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HQ on League - Next Great Closer?

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Taro's picture
Submitted by Taro on

Once you start getting over Ed.Jackson you really start to get excited about Brandon League.

League's K/9 could go up even further in '09 and he could be the next 1.90 ERA stopper in Safeco. We've covered the underlying SwS% and other peripherals, but another stat was put to my attention over at MC.

League has a career 673 OPS against on the grass. In '09 that was a .579 OPS. :-)

With the long Safeco grass and the killer left side of the infield, League is going to looove pitching in Seattle.

Hes going to be the best pitcher in the bullpen in '09, but I prefer him as a stopper than as a closer. The guy could make a serious impact in that role.

 

jemanji's picture
Submitted by jemanji on

Half the time Aardsma comes in with 2-3 runs, bases empty, and a random part of the lineup to deal with.  Anybody with a good arm, who remains calm, and throws strike one can pitch one scoreless inning with a clean start and a 2-run lead.

You get an overwhelming relief pitcher that you can bring in when it's really leveraged -- MOTO, or a man or two on, whatever -- and THAT is a difference-maker...

With Jack Wilson at short, and the grass at Safeco, I agree.  In '010, League could perform a role like Rivera did behind Wetteland in 1996, or like KRod did behind Percival in 2004.

............

Mark Lowe had a big second half too, with his CTL going from 1.7 to 3.2.  Lowe may be all the way back now.   If Aardsma could throw strikes, they might have something approaching the 2001 bullpen.

jemanji's picture
Submitted by jemanji on

BTW, here's a vid of League blowing away ARod and Teixeira with the splitter / sidearm change / whatever it is.

Here he is destroying the LH Teixeira with a 98 fastball on the hands.  Couple other League strikeouts on that one, too, including of ARod.

IcebreakerX's picture

From day one, for me, was one where Z was buying as low as you can in the potentials market. Though I didn't dig very far into the stats, it was clear to me that League has a lot of stuff that is hidden by bad results in the classic stat line. Z clearly sees something bigger in League than Morrow.

Relievers are volatile, but there is a difference between volatile and plain inconsistent. Volatile is Rivera or Papelbon or Nathan throwing a 2.95 ERA or a 1.96 ERA. Inconsistent is Morrow or Seans White or Green not being able to hit the side of a barn.

A lot of bloggers seem to mix this up and try to devalue League, but if the tools scouts are saying League is the next impact reliever and the numbers support it, this is one of the best bets out there. League sounds like a bet by Z on League being a product now, as opposed to inconsistent.

Though I do wonder why (outside of obvious budget considerations) the M's didn't trade for Rafael Soriano too, considering his nuclear 2009 campaign.

jemanji's picture
Submitted by jemanji on

*is* buying KRod before he has taken over the 9th inning and logged 45 saves... but bloggers also need to realize that a big time "stopper" is not cheap either... it's not like people haven't figured out what Rivera '96, KRod '04, or League '09 are...

Not saying that League is a Hall of Famer, but he is a s-t-u-d closer wannabe.

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