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Super Early Team Record Fan Poll

I know it's only the middle of December and the front office isn't done. I know they could still make a surprise major move that changes pretty much everything. But I feel pretty confident when I say I think we have a solid idea what this team's going to look like next season. So I'm curious.

Poll
How many games do you think the Mariners win in 2011?
100+
129 votes
95-99
9 votes
90-94
27 votes
85-89
134 votes
80-84
525 votes
75-79
1126 votes
70-74
1103 votes
65-69
294 votes
Under 65
114 votes

3461 votes | Poll has closed

Comment 188 comments  |  0 recs  | 

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Comments

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100+ as the top category?

Where is the 117?

(Joking of course, and I am not the 100+ voter).

by ARock on Dec 14, 2010 10:50 PM PST reply actions  

On the bright side

Our offense can only get better, I think…

by 1AndDone on Dec 15, 2010 5:25 PM PST up reply actions  

70-74

Should have voted for 65-69, but I went with my initial thought.

by ScottBrowne on Dec 14, 2010 11:00 PM PST reply actions  

75-79

but rooting for you.

Proud Adoptive Parent of no one, cause my son left me.

I still think Obi-wan wanted them to hook up & raise some genetic freaks with midichlorians firing out of their ass. - ResDog

THE GIANTS WON THE WORLD SERIES

by scout6 on Dec 14, 2010 11:00 PM PST reply actions  

75-79

Believe Medium.

Writer: CougCenter Twitterer: @GradyClapp

by Grady Clapp on Dec 14, 2010 11:02 PM PST reply actions   8 recs

I'm expecting 75 wins

More or less. I think the youth will help us win games late in the season.

by G@B3 on Dec 14, 2010 11:02 PM PST reply actions  

74-77

I know it’s hilarious to say since it hasn’t happened in years, but not having a black hole at DH should help.

Dawg! He put da team on his back!

by JAH on Dec 14, 2010 11:11 PM PST reply actions  

The offense as currently constructed just doesn't inspire confidence.

Unless Bedard is healthy for a good chunk of the season, I just can’t see the team breaking 75 wins or so.

by abender20 on Dec 14, 2010 11:54 PM PST reply actions  

I don't think we'll get to 80 wins, but as you said, it's still early and not all deals have been made yet.

I’m hoping that GMZ can do what a whole bunch of people before him couldn’t do. I feel fairly confident, for no particular reason (other than eternal optimism), that somehow GMZ is going to take this team to the WS, once it is his team, and he doesn’t have to deal with the bad contracts of the past that we are paying for now. If he can’t do it, I’m thinking that the M’s will never be a team that amounts to a whole lot. I’ll still root for them, but I’ll never expect that much. Pat Gillick couldn’t pull it off, so if GMZ can’t, probably no one can. I’m not saying GMZ is better than Gillick, just that he’s kind of my last hope.

by TrustBaseball on Dec 14, 2010 11:56 PM PST reply actions  

75-79 but this could easily jump 10 more wins.

We’ve got Felix. Start there. I’m hopeful about the bullpen and Smoak.

ignacio

by ignacio on Dec 15, 2010 12:00 AM PST reply actions  

"Hit me," pleaded the masochist

“No, I won’t” said the sadist.

De Gutibus non disputandum est

by Bearskin Rugburn on Dec 15, 2010 9:19 AM PST up reply actions   5 recs

"You have been banned from Lookout Landing" said the red outlined pop-up box.

replied the Coach Owens.

He was only five-foot-three but girls could not resist his stare... Chip Kelly never got called an asshole.

by qrsouther on Dec 15, 2010 4:25 PM PST up reply actions   4 recs

Currently thinking 75 wins...

… but voted 70-74 because I’m a goddamn pessimist that way.

by c_dowley on Dec 15, 2010 12:19 AM PST reply actions  

I don't think 80 wins is all that unrealistic.

I voted for 80-84, I think we’ll see some of the rebuilding start to take hold. I mean, other than Felix, who had a great year in 2010? Nobody. The pitching staff was okay (Felix, Lee, Fister, and Vargas were the only guys who were above replacement level) I think our success this season will obviously depend on players living up to their potential, and if any one player has either a career year or if multiple players regress to the mean, we’ll probably have a better season than last year. 75-79 is probably the most realistic for us, but who knows? maybe marginal improvements from Brendan Ryan, Saunders, Guti, and Smoak will propel this team back into some form of relevance.

I dunno though, W/O Niehaus, it’s going to be hard watching bad baseball and Olivo batting cleanup (oh God I pray he does not bat anywhere near cleanup)

by Sambearpig on Dec 15, 2010 12:30 AM PST reply actions  

Vargas and Fister had years well beyond any reasonable expectation going into 2010

And Felix won a Cy Young for his efforts.

There is definately room for worse results from the rotation.

by CMC_Stags on Dec 15, 2010 8:30 AM PST up reply actions  

I wouldn't say WELL beyond,

but yeah they over performed, their peak is probably 2-3 wins. Which neither one of them was worth more than 2.9 wins last season, so while I expect some regression I don’t believe they’re all of a sudden going to be replacement level or something, they could still realistically put up 1.5-2.0 win seasons. I think the potential for the offense to improve solely on regression from last year to career averages is reason to believe we’ll win more games, I would be pretty surprised if we put up two historically bad offenses 2 years in a row, but hey, I won’t put it past them.

by Sambearpig on Dec 15, 2010 10:14 AM PST up reply actions  

I think 3.5 wins for Fister + Vargas is perfectly reasonable

it’s not as if they were both running .130 BABIPs – FIP and tRA loved them both

by seattlebruin on Dec 15, 2010 2:03 PM PST up reply actions  

Fister may have pitched well but that doesn't mean he will maintain the same FIP or tRA

If I remember right, low walk rates are very hard for a pitcher to sustain. They may or may not be lucky but they just aren’t as useful when trying to project a player’s performance. For example, I can say with higher confidence that a high strikeout pitcher will continue to be a high strikeout pitcher than I can say Doug Fister will continue walking less than 2BB/9IP.

I’m a little skeptical of Fister. He was good last year. I’m not arguing that. Its just if anything in his game goes downhill (command, velocity, etc.) he will have a tough time maintaining his success. 2010 RRS is an extreme example of what can happen to a guy with borderline talent who sees his home run rate and walk rate increase.

by Edgar for Pres on Dec 15, 2010 3:53 PM PST up reply actions  

I completely agree about the Fister/RRS comparisons

He had a pretty good first half, so no, I don’t expect 2 wins from him, I do think that he and Vargas could combine for anywhere from 2.5-4.0 wins, and anything in that range is perfectly acceptable for me. As long as they can throw a ton of innings and and be serviceable.

by Sambearpig on Dec 15, 2010 7:59 PM PST up reply actions  

All logical.

So where can we find optimism? Ackley, Smoak and perhaps Cust? Pineda may not even be around to provide it.

Love the game, love the beer, love your team.

by THolt on Dec 15, 2010 9:49 PM PST up reply actions  

WELL beyond any reasonable expectation

Fister (2010, MLB) – 171 IP, 4.11 ERA, 3.65 FIP, 4.27 xFIP, 2.9 WAR
Fister (2009, MLB) – 61 IP, 4.13 ERA, 5.10 FIP, 4.50 xFIP, 0.3 WAR
Fister (2009, AAA) – 106.1 IP, 3.81 ERA, 3.39 FIP
Fister (2008, AA) – 134.1 IP, 5.43 ERA, 4.06 FIP

I don’t think any reasonable projection would show him dropping his xFIP, FIP, and ERA will pitching 170 innings in his first full MLB season. Especially as he didn’t have a track record for that level of success in the minors.

Vargas (2010, MLB) – 192.2 IP, 3.78 ERA, 3.95 FIP, 4.82 xFIP, 2.6 WAR
Vargas (2009, MLB) – 91.2 IP, 4.91 ERA, 5.07 FIP, 4.68 xFIP, 0.3 WAR
Vargas (2009, AAA) – 51.2 IP, 3.14 ERA, 3.05 FIP
Vargas (2008) – injured, did not pitch
Vargas (2007, MLB) – 10.1 IP, 12.19 ERA, 8.08 FIP, 6.61 xFIP, -0.2 WAR
Vargas (2007, AAA) – 125 IP, 4.97 ERA, 4.06 FIP

No projection for Vargas for 2010 would have been no where near 192.2 IP, nor at the ERA or FIP he ended the season at.

by CMC_Stags on Dec 16, 2010 9:11 AM PST up reply actions  

If he bats clean up I'm taking ny

Love the game, love the beer, love your team.

by THolt on Dec 15, 2010 9:44 PM PST via mobile up reply actions  

Damn phone...

Taking my money elsewhere. I’ll remain the die hard, borderline retarded fan that I am, but I wont spend money to see that.

Love the game, love the beer, love your team.

by THolt on Dec 15, 2010 9:46 PM PST via mobile up reply actions  

Conservatives estimates have the M's at 34 WAR. Which = 82 wins.

Pitching staff: 15 WAR
Infield + C: 8 WAR
Outfield + DH: 10 WAR
Bench: 1 WAR
Total: 34 WAR

by silverbook on Dec 15, 2010 1:11 AM PST reply actions  

Good post

but get your witchcraft math out of here, this is a place of unfounded speculation and outrageous projections.

162-0, swept by, like, the Blue Jays in the ALDS

by tsunamijesus on Dec 15, 2010 1:21 AM PST up reply actions  

You have more faith

in the pitching staff and infield than I do. I came up with 14 and 7, but I guess that’s just 2 wins.

by Michael Barr on Dec 15, 2010 8:19 AM PST up reply actions  

I should have voted 90-94 instead of 85-89

that way, if the only slightly more improbable happens, I’d be feeling good enough to come back here and say “I told you so”.

However, in defense of optimism – the uncertainty of projected performance makes positive prognostication plausible:

Ryan might hit, a little. Figgins might hit a little more. Guti might hit a little bit more. Moore might be more. Ackley will hit more than Wilson. More Ichiro, please. Saunders might hit a lot more. Smoak might hit a lot more.

See how easy this is??? And we haven’t even got to the pitching staff, yet.

More Fernandez, please.
Bedard might be more effective than Bedard.
More Cortes couldn’t be a bad thing.

Bottom line – it shouldn’t be that big a surprise to anyone if all the sudden players play like they should – and not like they have. If we get a couple of nice surprises along the way, this team will shatter expectations – a phenomena that happens somewhere all the time.

Law of Logical Argument
Anything is possible if you don't know what you are talking about.

by blacknoiseNW on Dec 15, 2010 5:37 AM PST reply actions  

I think we need to plan on that though.

While everything went wrong last year and we were awful, everything could go great this year and we end up with 85 wins. This sounds like a familiar pattern doesn’t it?

by Sec 108 on Dec 15, 2010 8:59 AM PST up reply actions  

It's an odd year so...

125 wins baby!

"Making hitmen legal would really help the unemployment rate."-Thingray

by ToddK on Dec 15, 2010 10:10 AM PST up reply actions  

82 wins 'ish

But all that hinges on that fact I think Smoak is going to rake.

by Scruffy Lefty on Dec 15, 2010 8:41 AM PST reply actions  

Like 80-84 wins

we know Jack is good at getting valuable players for cheap, which is the perfect strategy to try and make an awful team mediocre. We should be in line for bounceback years from several of our players, and have legitimate stars at CF, RF and one of the starting pitching spots

by seattlebruin on Dec 15, 2010 9:24 AM PST reply actions  

expected WAR of the projected Lineup

Starters:
Felix – 4
Vargas – 2
Fister – 1
Assorted other starters (Bedard, Pauley, French etc.) – 1

Bullpen: – 2

Lineup
1B Smoak – 1
2B Ryan, Ackley – 2
SS Jack Wilson, Ryan – 2
3b Figgins – 1
DH Cust – 1
LF Saunders, Bradley – 1
CF Guti – 2
RF Ichiro! – 4
C Olivo, Moore – 1
Bench – 1

26 WAR plus 48 wins for replacement level leads to 74 wins. I guess my vote (75-79) is a little optimistic.

by vj on Dec 15, 2010 9:30 AM PST reply actions  

I have a hard time believing that Guti is a two win player, Figgins is a one win player, and that the starters will combine for eight wins

I think you’re selling us awfully low here, and if anything, this makes me more optimistic about the upcoming season

by seattlebruin on Dec 15, 2010 9:47 AM PST up reply actions  

Guti

2.3 in 2008
2.3 in 2010

2009 looks like the real outlier, but it’s not unreasonable to expect 3 WAR. It just might not be likely.

by Michael Barr on Dec 15, 2010 9:49 AM PST up reply actions  

Didn't get all of that 16.1% in the first 2 months or so as well?

I remember him being on fire to start the season.. then nothing.

by d0nkey on Dec 15, 2010 9:54 AM PST up reply actions  

splits

Pre: .256/.330/.388
Post: .230/.269/.332

Yeeks.

by Michael Barr on Dec 15, 2010 9:58 AM PST up reply actions  

Injury?

I thought he has stomach problems later into the season.. maybe they were bugging him earlier.

by d0nkey on Dec 15, 2010 10:04 AM PST up reply actions  

Rec'd for understatement.

Love the game, love the beer, love your team.

by THolt on Dec 15, 2010 9:51 PM PST up reply actions  

His last three years

2.3, 6.1, 2.3 WAR

His defense, according to UZR, regressed a bit last year. If you assume it snaps back into the 12-14 range (it was 31 in 2009) and he remains exactly the same on offense, he’s a 3 WAR player. I think you have to assume 2.3, but you hope for 3.5.

by Michael Barr on Dec 15, 2010 10:35 AM PST up reply actions  

I think that there are enough questions about UZR and Gutierrez's numbers are enough of an outlier that it's unreasonable to expect that to happen.

He’s been a 2.3 WAR player two out of the last three seasons and while a higher upside is certainly there I think that 2.5 is far more realistic.

by Aaron Campeau on Dec 15, 2010 10:41 AM PST up reply actions  

I agree

like I said, I think you assume 2.3, but you hope for more. I don’t think there are many people that think his defense is going to deteriorate, but if it does, his value gets hammered.

by Michael Barr on Dec 15, 2010 10:46 AM PST up reply actions  

It's less that I think his defense is going to get worse and more that I think the error bars with UZR are huge.

I think he’s one of the best defensive outfielders in baseball, but I don’t think his glove alone is worth three wins.

by Aaron Campeau on Dec 15, 2010 10:50 AM PST up reply actions  

I don't think many other people believe that either.

When he posted +30 runs in UZR in 2009, most everybody was saying that no, he probably really isn’t that good, we need to expect some regression. Which is exactly what we saw last season.

by nathaniel dawson on Dec 15, 2010 1:25 PM PST up reply actions  

A drop of 2.4 WAR from UZR isn't exactly "some regression"

it’s a massive regression and the lowest, the lowest, UZR/PA rate he’s posted in any season.

by Matthew on Dec 15, 2010 1:43 PM PST up reply actions  

To add to that point

Guti UZR/150 since 2007 (first year he played 100 games)
2007 – 17.3
2008 – 26.0
2009 – 28.9
2010 – 6.8

though keep in mind he only played CF full time in 2009-2010

by seattlebruin on Dec 15, 2010 1:46 PM PST up reply actions  

Yes, that drop wasn't likely all regression.

I can see how what I wrote could make someone think that. There was a drop in UZR this past season, which was expected for Gutierrez. A drop of that magnitude, however, was almost certainly only partially due to regression to the mean.

by nathaniel dawson on Dec 15, 2010 1:53 PM PST up reply actions  

I'm not sure where I ignored 2009

But duly noted on the full time status in 2008. I think he had 450 plate appearances though, so he was likely playing at a 3 WAR level.

by Michael Barr on Dec 15, 2010 12:13 PM PST up reply actions  

You ignored it when you said this

“I think you have to assume 2.3”

No, you don’t assume 2.3 unless you are completely ignoring that 2009 happened.

by Matthew on Dec 15, 2010 12:25 PM PST up reply actions  

I also said

“If you assume it (UZR) snaps back into the 12-14 range (it was 31 in 2009) and he remains exactly the same on offense, he’s a 3 WAR player. I think you have to assume 2.3, but you hope for 3.5.”

The 2.3 assumption is just me being conservative I guess – largely based on how lost he was at the plate outside of April. But I completely see that he’s capable of better.

But I take your point, 2.3 probably isn’t fair.

by Michael Barr on Dec 15, 2010 1:56 PM PST up reply actions  

starters

I had Felix at 6
Vargas 2
Fister 1
whoever 0.5
whoever 0.5

Should Bedard actually return and actually pitch and actually resemble anything close to Bedard pre-falling-apart, it would be reasonable to give him a 2.5, I’d think. If he made 25 starts, you could probably give him a 3 WAR

But as it stands, the rotation is a god-awful mess 2-5

by Michael Barr on Dec 15, 2010 9:51 AM PST up reply actions  

I agree with the overall, that the rotation would be something like ten wins

if we bump Guti up to a reasonable three and Figgins back to two, that’s another four wins over vb’s projection.

I just don’t think we can replicate the injuries and bad luck from last season

by seattlebruin on Dec 15, 2010 9:55 AM PST up reply actions  

It's probably best to not expect 6 WAR from Felix next year.

He’s a great pitcher, he certainly could do that, but you can’t expect such a level of performance from any one pitcher in a projection.

by nathaniel dawson on Dec 15, 2010 1:28 PM PST up reply actions  

Don't want to say it but when projecting, there is always the question of whether you worry about the median or the mean

If you think about the mean then injury risk can make a big difference decreasing it alot. A 10% chance of 0 WAR will drag down a projection a ton.

by Edgar for Pres on Dec 15, 2010 3:56 PM PST up reply actions  

Thanks for the thoughtful comments

as I said, my WAR-Nos were guesses. You probably easily can find another five wins or so without being unreasonable.

by vj on Dec 15, 2010 10:08 AM PST up reply actions  

thoughts

Figgins – with a move back to 3b, his defense is going to improve dramatically, and I think it would be pretty safe to give him 2 if not 2.5 WAR, and he could easily exceed that by bringing the second-half Figgins to the plate for all 162 next year.

Felix the last two seasons – 6.2 and 6.8 WAR. 4 seems awfully pessimistic.

I think it’s optimistic to give French, Pauley, Olson a 1 WAR each.

I gave the bullpen 3 WAR, but maybe that’s too rosy

by Michael Barr on Dec 15, 2010 9:48 AM PST up reply actions  

This is reasonable, except there are no bombed-out craters.

I expect our bench to be replacement level or worse. Maybe the same for catchers. I know, regression means most M’s should improve to palatable. But if you combine that with increases for Felix, Guti, and either Saunders or Smoak, this looks about right. I went 75-79, too.

by yuniform on Dec 15, 2010 10:32 AM PST up reply actions  

You are incredibly low on C, 3B, DH, CF

Olivo’s been nearly a 2 WAR player on average the last five seasons while playing roughly 75% of games. You’re best off assuming 0 WAR for the remainder, but still, 2 WAR for catcher is what’s reasonable.

Figgins was terrible this year, but if you just ignore defense, he’s close to a 2 WAR player. Unless you think he’s going to hit like he did last season and that he really is one of the worst 3B in the game, 1 WAR is simply ridiculous.

Cust has averaged over 2 WAR as a DH for the last four seasons and is coming off a 2+ WAR season. He’s not great, and yes, aging, but expecting 1 WAR out of DH is not grounded in actual numbers.

Guti’s never been a full time 2 WAR player. Never. At worst he’s 3 WAR and that’s if you think he repeats 2010.

by Matthew on Dec 15, 2010 11:51 AM PST up reply actions  

I repeat, the numbers were just guesses

My point was more about the method of arriving at an estimated win total than the specific numbers. Feel free to add a win for each of the four positions plus 2 to Felix to come to an estimated win total of 80, if you feel optimistic about this team. I’d say that after a 61-win-season, 74 wins would be a nice improvement.

by vj on Dec 15, 2010 12:14 PM PST up reply actions  

Your phrasing is still misleading.

Rooting estimates in reasonable projections is not being optimistic. It’s being reasonable.

by Matthew on Dec 15, 2010 12:26 PM PST up reply actions  

If we add those adjustments in we are looking at maybe ~5 WAR more

So something like an 80 win team with lots of upside or downside, right?

by Edgar for Pres on Dec 15, 2010 4:00 PM PST up reply actions  

100+ BABY!

C’mon.. you all know it’s going to happen. Mariners win 118 games, the world series..

Then the apocalypse comes and the world ends..

by d0nkey on Dec 15, 2010 9:48 AM PST reply actions  

You're all crazy.

What happened to the pessimism? I still have mine, dammit! 69 wins ahoy!

by Eyebrows on Dec 15, 2010 10:29 AM PST via mobile reply actions  

Or 8.

Math is fickle and imprecise, so it’s hard to be sure what the real difference between 61 and 69 is.

by RunningFool on Dec 17, 2010 10:58 AM PST up reply actions  

Well, Dave Cameron's said that his offseason plan team (with Berkman, Jeff Francis, etc.) projected to win about 80 games.

Here’s the link. And the current M’s roster isn’t too different from it. The only differences are:
Brendan Ryan (1.5 WAR?) instead of Nick Punto (1 WAR)
Jack Cust (1.5 WAR?) instead of Lance Berkman (2 WAR)
Miguel Olivo and Adam Moore (combined 2 WAR?) instead of Adam Moore and Gregg Zaun (combined 1 WAR)…+1 WAR
Benchwarmer (0 WAR) instead of Ryan Roberts (0.5 WAR)… -0.5 WAR
Erik Bedard (????) instead of Jeff Francis (2 WAR)…
The bullpen is pretty much the same.

So if Bedard doesn’t throw a pitch, this team seems about 2.5 WAR worse than an 80-win team (ergo, it’s a 77-78 win team), which is what I voted for. If we can sign Jeff Francis and see a healthy Bedard for a decent part of the year, then maybe it’s a .500 team. If Bedard stays healthy, or if Gutierrez and Figgins play more like 2009 than 2010, or if Ackley, Smoak, Saunders, or Pineda become above average players this season on top of everyone else playing up to their projections, we have a reasonable chance of being competitive.

by Decatur on Dec 15, 2010 10:54 AM PST reply actions  

I question the +1 WAR increase for Olivo over Zaun.

Plus, the move somewhat eliminates a potential “holy wow” good year from Moore.

by yuniform on Dec 15, 2010 11:17 AM PST up reply actions  

So I calculated this after I voted (75-79)

But here:
Catcher: 1.9
Smoak: 2
Ryan: .5
Wilson: 0
Figgins: 2.4
Saunders: 2.4
Gutierrez: 3.3
Ichiro: 4.1
Cust: 0.9
Bench: ~0.5 (add however much for Ackley)

Felix: 7
Fister: 2.9
Vargas: 2.3
French: 1
Pauley (or whoever): 1
Bullpen: ~3

Overall that’s about 35 WAR or about 83 wins. I feel like I’m probably optimistic in left and at third but I think I’m underestimating Ryan and Ichiro somewhat so maybe it’ll even out. Assuming regression happens then we’re average!

by Mariner John on Dec 15, 2010 12:50 PM PST reply actions  

I think you're way high on Fister and Vargas, but maybe by 1.5 wins between the two

French and Pauley, I think they’re a bit closer to replacement level, and not sure Felix’s true talent is seven wins.

I think the point is that we project to be OK next year sheerly due to some upgrades and regression alone.

How did you do this calculation, if I might ask? Fangraphs Bill James projections?

by seattlebruin on Dec 15, 2010 12:54 PM PST up reply actions  

I did the fan projections for each of our players on Fangraphs.

I guess I’m having a lot of faith in Fister and Vargas being able to repeat their seasons but Safeco helps. And Felix is obviously high but I just don’t see him doing any worse. Maybe bring it back a win.

by Mariner John on Dec 15, 2010 1:13 PM PST up reply actions  

Felix put up 250 inning with an xFIP of 3.26 to get 6.2 WAR

I just don’t see him greatly exceeding either of those totals. Six seems reasonable because hey, Felix is awesome, but I ended up using 5 in my projection anyway

by seattlebruin on Dec 15, 2010 1:44 PM PST up reply actions  

That was my thinking

We should be better than last year thanks to regression alone

by Eyeball Kid on Dec 15, 2010 12:52 PM PST up reply actions  

I think you're high on bullpen by a win.

Also high on Felix, Saunders, Fister.
Everything else is pretty good to me, however, except Cust seems a bit low

by lailaihei on Dec 15, 2010 12:57 PM PST up reply actions  

Yeah I admittedly went a little crazy with League and was still including Aardsma.

But we do have a lot of possible .5 win guys coming up with Lueke, Cortes, Varvaro, The bullpen is probably the most volatile area to project because holy shit relievers are weird.

by Mariner John on Dec 15, 2010 1:17 PM PST up reply actions  

I think you're high on the rotational top three and Saunders

but low on Figgins, Cust, Ryan and Wilson.

Overall, close to a wash I think.

by Matthew on Dec 15, 2010 1:45 PM PST up reply actions  

Matthew,

you say that we can’t just ignore an outlier season to help our data, and Figgins was absolutely miserable in 2010. How does that affect his projection going forward? Since much of his issues came from awful fielding at 2B in 2010, do you think he completely rebounds in 2011?

For my projection, I used a 4-3-2-1 scheme and projected him to be worth ~3.3 wins/162 games, and guessed he’d play ~130 games this season for 2.7 WAR. Do these seem reasonable to you, and if not, why?

by seattlebruin on Dec 15, 2010 1:49 PM PST up reply actions  

Reasonable,

but I’d up his games played a touch. Part of his low games total prior was him not being a full time starter with Anaheim

by Matthew on Dec 15, 2010 1:54 PM PST up reply actions  

OK, so from my calulations, I got the lineup being worth like 22.6 WAR

I used a .4-.3-.2-.1 regression of the past four years where available to get WAR/162, then normalized for expected playing time.

The PT numbers were quite arbitrary, of course.

Olivo (95 games) – 1.9
Moore (57 games) – .3
Smoak (135 games) – 1.7
Ryan (105 games) – 1.2
Ja. Wilson (74 games) – .8
Figgins (130 games) – 2.7
Saunders (125 games) – 1.5
Gutierrez (150 games) – 3.5
Suzuki (155 games) – 4.7
Jo. Wilson (55 games) – replacement level defined
Bradley (72 games) – .9
Cust (103 games) – 1.6
Ackley (92 games) – 1.8

For the younger guys, I had to make up a bit of the projection, but I don’t think five wins between Ackley, Smoak and Saunders is out of the question. The total there is 22.6 WAR, and if we guess at the pitchers being something like

Felix – 5
Vargas – 2
Fister – 1.5
French – .5
Bedard – .5
Other starters – .5
Bullpen – 2

I came up with about 34 WAR, so ~82 wins.

I think it’s a bit high on Ackley, Bradley and Wilson, but by maybe a win or two total. I feel pretty comfortable saying I would guess ~80 wins, especially knowing GMZ probably isn’t done for the winter yet.

by seattlebruin on Dec 15, 2010 1:38 PM PST reply actions   2 recs

how did u manage

to pull that out of your ass?

by 1AndDone on Dec 15, 2010 5:59 PM PST up reply actions  

I can't speak for SB, so I'll just quote from the post you should have read more thoroughly.
I used a .4-.3-.2-.1 regression of the past four years where available to get WAR/162, then normalized for expected playing time.

Also please refrain from using chatspeak on LL.

by Eyeball Kid on Dec 15, 2010 6:09 PM PST up reply actions  

I was joking around

sorry for saying the A word Farnsworth, I sincerely apologize. I know you said your process is arbitrary but if you can pump out an equation to give the Mariners 82 wins then you really need to run the numbers for every other team in the league, I don’t think the math works.

by 1AndDone on Dec 15, 2010 6:25 PM PST up reply actions  

21 win increase

I don’t remember them adding Cliff Lee and Carl Crawford

by 1AndDone on Dec 15, 2010 6:31 PM PST up reply actions  

I just don't see

how in any universe this could be considered an above average Major League Baseball team. I mean Cliff Lee went 8-3 for us last year, Vargas Pitched the best he’s ever pitched. Same thing with King Felix and Fister. I just don’t see how we go from historically bad to an above average team. Expecting 82 wins would be a progression to the extraordinary.

by 1AndDone on Dec 15, 2010 6:51 PM PST up reply actions  

A good first step is to learn that pitching won-loss records are pointless.

Literally pointless. They bestow no point.

A second step is to remember that while the pitching was good, the hitting was actually historically bad. Most of it has been replaced or is due massive positive regression.

by Matthew on Dec 15, 2010 6:54 PM PST up reply actions  

Yes the

Pitching was good. It definitely wasn’t awful, and they still managed to lose over 100 games. The thing is I can see a scenario where our pitching declines from last year, and I don’t think our juggernaut offense is going to carry us to 82 wins..

by 1AndDone on Dec 15, 2010 7:09 PM PST up reply actions  

The game of baseball is more than just pitching and offense.

There is also the element of defense which we happen to have elite defenders on our team. All over the field. Our pitching, while not amazing, is pretty good as well. You have to be able to get past the bad offense to make accurate projections for next year. And as everyone has been saying, our offense will not be as bad as it was last year.

by Kirk on Dec 15, 2010 7:21 PM PST up reply actions  

It seems like you and other commenters are talking past each other a little bit because your understanding of how to project a team's record is very different from theirs.

In this thread, everyone here is using Wins Above Replacement (WAR) as the yardstick to measure players by. Here’s the best introduction to how it works. People here are basing their guesses on a mixture of computer-based projections systems, commentary from scouts, saber people, and other writers/reporters, and their own intuitions. The projection systems are measured every year against one another and against the actual, honest-to-god results on the field and reworked and improved accordingly (and this process has been going every year for at least ten years). It’s perfectly fine to be pessimistic and say that this team won’t win seventy games (at least a few regular commenters here believe this). It’s perfectly fine to do this while buying into the projection systems wholesale or questioning their entire validity (although I probably could not follow the argument of someone who could make that argument skillfully because it would involved either a ton of math and spreadsheets or serious scouting acumen or both).

by Decatur on Dec 15, 2010 7:27 PM PST up reply actions   9 recs

Please note...

…the 2011 offense will NOT be the same as last year’s.

Your sense of that offense will be that
   a) Every returning veteran will repeat their putrid performance from last year.
   b) Every new person will do no better than the person they replaced.
   c) There is no improvement in defense.

None of those are likely, given what these players have done in the past.

by rtang on Dec 15, 2010 8:56 PM PST up reply actions  

i'm expecting improvements

but I don’t think it’s realistic to expect 82 wins, but on the other hand crazier things have happened

by 1AndDone on Dec 15, 2010 11:47 PM PST up reply actions  

Based on the voting

Neither do the vast majority of people here.

Most expect the team to be below average (81 wins) by somewhere between 2-11 games.

by CMC_Stags on Dec 16, 2010 9:15 AM PST up reply actions  

Mariners 2007: 88–74

Mariners 2008: 61-101
Mariners 2009: 85-77
Mariners 2010: 61-101

by Eyeball Kid on Dec 15, 2010 6:56 PM PST up reply actions   3 recs

I explained my methodology

here

but if you don’t feel like reading all that, here’s the Cliff Notes version


I used a .4-.3-.2-.1 regression of the past four years where available to get WAR/162, then normalized for expected playing time.

The PT numbers were quite arbitrary, of course.

For the younger guys, I had to make up a bit of the projection, but I don’t think five wins between Ackley, Smoak and Saunders is out of the question. The total there is 22.6 WAR, and if we guess at the pitchers being something like

I came up with about 34 WAR, so ~82 wins.

I think it’s a bit high on Ackley, Bradley and Wilson, but by maybe a win or two total. I feel pretty comfortable saying I would guess ~80 wins, especially knowing GMZ probably isn’t done for the winter yet.

by seattlebruin on Dec 15, 2010 6:10 PM PST up reply actions  

This is an excellent projection.

Well done.
I have a gut feeling that Saunders will be worth a bit more than you projected. I feel like this is the year he makes a big leap forward.

by chezbergrur on Dec 16, 2010 10:29 PM PST up reply actions  

Of course - of the three young guys, I think they have the most variability

any one of Smoak, Saunders or Ackley could have a huge year, but keep in mind what Matthew said, that these are median projections – if you ran the season twice and in one Saunders was four wins and negative one in the second, that would be an average of 1.5 wins per year

by seattlebruin on Dec 17, 2010 11:22 AM PST up reply actions  

Very true.

It’s hard to keep that in mind.

by chezbergrur on Dec 18, 2010 3:22 PM PST up reply actions  

As everyone's making projections,

keep in mind this article by King Kaufman, that 20-25 percent of players are sub-replacement level. Yeah, the whole team fell apart last year and regression should help, but someone’s liable to do that this year. I mean, just look at whose picture he chose at the top. Who would’ve predicted how bad that guy was this year?

by yuniform on Dec 15, 2010 1:55 PM PST reply actions  

That's where variability comes in.

We try to project a player’s mean or median value, not their 15th percentile or whatever.

Projecting Jack Wilson/SS at 1 WAR, for example, does not, does not, does not equate to saying that Jack Wilson/SS will not be below replacement level in 2011. It means that I/we/you believe that given a sufficiently large sample of 2011 seasons, Jack Wilson/SS would accrue 1 WAR. Within that sample of seasons would be seasons where he is worth -2 WAR, would be seasons where he is worth 4 WAR and so on.

This is vitally important to remember.

by Matthew on Dec 15, 2010 2:03 PM PST up reply actions   1 recs

I understand.

I just don’t think all these projections (like Felix at 7 WAR) are median values.

by yuniform on Dec 15, 2010 2:59 PM PST up reply actions  

Trying to figure out who voted for 95-99

Obviously, those that voted for 100+ are just being epic homers. But why would someone vote 95-99? If you are that warped in your view of this team, then why not just go for the 100?

by spencer peaty on Dec 15, 2010 4:35 PM PST reply actions  

Why is everyone so low on Pineda?

As one of the top pitching prospects in baseball shouldn’t he have a floor of 1 WAR over 120 innings, and a ceiling of something 3 WAR over 160 innings?

I even think his learning curve will not be as rough as for most pitching prospects because he has the control to be effective even when the strikeouts aren’t coming, and the velocity and movement to get away with making some mistakes. The list of hard-throwing prospects with good control over the past few years includes Mark Prior, Wade Davis, Phil Hughes, Gallardo, Matt Garza, Adam Miller, Liriano, and Annibal Sanchez .The early seasons for most of those guys went pretty well.

by silverbook on Dec 15, 2010 5:01 PM PST reply actions  

Is that where the list ends?

Or are those just some of the hard-throwing prospects with good control that we’ve seen come up the last decade?

by nathaniel dawson on Dec 15, 2010 5:13 PM PST up reply actions  

Because there is no guarantee of anything from Pineda and even when they do call him up, there is no guarantee he will pitch a large amount

unlike Ackley, who is viewed as a sure thing, we have no idea what to project getting from Pineda – thus it’s best to assume he will have a small impact and toss him in with the “other starters” group.

by seattlebruin on Dec 15, 2010 5:55 PM PST up reply actions  

He's gonna only pitch a partial season with pitch counts. Is an injury risk. Still has weaknesses in his game that might hurt him in the majors.

He isn’t perfect probably the big factor will be that he might only get 50-80 IP in the majors this year (my guess).

by Edgar for Pres on Dec 15, 2010 7:21 PM PST up reply actions  

Eight guys in nine years?

So that’s about one per year. Are you saying that Pineda is the top pitching prospect among those expected to make their debut this season?

by nathaniel dawson on Dec 15, 2010 5:46 PM PST up reply actions  

I predict that the number of wins will be finite.

"Ever tried? Ever failed? No matter. Try again. Fail again. Fail better." - Samuel Beckett Mariners Minors

by JY on Dec 15, 2010 6:36 PM PST reply actions  

162 wins. 101 game improvement.

65-69 wins. Offense can’t be as bad but, you know. Still pretty bad.

Earl Thomas = God-send

by Modrik Zutar on Dec 15, 2010 6:41 PM PST reply actions  

We will be last in the division, and earn a top 3 draft pick next year!

Whooooo draft picks!

Seriously though, our offense will still be horrible to watch.

If not for Felix’s pitching, Guti’s defense, and ICHIRO! this team would not appeal to me much save for the curiosity of how Pinieda and Ackley will begin their major league careers.

by Tord F on Dec 15, 2010 8:13 PM PST reply actions  

About Pineda: I listed top good velocity + control guys that were in the top 30 for that year.

There are not too many of those guys. Dave Cameron had a feeling, as of a couple of months ago, that Pineda would break camp with the team. Perhaps things have changed.

by silverbook on Dec 16, 2010 12:01 AM PST reply actions  

65-69

It can’t be as bad as last year, but I steadfastly refuse to believe it won’t still be really, really, really bad.

On the other hand, 88 wins in 2007, 61 wins in 2008, 85 wins in 2009, 61 wins in 2010…maybe it will be in the 80s.

by Aly Edge on Dec 16, 2010 7:37 PM PST reply actions  

65 is four wins better than last year

a season in which the Mariners suffered a near epic collapse… at every position.

There is an incredibly small chance that ten Mariners hit 10% projections next season

by seattlebruin on Dec 16, 2010 8:03 PM PST up reply actions  

Believe Big!

Dawg! He put da team on his back!

by JAH on Dec 16, 2010 10:05 PM PST up reply actions  

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