Monday, January 05, 2009

DARN IT!!! - RAYS GET PAT THE BAT


WHAT DO THE RAYS HAVE THAT THE GIANTS DON'T?

Dang it. The Rays get Burrell. At two years, $16M this is a good move for the Rays lineup. Maybe it's the Rays just have a better chance to win...maybe it's the better scenery in and around the ballpark. Heck, I don't know. Big loss for the G-men.

http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=3811501

This is the guy I think the Giants could have used the most because of his impact on the entire lineup. And without the negative impact on the clubhouse that Manny might bring.

Now they may have to focus on a deal (lose Sanchez) or maybe Crede and Hinske. I'd rather not see Gillaspie blocked for too long, it may be better for him to have a full season in the minors, but we'll see. Hinske gives you some flexibility,, but much less of a respect/fear factor in the lineup.

And they do need some respect. Last year 15th of 16 teams in Offense. A feeble 640 runs scored and only 94 HR's will cause guys to come off the DL to pitch against you, not miss a start to avoid you. Renteria as an addition by himself doesn't add enough to move them up to middle of the pack. So clearly more work needs to be done.

The pitching staff may end up being a shaky foundation even after adding The Unit. Here's why:

Last year 9th of 16 teams in ERA at 4.38 allowed. 759 total runs allowed leaves a 119 run deficit between offense and defense. So even if some some combination of improvement close the deficit to zero, the best you can hope for is a .500 record.

Here's last years record for the projected starters:
18-5 Lincecum
8-14 Cain
11-10 Johnson (with D-Backs)
10-17 Zito
9-12 Sanchez
3-8 Correia

48-56 among returning starters, 56-58 if you take Correia out (please) and insert Johnson with his D-Backs productivity and durability. If he comes in and limps to 300 wins and exits to the DL shortly thereafter, we're looking at Correia or Lowry to pick up innings. Yuck.

We have to hope that Linceum's dad is right about his unique mechanics being so pristine that he won't ever hurt his arm. I do not want to be talking about him in the same vein as Mark Prior five years from now. So there's the hope and the fear in a nutshell. 18-5 is about the best we can hope for out of the top slot especially with the offensive support.

Which brings us to Cain. I was OK with the excuse that he received the worst run support in the league in 2007 when he finished 7-16, but last year he received virtually equal run support as Lincecum and Zito last year (Linceum 5.51, Cain 5.41, Zito 5.30) and he posted his 8-14 record. So the excuse flies out the window. As should Cain if he posts another anemic W-L record in 2009. Because then the entire league will know what many are beginning to whisper and that is that Cain may be just a good enough pitcher to lose games. Great stuff, maybe not so much fire in the belly. He wouldn't be the first guy who dazzled with his stuff but induced vomit with his W-L record.

Zito and his 10-17 has to be better. It's a crime that you almost have to hope against hope for a .500 record from a guy with his contract, but that's where we are. If he brings the same stuff, most fans would be praying for a DL sabbatical for Mr. Zito. As bad as that sounds, that's about where we are. If he's healthy management won't pull him. And although many semi-pro teams would kill for the stuff he has, they don't have enough broken bats or batting practice balls to offer in trade. So, it is what it is.

Sanchez also has to produce a plus .500 record, even with the offense he has to work with.

If we could get:
18-6 Lincecum
12-12 Cain
12-12 Zito
11-10 Sanchez
11-10 The Unit

That works out to 64-50 from the starters. The bullpen has to battle to .500 in the rest of the decisions, which almost by definition are back and forth affairs where the offense is performing reasonably well.

24-24 from the bullpen leaves you at 88-74.

You can compete with that record. Probably not win the division, or the wild-card.
But, baby-steps fans...baby-steps.

This is what we have to expect...even from Giants.

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Top Ten Suburban Area HS Baseball Prospects (and more)

  • 1. Michael Fotynowicz 6-4 RHP Minooka HS 92 FB
  • 2. Ryan Scarpetta 6-3 RHP Honenegah HS 89 FB
  • 3. John Lieske 6-2 RHP Harlem HS 89 FB
  • 4. Jeff Jackson 6-3 C Wauconda HS 6.9 60 yd.
  • 5. Matt Morse 5-11 SS Aurora Christian HS solid athlete
  • 6. Bryan Waldrop 6-5 RHP Marian Central HS 87 FB
  • 7. Joe Claver 6-2 LHP Downers Grove North 85 FB
  • 8. Riley Perry 6-1 RHP Geneva HS 88 FB
  • 9.5 Derek DeYoung 5-11 RHP-SS Plainfield Central HS 86 FB, athletic
  • 9.5. Kevin Borst 6-0 RHP St. Charles North 87 FB
  • Others to Watch: Jeffrey Johnson 6-2 RHP Warren HS 85 FB - John Kravetz 6-3 RHP Mt. Carmel HS 85 FB - Andrew Arensen 6-6 1B Naperville North HS - Karl Steiger 6-2 3B Marian Central HS athletic, with power - Tyler Hamer 6-4 RHP Kaneland HS 84 FB - Taylor Nead 6-5 RHP Charleston HS 83 FB - Matt Stevens 6-3 C St. Charles North HS 1.95 pop

Giants Top Minor League Prospects

  • 1. Madison Bumgarner 6-4,215 LHP Top of the rotation prospect.Fantastic control and mound presence. Plus-plus mid 90's FB with average curve and change. Slider could become an out pitch. Throws from a low three-quarters arm slot.
  • 2. Buster Posey 6-1, 180 C Advanced hitting approach with a bit of power. A converted SS, still a bit raw behind the plate. Very athletic catcher. Compact swing. Solid bat control with good SZ knowledge. Gap power type of hitter.
  • 3. Conor Gillaspie 6-1, 200 3B Terrific hitter, lacks power. Projects as Bill Mueller type 3B. A hit machine. Average fielder and arm. Could project as a #2 hitter. Potential for high average with gap power. Could move to 2B where with his bat he would project as an elite prospect.
  • 4. Roger Kieschnick 6-3, 215 OF Potential five-tool corner OF who could hit for power and steal some bases. Plays fearless defensively and shows a good arm. Above average speed. Power is a plus skill. Swing is a bit long but has good plate discipline and draws walks.
  • 5. Jose Casilla 6-1, 190 RHP 90-95 MPH FB, pitches down in the SZ, hard late breaking slider
  • 6. Dan Runzler 6-4, 215 LHP explosive mid 90's FB, throws on downward plane. Late breaking slider needs command. Aggresive and works quickly. Has potential closer stuff.
  • 7. Waldis Joaquin Live mid 90's FB and a nasty slider, can hit 98 MPH. Could dominate in set-up role. Tommy John surgery in 2007.
  • 8. Craig Clark 6-3, 205 LHP 15-2 in San Jose in 2009.
  • 9. Danny Otero 6-3, 205 RHP Control pitcher who attacks hitters, closer prospect.
  • 9B. Thomas Neal OF
  • Others: LHP Joe Patterson, SS Brandon Crawford, OF Francisco Peguero, SS Ehire Adrianza, 2B Nick Noonan, RHP Henry Sosa, RHP Kyle Nicholson, RHP Daniel Turpen, LHP Clayton Tanner, OF Wendell Fairley, SS Charlie Culberson, LHP Aaron King, RHP Zach Wheeler, C Tommy Joseph, OF Rafael Rodriguez, C Hector Sanchez, RHP Luis Mateo