Mets Demote Six More, Making Opening Day Roster Clearer

The Mets sent down six more players today, including top catching prospect Travis d’Arnaud. D’arnaud, 24, was having an excellent spring, hitting .355/.432/.484 with four doubles in 15 games played. He was expected to be optioned to Triple-A sometime before Opening Day, but his impressive performance this month certainly made the move a tough one for Sandy Alderson.

Among the others sent down was Aaron Laffey, who was there in case another Met starter got hurt. Shaun Marcum, the primary injury candidate, seems on track however, so sending Laffey down makes sense.

Brian Bixler, Andrew Brown, and Jamie Hoffmann were re-assigned to minor league camp while Brandon Hicks was outrighted off the 40-man roster. All four of these players only had outside shots at winning a major league job. Hicks’ demotion all but guarantees that Omar Quintanilla will once again suit up for the Mets as a middle infield utility player.

With 36 players on the roster, the Mets will have to cut 11 more players before Opening Day on April 1.

Permanent link to this article: http://www.upalongfirst.com/2013/03/mets-demote-six-more-making-opening-day-roster-clearer/

Outfield Prospect Matt den Dekker Breaks Wrist

Matt Den Dekker injured his right wrist in this afternoon’s 9-4 loss to the tigers in Port St. Lucie attempting to make a diving catch in center field. It turns out that his wrist is broken and he is being sent to New York to determine whether he needs surgery on the wrist.

Den Dekker, 25, could miss all or most of the season if surgery is required. This from MLB.com:

“We don’t know how serious it is,” general manager Sandy Alderson said. “It’s serious enough, but we won’t know any details about the exact condition or the recovery time until the doctors take a look up in New York.”

Den Dekker was having a great spring defensively, making some incredible highlight-reel catches in the outfield, including this incredible grab from an early exhibition game:

Offensively, Den Dekker hasn’t been great, batting .205 this spring with one home run. He struggled at the plate in Triple-A last season, hitting only .220 while striking out 90 times in 317 plate appearances. Early on, he had been a possible candidate to break camp in an outfield spot, but that became increasingly less likely as camp went on.

Permanent link to this article: http://www.upalongfirst.com/2013/03/outfield-prospect-matt-den-dekker-breaks-wrist/

2013 Mets Projection: Scott Atchison, RHP

The Mets made possibly their most underrated signings of the offseason in late-January when they signed right-handed relief pitcher Scott Atchison to a minor league contract.

Atchison, 36, has bounced around baseball in his 14-year professional career. He came out of TCU as a starting pitcher in the late ’90s. Drafted by the Mariners, he rose up through the system, but stalled at Triple-A. He was eventually converted to a relief pitcher, and made his debut with the Mariners. Over the next few years, he bounced around, pitching for Seattle, San Francisco, and even played two years in Japan for the Hanshin Tigers in the Nippon Professional Baseball League.

Atchison finally settled down with the Red Sox organization in 2010, becoming a major part of their bullpen. That year, he tossed a career-high 60 innings and posted a 4.50 ERA. He didn’t pitch very well, but got significant time thanks to injury after injury to Red Sox relievers. In 2011, he bounced back and forth between Triple-A Pawtucket and the Boston bullpen. He pitched very well for both teams in a long-man type role, not seeing too much late-game action. With the Red Sox, he posted a 3.26 ERA in 30.1 innings while putting up a 2.64 ERA in 61.1 Triple-A innings.

2012 was by far, the best season of Atchison’s career. Finally a permanent fixture in the bullpen, Atchison spent most of the season as a setup man. He was flexible, however, and was often able to give the team more than one inning, which, if he could do with the Mets, would be immensely helpful considering the health problems in the rotation. He missed two months of the season after he tore his UCL in his right elbow. The put him out from mid-July to late September. He was able to return to the Sox, and finished up the season with 5.1 scoreless innings in five September appearances. Atchison’s overall numbers for the season are outstanding. In 51.1 innings over 47 games, he had a 1.58 ERA, 4.00 K/BB ratio, and only allowed two home runs all season.

Atchison has pitched well thus far in spring action, allowing only two runs on seven hits in 8.2 total innings, striking out four and walking two. He has almost guaranteed himself a spot on the Opening Day roster. It’s still unclear who will have what role in the bullpen, but my guess is Atchison will have the same role he had last year in Boston. The key for Atchison has always been keeping the ball down and preventing home runs. That’s what has made him so successful over the past two seasons. It’s unlikely that he will pitch as well as he did last year, but if he can stay healthy and keep the ball down, he will have a very solid season for the Mets.

2013 Projection:

60 IP, 2.95 ERA, 6.7 K/9, 2.1 BB/9, 1.1 WAR

Permanent link to this article: http://www.upalongfirst.com/2013/03/2013-mets-projection-scott-atchison-rhp/

2013 Mets Projection: Bobby Parnell, Closer

With Frank Francisco working very slowly back from elbow soreness, presumably an effect of the surgery he underwent in December to remove bone chips from his throwing elbow, the Mets closer going into Opening Day will be Bobby Parnell.

The 28 year-old right-hander will be getting his first long-term shot at the closer role. He has been given some time in August and September over the last few years in the role, but he has never been “the guy” from the get go. This will be his last real opportunity to prove that he is more than a hard-throwing middle-innings relief pitcher.

Parnell is coming off the best season of his career, one that saw him drop his ERA to a career-best 2.49 mark in 68.2 innings pitched, a heavier workload than he has had to deal with in years past. His strikeout rate went down from 9.7 K/9 in 2011 to 8.0 last year. That’s still above league average, and slightly below his career average. However, he dropped his walk rate from a sub-par 4.1 BB/9 to a very solid 2.6 rate.

The key for Parnell has always been being a pitcher rather than just a thrower. Last season, he changed speeds on his fastball much more effectively than before and was finally able to find a breaking pitch that worked for him. Those two things were the key to his success last season, and we’ve only seen more of that in the spring. His control issues seem to be a thing of the past as well, and Parnell is much more consistent with his command than we have ever seen from him.

There is one issue that has gone unanswered from Parnell, however, and it is the most important one: can he handle the closer role? While he hasn’t been put in the spot long-term ever in his career, he has thus far struggled in those situations. His numbers are significantly worse in save situations over his career. In 87 save situations, he has a 4.54 ERA with 31 walks in 73.1 innings. That’s compared to his 2.45 ERA and much lower walk rate in 146.2 innings in non-save situations. Parnell thus far, has shown that mentally, he cannot handle the ninth inning role. The pressure has been a little too much for him, and quite frankly, it has shown in some of his post-game comments after games.

While a full spring of preparations for becoming a closer will help him a little bit, it is hard to predict how Parnell will adjust mentally to the new role. The switch may seem insignificant to some pitchers, but others sometimes wilt under the pressure. He has improved as a pitcher over the past few seasons, especially last season, so I don’t think he will pitch as badly as his career stats in save situations would suggest, but until I see proof that he can perform under the pressure in the ninth, I don’t think Parnell can reproduce last year’s excellent statistics.

2013 Projection:

3.70 ERA, 65 IP, 8.2 K/9, 2.7 BB/9, 0.5 WAR

Permanent link to this article: http://www.upalongfirst.com/2013/03/2013-mets-projection-bobby-parnell-closer/

Mets Name David Wright Team Captain

Terry Collins told reporters today in Port St. Lucie that third baseman David Wright has officially been named team captain.

Wright, 30, will become the fourth team captain in Mets history, joining Keith Hernandez, Gary Carter, and John Franco. He had a .306/.391/.492 slash line with 21 home runs and 15 stolen bases in 156 games with the Mets last season. Here’s some of what Wright told reporters, according to MetsBlog:

 “To be viewed in this light – by ownership, by Sandy and the front office, the coaching staff, and most importantly by the players – means a great deal to me. I’m honored and proud to be on the short list of guys of who have been captain in our history. It’s a dream come true, to say the least, and something I am very, very proud of.”

Wright will not wear a “C” on his jersey as Hernandez and Franco did in their time as captains. The “C” is really pointless and only puts a little more pressure on a player, so there was no need for Wright to wear it.

Wright is now one of three active team captains in baseball, joining Derek Jeter and Paul Konerko, neither of whom wear any special patches on their jerseys.

 

Permanent link to this article: http://www.upalongfirst.com/2013/03/mets-name-david-wright-team-captain/

Proving The Validity Of OBP: How On-Base Percentage Directly Relates To Runs Scored

There has long been a debate over the value of On-Base Percentage in baseball. The traditionalists say that On-Base Percentage has its place, but is not one of the main statistics front offices should be using when evaluating players. The fans that embrace advanced stats, however, argue that it is a very effective way of determining how well an offense performs.

Bill James

The popularity of the statistic among fans soared after Bill James and numerous others lobbied for it in the 1980s and 1990s. THere reasoning is this: a player making an out drastically reduces a team’s odds of scoring a run. They also argued that not making an out increases your team’s chances of scoring. In other words, they said getting on base is the most sure-fire way to score runs.

A large portion of the Met fanbase has been enraged by Sandy Alderson (a well-documented supporter of OBP) and his use of advanced statistics, especially when it comes to patience at the plate, walk rate, and on-base percentage. Through his comments in the media, he has lobbied numerous times for the stat, despite the displeasure of so many fans. That led me to conduct a little research on the effectiveness of the stat.

For my sample, I used every team’s stats over the last ten seasons (2003-2012). It’s a sample size of 300 different teams, which I felt would be enough to give an accurate measure of how OBP correlates to runs scored. Every little dot on the graph is one team, such as the 2007 Diamondbacks.

First, I wanted to look at something simple, like home runs. Teams with more power tend to score more runs, or so it is thought. Over the past ten years, the results were rather surprising.

home runs vs runs scored

There clearly is some type of correlation between home runs and runs scored, but it is much weaker than I thought it would be. Obviously there is a correlation because frankly, if you’re hitting 240 home runs in a season, you are going to score a ton of runs. However there are many cases in which teams have not followed this trend. So home runs do not directly correlate to runs scored, although they influence it.

Next, I wanted to see how this compares to On-Base Percentage, and whether it has a stronger effect on the number of runs a team scores.

on-base percentage vs runs scored

Here, of course, you can see a very clear correlation. Teams that get on base more, teams who have batters that make outs less are more successful, and score more runs. However, you can obviously see that it is no perfect indicator of runs scored. Why is that so? Looking at last year’s rankings for both OBP and team runs scored, I saw that they were similar, but not in the same order.

team rs obp 2012

The key thing to remember about On-Base Percentage is that it is a very rudimentary statistic. It has a very basic formula, and doesn’t take into account the values of the ways a player can get on base. Slugging percentage attempts to, but fails to put an accurate vale on each way someone can reach base. Is a double really worth twice as much to a team as a single? Is a walk worth three times less to a team than a triple? Over 100 years of baseball tells us that is not the case. That’s where wOBA, or weighted On-Base Average, comes in. It assigns a value to each way a hitter reaches base. How can they just choose those values? Doesn’t that make the stat arbitrary? The coefficients of walks, singles, doubles, etc. are based off the added probability of a run being scored. It’s essentially a bulked-up version of On-Base Percentage, and is even more effective at predicting runs scored.

I took the same date from earlier, the 2003 to 2012 seasons, and applied the same method I used for home runs and On-Base Percentage, only replacing it with wOBA.

woba v runs scored

Even a metric as well-developed as wOBA has its flaws, but it may be the most accurate in determining how many runs a team will score. There are still imperfections, but it’s about as close as we can get right now. Opponent defense, the offense’s ability to steal bases, managerial moves, and more all tweak the results a bit. This is no super-stat. There are none. But they are very effective.

There are always going to be exceptions to the rule, especially in a sport as complicated as baseball, but On-Base Percentage and more complex versions of it (wOBA) clearly correlate to runs scored, and are not by any means, meaningless statistics.

Permanent link to this article: http://www.upalongfirst.com/2013/03/proving-the-validity-of-obp-how-on-base-percentage-directly-relates-to-runs-scored/

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