5.38            4.08           -1.30
Weaver          Jered D.            4.79            3.55           -1.24
Meche           Gil                 5.42            4.18           -1.24
Bush            David T.            5.85            4.71           -1.14
Jimenez         Ubaldo              5.43            4.30           -1.13
Sabathia        C.C.                4.81            3.70           -1.11
Beckett         Josh                4.07            2.97           -1.10
Sonnanstine     Andy                4.88            3.81           -1.07

Lucky
LAST            FIRST               ERA             LIPS ERA        LIPS ERA-ERA
Carmona         Fausto C.           3.10            5.75            2.65
Volquez         Edison              1.32            3.42            2.10
Duchscherer     Justin              2.32            4.23            1.91
Saunders        Joe                 2.63            4.53            1.90
Floyd           Gavin C.            3.15            4.93            1.78
Matsuzaka       Daisuke             2.53            4.18            1.65
Lincecum        Tim                 2.15            3.77            1.62
Olsen           Scott M.            3.44            4.90            1.46
Dempster        Ryan                2.90            4.22            1.32
Contreras       Jose                2.76            4.06            1.30
Marcum          Shaun M.            2.52            3.64            1.12
Zambrano        Carlos              3.01            4.13            1.12
Sheets          Ben                 2.62            3.70            1.08
Danks           John W.             2.88            3.90            1.02
Hudson          Tim                 2.86            3.88            1.02
Garland         Jon                 3.87            4.87            1.00

Note on the numbers


Pitchers you see on the unlucky lists are those whose value is likely too low. That doesn't necessarily mean you want to acquire the pitcher, though. Steve Trachsel, for example, has the worst LIPS ERA of any pitcher with at least eight starts. He's on the unlucky list, but that's only because his actual ERA is a ridiculous 8.39. Also, while he's made eight starts, he has since been moved to the bullpen and is in danger of being released. Be sure to look at the player's actual LIPS ERA and his overall skill set before you go buying or selling.

Concluding thoughts


If you have some free time at 11 pm EST tonight, I'll be appearing on the Fantasy Baseball Roundtable radio show, which you can find here.

Posted by Derek Carty at 1:02pm

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Recurring lower leg strains of Albert Pujols


The troublesome left calf of Albert Pujols has struck again. This time, the Cardinals would be wise to shut him down to prevent further damage. In fact, they may have no choice but to shut him down after Tuesday night's injury.

He left the batter's box on a weak ground ball to first base in the seventh inning against the Reds and almost immediately pulled up lame and fell to the ground on the infield grass. He was carried off the field with assistance of two people, placing very little weight through the lower leg—indicating it was strained pretty badly.

The left calf has been hindering Pujols since June 3, and the fact that he continues to struggle with it means it had not healed as he continued to play. He also dealt with tightness of the left calf late in the 2007 season. Perhaps the bigger concern to me is that he has recurring calf tightness/strains, as well as a history of chronic plantar fasciitis of both feet. These two injuries are so closely interrelated that I felt the need to shed light on the topic.

As a clinician, to me this screams "biomechanical faults" (of the lower leg/feet).

If Pujols were a client of mine, I would immediately address any biomechanical faults at the foot, and assess his foot position. The feet are largely ignored when assessing lower extremity orthopedic pathology, and they should not be. Tight calves often accompany those with pronated (flat) feet, and the tighter the calves become, the more the foot is forced into a pronated (flattened) posture. When this happens, it places excessive stress on the plantar fascia, which runs from the heel to the metatarsals (balls of your feet).

I am not saying that Pujols definitely has pronated feet because I have no idea—this could just be a case of bad luck, poor healing/overuse, or other extraneous factors. However, I would certainly start by assessing his foot position, and perhaps by placing him in full-contact custom orthotics to position his foot in the optimal posture so that he is less likely to strain his calf.

It sounds like it is time to address the cause, and not just the symptoms!

Meanwhile, Chris Duncan is likely packing his bags, getting ready for the call-up to replace Pujols. He is a more-than-adequate replacement while Pujols recovers.


Posted by Chris Neault at 1:32am

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Fantasy Baseball Roundtable Radio Show: Recap


A couple of nights ago I was a guest on the Fantasy Baseball Roundtable Radio Show. If you weren't able to listen in live, you can listen to a recording of the show here. Thanks to Patrick DiCaprio and Mike Podhorzer of the Fantasy Baseball Generals for having me on. Also on the show was Brian Joura of the Generals and Eric Stashin of RotoProfessor.

The topics on the show included the off-season trade of Edinson Volquez for Josh Hamilton, the likelihood of Victor Martinez bouncing back, Aaron Harang's win total, and each participant's favorite "sell high" candidate. There was also some brief discussion of the Pitch f/x system and of the merits of the rotisserie and head-to-head variety of leagues.

Posted by Derek Carty at 10:04pm

Friday, June 13, 2008

Waiver Wire: American League (Week 11)


Not really much excitement in the American League this week, especially in the way of hitters.

American League


Francisco Liriano | MIN | SP: Liriano has put up three good games in a row in the minors, posting a cumulative 10.3 K/9 and 2.9 BB/9 in 18.1 innings. He was pretty bad before these three starts, at times downright awful, but we all know the potential is there. It's possible he'll get a callup by the end of the month, and if you're looking to take a risk, Liriano is a good pickup. He could be a home run pickup or completely bomb. Picking him up really depends more on your individual team situation than most Waiver Wire additions do, so I'm not going to list specific leagues to grab him in.

Clay Buchholz | BOS | SP: Similar to Liriano in that he's been relegated to the minors, although Buchholz's demotion was completely unwarranted. With the way Daisuke Matsuzaka has pitched this year (while healthy), Buchholz could come up and immediately be the second-best Sox starter. He could be getting recalled within a couple weeks (hat tip Melnick & Greco), so now might be a good time to stash him if someone in your league hasn't already. I kind of like what that article says about his arm angles. The upside of a fantasy ace is there, but he hasn't been great since returning from injury, so just keep your expectations in check.
Recommendation: Can be owned in 12-team mixed leagues. Should be owned in all AL-only leagues.

Radhames Liz | BAL | SP: Liz has taken Steve Trachsel's spot in the rotation and could be there to stay. He has always been able to strike batters out, but he's struggled with his control. His K/9 fell to 8.70 in Triple-A this year, but his BB/9 also fell to 3.75. It's not great, but it's better than it has been. Liz is a fly ball pitcher, though, and those numbers figure to get at least a little worse in the majors. He might be worth owning in some leagues and he has some upside, but I don't see him doing all that well this year. He will, at least, be better than Trachsel.
Recommendation: Should be strongly considered in deep mixed leagues. Should be owned in 10-team AL-only leagues.

R.A. Dickey | SEA | SP: Miguel Batista is moving to the bullpen and R.A. Dickey is moving into the rotation, at least for now. The M's say that they need Batista in the bullpen with J.J. Putz out, but he's been awful this year and Dickey could easily stay for the remainder of the year. Dickey isn't great himself, but he has good control and gets some ground balls. Worth a look in AL-only leagues.
Recommendation: Should be avoided in mixed leagues. Should be owned in 10-team AL-only leagues.

Brandon Morrow | SEA | CL: With J.J. Putz hitting the DL, Morrow becomes the closer in his place. Morrow has had control troubles in the past, but he's walking just 3.5 batters per nine in 18 innings this year and striking out 12.5. Morrow needs to be owned until Putz returns and can even be owned in certain leagues after that with all the struggles Putz has had this year.
Recommendation: Should be owned in all leagues.

Troy Percival | TB | CL: Percival is supposed to be activated today and should step right back into the closer's role. He's a risk to get injured again, but he's been very good while healthy this year and needs to be owned.
Recommendation: Should be owned in all leagues.

Joel Zumaya | DET | RP: Zumaya is shooting for a return next Friday. With the way Todd Jones is pitching, there is a decent chance Zumaya is closing games by the middle of July. If you're looking for a guy to speculate on, there aren't too many better options than Mr. Zumaya.
Recommendation: Should be considered in 10-team and owned in 12-team mixed leagues. Should be owned in all AL-only leagues.

Fernando Rodney | DET | RP: Rodney should be back on Monday, but with Zumaya coming back earlier than he was originally expected to, there's very little chance Rodney will be closing games this year. The Tigers have been been reluctant to make him their closer in the past, and with a guy as good as Zumaya around (assuming Zumaya is his old self, which may or not happen right away), I just don't see it happening.
Recommendation: Should be owned in leagues where setup men have value.

Ramon Ramirez | KC | RP: Might not be anything to worry about, but Joakim Soria missed Tuesday and Wednesday with "some tightness in his backside." Ramirez is next in line right now if Soria needs to miss time. If you're speculating, Ramirez is a guy you can keep in mind, though Soria did pitch yesterday
Recommendation: Should be owned in leagues where setup men have value.

Santiago Casilla | OAK | RP: Santiago Casilla could be back at the beginning of next week. He was one of the best relievers in baseball this year before his injury, and there's a chance he'd start closing games if Huston Street gets traded in July. There was talk before Joey Devine's injury that Devine could actually be the one to take the role, but he has only just begun playing catch again. There's still a chance this could happen, but Casilla is a decent speculatory pickup. If nothing else, he should put up elite numbers for a setup man, assuming he comes back fully effective. If you're in a league where you can stash a player in a DL spot for a couple of weeks after their real-life activation, Casilla and Devine would make even better pickups.
Recommendation: Should be owned in 14-team mixed leagues. Should be owned in all AL-only leagues.

Kelly Shoppach | CLE | C: With Victor Martinez sidelined for a while, Shoppach should take over catching duties. He strikes out a ton but puts up good BABIPs and has some power. Expect maybe a .240-.250 batting average with 20 home run production (assuming 500 at-bats), which is useful for a catcher. He'll likely be hitting at the bottom of the order, though, limiting RBI and run potential.
Recommendation: Should be avoided in mixed leagues. Should be considered in 12-team and owned in 14-team single-catcher AL-only leagues. Should be owned in all two-catcher AL-only leagues.

Ryan Garko | CLE | 1B: I've gotten a couple questions about Garko lately. His batting average and HR/FB are both down, though his contact rate is up to 85 percent. His BABIP is down to .281 after in was .322 last year and .333 the year before. Remember, though, that it was .266 in Triple-A in 2006.

Still, Garko is being more selective this year, swinging at 17 percent of pitches out of the strike zone as opposed to 27 percent last year (courtesy FanGraphs). He's making contact with them at the same rate, so the drop in BABIP really doesn't make much sense. He's swinging at better pitches, making contact at the same rate, but they're falling for hits at a worse rate. This doesn't seem to make much logical sense, and in the light of his prior BABIPs, I'd have to think he'll be bouncing back above .300. When he does, his batting average should rise.

He isn't hitting his homers quite as far as last year, looking at his HitTracker profile, yet at age 27 we'd expect him to be peaking. His power really isn't off by much (12 percent HR/FB last year and 8 percent this year), and he's hitting the same percentage of fly balls, so a power bounce back wouldn't really be a surprise. He's hitting cleanup for the Tribe, and I think Garko is a solid pickup.
Recommendation: Should be owned in 10-team mixed leagues. Should be owned in all AL-only leagues.

Jamey Carroll | CLE | 2B: With Asdrubal Cabrera in the minors and now Josh Barfield on the DL, Carroll will man second base for a while. He doesn't have much power, will only hit maybe .260-.270, but he does have a little bit of speed. He does take walks, though, and will likely hit at the top of the order, so he could score some runs.
Recommendation: Should be avoided in mixed leagues. Should be strongly considered in 10-team and owned in 12-team AL-only leagues.

Mike Aviles | KC | SS: There was news last week that Esteban German would be the everyday shortstop in KC, but it looks like Aviles is getting a lot more time than he is. Aviles puts up good contact rates and could hit .290 or so with a handful of homers and a handful of steals. He won't score or drive in many runs batting mostly eighth, but he still could have a little value.
Recommendation: Should be strongly considered in deep mixed leagues. Should be strongly considered 10-team and owned in 12-team AL-only leagues.

Frank Thomas | OAK | UT: The Big Hurt could be back next Friday once the A's are done playing Interleague games in National League parks. As I've said for a long time now, Frank Thomas is a great guy to own that very few people give credit to. He's older, lacks speed and has injury concerns, but he has big-time power and can still hit .270. He'll probably hit in the heart of the order too, helping with RBIs and with runs (although the speed diminishes some of his runs value).
Recommendation: Should be owned in 10-team mixed leagues. Should be owned in all AL-only leagues.

Posted by Derek Carty at 11:48pm


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