I’ll give you a hint: very good. EJ Fagan at TYU took a look at the Yanks’ best prospect, particularly how his defense has progressed and how his 2009 offensive season shook out, determining that yeah, Mr. Montero is pretty freakin’ special. I’ll say this, the kid is legimately the best position player prospect the Yanks have had since Derek Jeter in the early-to-mid 1990’s. Get excited, people.
RAB on the radio
Just a heads up, I’ll be appearing on The Sports Show Live with Joey Hayward, who you may know from the comments as Joey H. I’ll be on at 9:30pm to preview the playoffs and talk about the Yanks. Click here if you want to listen, and/or join in on the conversation.
Open Thread: RAB Fantasy Baseball League Final Update
Well, technically it’s the first update, but that’s neither here nor there.
For the third straight year, I won my league’s regular season title, but fell short in the playoffs. This time it was out of sheer stupidity though, not because I had an inferior team. I forgot to set my lineup one day during my matchup in Round One of the playoffs, and missed out on this Zach Greinke start. The ERA and WHIP wouldn’t have mattered, but the five extra strikeouts would have tied me in that category, and given me the win that week. It’s not as bad as the Rafael Furcal Stolen Base Incident of 2007, but it sucks none the less.
Anyway, RAB regular A.D. won the league, beating Jamal G., another regular. So congrats to him. Here’s the team I drafted, and here’s the team I finished the year with:
C: Russ Martin
1B: Derek Lee
2B: Brian Roberts
3B: A-Rod
SS: Gordon Beckham
OF: Jason Kubel
OF: Andrew McCutchen
OF: Julio Borbon
UTIL: Carlos Gonzalez
BN: JD Drew
BN: Rafael Furcal
BN: Brad Hawpe
BN: Casey McGehee
BN: Conor Jackson (DL)
SP: Felix Hernandez
SP: Zach Greinke
SP: Josh Johnson
SP: Freddy Garcia
SP: Sean West
SP: Jered Weaver
SP: Gil Meche (DL)
RP: Ryan Madson
RP: Matt Thornton
RP: Kiko Calero
Power pitching wins, folks. I struck gold with Felix (5th round), Greinke (7th), and Johnson (11th), and Weaver was decent for a 16th rounder. I picked up Garcia and West late in the season when I needed strikeouts and they were starting on a Sunday. Madson and Thornton racked up the holds (the league used Saves+Holds, not just Saves). Assuming Greinke wins the Cy Young, I will have had three of the last four Cy winners on my fantasy team (I traded for Tim Lincecum early last year, and grabbed Cliff Lee off waivers in April).
Don’t read too much into the outfield alignment, I played the matchups pretty much every day and could have had Drew or Hawpe starting. That’s just how I had my roster set yesterday. My first rounder – the uberslumping Jimmy Rollins – was jettisoned along with Aubrey Huff in a trade for McCutchen and Furcal. I had a mid-season outfield crisis and needed the help, plus I had Beckham starting at short. I shuffled in guys like Jack Cust, Kosuke Fukudome, Matt LaPorta, Scott Hairston, and David Murphy all summer until Borbon and Gonzalez stabilized things.
Did you know Derrek Lee finished the year with a .972 OPS, 35 homers, and 111 RBI? I almost traded him for Edwin Jackson in early August. A-Rod was the man, as usual, but Martin hit for zero power all season. Regardless, it was a good team and I won my final six regular season matchups.
Final standings for the league are after the jump, but feel free to use this as your open thread for the night. Brett Favre takes on the Packers in Minnesota on Monday Night Football, and you’ve also got the Rangers and Devils facing off in New Jersey. There’s also a new House on, which is where I’ll be. Talk about whatever you want, just follow the guidelines and be nice.
Looking At The Playoff Roster: Pitchers
The 162-game regular season is over, and now we’re just waiting for playoff baseball to start. I don’t know why baseball feels like it needs two off days between Game 162 and Game One, but whatever. Before the postseason can start, the Yanks much first decide on a 25-man playoff roster, not always the easiest task. Brian Cashman has already hinted that the team will use a 10-man pitching staff for at least the Division Series, which means we’re looking at a six man bench.
This morning we looked at the position players, so let’s check out the hurlers now. With ten spots available, six are filled by these shoo-ins:
Al Aceves
A.J. Burnett
Phil Hughes
Andy Pettitte
Mariano Rivera
CC Sabathia
Just as those six are locks for the postseason roster, these seven are locks to be left off:
Jon Albaladejo
Mike Dunn
Ian Kennedy
Mark Melancon
Sergio Mitre
Edwar Ramirez
Josh Towers
The remaining four spots will be occupied by some combination of Brian Bruney, Joba Chamberlain, Phil Coke, Chad Gaudin, Damaso Marte, and David Robertson. Let’s break down the matchups one by one.
Phil Coke vs. Damaso Marte
This one might depend on who the Yanks play in the ALDS. The Tigers have lefties Curtis Granderson (.897 OPS vs. RHP, .478 vs. LHP) and Aubrey Huff (.714 vs. .650) in their lineup, while the Twins pack Joe Mauer (1.099 vs. .910, haha) and Jason Kubel (1.011 vs. .648) into the 3-4 spots of their batting order. Coke held lefties to a .195-.218-.366 line this year, Marte .120-.214-.280. I’m not worried about Granderson or Huff beating me, good righties can get them out. Mauer and Kubel … well that’s a different story.
Given Mauer and Kubel’s dominance of righthanders, I’d like to have that extra southpaw in the bullpen if the Yanks have to face the Minny. Surely those two will come up in a big spot twice in one game at some point in the series, and you’d like to be able to combat that somewhat. As for Detroit, I don’t see why you’d need more than one LOOGY. If the Twins win Tuesday, I’d take both Coke and Marte, no question. If the Tigers win, well then we have a decision to make.
Obviously, Marte is the more accomplished of the two and has previous playoff experience. Coke’s been there all year, which should count for something, but his tendency to serve up homers scares the crap out of me. A healthy Marte – which is what he’s been since coming off the DL – is better than a healthy Phil Coke, so I’m going to take him.
Joba Chamberlain vs. Chad Gaudin
The Yanks aren’t going to need a fourth starter in the ALDS, so whichever guy comes along would be used strictly in relief. I watched Joba’s relief outing yesterday, but that one inning does nothing for me. As good as he looked during all seven of those pitches, it’s not enough to discount the last two months. Gaudin, at the very least, has been serviceable since joining the Yanks, and he straight up murders righthanders (.224-.293-.380), something we haven’t seen Joba do lately.
Believe me, I’m well aware of what Joba did out of the bullpen in 2007. But why should we expect him to repeat that kind of performance two years later? A shift to the bullpen isn’t going to magically fix his command. He hasn’t been reliable for two months now, and frankly he’s not one of the ten best pitchers in the organization at the moment. Don’t get me wrong, I’m all for showing patience and letting kids take their lumps as part of the learning experience, just not in the playoffs. This is crunch time, and the Yanks can’t afford to bring a lesser pitcher to the ALDS. Gaudin serves as a capable long man and perhaps even a ROOGY in the middle innings. I’m taking him for the Division Series.
David Robertson vs. Brian Bruney
Much to my surprise and probably just in the nick of time for him, Brian Bruney has been pretty decent in the last week or so. He’s retired 11 of the 13 batters he’s faced (spread over three appearances), four via the strikeout. Is that enough to negate the .942 OPS against and 19-20 K/BB ratio he put up in the previous 26 IP since coming off the DL? No, of course not. We can’t be fooled by a recent small sample size, no matter how good it looks.
David Robertson, on the other hand, is just coming off some elbow stiffness which creates some questions. Despite the injury, Robertson leads all AL pitchers – all of ’em – with 12.98 K/9. And it’s not particularly close either; Joakim Soria is second at 11.72, so we’re looking at a difference of about one strikeout every seven innings pitched. He walks fewer batters than Bruney (4.74 BB/9 to 5.31) and is much stinger with the longball (0.82 HR/9 vs 1.38). If the elbow is sound, this isn’t much of a debate for me: Robertson over Bruney.
So after all that, my ten-man pitching staff for the ALDS is:
SP: Sabathia
SP: Burnett
SP: Pettitte
LHRP: Coke vs. Twins
LHRP: Marte
RHRP: Gaudin
RHRP: Robertson
RHRP: Aceves
SU: Hughes
Savior: Mo
If the Tigers manage to win tomorrow, I still need one more arm because I’d only be bringing one LOOGY. Of the three guys who got snubbed – Coke, Joba, and Bruney – I’d have to go with … Coke. He’s been more effective than either of the other two of late, so he gets the nod. Sorry Joba, sorry Brian, but your craptacular pitching in the second half cost you a spot on my Division Series roster.
Given the ridiculous game, off day, game, off day, game, game, off day setup of the ALDS, Hughes and Mo should get the lion’s share of the work out of the bullpen. There’s no reason that duo can’t combine for nine outs in games one through three, and in an elimination game they could be pushed to 12 outs. You really can’t ask for a better third option than Aceves, so that’s like six innings of top notch relief the Yanks have available to them in the first three games of the Division Series.
So what do you guys think, would you take Joba over Gaudin, Bruney over K-Rob™? Any wildcard guys you’d rather include?
Looking At The Playoff Roster: Position Players
The 162-game regular season is over, and now we’re just waiting for playoff baseball to start. I don’t know why baseball feels like it needs two off days between Game 162 and Game One, but whatever. Before the postseason can start, the Yanks much first decide on a 25-man playoff roster, not always the easiest task. Brian Cashman has already hinted that the team will use a 10-man pitching staff for at least the Division Series, which means we’re looking at a six man bench.
Barring something completely unforeseen, these ten players are a lock for the postseason roster:
Melky Cabrera
Robbie Cano
Johnny Damon
Brett Gardner
Derek Jeter
Hideki Matsui
Jorge Posada
Alex Rodriguez
Nick Swisher
Mark Teixeira
For all intents and purposes, Eric Hinske and Jerry Hairston Jr. are in as well. Hairston’s wrist is healthy, so he’s a go as the jack-of-all-trades. Juan Miranda is a less versatile and less experienced version of Hinske, so there’s no point in bringing him along. Shelley Duncan is a classic AAAA slugger and offers very little beyond running into the occasional fastball. I like Shelley as much as the next guy, but there’s no use for him in October. That’s already 12 spots accounted for, basically leaving you with four players vying for the final three spots: Jose Molina, Frankie Cervelli, Freddy Guzman, and Ramiro Pena.
Obviously there needs to be a backup catcher, so let’s hammer that out first. Molina, never a threat with the bat, has sunk to new offensive lows this year thanks to his .292 OBP and .268 SLG. Among the 387 players with at least 150 plate appearances this year, only Aaron Miles (.466 (!)), Alexi Casilla (.532), Brian Giles (.548), and Willy Taveras (.559) have a worse OPS than Hava Molina’s .560 mark. Cervelli isn’t striking fear into the heart of opposing pitchers anytime soon either, but his .309 OBP and .372 SLG are’t nearly the eyesore Molina’s lines are. Small sample size warnings apply here, but in reality the backup catcher shouldn’t see much, if any playing time in the postseason anyway. Whether or not that’s how it goes down is a different story all together.
On the defensive side of the ball, both guys are pretty good at blocking balls in the dirt and making throws (Molina’s thrown out 28.1% of basestealers, Cervelli 43.5% in a small sample). Molina’s reputation as a gunslinger might give him a slight edge because teams may think twice about going, but that’s probably a negligible effect. Also, Cervelli is a way better runner than Molina. No stats needed and there’s no debating it, however just because Frankie is an above average runner for a catcher doesn’t mean he’s fast, it’s just means he’s one of the faster slow guys.
I have zero interest in starting another debate about Molina’s game calling merits, in my mind the backup catcher shouldn’t see the field in the playoffs unless he’s warming up pitchers between innings or there’s an injury. I’m going to go against the grain and say they should take Cervelli as Posada’s backup, mostly because he’s more likely to put together a decent at-bat and he runs better. He’s the lesser of two evils, I guess.
As for the other two spots, I’m giving them to Pena and Guzman almost by default. I’ve said it twice already, but I might as well repeat it: I don’t think the backup backstop should play much in the playoffs, and based on that there’s no reason to carry a third guy. Guzman is obviously on board for one specific reason, and that’s to pinch run in a big spot late in games. No more, no less. Pena is pretty much in the same boat, but at least he offers outstanding defense and some versatility around the infield as an added bonus. However, it’s unlikely A-Rod, Jeter, or Cano will not be on the field at any point, so Pena doesn’t figure to see much action beyond pinch running either.
Based on all that, here’s the 15 position players I’m bringing to the ALDS:
C: Posada
1B: Teixeira
2B: Cano
SS: Jeter
3B: A-Rod
LF: Damon
CF: Gardner/Melky
RF: Swisher
DH: Matsui
BUC: Cervelli
UTIL: Hairston
OF: Gardner/Melky
PH: Hinske
PR: Guzman
PR: Pena
As has been the case the last few years, the players the Yankees carry on the bench won’t play much because of the quality of their starting lineup. The only time Hinske will play is if Gardbrera comes to the plate with ducks on the pond in the late innings of a close game. That’s also when Gardner (if he’s not starting), Guzman, and Pena will be getting their pinch run on. Hairston could pinch hit for Gardbrera against a tough lefty, although it seems unlikely.
Later this afternoon I’ll take a look at the pitching staff, but until then use this thread to talk about the position players.
Fan Confidence Poll: October 5th, 2009
Record Last Week: 3-3 (32 RS, 29 RA)
Season Record: 103-59 (915 RS, 753 RA), won AL East by 8 games, finished with the best record in MLB by 6 games
Opponents This Week: Yanks will play winner of Tuesday’s Twins-Tigers game in the best-of-five ALDS
Top stories from last week:
- The final week of the season began the same way as so many other weeks: with a win. The Yanks C-squad knocked around former #1 overall pick Luke Hochevar on Monday. The Bombers came back with a walk-off win off old buddy Kyle Farnsworth on Tuesday, but Joba Chamberlain struggled again in the final home game of the regular season and the winning streak came to an end.
- The Yanks headed down to their home away from home for the final series of the year, but CC Sabathia got knocked around as he chased his 20th win. Andy Pettitte wasn’t sharp the next night, but A-Rod hit two homers and drove in seven runs in the 6th inning on Sunday to close the season with a W.
- We may not like it, but it appears that Jose Molina may actually get a start behind the plate in the postseason because of the relationship he has with AJ Burnett. We still don’t have an answer to the “who will be the fourth starter” question, and there’s the David Robertson-Brian Bruney conundrum as well.
- At least Joe Girardi is one of the best at managing the bullpen, so they have that going for them. He’s not a candidate for a contract extension yet, though.
- Manny Banuelos and Arodys Vizcaino ranked highly on the Low-A South Atlantic League and Short Season NY-Penn League Top 20 Prospects lists, respectively. The playing surface at Triple-A Scranton’s PNC Field is being replaced, so no more drainage problems.
- As if there was any doubt, the Yankees are still America’s team. They’ll also host a bowl game at the New Stadium in two years.
- RAB readers voted A-Rod 15th inning walk-off homer against Boston as their favorite moment of the second half. Also, friend of RAB Chad Jennings is taking over LoHud, so we’re in very capable hands.
- ALDS and ALCS tickets go on sale at 10 a.m. today. Hurry up and get yours.
Please take a second to answer the poll below and give us an idea of how confident you are in the team. You can view the Fan Confidence Graph anytime via the nav bar above, or by clicking here. Thanks in advance for voting.
Game 162 Spillover Thread
A-Rod keeps padding those stats, right til the end.
If you want, go ahead and chat about the Jets game after the Yanks are done. Special treat.