
TheEmrys
Mar 26, 2008 Jan 08, 2009 17 162
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Interesting Write-up on Defense at Baseball Analysts
If you haven't read Baseball Analysts, you're missing out. Very good work done. Rich Lederer is a pretty smart guy, but he gets a lot of even smarter guys to do some work there (Dave Cameron and Jeff have both written there). An article popped up yesterday by Myron Logan (of Friar Forcast) regarding defense. He takes Inez's work with THT's data and comes up with some info. Not sure how accurate it is, but it looks pretty sound.
Some of the things it shows is that Beltre is the 3rd best fielder (given his percentage of plays in zone and plays he makes out of the zone).
The article also takes a long look at Yuniesky Betancourt. He's slighly below average at at plays in the zone and well below average at balls out of the zone.
Well worth the read.
17 comments | 0 recs
Stark: Bavasi wouldn't trade Bedard. So Lee will?
This is listed as one of the reasons for Bavasi's firing, along with his refusal to fire McLaren. Now, that being said, if Lee is now going to try and trade Bedard, this brings up some interesting options. At that point, the M's would be looking for someone to either "Put them over the edge" or to solidify injuries. Teams that jump to mind are the Cardinals and Braves. Both are within reach of their respective divisions, and both need starting pitching. Bedard would be a definate upgrade.
I'd trade Bedard for Texiera (if a contract extension is worked out prior). If they'd throw in a pitching prospect (Cuevas?, James?), it'd be icing on the cake.
With the Cardinals, I can't come up with anyone plausible from their ML roster. Maybe Nick Stavinoha (solid LF), Barden (SS having a pretty good year), and Joe Mather (very good OPS guy) all in AA?
What a bath the M's will take if they trade Bedard. What realistic options are there?
57 comments | 0 recs
McLaren: Lopez an All-Star
Jose Lopez, who has been the Mariners' best overall hitter this season, has been talked up by the manager as a potential All-Star.
McLaren Calls Jose Lopez All-Star
He who is batting .297/.312/.425 is All-Star quality.
For context:
Ian Kinsler (Tex) : .307/.358/.478
Placido Polanco (Det): .297/.355/.425
John McLaren is rubbish. John McLaren is rubbish. John McLaren is rubbish. John McLaren is rubbish. John McLaren is rubbish. John McLaren is rubbish.
41 comments | 0 recs
McNamee crashes car into bus after fainting
http://msn.foxsports.com/mlb/story/7938762?MSNHPHMA
From the article
Brian McNamee, the personal trainer who has said he injected former Yankees pitcher Roger Clemens with steroids and human growth hormone, fainted while driving and crashed his car head-on into a city bus, a newspaper reported
Brian McNamee told police he blacked out because of an ongoing medical problem and regained consciousness only as his Lexus hurtled into the bus Thursday in Queens, the Daily News reported Friday.
6 comments | 0 recs
Red Sox and their traveling data center
First off, I'm a bit of a techno-nerd. I love technology for technology's sake. That being said, the Red Sox are once again demonstrating why they are so good. They have a data system that archives everything. And its portable. They take it on the road with them.
http://www.informationweek.com/news/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=206902277
From the article:
Also making the trip will be the team's modern coveted talisman -- its EMC.
"Information makes winners," said EMC's Mark Lewis this week at a session at the AIIM 2008 conference in Boston. "Information is becoming more and more important in sports all the time." So important for the Red Sox, in fact, that the team brings along its data center to all of its away games.
Lewis, who is president of EMC's content management and archiving division, told the packed session at the AIIM event that players and managers have virtually instant access to the center. A batter suddenly scheduled to face a new relief pitcher can instantly call up videos of the pitcher to study his delivery and assortment of pitches. Conversely, a pitcher can study videos of batters he is likely to face. The pitcher can search for a weakness -- for example, the batter may have trouble hitting curve balls or a split-finger fast ball.
Lewis said teams always have to be on guard against being flooded with useless information. The days of hunches, superstitions, intuition, or second-hand stories from scouts are long gone, replaced now by the hum of EMC's storage arrays, storage area network, and sophisticated software from its Documentum unit.
"The Red Sox have gone a little crazy" with technology, said Lewis as he outlined the team's near-obsession with statistics and videos -- all of it captured, stored, and pulled up quickly.
10 comments | 0 recs
Great article at Baseball Analysts
Rich Lederer has a great article up on http://www.baseballanalysts.com/. The article takes everything into account as far as batting. The numbers are based of Total Plate Appearances rather than At Bats. Shows Ichiro as an example. Ichiro gets out 60.6% of the time. Rich breaks down:
TOP 20 IN HITTING PERCENTAGE (H/TPA)
TOP 20 IN WALK PERCENTAGE (BB/TPA)
TOP 20 IN OBP/LOWEST OUT PERCENTAGE
TOP 20 IN SLUGGING OR ADVANCEMENT PERCENTAGE
The work here is based off an earlier article by Sully, that I thought was interesting but Rich really put some nice context around it.
Recommended Read.
0 comments | 0 recs
LL Store needs an item - Red Badges of Courage
I want 3 or 4 different buttons (Red Badges of Courage). There needs to be different buttons that I can swap, dependant upon who's up to bat or whatever the circumstance of that game are.
I'd think one of Red with the Beltre poster.
Another with his "Red Hex" going.
A "Rally Red" with an image of his dance.
The June 03 recap photo of Red could be usefull.
I would pay through the nose for Red Badges of Courage. And I would defy anyone who says this is poor taste. Red has power. I want to use it. Dude is awesome.
3 comments | 0 recs
Adrian Beltre write-up on Baseball Analysts
http://www.baseballanalysts.com/
Its by Jeff Albert: here's a quote for you.
After a stellar 2004 season, Seattle 3B Adrian Beltre has somehow lost his belt. Unfortunately, the belt I am referring to has to do with producing long hits instead of holding up long pants. What's intriguing is not that Beltre's production fell off after a career year, but the degree to which his numbers have declined. After what seemed to be an MVP-type season where Beltre put it all together showing his tremendous ability, it seems that 2005 resulted in a return right back to square one - do not pass go, do not collect your $200 (uh, rather collect your $64 million, but I suppose that
is another story).
2 comments | 0 recs
Jeff Weaver was in Harry Potter?
Yeah, this freaked me out a bit. I never knew Jared Weaver was a shakespearean actor....
http://i147.photobucket.com/albums/r296/TheEmrys/harry.jpg
http://i147.photobucket.com/albums/r296/TheEmrys/baseballsgiving2.jpg
Good lord. *Fixed name
9 comments | 0 recs
Posting Fees, why they are evil, and solutions
Posting fees do not count against Luxury Tax. It goes against everything the psuedo-salary cap is supposed to do. In the current (insane) situation, the cash-laden Boston Red Sox bid $50m (lump sum? over a year?) for the right to talk to Matsuzaka. Kansas City had no chance in this bidding. In all honesty, most teams had no chance. Only the big-market/spend-happy-ownership could even contemplate this move.
An equilibrium must be achieved. There are two viable solutions, as far as I can see.
Have the posting fee count towards the Luxury Tax.
-or-
Restructuring of the posting fee process. One way this can be accomplished is through MLB paying the posting fee to the JBL. The money for this would come out of the Luxury Tax. Yes, this will reduce the tribute given to KC and Pittsburg, but at least these teams would be on more even footing vis-a-vis japanese baseball players.
While KC could not have spent $60m this year (total) for Matsuzaka, they could have taken the $10m they gave Meche (which matches the purported amount the Red Sox are paying Matsuzaka) and at least come close.
24 comments | 0 recs
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