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Better Know the Ones Left Off the Ballot #23: Jason Marquis

The report of this series’ death was an exaggeration. When will it stop? When I say. Which is not now. Anyway, If you don't know what this is, basically a bunch of players qualify for the Hall of Fame ballot (10 years in the MLB), but only a few make it on. This is thanks to a Screening Committee who screen who gets on by committee (wow who woulda guessed). Here we take a look at the people who got cut. I've done a couple more of these that you can check out at the bottom. On with the show.

Jason Marquis

Bill James Hall of Fame Monitor: 10
Career bWAR (15 years): 6.8 (4.3 w/o batting)
Stats: 124-118, 4.61 ERA, 93 ERA+, 377 G, 318 GS, 1968.1, 1174 K, 769 BB, 1.447 WHIP
League Leading Stats: Losses (16, 2006), Earned Runs (130, 2006), Home Runs Allowed (35, 2006)
Awards: All-Star (2009), Silver Slugger (2005), World Series Ring (2006)
Teams Played For: Braves (2000-03), Cardinals (2004-06), Cubs (2007-08), Rockies (2009), Nationals (2010-11), Diamondbacks (2011), Twins (2012), Padres (2013), Reds (2015)
Jason Marquis has one of the more intriguing Major League careers I've ever come across. In most cases, having 6.8 bWAR across your entire time in the league doesn't mean you regularly started MLB games for 15 years. But it appears Marquis, in addition to garnering staying power, got Luquis. Nope, didn't work. While he would have bad years, many times he’d have a good one or two right after. Thanks to an interestingly distributed amount of high highs and low lows, his overall career trajectory doesn’t resemble the normal gradual ascent and decline of a curve, but bears more similarities with an outline of a mountain range. Since he wasn’t on the ballot, we can take a look at all the stuff that happened. Did he deserve all the chances he got?
Marquis's career technically started after he got drafted, but I would be remiss if I ignored the time he pitched a no-hitter in the Little League World Series against Team Canada to secure third place. Anyway, Jason Marquis's career started after he got drafted. His 35th overall selection was by the Atlanta Braves, and a signing bonus of $600,000 led to him reneging his letter of intent to play college ball at Miami. It's fine, they made the College World Series for three straight years anyway. Marquis was touted as the best high school prospect out of his hometown of NYC since Manny Ramirez. The year before, Ramirez had been an All-Star, won a Silver Slugger, and finished 12th in MVP voting at the age of 23. No pressure kid. Oh, it's three years later and you haven't finished a season with an ERA below 4? Sounds like a bust to me. And at only 20 years old. Wait, you just started 6 games in high-A and allowed exactly 1 earned run while striking out 41? Okay maybe we spoke too soon. You can go to double-A. Marquis would only need one more year after that to prove his first three seasons were just tune-up years, even the one when he went 2-12. After a nice showing at AA at the beginning of 2000, the 89th-ranked prospect in all of baseball got called up to Atlanta in June to help in the bullpen. The call-up was courtesy of John Rocker threatening a reporter and the Braves telling him "no, you can't do that" by demoting him, so thanks John Rocker! Probably the first time that phrase has been said in a while. Marquis had been drafted as a starting pitcher, but the Braves of the 90s and early 2000s weren't exactly lacking in that department. His first appearance was in relief of Tom Glavine after a start against the Blue Jays got away from him, and it ended after one inning with Marquis delivering his first Major League strikeout against Shannon Stewart. The rest of his year would go rather sloppily, with a 6-run outing in late July punching his ticket to triple-A, and the September call-up that followed only really happening thanks to his prospect status. Thankfully, he did well enough the next spring training that it left no question as to where he'd start the season: on the Opening Day roster.
Marquis's 2001 season started when he was named the 92nd best prospect, slightly below where he was a year ago. Still, he was ready to go out and prove he could be better than whoever was 91st. What was their name, anyway? Some scrub no one remembers named Miguel Cabrera? Oh. Moving on, Marquis spent roughly half the year in the bullpen, with his first start came in May. Even with it being a spot start, you wouldn’t have known that after he hung up six innings of shutout pitching against the LA Dodgers, allowing just two hits and striking out five. What’s that? He was facing Kevin Brown who matched him blow for blow and finished the game with eight innings of nine strikeout greatness and the Braves lost on a walkoff Gary Sheffield home run? We can just ignore that bit. Marquis would finish the year as a member of the rotation, starting 16 games, the best of which was an 8-inning showing versus the Brewers where he struck out 13. Even showed up as a relief arm in the playoffs, finishing two NLCS games and allowing no earned runs. Four unearned ones, though. Braves lost that series to a five-year-old franchise from the desert, but they had hope for the future even as their pitching core was aging. Glavine, Maddux, and Smoltz were all over 35, though you wouldn't know it to look at their stats. Even so, Father Time is undefeated, so Atlanta had to find people to replace them. And in 2002, it seemed they had begun to do just that. Kevin Millwood, the 28-year-old established arm, would form a core of the future with the 25-year-old surprise named Damian Moss and the hotshot young gun, Jason Marquis. Or Glavine and Maddux could carry the rotation once again with ERAs under 3, Smoltz turned in a fantastic season in relief, Moss and Millwood could play third and fourth fiddle on the staff, and Marquis could put up an ERA of 5.04 and get demoted to AAA a couple times. Braves still made the playoffs again, but this time Marquis stayed home. Thankfully Atlanta still believed in him enough to keep him around, even after acquiring not one, not two, but three new rotation arms in Mike Hampton, Russ Ortiz, and Shane Reynolds. Unfortunately for Marquis, a move to the bullpen turned out to do the exact opposite of what it did for Smoltz. A 5.54 ERA, 18 walks to 19 strikeouts in 40.2 innings, and extended stays in triple-A was not what anybody wanted for him. Furthermore, after the "Chipper Jones in Left Field" experiment returned less-than-stellar results, his move back to third necessitated a new outfielder. When GM John Schuerholz learned former uber-prospect J.D. Drew was available from the Cardinals, he pounced, sending a package in return that consisted of relief pitcher Ray King, a guy no one remembers named Adam Wainwright, and the struggling, but promising, Jason Marquis. Little did Schuerholz know, Marquis had just hit the nadir of his Major League career's first valley, and a trade provided him with some climbing gear.
The 2004 Cardinals were very good. Very very good. On a scale from 1 to Good, they were, like, super good. When the heart of your lineup is Albert Pujols, Scott Rolen, and Jim Edmonds, all of whom had OPSes north of 1.000 and over 100 RBIs a piece, your team is really good. And thanks to an offseason move, the team had also found its new ace starting pitcher. Even if his 2002 and 2003 years left a lot to be desired, there was no question this was a guy who’d anchor the rotation for years to come. I am, of course, talking about Chris Carpenter. Jason Marquis was pretty good too. In his age-25 season, he put together a fantastic year, especially considering where his career had begun stats-wise. 15-7, 3.71 ERA, and 138 strikeouts slotted him as a serviceable enough number-2 starter. Even got a start in the NLDS, a start in the NLCS, and a start in the World Series. Sure he might have allowed 9 runs across those three starts but... let’s move on. One notable stat about Marquis takes the form of a slashline: .292/.297/.375. If you guessed that was his batting average allowed in some weird situation, you’d be wrong. Those mediocre hitting numbers were his. As a pitcher, Marquis’s rate stats were, across the board, better than Mike Matheny, his catcher. Thanks to a 21-for-72 year at the plate, Marquis added 0.7 oWAR to his year, and was actually more valuable by bWAR (3.1 with batting) than Chris Carpenter (2.8). Even as the Cardinals got swept in the World Series by the Red Hot Red Sox, St. Louis was clearly in a spot to compete for a while. A trade for Athletics starter Mark Mulder seemed to solidify that fact, and with a rotation consisting of Carpenter, Mulder, Marquis, Jeff Suppan, and Matt Morris, the Cardinals looked nice on the pitching front. Remind me how that offense was doing again? And they added Larry Walker to it at last season’s deadline did they? Heaven help the National League.
Even with a midseason injury to Scott Rolen, the Cardinals' 2005 offense still produced 805 runs on the year. Their starting pitching staff responded in kind, statrting all but two games, with the worst ERA among them being 4.13. It’s no wonder the team won 100 games. Speaking of starting pitchers, guess who had that 4.13 ERA? None other than Jason Marquis. He did lower his WHIP, but a 13-14 record and just 100 strikeouts in over 200 innings got him relegated to a bullpen role in the playoffs. But nobody cares about that. Everyone wants to know is how he did as a batter. Brace yourselves. In 2005, Jason Marquis batted .319/.326/.460 with a 103 OPS+. He accrued 1.1 oWAR off 27 hits, 10 for extra bases, including a home run off Wandy Rodriguez. Also, because Tony La Russa is an absolute madman, Marquis actually pinch-hit a couple times. He did so on not one, not two, but nine occasions, three of which ended in hits because nothing makes sense. Across 91 plate appearances, he only struck out eleven times. Guess who won the Silver Slugger that year. Close, it was Marquis. Oh his fellow Cardinals starter Chris Carpenter won the Cy Young? Absolutely nobody gives a hoot. Clearly, Marquis was destined for greatness in 2006, where he’d inevitably bat over .400 and hit 10 home runs. Or… maybe not. 14-for-78, enough for .179/.210/.256. Ouch. At least he made up for it with his pitching, right? Oh no. An ERA of 6.02, career high 75 walks given up, and the league leader in losses (16), home runs allowed (35), and earned runs allowed (130). Yeah, I don’t blame the team for leaving you off their playoff roster. At least you have those other two years to fall back on for arbit… that was your contract year? Well that sucks. And just like that, Jason Marquis was unemployed. However, once he got an offer, his career’s terrain would prove to be rising once again.
When it came to 2007 free agent signings, Marquis’s was not marquis. That’s a joke ladies and gentlemen. Due to his recent struggles, MLB Trade Rumors didn't mention his name in the top 50 free agents. Nevertheless, in mid-December, he accepted a 3-year, $21 million deal with the Chicago Cubs. Maybe they saw that outside two really bad starts that he suffered because of a tired bullpen, his ERA was actually 5.13. I still wouldn’t pay a starter with that ERA 7 mil a year, but hey what do I know. His next two seasons were remarkably pedestrian, going a whelming 23-18 with a cromulent ERA of 4.57 for an astoundingly regular ERA+ of 101. He even found time to strike out the incredibly middle-of-the-road total of 200 batters while walking a radically mediocre number of 146 batters. For you see, we’re experiencing a flat plain in his mountain range. Thanks to his gargantuan propensity for average performance on the mound, Marquis looked attractive to a team where ordinary pitching numbers were viewed as much more extraordinary: the Colorado Rockies. Appropriate. In January of 2009, the Cubs traded him there for relief pitcher Luis Vizcaino. Perhaps in Denver he’d experience a resurgence in his bat as well, since apart from three home runs, his .168/.193/.282 over the past two years was another perfectly average performance from a pitcher. Sadly, he’d only go 11-for-64, with a paltry 3 doubles accounting for all his extra base hits. Though that would remain the same, he experienced a resurgence in pracitcally everything else. In 2009, Marquis tied his best win total with a 15-13 record, assembled the second best ERA he’d had as a full-time starter at 4.04, got voted to the All-Star team for the first time in his career, and threw his hat in the ring for best pitcher on a Rockies staff that surprised many people. Add on the most recent Maddux by a Colorado Rockie (Rocky?), and you got yourself a real nice ascension to a peak. See Jason? That’s how you do a contract year. His 3.5 bWAR was the second highest total on a Colorado team that went to the playoffs, though they were quickly brushed aside in the NLDS by the defending champ Phillies. While Marquis would return to unemployment, he would do so with his head held much higher than last time. After all, he had just tied Sandy Koufax for the most consecutive seasons with at least 10 wins by a Jewish pitcher (6). By the way, Marquis is Jewish, and this is the first and last time I will mention that fact because if I talked about it anymore it would only be in the context of horrible jokes on account of me being a terrible person.
So whe he hit fre agency after 2006, Marquis didn't make MLB Trade Rumors' top 50. After this season, though? All the way up to… wait let me scroll down… number 30! Improvement baby! And yet, when the Nationals signed him to a two-year, $15 million deal, they apparently forgot what happens after a peak in a mountain range. The 2010 season saw Marquis get knocked out for close to four months with bone chips in his elbow. That or the diagnosis for “elbow shingles” got autocorrected to “elbow Pringles” and the doctors extrapolated. Even when he didn’t have Kellogg's-sponsored joint pain, Marquis was not effective on the mound. In 13 starts, he went 2-9 and allowed 43 earned runs while walking 24 in only 58.2 innings pitched. It also marked the first time he was on a team that didn’t finish the season in the playoffs. However, rather than releasing him and cutting their losses, the Nationals appeared to have some insight as to how he worked. Marquis was kept in the rotation for 2011, and rewarded Washington with 20 games started, an 8-5 record, and a 3.95 ERA. Even Madduxed Tim Lincecum and the Giants for good measure. He did so well the Nationals decided to trade him at the deadline to the surprisingly competitive Arizona Diamondbacks. 3 starts and 16 runs allowed later, a comebacker broke his leg and he was done for the season. With his range's recent dip below sea level, he was once again left off the top 50 free agents list, and a seven-start stint with the Twins that ended in late May of 2012 after an 8.47 ERA did him no favors. At this point, the only chance Marquis had would probably be a team that had nothing to lose picking him up. So, naturally, the day after he got let go in Minnesota, he accepted an offer from the San Diego Padres. A 6-7 record was fine, and a 4.04 ERA was much less impressive here than it was in Colorado, but that was enough of a climb from his previous valley for the Padres to bring him back. Not that it mattered, cuz, you know, 2012 Padres. What came back in a major way, though, was his hitting. Marquis’s 2012 season ended with him going .281/.303/.375 at the dish. All were his highest by far since he won the Silver Slugger. Pitching-wise, His next season wasn’t half bad either, finishing the year 9-5 in 20 starts. When it came to his other stats, talk about a plateau. His ERA went from 4.04 in 2012 to 4.05 in 2013. His strikeout total was 79 in 2012 and 72 in 2013. What did take a dip this time was, tragically, his bat. Just 5 hits in 43 plate appearances, a .119 batting average. He might have been able to improve it had he not elected to undergo Tommy John surgery that July. And unfortunately, that decision would more or less mark the end of Marquis’s landscape painting of a career, because it was all downhill from there. A minor league offer from the Phillies was accepted once he came back, but only 8 triple-A starts later he was gone again. The famously awful 2015 Reds gave him a shot, but after 34 earned runs in just 9 starts and 47.1 innings, even they saw the valley he was headed for, and bid him farewell. While he never officially retired, nobody’s offered him a contract for five years, so it’s relatively easy to say that his last mountaineering trip was to Old Man’s End Of A Baseball Career Gulch.
Jason Marquis is an anomaly. Practically nothing about his career was predictable. With a good long Major League experience like he’s had, it’s amazing all the stuff he’s packed in. Starting games for 9 different teams, getting a World Series ring after an awful season, finding out just how high and low his career can go, and so much more. Truly a fascinating ball player. Thing is, fascinating players don’t get on the ballot if they haven’t been consistently good. Nothing was consistent about Jason Marquis, so that’s not where he belonged. And who knows, maybe he comes back for one last hurrah, since from what I can tell, his retirement papers haven’t ever been officially submitted. Maybe he couldn’t find them after his vision was obscured by his massive schnoz. (There were gonna be a lot more big nose jokes before I found out he was Jewish, so to limit my cancelability I’m only doing one)
Jason Marquis would visit the Hall of Fame in a Cardinals hat for his 42-37 record, 334 strikeouts, and World Series Ring with the team. Preferably in a Rockies jersey and hiking boots to symbolize just how up-and-down his career was.
Hey remember all these guys? No? Well you can read about em anyway.
#1: Randy Choate
#2: Kevin Gregg
#3: Dan Uggla
#4: Josh Hamilton
#5: Delmon Young
#6: Willie Bloomquist
#7: Grady Sizemore
#8: Kevin Correia
#9: David DeJesus
#10: Rafael Betancourt
#11: Clint Barmes
#12: Adam LaRoche
#13: Grant Balfour
#14: Randy Wolf
#15: Rafael Soriano
#16: Chris Denorfia
#17: Bruce Chen
#18: Cody Ross
#19: Scott Baker
#20: Jeff Francis
#21: Aaron Harang
#22: Corey Hart
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A Toast to the 2020 New York Mets

Before I get to the 2020 Mets, let’s address the elephant in the room: The Mets are finally under new ownership. Extremely rich man Steve Cohen bought the team from the long-cursed Wilpons for $2.4 billion, finalizing the sale on November 6. Not only is he ludicrously wealthy - he once bought a bronze sculpture by Alberto Giacometti for about the same amount of money as Patrick Corbin’s contract - he’s a long-time Mets fan, revealing late in November that he owns the ball that Mookie Wilson hit through Bill Buckner’s legs in the 1986 World Series, and intends to move it into the Mets Museum at Citi Field.
Now, onto the actual baseball programming. The 2020 Mets were… kinda lousy, not going to lie. Noah Syndergaard underwent Tommy John surgery and Marcus Stroman opted out of the season, and the thinned-out pitching staff had the 12th-best ERA in the National League, at 4.98 (86 ERA+). The offense had the best batting average, second-best OBP, and fourth-best SLG in the NL, but thanks to an agonizingly unclutch first half, they wound up seventh in runs scored. They missed the expanded playoffs by three games and tied for last in the NL East.
But they still had their moments.
Opening Day, July 24: Jacob deGrom and three relievers combined on a 1-0 shutout of the Braves, with Yoenis Céspedes mashing a solo homer in his first major league game since 2018 to provide the only run of the game.The Mets’ Opening Day record improved to 39-20, the best winning percentage of any team - even more impressive when you consider the Mets lost their first eight Opening Days from 1962-1969.
August 28: On the same day that Steve Cohen entered exclusive negotiations to buy the Mets (bye-bye A-Rod and J-Lo), the Mets swept the Yankees in a doubleheader at Yankee Stadium. In game one, a trio of late homers from Pete Alonso, Dom Smith, and Jake Marisnick gave the Mets a 6-4 victory. In game two, Amed Rosario hit a walk-off two-run homer off Aroldis Chapman, and may I repeat this happened at Yankee Stadium. Beautiful.
September 3: In the team’s first game after the passing of Mets legend Tom Seaver the team took the field to play the Yankees with dirt on their right knees to honor The Franchise. In the ninth inning, with the Mets trailing 7-6, J.D. Davis took Chapman deep to center field to tie it; in the tenth, Pete Alonso blasted a walk-off homer.
September 9: Trailing the Orioles in the late innings, Michael Conforto made an absurd catch to save three runs; Andrés Giménez popped an opposite-field homer to tie it, and Alonso gave the Mets the lead for good with a homer to center field.
Players:
Infield prospect Andrés Giménez finished seventh in Rookie of the Year voting, splitting his time between shortstop and second base and posting a 102 OPS+ to go along with solid defense and baserunning. Very enjoyable to watch. (update: see below)
Pitching prospect David Peterson posted a 3.44 ERA in 49.2 innings, flashing impressive poise and quality stuff in his first taste of the majors.
Jacob deGrom threw a 102-MPH fastball. By 2025 he’ll be throwing Mach 7. He also had another outstanding season, as he pitched to a 2.38 ERA, led the NL in strikeouts, and finished third in the Cy Young voting. On September 6, he induced 35 swinging strikes in a game against the Phillies, tying the most in a game since pitch tracking began in 2008.
Michael Conforto hit .322/.412/.515, the best numbers of his career to date. I can actually hear newyorkmets shouting EXTEND CONFORTO as I type this.
Edwin Díaz bounced back from his career-worst 2019 season to pitch to a 1.75 ERA/2.18 FIP, including a preposterous 45% strikeout rate (25.2 IP, 110 batters faced, 50 strikeouts). (Kindly do not ask about how his co-acquisition’s doing.)
Dominic Smith hit .316/.377/.616, with a whopping 32 extra-base hits (second in the NL behind Freddie Freeman’s 37, except in 63 fewer plate appearances). He finished fourth in the NL in OPS. That, combined with his blossoming as a leader in the wake of the summer’s Black Lives Matter protests, earned him a 13th-place MVP finish and the hearts of the Mets fanbase.
Offseason:
As of this writing, the Mets have re-hired Sandy Alderson as president of baseball operations, hired Jared Porter Zack Fox as GM. They have also signed reliever Trevor May (2 years, $15.5 million), catcher James McCann (4 years, $40.6 million), and Marcus Stroman accepted the qualifying offer after opting out of the 2020 season.
AND THEN THEY TRADED FOR FRANCISCO LINDOR AND CARLOS CARRASCO HOLY $&@%-
(Going back to CLE: Andrés Giménez, Amed Rosario, Isaiah Greene, and Josh Wolf.)
So, the 2020 Mets. We said farewell to Tom Seaver, said hello to Steve Cohen AND FRANCISCO LINDOR, and chucked the Wilpons out the door. 2021, here we come.
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I love Trea Turner and you should too: a brief history and analysis on baseball's most underrated shortstop

I love Trea Turner and you should too: a brief history and analysis on baseball's most underrated shortstop
\*normally i don't use capital letters on this website. but in in the interest of making the below more readable, an exception will be made. for trea.*\**
The recent outcry over the All MLB Team and how Trea Turner was blatantly subbed proves to me that baseball is finally woke to how great the current full time shortstop for the Washington Nationals organization truly is. I thought I would write this post, my first analysis, to give the new members of the Trea Turner hype train some more background on how good of a player he has become. Hop onboard.

A speedy boy is born

Trea Vance Turner was born on June 30th, 1993 in Boynton Beach, Florida and presumably was a very cute child. His Zodiac sign is Cancer. Foreshadowing his future residency at the Nationals' spring training facilities in the Palm Beaches, Trea played high school ball in Lake Worth, Florida. He received scholarship offers from only two colleges, and in 2011, he was selected in the 20th round of the draft by the Pittsburgh Pirates - though he would end up choosing to attend NC State and play for their division I baseball team where he served at third base and shortstop.
College is truly where Trea would flash his chops on the big stage - and impressive chops they were. He started early - his 57 stolen bases in 2012 (as a freshman) was a NC state record and more seals than 158 D1 teams put together. You read that right - 158 teams. He once stole 5 bases in a single game which tied the record for the Atlantic Coast Conference.
Trea was stealing mad bases - and hearts - as the he was named to the all-ACC first team, finalist (2013) and winner (2014) of the Brooks Wallace Award for best D1 shortstop. Avid watchers of Jomboy may be familiar with this video of Trea in college back in 2014 reacting spectacularly to a BS out call when he stole home to tie the game. This moment closely foreshadows the legendary interference call from the 2019 World Series where Trea gets ruled out running to 1st and boldly calls out the umpires from the dugout and accuses Joe Torre of hiding. Trea Turner doesn't take anyone's crap, and he started young.

From the start to the starting shortstop

In 2014 Trea was selected 13th in the 1st round by the Padres - a great selection, if I may say so myself. But his time in the Padres org would not last long as the Nationals traded for him as a part of the three way deal between the Padres, Rays, and Nats. The Nationals would also pick up Joe Ross, our current high-hopes 4th starter, in this deal. Due to some timeline wonkiness and MLB's trade rules, he would be enter the Nationals farm system formally only in June of 2015.
And thus began the glorious reign of one of the brightest, yet most underrated stars in the Nationals organization. 2015 would prove to be a banner year for the Nationals with Bryce Harper winning a bevy of awards for his monster season including MVP, though the team itself would miss the playoffs as they had on and off since 2012, when the team became a perennial contender. Trea only had 40 at bats in his major league debut season, which began on August 21st, 2015. He hit .225 with a single homer.
In 2016, Trea lost out for the starting shortstop spot, but was called up in June, where he went 3-3 with a walk in his first game. Trea's rookie year (in which he played shortstop, second base and center field - that versatility, tho) earned him some plaudits, as he won Rookie of the Month in August of that year where he 5 home runs and 11 stolen bases. Kicking off his status of always the bridesmaid and never the bride, he came in second for NL ROY to Corey Seager.

Zooming to greatness

In 2017, Trea hit for the cycle for the fist time in his career. He would do so again in 2019, again against the Rockies - do what you will with that information (I was at this game and it was incredible). The night after his first cycle in '17, he almost did it again, but was 1 triple short. Unfortunately he would fracture his wrist and hit the injured list for the second time in the 2017 season. Once again this would not be the only time he'd break a bone on the field.
In the same year he hit his second cycle, Trea would break his index finger on a bunt attempt. This wouldn't be fully repaired by surgery until after the season and playoffs ended. That's right, he was playing through a broken finger almost all season long. Trea shared an update of his finger surgery on Instagram 7 months after the original injury, where he shows off his winning smile and incredible ability to have great hair at all times.
Let's step back from the history for a moment to break down Trea's skills. You've heard it before, but Trea is fast as hell. He has been one of the top 10 fastest players in the MLB since his 2015 debut. That's right, he has never left the top 10. Here's a quick table breaking it down from Statcast:

Year Position in Sprint Speed leaderboard
2015 #2 (30.6)
2016 #6 (30.0)
2017 #5 (30.3 - this year the Nats took 2 in the top 10; Victor Robles was #1 at 30.9)
2018 #4 (30.1)
2019 #4 (30.1)
2020 #5 (30.0)
Does speed really kill? I don't know. But Trea has shown himself to be remarkably consistent with his speed since his major league debut.
What do these numbers actually mean? For the uninitiated, Sprint Speed is how Statcast measures speed, and is defined by as feet per second in a player’s fastest one-second window on individual plays. League average is about 27 ft/sec. But, if you look at Bolts, which measures any run where the sprint speed is at least 30 ft/sec, Trea is simply the best. In 2018, he lead the league in them at 134 (next best was 101), and did it again in 2019 at 129 (next best was 68!!) and then AGAIN in 2020 at 53 (next best was 29!!!!). Again, yes, you are reading that right.
That series of achievements draws a clear picture - not only is Trea fast as a whip, he also has far and away the most speedy moments of any player in the game right now. He runs fast, and he runs fast a lot.
Let's talk stolen bases for a moment. Trea has stolen 171 bases in his career, tied for 463 most ever in the MLB in a time when base stealing is far from in vogue. The numbers tell a similar story of a player who is bold, fast, and while not number one, simply one of the best.
Year Position in SB leaderboard
2016 #7 (33)
2017 #3 (46)
2018 #2 (43)
2019 #5 (35)
2020 #4 (12 - shortened season)
And if that's not enough to convince you, here are some of Trea's slash lines from the past several seasons:
2017: 284/.338/.451
2018: 271/.344/.416.
2019: 298/.353/.497
Returning to history again, Trea would secure the Nats a spot in the postseason when he hit a go-ahead grand slam against the Phillies on 9/24 (I was there at that doubleheader game 1, what a day). Trea would find the national stage in a big way in the 2019 playoffs. He contributed to the Nationals' pivotal victory over the Brewers in the Wild Card Game, where he hit his first postseason home run - and the Nationals' first postseason run of that year, after they were already down 3 in the game.
Trea had a total of 19 postseason hits in 2019 (here is all of them). He scored at least a single run in every series of that postseason, and in the World Series itself, he had 5 hits, scored 4 runs, and walked 3 times. His legendary interference call also gave us the unforgettable Davey Martinez v. Everyone fight where our furious skipper attempted to deal with Trea's blown call with his fists whilst being held back by his own staff as "Take Me Out to the Ballgame" played serenely in the background.
In the 6 years of postseasons Trea has played in, he has batted .233/.286/.302 with a .587 OPS (it was 1.250 in 2019 alone). He scored a total of 16 runs. We love a man who shows up when it counts.

TVT for MVP

Here we finally arrive at the 2020 season. The emergence of Juan Soto as the Best Hitter in the MLB has made Trea's incredible season fly slightly under the radar, but don't get it twisted - Trea was absolutely one of the best players in the game this past season, and a serious MVP contender. Here is a table laying out some of his notable achievements:

Stat Position on Leaderboard
Batting Average #5 (.335)
Hits #1 (78)
Stolen Bases #4 (12)
OBP #13 (.394)
SLG #12 (.588)
OPS #11 (.982)
Now, if you look at the context of the Nationals, Trea's case for MVP grows stronger. Unfortunately, there is no easy way to say that the team at large really underperformed. At one of the most dire moments of the season, when it seemed like Trea and Juan Soto were the only ones at all contributing offensively, I created this new jersey for our Nationals re-christening of the team to the Washington Turner Sotos.
Basically this past season in a nutshell
Trea was slashing .335/.394/.588, well above the team's meek average of .264/.336/.433. He delivered amazing and consistent hits (he had a career high 16 game hitting streak at one point) including a must see to be believed inside the park home run (notice how he's not even sprinting till he rounds 1st; that's how fast he is). He finished 7th in MVP voting overall.
Not only was Trea a huge contributor behind the plate, but according to Davey Martinez, he blossomed as a leader as well.
“Honestly, I think he’s more open, he communicates a lot more... That’s something that he took it upon himself to be a little bit more vocal this year, and even in the clubhouse. He’s going to get really good in the future about just taking control of different situations and having these conversations and having tough conversations when he needs to with his teammates, but he’s been tremendous, I can’t say enough about what he did this year and how he went out there and perceived everything."
Trea, humble as ever, himself had this to say:
'I feel like your voice is important, so I try to balance it, and I try not to talk too much, but I also try to help out especially young guys when I think they need it. I’ll sit in the cage with people and talk about hitting with them. I do things more just on a personal level more so than a rah-rah level but I think as my career evolves, I think I’ll just try to take advantage of opportunities and helping out teammates if they want it and if they don’t, then I’m here for good job support, I guess."
Now tell me that's not the guy you want in your dugout cheering on your squad while delivering heroics every night.

All MLB snub: real eyes realize real lies

Unfortunately, the Nationals' missing of the playoffs and overall wimpy output hurt Trea's chances at the All MLB Team. But let me be very clear - he was absolutely snubbed, playing with an offensive edge over both Fernando Tatis Jr. and Corey Seager, both wildly talented players whose postseason success probably pushed them over the edge to secure spots on the 1st and second teams respectively. And we can't discount the Juan Soto effect (1st team) - it can be hard to shine next to one of baseball's absolute biggest stars.
Trea lead all MLB shortstops in BA, OBP, SLG, OPS, OPS+ and wRC+ despite a crappy team around him (thanks to this article laying it out). I did an informal survey on this sub a short while ago asking which player you'd rather have in a choice between two very good players at the same position, with one being slightly better at offense and one slightly better at defense. Who I had in my head when making this post were the three shortstops mentioned above. You all overwhelmingly voted in favor of the better offensive player, as I would have as well.
While I don't expect the general voting public to be as informed as this sub's audience, it's a real shame Trea's crazy season wasn't recognized with this award, because I believe he overwhelmingly deserved it.

In conclusion: Trea Turner send tweet

Trea Turner is 27 years old. He is 6 feet one inch tall, and speaking subjectively but also objectively, he is one the most talented players in the league right now (not to mention one of the most handsome). In 2021, he will earn 13 million dollars from the Washington Nationals, with whom he has played his entire career. Trea Turner is a franchise star and a clubhouse leader and if he continues his current level of consistent, underrated goodness, he will be one of the premier free agents when he hits FA in 2023.
Will he take the Bryce Harper path, where he leaves DC for a massive deal elsewhere, or will he join Stephen Strasburg as a Nat for life if he's given a contract long enough? It's all in His hands now - and yes, I'm talking about Mike Rizzo. What is clear, however, is that if you're not paying attention to Trea Turner, wake the hell up.
Blink, and you'll miss him.
submitted by ilovearthistory to baseball [link] [comments]

Motor City Management - Detroit Tigers Report 2024 - Cleveland Rocks

If you'd like to catch up on previous installments, you can do so here: Initial Setup, 2020 Season Report, 2021 Season Report, 2022 Season Report, 2023 Season Report
Let's take a look at the award winners from 2023 to wrap that year up and then get into the moves made and the season recap for 2024!

2023 Offseason News

League News:
Detroit Achievements:

Offseason Transactions

Owner gave us a $4,000,000 budget increase, but we have some solid players coming off of minimums, so our scouting and development budgets will be going down from their max.
League News:
Detroit Departures:
Detroit Trades:
Trade #1 Detroit receives: 2B Marcus Chiu, RP Jack Little Los Angeles receives: RP Junior Fernandez, RP Brendan White
Fernandez didn't seem like he was going to make it back to the majors and was available as an auto-renew for 1M+, so I moved him for another reliever that I can take a chance on and a 2B prospect that looks ready for AAA and gives me some infield depth.
Trade #2 Detroit receives: RF Ismael Mena, 2B Jordy Barley, $750,000 San Diego receives: SS Vidal Brujan
Brujan wasn't very good for us last year and was super pissed about not being an everyday starter. I can't offer him that, but the Padres were willing to part with a decent middle infielder who will play in AAA and a RF prospect that I'm really excited to be adding to the team in Mena, with great personality traits.
Trade #3 Detroit receives: 3B Jordan Diaz Oakland receives: RP Blake Taylor
Taylor wasn't going to stick with the team after a down season and some regression, but Diaz looks like a solid piece for the future. He's 23, cost-controlled and already has a nice hitting profile. He'll start in AAA likely.
Detroit Additions:
OF Jairo Pomares - He was on the waiver wire to end the season and looks like a more than capable hitter. He's young and on a minimum, so I figured I'd take a flier on him.

Spring Training

We have $17,600,000 available for free agents/trades for the season, $12,000,000 set aside for the draft and $5,400,000 set aside for international amateurs. We're spending the maximum allowed on development again this year.
We used the spring to have Castro play 2B and Gold Glover Ke'Bryan Hayes play SS.
Detroits News:

Regular Season

First Half
We take an Opening Day win behind a nice outing from Casey Mize and hope to continue that momentum. We're projected to win 99 games and have three top pitchers, but I have my doubts - especially with Manning missing significant time. I normally don't note much about the second game, but it was Kumar Rocker's first start and he was stellar - 8 and a third innings, 1 run and 7 strikeouts - a good look for the rookie.
As we roll into May we sit at 18-14, five games back of the unstoppable Cleveland Indians. We started 5-0, but we've had some down stops as well. At 32-28 on June 1st, the team is now seven games back of the Indians and three games back of the wild card. We need some help. Sandy Alcantara goes back into the rotation, replacing a struggling Justin Dunn, while bullpen roles get shifted as well. Ke'Bryan Hayes has been incredibly unlucky at the plate with a .222 BABIP, resulting in a .187 batting average. We'll give him another month to sort it out, but we move Evan White to CF and bring Riley Greene into the starting lineup to spell a struggling Parker Meadows. We bring up Jonathan Bowlan and David Parkinson, sending down Alex Lange and Drew Carlton to AAA.
2024 Draft
Another low pick for us, this year we spend the 27th on SP Doug Wade in the 1st round. We double-down on pitching in the 2nd with Kevin Abbs. We grab a SS that looks like a future gold glover in the third in Jeff Allemand. Left fielder Mike Gode is next on the merit of his bat. In the fifth it's center fielder Jim Longchamps with a stellar combo of speed and defense. We like the next picks of SS Ben Barilla, CF Mike Voytko and CF Kevin Devaney as well.
We limped into the All-Star break with a record of 38-37. Matt Manning returns from injury though, and hopefully it's a much-needed shot in the arm. It seems to work as the team goes on a winning streak to finish June, landing 1st in the Wild Card at 46-40 (yet still 9 back of the surging Indians).
July would prove to be a turning point for us as we secured series wins against the Mariners, Rays (swept), White Sox (swept), Rangers, Blue Jays (swept) and Angels en route to a showdown with the Indians to close the month. That showing put us 3 games up on the wild card, but still 7 back of Cleveland. We take one from them, but they prove to be too much, winning two to end the month.
Second Half
August is a new month though, and we kick it off with series wins against the Athletics and Twins, but then get swept by the Yankees. We sweep the Royals and win a series against the Steelhounds to sandwich a series loss to the Orioles and head into roster expansion. We send down David Parkinson and bring up RP Ethan DeCaster, CF Jairo Pomares and 1B Bryant Packard.
We roll into September, securing wins against a number of top teams. On September 14th we lose RP Jack Little for four months, but also clinch a playoff spot. We sit three games back of Cleveland with a chance at a division title and a series against them. We take game one handily, but draw their ace in game two against our back-half and fall by one. Mize carries us to a 2-1 win in game three though to win the series and put us just two games back three games left, giving us an outside shot. We take a game against the Athletics and the Indians drop one to the Angels to move us one game back. Another huge win against the Athletics, coupled with a Cleveland loss and we sit tied heading into game 162. We control our destiny and can force a tiebreaker!
Unfortunately, there are no last game heroics - the Athletics steal one from us and the Indians prevail, we'll take the top wild card spot.

Playoffs

We've secured a wild card berth one again, this time against the Athletics - who put us there with a win in Game 162. We have Casey Mize on the mound and it's a game we should win - we were probably the third best team in the AL, but the Indians control our division.
Wild Card - Game 1 - Tigers defeat Athletics, 9-5 We've finally advanced past the wild card round in my tenure! Mize gets hit later in the game, but we pretty much control this one wire to wire and now must face the Rays, a team we were 8-4 against during the regular season.
Division Series - Game 1 - Rays defeat Tigers, 7-6 We jump to a 6-0 lead and then crumble the rest of the way. The bullpen really didn't do too bad, just couldn't get another run on offense. If we score six, we should be winning.
Division Series - Game 2 - Tigers defeat Rays, 6-5 So I guess we're having only close games. This time it's us that had to battle back throughout the game to score, but we did it. We need better outings from the rotation.
Division Series - Game 3 - Rays defeat Tigers, 7-4 Well, we aren't getting good outings from our good pitching staff, which is irritating. The Rays blast us for 7 runs in the first three innings and we can't recover. We're on the ropes now, let's see what we're made of.
Division Series - Game 4 - Tigers defeat Rays, 4-1 Finally we get an elite performance. Mize showed up, holding them to one run over nearly 8 innings and the bullpen shut the door for us. We've got Rocker on the mound in Game 5 against Glasnow, their ace, so it'll be a high pressure situation for the rookie.
Division Series - Game 5 - Tigers defeat Rays, 6-4 We pulled it off! Rocker gave us 6 innings of quality work, only allowing 2 runs. Zach Hess got rocked in relief, but De Geus and Short shut it down after that. We got on Glasnow early and chased him before he could complete 5 innings and maintained he lead all the way! Willy Adames of the Rays was named series MVP.
The bad news for us is that the Indians swept the Angels in their series and they'll be our opponent in the League Championship Series. We were 5-7 against them during the season. Their lineup is strong, particularly the Lindor-Ramirez-Aquino-Casas gauntlet that sits from #2-#5 in the order. Their pitching is even better though, with the league's lowest FIP and best bullpen ERA, which helped them to the second fewest runs against. Shane Bieber had a down year, but he's still Shane Bieber - but Daniel Espino and Dinelson Lamet give them a fearsome three-headed monster. This will be tough to unseat the defending champs.
League Championship Series - Game 1 - Tigers defeat Indians, 3-2 A HUGE road win against Bieber off of Castro's two-run dinger in the 8th inning. Bieber was stellar, but we happened to get ahold of Edwin Diaz, which is also surprising. Manning was decent and our bullpen was stellar. I'm pumped to steal one in Cleveland.
League Championship Series - Game 2 - Indians defeat Tigers, 6-5 This was about as close as it can get throughout - we kept answering each other at the plate until we finally failed to do so. It's a shame to chase Espino so early and still lose with Mize on the mound, but I'm still glad to have one win already.
League Championship Series - Game 3 - Indians defeat Tigers, 4-1 Yeah, Lamet held us in check and their bullpen was stellar. Skubal was unfortunate, giving up three runs with only one of them being earned. It particularly hurts because the error was by Ke'Bryan Hayes, last season's gold glove winner. We need to bounce back in Game 4.
League Championship Series - Game 4 - Indians defeat Tigers, 7-6 (13) Well, that hurts. We got a serviceable outing from Rocker and got on Plesac early - we got some runs on Edwin Diaz again too, but the rest of their bullpen was untouchable. Ours, on the other hand, all gave up runs except for Zach Hess. Tough. We battled, but this road is now an incredibly uphill one.
League Championship Series - Game 5 - Indians defeat Tigers, 4-2 Manning got blown up and Bieber continues having a strong postseason - he seems to have caught fire at the right time for them. We have a lot to take from this series and feel good about going forward, but I'm starting to really dislike Cleveland. Their reign needs to end.
World Series Well, the Giants draw the appearance for the National League and get off to a 3-0 start. But Cleveland, they aren't killable are they? No, no they are not. They came back. They won the dang thing. The Cleveland Indians repeat as MLB Champions.
Detroit Achievements

Season Recap

My division nemesis wins the World Series after sending us home. I dislike this. We had a great season though with our best win total of my tenure and had he most cost efficient team per wins, runs scored and WAR in the league. We became a top 10 team in attendance and our player's popularity is growing. Our owner wants us to upgrade at short stop - so I guess he doesn't like the Castro/Hayes swap - so we make take a look at that once again. Spoiler alert - we got a budget increase, so maybe we'll spend it. Who knows.

Hitters

Starting Lineup
CF Parker Meadows
Meadows ended up going to the bench instead of an everyday starter as his bat just wasn't there like it was last year. He's a quality fielder and baserunner and makes the minimum, so he'll be back - but he may not have a clear role on the team in the future.
DH Kyle Isbel
Isbel ended up much lower in the order during the season and his bat just wasn't good enough for a DH role. My scout thinks he should be better than he is, but I have two seasons of data that say he isn't. He's also listed as fragile, which I'm not sure if I just missed that before or if it's new, but I may try to move him this offseason.
2B Willi Castro
Willi just keeps getting better. He was a 2.5 WAR player as a rookie, gave me two seasons of 5 WAR and now nearly 8 this season - the move to 2B seems to have worked well for him and he was a plus defender. He led the league in runs, had his best season yet at the plate and was a 20/20 player. His arbitration estimate is $15,000,000 - which is a lot, but I don't see how I can let him walk while I have contract control. He's given me four full seasons without any injury issues, is a fan favorite and one of my best players. I'd love to sign him longer term if it's reasonable.
RF Yaya Chentouf
Yaya made his first all-star team, led the league in walks and was a dominant hitter for us this season. He's come a long way since he was a struggling reliever in my minors, now giving us nearly 6 WAR in RF. He's on a minimum deal and was incredible, he's obviously returning. His jump from 25 to 51 homeruns helped us accomplish our goal of improving on our homerun total that our owner set as well. Yaya has also become extremely popular at a national level - he's quickly become one of my favorites.
1B Ryan Mountcastle
Mountcastle continues to be a steady performer for me - he's not an all-star and he's not going to win any awards, but he's reliable and dependable. He bounced back from his 1.4 WAR season to give us nearly 3 this year, hit well and played good defense. His arbitration estimate is cheap, so he'll return.
LF Evan White
White was a bit disappointing again. He was the hottest player on the team two years ago and gave us 5 WAR, now he's struggling to hit 2. The bat has cooled off considerably, though, much like Isbel, my scout thinks he should be better than he has been. He doesn't appear to be having any bad BABIP luck either, so maybe he's just not as good as I had hoped, but still serviceable. He's still locked up long-term with Seattle footing 40% of the bill, so that's good. Defensively, I prefer him in left than center, but center field continues to elude me. It might be worth considering if I need both him and Mountcastle, or if I should move White to 1B or move him out.
3B Isaac Paredes
Well now, here is a pleasant surprise. Paredes wasn't someone who had a big BABIP jump, but his bat was much improved this year - going from below league average to one of the best in the league. He gave us 4.3 WAR despite missing a few weeks with injury as well, so a solid season all-around. His arbitration estimate isn't too bad, so I'll definitely be keeping him around. His personality concerns me, but if he keeps up the performance from this season he'll be hard to move on from.
SS Ke'Bryan Hayes
I had hopes that swapping Hayes and Castro would empower them both to have better seasons defensively and thus provide more value. While Hayes was a plus defender at short, it wasn't by much and I've seen four seasons of his bat not being that good. Yes, he was unlucky this season, but I'm not sure he's going to give me much even if he wasn't. If I can find a better defensive option, I may just do that.
C Christian Vazquez
My catcher position has never been one worth going crazy about. Vazquez continues to be a bad hitter for me, despite that one great season, but his defensive value is so hard to gauge. Our pitching staff was the league's best and it's tough to not credit Christian with a lot of that. I'm going to let him hit free agency and try to get him cheaper there.
Bench/Replacements
C Jake Rogers
Rogers was a better backup this year than last year, despite less appearances. I'll probably bring him back, but I might give more time to Drew Romo next year and see what he brings. Rogers looks like a solid backup with no real intentions of being a starter.
3B Jordan Diaz
Diaz was brought in to maybe replace Paredes if he struggled and I think he pushed Isaac to a career year. Diaz was decent enough as a bench player and he'll either be back with us or in AAA next year to see if he fills out some more.
RF Riley Greene
Greene pretty quickly became the everyday starter in left field, forcing my hand with his play as a fourth outfielder. Well, he was pretty dang good as a rookie, giving us 3.4 WAR in 118 starts. He was a great hitter and brought some extra pop to the lineup as well. My scout thinks his discipline will come along as well, and I hope it does because he'll be deadly if so.
OF Jairo Pomares
Pomares was tearing it up in AAA, came up at the end of the year and had a decent, albeit brief, appearance. He may be a full-time fourth outfielder next year.

Pitchers

Rotation
SP Casey Mize
Mize casually came out and improved upon his Cy Young campaign from last season, giving us a league leading 6.2 WAR and a 61 FIP-. He was pretty solid I'd say, obviously. All of that was despite a higher BABIP against him, so I like what Mize gave us. Will he repeat as Cy Young? I'm not sure, but he should be in contention.
SP Kumar Rocker
What can you expect from a rookie starting pitcher? Well, how about 4.2 WAR, a 130 ERA+ and a 73 FIP-? I will take that every single day of the week. Wow. Rocker was outstanding and my scout says this guy might get better - that is exciting. He struck out a lot of players, kept walks reasonable and overall was deserving of the #2 role in my rotation with Manning out.
SP Franklin Perez
"Fragile" Franklin finally gets his shot - and, well, he was... okay? He had four different injuries, big surprise, and was kind of rough as a starter. However, when I moved him to the bullpen, he was pretty good when healthy. I may try to capitalize on some team thinking he can be a full-time starter and move him out, but I've been saying that for awhile.
SP Justin Dunn
Dunn was worse in the rotation this year then he was last year, so he ended up being sent back to AAA to clear room for other arms. Similar to Perez, maybe I should try to move him - he has yet to perform in the majors.
SP Tarik Skubal
Tarik surprised me. He was decent enough the last two seasons, but was demoted to the pen last year. I didn't think he'd be in the rotation, but injuries said otherwise and his performance said it was a good call. He gave us 2.5 WAR as our fifth starter, which I'll definitely take. His arbitration estimate is 3M, which is probably doable.
Bullpen
SP Matt Manning
Matt missed four months with injury, which is alarming - but he came back strong and gave us 1.4 WAR in 19 starts. I suppose it was his worst stretch since his rookie year, but he was still an above average arm. The arbitration estimate is just over five million, so he'll likely be back.
RP Brett De Geus
My bullpen has yet to have a consistent leader. This year it was Brett de Geus, who gave us 2.1 WAR in 81 IP in his 63 appearances. He was downright dominant with a 58 FIP-, striking out 32% of the opposition. He'll be back on a minimum.
RP Gerson Moreno
Moreno was another new face who was surprisingly solid for us. He gave us almost 1 WAR over his league-leading 71 games and 24 holds. He was pretty solid and will be back on a minimum.
RP Zack Hess
Hess was as productive as Moreno in half as many appearances, so he was pretty great for us. He'll get more opportunities next year in the pen.
RP Kyle Dohy
Dohy was another 1 WAR reliever who was better than league average. He's also on a minimum and will be back - the high stuff, no control guys do well with Vazquez. He struck out nearly 40% of the opposition.
RP Jack Little
Little was decent enough before he got injured and missed the playoffs. He logged a lot of innings for us and gave us a solid 1 WAR. However, I think we have better arms and he won't be as relied upon next year.
RP Genesis Cabrera
Genesis was far better in the bullpen role this year than he was last year - giving us 1 WAR and a solid 149 ERA+ and 79 FIP-. He filled in for a recovering Alcantara at the end of the year too in the rotation. His estimate is less than a million, so he should return.
RP Drew Carlton
Here is the reason I was complaining about bullpen volatility - Carlton gave us 2 WAR last year and was so bad this year that I sent him down after 19 games and never looked back. I will not be picking up his arbitration.
RP Sandy Alcantara
Sandy was better than I expected despite his ratings falling a bit. He was mostly used in the pen, filled in as a starter later on, and was good at both. However, he wants eight million dollars to extend soooo good luck elsewhere!
RP Jonathan Bowlan
Jonathan got called up a couple of times, was serviceable when he was up, but will be back in AAA or gone next season.
RP Alex Lange
Keeping it short - Lange wasn't good when he was up and got sent down, where he'll stay.
RP David Parkinson
Even shorter - he was awful.

Prospect Watch

SP Justin Powell - Powell wasn't even listed last year because he struggled in rookie ball. I let him repeat, which I normally don't do, because he had just been drafted. Well, he had quite the development tour this year and is now ranked as not only my top prospect, but as the 2nd best prospect in baseball. The bad news is that he wasn't good in rookie ball again, but he'll go to A-.
SP Doug Wade - Wade was our top pick this year and was good enough in A- to go to A, where I hope he'll improve.
SS Trevor Haskins - Haskins was solid in A and will go to AA. I like his defensive profile and he's a solid baserunner. The bat tool needs some work still but I have high hopes.
C Dale Burton - Burton is, of course, still fragile, which isn't great. He was fine enough in A- to go to A though, but I don't know if he's a long-term option.
CF Petey Halpin - Petey will go to AAA next year. Maybe he's the future CF option, I don't know. Maybe he's just a fourth outfielder.
RF Ismael Mena - Mena was great in AA and will go to AAA. If he fills out the hitting tool, he doesn't have a weakness. He's a phenomenal runner and solid in the outfield. Hopefully he keeps progressing.
C Drew Romo - Romo's hitting never developed, not like it looked like it would way back in 2020. But, the defense is there and he might be the Vazquez replacement due to that alone. It's not like Vazquez has hit either.

Future Outlook

Arbitration is going to hit hard for some folks this year. Willi Castro and Casey Mize in particular. We're going to have to be more financially selective moving forward as we start to lose the cheap and controlled deals we've been accustomed to.
submitted by Molholt to OOTP [link] [comments]

Alabama Slammers Franchise Report - Year 17: Young, Wild & Free

Welcome back to year seventeen of the Alabama Slammers Franchise Report! Here are the links to the previous versions if you want to catch up (2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031,2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036).
Previous Season Highlights:
Andy Schaffer wins Cy Young
20-year-old Marco Vazquez leads the league in batting average, hits, doubles, and triples
Edgar Sanchez wins seventh straight gold glove
6 players make all-star team
106-win regular season
Lost in NLCS 4-2
Start of Offseason:
As with the previous versions, I’ll list the moves I made, the rationale behind those moves, the season results, and the future outlook.
Here are the salaries heading into the offseason.
\Unless stated otherwise, all players were re-signed to their one-year arbitration estimate*
Departures (non-trades):
Ernesto Bernal
Bernal was discovered by my scout in 2022 and spent fifteen years with the organization. He’s the franchise’s all-time leader in games, at-bats, WAR, runs, hits, total bases, singles, doubles, triples, RBIs, and stolen bases. He’s the greatest player in franchise history and it really hurt to part ways with him, but all good things must come to an end.
He signed a 5/$84m deal with the Rangers, which seems reasonable, and had a solid year. I received a supplemental first-round pick upon his signing.
Drew Romo
Romo looked to be on his way out, so I let him walk as a free agent. He didn’t sign with a team and retired at the end of the season. He played his entire 12-year major league career with the Slammers and was a huge reason we had six Cy Young award winners during his tenure.
Eric Lawrence
Lawrence struggled last year in the majors, so I gave him a season in AAA to work things out. He looks ready for the big leagues again and will be an opening day starter or get traded.
Jeff Hopper
Hopper was excellent during his six years with us, highlighted by his 2035 campaign when he finished third in the MVP voting. He wanted 8/$232m to re-sign, which was too expensive for my tastes, and ended up getting 6/$156m from the Jazz, which is still too expensive for me. I don’t see this contract ending well.
Move #1:
Hired a new trainer.
I heavily prioritize prevention and this guy is good at preventing all types of injuries. Here’s my old trainer.
Move #2:
Slammers Receive: Edwin de la Torre
Diamondbacks Receive: Alex Rivera, Luis Arguello, Mike Dooner, Harold Coppola, Bryn Hill
De la Torre is my third baseman fantasy. He has elite batting potential, above average fielding ability, excellent baserunning, great character, durable injury proneness, and bats from the left side of the plate. I gave the Diamondbacks an assortment of young and talented players, but I would’ve gladly given them twice as much. Guys like de la Torre just don’t exist.
Move #3:
Slammers Receive: Jonathan Hubbard
Padres Receive: Eric Clark
Hubbard might not be anything special to the Padres, but he’s beautiful to me. He’s a right-handed hitter, has elite defensive ratings, doesn’t expect to start, is durable, and has the sparkplug personality trait. I needed a very specific player and Hubbard met all of my criteria. He’ll start against lefties and play a decent amount against righties in an attempt to keep Steve Flores healthy for the playoffs.
Move #4:
Signed Andy Schaffer to a 5/$105m extension.
Schaffer is 26 and just won a Cy Young, this seems like a pretty safe deal.
Move #5:
Signed free agent Tommy Noonan to a 3/$30m deal.
After looking through the available in-house, trade, and free agent replacement options, I decided the best course of action was to roll the dice on Noonan. I’ve seen players bounce back from the Guru before, so hopefully Noonan does just that. If he falls off a cliff, I’ll only owe him $15m after this year.
Move #6:
Added a Dominican Rookie League team.
We haven’t gotten much out of our scouting discoveries, and I think it might be partially due to them spending so much time in the international complex, so we’re adding a Dominican Rookie League team for them to develop in – The Kiev Blue Claws. Don’t ask me why the team is in Ukraine, it’s just what the owner wanted.
I promoted every player from the international complex, and I’ll continue to promote new players as they’re discovered. I’m interested to see how this works out.
Move #7:
Slammers Receive: Chris Joiner
Mets Receive: Joe Poffenberger
Poffenberger was given strong consideration for the starting catcher job this year, but I decided to go with Gutierrez instead. There was no need to keep Poffenberger around in the minors, so I swapped him for a guy that can provide some depth in a year or two.
In-House Moves (Preseason):
Sean Vahey remains on the major league roster after joining during roster expansion last season. He will be a member of the bullpen.
Jose Gutierrez promoted from AA. Will be the primary starter at catcher vs. RHPs.
Bobby McCallum promoted from AA. Will start at first base.
Seung-hwa Kim promoted from AA. Will start in left field.
Bob Banks will slide to DH with the promotion of Kim.
Final Financial Situation:
We have about $34m in available budget room to start the year, so shouldn’t need to make any trades for cash, and we might even complete the owner goal of ending the year with a balance of +$23m. He’s been hounding me about that one for a while.
Here are the salaries heading into the season.
Move #8 (Part 1, Part 2):
Slammers Receive: $14m
Slammers Lose: Chris Dearborn, Nate Holston
Turns out we needed some more cash. Holston is a career minor leaguer, but Dearborn might have a real MLB future. I’ve seen too many players with his profile flame out though, so I’m willing to take the risk he doesn’t amount to anything.
Season Outlook:
This is the most excited I’ve been about a season in a while. It’s always fun to cruise to 100-win seasons with established teams, but we’re going with the youth movement this year. Our five through eight hitters have a combined zero days of major league service, so I’m really trusting my scout that these rookies are ready to perform. The pitching should remain elite, so if the young guys come through, we should roll to another division title.
Batters:
Primary Lineup vs. RHP and vs. LHP when Healthy (\DH enabled in both leagues, lineup vs. RHP shown below)*
RF – Marco Vazquez
Vazquez cooled off a bit at the plate as compared to last season but upped his defense to boost his overall value. He made his second all-star team and won his first gold glove.
CF – Wil Mireles
Mireles had another excellent season but will be leaving as a free agent. He wants 8/$256m to re-sign, which is too much for me.
2B – Edgar Sanchez
Sanchez continued his march towards the hall of fame with another great year. He made his third all-star team and won his eighth gold glove.
DH – Bob Banks
Banks moved to DH this year, which should be the least taxing position, but missed about a month to injury. When healthy, he performed below his usual standard. Hopefully, he gets back on track next year.
LF – Seung-Hwa Kim
Kim had a solid rookie year and will be back for a sophomore campaign. He’s 26-years-old but still looks to have a lot of untapped potential.
3B – Edwin de la Torre
De la Torre had a monster rookie season, winning rookie of the month in September and taking rookie of the year honors. He’s 21-years-old, so should be around for a long time.
1B – Bobby McCallum
McCallum started off the year on a crazy hot streak. He won rookie of the month in April and June and was on pace for 65 home runs and 167 RBIs. He cooled off tremendously as the season progressed but was still good enough to finish third in the rookie of the year voting.
C – Jose Gutierrez
I feel pretty good about my decision to go with Gutierrez at catcher. He played great defense and was league average at the plate, which is all I could ever ask for. As an added bonus, his personality trait was revealed as sparkplug.
SS – Steve Flores
Flores came back from a year-long injury and played great. I would love to keep his defense around forever but it’s probably better to go ahead and move him before he gets injured again. I have a solid replacement in Eric Lawrence.
Bench
C – Danny Wells
Wells has been pretty much the same player since he debuted in 2032 but I’m ok with that. As long as he continues to play excellent defense, he’ll stick around.
IF – Justus Evans
Evans had a pretty good five-year run for a guy that used to be a pitcher. I have plenty of in-house replacements though, so he’ll leave as a free agent.
IF – Jonathan Hubbard
I brought in Hubbard to replace the fragile backup, so of course he got injured. He missed a month with a separated shoulder but did what was asked of him when healthy.
OF – Andy Vera
Vera is overqualified to be a bench player, but I have an excess of outfield talent and he’s the worst of the bunch. He might get a shot to start in center field next year with Mireles departing.
Replacements
IF – Chris McClain
It’s a good thing I kept the fragile backup middle infielder around. He filled in for Hubbard for a month and didn’t kill us.
OF – Mike Honeycutt
Honeycutt filled in for Banks and was pretty good in his limited opportunities. Depending on the rest of the roster, he might get a backup role next year.
Pitchers:
Pitching Staff when Healthy
SP – Corey MacDonald
I took the pitch count off MacDonald since his injury proneness was upgraded to iron man and he continued to stay healthy. He played well and made his seventh all-star game.
SP – Gilles Palacios
Palacios had one of his best seasons yet, winning the pitching triple crown and collecting his fourth Cy Young award. He wants 7/$245m to re-sign, but I’m going to try to find a way to bring him back. More than likely, I’ll have to sign him in free agency.
SP – Andy Schaffer
Schaffer decided to take it easy after winning a Cy Young last year and getting a contract extension. Hopefully, he goes back to his Cy Young ways next season.
SP – Eddie Copping
I had strongly considered a long-term extension for Copping in the offseason but I’m glad I held off. He struggled this year, posting his worst season yet. I think he’ll be fine going forward, but I’m much less worried about his performance without a long-term deal.
SP – Bobby Butler
Butler might not be done as a major league starting pitcher, but he’s done with the Slammers. He suffered a partially torn UCL in spring training, then suffered an eight-month setback in August. Hopefully, he still has some trade value when he returns.
RP – Alan McCarter
McCarter has been getting worse the last two seasons, but I’ve kept him around for his prankster personality trait. I’ll try to find someone in the offseason that’s also good at baseball.
RP – Tommy Noonan
Noonan isn’t the world beater he used to be but he’s still a really good reliever. I’m glad I brought him back.
RP – Jose Macias
Macias was solid for the second straight season and will be back next year.
RP – Sean Vahey
Vahey had a tough start to the season but established himself as one of the best relievers in the game by the end of the year. He’ll probably be around for his remaining five years of team control.
RP – Jose Aguilar
Aguilar once again performed like one of the best relievers in baseball, making his fifth all-star game. He has two more team friendly years on his contract, so will definitely be back.
RP – Mike Bentley
I was browsing through player profiles about halfway through the season and did a double take when I got to Bentley. All of a sudden, he had an 80-grade changeup and wanted to be a starter, which definitely wasn’t the case last year. I kept him in the bullpen until rosters expanded, then let him work as the sixth starter the rest of the season. He did well in his five starts and will be a member of the rotation next year. Hopefully, I can still sign him to a cheap extension.
Oh yeah, he also won reliever of the year.
RP – Steve Hixson
Hixson wasn’t as good as last year but he’s cheap and durable, so I’ll probably bring him back.
RP – Jonathan Kelsey
It’s always nice to have an iron man reliever that’s capable of competently starting 31 games. He moved to the rotation when Butler was injured and gave us 190.1 solid innings. Unfortunately, he’s an upcoming free agent, so probably won’t return.
Replacements
RP – Chris Larkin
Larkin was called up and given Kelsey’s bullpen role when Butler was injured. He wants to be a starter, but I don’t feel comfortable with his movement, so he’ll remain in the bullpen or get traded next season.
RP – Joe Cope
A 32nd round pick in 2032, it took Cope a while to figure things out in the minors, but once he did, he rose quickly through the system. He was called up when rosters expanded and struggled in limited appearances, but I think he’ll be one of the best relievers in the game in a year or two.
RP – Mike Blake
Blake was also called up when rosters expanded, and he pitched well in his three appearances. He looks like he could be a solid starting pitcher, but I have better options ahead of him, so he’ll have to take a bullpen role in the majors.
Season Results:
We didn’t do our usual raping and pillaging during the regular season but still won 104 games and took our eighth straight division crown. The Cardinals actually took the lead from us at game 130, but we took it back thirteen games later and pulled away late. The pitching continued to be dominant and the offense was amongst the league best. Other than Butler, we’re fully healthy going into the playoffs and will go with a playoff rotation of Palacios, MacDonald, Schaffer, and Bentley. Copping and Kelsey will move to the bullpen.
Our first-round opponent is the 94-68 Rockies. Their 3-5 hitters (Eric Zuniga, Noe Renteria, Robby Teeter) are terrifying, but they don’t have much pitching. We should be able to take this one.
Divisional Series Game 1, Rockies Win 5-3 – We played well overall but couldn’t overcome Renteria’s four RBI performance. Three players had solo home runs in the loss.
Divisional Series Game 2, Slammers Win 5-4 – MacDonald gave up four runs but the bullpen provided 3.2 scoreless innings to hold on for the win. We had fourteen hits in the contest and Sanchez led the way with two RBIs.
Divisional Series Game 3, Slammers Win 6-4 – New starter Mike Bentley had a great outing, striking out eight while giving up two runs over six innings. Banks led the way on offense with three RBIs.
Divisional Series Game 4, Slammers Win 8-1 – Schaffer pitched a gem, going seven scoreless innings and striking out nine. Everyone chipped in on offense en route to fourteen hits and eight runs.
Divisional Series Game 5, Slammers Win 12-8 – We knocked out their starter in the first and continued to pile on in the 12-8 victory. Kim led the way with two homers and three RBIs, winning series MVP.
Next up is the 101-61 Cardinals, led by young ace Eddie Salinas. They have a deep and balanced roster, so I could see this going either way. The winner should take the World Series.
NLCS Game 1, Slammers Win 6-4 – The rookie McCallum put the team on his back with a three-home run, five RBI performance. MacDonald gave up four runs in his second straight appearance, but Aguilar and Noonan closed out the game with 3.1 scoreless innings.
NLCS Game 2, Slammers Win 10-3 – It was Banks putting on his superman cape this time, with a four RBI performance. Bentley gave up two runs over 5.1 innings.
NLCS Game 3, Slammers Win 3-2 (12) – This one was close throughout, but a bases load walk by Kim in the top of the twelfth provided the game deciding run. Schaffer, Aguilar, Noonan, and Macias combined to allow two runs over twelve innings.
NLCS Game 4, Slammers Win 2-1 – Palacios came out on top in a pitcher’s duel and we swept the series. McCallum was named MVP, mostly off of his game one performance.
We’re once again facing off against the Red Sox in the World Series, and this should just be a victory lap. They have a very good rotation (Jorge Morones, Bobby Dibble, Rob McDowell, Josh Sheppard) but no one worth mentioning on offense. It’ll be a major upset if we lose this one.
World Series Game 1, Slammers Win 8-2 – We started off the series with a bang, getting home runs from McCallum, Banks, and de la Torre. MacDonald gave up two runs over 6.2 innings and Aguilar closed out the rest.
World Series Game 2, Slammers Win 7-4 – The Rookie Kim led the way with a pair of two-run homers. Then Bentley struck out eleven and gave up two runs over six innings.
World Series Game 3, Red Sox Win 3-1 – Red Sox ace Morones shut us down in the loss, but we can win the series without seeing him again if we win two of the next three.
World Series Game 4, Red Sox Win 9-7 – We were on track to win this one before a complete meltdown by Macias and Noonan in the eighth. They gave up a combined five runs in the inning and the offense couldn’t bail them out in the ninth.
World Series Game 5, Slammers Win 6-2 – We really needed this win. MacDonald and Vahey combined to hold them to two runs over nine innings and Banks led the way on offense with three RBIs. We’ll head back home and look to close out the series.
World Series Game 6, Slammers Win 14-5 – This one was close until a nine run explosion in the fourth inning put the game away. Every starter other than Kim had at least one RBI. The Red Sox first baseman won series MVP in the loss, but we’d much rather have the title than an individual award.
We’re really starting to roll now, as that’s our third title in six seasons! The young guys came through when it mattered and will hopefully lead us to many more titles in the future.
Here are the rest of the playoff results and MLB standings.
Top Prospects:
The top prospects list continues to be in flux, as we promoted three players and traded another three from last year’s edition, but we still have a lot of good players.
1.) Hector Ruiz
Ruiz was an honorable mention the last two years because I don’t trust international amateur free agent signings, but I’m ready to buy the hype now. If he can stay healthy and reach his full potential, he’s a 10 WAR player. He’ll begin next season at AA.
2.) Victor Lacayo
I’m starting to get some serious mileage from these international amateur free agent signings, as that’s how the top two players on the list were acquired. Lacayo has monster hitting potential for a middle infielder and could be elite defensively if he gets a slight bump to his range. Worst case, he’ll a great bench player. He’ll begin next year in A.
3.) Jake Maddox
Maddox continued his steady climb through the system and looks just about ready for the majors. Depending on what his ratings look like at the start of next year, he might make the opening day roster.
4.) Chris Joiner
I had a trio of guys last year that I thought were in line to take Justus Evans spot, but the acquisition of Joiner probably ended their major league chances. He plays above average defense at three positions, has the potential to be an elite hitter, and has excellent baserunning skills. He’ll begin next season on the opening day roster.
5.) Felix Lopez
Lopez could probably fill the role Joiner will take next year, but he’s still young, so I’ll give him a year in AAA to round out his skills. I like everything about him but his range, so hopefully that improves next year.
6.) Chris Overcash
Overcash looks ready for the majors but I don’t have a place for him, so he’ll start next season in AAA. I’ll get him some experience in left field, and he’ll be first in line as an injury replacement.
7.) Gabe Depass
If Depass had durable injury proneness, he’d be top two on the list. He’s a great talent but you can never put too much faith in a pitcher with normal injury proneness. He’ll start next season at A.
8.) Brad Cole
Cole is a very interesting player. Other than his outfield error, he has everything you’d want in an outfield prospect, so I’m hoping that improves next year in A. I was able to scoop him up in the sixth round since he was listed as a pitcher coming out of the draft.
9.) Nate Bianco
Bianco’s movement still hasn’t improved, so I’m starting to cool on him a bit. He performed well in A- though and will begin next season in A+.
10.) Chris Brown
Rest in peace Chris Brown. If he makes it back from his torn UCL, he’ll be restricted to bullpen duty.
Honorable mentions:
Andy West, Bob Larson
I usually don’t include players like this on the list, but these two curiosities have very interesting ratings profiles and dominated the competition in A. They’ll both begin next season in AA and I’m hoping their ratings catch up to their production.
Eric Whittington, Israel Lopez
Both of these guys were listed as starters coming out of the draft, but I’ve put them in their proper roles as relievers. Between the two of them, I’m sure one will make the majors.
Sam Leintz
Leintz can’t stay healthy, so he’ll probably get traded. Too bad, since I used a first-round pick on him last year.
Promoted to MLB:
Bobby McCallum, Seung-Hwa Kim, Jose Gutierrez
Future Outlook:
We have some tough decisions this offseason with Palacios’s upcoming free agency and logjams in the infield and outfield. Eric Lawrence deserves to start, as do a number of minor league outfielders, but we also have a lot young entrenched starters in the majors. I’m not sure yet how I’ll build the roster, but these are good problems to have. It’s not a question of how we win, but how do we win the most. Hopefully, we can push towards 120 wins next year.
Here is the budget and salaries heading into the offseason.
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Better Know the Ballot #4: Dan Haren

Hey Baseball buddies! Hope everyone had a relaxing Thanksgiving weekend...and following week. I'm back now, and it's time to get balls deep on the rest of this list.
This year’s Hall of Fame ballot includes 11 first time players. None of them are first ballot locks and some of them are guaranteed to fall off the ballot after one year of eligibility. So once again, we’re taking a look at all the ballot rookies, starting from the bottom. We've previously covered Nick Swisher, Michael Cuddyer and AJ Burnett, so it’s time for…
Dan Haren
Bill James Hall of Fame Monitor: 30
Career bWAR (13 years): 35.1
Stats: 153-131, 3.75 ERA, 2013 K, 2419.2 IP, 1.181 WHIP, 109 ERA+
Awards: All-Star x3 (AL 2007, NL 2008, ‘09)
League Leading Stats: Starts x3 (34, 2006; 34, 2007; 34, 2011), WHIP (1.003, 2009), K/BB x3 (5.15, 2008; 5.87, 2009; 5.82, 2011)
Teams Played For: Cardinals (2003-04), A’s (2005-07), D-backs (2008-2010), Angels (2010-2012), Nationals (2013), Dodgers (2014), Marlins (2015), Cubs (2015)
Throughout the ‘90s, David Cone picked up a reputation as kind of a gun for hire. Twice the Blue Jays brought him in mid-season for playoff pushes. The Yankees signed him longer term to solidify a rotation that won four rings, and Boston brought him in at the end of his career to try and stoke their own championship fires. He was a six-time all-star, a Cy Young winner and a fringe HoF candidate who was always happy with the “hired merc” persona.
Dan Haren was kind of like that, only more mediocre.
Daniel Boone* Haren first gained the attention of scouts while he was pitching at Pepperdine, along with teammate Noah Lowery. In their junior years, Haren put up a 2.22 ERA and was named WCC Player of the year, while Lowery posted a 1.71 ERA en route to being named WCC Pitcher of the year. Both players skipped their senior season and declared for the MLB draft; a draft in which the Giants would take Lowery in the first round, with the Cardinals drafting Haren in the second.
Lowery seemed to be on his way to a good-to-above-average career in SF until the Giants medical staff decided that he needed to be sacrificed upon the alter of Dave Dravecky and completely mis-managed a circulatory issue into a career ending forearm injury that cost Lowery a rib in the process. Meanwhile, Haren was completely fine, he was just in St Louis. He appeared in 28 games over two seasons, making 19 starts and throwing 4.2 shutout innings in the 2004 World Series, but the Cards wound up sending Haren to Oakland, along with Kiko Calero and future Mexican Baseball League gold glover Daric Barton, in a trade that netted them Mark Mulder.
In response Haren, clearly happy about being relieved of the burden of pretending that St Louis has the best fans in baseball, entered the prime portion of his career.
From 2005 to 2010, Haren’s age 24 to 29 seasons, ol’ Dirty Dan was a legit dealer. 85-64, 3.55 in 1343 innings, with 1176 K, to the tune of a 3.61 FIP, 1.173 WHIP and 123 ERA+. Over that span, he would make all three of his all-star appearances and be good for 27.1 bWAR, including back to back 6+ bWAR seasons in 2008 and 2009.
In the middle of that stretch, the A’s traded Haren to Arizona in exchange for a massive haul of prospects that included Carlos Gonzalez, Brett Anderson, Greg Smith, Dana Eveland and Chris Carter. Three of those guys would go on to have notable big league careers, but only one would make any noise in an A’s uniform because Billy Beane was always playing a game of keep away with himself.
The back half of Haren’s career, 2011-2015 was less successful. Haren kept on doing exactly the same things he’d always done, just with ever diminishing returns. Two full seasons in LAA, including his last really good effort in 2011. A season in DC. Back to LA proper for a season in Dodger blue. Then 21 games for Miami in 2015 before the Cubs traded for him to try and get them over the hump a year before they were really ready for prime time. (This was three years after a deal to trade Haren straight up for Carlos Marmol fell through. A deal which, while not being on quite the same level as Lou Brock for Ernie Broglio, would have been hilariously lopsided, nonetheless. Haren was still good for 500 innings of league average ball over his last three seasons; Marmol once finished third in the league in hit batters, despite only throwing 74 innings. A stat we celebrated by making him our closer. And sure, he gave us one pretty solid season, but then he started blowing saves like he was a drunken college student in Seattle during Fleet Week and you know what? I’m getting off track.)
Unlike Cone, Haren was never a guy who embraced the “missing piece” role. When the Angles let him walk after the 2012 season, Haren told the LA Times “I’m sick of changing teams.” And, since baseball is a petty bitch with a weird sense of humor, Haren would naturally be forced to change uniforms four times over the next three seasons.
A large part of the reason for Haren’s decline can be attributed to his change in velocity. Haren was never exactly a fireballer, but in the early portion of his career his fastball could routinely end up in the lower-end-of-the-lower-end of the 90’s and he could dial it up into the 93-94 range when he needed. By the time the Angels declined his option in 2012, however, his fastball was down to the high 80’s (a fact he’s kind of leaned into and embraced: his Twitter handle is @ithrow88). His last season in the bigs, Haren’s 86 MPH average was the second slowest non-knuckleballer in the majors.
Haren was able to remain effective because he’d always had impeccable control. At no point in his career did he ever walk more than 55 batters in a season and there were just three full seasons in his career when his BB/9 ratio got above 2. But he wasn’t ever known as a Maddux-type pitcher who lived life on the black. Instead, Haren liked to use his ability to throw any pitch at any time as a means of coming right at guys and challenging them where they live. When it worked, it worked: Haren struck out over 200 batters three times and was the active leader in K/9 ratio when he retired. But all that reward came with an ever increasing amount of risk as well: Haren coughed up 305 homers in his career, 54th all time. Back in 2016, Haren directly addressed his lack of both velocity and fear in an amazing, now sadly deleted, tweet: “Sometimes when the count was 3-1, I would just throw it down the middle and hope for the best. People pop up in batting practice, right?” (The quarantine has slowed him down a bit, but Haren has historically been a highly entertaining Twitter follow)
Dan Haren spent 13 seasons in the major leagues, dividing nine of those years more or less evenly betwixt the A’s, Dbacks and Angels. He made the most starts in Oakland and professed to be happiest in Anaheim, but he goes into the Hypothetical Hall with the Diamondbacks, as a nod to his two all-star appearances with the team and the two best overall seasons of his career. He’s also fifth all time in franchise history for bWAR for pitchers (13.1), sixth in ERA (3.56) and fourth in WHIP (1.132).
Chances of making the Hall: Worse than his chances of making an MLB comeback, better than his chances of winning the fastest pitch competition at your local ballpark.
Chances of leaving the ballot this year: 100%
*not his actual middle name, but fuck. It should be, right?
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Better Know the Ballot #5: Shane Victorino

We're moving right along, Baseball Buddies! This year's Hall of Fame ballot contains 11 first time members. None of them are locks for first year induction, but there are several who are going to fall off the ballot for not meeting the 5% threshold. So before they're gone, we're taking a look at all of them. We've already covered Nick Swisher, Michael Cuddyer, AJ Burnett and Dan Haren, which brings us to...
Shane Victorino
Bill James Hall of Fame Monitor: 32
Career bWAR (12 years): 31.5
Stats: .275/.340/.425, 102 OPS+, 108 HR, 231 2B, 70 3B, 231 SB, 731 R
Awards: All Star x2 (NL, 2009; NL, 2011) Gold Glove x4 (NL, OF, 2008; NL, OF, 2009; NL, OF, 2010; AL, OF, 2013) World Champion x2 (Philly, 2008; Boston, 2013)
League Leading Stats: Triples x2 (13, 2009; 16, 2011), HBP (18, 2013)
Teams Played For: Padres (2003), Phillies (2005-2012), Dodgers (2012), Red Sox (2013-2015), Angels (2015)
Humble brag time: thanks to a lucky combination of good friends and being a professional freelancer—thus setting my own schedule—I have been fortunate enough to attend at least one round of every World Baseball Classic. So in 2009, I’m up in Toronto, watching the Pool C games at Rogers Centre. My friend and I are up in the outfield second deck, getting ready to watch what would become Team USA’s 6-5 victory over Team Canada in the opening game. There’s this Yankees fan about three rows ahead of us and he’s spending the first few innings heckling everyone on Team USA who’s not a Yankee which is, like, the MOST “Yankees fan” thing ever.
So, like, as the rosters are being announced and they get to Jimmy Rollins, who was wearing jersey number one for the WBC, and Yankees Dude yells out “Hey Rollins! You might be number one, but you’ll never be Number Two!” Then he looks around kind of smug to make sure that everyone gets his Jeter joke and we’re all like “dude, they’re on the same team.”
Anyway, the reason that story is relevant is because in the third inning when Shane Victorino comes to bat, the best Yankees Dude can come up with is “Victorino? More like ‘Victory? NOOOOOOO!’,” which is some weak-ass sauce.
So what else can I say about the Flyin’ Hawaiian? Well, for starters, there have been 46 major league players born in the great state of Hawaii—including 11 who were born there before Hawaii was even a state—and, measuring just by bWAR, Victorino is the third most successful behind Sid “The Squid” Fernandez (32.75 bWAR) and Charlie “First Marlins Opening Day Starter” Hough (38.42). (Fun side note, the World Series winning 1986 Mets team featured two starters from Hawaii, as Ron Darling was a rotation mate with Fernandez.)
A three sport star in high school, Victorino passed up scholarships in football and baseball at the University of Hawaii after the Dodgers called his name in the 1999 MLB draft. After spending a couple of seasons in their farm system, advancing as high as AA in 2002, before being selected by the Padres in the ’02 Rule 5 draft. Because he was clearly a talented youngster and because the ’03 Pads were led in WAR by fuckin Mark Loretta, it felt like a pretty safe time to gamble on a 22-year-old speedster with upside. Unfortunately for Victorino, it was a case of too fast, too soon and he struggled against big league pitching, slashing .151/.232/.178 in 83 PAs for the Dads, striking out in 23% of his at bats. After just under two months with the club, the Padres waived him. Victorino cleared waivers and, per the Rule 5 guidelines, he was offered back to LA, who sent him back to the farm.
After two more seasons of minor league toil, Victorino was once again selected in the Rule 5 Draft, this time by Philadelphia. He performed better in a smaller sample size, slashing .294/.263/.647 over 19 PAs, but the Phillies weren’t impressed enough to keep him on the roster so he was once again offered back to LA. THIS time, however, the Dodgers said “Nah son” and declined. Thus, having cleared waivers, the Phillies were able to send Victorino down to Scranton. This proved to be a lucky stroke for Philly, as the Flyin’ Hawaiian was about ready to take off.
2006, Victorino’s age 25 season, became his first full taste of the majors and he did not fuck around with it. He would slash .287/.346/.414 that season and immediately jumpstart a six year stretch that saw him combine for a .282/.348/.443, 164 double, 58 triple, 155 stolen base, 531 run scored stat line, amounting to a 106 OPS+ and 21.9 bWAR, including a high of 5.5 in 2011. That same run would see him lead the whole major leagues in triples twice, nab three Gold Glove awards, get named to two all-star teams and pick up a World Series ring in 2008, after hitting a combined .270 in the playoffs with three doubles, a triple, two homers and 13 RBI. Oh, and in 2007 he ended “Shane Victorino Day” with a walk-off homer to beat the Giants.
In 2012, with the Phillies milling around the middle of the NL pack, Victorino was shipped to Los Angeles just before the trade deadline, in exchange for 26 innings of Josh Lindblom, a 64 ERA+ from Ethan Martin and Stefan “Player to be Named Later” Jarrin, who promptly retired the next season and is now an inside sales rep for the Dodgers.
Now, I know that it might not sound like the Phillies got a lot in exchange for Victorino. This was, after all, a Rubin Amaro joint so nobody expected it to be great. But don’t let first impressions fool you! Because if you go down the rabbit hole, you see that the Phillies then flipped Lindblom to the Rangers that offseason in exchange for Michal Young’s desiccated corpse, who they then sent to the Dodgers for Rob Rasmusson, who was sent to the Blue Jays for Bran Lincoln, who pitched 2.1 innings for the Phillies in 2014 before being released. NOW how does the trade look?
But if it’s any consolation, it wasn’t super successful for LA either, as Victorino never looked particularly comfortable in Dodger blue, hitting .245 with an 85 OPS+ in 53 games down the stretch. He was allowed to wade into free agency that offseason, and signed three year, $39 million deal with the Red Sox. He thanked the club by giving them one last brilliant season of baseball.
Victorino started the 2013 season off with an injury in May but came back at the beginning of June and went off to the tune of a career high .294 batting average. His .351 OBP missed his career high by .001, and he finished the slash line with a .451 SLG, the second highest of his career. He stole 21 bags, scored 82 runs, combined for 53 XBH and posted a 118 OPS+ and career high 6 bWAR. He didn’t exactly carry those good feelings over to October, hitting .196 across the playoffs, but it was good enough to help the Red Sox to a World Series win, Victorino’s second career ring.
Then, like the Bluesmobile at the end of that chase though downtown Chicago, Victorino’s body collapsed in a heap and he was done as a useful player. He managed just 30 games the next season, batting exclusively from just one side of the plate for the first time in his career thanks to the pain, before going under the knife in the offseason to have a piece of his fucking back removed.
He came back in 2015 and played like a guy who had gotten a piece of his fucking back removed, before being traded to the Angels and managing to play even worse. In the offseason he signed a minor league deal with the Cubs and I looked forward to watching him play at Iowa in 2016. But he was only on the roster for nine games before being released and, as we all know, nothing else good happened for the Cubs that year.
There was nobody knocking on his door and Victorino seemed to be pretty at peace with the fact that his career was over. So at peace in fact, that it was not until two years later—on July 3, 2018—that Victorino looked up from his newspaper with one of those “oh shit” epiphany moments, picked up his phone and tweeted out the fact that, oh yeah, he was retired now. The Phillies signed him to a one-day contract so they could claim dibs.
Shane Victorino played for 12 seasons in the major leagues, almost all of it in Philly. He had his best single season in Boston, but it would be utterly laughable to think of him going into the Hypothetical Hall as anything other than a Phillie. He was a perennially beloved fan favorite; a heartwarming, charismatic contrast to bygone Phillies like Lenny Dykstra and Curt Schilling. The only category he ranks among the franchise leaders in is stolen base percentage (fourth, 82.11%), but come on. It’s the Phillies. You’ve got to be very good for a very long time to crack the leaderboards of a team where Sliding Billy Hamilton was sealing 102 bases in 1890.
Chances of making the Hall: Worse than Santa’s chances of getting a standing O in Philly
Chances of leaving the ballot this year: 100%
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A Toast to the 2020 Colorado Rockies!

Heading out of 2019 and into 2020, the Rockies had no expectations. Heading out of 2020 and into 2021… we still have no expectations.
But this isn’t a post about hating the Colorado Rockies and what they’ve done poorly or not done! After all, the literal title of this post is “A toast to the 2020 Colorado Rockies”. So instead of hating on Jeff Bridich like we always do as Rockies fans, let’s bring up some highs, some lows, and overall, let’s have a fun time reminiscing about a truly unique Rockies season, even outside covid.

MILE HIGHS

Comeback Player of the Year… after 7 years off
Prior to this season, the last MLB season Daniel Bard pitched in was in 2013, where he only pitched 1 inning, giving up two walks and an earned run. His 9.00 ERA in 2013 and the 6.22 ERA the year prior led to him being designated for assignment by the Red Sox, which was disappointing for Bard after posting great numbers for the 2009-2011 Sox teams. It appeared as if the yips had ended his career, retiring in 2017 after being stuck in minor league purgatory for several years. Yet, seven years later, with tape on his back, he pitches himself back into the big leagues with an excellent spring training showing. He not only is able to throw his first major league pitch since Barack Obama was in office, he’s still got his vintage stuff on a 99 mph pitch. Truly, a comeback story for the ages.
Nolan Is Still Nolan
Nolan Arenado had injured his shoulder within the first few games in Oakland. He’s clearly not himself offensively this year, with a triple slash of .253/.303/.434, and a wRC+ of 76. He hasn’t had one season under 100 wRC+ since his rookie year, so why do I still say “Nolan Is Still Nolan”? Despite that shoulder injury, he’s still the best defensive player in baseball. If you don’t like FanGraphs, here’s Baseball Savant ranking him among the top fielders in baseball, too. Here’s baseball-reference having Nolan lead in defensive WAR as well!. Not a stats guy? Here’s an amazing play by Nolan to pass the eye test. No matter how you slice it, Nolan was still Nolan defensively, and he did all of that through injury.
The Re-Emergence of K-Free and Senzei
Both Kyle Freeland and Antonio Senzatela debuted in 2017. In 2018, they both improved to lead the Rockies oh-so-close to upsetting the Dodgers for the NL West title. Then 2019 came, and both pitchers suffered major setbacks. Kyle Freeland? Went from an unheard of 2.85 ERA despite playing in Coors to a 90’s era Rockies-esque 6.73 ERA. And, Senzatela? Not much better, falling from a respectable 4.38 to a horrendous 6.71 ERA. It looked like the Rockies had a starting pitching problem again, but in 2020 the two made improvements. Senzatela would start to mix his pitches better, and it got him a 3.44 ERA, best of his career, as he led the Rockies in rWAR and ranked second in fWAR. Freeland had a 4.33 ERA, which looks even better if you take out his last start in a meaningless game, bringing it down to 3.69. These guys proved that 2019 struggles were just a fluke and oddly made the rotation a Rockies strength. Hats off to these two underrated comebacks, alongside Daniel Bard.
A Fantastic Start to the Season
Of all of the stories, the high that Rockies fans remember best is their hot start to the season. Starting 11-3, the Rockies looked absolutely dominant in a shortened 60-game season. Not a single Rockies fan, or even any fan, was expecting this greatness. Sure, the offense wasn’t sustainable and the bullpen had signs of distress, but it didn’t matter. The Rockies were #1 in the NL, baby.

ROCKY LOWS

The Rockies Forget How to Win
The higher you climb, the farther you fall, they say. After the Rockies went 11-4 through the first 15 games of the season, they only needed to play .500 ball for the rest of the season to make the expanded playoffs. The Rockies would go 15-30 the next 45 games. In all honesty, let’s not talk about this anymore.
A Bullpen only Sunnier than in Philadelphia
The Phillies had a historically bad bullpen, with an ERA of 7.06. Right behind them, however, were the 6.77 ERA Colorado Rockies. Daniel Bard & Yency Almonte were pretty much the only good relievers in the Rockies bullpen. Carlos Estevez posted a 7.50 ERA after a 3.75 ERA the year prior. Jairo posted a 7.65 ERA mark himself after setting himself up to be a promising closer last season. Hoffman continued to be a bust, with a whopping 9.28 ERA. Pazos provided no support as a lefty with a 16.88 ERA. Then, of course, Bridich-overpayment Wade Davis had an amazing 20.77 ERA. Please come back healthy Scott Oberg. We miss you.
Please Fire Jeff Bridich
Last year, u/Underbubble made this exact point here too: Jeff Bridich needs to be fired. Since then, he’s somehow gotten worse. I’ve already mentioned how bad Wade Davis had been this season, but what did Bridich do to try and improve on his mediocre 2019 team, and supposedly make these 2020 Rockies the 94-win team Rockies owner Dick Monfort famously projected them to be?
Nothing - literally nothing. He signed minor leaguers, released some bad players, and that’s it. Oh, and he pissed off Nolan Arenado. While most fans want a World Series win or even a playoff appearance from their squad every year, every Rockies fan wants Jeff Bridich fired instead, as there’s no reaching those two goals with him as our GM. Rockies fans are to Jeff Bridich as Mets fans were to the Wilpons. Bridich is still our GM though, so it looks to be a rough offseason for us.

GOODBYES, AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS OF AN OLD FRIEND

I want to start by giving a quick shoutout to DJ LeMahieu! After Jeff Bridich foolishly believed that Daniel Murphy was a better investment than DJ LeMahieu, he would go on to become an MVP candidate for the Yankees, in both 2019 and 2020. A triple slash of .364/.421/.590 is just absurd, even in a 60 game season. Beautiful. Let’s say move onto goodbyes though before this becomes a rant.
Matt Kemp: The only team to beat the Dodgers this whole season in a series? The Colorado Rockies. Who hit the home run to put the Rockies in the lead for one of those crucial games. Matt Kemp. You’re probably not a Rockie with the DH rule being removed once again, but you truly made your time here memorable. Thanks.
Chris Owings: Other than the fact we didn’t see you for like, half the season after you got injured… You did quite well for us here. You were an underrated part of our original 11-4 run. I don’t think you’re a Rockie next year either, but you were also memorable.
Wade Davis: Uh. Thanks for September 2018. That wasn’t bad!
Daniel Murphy: Thanks for bringing meme material to 2020.
Drew Butera: We know you’re going to be back again, who are we kidding.
Last year’s toast said good riddance to the 2019 Rockies. Well, 2020 was unique. It’s not gonna be easy to forget. Though still, one last toast to the 2020 Rockies, and good riddance, once again.

ColoradoRockies Top 5 Shitposts by Karma:

I feel silly
RoxsHub (NSFW?)
After doing nothing in the offseason
What a monster.
Wade Davis has me like
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Motor City Management - Detroit Tigers Report 2020 - Exceeding Expectations

Motor City Management - Detroit Tigers Report 2020 - Exceeding Expectations

Motor City Management - Detroit Tigers Franchise - OOTP21
If you're just tuning in, you can catch up here: 2020 (Opening Day)
The 2020 Detroit Tigers now feature the best minor league system in baseball and perhaps the ugliest Opening Day lineup in baseball as well. The league projects them to win only 19 of their 60 games. Going into the season I agreed with them, but, let's take a look at what we're working with and how things panned out.

2020 Tigers Recap

We knew it would be ugly, but it wasn't as bad as expected. The team exceeded expectations and managed 23 wins to their 37 losses. Certainly a down year, but the .383 winning percentage was an improvement over the 2019 final of .292%. The team's hitting was abysmal, finished 13th in runs scored, 15th in OBP/WAOPS/Home Runs. However, as a lone bright spot on offense, we were 1st in the league in baserunning at a +11.2. We'll take any win we can get.
The pitching staff was actually not bad! Finishing 7th in runs against, 6th in starter ERA and 10th in bullpen ERA. I was proud of the arms for holding it down a bit and helping us to the 23 wins without much offense behind them. We ranked 6th in FIP and 5th in pitching WAR. Defensively? We ranked 14th in efficiency and 8th in zone rating, so I'd like to see that improve along with the hitting.
Unsurprisingly, we didn't bring home any hardware in 2020.

Around the League

The Atlanta Braves were your 2020 MLB Champions! The playoffs were a bit wild, with the Angels making a surprise trip to the World Series, where they pushed Atlanta to seven games. The Braves also did the unthinkable in the NLCS, pulling off a reverse sweep of the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Clayton Kershaw notched his 2,500th strikeout, but not many notable milestones happened in 2020.
In the AL, Oakland had a phenomenal season for awards, with Matt Olson bringing home the league MVP and Jesus Luzardo securing both the Rookie of the Year award and a Cy Young! Taylor Rogers grabbed a Reliever of the Year for the Twins.
In the NL, Christian Yelich brought home a 2nd MVP trophy. Cardinals' youngster Jack Flaherty won the Cy Young in a stellar year, while Sixto Sanchez won Rookie of the Year for the Marlins and Edwin Diaz grabbed another Reliever of the Year award!
You can take a look at the Batting Leaders and Pitching Leaders as well. Grienke managed 9 wins in the short season, deGrom had 11 Quality Starts, Yolando Alvarez paced the league with 22 dingers and Daniel Murphy hit about .100 higher than in 2019 to lead the league with a .361. Mondesi was a menace on the basepaths and Vlad Guerrero Jr. was good as always.

Transactions

Trade #1
Tigers receive: RP Kyle Dohy, $1,200,000 cash Phillies receive: C Josh Phegley
I will now always look for waiver guys I can flip later (Phegley was a waiver guy). Dohy has a ton of stuff and not much else, hoping he magically works on it and becomes a great reliever.
Trade #2
Tigers receive: RP Bryan Hudson, CL Wyatt Short, CF D.J. Wilson, $125,000 cash Cubs receive: RF Cameron Maybin, RP Luke Sommerfeld
I'm not sad about 33 YO Maybin leaving - I should've dealt him earlier when he had some more value. Hudson and Short give me more bullpen arms in the system, Wilson probably never pans out.
Trade #3
Tigers receive: CF Gage Canning, $25,000 cash Nationals receive: C Austin Romine
Austin wasn't playing much for me at the deadline and he hit well for the Nats in 9 games. Clearing Romine's money let me sign one more draftee that I didn't have the money for previously.
Trade #4
Tigers receive: CF Rusney Castillo Red Sox receive: 1B Miguel Cabrera (DET retains 60%), 1B Frank Schwindel, C Jon Rosoff
The fans weren't pleased about this one. Miggy was slashing .214/.291/.300. He was making 30M and set to do so for about 5 more years. Castillo was a contract I could get out from under, so I made this move to clear the future books. He hit even worse for Boston the rest of the way. It turns out though, that it wouldn't matter for me or Boston. Miggy retired at the end of the year and I released Castillo - we both clear cap.

Batters - 2020

Starting Lineup
C - Francisco Pena Pena did about what I expected, if not moreso. He's been a AAAA guy for a long time, so I'm surprised that he hit as well as he did in a "full" season. I assume that his defensive acumen is part of the reason for my staff's relative success compared to their talent. Pena played himself into a 2 year extension for $3,000,000 total. 1B - Will Craig Craig was 25 coming into the season with some potential to grow into a slightly above average hitter, having been pretty good in AAA in 2019. Given that I had Cabrera at 1B, I decided to see what Craig had. It was a bit disappointing and my scout thinks he took a step back, but he's on a minimum and I don't believe I'm going to suddenly be good, so he'll get more reps next year. 2B - Hernan Perez Hernan was a super utility guy for the Tigers that I threw into a starting role due to moving Schoop - unsurprisingly, he didn't play well and was awful at the plate. I released him after the season and he went to play in Australia. 3B - Dawel Lugo I had no expectations of Lugo performing that well, but he ended up being a league average hitter with 1 WAR. He'll be back on the team next year, though he may just be keeping the spot warm for future talents. SS - Jordy Mercer Mercer was thrust into the starting job due to lack of bodies and, well, it went about like you'd expect. He was horrible at the plate and was let go after the season. He remains unsigned on January 1st. LF - Myles Straw Straw started the season in LF and played 34 games there, but also spent time at 2B, SS, CF and RF. Basically, he became what Perez had been, but he's a better fielder. His bat was pretty bad, I expected him to hit closer to .300 and he managed .254. He'll be on the team next year for another shot, as he's only 26. CF - Derek Hill It was a lot to expect Hill to make the jump from AA, but at 24 I thought I'd give it a go. He was the team's 22nd ranked prospect and I believe that'll go down after this showing - hit hitting was poor, which seems to be a theme for the team. He will return however, we'll see if he gets more starting duties. RF - Victor Reyes Reyes was almost league average at the plate! That's a win for your 2020 Detroit Tigers. He gave us almost one WAR and hit over .300. He's pretty solid in RF, so I'm excited to see if he can up his discipline at the plate and become a better hitter to go with it. DH - Miguel Cabrera I mean, Miggy was horrible, but we all knew that was coming. The Tigers were proud to retire his #24 after the season though to honor his tenure with the team and I imagine he'll have a decent shot at a Hall of Fame plaque in a few years!
Bench C - Austin Romine Romine was bad, but I never wanted him to hang around much anyway. The bat was unplayable and the defense wasn't needed with Pena being a better defender. He played well in a short duration for Washington after being dealt though. He's unsigned as of January 1st. LF - Christin "Twilight" Stewart Twilight, a nickname he earned by being named Christin Stewart, played 44 games for us including 33 starts. A dozen of his appearances were in left field, but he primarily was the team's DH after the departure of Cabrera. He hit almost league average, which is a plus on this roster, and will be back with us next season. I'm hoping his combination of power and discipline will lead to better things at the plate. He's also a captain on the team and was critical to keeping our morale stable in a bad year. LF - Travis Demeritte Travis also spent most of his time in LF, playing 25 games for us and hitting slightly below average. As is spoiled by his player card, he won't be with the team next season.
Replacements/Call-Ups C - Jake Rogers Rogers was kind of a pleasant surprise. He got a limited run after Romine was dealt, coming up for a cup of coffee at the end of the season. He has a similar situation in 2019, in which he was horrible, but it went much better in 2020! He only had 30 plate appearances, but carried a .556 slugging percentage and a 116 OPS+. He'll likely be on the major league roster next year.

Pitchers - 2020

Rotation SP - Casey Mize Mize was right around league average, which I will certainly take for a 23 year old that got thrust into an Opening Day role and the unit's ace. He finished the season with 3 of his strongest performances in a row and stayed durable the whole season - I'm hoping that those trends continue into 2021. SP - Spencer Turnbull Turnbull led the league in losses and also in fewest homeruns given up. His ERA+ and FIP tell the story - he went 0-7 on a horrible team and is living proof that wins and losses aren't good evaluators. He was an above average pitcher and will likely be relied on heavily in the rotation again next season. SP - Daniel Norris Norris was also right around league average, perhaps a bit of BABIP luck on his side this year, but he's got a balanced profile and was healthy all season. He has four pitches that are above average and no glaring weakness, he'll be back in the rotation again as well. SP - Matt Manning Despite carrying a high .340 BABIP, Manning was pretty good for us, slightly above average on the mound. He's the 2nd best prospect in our system (behind Mize) and I'm counting on these two anchoring the rotation for awhile - Manning got a younger start and has more room to grow, he might end up being the better of the two, who knows. He'll definitely be back. SP - Ivan Nova Nova certainly could've been worse. He was right below average, which was manageable since he was a bottom of the rotation starter. As is spoiled by his card, he won't be back next season, but I did extend him for 2 seasons at 1M per year, so he's a cheap arm.
Bullpen LR - Jordan Zimmermann Jordan was bad and surprisingly no one wanted his 25M contract. He tore his UCL and spent most of the season on the IR before being let go after the year. He'll be out until June and hasn't been signed, I imagine his career is probably done. MR - Rony Garcia Rony was a Rule 5 guy that the Tigers grabbed from the Yankees (before I took over) and while I was worried about his capabilities, he pitched pretty damn well. In 14 games (22 IP) he had a 2.42 ERA, 201 ERA+ and struck out nearly 9 per 9. Now, it does seem like he probably was pretty lucky all things considered, with a 4.43 FIP, but, sometimes its better to be lucky than to be good. MR - Luiz Gohara Gohara was brought in as a possible rotation arm, but ended up pitching well in the pen. He put up a 2.25 ERA in 12 IP, helped out by a probably unsustainable .214 BABIP. Short seasons are weird for evaluating bullpen guys, but Gohara has 3 great pitches, 2 of them being really nasty. He has a history of not keeping the ball in the park, but did well this year in limited opportunities. If he can keep it in, he'll be good. He'll have another go at it next year. His personality scares me though.
MR - Bryan Garcia Bryan was one of my Bryan pair that dominated. Sure, it's limited appearances at only 11 IP, but he never allowed an earned run across those innings, so I'll take it. He also refused to walk anyone which I'm a big fan of. I'm excited to see what he can do across a full season. MR - Buck Farmer Let's talk about the unluckiest hurler in the game, Buck Farmer. A quick glance at his 7.00 ERA and 69 (nice) ERA+ across 27 IP and you're running away from him, but... he had a 3.02 FIP and 62 FIP- with a .362 BABIP. I think he was a bit unlucky and he'll have another shot next season more than likely. MR - Drew Carlton On the other hand from Farmer, Carlton looks like he was a bit lucky. Carlton is supposed to possess great control and he walked 16% of the batters he faced, so that's alarming. We'll see if he makes the cut next year, but he's on a minimum deal and has minor league options if needed. MR - Blake Taylor Feels like I had so many similar arms in the bullpen and a lot of these guys are interchangeable. Taylor was okay - I'm concerned about him if the BABIP stabilizes, but he'll have a shot at it next year again. MR - David McKay McKay was below average in 24 IP, but had a .446 BABIP. That feels unlucky. He has an absolutely nasty slider and I'm hoping he can bounce back, but if not he has minor league options. SU - Bryan Abreu The other dominating Bryan. He refused to allow an earned run also and also decided to strike out nearly 40% of the opposition. The good news is that his BABIP wasn't super lucky, so I'm hoping he can keep it up next year. He has two elite pitches, another on it's way and a fourth that is above average. He has some stamina, but I think his control would concern me in long doses, but we'll see. He'll be on the staff in some way, shape or form. SU - Hunter Harvey Harvey logged a lot of innings for me given the short season, 36 of them, and in them he was pretty dang good. He's got a nasty curveball and fastball has some life, so I'm hoping he can continue to be a reliable setup man next year. CL - Joe Jimenez Ignore Joe's 4.00 ERA and pay attention instead to his 122 ERA+, 2.65 FIP and 54 FIP-. Joe was good for me, striking out 30% of the batter's he faced with his slidefastball combo. If he brings the changeup up a bit too that's even better. Holding onto a closer during a rebuild may be silly, but Joe was young enough that I wanted to ride it out instead of shipping him out and I hope it'll be worth it. I hope he can be better than 80% on saves though.

Updates from the Farm

I was so pumped about my minor league system. Lots of prospects, I manually set every organization's rosters, lineups and staffs, handling demotions and promotions myself for the first time ever. I was so excited about it that I totally forgot that there was no A/AA/AAA for 2020... what a letdown. So, the stats won't tell me much of a story this year, but I'll still share what my prospects look like and what I expect going forward, as well as where they'll be suiting up to start 2021.
Top 200:
1 (7) - SP Casey Mize For Mize, see above. Given the short season he's still considered a prospect, but this guy is in the rotation and figures to be for awhile. He's rated as the 7th best prospect in baseball by BNN and is my top prospect.
2 (11) - SP Matt Manning Same for Manning, who is discussed above as well - he's moved up a couple of spots after last season.
3 (27) - SP Tarik Skubal Tarik is another top 30 prospect league-wide, another arm in the farm. He has a plus fastball and changeup combo, with a curve and slider that look to be above league average. He projects with above average stuff, league average control and slightly lower than average movement. I have my concerns about Tarik, namely the extreme flyball profile and his poor personality profile, but he's a leader and could be a live arm. I was really hoping to see how he did in AAA last year, so we'll settle for this season and see if he's almost ready. He was great in AA in 2019.
4 (54) - OF Riley Greene Green looks like he may swing an above average bat for me and has the potential to draw a lot of walks. I like that he doesn't have any glaring weaknesses, looks like a good baserunner and is reliable in the field. I wish his arm was a bit stronger and of course he needs to fill out the potential, but he'll be in high A ball in 2021 to see if he can keep progressing nicely.
6 (65) - IF Ke'Bryan Hayes Hayes is a good third baseman that I had plans of teaching 2B this season when I thought there would be games. I think he'll give me some infield versatility, playing solid defense, and I like his personality. He's already got the discipline and doesn't strike out a ton, with some room to improve there. If the contact comes along he'll have a nice profile. I wish we hadn't lost the year because I wanted to teach him a couple of positions, but he might be ready after one more season.
7 (72) - 1B Ryan Mountcastle Mountcastle feels like a prospect that is already ready, but I was hoping to see it myself in AAA this year. The defense is there (sure, only at 1B) and the hitting tool is pretty much big league ready, but I'd love the discipline to fill out more. I think he's probably a better option than Will Craig at 1B already, but I still want to see if his 2019 AAA performance holds. He could be a call-up next season.
8 (78) - C Drew Romo My new scout isn't as high on Romo as the one I had when I drafted him, but I'm still hopeful. Since he was in a low enough league, we can actually see that he was a good player in the Gulf Coast League last year, hit well in his 49 games. He's definitely going to be going up to Low A to see if he keeps moving nicely and hopefully that helps the hit tool come along. The defense is already solid and I love the high work ethic and leadership - I'm hopeful he's a long-term backstop for me.
9 (87) - 3B Isaac Paredes Paredes is why I'm teaching Hayes 2B - I think Paredes profiles better at 3B, though isn't going to win any gold gloves there. He was great in 2019 so I want to see it a bit in AAA, but he's coming along nicely despite no playing time. He looks to truly have no weakness, though no elite talent either. If he fills out the hitting, he'll be a nice everyday player for me soon.
10 (96) - RP Bryan Abreu See above for Abreu's 2020 in the MLB. Abreu was great in relief and I imagine he doesn't quite have the stamina for more, but BNN likes him as a top 100 arm.
11 (124) - 1B/OF Evan White I really wanted White to learn a corner OF position, he's got the ratings for it (60/60/60) and I have Mountcastle at 1B in the pipeline too. The new scout likes White even more than my old one did, and he had a couple of nice positive progressions throughout the season despite no playing time. The concern with White is the hitting, but it sure looks like it's come along nicely already and he looks about as big league ready as he's going to - I just wanna see him do it in AAA for a bit this season.
12 (129) - RF Yusniel Diaz Diaz looks like he can be a league average hitter and a good right fielder. Frankly I'm hoping his high work ethic pushes one of his hitting tools a bit higher to make him more worthwhile, but he was hitting well in AA in 2019 and I hope he'll do the same in AAA.
13 (143) - SP Franklin Perez Perez has some work to do and his fragile durability concerns me a lot. It's probably as good of a time as ever to try to sell on him if anyone will take him, but I'm not sure if they will. BNN still likes him as a top 150 guy though and he looks to have a fairly balanced profile. If he survives on the team until the season he'll open it AA.
14 (146) - OF Daz Cameron Daz is the guy I'm hoping replaces Hill in CF soon. He needs to show me the bat in AAA, but the speed is good and the defense is good. He's god a solid profile (and I need a prankster on my MLB team) and has the makings of a solid walks guy with decent average and pop.
15 (168) - SP Kyle Harrison The big lefty spent time in the GCL after being drafted in the 3rd round (69th overall, nice) and was pretty solid in his time there. 10 starts, 3.04 ERA with an ERA+ of 152. The strikeouts weren't that great, but he didn't give up a bunch of homers or walks - he'll be in Low A next season.
16 (190) - Dean Kremer Another arm I would've loved to see in AAA this season, he struggled there in 2019 but I think he's ready now. Four solid pitches, balanced profile, but I need to see him perform in AAA this year before deciding if he's ready to come up, I think he's a year away.
Notes on some outside the Top 200:
LF Sammy Siani did well enough in R+ that he'll go to Low A next season. SP Justin Dunn will get time in AAA to see if he's ready. SP Ryan Hagenow wasn't overly stellar in the GCL, I might try him in Rookie + for the year rather than a full bump to A-. SP Charez Butcher was solid in the GCL, will see A- action in 2021. SP Storm Hierholzer was decent in the GCL, he'll go to R+ for the Clio Kings. CF Derek Hill is now 28th in my system and outside the Top 500. OF Petey Halpin struggled a bit in the GCL, may give him another year there or try R+. SP Calvin Schapira was good in A-, will go to A/A+. 2B Addison Barger raked in R+, will go to A- or A. C Yeison Ceballo was a bit below average in Rookie ball, will try R+. SS Hunter Haas will move to R+ from the GCL after an average season. SP Alex Greene was solid in the GCL, will go to A-. SP Davis Heller is probably ready for A- after a decent R+ season. SP Hunter Cranton dominated R+, will go to A/A+ (was 20th round pick). 1B Alex Burleson was solid in limited time in the GCL, will go to A-. IF/RP Masyn Winn tore his rotator cuff and missed most of 2020, will repeat GCL. RP Luke Little struggled in R+, will repeat. RP Blake Weiman retired from baseball to go play golf.
I'm looking forward to getting all of my prospects on the field in 2021 and seeing if we can improve upon our major league performances. I know it'll be another rough year, but we have lots to look forward to!
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Even though everyone's already forgotten about Baseball-Reference's simulated season, I put together a prospective ballot for each award based on how players did in the sim.

If you have no idea what I'm talking about click here. Here’s some more links to how AL pitchers did, how NL pitchers did, how AL batters did, and how NL batters did. Also if a stat is italicized that means the player led their respective league in that category. Anyway onto the important stuff.

American League MVP

1. Francisco Lindor, CLE

.309/.361/.546, 205 H, 56 2B, 33 HR, 131 RBI, 362 TB, 9.2 WAR Lindor proved he was the complete package this year. At the plate, he led the AL in hits, hits for extra bases, and total bases. Of course, clobbering 56 doubles and 33 homers will do that. He had the most WAR of anyone in the American League (including the fish man), and his glove sure helped that number. Oh did I mention his team came back from a 3-0 deficit to win the World Series? Because his team came back from a 3-0 deficit to win the World Series.

2. Mike Trout, LAA

.275/.436/.556, 151 H, 43 HR, 145 BB, 94 RBI, 129 R, 9.0 WAR Wow didn’t expect to see him here. Led the AL in OBP and OPS. Shocker. Would've led WAR too if it wasn't for that Indian man. Also led league in Runs Scored and Walks because why not when you're a god. Mike Trout is still very good at baseball, and the Angels still didn't make the playoffs.

3. Yordan Alvarez, HOU

.304/.380/.551, 195 H, 39 HR, 135 RBI, 354 TB, 162 GS, 5.2 WAR The 23-year-old really stepped up this year, batting in the most runs in the league. He also scored 118 runs, the second most on a team that won 94 games. Alvarez also came in super clutch for Houston with 4.5 Win Probability Added, third most in the league. Second most was Mike Trout with 5.0, and in first we have…

4. Matt Chapman, OAK

.248/.337/.512, 151 H, 42 HR, 127 RBI, 94 R, 7.1 WAR, 5.2 WPA A low batting average didn’t matter to the reigning Gold Glove winner, whose team won the division by 5 games. I feel pretty safe in saying if Chapman had been gone the Athletics wouldn’t have won 99 games, and when a player does something like that, you put him on your MVP ballot.

5. Shohei Ohtani, LAA

As Batter: .301/.372/.520, 121 H, 21 HR, 43 XBH, 209 TB, 79 RBI, 72 R, 3.5 WAR As Pitcher: 10-14, 3.68 ERA, 20 QS, 203.0 IP, 73 BB, 246 K, 1.084 WHIP, 3.2 WAR Second best OPS on a team with Mike Trout on it is nothing to sneeze at. Accomplishing that while also being arguably the best pitcher on the squad and you have Shohei Ohtani. While, again, the Angels didn’t make the postseason, that 86-76 record would look a lot worse if it weren’t for Ohtani-san.

6. Byron Buxton, MIN

.274/.322/.446, 189 H, 24 HR, 308 TB, 97 RBI, 113 R, 55 SB, 754 PA, 691 AB, 6.3 WAR A shoo-in for Gold Glove in CF following Kevin Kiermaier’s midseason trade to the Cubs, Buxton helped his team win 97 games, finishing only one game behind the AL Central-winning Indians. Buxton also held his own at the plate, where he settled in more than any other American League batter, and made the most of it. Second most bags swiped in the league too.

7. Jose Ramirez, CLE

.289/.363/.540, 186 H, 38 HR, 83 XBH, 348 TB, 108 RBI, 125 R, 28 SB, 6.6 WAR Batting in front of the Francisco Lindor does have its perks, but when that bat is Jose Ramirez, it helps even more. Ramirez was also the leader in runs scored on the come-back-from-a-3-and-0-deficit-to-win-the-World-Series team, and finished with the second most extra base hits in the AL (behind Lindor).

8. Yoan Moncada, CHW

.308/.370/.531, 197 H, 36 HR, 88 RBI, 108 R, 340 TB, 6.6 WAR, 4.1 WPA Moncada’s inclusion this high up is more out of sympathy than anything else. His team came in with such high promise, so many predicted they’d compete for the division, before finishing the year below .500 at 78-84. He still contributed, garnering the 3rd most hits and the 7th most total bases in the AL, but ultimately fell victim to a team that started Edwin “.180/.261/.359 and -1.6 WAR” Encarnacion at DH for 138 games. A bullpen whose second best arm had negative WAR probably didn’t help either.

9. Gleyber Torres, NYY

.291/.371/.559, 178 H, 46 HR, 81 XBH, 132 RBI, 121 R, 342 TB, 6.3 WAR, 4.4 WPA Best player on the team with the most wins in the AL. Second most homers in the league behind Joey Gallo’s 47. Only thing holding him back is the excellence of everyone above him. And the fact that while he was the best player on the only AL 100-win team, he was far from the only great player on that team.

10. Shed Long, SEA

.287/.352/540, 182 H, 39 HR, 79 XBH, 343 TB, 133 RBI, 103 R, 5.1 WAR Wanted to acknowledge the surprise team of the year, the Seattle Mariners, who led their division for a good portion of the season before regressing to finish at 84-78. A big part of their success was Long, who led the team in hits (by 24), RBIs (by 46), homers (by 11), and qualified OPS (by .113). In other words, the tenth spot on this ballot went to the entire Mariners offense, and his name is Shed Long.
Honorable Mentions: George Springer HOU (.303/.386/.564, 44 HR, 6.6 WAR) Rafael Devers BOS (.303/.351/.457, 38 HR, 2nd most TB, 6.1 WAR) Andrelton Simmons LAA (.283/.318/.407, 6.6 WAR) Gerrit Cole NYY (18-4, led league in ERA and Ks, 6.0 WAR) Trey Mancini BAL (~30 games lost to injury, .302/.368/.587, 40 HR, 4.1 WAR)

American League Cy Young

1. Gerrit Cole, NYY

32 GS, 18-5, 214.1 IP, 3.02 ERA, 283 K, 23 QS, 1.106 WHIP, 11.9 K/9, 2.0 BB/9, 6.0 WAR Best pitcher on the best team, but that’s not why I’m voting for him. He’s in the #1 spot because he led the league in the two more important categories of the Pitching Triple Crown, only walked 48, and accrued the most WAR of any AL pitcher.

2. Shane Bieber, CLE

33 GS, 20-8, 214.2 IP, 3.65 ERA, 218 K, 22 BB, 20 QS, 1.030 WHIP, 9.1 K/9. 0.9 BB/9, 4.8 WAR Lowest WHIP and fewest walks surrendered of any qualified AL starter, most wins in the league, and need I remind you that he’s on the team that came back from a 3-0 deficit in the World Series to beat the St. Louis Cardinals? While he was tenth in strikeouts, his miniscule number of walks meant his K/BB was also the best in the American League.

3. Lucas Giolito, CHW

34 GS, 13-9, 187.2 IP, 3.40 ERA, 277 K, 14 QS, 1.040 WHIP, 13.3 K/9, 2.2 BB/9, 4.6 WAR While he may not have gone as long into the games he started as the people above him, G-Elite-o made his pitches count. Only six strikeouts behind the leader Cole despite over 25 fewer innings pitched, the highest K/9 in the AL, and probably would’ve had a lot more wins if his bullpen wasn’t a dumpster fire.

4. Jesus Luzardo, OAK

33 GS, 13-7, 210.1 IP, 3.04 ERA, 234 K, 25 QS, 1.108 WHIP, 10.0 K/9, 2.2 BB/9, 5.5 WAR Second lowest ERA, most Quality Starts, and being the best pitcher on a 99-win team while a rookie. Stands right below Gerrit Cole on several lists (ERA and WAR are the primary two that land him here) but his contributions to his team were far from second best.

5. Aroldis Chapman, NYY

48 GF, 1-2, 35 SV, 55.2 IP, 2.10 ERA, 86 K, 0 BS, 1.006 WHIP, 13.9 K/9, 2.0 WAR, 3.7 WPA Yankees games very often came down to Chapman performing (as you can see with the league-high save total), and each time they called on him, he delivered. His 3.7 Wins Probability Added is the highest of any AL pitcher, starting or otherwise. Gerrit Cole, in second, has 3.0. Chapman was integral to the Yankees pitching this year.
Honorable Mentions: Zack Greinke HOU (33 GS, 18-7, 229.0 IP, 4.52 ERA, 6 CG, 2 SHO, 216 K, 27 BB, 3.6 WAR) Brendan McKay TBR (32 GS, 16-12, 186.0 IP, 3.87 ERA, 207 K, 4.3 WAR) Sean Manaea OAK (33 GS, 16-7, 219.1 IP, 3.32 ERA, 192 K, 4.1 WAR)

American League Rookie Of The Year

1. Jesus Luzardo, OAK

33 GS, 13-7, 210.1 IP, 3.04 ERA, 234 K, 25 QS, 1.108 WHIP, 10.0 K/9, 2.2 BB/9, 5.5 WAR Basically for all of the reasons listed for his Cy Young candidacy, plus the fact that he’s a rookie. Dude killed it.

2. Austin Hays, BAL

.286/.326/.510, 179 H, 35 HR, 70 XBH, 319 TB, 87 RBI, 91 R, 3.4 WAR The consensus best rookie bat of the 2020 American League came to us from the Baltimore Orioles. Hays led all AL qualified rookies in every single stat listed above, sharing only his homer total and WAR total with Luis Robert. The future of the Orioles is looking bright.

3. Brendan McKay, TBR

32 GS, 16-12, 186.0 IP, 3.87 ERA, 207 K, 15 QS, 1.210 WHIP, 10.0 K/9, 2.7 BB/9, 4.3 WAR Any other year, Brendan McKay would be an easy pick for best rookie pitcher. He had the bad luck of debuting the same year as Jesus Luzardo, but that didn’t stop him from excelling. He led his team’s rotation in Wins, Quality Starts, and BB/9.
Honorable Mentions: Nate Pearson TOR (34 GS, 8-8, 170.2 IP, 3.85 ERA, 204 K, 7 QS, 1.178 WHIP, 3.2 WAR) Luis Robert CHW (.248/.297/.496, 135 H, 35 HR, 270 TB, 75 RBI, 84 R, 3.4 WAR)

American League Manager of the Year

1. Terry Francona, CLE

98-64, Won AL Central, won World Series Tito just broke a 70+-year World Series drought with his second team. Also, not sure if you’ve heard, but they came back from a 3-0 deficit to win the World Series.

2. Bob Melvin, OAK

99-63, Won AL West, lost ALDS in 4 to eventual WS Champs I honestly don’t know what I’m doing here so I just voted for Melvin because Oakland seems like a good team that Melvin helps along.

3. Scott Servais, SEA

84-78, 4th in AL West A great deal of expectations were upended near the beginning of the season as they led the AL West as late as June and were in a Wild Card spot for a great deal of the time they weren’t leading. Servais was a big part of making that product happen, so that’s why he’s here.
Honorable Mentions: Rocco Baldelli MIN (97-65) Aaron Boone NYY (100-62)

National League MVP

1. Juan Soto, WAS

.317/.441/.626, 187 H, 44 HR, 90 XBH, 369 TB, 141 RBI, 128 R, 130 BB, 9.0 WAR Juan. Soto. And I thought Mike Trout’s age-21 season was incredible. Soto truly showed all he had this year, leading so many offensive categories, captaining a playoff team, and garnering the most RBIs by a batter in a single season since 2009. Now some might say “But Bellinger was more valuable! His WPA dwarfs Soto and he had a much better season!” To that, I say, look at what they had to work with. Bellinger had 9 other players on his team top 3.5 WAR. Soto had 5. Bellinger’s team won 121 games, and without his 9 Wins Above Replacement, they would have won a measly 112, still by far the best in the league. If Soto’s 98-win team gets his 9 wins taken away, their 89 wins don’t capture the division, and depending on how many of those wins go to Milwaukee, they might not even be in the playoffs. So, in that sense, I feel comfortable picking Childish Bambino as my NL MVP.

2. Cody Bellinger, LAD

.297/.431/.593, 170 H, 45 HR, 77 XBH, 339 TB, 104 RBI, 137 R, 134 BB, 9.2 WAR, 8.8 WPA Boy oh boy did Bellinger have a year. Although it ended far short of where many believed it should have in NLCS Game 5, that doesn’t discount the amazing things Belli showed he was capable of. He led the NL in both home runs and walks, the first to do so since Barry Bonds in 2001. His 9.2 WAR was the most in the league. His 137 runs were the most in the league. His team won 121 games. What else can I say?

3. Ozzie Albies, ATL

.325/.367/.542, 222 H, 27 HR, 84 XBH, 370 TB, 95 RBI, 128 R, 29 SB, 7.0 WAR, 7.3 WPA Albies was the best player on a very good Braves team. Led the league in hits and total bases, which, I mean, that’s pretty good. Also spent a fair amount of time this season atop the batting average leaderboard. 7 fewer wins and Atlanta likely isn’t in the playoffs, so, yeah. Dunno if I can say much more. Braves fans better enjoy that contract.

4. Christian Yelich, MIL

.312/.423/.582, 174 H, 39 HR, 71 XBH, 324 TB, 114 RBI, 122 R, 29 SB, 7.9 WAR Another player whose team wouldn’t have made it if his Wins were taken away. Yelich’s Brewers barely scraped into the playoffs, and he dragged them kicking and screaming to that postseason spot. One of only three NL players to pass an OPS of 1.000 (others were Soto and Bellinger), and the third most WAR of any NL player, it’s no surprise he’s on here in such a high spot.

5. Clayton Kershaw, LAD

32 GS, 17-0, 217.0 IP, 2.36 ERA, 227 K, 25 QS, 2 SHO, 0.912 WHIP, 9.4 K/9, 1.0 BB/9, 7.2 WAR Three people are all valid answers to who the best pitcher was in the NL this year. Those men are Max Scherzer, Walker Buehler, and Clayton Kershaw. In my opinion, which will most definitely not be shared by everyone, Kershaw deserves to be remembered as the best. He suffered no losses, allowed the fewest walks and home runs of the three previously mentioned, and, last but not least, he threw a no-hitter. That will surely not convince many of you. It convinced me. And he’s that’s why he’s at number 5.

6. Max Scherzer, WAS

33 GS, 16-8, 226.0 IP 2.63 ERA, 318 K, 25 QS, 0.889 WHIP, 12.7 K/9, 1.4 BB/9, 7.7 WAR See what I meant? Scherzer was dominant. He struck out 35 more batters than any other pitcher did this year. Only eight of his starts weren’t Quality Starts. He pitched more innings than any other NL pitcher not named Johnny Cueto. His ERA and win total are 3rd and 6th among National League starters, respectively. He also pitched his team into the postseason, so it seems like he did all right.

7. Walker Buehler, LAD

33 GS, 15-5, 205.1 IP, 2.28 ERA, 278 K, 24 QS, 0.843 WHIP, 12.2 K/9, 1.5 BB/9, 7.1 WAR, 3.8 WPA I really didn’t have any option but to group these three together. They were all just that good. And Buehler was no exception. League’s lowest ERA, lowest WHIP, and second most strikeouts. Lowest H/9 (6.0) of any NL starter as well. The only thing that Buehler did wrong was pitch so well in the same year as two other amazing performances. He even performed in the playoffs, allowing but two runs in striking out 19 in 15.1 innings of NLCS work only to see it all wither away as LA lost both games. You’ll get em next year.

8. Nolan Arenado, COL

.296/.364/.572, 182 H, 44 HR, 80 XBH, 351 TB, 110 RBI, 122 R, 7.8 WAR The high-flying third baseman may not have reached the postseason, but that doesn’t mean he didn’t try. With the most home runs and runs scored for the most potent offense in the NL West not based in Los Angeles, Arenado only struck out 103 times this year. That was the second lowest on the team, and lower than 93 other qualified batters. I guess he was also a pretty good defender so there’s that too.

9. Kris Bryant, CHC

.285/.413/.533, 159 H, 35 HR, 297 TB, 86 RBI, 107 R, 100 BB, 22 HBP, 7.0 WAR The Cubs lost 97 games this year, the most in the National League. They did that due to the trainwreck that was half their rotation and a bullpen that was equivalent to soggy bologna. If they were tanking, it appears they forgot to tell Kris Bryant, because he went off. Fourth highest on-base percentage among qualified batters. 5th highest OPS. 5th most walks. Top ten in many other categories. If you were curious who was above him on those leaderboards, many of them are elsewhere on this ballot. Pity the Cubs’ pitching exploded or he’d be in for a much better conclusion to a fantastic year.

10. Fernando Tatis Jr., SDP

.280/.354/.521, 173 H, 35 HR, 322 TB, 84 RBI, 98 R, 5.2 WAR If anybody doubted that Tatis Jr. was destined for greatness, this year silenced all doubters. At 21, Junior helped a surprise San Diego squad to a much-higher-than-predicted 77-85 record, and led the team in hits, home runs, slugging, and total bases while he was at it. He also had the most WAR on the team but that was kind of a given. He can only go up from here.
Honorable Mentions: Jacob deGrom NYM (13-14, 222.1 IP, 2.67 ERA, 250 K, 26 QS, 1.043 WHIP, 5.1 WAR) Kolten Wong STL (.283/.363/.390, 181 H, 42 XBH, 249 TB, 59 RBI, 102 R, 39 SB, 6.1 WAR) Miguel Rojas MIA (.300/.359/.421, 187 H, 49 XBH, 68 RBI, 82 R, 20 SB, 6.5 WAR) Ronald Acuña Jr. ATL (.302/.392/.536, 184 H, 35 HR, 71 XBH, 327 TB, 114 RBI, 117 R, 39 SB, 6.1 WAR) Gavin Lux LAD (.295/.376/.519, 161 H, 27 HR, 63 XBH, 283 TB, 74 RBI, 98 R, 22 SB, 5.4 WAR) Stephen Strasburg WAS (19-5, 211.0 IP, 3.67 ERA, 242 K, 22 QS, 1.095 WHIP, 6.7 WAR)

National League Cy Young

1. Clayton Kershaw, LAD

32 GS, 17-0, 217.0 IP, 2.36 ERA, 227 K, 25 QS, 2 SHO, 0.912 WHIP, 9.4 K/9, 1.0 BB/9, 7.2 WAR Said all I need to say back over at #5 on the MVP listing, so go peep that if you haven’t already to know why he’s here.

2. Max Scherzer, WAS

33 GS, 16-8, 226.0 IP 2.63 ERA, 318 K, 25 QS, 0.889 WHIP, 12.7 K/9, 1.4 BB/9, 7.7 WAR Same as Kersh. This was really tough I promise you, and tomorrow I might feel differently, but this is my ballot today.

3. Walker Buehler, LAD

33 GS, 15-5, 205.1 IP, 2.28 ERA, 278 K, 24 QS, 0.843 WHIP, 12.2 K/9, 1.5 BB/9, 7.1 WAR, 3.8 WPA Ditto on the last two. Buehler also led the league in WPA for starters, which I didn’t mention up there, but do here because this is specifically a pitching award.

4. Jacob deGrom, NYM

34 GS, 13-14, 222.1 IP, 2.67 ERA, 250 K, 26 QS, 1.043 WHIP, 10.1 K/9, 2.2 BB/9, 5.1 WAR While deGrom may have lost out on the three-peat, he didn’t lose for lack of trying. In only his second losing season, the deGrominator led the league with 26 of his 34 games started being Quality Starts. He also happened to be given an average of, and I calculated this myself, 1.97 runs of support. Because of course he was. He did throw a no-hitter of his own against the team that would eventually win his division, though. So that’s pretty good.

5. Stephen Strasburg, WAS

33 GS, 19-5, 211.0 IP, 3.67 ERA, 242 K, 22 QS, 1.095 WHIP, 10.3 K/9, 1.5 BB/9, 6.7 WAR The Nationals and Dodgers had, without a doubt, the best 1-2 starting duos in the league this year. Scherzer and strasburg were 1st and 4th on pitcher WAR league-wide, and Kershaw and Buehler were 2nd and 3rd. Strasburg showed last year was no fluke, striking out the 6th most batters of any NL pitcher and having the 4th best K/BB of any starter. His 22 quality starts were also tied for fifth most in the National LEague, and his 19 wins were the second most behind only Dodger Alex Wood. Strasburg’s numbers speak for themselves.
Honorable Mentions: Jack Flaherty STL (33 GS, 10-9, 198.1 IP, 3.40 ERA, 245 K, 1.008 WHIP, 11.1 K/9, 2.2 BB/9, 5.9 WAR) Robbie Ray ARI (34 GS, 18-7, 203.0 IP, 3.01 ERA, 1.158 WHIP, 5.5 WAR) Josh Hader MIL (42 GF, 4-3, 52.0 IP, 1.38 ERA, 25 SV, 105 K, 0.932 WHIP, 18.2 K/9, 2.8 WAR) Freddy Peralta MIL (9-6, 3.01 ERA, okay overall, but threw a no-hitter with 17 strikeouts)

National League Rookie of the Year

1. Gavin Lux, LAD

.295/.376/.519, 161 H, 27 HR, 63 XBH, 283 TB, 74 RBI, 98 R, 22 SB, 5.4 WAR Early on in the Rookie of the Year race, Lux proved the award was his to lose. And following a rookie season that could see him pop up on more than a few MVP ballots, it looks like he hasn’t. He leads NL rookies in all rate stats, has the most dingers, hits for extra bases, and total bases among that crowd. His team won 121 games. There you go.

2. Carter Kieboom, WAS

.283/.356/.451, 170 H, 21 HR, 58 XBH, 271 TB, 87 RBI, 101 R, 4.5 WAR The consensus second best NL rookie is nothing to be ashamed of when the first place player does what Gavin Lux did. Kieboom showed up too for his first year in the majors, leading NL rookies in RBIs, hits, and runs scored. He’ll definitely be one to keep your eye on in the coming years.

3. Kwang Hyun Kim, STL

59 G, 9-1, 104.1 IP, 2.76 ERA, 2 SV, 10 Ho, 123 K, 0.939 WHIP, 10.6 K/9, 1.9 BB/9, 2.6 WAR The former KBO MVP proved he could hang with the big dogs of the MLB in his debut season across the pond. In a year that saw many promising pitchers debut very well, Kim led them all in ERA, WHIP, and K/BB (5.59) while coming out of the bullpen for the NL pennant winners.
Honorable Mentions: Bryse Wilson ATL (29 GS, 12-9, 173.0 IP, 3.59 ERA, 165 K, 10 QS, 1.069 WHIP, 3.0 WAR) Trevor Rogers MIA (27 GS, 10-11, 164.0 IP, 3.24 ERA, 140 K, 15 QS, 1.220 WHIP, 3.3 WAR) Brusdar Graterol LAD (42 G, 20 GS, 8-4, 131.1 IP, 3.22 ERA, 136 K, 1.150 WHIP, 9.3 K/9, 2.9 WAR) Michel Baez SDP (64 G, 3-2, 82.1 IP, 2.95 ERA, 109 K, 0.996 WHIP, 11.9 K/9, 1.8 WAR)

National League Manager of the Year

1. Mike Shildt, STL

96-66, Won NL Central, Won NL Pennant Again I’m not sure how I’m supposed to judge this because there really isn’t all that much to go on but his team did really well so…

2. Dave Roberts, LAD

121-41, Won NL West, lost NLCS in 5 games His team did really well too but everyone kind of expected that so his placement isn’t as high even though they did really well.

3. Davey Martinez, WAS

98-64, Won NL East, Lost NLDS in 3 games His team did really well too even though they lost a pretty good player so I guess he gets my vote too.
Honorable Mentions: Craig Counsell MIL (86-76) Brian Snitker ATL (92-70)
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batting average leaders major league baseball video

Learn to Hit with the Count Think You Can Hit a Big League Pitcher - YouTube Joe DiMaggio extend his streak to 56 games Milwaukee Brewers MLB Tryout 7/30/12 Rookie First Baseman **never played** Babe Ruth: A Legend in Color (Photo Restoration & Colorization) Max Scherzer makes history with 20-strikeout game Major League Baseball's Top 20 Highest Batting Averages ... Fab 40 Hitting Drills for Advanced Players (Ages 15 and Up) The Top 3 Baseball Hitting Drills to Improve Batting Average!

Batting average AL/MLB -- DJ LeMahieu (NYY): .364 LeMahieu and Voit made some serious history, making the 2020 Yankees the first team since the 1959 Milwaukee Braves (Hank Aaron and Eddie Mathews) to feature both the Majors’ batting leader and home run champion. The official source for sortable MLB player and team stats, including customizable splits and filters. Outfielder Ty Cobb, whose career ended in 1928, has the highest batting average in Major League Baseball (MLB) history. [1] He batted .366 over 24 seasons, mostly with the Detroit Tigers. In addition, he won a record 11 batting titles for leading the American League in BA over the course of an entire season. Year by Year Leaders for Batting Average Major League Baseball Batting Champions. Ted Williams once commented about those that fail 'only' seven times out of ten attempts will be the greatest in the game. He was right about that and the list of batting champions below, reflects those great hitters who truly dominated during a single season of play. Look for your favorite MLB slugger in this impressive list of baseball's top 500 career batting leaders. Batting Leaders Go. Pitching Leaders: Lajoie set an American League record with a .426 average in 1901. He accumulated 3,242 hits for a lifetime .338 average, and was inducted to Cooperstown in 1937. Napoleon Lajoie's career stats > This Week in Baseball History > Downloads from Itunes; Yanks lift WS trophy in '09; Classic games, All-Star, Postseason and Games of the Year: download from 2020 Batting Leaders including BA: LeMahieu .364, H: Turner 78, HR: Voit 22, OBP: Soto .490, OPS: Soto 1.185, R: Freeman 51, RBI: Abreu 60, SB: Mondesi 24, SLG: Soto .695 League By League Batting Averages The Major League record for the highest batting average in the American League was .292, set in 1921, in the National League it was .303, set in 1930. The Major League record for the lowest batting average in the American League was .230, set in 1968, in the National League it was .239, set in 1908. Visit ESPN to view 2020 MLB stat leaders. MLB has enhanced its code of conduct pertaining to harassment and discrimination, has set up an anonymous hotline for those with information about sexual Career Leaders & Records for Batting Average Create your own custom leaderboards Become a Stathead today and run queries with our Season and Career Finders to see the best seasons in MLB history.

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Learn to Hit with the Count

Here's a view from catcher-cam as Dillon Gee gets ready to make a rehab start with the Brooklyn Cyclones. Jerry Florez lists from memory Major League Baseball's Top 20 Highest Batting Averages The Top 3 Baseball Hitting Drills to Improve Batting Average! Try these 3 baseball hitting drills to help improve your batting average! Get Your Free Bat Spe... Jackson has the second highest career batting average in MLB history at .356 1897 - At the age of 45, Chicago's Cap Anson becomes the first major leaguer to amass 3,000 hits when he singles off ... The Top 3 Baseball Hitting Drills to Improve Batting Average! - Duration: 5:21. ... Extreme Baseball Infield Drills-Major League Fundamentals - Duration: 4:16. dmac59ny 1,585,302 views. 4:16 ... Here is a simple, fun and effective way to coach hitters to hit with the count. Knowing how to hit with the count increases baseball players averages and helps them learn to zone in and protect ... My throws from first 1st base to 3rd base were 60mph Major League Standards (average) 75mph, I need to be on my toes and have loose hands when fielding. Obviously, I need to work extremely hard on ... His batting average of .342 is among the tenth highest in baseball history. Babe Ruth is credited with changing the popularity and quality of baseball for all time. Photo credit courtesy of the ... The Nats celebrated on the field at Nationals Park as Max Schezer joined Roger Clemens, Kerry Wood and Randy Johnson as the only pitchers in Major League Baseball history to throw 20 strikeouts in ...

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