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Showing posts with label 2018. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2018. Show all posts

Thursday, September 7, 2017

Brian Snitker isn't the Problem

You may have read that headline and thought this was going to be a post defending or advocating for Brian Snitker as manger. This is not that post. I don’t think Brian Snitker is particularly good at managing a baseball team and given the choice between a good manager or bad manager, I’ll take the good manager. But this isn’t the Braves problem. At least not their main problem.

You win based on your talent level. There are other factors that contribute to winning of course; luck, randomness but talent is the one most responsible and the one you can control most, and therefore the most crucial. Managers often get the axe when things don’t go well, creating this misconception that a great manager somehow holds the key winning while a bad one will be your downfall. The reality is managers get fired because that’s hell of lot easier than firing 25 players or firing yourself as GM. It’s the path of least resistance. Let’s not mistake it for some monumental change. A great manager adds maybe 2 wins to your team? A bad one probably cost about the same. There’s just not that much value to be had. And most a what a manager does isn't seen or quantifiable anyways. No, what moves the needle is talent. And the bottom line is Atlanta doesn’t have enough talent.

Not having enough talent and having a bad manager is akin to having a broken pinky and a gun-shot wound. Yeah, eventually you’ll want to address that broken pinky just because life is better with a fully functioning pinky but it’s hardly the thing holding you back. The Braves have to get substantially better on the field or what they have in the dugout will cease to matter. 

We'll go position by position.

Freddie Freeman is amazing. This isn’t news. Get him healthy and first base is taken care of for the foreseeable future.


Ozzie Albies looks like the guy he’s been billed to be the last few years. Dynamic, young, a little more powerful than he may appear to have and very likely the second baseman of the future. You’re set there.

Shortstop is where it starts to get a little fuzzy. Dansby Swanson has eased the minds of a lot of Braves’ fans with the way he’s played since returning from demotion but the overall numbers are still bad. Him turning into a solid, everyday player would go a long way for the organization and he’ll at least get every opportunity to do just that.

Third base is a black hole. I wrote a couple weeks ago about Atlanta’s struggles finding a 3B since Chipper Jones retired and they haven’t solved them yet. Plenty of people will tell you Johan Camargo or Rio Ruiz will fill that spot but I’m not sold on either one as an everyday guy. You could potentially look at a platoon here but this is a spot I think Atlanta needs to be looking at serious upgrades. They could change the dynamic of the their whole lineup if they go and get legitimate guy for third and use guys like Camargo and Ruiz for the bench.

Right field is a weird problem. I say weird because Atlanta has an elite talent ready to step in and take that role for the next decade in Ronald Acuna. But they have a tricky path in clearing space for him. Nick Markakis is still under contract for next year at around 11M and has shown yet again this year he isn’t worth giving a full-time job too. His contract is underwater at this point and the Braves will almost certainly have to eat a chunk of it to move him. I’d like to say that’s certainly what they’ll do but this front office has already had to convince ownership to pay players while they play for another team and there may be more coming after Markakis so how they handle this will be interesting. Whatever they do with Markakis, bottom line is right field needs an upgrade which means Acuna needs to play.

Center field is set. Ender Inciarte is tremendous and there's zero reason to mess with that position at all. Moving on.


Left field. Oh boy. This is the biggest headache facing Atlanta, at least among position players. Matt Kemp is a replacement level player making a ton of money and signed for another 2 seasons after this one. He's absolutely, 100% not an outfielder anymore and should be playing out the rest of his career as a DH in the AL. Problem is how to get him there. Teams aren’t lining up to trade for a guy putting up his numbers, making his salary and this is another scenario where Atlanta most certainly will have to eat a large portion of the contract to move the player. I just don’t know how much of this ownership is willing to do. Atlanta is a small market team when it comes to payroll. They have a hard enough time competing with the big boys when all their money is going to people playing for them. Paying guys to play for someone else gets old and there’s only so many times you can go to that well. However they do it, though, LF is spot in desperate need of real talent, and at least for now, there doesn’t seem to be a way to achieve that.

Catcher has the been the brightest of bright spots this year. Both Tyler Flowers and Kurt Suzuki have been way better than advertised. Flowers is under contract next year for a steal at 4M while Suzuki becomes a free agent. Suzuki has done enough this season to warrant a starting job next year which I bet he gets so my guess is Atlanta will have to find a decent back up somewhere. But given Flowers’ production as well as the other issues facing the team, this is one I’m not too worried about. Though I guess if we’re being prudent, we should assume Tyler won’t have the same BABIP luck next year and should expect a regression in his production but like I said, Atlanta has bigger fish to fry. If catcher is the biggest problem they have next year, then they’ve done a hell of job.

Starting pitching is most definitely a sore subject in the Braves offices at the moment. Atlanta comes in to tonight’s action with a starter’s ERA of almost 5. (4.90) This after Atlanta spent almost 30M in the offseason on three veteran starters that were supposed to stabilize the rotation. Combine that with the 5 or 6 SP prospects that have already debuted with average results and you can believe starting pitching will once again be the main priority this offseason. It’s easy to just say let kids pitch but each one of the guys that have appeared so far has major red flags in their profile. Whether it’s not missing enough bats, not being able to get opposite handed hitters out or having serious command issues, it’s probably not wise to trust an entire season’s worth of innings to just prospects. Bottom line is Atlanta’s starters have produced a combined total of 5.4 WAR this year which will end up being behind several individual pitchers. There is no spot on the field where Atlanta needs to see a greater jump in production than starting pitching.

If starting pitching is the number one problem then the bullpen is number two. Braves are dead last in the NL in bullpen production and 29th in all of baseball. The principal problem is Jim Johnson who is owed over 4M next year while producing a 5.81 ERA this year and ultimately being removed from the closer's role. Braves have shuffled guys in and out all year with the overall results being poor. There have been some bright spots in Sam Freeman and Arodys Vizcaino as well as younger guys like Akeel Morris and A.J. Minter so not all is lost. Combine some of those guys with starters like Lucas Sims who probably becomes a reliever and there’s something to build on. But production has to go up. It’s almost impossible to achieve anything of worth in a baseball season while having one of the worst bullpen in the league. Unless you’re the Nats.


The bench has been one of the bright spots for the 2017 season. What started as a major weakness with names like Emilio Bonifacio and Chase d’Arnaud has evolved to include guys like Camargo, Ruiz and Lane Adams. I think Atlanta can put together a decently competent bench with just internal guys assuming they go outside the org to fill certain starting jobs. We’ll see.


So there you go. A lot of work to do. I count SS, 3B, LF, RF, SP and RP as areas Atlanta needs serious production increases. Some of that will happen internally of course. Dansby can bounce back, Acuna could be the starting RF, some of the starters could take a step forward, etc. But those steps forward aren’t guaranteed and should never be assumed. Especially the pitchers. It would be unwise for the Braves to leave all of this needed production up to young players. They need external additions as well. Probably at 3B. Probably in LF. Probably somewhere in the rotation. 

And yes, it be nice if they had a fully competent manager. Snitker is a problem but as the title says he isn't the problem. They could stand for an upgrade in the dugout, no doubt. But having a working pinky isn’t worth much if you died from that gun-shot wound.

Friday, September 1, 2017

Introducing Tony Sanchez

Let's go to the annual Baseball Prospectus from 2015 for the story on Tony Sanchez:
"Good news: Sanchez might eke out a career as a back-up catcher. Bad news: That's about the best-case scenario."
Cool.

By Eugene Kim on Flickr (Original version) UCinternational Crop) [CC BY 2.0],
via Wikimedia Commons
If you didn't hear - and judging by the mass hysteria on social media, you almost certainly did - the Braves traded Brandon Phillips yesterday evening for catcher Tony Sanchez. WOW.net contributor - and second biggest The Office fan at the blog - Stephen Tolbert went over the deal last night with a focus on Phillips and why the Braves got so little in return for a solid performer. Instead of repeating him, I want to look at Sanchez because I'm more into tackling the mundane and boring subjects in baseball. Speaking of which, did you see my Denny Neagle trade retrospective the other day? No? Oh...

Sanchez was drafted with the fourth overall selection of the 2009 draft out of Boston College but was born and raised in Miami. I was first introduced to Sanchez a few months later. After stays in the New York-Penn League and South Atlantic League, Sanchez finished up his first summer in pro ball by joining the Lynchburg Hillcats in the Carolina League. The 'Cats already had a future major league backstop in Eric Fryer along with a productive bat in Kris Watts, but Sanchez was the big name and with the 'Cats headed to the playoffs, the Pirates decided to give Sanchez a shot at managing a pitching staff in some important games. They would win the title a few weeks later.

Sanchez was immediately a big prospect, ranking #79 in baseball heading into his first full season by Baseball America. It was an injury-shortened, but solid campaign for Sanchez. Playing for the Pirates' new High-A team in Bradenton, he slashed .314/.416/.454 over 250 PA, though he would look pretty lost in a stint in the Arizona Fall League after the regular season ended. His prospect status began to take a hit from there. In 2011, now in the Eastern League, Sanchez slashed .241/.340/.318, which earned a return to the level to open 2012. He showed moderate improvement before a promotion to Triple-A. Three years after being drafted, Sanchez was already in Triple-A and while he was no longer showing up in Top 100's, there was still some hope he would be the long-term guy for the Pirates.

That, well, didn't happen. From 2013 until the end of 2015, Sanchez went back-and-forth between the Pirates and their top minor league team in Indianapolis. He had a few good runs mixed in, but was hardly noteworthy in the majors with a .259/.303/.378 slash over 155 PA. His longest look came in 2014 when a Russell Martin injury opened up some increased playing time. Sanchez wasn't especially bad, just forgetful, as he hit .267 with no plate recognition (3 BB/28 K in 80 PA).

Since leaving the Pirates, Sanchez struggled through a year of injuries and abysmal offensive production playing for both Buffalo and Sacramento. This year, he was sharing catcher duties with Carlos Perez in Salt Lake, the Angels' top minor league club. In a tremendous environment for hitters, Sanchez was hitting .272/.355/.374. For perspective, each of those marks is below the team average for this season.

Underwhelmed? As am I. As is everyone here at WOW.net. As is, I'm sure, John Coppolella. But as Stephen rightfully pointed out, the market was garbage this year for rental bats and the goes double for the market for Phillips, which was especially small with so many teams needing a 2B (and sometimes 3B). Sanchez provides the team some depth with Tyler Flowers on the mend and the Braves unsure if he'll play again this season. And to his credit, Sanchez's defense - his calling card since his BC days - remains very good. He's routinely placed very well in framing stats from Baseball Prospectus and, while he's not known for a big arm behind the plate, he does everything else you want from a catcher - much like Flowers.

Moving forward, this gets a bit murkier for Sanchez. With Kurt Suzuki a free agent, the Braves could bring back Sanchez for competition for next year's roster. The current backup to Suzuki, David Freitas, is basically a poor-man's version of Sanchez, interestingly enough - if there exists a poor man's version of a guy making the major league minimum. Freitas isn't quite as athletic behind the plate and has some of the same issues throwing out runners Sanchez has, but is just as good of a pitch framer and has displayed a similar offensive profile over the last couple of years.

For what it's worth, Sanchez could eclipse, if brought to the majors for little more than a week, one year of service time. If you were curious, Sanchez is also out of options.

To sum up, Sanchez is a capable defender and not much else. That might disappoint fans who wanted more if Phillips was traded. Certainly, I am disappointed, but realistically, my biggest hope was that the Braves would pick up some no-name arm that walks 10 BB/9 at rookie level but has big velocity. Suffice it to say, my expectations were really low in the event Phillips was dealt. Remember that the Braves gave the Reds Andrew McKirahan and a guy who they quickly released for Phillips while also getting the Reds to pay down over 90% of his salary this year. All in all, the Braves did well by Phillips to be open to a deal that would allow him an opportunity to play meaningful baseball. They did well for the team by opening up a spot in the lineup for Johan Camargo and Rio Ruiz. And the Braves did well for future players by finding Phillips a new home rather than cut a productive player simply to open up time for younger ones. Sanchez might not be an interesting pickup, but it's better than nothing.

Monday, August 14, 2017

Finding the Braves a 3B

Through their run of 14 straight division titles spanning from 1991 to 2005, the Braves were known for dominant pitching. Regardless of what happened the year before or what happened in the off-season or free agency, it seemed Atlanta always had pitching. Having 3 Hall of Famers anchoring your rotation will, of course, help build that reputation but starting pitching wasn’t the only position Atlanta didn’t have to worry about for the better part of two decades. The other was third base.


Chipper Jones held down the hot corner for the Atlanta Braves for pretty much he’s entire career. Excuse me, his entire Hall of Fame career. The only time he wasn’t there was when fellow all-star Vinny Castilla manned the positions for a few years in the early 2000s while Chipper patrolled LF. And even before Chipper arrived, former MVP Terry Pendelton was the primary 3B, starting over there from 1991-1994. Point is for almost a quarter century, 3B just wasn’t a position the Braves had to worry about. Production was always there.

Well that’s changed.

Chipper retired in 2012 and since the Braves have been, well terrible at 3B. How terrible? Here’s a chart of every NL team starting in 2013 through present day:





Apparently in the NL East you can be great at 3B, or awful. No in between. Anyways, as you can see, the Braves have been bad. I’m not going to go through all the names they’ve run out there since 2012, you guys know who they are. Point is it’s time for Atlanta to find a decent 3B. It is important to remember that uber-prospect Kevin Maitan most likely big-league position will end up being third base in my opinion. Others will disagree with that but I see a guy only 17 and already bordering on being too big to stay at SS. But we’ll see. Maitan is too far away to be counting on at this point anyways so Atlanta still needs to be looking.

And because of that, I put together a list of guys I think may have at least some chance of being Atlanta's 3B in 2018 and beyond. 

There are a few of things about the list before we get started:
  • This isn’t exhaustive. There will be guys you think of that I didn’t. It’s fine.
  • This isn’t a ranking. Where a guy shows up on the list isn’t significant. It’s just a list.
  • Defense matters. It’s a zero-sum game. A run saved is a run scored.
  • Everything is allowed. I look at trades, FA signings, internal promotions.
  • I’ll probably revisit this in December when we have a better idea of the market.


Ok. Off we go.

Mike Moustakas


So this is the name everyone is talking about, and rightfully so. Moustakas is having an incredible year offensively while maintaining league average defense. His 34 home runs rank 1st among all 3B in MLB and is on pace for around a 4 Win season. Moustakas is a free agent after the season and given he’s only 28 and the kind of year he’s having, he will be handsomely rewarded with what is sure to be a massive contract. And this is where it gets tricky with him and Atlanta. The Braves don’t swim in the deep end of the free agency pool and given some big market teams, including the Yankees, will likely be looking for 3B help, it’s very likely Atlanta will simply get outbid. Anything can happen so we’ll see but this looks like a match that makes more sense on paper than it does in the budget.

Adonis Garcia


No.

Eduardo Nunez


The best thing you can say about Nunez is he’s just solid. Nothing terribly spectacular about his game but no big glaring hole either. One plus for him is he’s able to make high levels of contact while maintaining decent power numbers. A 10% K rate with a .140 ISO is solid ratio and works plenty well as a solid major league starter. The defense is just meh, slightly below average but he isn’t going to kill you over there. Nunez is free agent at the end of the year and is expected to command significantly less salary than Moustakas so this one has some plausibility.

Johan Camargo


Everyone’s favorite story of the 2017 season, the once disappointing prospect has turned some serious heads with added pop, loud tools, and what looks to be a new dedication to the game. Johan had a really good spring and was close to making the team if not for some mental lapses and sloppy errors that convinced the organization to go with other, lesser players for the bench. Camargo’s solid play this year has led some to wonder if he should be the starting 3B next year, next to SS Dansby Swanson and 2B Ozzie Albies. Since it’s my list I’ll say I wouldn’t do this just because that .364 BABIP he’s running this year has only led to a 101 wRC+ and as one rapidly falls, so will the other. Combine that with a 5% walk rate and ultimately, I think Camargo is best suited for a utility role. But he’s definitely put his name in the ring which is amazing given where he was a year ago.

Yandy Diaz


Some of you have no idea who this but this is a guy I, personally, have been following for a while. Diaz is a 3B in the Indians farm system and has consistently put up some of the best numbers in minor league baseball. When we did our trade deadline extravaganza here at WalkOffWalk, we each picked a guy we “wish” the org would go get. My guy was Yandy. He’s not a guy you'll see on top 100 prospect list because his production has always been louder than his tools and prospect guys love tools. But here’s what he’s done the last few years in the upper minors:


2015 AA
143 wRC+
13.8 BB%
11.5 K%
2016 AA
144 wRC+
21.8 BB%
14.5 K%
2016 AAA
149 wRC+
11.3 BB%
16.8 K%
2017 AAA
166 wRC+
16.9 BB%
15.4 K%


Just insane production. And as far as his defense goes, Fangraphs throws a 60 on his glove and a 70 on his arm. The other great thing about Yandy is he’s barely seen any major league time. That means it’s at least 5 or 6 years of team control if you can acquire him. And given Cleveland already has an All-Star 3B in Jose Ramirez and are a win now team, I imagine Atlanta can find something to send their way in the offseason to make a deal work. This list isn’t a ranking but if it was, Yandy would be #1.

Rio Ruiz


Rio is another guy who has ridden the prospect roller coaster the last few years. If you don’t remember, Ruiz came over in the Evan Gattis trade with the Houston Astros and at the time, was a top 100 prospect. But after a disappointing 2015, Ruiz found himself at a crossroads in his career and there were many in the Braves organization who questioned his effort, specifically around keeping his body in shape. Well Ruiz took the criticism to heart and showed up in 2016 with a new body and a new game. Ruiz put up a 114 wRC+ for AAA Gwinnett in 2016 with an 11% BB rate and re-established himself as a legitimate prospect. He didn’t slow down in 2017 either, starting the year on fire and eventually earning a promotion to Atlanta. His big-league stint was rather lack luster, in part because of extremely inconsistent playing time, and eventually was sent back to AAA. It’s a bit of a mystery where the organization sees him long-term but if I had to guess, it would be more as a solid bench piece rather than an everyday starter. We’ll see though. Rio continuing to play well can only help his cause.

Eugenio Suarez


Suarez is another guy that, if you’re not as weirdly obsessed with baseball as I am, you may never of heard. But he’s a really good player. Suarez is the starting 3B for the Cincinnati Reds and is quietly putting up a very good season. In 2017. Suarez has a 120 wRC+ with 20 HRs and a 13% BB rate. He’s also an absolute vacuum cleaner defensively. Suarez is at +7 defensive runs saved for this season and while that’s much better than he’s ever posted, he’s always been at least above average with the glove. The reason the 26-year-old would be available is because the Reds have a 22-year-old stud prospect named Nick Senzel putting up a 188 wRC+ in AA. And when you have as many holes to fill as Cincinnati does, you can’t afford these types of redundancies on the roster, especially on their budget. My guess is they’ll move Suarez for help elsewhere and Atlanta would be wise to at least check in.

Travis Demeritte.


Last guy on the list (remember, not exhaustive) is Travis Demeritte. Coming into the year, Demeritte would have been near the top of the list of potential guys to man to hot corner for Atlanta in 2018 after the strong year he had in 2016. Even 6 weeks or so into the season, he was having a solid year, and most importantly had appeared to figure out his strikeout problem. But around mid-May, he just fell off a cliff. For the season, he’s still put up 15 HRs, a 10% BB rate and a league average OBA but the strikeouts returned in full force. His K rate is up to 27.5% on the season, and to make that profile work in the majors, you have to produce a ton of power and be quality with the glove. Good news for Demeritte is he has both a good glove and plus power but it’s unclear where the organization seems him now and seemingly unlikely he’ll see the majors in 2018 absent a strong finish to the season.


So there it is. An early look at some 3B options going into next year. Like I said at the top, we’ll look at this again in the offseason when we have a better idea of the market and have a few more names to go through.