Highest Payouts In Town Guaranteed!

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Gordon sez,

 

[The Safeco solution is] a garage door opener.  Make Edgar close it and leave it closed unless the day is spectacular.
 
It seems like the easiest fix for the lower end of our offensive woes.  The other part - the high end - is harder to fix.
 
As is ably illustrated in this Jayson Stark article, the age of the crushing offenses is over.  It's why I said last year that Fielder was a good buy despite the cost because of his age and because getting great offensive pieces will only get harder.
 
You might notice that nobody's hitting the market.  Tulo?  Locked up.  Cargo?  Same thing.  Votto? locked up.
 
The Brewers had to make a choice and took Braun over Fielder, otherwise Prince would never have made the open market either.  Ethier didn't and he's not even the best hitter on his team.  Kemp was extended for a fortune.
 
There aren't a lot of offensive talents any more and the odds of getting them, especially in their prime, are going way down.
 
Have to draft them or trade for them.  Which is what Jack's been trying to exploit before everybody else figures out that pitchers are easier to find now than hitters.  That's why we got Smoak, Montero, F-Mart, Trayvon, Chiang,  and Wells in trades, while also re-stocking pitching with Furbush, Beavan, Noesi and crew.
 
The year I wanted him to draft a pitcher he took a cross-fire pitcher (Hultzen), a newer breed of arm starting to show up (also briefly discussed in Stark's article).  But it was a good pitching year, and Hultzen's making him look like a genius.
 
This year he took one of the biggest HR hitters in college (which has been nice enough deaden their own bat to give a better read of the power potenial of collegiates).
 
But he took him at a glove position so that if he doesn't work out to as much power as we'd like he's still good positionally.  I hope that becomes a positive for us either way.
 
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That still doesn't help the plus side of the ledger as far as runs goes. We're going back to the 70s and 80s as far as power goes, and parks built in the 90s to play "fair" with all the crazy offense now look ENORMOUS to non-roided hitters.
 
The other way to fix that is to move the fences in, as has already been discussed.  20 years from now there are two possible solutions: one, somebody proves that HGH is good for you, and it's allowed, or two, the newer parks they're building at that point are cozier.
 
Because chicks dig the long ball and 1-0 pitching duels don't sell tickets.  Television ratings matter, and they recovered when hitters could hit. I don't think the league is gonna let viewership lag no matter how much they push their Verlanders.
 
In the meantime we need to figure it out in the Northwest in our already-built park.  First, close the roof next year if the temp is under 80.  If that doesn't help as much as we want, then start talking about the fences.  I'd prefer to let it be a roof issue and let the park simply pay fair with the non-roiders - I do not want to move the fence.
 
If the Rangers are proving that the excuses of heat and park were not gonna be accepted by their owners as reasons for terrible pitching down the stretch, then I really don't want to accept that simply hitting doubles instead of homers is a curse for our offense.
 
But if our pitchers are Felix / Vargas / Walker / Hutzen / Paxton or whatever,  with a bullpen of 99 mph torchers, then moving the fences in will do more for our offense than against our pitching.
 
Gotta do whatcha gotta do, and you can't win if you don't score.  In Safeco right now, we don't score.
 
~G

Hadn't thought of this, the parks that were designed as reactions to the absurd 70-homer seasons of the 1990's..

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So you deflate the hitters but leave them swimming around in an enormous ball-pong pit .... we're talking literally deadball-era offenses in 2010 and 2011 - literally 1906 slash lines teamwide.  Mr. Chuck's fondness for a "well-played" 3-2 game is well and truly outmoded in Seattle at this point.

You'd raise the ante to 80 degrees, eh ... I'd love to see something along those lines, maybe 69-overcast and below, but is there an issue selling that to Selig?  Or does Selig pretty much sign off on the org's roof policy?

As we know, Lincoln and Armstrong call these kindsa shots.  ... it appears that Eric Wedge, at least, will be a voice on the fans' side.

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

No question either about your observation, that the deck of the ship is tilting wildly under their feet.  As far as the hitter-pitcher balance of power.  One part of this problem that amazes me, is simply the improvement in pitching ....

James has observed that --- > the last few years have been unique with regard to talented young starters coming up and staying healthy.   Some decades have featured an oddly deep collection of shortstops.  This one seems to be breeding starters.

In his opinion it isn't just the environment creating an illusion -- it actually is a weird number of Verlanders and Felixes and Cains and Prices and Kershaws ...

And here we go again with another wave:  Chris Sale and Strasburg and Gio and Lance Lynn and Alexi Ogando, you can count Yu Darvish in that, and soon to be Hultzen, Paxton and Taijuan as well as Trevor Bauer and other hotshots who virtually can't miss...

Behind them, it actually does seem like there is another tier there of "mediocre" pitchers who have leaped plateaus:  Ryan Vogelsongs and James McDonalds and Jason Vargases and those guys who just seem to have sharpened their games to a shocking degree. 

The M's need to hit better, but it seems every game I watch in 2012, the enemy pitchers are throwing aspirin tablets.

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As far as our having the margin-for-error to improve Safeco because Felix, Hultzen, Paxton, Taijuan and Tom Wilhelmsen :- ) are going to combine for 9 strikeouts per game ... pretty obviously true that the Seattle days of pitch-to-contact guys are fading fast.  There was a time when the 4-K flotilla of Batistas, Washburns, Silvas et al did create a synergy with deep fences.  That synergy is lost as the organization gets away from craven "at least this guy doesn't walk anybody" orientation.

Part of the reason that this year's 3-4-5 starters couldn't phase fast enough for me.  I wanna see pitchers attack hitters.  I've heard it's the trend.

Comments

1

 

Hi Bill, in your opinion, why are we seeing this dominance of the pitchers the last 3 years? How much, if any, do you think it has to do with testing for performance enhancing drugs in baseball? Thanks. Efrain
Asked by: Efrain
Answered: 6/16/2012

We're not seeing DOMINANCE of pitchers the last three years; the major league ERA last year was barely under 4.00.    In 1988 it was 3.71, in 1978 3.67, in 1968 2.98, in 1958 3.86.   We're merely drifting back TOWARD historically normal figures.   We're not even quite there yet.   The banning of PEDs has a lot to do with it, yes.  

 

2

I don't know if the offer still stands, but I almost can't believe no one bit on Reynolds. It is looking like he's become nothing more than a token third baseman, but those offensive gains seem to be holding. His overall OPS of .805 is masking the dominance he's displayed since he finally remembered how to hit home runs on May 4th, since then:
23 G, 95 PA, .333/.463/.640, 17 BB, 20 K (21%!).
A Mark Reynolds that is striking out only 21% of the time is a truly frightening thought.  I don't even need to ship out Chone Figgins for that guy.  Stick him at DH and have Jaso ready to spot him against the nastier righties.

4

Reynolds:
April of 2011: 8-BB; 25-K
June of 2011: 21-BB; 27-K
August of 2011: 5-BB; 44-K;
Sept of 2011: 12-BB; 35-K
Just last season, Reynolds had two single-digit walk month -- and a 19 and 21 walk month back-to-back.
The one thing that is known without question is Reynolds cannot play defense. They moved him from 75% 3B in 2011 to 60% 1B in 2012. His defensive WAR is still negative.
Reynolds is 28 ... is guy who is a proven 200-K per year whiff machine. Could that improve nominally this late? Perhaps. But he's a .238 career hitter, (and .241 this season). That isn't going to change.
He's got a career .312 BABIP ... but is currently up at .341 ... with a huge .378 BABIP at home so far. (Let's see everyone's hand who thinks he's going to run a .378 BABIP in Safeco).
Reynolds destroys his offensive value with his defensive value. BBREF has his at an aggregate -0.3 this season. Except for his 2009 abberation, he's never reached 1.0 WAR in a full season, just fyi. But ... the Ms remain desperate for a DH. So, maybe if you don't have to lose a couple of games a season with his glove ...
Well ... he's only got 10 games (38 PAs at DH). So, his .589 OPS isn't really a fair look, (though it ain't comfortaing). His 20 pinch-hits include 2 HRs ... so he's at .750 as a pinch-hitter. But ... his .125/.250/.500 20-PA slashline as a pinch-hitter isn't as bizarro as his .000 BABIP and 9 Ks in that situation. Talk about all-or-nothing.
I just have never gottent this fixation on Reynolds out there. He's an .800 hitter in Baltimore ... (and Arizona before that) ... both significant pitcher and HR-friendly venues. Mind you ... he doesn't have a monster home-road split for his career, but he's a .238 career hitter ... and it's pretty much a guarantee if he moves to Safeco he WILL have a major home/road split.
Seriously ... what is the projected home slashline for ANY .238 RH hitter moving to Saffeco at this point?
The Mariners, in fact, have ALREADY experienced Mark Reynolds. His name was Richie Sexson. Though Sexson finished with a career .851 OPS (well above where Reynolds currently sits).
Sexson would finish his Seattle career with a .776 OPS in Safeco. He would finish with a .230 average in Safeco ... (though his career average was actually .261).
Other than not being as good as Sexson was at the plate ...
Other than being even worse than Sexson in the field ...
Mark Reynolds is begging for a complete replay of the Richie Sexson experience ... except you're starting from a lower starting point.

5

Bring him in and put his name on a 4 year contract. He's signed for this year, and next if you want him (though you could probably opt out and re-sign for less if he sticks at .800). That June last year where he had 21 BB vs. 27 K was the first time his BB/K ratio got within spitting distance of even (it was one of a very few months he kept his Ks under 30). Sexson's 30/31 seasons were just fine (.875 OPS).
It was that month that sent my interest up from, "He might have made a cheap trade for a funky power bat in 2010" to "He might turn into Jim Thome". There was an HBP just prior to the all star game, he was hit on the hand or the wrist, and he just reverted back to a hit or miss kind of guy the rest of the season. My guess was, then and now, that he was playing with some damage that kept what finesse he had learned out of his swing. Now he's showing that progress might have been real.

6

I would absolutely do that. He OPSes .890 vs LHP career. The Mariners are extremely LHB-oriented, and having Reynolds/Wells in there against lefties helps significantly.
I don't think we can do something like that, but I'd certainly try. Even if we have to throw something else in to get rid of Chone, it'd be worth it not to be handcuffed by having him around. And getting back a guy who is useful in SOME situations is better than having your manager decide out of duty or stupidity to play a guy who's only useful as a pinch-runner.
~G

7

He's currently sporting the highest LD% of his career, the lowest IFFB%, the lowest Out of Zone Swing %, the lowest In Zone Swing %, the Highest In Zone Contact %(a drastic 79 compared to a career 71), and the lowest Swing Strike % (again drastic: of his career 12.8 vs. Career 16.9). And I think the fact that he's 60% 1st Baseman this season is due mostly to hamstring issues from spring. I don't buy that any 3rd Baseman would make a worse 1st Baseman than Richie Sexson.

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