Monday, July 31, 2023

Newsletter Excerpt, July 31, 2023 -- "Thinking Inside the Box"

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Pirates 6, Phillies 4 (10 inn.)

                     IP  H  R ER BB  K
Bednar                1  0  0  0  1  2


One of the mysteries of each year’s deadline is sussing out what teams think of their own futures. David Bednar couldn’t be dealt at last year’s deadline, when the Pirates were years from contention, because of back problems. Now, he’s pitching well for a Pirates team that can reasonably expect to contend for a playoff berth in 2024. With Bednar controlled through 2026, will Ben Cherington want to trade one of the best relievers in the game?

The counter is that you can make relievers in a way you can’t make high-OBP outfielders or slugging third basemen. Bednar himself is an example, a 35th-round pick who had a 6.75 ERA when he was traded east from the Padres in 2021. The Pirates are getting good work from other teams’ rejects like Dauri Moreta, Ryan Borucki, and Angel Perdomo. In Bednar, they hold one of the best relievers in baseball and one who can be controlled for three more full seasons. Given the desperation out there for marginal pitching, the Pirates could return a haul for Bednar. He has far more value than David Robertson or Jordan Hicks. Pending the Mets and Justin Verlander, I think he’s the best player left who could be traded.

 

Sunday, July 30, 2023

Newsletter Excerpt, July 30, 2023 -- "Rangers/Mets Trade"

 

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"Scherzer allowed five homers on more than 1800 sliders from 2019 through 2022. He’s allowed nine this year on 306 sliders. Eyeballing the Rorschachs at Baseball Savant, Scherzer seems to be getting his slider up in the zone more rather than burying it down and away, and combined with the loss in velocity, the pitch is just sitting there. Scherzer has allowed 29 barrels this year, and his barrel rate is in the bottom 15% of all qualified pitchers. Scherzer’s walk rate is his highest in a full season since 2017, his strikeout rate his lowest since 2011.
 
"All this is to say that the Rangers aren’t trading for Scherzer’s old Strat cards, but for a pitcher who is probably more a #3 than a #1, with both performance and health risk."

Newsletter Excerpt, July 28, 2023 -- "Mailbag (Trade Deadline's Version)"

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Given the lack of starters/pitching on the trade market, maybe the Giants can get Sean Manaea and/or Ross Stripling off the books--both are signed for another season at $12.5 million each. Farhan Zaidi has had up till now good success buying these types of players, but these sure haven't worked out.

Assuming the return is a PTBNL or a non-prospect prospect, is this a sound strategy? Would anyone trade for them with the hope of getting them back to where they were performance-wise last year?  

-- Bryan D.

I understand this thinking as a fan, though I would separate the two pitchers. Stripling has never been that far above an up-and-down guy, and full credit to his agent for turning the second good season of his career into $25 million guaranteed over two years. I think Stripling has negative trade value, even in a rough market for pitching. 

Manaea, though, has a 27% strikeout rate and a 3.98 FIP (albeit a 4.98 xERA per Statcast). The hype on him this spring set expectations a bit high -- I was absolutely part of that problem -- but he’s been an asset for a team that has had to patch together the rotation for much of the season. He’s picked up nearly three ticks on his fastball this year, and I would hate to end up paying a team to pitch him against me when it comes together. If I hear this weekend Manaea has been traded to the Guardians or something, I’m all in on him. 

Realistically, I think it’s hard to trade either. Stripling isn’t good, Manaea is valuable to this roster, and both come with good salaries in 2024. 

--J.
 

 

Thursday, July 27, 2023

Newsletter Excerpt, July 27, 2023 -- "Pro Scouting"

 

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"It’s ironic, of course, that a hardcore stathead is writing up the virtues of scouts in 2023. I know there was a time I believed player evaluation, certainly of collegians, often of professionals, could be done using data -- what Law would call 'scouting the stat line.' I know now I was wrong about that, that the data can tell you the what, but that you need eyes on the player, as many as possible, to figure out the why. In this era of constant improvement, and an array of tools we couldn’t imagine two decades ago, scouts are going to identify players who have both a growth mindset and the skills to turn that into performance."

 

Wednesday, July 26, 2023

Newsletter Excerpt, July 26, 2023 -- "Whither the Cubs?"

 

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"The Cubs invested a lot in their 2023 roster, pushing the payroll to its highest since 2019, making big commitments to Swanson and Taillon, getting Stringer’s message out there. It hasn’t gone quite to expectations, with the team under .500, but to go back on that now would be a tough message to a fan base that has been alienated at all turns since 2016. The Cubs shouldn’t be sellers, and if anything, they should be soft buyers. The Cubs can still win the NL Central."

Tuesday, July 25, 2023

Joe Sheehan Newsletter, July 25, 2023 -- "Citizens Bank Park at Camden Yards"

 

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The Joe Sheehan Newsletter: Citizens Bank Park at Camden Yards
Vol. 15, No. 71
July 25, 2023

I had as much fun at the ballpark last night as I have had in a long time.

About once a year now, I make the trip down to Philadelphia for a game at Citizens Bank Park, sometimes invited by one friend, sometimes as part of a group of others. Last night, as it turns out, it was all the people in that last sentence going together. We went to dinner in South Philly, met up with some media types at the yard, and then settled in for a very entertaining night of baseball. It was, from start to finish, the way a summer night at the ballpark is supposed to be. We watched some ball, we caught up with each others’ lives, we made fun of the guy -- who may have looked like me -- who returned to the wrong section after a concession run...we had fun. That’s the only word for it.

It didn’t hurt that we got a fantastic game between two good teams. Dean Kremer and Christopher Sanchez provided a very surprising pitchers’ duel, each tossing a quality start across seven innings. For Sanchez, it was just the third time in ten professional seasons that he’d gone seven innings, and his first in the majors. Kremer continues to make his case as the best pitcher in baseball history with a man bun, allowing a run in seven frames. It wasn’t a case of generous umpiring, either. Neither pitcher needed even 100 pitches to go seven, and while there were some hard-hit balls, including homers by Jordan Westburg and Ryan Mountcastle, both Sanchez and Kremer were in control.

After they left, though...the Orioles fan in our group noted early that neither Yennier Cano nor Felix Bautista was going to pitch in the game, the two having been worked hard over the weekend. Once Kremer was pulled to start the eighth, our pal’s worry about the rest of that bullpen came to fruition, as Danny Coulombe and Bryan Baker combined to allow the tying run, and Cionel Perez attempted to blow a save in the ninth. Combined, Orioles relievers last night faced ten batters, allowed four hits and a walk, struck out no one, and retired just four of the hitters they faced. It was a bit of a miracle the Os held on, and it underlined their need for relief help behind Cano and Bautista. Shintaro Fujinami, picked up from the A’s, isn’t a high-leverage reliever.

The Orioles’ bullpen meltdown in the eighth, where they retired one batter and got two baserunning outs, provides an opportunity to make a point I have been hammering on Slack a bit: Not all baserunning outs are TOOTBLANS, and sometimes bad baserunning succeeds.

The latter is something I’ve been thinking about with Elly De La Cruz, who is one of the fastest, most exciting players in baseball, but who also makes really shaky decisions. On July 5 against the Nationals, with the Reds up 7-2, De La Cruz doubled leading off the eighth. He then stole third. Up 7-2 with nobody out, attempting a  steal of third is a bad choice. He was safe, so nobody talked about it -- Elly got credit for aggressiveness -- but the decision is just awful. De La Cruz has a number of these plays on his record, trying to take bases where the risk/reward calculus doesn’t make sense. He’s not the only one, and I’ll bet on him improving his judgment long before he loses his speed. Across the sport, though, we’re seeing a lot of questionable choices by baserunners. The Red Sox alone tried to set baserunning back 50 years in their Sunday night win over the Mets, nearly TOOTBLANing for the cycle. As triples are for regular cycles, baserunning outs at first base are for TOOTBLAN cycles. You have to get a little lucky.

What we got in the eighth inning in Philly last night, though, were hardly errors. With first and second and nobody out, Edmundo Sosa hit a rocket right at Ramon Urias, who snagged it and doubled Johan Rojas off at second base. That’s a baserunning out -- and it was just barely one -- but there’s no reason to call Rojas a nincompoop. He’s getting a good secondary lead as the tying run, and Sosa ripped the ball to the wrong guy.

Two batters later, after a Bryce Harper single, Nick Castellanos lined a ball into left-center field on a 3-2 count. Kyle Schwarber scored from second easily to tie the game, and Harper, running on the pitch, never hesitated in trying to score from first. It took two good throws by Colton Cowser and Jorge Mateo to nail Harper at the plate. Harper was out, but not by much. He forced the Orioles to make a play, and they did.

From the first-base grandstand, I had a great view of the whole play, and it was clear that Harper was going as he moved from second to third with the ball still not in a fielder’s hands. Now, I had nothing invested in the outcome, no dog in the fight, and yet that moment, when I realized Harper was going, sent a thrill through me. This is the stuff we wait for as fans, winning run coming home, outfielders charging, infielders getting set for a relay, catcher imploring all of them to get him the ball.

It was a baseball play. Great hitting, great running, great throws, great tag.

It was also one that made maybe a third, maybe more, of the crowd happy. The game was a sellout, no mean feat for any Monday night, and many of the 44,000-odd tickets sold were held by Orioles fans up from Baltimore. They made their presence known early, with the traditional “O” leading off the last stanza of the national anthem, and throughout the night. That was one of the wild things about Harper’s dash; usually, a play like that ends with a groan, the home team’s hero thrown out at the plate, but last night we got a fair number of cheers after James McCann got the tag down. The energy in the park was raised a level by the large contingent of Orioles fans, creating good sports tension inside the park throughout the contest. The size and enthusiasm of the crowd was a big reason why it was such a fun night. It had an October vibe.

Not everyone at the park had a good time. Trea Turner, in the midst of the worst season of his life, made a pair of errors, went 0-for-3, and was ejected in the fifth inning after being called out on strikes (correctly) and arguing. I can’t say I’ve seen Turner lose his temper very often, and I think his doing so last night was less about one call and more about four months of frustration. Turner, who signed an 11-year, $300-million contract off of three straight top-11 MVP finishes, is hitting .247/.300/.387, all career lows by far. He’s still one of the best basestealers in baseball, and he has a chance to set an esoteric record.

Volume and Efficiency (Most SB, 100% success rate)

Chase Utley       2009   23
Alcides Escobar   2013   22
Trea Turner       2023   21
Quintin Berry     2012   21
Kevin McReynolds  1988   21
Paul Molitor      1994   20


Kevin Kiermaier is 11-for-11 this season, so he could make this list as well.

I’m sure this will turn Philly fans -- who saved their loudest cheers of the night for Turner’s ejection -- completely around.

I watch most of my baseball on screens scattered around my apartment, and I enjoy that. My wish for all of you, as we head towards the back half of the summer, is that you get a night like I had last night, with good seats watching good ball with good friends.



Monday, July 24, 2023

Newsletter Excerpt, July 24, 2023 -- "Clarity"

 

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"The one thing we can probably say is there is no surprise waiting for us, no Juan Soto or Trea Turner deal. With Shohei Ohtani likely staying, the most valuable players on the market are rental #2/#3s like Lucas Giolito, Eduardo Rodriguez, and Marcus Stroman. The reputations of Scherzer and Verlander could mean they return more than their 2023 skill sets are worth. Rental hitters include Cody Bellinger, Jeimer Candelario, and C.J. Cron. The top controlled players include Verlander, Cease, the Pirates’ David Bednar, maybe the Royals’ Brady Singer and Scott Barlow, and the A’s Paul Blackburn."
 
 

Sunday, July 23, 2023

Newsletter Excerpt, July 23, 2023 -- "The Buxton Problem"

 

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"Buxton’s inability to play the field traps Baldelli. Buxton is the team’s superstar, nominally, and he’s tied to the Twins through 2028 on a deal that guarantees him just $15 million a year. It’s not easy to bench him. On the other hand, the Twins have a lot of stick-first players who could fit at DH. Edouard Julien is hitting .310/.390/.551 while acting as a second baseman, and the Twins are trying Jorge Polanco -- on a minor-league rehab assignment -- at third base to accommodate that. Lewis will return in August, crowding the infield further. Miranda and Larnach played their way off the roster, but both have track records of hitting in the minors."
 
 

Friday, July 21, 2023

Newsletter Excerpt, July 21, 2023 -- "Birdland"

 

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"Few teams in baseball will have more ability to buy talent on the market. The Orioles do not have a contract commitment above the minimum salary on the books for 2024. Their projected payroll, looking at arbitration cases, comes in around $60 million. There isn’t a starting pitcher on the market, free agent or trade, that they couldn’t acquire for talent or money. We don’t talk about this much, but the Orioles’ laughably low payrolls in recent years, relative to revenues, should have created a war chest for use when the team is ready to win.

"The team is ready to win."

Wednesday, July 19, 2023

Newsletter Excerpt, July 19, 2023 -- "Landing Spots"

 

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"No, I want to see some unexpected buyer take a stand here. We’re looking for teams with a lot of young talent, especially talent that is clustered at a few positions -- teams that are going to have to clear out a logjam one way or another. We’re looking for teams that, by choice or circumstance, are less likely to sign Ohtani than the max-payroll squads. As I wrote recently, the trade value of rentals is as low as it’s ever been, even for stars. Ohtani, for all his greatness, has quantifiable and limited value to a new team: 200 or so PA of 160 wRC+ at DH, and eight to nine starts, maybe 55 innings, of a 3.50 FIP on the mound, plus a playoff run. That comes to two to three wins, with considerable error bars around that, and keep in mind that Ohtani has been struggling with a fingernail issue that has affected his pitching.

"Maybe the biggest factor, then, is identifying teams for which those two or three wins have the highest potential marginal value, the difference between being in and out of the playoffs, the difference between winning the division -- and a first-round bye -- and not.

"I came up with three teams, all of which could overpay in prospects, have a real need for what Ohtani brings on the field, are positioned to get maximum value from marginal wins, and are unlikely to compete to sign Ohtani this winter."

 
 
 

Tuesday, July 18, 2023

Joe Sheehan Newsletter, July 18, 2023 -- "Competitive Balance"

 

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The Joe Sheehan Newsletter:
Vol. 15, No. 66
July 18, 2023

A few days past the All-Star break, 58% of the 2023 season has been played. That number will be well over 60% by the time we hit the trade deadline in two weeks. Trade rumors have come to dominate the conversation more than any other topic, certainly more than anything on the diamond, with Shohei Ohtani the point of overlap between the off-field chatter and the on-field activity. More on that topic tomorrow.

Today, though, let’s take a second to consider just how good baseball’s competitive balance is. Thirty teams are approaching 100 games played, four months of baseball, and only a small handful have been clearly eliminated from contention. The A’s, Royals, Nationals, and Rockies are all at least 14 games from any sort of playoff berth and, at that, they weren’t trying to win anyway. Two more teams, the Pirates and Cardinals, are 11 games out in both the NL Central and NL wild-card races. Those two are turning their attention to the 2024 roster -- the Pirates with call-ups, the Cardinals eyeing the trade market.

There are four teams in a bit of a liminal state, within 8 1/2 games of a playoff berth today, but all playing .470 baseball or worse. The Mets, Padres, and White Sox are three of the most disappointing teams in the game, while the Cubs are about where they were projected to be, even after spending a lot of money last offseason. All four will probably land as soft sellers over the next two weeks, though the teams’ overall situations, considering talent base, payroll, and future roster makeup, make that a complicated decision.

All four of these teams are close enough to a playoff berth, and invested enough in 2023, that a six-game winning streak or taking nine of ten would probably move them out of this group. The White Sox have series with both the Twins and Guardians before the trade deadline, giving them a puncher’s chance at changing their story.

Even if you peg all four as sellers, though, that’s still just ten teams, of 30, who aren’t contenders nearly four months into the season. Baseball is still suffering from the lies of the Bud Selig Era, when the man tasked with leading baseball spent decades selling the idea that only a small handful of teams had a chance to win the World Series, a chance to contend for the playoffs, all as part of a long-term strategy to mold the sport’s business to the whims of its worst owners. It was a lie then -- even with smaller playoff fields, most teams went into a season with a fair chance to be in them. Selig’s lies, accepted and reported as truth, have been in the sport’s water supply for my entire writing career, and have poisoned two generations of fans and media.

The fact is, as we approach the 100-game mark, 20 teams are within 5 1/2 games -- within a good week -- of a playoff berth. Some of those are very good baseball teams, like the Rays, Rangers, and Dodgers. Some...aren’t, like the Twins, Guardians, and Tigers. As we’ve learned over 30 years, though, the baseball playoffs don’t really distinguish between the two. If you’re good enough to make the playoffs, you’re good enough to win the World Series, and as of July 18, two-thirds of the league has a shot at the playoffs.

This isn’t that unusual a scenario, either. The trade deadline serves as an opportunity for teams to self-define. Last year, 12 teams were sellers, based on their actions, and the Orioles’ place on that list was controversial. In 2021, the split was 16 buyers and 13 sellers, though with two fewer playoff teams. I didn’t publish a split in 2019, the first year of the single deadline, but just reading my coverage it looks like another 16 or 17 teams were buyers, again with a smaller playoff format.

There are 20 teams within 5 1/2 games of a playoff berth today, and four others inside 8 1/2 games. For a league that plays 162 games over 187 days and lets just 40% of its teams into the playoffs (smallest field of the major U.S. sports), that seems to be as good as you could possibly hope for.

Bud Selig lied to you. Baseball’s competitive balance is just fine, and if you don’t believe me, believe the front offices, who will spend the next two weeks showing you how many of them have hope and faith.

 
 
 

Monday, July 10, 2023

Newsletter Excerpt, July 10, 2023 -- "Thinking Inside the Box"

This is a preview of the Joe Sheehan Baseball Newsletter, an e-mail newsletter about all things baseball, featuring analysis and opinion about the game on and off the field from the perspective of the informed outsider.

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Cardinals 4, White Sox 3 (10 inn.)

E: Gorman (5), Contreras (4), Goldschmidt (2)
PB: Contreras 2 (4)
CS: Goldschmidt (2), DeJong (3)


The Cardinals won this game.

There are a lot of reasons why the Cardinals are having their first lost year since 1999, and high on the list is a shocking amount of sloppiness in the team’s second season under Oli Marmol. The Cardinals are last in the majors in Defensive Efficiency by nine points, 22nd in Outs Above Average, sixth in times caught stealing, dead last in stolen-base success rate, 28th in baserunning value. These numbers only scratch the surface of what it’s like to watch them play this year. They’re the most mistake-prone Cardinals team since Joe Torre was running the show.

It helped, yesterday, to be playing the AL’s version of the Cardinals. Kendall Graveman hit two batters in the ninth inning as part of a blown save, and the Cardinals got the stupid runner home in the tenth. The Cardinals have to fix their pitching, and they have to settle on an outfield. Those are the big things. Once those are in place, though, they have to find a way back to playing a more crisp, less mistake-prone version of baseball.
 

 

Saturday, July 8, 2023

Joe Sheehan Newsletter, July 8, 2023 -- "The Perez Pause"

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The Joe Sheehan Newsletter: The Perez Pause
Vol. 15, No. 64
July 8, 2023

It’s a surprise to me that some lessons have yet to take hold. From June 1, 2012:

Strasburg isn't in danger of being abused because no professional pitcher, and especially no young pitcher, is in danger of being abused. If he's merely treated like any 23-year-old starting pitcher, he will be well within the safe guidelines for pitcher usage. The special circumstance of "coming off Tommy John surgery" has to be balanced against the special circumstance of "flags fly forever”.

More than 11 years after I wrote that, we’re still fighting the last war. Since the season of the Strasburg Shutdown, 2012, just 65 pitchers baseball-aged 23 and under have thrown even 125 innings in an MLB regular season. Just 22 of those 23-and-youngers have thrown at least 175 -- about two a year, though one of those was the shortened 2020 campaign. Look at the previous ten-year period, from 2002 to 2011, and you find 110 young pitchers at 125+, and 63 at 175+. Go back ten more years -- which includes the two strike-shortened campaigns -- and you have 104 and 43.

Looking at this through the lens of pitch counts makes the case even more clear. In the last ten seasons, there have been a total of three 120-pitch starts by young pitchers, and just 26 115-pitch starts by them. You’re about as likely to see a perfect game as you are to see a young pitcher throw 120 pitches. For the ten years prior? Seventy-one 120-pitch starts, and 200 115-pitch starts. No young pitcher has gone 125 pitches in a game since 2009, none has gone 130 since 2006.

What was one of baseball’s biggest problems when I started writing about the game, the abuse of young arms by teams asking too much of them, no longer exists. It’s polio. It’s smallpox. It’s weekly magazines.

Per MLB.com, the Dodgers’ Bobby Miller is the best pitching prospect in baseball. He was 23 last year and threw 112 1/3 innings. He topped out at 103 pitches, and threw 100 or more just twice. Go down the list. The Guardians’ Gavin Williams threw 115 innings last year at 22, never more than 97 pitches in any one outing. The Giants’ Kyle Harrison threw 98 2/3 innings at 19, 113 innings at 20, and may not reach either number at 21 as he’s going to miss a month with a hamstring injury having thrown 56 1/3 innings. He’s been a pro for two years now and he’s thrown 90 pitches in a game four times. The Phillies’ Mick Abel is starting the Futures Game tonight; he threw 108 1/3 innings last year, is one pace for fewer than 120 this year. He has two 100-pitch starts and 13 at 90 or more, which makes him Wilbur Wood in this crowd.

For most of baseball history, pitchers were getting hurt because they were pitching too much, often at too young an age. In the 1990s, teams began to lower both game and season workloads, but pitchers kept getting hurt, so teams lowered workloads more, and pitchers kept getting hurt, so teams lowered workloads more, and now we have a sport in which the best pitching prospects arrive in the majors with basically no experience pitching tired or getting hitters out a third time.

And they keep getting hurt.

The reason, of course, is velocity. We’ve traded overwork injuries, usually to the shoulder, for overexertion injuries, usually to the elbow. Collectively, pitchers produce the same amount of energy and effort in 2023 as they did in 1983. The difference is at the individual level, where the pitchers concentrate that energy into fewer pitches, encouraged by teams that have the luxury of rostering 13 pitchers for each game and deploying max-effort pitchers in shorter and shorter stints.

Teams learned the right lesson initially, but have gotten caught in this cycle of thinking that if 110 pitches is safer than 130, then 90 must be safer than 110, and 70 safer than 90, until they’re barely developing pitchers at all. What pitchers are doing, though, is maxing out their effort for those 70 pitches, often blowing out their elbows in the process.

Andrew Painter threw 103 2/3 innings last year, threw more than 90 pitches twice, threw more than 80 pitches five times, and has spent 2023 rehabbing a sprained UCL in his throwing arm. Max Meyer was the third pick of the 2020 draft, threw 111 innings in 2021, and 61 in 2022 before his UCL blew out. Meyer had never thrown more than 92 pitches in a pro game when his elbow went kablooie. Kumar Rocker made six pro starts before needing Tommy John surgery. Dustin May has as many elbow surgeries as a pro (two) as 100-pitch outings.

All of this brings us to Eury Perez, the Marlins phenom who was sent down to Triple-A this week to limit his workload, per Craig Mish. What has that workload been? Perez has been a professional since 2021. At 18, in his first year, he threw 78 innings in 20 games, never more than 81 pitches, and even 80 just twice. Last year, it was 77 innings in 18 games, never more than 88 pitches, at least 80 six times. This year, Perez made the majors, and in 17 games he’s thrown 84 1/3 innings, topping out at 93 pitches, reaching 90 just three times. Eyeballing his underlying numbers, his velocity has held up, and aside from one inning against the Cobb County Gashouse Gorillas, his performance has as well.

The Marlins are pausing Perez because of an evidence-free belief that using him less today will keep him healthy tomorrow. What teams can achieve through workload reduction has long been achieved, though. The Overton Window on pitcher usage has moved so fast that Max Verstappen was seen driving the thing. Teams have done all they reasonably can do to keep overuse from being a factor in injuries. Pitchers no longer get hurt because they pitch too much. They get hurt because they pitch.

Twenty years and a couple of days ago, the Cubs sent a 23-year-old sophomore to the mound against the Cardinals. Mark Prior threw 114 pitches in seven innings, allowing four runs and striking out 11. Now, Perez is younger, but around the league, do you want to guess at how many pitchers 23 and under have thrown 114 pitches in a game this year? It’s zero. Last year? One, Hunter Greene, who did it twice. In 2021? None. In 2019? None. In 2018? Three.

The injury risk today isn’t cumulative the way it was with shoulders, the way it was on the 130th pitch of the night, the way it was 20 years ago when Prior threw 757 pitches in six starts in September. Workload just isn’t an issue any more, even for young pitchers. Eury Perez might blow out making three-inning starts for the Jacksonville...uh...Jumbo Shrimp?...or he might be Justin Verlander, and the only way we’ll find out is to pitch him. The Marlins’ use of him this year would have been considered “babying” not so long ago -- 17 starts in 90 days, none longer than six innings or 93 pitches. There is no reason to think Perez can’t keep throwing 90 pitches every fifth day. That’s a laughably low workload for a professional pitcher, even at 20.

The marginal risk of whatever extra pitches Perez would be throwing is notional, tied to the idea that more pitches equals more risk. That applied, in the original Pitcher Abuse Points research, to the pitches above 120, above 130, when pitchers were pitching tired. Eury Perez is never going to work that deep into a game. You’d arrest a manager who used pitchers the way Dusty Baker did for those 2003 Cubs. That fight has been long won. It had been won when the Nationals shut down Strasburg in 2012. Eleven years later, though, here we are.

There is no evidence that modifying Perez’s already conservative use will keep him from getting injured, and a lot of evidence that the innings he won’t pitch for the Marlins will be pitched by someone who makes the team more likely to lose.

 

Thursday, July 6, 2023

Newsletter Excerpt, July 6, 2023 -- "Fish Fly"

This is a preview of the Joe Sheehan Baseball Newsletter, an e-mail newsletter about all things baseball, featuring analysis and opinion about the game on and off the field from the perspective of the informed outsider.

You can subscribe to the newsletter for one year for $79.95 using your PayPal account or major credit card.

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"Ng has not been in Miami long enough, about 2 1/2 years, to have her influence on the team’s amateur acquisition bear fruit. She inherited Chisholm and Braxton Garrett and Eury Perez. Truthfully, one reason she got the job is because the Marlins had done such a poor job in the draft and international markets. You can see that in where the Marlins are getting production; of the 19 position players who have played for them this year, just two came out of the draft, and none from amateur free agency. Of the 24 pitchers they’ve used, just six have come from those paths. In total, the Marlins have less than four WAR from homegrown players. This isn’t your typical young team coming together, but rather an assembled roster playing at its peak.

"However they’ve been put together, the Marlins can pitch. Their starting rotation, with no Trevor Rogers, no Johnny Cueto, and a little too much Hoeing around, is 11th in the majors in ERA, fourth in FIP, fourth in strikeout rate, third in K-BB%. No group of starters throws harder -- a 96.3 mph average fastball, a half-tick above the team in second, a full tick above the one in third. The pen’s numbers don’t pop as well -- fourth in ERA, 13th in FIP, 11th in strikeout rate. They do limit walks, with the eighth-best walk rate of any relief corps. It’s mostly a Kim Ng Production, with Scott, Huascar Brazoban, Steven Okert, J.T. Chargois, and even A.J. Puk all picked up for free or nearly free. Rookie Andrew Nardi went full fastball/slider this year to become one of the toughest lefty relievers in the league."

 

Wednesday, July 5, 2023

Newsletter Excerpt, July 5, 2023 -- "Expectations"

This is a preview of the Joe Sheehan Baseball Newsletter, an e-mail newsletter about all things baseball, featuring analysis and opinion about the game on and off the field from the perspective of the informed outsider.

You can subscribe to the newsletter for one year for $79.95 using your PayPal account or major credit card.

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"More than half the league is within five wins of their pro-rated projected record, which is the range inside which variance can explain most differences. In addition to the Cubs, the Yankees and Rockies are exactly where they’re supposed to be. Some teams that feel like disappointments, like the Astros, Phillies, and Guardians, are within three games of my projection, basically a rounding error. Anchoring the evaluation of a team’s performance to a hard number helps to put performance in perspective."

 

Newsletter Excerpt, July 4, 2023 -- "Independence"

This is a preview of the Joe Sheehan Baseball Newsletter, an e-mail newsletter about all things baseball, featuring analysis and opinion about the game on and off the field from the perspective of the informed outsider.

You can subscribe to the newsletter for one year for $79.95 using your PayPal account or major credit card.

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"No, Ohtani’s greatness cries out for broader comparisons. Maybe he’s Michael Jordan, at his peak a devastating one-on-one scorer and a lockdown defender. Maybe he’s Stevie Wonder, winning three straight Album of the Year Awards from 1974 to 1977 while making music at a level few have ever reached. Maybe the comp is Al Pacino banging out 'The Godfather,' 'Serpico,' 'The Godfather II,' and 'Dog Day Afternoon' in four years in the early 1970s. The Beatles with every song in the top five in the spring of ’64. You’d no more use WAR to describe Ohtani than you’d use beats per minute to describe 'Can’t Buy Me Love.'"
 
 

Monday, July 3, 2023

Newsletter Excerpt, July 3, 2023 -- "Thinking Inside the Box"

This is a preview of the Joe Sheehan Baseball Newsletter, an e-mail newsletter about all things baseball, featuring analysis and opinion about the game on and off the field from the perspective of the informed outsider.

You can subscribe to the newsletter for one year for $79.95 using your PayPal account or major credit card.

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"So a player-development success like Duran, a seventh-round pick who was a second baseman at Long Beach State, is to be celebrated. Duran, who struggled to a .219/.269/.354 line in parts of 2021 and 2022 in Boston, has learned to hit the ball hard in 2023, posting the best contact-quality numbers of his career -- exit velocity, max exit velocity, hard-hit rate. Those four doubles yesterday? Three came off the bat at 97 mph and better. He’s getting better in center, fighting the position to a duel mostly thanks to his jumps, which Statcast rates as among the best in baseball.

"The Red Sox are one of the most interesting teams as we head towards the trade deadline. They’re a contender based on overall quality and position in the wild-card race. They also have only that wild card to shoot for, and one of the sweetest trade chips in the healthy-for-the-moment James Paxton."
 

 

Saturday, July 1, 2023

Newsletter Excerpt, July 1, 2023 -- "Market Shift"

This is a preview of the Joe Sheehan Baseball Newsletter, an e-mail newsletter about all things baseball, featuring analysis and opinion about the game on and off the field from the perspective of the informed outsider.

You can subscribe to the newsletter for one year for $79.95 using your PayPal account or major credit card.

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"The gap in the two returns for Chapman are an indication of how much has changed in MLB front offices since 2016. That trade, in fact, may have ended an era in which teams gave up top prospects for players with a year or less of control remaining. You can still get good returns at the deadline, as the Nationals have done in tearing down their roster by trading Trea Turner and Juan Soto, you just have to do it before the talent you have reaches its walk year. Look at what the Reds got for Luis Castillo, the Orioles for Jorge Lopez. Teams have all come around to the idea that rentals like Chapman, like Andrew Benintendi in 2022, like Kris Bryant in 2021, aren’t worth moving top prospects for."