Monday, February 26, 2007

Pitching Preview: The Phillies




Brett Myers




I've decided to start a new feature. I'm going to preview the starting rotations of all the teams in the National League. Starting in the East, I will hopefully have a good idea of what I'm doing by the time I get to my favorite division, the NL West.

I'm starting with Philadelphia, which is kind of a cheap trick because I've already previewed one of their pitchers (Cole Hamels) in a previous blog post. However, why not encourage you to read my other post? Here is my Phillies Pitching Preview.

Brett Myers
At 26 years old, Mr. Myers is about to enter the prime years of his pitching career. In the two magazines I now have (CBS Sportsline.com Fantasy Baseball, Fantasy Baseball Index), one ranks him as the 13th best starting pitcher in the major leagues, while the other ranks Myers 56th. Of course, I will resort to the stats to draw my own conclusion.
Brett Myers has never been a master of plate control. What he has gotten a lot better at is striking hitters out. In the last two years, Myers has struck out 397 batters in 413 innings, a rate of about 8.65/9 IP. He also allowed only 18% last years balls put-in-play to be line drives, the lowest such rate of his four-year career. His ERA has been below 4.00 the last two years. Personally, I think Myers is primed for a big year.

Cole Hamels
23 year-old Cole Hamels is a big deal. I learned recently from Ron Shandler that left handers have a longer life expectancy than left brainers in pitching years, and that only says more about Hamels' potential. Hamels struck out 145 batters in 132 innings at the big league level last year, for a command ratio of 9.89 K/9. Something of note...Hamels faced a bases loaded situation in six games last year for a total of three innings pitched. He didn't allow a hit, but he did allow three earned runs. How did this happen? Well, there was one walk, but I suspect the other runs game from either a ground out or a sacrifice fly. Just something of note. Anyway, Hamels is going to put up some major strikeout numbers this year. If you are playing, you want to pick this guy up. That simple.

Freddy Garcia
By a lot of accounts, you could say that the 30 year-old Garcia is the true ace of this ballclub. He is new to the team, but he has 72 wins over his last five seasons. That's an average of nearly 15 wins a season! That's really good, especially when you consider that he has been that good for that long. He also has pitched over 200 innings every single one of those years! Admittedly, I don't know a lot about Mr. Garcia or his fitness regimen, but he must be doing something right if he hasn't seriously injured himself yet. Will this be the year that breaks him? It's hard to say. Garcia also is in a contract year and has declared that he won't talk about his contract once the season starts. Will the Phillies give him a major extension before the regular season begins? Again, it is hard to say, but I am leaning towards no. This is because they are going to have to devote a lot of money to a lot of players sooner or later and Garcia may have already had his best seasons. Unlike Myers and Hamels, Garcia does not strike out a very high number of batters. On a grander level than Myers and Hamels, he has consistently shown an ability to allow a very low percentage of line drives. Many pitchers show improvement when switching from the AL to the NL, and I think this will be the case for Freddy as well. It's hard to expect improvement, but if he stays healthy, I would have to say Garcia wins 15 games again this year.

The Other Three: Adam Eaton, Jamie Moyer, Jon Lieber
As you know, big league clubs never hold six starting pitchers. So one of these three will get cut from the rotation, either before the season or shortly thereafter. I think Eaton will make the rotation, because he is only 29 years old and the Phillies showed they are committed to him by signing him to a three-year contract this past offseason. Why they did that, I don't know. Eaton is an okay pitcher at best, and missed most of last year suffering from a finger injury. He does have an 18-9 record in the last two years combined, and it's hard to argue against that.
The other two could be mistaken for men who are too old to be playing professional baseball. Lieber is 37, and Jamie Moyer is 44 years old. Heck, I heard the Giants need a fifth starter, and Moyer might be old enough to crack the lineup. Grimaces aside, Moyer probably will not make the cut because he had a bad second half last season that was partially due to a rise in home run rate, and the Phillies play in a park where balls are known to leave the yard. Plus Moyer is older than rotten vegetables. That, and he could be mistaken for a pretty female character that used to date J.D. on Scrubs, who was also named Jamie Moyer. She would probably be a lot more valuable than he in a trade offer.
Lieber is very good precision pitcher, but he will leave Phillies fans biting their nails every fifth day because of his high home run rate, which has been 1.4 each of the last two years. He did somehow manage to win 17 games in 2005 with that ratio, but the likelihood of a repeat is low.

Of note: I think the Phillies will score a LOT of runs this year, which should result in high win totals for their big three of Myers, Hamels, and Garcia. Should the Phillies make the playoffs, they could be a very scary opponent for ANY team, Yankees included.

Thursday, February 22, 2007

The Best Pitchers in the NL






Roy Oswalt

After reading another great post on Fantasy Baseball Island, I decided to take a look at which NL pitcher will be the best this year. To me, it is a six-headed monster: Ben Sheets, Brandon Webb, Chris Carpenter, Roy Oswalt, Jake Peavy, and Carlos Zambrano. Some notes on each:

Sheets: It seems like he could be the best if healthy. Last year posted 116 K's and only 11 BB's, which are just unheard of numbers. In 2004, he posted even better numbers, when he finished the year with 264 K's, a 2.70 ERA, and a 0.98 WHIP. Somehow, he managed to finish that season with a 12-14 record. Was his run support that bad? It's hard to say. Sheets is currently from shoulder problems.

Webb: Last year's NL Cy Young Award Winner, Webb has one of the nastiest sinkerballs in the game of baseball. Not especially dominant on the strikeout end, he wins games by forcing groundouts (2/3 of balls put in play against Webb last year were grounders) and by not giving up a lot of walks (1.9/9 IP last year).

Carpenter: The 2005 NL Cy Young Winner, Carpenter may also suffer burnout this year after pitching 462 innings the last two years. Carpenter has won fifteen or more games the last three years, peaking with 21 in 2005. It is likely that the Cardinals' run support has played a big role in that. Carpenter finished last season with a second half (9-4, 0.96 WHIP, 5.6 K/BB) that he doesn't get worn down by the end of a full season.

Oswalt: Is the lone ranger in Houston now that Pettitte has returned to New York and Roger Clemens may not be returning. Does not get a lot of strikeouts, but Oswalt is Mr. Reliable, as he has finished with an ERA of 3.01 or less four of the last five years. Had a second half similar to Carpenter's (9-5, 5.4 K/BB). Has had 20 wins two of the last three years.

Peavy: Has awesome strikeout ability, recording 100 K's in each half last year. A troubling trend emerged though, as Peavy's command ratio dipped by two whole points in the second half due to his loss of strike zone control. Should improve upon last years 11-14 record. May benefit from pitching alongside Greg Maddux all season.

Carlos Zambrano: For someone who started pitching exclusively at the major league level when he was twenty years old, Zambrano has not suffered, yet. He may, as he has pitched 200 or more innings each of the last four years. Has never had very good control of the strike zone, so last years 1.29 WHIP shouldn't come as a huge surprise. Has an awesome strikeout ratio (8.0 or better three years in a row).

So by my earliest estimates, here's my ranking:
1. Roy Oswalt
2. Brandon Webb
3. Chris Carpenter
4. Ben Sheets
5. Jake Peavy
6. Carlos Zambrano

Stay tuned!

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

Cain and Hamels




Amongst the rankings I have seen so far, there hasn't been a most improved list yet. By this, I am talking about the players who statistically will improve the most upon last year's totals. I feel the leaders amongst National League pitchers are going to be Matt Cain of the Giants and Cole Hamels of the Phillies. Cain is 22 years old, Hamels is 23. Last year, Cain spent the entire season as the number four starter for the Giants, which is where he will be again to start this season. Hamels spent last year splitting time between AAA and the bigs. It seems that Hamels may be a year behind Cain in overall progress despite being a year older. Is Cain going to be the better pitcher? We will have to wait and see, but February is a good month for speculation I suppose. Here are Cain's numbers in 2005, when he split time between the minors and the majors, pitted against Hamels' numbers last year.
Cain (2005): 12-6, 3.35 ERA, 9.5 k/9, 3.5 bb/9, 191 IP.
Hamels (2006): 11-8, 3.59 ERA, 10.2 k/9, 2.8 bb/9, 155 IP.
Just to clarify, that's a 3.6 CMD ratio for Hamels to Cain's 2.7 in 2005. Thing is, Cain's walk rate actually rose to 4.1 last year, his first full season in the majors. But I'm confident that at 22 years old, Cain has time to work out his control issues. Things could be a lot worse for sure. Hamels actually posted a behemoth 6.2 bb/9 in AA ball in 2005, which I have to assume was discrepency based on the small sample size (19 IP). Still, that's pretty strange. For now I'm going to leave this debate open.
Other rising stars: Scott Olsen (Marlins), Chuck James (Braves)

Blog Review: Fantasy Baseball Island

Sponsored by Fantasy Baseball Express, this blog here is mostly focused on the National League. No Dh's or fluff on this blog- just good looking rankings. The topics on Fantasy Baseball Island change between analysis of the hot/not players on NL teams and rankings of the top players at individual NL positions. There are no pictures here, but I like the format of this page. It's just a simple page with a white background and type in black, blue, and red. Easy on the eyes, just how I like it. This painting is called Alegoría de la Santa Eucaristía, and it was painted in 1750 by Miguel Cabrera, who happens to share a name with the current Florida Marlins 24 year old, who is featured on this blog as the number one fantasy third baseman in the National League this season.

Blog Review: MLB Front Office













This blog is for anyone who is interested in fantasy baseball but doesn't enjoy looking at lots of numbers and charts. Though the stats are here, this blog has more artistic value than most. One feature of this blog is a review of a mock draft that blog author Brad Stewart participated in. Even better is a countdown of the top 25 fantasy baseball players this year, complete with lengthy analysis. A great site for those who love rankings. Pictured here is Jimmy Rollins, #23 on the list.

Blog Review: Baseball Analysts


From the wonderful database of baseball blogs aptly titled baseblogs.net comes this blog called Baseball Analysts which is quite simply the closest thing to what I've been searching for so far. The most recent post is an interview with Nate Silver, the inventor of PECOTA - Player Empirical Comparison and Optimization Test Algorithm. This is great stuff for gritty numerical analysis. It doesn't provide much in aesthetic value though- were it my blog I would color it up a little bit, maybe add some more graphics or a background design. On the flip side, it's hard to argue with a plain white background when it comes time to intensely pore over some information.

Monday, February 12, 2007

Preparing for The Season: Initial Steps


The fantasy season started for me last year on Christmas when I unwrapped a hardback copy of Fantasyland by Sam Walker, which was a present from my father. In the book, Wall Street Journal writer Walker is invited to play in an experts league called Tout Wars, a league founded by Ron Shandler. For more on Shandler, click here.