Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Teixeira, the Worst GMs in the World, Majewski

We might as well start with the most baffling signing of the day. No one saw it coming and it’s turned the tide of how we look at the 2009 season.

The Phillies sign Gary Majewski to a minor league deal.

Apparently Adam Eaton doesn’t suffice? The Philadelphia Phillies, who have a well-stocked bullpen after re-signing Scott Eyre and adding Rule 5 draftee Robert Mosebach to the mix, are apparently antsy to add another one of the worst pitchers in baseball to their already-elderly minor league system.

Majewski hasn’t been anything but the worst pitcher in baseball for the last two and a half seasons, so what the Phillies are hoping shows up in Clearwater next year is a complete mystery. Excluding errors, 79 of 192 batters who faced Majewski in 2008 reached base for an OBP against of .412. Similarly, in 2007, 49 of 113 batters faced Majewski reached base (.434). In 2006, it was a mere .364 for the combined season, but after he was acquired by the Reds, he became the proverbial gasoline on the fire and the fire itself, sporting a modest WHIP of 2.27.

Taking a look at sabermetric numbers makes it seem like Majewski might be salvageable, since his BABIP in the last three years has been .323, .422, and .391. That said, there are essentially three reasons BABIP can be high – random chance (e.g., bad luck), poor fielders who just don’t get to balls, and a pitcher being hit really hard. I’m laying heavy odds that it’s the third category at issue for Majewski, partly because the BABIP against him should be low since he allowed 6 home runs (which, of course, are not “in play” as far as BABIP is concerned).

Majewski was part of the inaugural USA team for the World Baseball Classic. Let me be the first to suggest he’s not getting invited this year.

The second signing – nearly as baffling.

The Nationals sign Corey Patterson and Jorge Sosa to minor league deals.

It’s official. The two worst GMs in baseball are Ruben Amaro Jr. and Jim Bowden. It’s taken Amaro mere weeks to crack this list, it’ll take a Raul Ibanez MVP year to get him off it (unfortunately, if you should only get your news from this blog, you don’t know the Phillies signed Raul Ibanez – well, they did. It was bad. We’ll get to that in a few days.) It should only take Stan Kasten coming to his senses to remove Bowden from the list and the employment rolls.

Corey Patterson is the ultimate Dusty Baker player – he doesn’t clog the bases, because he never gets on the bases, and he steals bases with reckless abandon (in 2008, the emphasis was on reckless, he got caught stealing 9 times in 23 attempts). The fact that he didn’t even last under Dusty Baker should really tell you plenty. He doesn’t work counts, he doesn’t draw walks, he’s a terrible leadoff hitter, but he hits for some power, flashes tremendous tools, and is good defensively. Since the Nationals already have Ryan Langerhans, in other words, he is completely and utterly useless. But he’s got a contract for $800K waiting for him if he should somehow make the Nationals’ major league club. The good news for the Nationals is that he shouldn’t have much of a shot to do that with big contracts (Wily Mo Pena for $4 million, Austin Kearns for $8 million), acceptable talent (Lastings Milledge, Josh Willingham, and Elijah Dukes), and utility players (Willie Harris) blocking the path. The bad news is that if those things were enough to ward him off, they should have already done so.

Patterson was tremendously terrible last year, posting a .238 ON BASE PERCENTAGE. This number would rank below such luminaries of batting as Bronson Arroyo (.246 OBP), Seth McClung (.263), Aaron Cook (.258), Manny Parra (.255), Tim Redding (.250), and Jason Marquis (.242). In case you were unaware, Mr. Bowden, Jason Marquis is available and you just non-tendered Tim Redding, who offered superior offensive output to Corey Patterson.

The other minor league deal went to living proof of a Leo Mazzone effect – Jorge Sosa – who has had one good major league season. That season was 2005, the only year he was in the Braves organization simultaneously with Leo Mazzone. The next year, Mazzone left for the Orioles, and with him went Sosa’s ability to pitch. Sosa doesn’t have strikeout stuff, doesn’t have great control, but is really just erratic. In 2007, he walked 41 batters in 112 innings; in 2008, he walked 11 in 21. His strikeouts have been in steady decline since 2004, so he’s not likely to be a back-end contributor to the bullpen, but he may figure in the 5th starter competition or in the “who is this year’s Jesus Colome” reality show that will be spring training in Brevard County.

One other minor deal was transacted today, with Mark Teixeira signing with the New York Yankees for a mere 8 years and $180 million.

This one’s not hard to explain. The Yankees have money, they have no real first baseman, and they had an opportunity to take something away from the Red Sox.

Teixeira, I think, is a pretty overrated signing for the amount of money that we’re talking in this deal. He’s still young, but he sacrificed much of his value by moving to first to vacate third base for Hank Blalock a few years ago. He’s an excellent fielder at first base and he’s an excellent hitter, so I’m not criticizing Teixeira, just noting that he’s not really a savior to a franchise (which is why this deal is a huge benefit to the Orioles and Nationals).

Aside from the obvious stats that jump out at you, Tex offers two big upsides – patience and durability. He draws a lot of walks and is becoming more patient at the plate as he’s developed and he has never missed much time with injuries (and had played in 507 straight games until straining a hamstring in 2007). He’s primarily a fly ball hitter, but it’s hard to tell how that will fly in New Yankee Stadium Redux. I’m sure it will not be a major difficulty.

Dave Cameron projects that Teixeira will likely mean an extra 4 wins for the Yankees every season. I think the vital factor isn’t that he means extra wins for the Yankees as much as he means fewer wins for the Red Sox, who will have to hope that David Ortiz can once again become a 1.000+ OPS hitter. Maybe Eric Gagne left some vials behind, because lord knows there’s nothing the least bit suspicious about David Ortiz’s emergence.

I’m not among those who thinks the Teixeira signing makes the Yankees the favorites in the AL East. They still have a profoundly pedestrian outfield and DH – I’d rank Damon/Matsui/Cabrera/Nady among the middle of the pack in outfields – closer to Sizemore/Choo/Francisco/Dellucci than Mantle & Maris, a gaping hole at catcher on days that Posada is out (which may be every day, for all we know), a bullpen with only two components (Marte and Rivera), no minor league talent on the verge of contributing in the event of an injury, aging players like Posada and Rivera who are on their last legs, a woefully deficient defense up the middle in the infield (Jeter can’t make plays to his right, Cano can’t make plays on the baseball diamond), and they’re relying on A.J. Burnett to make all of his starts. They’ll be good. But they’re not exactly shoo-ins.

Nothing has changed in the 8 years of not winning the World Series. Rooting for the Yankees is still like rooting for a terminal illness – it’s never in doubt that they’re going to win, it’s just a matter of how long the baseball collective can stave it off.

Projected Yankees’ lineup:
LF Damon
SS Jeter
1B Texeira
3B Rodriguez
DH Matsui
C Posada
RF Nady
2B Cano
CF Cabrera

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