Saturday, January 31, 2015

Chicago says good bye to Mr. Cub


from @Chicago Cubs Twitter


RIP Mr. Cub, Ernie Banks.


from ESPN:
http://espn.go.com/blog/chicago/cubs/post/_/id/28617/baseball-says-goodbye-to-mr-cub
Cubs owner Tom Ricketts added: “Never in time have numbers fallen so short in describing the true greatness of a baseball player. Ernie Banks was known as much for his off-the-field demeanor as his on-the-field performance.” 

Listening and watching from the front of Fourth Presbyterian Church were many baseball greats, including Hank Aaron, Frank Robinson, Reggie Jackson and Lou Brock. Other current and former Cubs and team employees attending included Kerry Wood, Jim Hendry, Theo Epstein, Jed Hoyer, John McDonough, Glenn Beckert and Randy Hundley. All got an opportunity to remember Mr. Cub for the player and person he was. 

“Ernie Banks was living proof that you don’t have to wear a championship ring on your finger in order to be a pillar of baseball and a champion in life,” Joe Torre said in representing Major League Baseball at the ceremony. “He made the confines of Wrigley Field friendly, he made the Cubs lovable, and he was one of the pivotal people during a vital time in our history who made a great game worthy of being our national pastime.” 

Friday, January 30, 2015

How BBWAA voting predicts future Hall of Famers | Baseball: Past and Present

The 2013 Baseball Hall of Fame Ballot Seems a Little Biased – Image 1

BTW: This is blog post #1900 for TheSlav. ~;::::::;( )">  ¯\_( )_/¯ DING, DING, DING!!!!!! 

The 2013 Baseball Hall of Fame Ballot Seems a Little Biased – Image 1




Although small sample size by definition, this analysis provides a bit of hope for some of the so-called PED guys, We have no idea as to how this past voting history and the Hall of Fame corrective mechanism provided by the Veterans Committee and Old Timers Committee will translate into the future and applied to the PED crowd.



Perhaps if more black and brown players begin to populate the two committees to say nothing of the BBWAA, we will begin to see progress. Some further corrective action is in order.



If not, it shouldn't be long before both the BBWAA and the baseball Hall of Fame is looked upon as elitist, exclusionary institutions in the same way that Augusta National CC is, if not outright racist institutions,



Can somebody point out for me the white equivalent to the hose job given to Carlos Delgado, to say nothing of Sheffield? The whole process has increasingly become a sick joke and the MLB hierarchy should, at least in some ways, show that they are embarrassed by it.



from Baseball Past and Present:

How BBWAA voting predicts future Hall of Famers | Baseball: Past and Present



Using Baseball-Reference.com, I recently went through every BBWAA vote since 1936, making a list of the 884 players who’ve received at least one vote and 221 more players who’ve appeared on the ballot and not gotten any votes. What I found: If a player gets even 20 percent of the writers vote, there’s a better than 50 percent chance they’re eventually going in. If they top 45 percent, their bid is more or less guaranteed. Not counting players currently on the ballot, 136 of the 139 players who’ve received at least 45 percent of the Hall of Fame vote from the writers are now enshrined.
There’s a question of causation or correlation between the BBWAA and Veterans Committee results that I don’t know I can answer here. There’s no proof, so far as I know at least, that the Veterans Committee cribs off the BBWAA to build its ballots. My gut is that the writers are a tough electorate and that any player who rises above 20 percent in the vote is a fairly popular candidate. I think the Veterans Committee would look to these players first even if the BBWAA wasn’t voting.
A more conclusive breakdown of my findings is as follows:
I. Enshrined by the BBWAA
Not counting Lou Gehrig or Roberto Clemente, who each were enshrined through special elections called for by the Hall of Fame, I count 117 people enshrined by the BBWAA. That leaves another 193 Hall of Famers, 96 of whom received at least one vote from the BBWAA at some point. Most of the remaining 97 Hall of Famers are executives and Negro League selections who fall outside the purview of the BBWAA. I’ll list the 17 Hall of Fame players who never appeared on a BBWAA ballot at the bottom of this.
I. Peaked between 70 and 74.9 percent on the BBWAA ballot 
A. The four people who peaked in this range: Jim Bunning, 74.2 percent in 1988; Orlando Cepeda, 73.5 percent in 1994; Frank Chance, 72.5 percent in 1945; Nellie Fox, 74.7 percent in 1985.
B. Since enshrined: 4/4
  1. How they got in: Nellie Fox by Veterans Committee in 1997; Jim Bunning by Veterans Committee in 1996; Orlando Cepeda by Veterans Committee; Frank Chance by Old Timers Committee in 1946.
C. Not enshrined: None
'via Blog this'

====

There should be more accountability from the BBWAA to the fans, to say nothing of the players whose lives are being tarnished unjustly.


So there it is, your 2015 Hall of Fame class. Let the weeping and/or gnashing of teeth proceed. Four guys who belong but so many more who appear to belong as well, but for whatever reason(s), fell short.

  • Schilling surprisingly short IMO, given that his career seemed virtually equal to Smoltz in many respects.
  • Mussina very surprisingly short given that he seemed statistically superior to Smoltz and Schilling. I guess I don't understand the "compiler" argument, which seems to embody exactly what you look for in a player: consistent excellence, day after day over a long period of time. If the argument is "you have to have been in the top 0.01% for some period of time in your career", well you need to sweep out dozens of guys currently residing there. 
  • Piazza, Bagwell and Larry Walker among the holdovers were surprisingly short as well as Edgar Martinez and Jeff Kent. 
  • Sheffield, Delgado and Garciapara among the newbies were surprisingly weak.  
  • How did Brian Giles not get a single vote?!? And Darin Esratd did?!? C'mon Man!!!!
A lot to complain about in a crowded field. Always more to complain about than celebrate.

We'll see how this shakes out in 2016 when only Ken Griffey, Jr. should be a lock among the new entries.

It was painful to watch the ESPN commentary especially them asking Curt Schilling to comment on what a great party it was given that he clearly expected to be participating in it as well as commenting on it.

Couldn't you have given him the day off ESPN?

BBWAA.com: Official site of the Baseball Writers' Assn. of America.:

2015 Hall of Fame

Writers Elect 4 for 1st Time in 60 Years

NameVotes (Pct.)Yrs on ballot
Randy Johnson534 (97.3)1
Pedro Martinez500 (91.1)1
John Smoltz455 (82.9)1
Craig Biggio454 (82.7)3
Mike Piazza384 (69.9)3
Jeff Bagwell306 (55.7)5
Tim Raines302 (55)8
Curt Schilling215 (39.2)3
Roger Clemens206 (37.5)3
Barry Bonds202 (36.8)3
Lee Smith166 (30.2)13
Edgar Martinez148 (27)6
Alan Trammell138 (25.1)14
Mike Mussina135 (24.6)2
Jeff Kent77 (14)2
Fred McGriff71 (12.9)9
Larry Walker65 (11.8)5
Gary Sheffield64 (11.7)1
Mark McGwire55 (10)9
Don Mattingly50 (9.1)15
Sammy Sosa36 (6.6)3
Nomar Garciaparra30 (5.5)1
Carlos Delgado21 (3.8)1
Troy Percival4 (0.7)1
Aaron Boone2 (0.4)1
Tom Gordon2 (0.4)1
Darin Erstad1 (0.2)1
Rich Aurilia0 (0)1
Tony Clark0 (0)1
Jermaine Dye0 (0)1
Cliff Floyd0 (0)1
Brian Giles0 (0)1
Eddie Guardado0 (0)1
Jason Schmidt0 (0)1
Three pitchers who combined to win nine Cy Young Awards and a member of Major League Baseball’s 3,000 Hit Club were elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in balloting by the BBWAA verified by Ernst & Young.


Randy Johnson, Pedro Martinez and John Smoltz became the first trio of pitchers honored by the BBWAA in the same election. Each was on the ballot for the first time, which created a precedent with three first-ballot candidates elected in consecutive years, following that of Greg Maddux, Tom Glavine and Frank Thomas in 2014. Craig Biggio, who missed election last year by two votes, gained entry in this year’s election in his third time on the ballot. They will be inducted July 26 as part of the Hall’s Induction Weekend July 24-27 in Cooperstown, N.Y.

Johnson, a five-time Cy Young Award winner with the Seattle Mariners in 1995 and with the Arizona Diamondbacks in 1999, 2000, 2001 and 2002, was the leading vote getter with 534 of the 549 ballots, including one blank, cast by senior members of the BBWAA,writers with 10 or more consecutive years of service. It represented 97.3 percent of the vote, the eighth highest plurality in the history of balloting, topped only by Tom Seaver (98.9), Nolan Ryan (98.7), Cal Ripken Jr. (98.5), Ty Cobb (98.2), George Brett (98.2), Hank Aaron (97.8) and Tony Gwynn (97.6).

Candidates must be named on 75 percent of ballots submitted to gain election. Martinez, who won the Cy Young Award with the Montreal Expos in 1997 and with the Boston Red Sox in 1999 and 2000, received 500 votes (91.9). Smoltz, the 1996 National League Cy Young Award winner with the Atlanta Braves, got 455 votes (82.9), one more than Biggio (82.7), all of whose 3,060 career hits were with the Houston Astros.

The previous time four players were elected in the same year was 1955 (Joe DiMaggio, Gabby Hartnett, Dazzy Vance, Ted Lyons). The only other year four players were chosen by the writers was in 1947 (Lefty Grove, Carl Hubbell, Mickey Cochrane, Frankie Frisch). The class of 1939 had four players, but only three (George Sisler, Eddie Collins, Willie Keeler) were in the BBWAA election. Lou Gehrig, forced to retire because of illness, was selected by the writers in acclamation in a special election at that year’s Winter Meetings.

This year was the first time since 1954-55 that three or more players were elected in consecutive years. In 1954, Bill Dickey, Bill Terry and Rabbit Maranville were elected. The first vote in 1936 was the only time five players (Cobb, Honus Wagner, Babe Ruth, Christy Mathewson, Walter Johnson) were elected. In addition to the past two years and the first election, the only other time three players made the grade in their first year on the ballot was in 1999 (Nolan Ryan, George Brett, Robin Yount).

Falling 28 votes shy of the 412 required for election this year was catcher Mike Piazza, whose vote total represented 69.9 percent. The only other players to be named on more than half the ballots were first baseman Jeff Bagwell (55.7) and outfielder Tim Raines (55.0). Players may remain on the ballot provided they receive at least five percent of the vote for up to 10 years.

Others who qualified for future consideration were pitcher Curt Schilling (39.2), pitcher Roger Clemens (37.5), outfielder Barry Bonds (36.8), relief pitcher Lee Smith (30.2), infielder-designated hitter Edgar Martinez (27.0), shortstop Alan Trammell (25.1), pitcher Mike Mussina (24.6), second baseman Jeff Kent (14.0), first baseman Fred McGriff (12.9), outfielder Larry Walker (11.8), outfielder Gary Sheffield (11.7), first baseman Mark McGwire (10.0), outfielder Sammy Sosa (6.6) and shortstop Nomar Garciapiarra (5.5). In his final year on the ballot, first baseman Don Mattingly received 50 votes (9.1) and will be eligible for consideration by the Expansion Era Committee in two years.

The Hall of Fame now has 310 elected members, including 215 players, of which 119 have come through the BBWAA ballot.


'via Blog this'

http://www.baseball-reference.com/leaders/hof_monitor.shtml



Thursday, January 29, 2015

Marco Scutaro designated for assignment, then released (thank Matt Holliday)




Perhaps more a career shortening injury rather than a career ending injury? Hard to say since Scutaro did march on like a good soldier into the World Series, as well as the next season....but still. The residual effects of The "so-called" Slide had to be pretty significant.

Marco Scutaro designated for assignment, will continue rehab - Giants Extra:
Shortly before attempting a comeback last season, Scutaro conceded that his back and hip problems could be due in part to a brutal collision with Matt Holliday in the 2012 NLCS. The Cardinals outfielder came in hard and late with a slide to second base, sending Scutaro’s body in two different directions.

“Who knows? I wish I would know,” Scutaro said last June. “When he hit me, it literally felt that day like he grabbed my leg and pulled it out of my hip like a chicken.”
'via Blog this'

IMO, still a dirt-bag play by a dirt-bag player. The slide doesn't even start until Holliday is clearly past the bag. This would be an illegal block/tackle in football, I'm still disappointed that nobody on the staff didn't drop Holliday. That fat melon of his had to have been on the radar as far as I'm concerned.

Matt Holiday should be so proud of himself today.
http://www.sportingnews.com/mlb/story/2015-01-28/giants-release-marco-scutaro



Wednesday, January 28, 2015

"I'm back where I wanted to be," Ryan Vogelsong says after signing one-year deal - Giants Extra

"I'm back where I wanted to be," Ryan Vogelsong says after signing one-year deal


From Vogie Out!! to Vogie Back!!!. Not only back where he wanted to be, but back where he belonged. He just wouldn't have looked right in another uniform. And so continues the great comeback story with the Voglesong's proving true the old adage that "behind (beside?) every great man is a great woman....chirping in his ear every two seconds".

from Giants Extra:
"I'm back where I wanted to be," Ryan Vogelsong says after signing one-year deal - 

Giants Extra:

Through it all, a persistent voice pushed him back toward San Francisco.

“I also have a wife (Nicole) that loves San Francisco and loves the fans and I’ve got her chirping in my ear every two seconds,” he said.


Vogelsong talks openly about his faith, and said a return just felt right to the family, which includes a young son, Ryder. He credited “divine intervention” for pushing him back towards the Giants and said it felt like a weight had been lifted when he left Houston and returned to negotiating with the Giants.

“When a decision came down everything kept leading me back to San Francisco,” he said. “Honestly, I just think it’s where I’m supposed to be. Stuff happens for a reason."
'via Blog this'


Indeed. Ryan Vogelsong, Back where you belong.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pSu9AjAwJLI

38 Special - Back Where You Belong


Thursday, January 22, 2015

Ryan Vogelsong “shifts course” on Astros, now “in serious discussions” with the Giants | HardballTalk





Be still my heart. Of course, this is exactly what I love to see....RESULTS!!! From my blog post of two days ago to the news of the day.



from The Slav's Blog:
http://slavieboy.blogspot.com/2015/01/giants-get-steal-with-nori-aoki.html

BTWII, I keep hearing that the Giants may need to add a guy like Ryan Vogelsong. Last time I checked, Ryan Vogelsong was still available. SIGN VOGIE!!! You cheap bastards!!!


from Hardball Talk:
Ryan Vogelsong “shifts course” on Astros, now “in serious discussions” with the Giants | HardballTalk:
Free agent starter Ryan Vogelsong was said to be working toward an agreement with the Astros and even traveled to Houston on Monday to meet with team officials. But it appears those negotiations have suddenly collapsed. From the Twitter account of FOX Sports’ Ken Rosenthal … 
'via Blog this'

It just makes more sense from both sides that Vogie ends up in SF than Houston. For the Giants, if you need a "Vogelsong-like" pitcher to fill out the staff, and Vogelsong is available, you don't give the fans Jason Marquis. From Vogie's side, I'm not sure he has enough mileage in him to see the results of the Astros rebuilding effort. Why not Pittsburgh and close that career circle instead?

Tuesday, January 20, 2015

Giants Get a Steal with Nori Aoki

Giants add former Kansas City Royals outfielder Nori Aoki

I like the deal initially and if Fan Graphs likes it, I like it even more. This should give the lineup a little more diversity and with McGahee, it should be a more disciplined, albeit less power-laden lineup, Plus, you get a little Pagan injury insurance at the top of the order.

You have basically replaced Sandoval and Morse with McGahee and Aoki. OK, who replaces the HR power you just lost? Posey, Pence and Belt likely will need to contribute 5 or more additional HR's each over last years output. Very doable if all three stay healthy.

I still think one more move is in the future and necessary for the Giants. As much as I would like that move to be Moncada, that would not help the title defense effort at all. Another pitcher? If the price of Shields comes down a bit, maybe. But with what Scherzer just signed for, I doubt there will be much of a Shields discount. If anything, Shields price tag to the Scherzer also-rans just went up a bit.

from Fan Graphs:
Giants Get a Steal with Nori Aoki:
With a $4 million base salary in 2015, it seems likely the second year option is probably around $7 million, and then some incentives could push it to the $12.5 million figure if he played really well. But even if he absolutely maxes out, that’s still less than what the crowd estimated, half of what I guessed, and only a fraction of it is guaranteed.
At this price, this is probably going to go down as one of the better free agent signings of the winter. Aoki isn’t any kind of star, but he’s a perfectly acceptable corner outfielder. He doesn’t have a platoon split issue, so he can play everyday.
He’s a good enough defender to not need to be subbed out for a late game replacement. And yet the Giants are basically paying him like a bench player.
Heyman notes that Aoki took less money to play for the Giants, so perhaps there’s some World Series discount in here, but this is still a huge bargain. In a market where worse players are signing for $20 million and costing their teams a first round pick, Aoki for $5 million is kind of amazing.

'via Blog this'


P.S. Good to see the Giants brass appears to agree with my assessment of the deal.
http://blogs.mercurynews.com/giants/2015/01/20/bochy-sabean-talk-lack-power-lineup-changes-comes-next/

BTW, the Cubs got the other guy I thought would be a good fit, for the same reasons as Aoki, in Dexter Fowler. Fowler would have cost a prospect or two while Aoki only costs payroll space.

BTWII, I keep hearing that the Giants may need to add a guy like Ryan Vogelsong. Last time I checked, Ryan Vogelsong was still available. SIGN VOGIE!!! You cheap bastards!!!

Thursday, January 08, 2015

#662 and I'm not sure which guy was from another planet either


CY YOUNG vs MVP - YouTube:


If you've seen a pitcher - batter confrontation as compelling as this in recent years, let me know.

Head to head, neither guys backs down. Bonds had just hooked a 99MPH fastball into the drink foul and Gagne, in true Major League style, eschews the request from his catcher to toss a change-up, choosing instead to "go with the heater". Which Bonds promptly yacks into the CF bleachers.

4 minutes of epic, classic baseball confrontation.

Just something to get away from the Hall of Fame blather.

OBTW, 40 days until Pitchers and Catcher Report. Music to my ears as the temps hover around zero in Chi-town.




Tuesday, January 06, 2015

First-Timers Randy Johnson, Pedro Martinez And John Smoltz, Holdover Craig Biggio Expected To Enter Baseball's Hall Of Fame



I use the BaseballReference.com 2015 Official Hall of Fame Ballot to confirm what my eyes tell me to fill out what would be my HOF ballot.

from Forbes.com
First-Timers Randy Johnson, Pedro Martinez And John Smoltz, Holdover Craig Biggio Expected To Enter Baseball's Hall Of Fame:

In my more than 20 years of voting for baseball’s Hall of Fame, there has never been a ballot like the 2015 edition. There are arguably 15 players worthy of consideration, an unprecedented number. Usually, it’s fairly easy to focus on a trio of sure-fire candidates and then examine some who appear borderline. This year there are five first-time eligibles with excellent credentials, six holdovers and four who would be automatics if not for their steroid use.
Let’s take a closer look starting with the four first-timers on my ballot:
Randy Johnson – Nicknamed “The Big Unit” because of his menacing size, Johnson captured five Cy Young Awards, including a record-tying four straight from 1999 to 2002, and struck out 4,875 batters, second only to Nolan Ryan.
Pedro Martinez – A fierce competitor, Martinez compiled a career winning percentage of .687, the best mark of any pitcher who began his career after 1950 and sixth all time. He won three Cy Youngs and finished second twice.
John Smoltz – Best known for his clutch pitching in the postseason, Smoltz was 15-4 with a 2.67 ERA when it mattered the most. He’s also the only pitcher in history with more than 200 wins and 150 saves.
Gary Sheffield – Known for his consistent power and production, Sheffield had 14 seasons of more than 20 homers, eight with more than 30 and two with over 40.
'via Blog this'

I like the two Bill James metrics, the HOF Monitor and the HOF Career Standards. The Hall of Fame Monitor (HOFm) measures the chances of a player being elected and the Career Standards (HOFs) measures how well a players career measures up to the typical standards of the HOF with 50 being the average Hall of Famer. Sort of the WAR of Hall of Fame metrics.

BTW: I think it was Bill James who said that there is likely five current Hall of Famers who used PEDs. I assume this is based on statistical anomalies through their career. Somebody also observed that this year's class will likely include two "suspect" players and I assume that excludes Bonds and Clemens, who nobody gives a chance of getting in this year.

The No-Doubters:
Bonds ( 76 HOFs ) and Clemens ( 73 HOFs )

The Don't have to think too hard:
Randy Johnson ( 65 ), Mike Piazza ( 62 ), Gary Sheffield ( 61 ) Pedro Martinez ( 60 )

Sorry, when you're better than 60% of the existing Hall of Fame, to not include these guys makes a mockery of guys that got in with significantly inferior stats by comparison, Last year, Frank Thomas was coronated with a 60 HOFs and Tom Glavine got in with a 52. Smoltz is considered a lock this year at a 44 HOFs. Reconcile that math, please.

The Should be in, not much argument:
Jeff Bagwell (59), Larry Walker (58), Craig Biggio (57), Mike Mussina (54), Sammy Sosa (52), Jeff Kent (51), Edgar Martinez (50).

If Frank Thomas gets in as pretty much a career DH, how does Edgar Martinez not make it? Here again a little selective discrimination, without much basis, against a guy who was just playing under the rule structure that was in place. I'm sure if he knew he would face this, he would have donned a glove and played the field more often.

The Maybe. Maybe next year crowd:
Fred McGriff (48)
Tim Raines (47)
Curt Schilling (46) If Smoltz gets in.....virtually statistically equal across the board
John Smoltz (44) Once he gets in, do we have to consider Steve Avery next year ?
Carlos Delgado (44) DH rule hurting here, as well?
Mark McGwire (42)
Brian Giles (41) Really?
Nomar Garciaparra (40)
Alan Trammell (40)
Don Mattingly (34)

See, this is where guys like Mattingly and Trammell get hurt. If they get in, I'm going to start beating the drums for Brian Giles to get in.

Ain't stats fun?

Epic rant by Ray Ratto in this article:
http://www.csnbayarea.com/giants/mlb-hall-fame-voting-starts-tuesday-and-everyone-loses


Suggested changes to the current system
http://espn.go.com/blog/sweetspot/post/_/id/54223/the-broken-hall-of-fame-voting-system

Pure politics

Sunday, January 04, 2015

Evans: Giants 'staying engaged' with Rays on Zobrist | CSN Bay Area



So, let me get this straight, the Giants:
  • are not engaged with Scherzer, nor do we plan to be engaged with Scherzer
  • are out on Shields
  • are staying engaged with Zobrist
from CSN Bay Area:
Evans: Giants 'staying engaged' with Rays on Zobrist | CSN Bay Area:
While nothing appears imminent, Giants assistant general manager Bobby Evans told MLB Network Radio on Sunday morning that the team is "staying engaged" with the Tampa Bay Rays about a possible trade for infielder/outfielder Ben Zobrist.
'via Blog this'

Sounds like the Giants are the biggest getting left at the altar, no free-agent getting-est, Super Tramps in the major leagues.

Let me know when the Giants are actually getting married to someone and where they'll be registered, because I'm getting tired of all these stupid updates and so-called rumors.

Equally as stupid are some of the trade proposals. I read some Internet clown from a website named Rays of Sunshine or something equally as inane, speculate that the price of the Giants acquiring Zobrist (who BTW turned out to be nearly Ted Williams incarnate, should be Kyle Crick, Andrew Susac and the obviously unproven Joe Panik.

OK genius, let's run through the math. For one year of control over Ben "Winter" Zobrist, the Giants should give up six years of control over the organization's  top pitching prospect and two guys who have at least "proven" themselves capable during a pennant race and the World Series, albeit not a full major league season? But the Giants have another 5-6 years of control over those guys. For one year of Ben Zobrist? I don't think I would give up any ONE of those guys straight up for a year of Ben Zobrist, regardless of how glorious that year might be. And BTW, I think Zobrist would be a great fit for the Giants, but sorry junior-GM, go back to your fantasy league dealings and STFU. You better hope the Rays new GM doesn't play his hand as foolishly as that among his peers, or you'll be taking your season tickets to Montreal or Havana or God knows where in the very near future.

I'm with the lunatic fringe on this one.

http://www.sflunaticfringe.com/comics/signs-youre-an-over-obsessed-sports-fan/

Signs You’re An Over-Obsessed Sports Fan


My bad, it was Rays Colored Glasses and the asking price was only Crick and Susac, but still....nothing like over-valuing your own. Zobrist is more valuable to the Rays at this point than almost anyone else, but then they end up with nothing for him and still outside of the playoffs. The Giants meanwhile can sit on their under-valued assets and keep winning championships.

http://www.chatsports.com/tampa-bay-rays/a/How-the-San-Francisco-Giants-Could-Acquire-Ben-Zobrist-2-10935731

According to Fans Graphs WAR stats, the Giants roster would have ranked 7th in the NL and the Royals 7th in the AL in WAR. And yet both statistically pathetic teams (the Giants rank behind the Cubs, for Pete's sake) made the World Series. So if all the pocket-protector GM's are so intent at worshipping at the mythical statistical God called WAR, so be it. Other can focus on winning games.

from FanGraphs:
http://www.fangraphs.com/depthcharts.aspx?position=ALL&teamid=30


BatPitWAR
Red Sox29.013.642.6
Dodgers26.215.341.6
Nationals26.214.340.4
Mariners25.314.339.5
Cardinals26.412.739.1
Blue Jays26.311.537.7
Tigers24.612.336.9
Rays25.311.036.4
Yankees21.913.835.7
Indians22.413.235.6
Pirates24.710.835.5
Royals23.511.935.4
Athletics23.711.335.0
Angels28.07.035.0
Orioles25.18.233.2
Cubs20.012.532.5
Rockies21.210.932.1
Giants22.29.531.8
Rangers20.410.430.8
Marlins18.711.930.6
Twins18.510.328.8
Brewers19.09.428.5
White Sox14.612.627.1
Reds17.79.226.9
Mets18.37.826.1
Astros16.68.525.0
Padres16.88.024.8
Diamondbacks15.17.922.9
Braves13.58.121.6
Phillies9.67.216.8





Giants Top Minor League Prospects

  • 1. Joey Bart 6-2, 215 C Power arm and a power bat, playing a premium defensive position. Good catch and throw skills.
  • 2. Heliot Ramos 6-2, 185 OF Potential high-ceiling player the Giants have been looking for. Great bat speed, early returns were impressive.
  • 3. Chris Shaw 6-3. 230 1B Lefty power bat, limited defensively to 1B, Matt Adams comp?
  • 4. Tyler Beede 6-4, 215 RHP from Vanderbilt projects as top of the rotation starter when he works out his command/control issues. When he misses, he misses by a bunch.
  • 5. Stephen Duggar 6-1, 170 CF Another toolsy, under-achieving OF in the Gary Brown mold, hoping for better results.
  • 6. Sandro Fabian 6-0, 180 OF Dominican signee from 2014, shows some pop in his bat. Below average arm and lack of speed should push him towards LF.
  • 7. Aramis Garcia 6-2, 220 C from Florida INTL projects as a good bat behind the dish with enough defensive skill to play there long-term
  • 8. Heath Quinn 6-2, 190 OF Strong hitter, makes contact with improving approach at the plate. Returns from hamate bone injury.
  • 9. Garrett Williams 6-1, 205 LHP Former Oklahoma standout, Giants prototype, low-ceiling, high-floor prospect.
  • 10. Shaun Anderson 6-4, 225 RHP Large frame, 3.36 K/BB rate. Can start or relieve
  • 11. Jacob Gonzalez 6-3, 190 3B Good pedigree, impressive bat for HS prospect.
  • 12. Seth Corry 6-2 195 LHP Highly regard HS pick. Was mentioned as possible chip in high profile trades.
  • 13. C.J. Hinojosa 5-10, 175 SS Scrappy IF prospect in the mold of Kelby Tomlinson, just gets it done.
  • 14. Garett Cave 6-4, 200 RHP He misses a lot of bats and at times, the plate. 13 K/9 an 5 B/9. Wild thing.

2019 MLB Draft - Top HS Draft Prospects

  • 1. Bobby Witt, Jr. 6-1,185 SS Colleyville Heritage HS (TX) Oklahoma commit. Outstanding defensive SS who can hit. 6.4 speed in 60 yd. Touched 97 on mound. Son of former major leaguer. Five tool potential.
  • 2. Riley Greene 6-2, 190 OF Haggerty HS (FL) Florida commit.Best HS hitting prospect. LH bat with good eye, plate discipline and developing power.
  • 3. C.J. Abrams 6-2, 180 SS Blessed Trinity HS (GA) High-ceiling athlete. 70 speed with plus arm. Hitting needs to develop as he matures. Alabama commit.
  • 4. Reece Hinds 6-4, 210 SS Niceville HS (FL) Power bat, committed to LSU. Plus arm, solid enough bat to move to 3B down the road. 98MPH arm.
  • 5. Daniel Espino 6-3, 200 RHP Georgia Premier Academy (GA) LSU commit. Touches 98 on FB with wipe out SL.

2019 MLB Draft - Top College Draft Prospects

  • 1. Adley Rutschman C Oregon State Plus defender with great arm. Excellent receiver plus a switch hitter with some pop in the bat.
  • 2. Shea Langliers C Baylor Excelent throw and catch skills with good pop time. Quick bat, uses all fields approach with some pop.
  • 3. Zack Thompson 6-2 LHP Kentucky Missed time with an elbow issue. FB up to 95 with plenty of secondary stuff.
  • 4. Matt Wallner 6-5 OF Southern Miss Run producing bat plus mid to upper 90's FB closer. Power bat from the left side, athletic for size.
  • 5. Nick Lodolo LHP TCU Tall LHP, 95MPH FB and solid breaking stuff.