Effectively Wild: A FanGraphs Baseball Podcast - Effectively Wild Episode 1298: The Paxton Pact
Episode Date: November 21, 2018Ben Lindbergh and Jeff Sullivan banter about Tommy Milone and Willians Astudillo, Bryce Harper‘s awful fielding in 2018, two more examples of percentages greater than 100, and Adrian Beltre’s reti...rement and atypical, incredible career, then (23:34) bring on new FanGraphs managing editor Meg Rowley to talk about both sides of the Yankees-Mariners James Paxton trade, […]
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Skin can feel my lips, they tingle, tense anticipation
This one is an easy one, feel the word and melt upon it
Words of love and words so leisured, words are poison, thoughts of pleasure
Die, and so you die
Hello and welcome to episode 1298 of Effectively Wild, a baseball podcast from Fangraphs presented by our Patreon supporters. I am Ben Lindberg from The Ringer, joined by Jeff Sullivan from
Fangraphs. Hello. I don't have a Williams F to do. Fun fact, nothing has happened,
but I do have a winter ball. Fun fact. Okay. I don't know why you would be able to know this,
but I'm looking at the Venezuelan Winter League,
the Mexican Winter League, the Dominican Winter League.
Do you know what pitcher, at least what qualified pitcher,
has the lowest ERA?
I sure don't.
Tommy Malone has thrown 34.1 innings.
He's been playing in the Dominican.
34.1 innings for Tommy Malone.
21 hits, 0 earned runs, 2 walks two walks 32 strikeouts now he's allowed
three runs unearned i don't know i don't know what the deal is there but tommy malone era of zero over
six starts so that's uh that's pretty special good for tommy malone who by the way was in the majors
this past season yeah i don't know if uh i don't know if you knew that. As was William Sestadillo, who has still not struck out in 109 at-bats.
So your daily update that nothing has changed.
So later in this episode, we will be meeting the new managing editor, different from the old managing editor.
You've met her before. It's Meg Rowley.
She will be joining us to talk about her new job, but also at length the James Paxton trade from both the Mariners and Yankees sides.
But just a couple of quick things I wanted to get to before then.
I wrote about Bryce Harper's defense.
You have already written about Bryce Harper's defense.
I think Mike Petriello is working on his own post about Bryce Harper's defense.
This is the new Kyle Freeland, except about a player people care about and
we'll actually click on so we all wrote about this because it is relevant he is the big name
free agent one of the two and he had a horrific defensive season last year like one of the worst
of anyone one of the worst outfielding defensive seasons of all time. It's odd because he doesn't really have a track record of this.
He's been fine as a fielder, not amazing, but fine.
And everything just completely fell apart in 2018.
And if you're a team that is thinking about giving $300 to $400 million to Bryce Harper,
you would want to know why that happened and whether it will happen again.
So you did some research that
was useful to me because I didn't have to do it. So you've looked at guys who have just had a big
single year decline in whatever stat you want to cite, and you can cite any stat for Bryce Harper
in 2018, and he was terrible in it. There's a lot of consensus there. And you found that guys who
really have a big drop off in one year tend to regain about a
third of what they lost in the season after that, which in Bryce Harper's case would still be very
bad. If he were two thirds as bad as he was last year, he'd still be bad. So I tried to figure out
why he was bad. And it's not just like a single season defensive stat thing like if you look I mean
the eye test just look at the misplays there were a lot of them he just did not look good as an
outfielder last year a lot of bad routes and just balls clanking off his glove and weird ones where
he was just kind of standing there and didn't catch it anyway or he was going back on a ball
and it just went over his head for no real reason. Just lots and lots of plays like that, which I embedded in my post,
if you want to go click on it. And the odd thing is that he didn't seem to get slower, at least at
his top speed. Like that's the thing that would concern you if he had really lost a step. And
Scott Boris, of course, had an explanation. He said that Harper's legs were tired because he had hyperextended his knee in the previous
season and that that was still taking a toll on him.
But his sprint speed on the bases was essentially the same.
His sprint speed in the outfield, which is a stat I got from Tom Tango, was essentially
the same.
So his top speed was the same, yet he was truly terrible.
So it's kind of a perplexing case. By the way, some of you
may be wondering whether Harper's playing center field had something to do with his poor performance
in the defensive metrics. We did get some Lister emails about that. Not really, maybe a little bit.
This was the first time he had played center in a few years. He had not played center at all the
previous couple seasons, and this year he played more than 400 innings there and obviously in center he's being compared to a higher caliber of fielder which would make him
look worse in a relative sense but he was also really really bad when he was in right field
being compared to right fielders which was the bulk of his time and the bulk of his negative
defensive stats so probably didn't help but wasn't the whole reason yeah i noticed in the what is it
the one star plays that stat cast yes they track one through five star and in one star plays he was
like one of the worst outfielders i mean look he was one of the worst outfielders in baseball period
according to the numbers but he i think he made something like 70 percent of catches on like the
91 to 95 percenters which is just bizarre it's the kind of thing that makes
you want to write it off to luck but i mean it's it's just it's a terrible look when you go into a
contract season yeah he even had a zero star play which he didn't make it i didn't even know there
was a zero star play i guess it's just the plays that everyone makes so they don't even display it
on the website but he had one of those it was i think it became a matt carpenter double where he
was just standing there.
And I don't know if he lost it in the lights or the clouds or something, but he just stood
there and it dropped.
So lots of weird ones like that.
But my theory, which I have developed, is that he was just kind of taking it easy out
there a little bit more than he has in the past, which in one sense is not
a bad thing because he used to be a guy who would crash into outfield fences and hurt
himself.
And he did that in 2013.
He crashed into a wall.
He hurt his knee.
He went on the DL.
He had to have surgery after the season.
And he tweeted something at the time.
I will keep playing this game hard for the rest of my life, even if it kills me.
I'll never stop. Hashtag respect the game. And he was 20 years old at the time, and
people change between 20 and 25, and they change even more when they're about to enter free agency,
and perhaps when their team is not playing very well and is probably not going to be a playoff
team, which was the case for the Nationals for much of the season.
So I think, and the most compelling evidence to me, it's hard to say what someone's effort
level is or whether he is easing off the gas a little bit, but there's a stat for everything
these days.
And there is a stat that Sports Info Solutions tracks, which keeps track of the number of times that a fielder dives or slides.
Just literally, they watch all the plays and they count the number of times that someone dove.
And Harper, as a young player, used to dive all the time.
So 2013, that year he hurt himself, he dove 10 times in 314 opportunities, which was the sixth highest dive rate among outfielders with a certain number of opportunities.
So that continued 2016 to 2017.
He had 764 opportunities, and he dove 11 times and slid 17 times.
I know no one knows really what the baseline is for sliding and diving.
It's like once every 60 opportunities or so, someone will dive.
So in 506 combined opportunities in right field and center field this year, he dove one time, one dive, and he slid four times.
And obviously diving is not always good.
There are times when you shouldn't dive.
times when you shouldn't dive but the fact that he used to dive and slide all the time and this year he almost never did to me suggests that maybe he was being a little bit careful and you can
understand why he would be in fact the one time he did dive he was kind of like cradling his hand
after because i think he jammed a finger or something and that can happen and if you're
about to be well he's already rich but really really rich, I can see why you might just kind of ease up and say, eh, I'll play this one on a hop.
And it's interesting because he's shared in outfield some of the time with Adam Eaton,
who is another guy who just is like a balls-to-the-wall kind of effort guy.
And Adam Eaton has missed a good chunk of time due to injury.
Now, he didn't in 2015, he he didn't in 2016 but then he had major
knee surgery and then he had some some aches and pains in 2018 adam eaton has played just about 120
games the last two seasons combined because he hasn't quit and so when when you have both hurt
themselves running to first really hard and slipping on the back right so yeah yeah i believe
i believe that's correct so uh yeah even if you do conclude now i'm
looking at a mark simon article from uh from the the baseball info solutions blog from april 27th
of 2018 and the headline is why does bryce harper have negative five defensive runs saved
so it's interesting that this season bryce harper you know if you figured maybe he gave even less of
an effort as the nationals faded from the hunt he was bad from from the get-go his his poor performance was kind of
evenly distributed but that the the idea that he gave less of an effort as the team faded from the
race is different from the idea that he gave less of an effort because he was playing more
conservatively on purpose now you could say because he wound up like 20 runs worse than average, he was too
conservative and Bryce Harper would probably agree with you. But the good news is that Bryce
Harper will be paid for what he is expected to do. I don't think anybody expects him to be a
negative 20 or something like that again, but it will be very interesting to see where his numbers
end up in 2019 for sure. Yeah. I'm going to guess this doesn't cost him that much and that teams look at this and say well he's been fine before he's not old his peak speed didn't decline
so probably he you know i don't know if it's a good thing that he was taking it easy and kind of
putting his personal gain perhaps before the team and not going all out after every fly ball
there are some also where he just like got to the ball and didn going all out after every fly ball. There are some also where
he just like got to the ball and didn't catch it for whatever reason. So it wasn't just that he
wasn't getting there. So maybe there was more going on. It was also his arm. His arm was one
of the very worst in baseball, if not the worst for an outfielder. And that was weird too, because
in the past, he's been pretty good at throwing guys out. He had one outfield assist all year this year, despite playing lots of games.
But what I will say is that this was the first season in his career where he didn't miss
a single game due to a reported injury.
And I would think that if you're looking at investing in him for the next decade or more,
that might be a more encouraging data point than the defensive
slide is a discouraging one. Just because when he was young, it really looked like the only thing
that could derail him would just be him hustling so hard that he hurt himself. And he seems to have
found the ability to downshift a bit, and maybe he downshifted too much, but maybe once he has that money and he
doesn't have to worry about his financial future, he can just kind of go back to his previous
effort level, but also not crash into the wall because that's not good either. So maybe he'll
find the happy medium. Yeah, if I were a team, I'd look at Harper's numbers, but then I would
think, well, what's the underlying reason here? And if his athleticism hasn't actually actually really changed and if he's still running just as fast and maybe we don't have access
to his first step data but if his reactions are are basically the same then i wouldn't be too
upset or worried by him because you'd figure well the skills are all still there do you have
anything else you'd like to say on bryce harper i don't think so okay so i know you have something
else you need to do quick and maybe we should spend two minutes talking about adrian belcher I don't think so. Headline, darts players let rip in flatulence row at Grand Slam of Darts.
Reuters.
Players set more than just their arrows flying at the Grand Slam of Darts this week,
with opponents rowing for who had emitted noxious smells during their match.
Media reported on Saturday twice.
World champion Scotsman Gary Anderson, 47, won Friday's match 10-2 to reach the quarterfinals, but his Dutch opponent Wesley Harms, 34,
said he was affected by the, quote,
fragrant smell, end quote, Anderson,
had left as they played.
It'll take me two nights to lose this smell from my nose,
Harms told Dutch television station RTL7L.
RTL7L?
Anyway, sure.
However, world number four, Anderson said, the smell had come from the table side
at the Aldersley Leisure Village venue in the English Midlands town of Wolverhampton, suggesting it was from the crowd.
Finally, the point.
Quote, if the boy thinks I farted, he's one thousand and ten percent wrong.
I had a bad stomach once on stage before and admitted it.
So I'm not going to lie about farting on stage.
He was quoted as saying by the BBC.
I might as well just read the rest of the quote.
Every time I walked past there was a waft of rotten eggs,
so that's why I was thinking it was him.
It was bad, it was a stink.
Then he started to play better,
and I thought he must have needed to get some wind out
if somebody has done that they need to see a doctor.
Seemingly, he says it was me but i
would admit it what is the deal with so much farting happening in the grand slam of darts
i don't know but judging by the attention it received they should fart more often because
it would be good for darts as a sport i mean i lost track of how many people sent this to us
it was definitely upwards of 30.
So thanks to all of you.
But I thought we were done talking about more than 100%.
Wait, wait, wait.
Yeah.
Wait.
Oh, I didn't read this all the way to the end.
This is by the PDC chairman, Barry Hearn, who has helped transform a sport which now
attracts sellout crowds.
Anyway, on a slightly more serious note, this is a top-level competition involving highly skilled sportsmen, so we have no intention of renaming the event the Grand Slam of Farts, as some have suggested at a turn.
I have, that's right up there with the drunk curling team in fun stories from the past few days about sports that we perhaps should pay more attention to.
I have one more note about the greater than 100% thing. And this one, I just sent you a link.
I'm going to play a very quick clip here.
This is from a Fangraphs Audio episode, episode 636.
a very quick clip here. This is from a Fangraphs Audio episode, episode
636. Listener Roland
was going back and listening to old
episodes of that podcast to mourn Carson's
departure, and he was listening to
an episode you were on, in which
you were talking about the only rule is it has
to work, and he was asking
whether you had been invited to
participate in the project, I believe, and
here's the clip.
No, I'm pretty sure that was a Ben and Sam project.
But I think now Grant Brisby and I want to write a book
basically driven 110% by jealousy of their book.
Yeah.
And I don't know what we would title our book.
Can you become the GMs of another team in the, whatever,
the Pecos Bill League or whatever it's called?
Just have a rival team just erase
them to the conclusion of the book by the way that's a great sequel to that book 110 percent
jeff sullivan you said it and i have now listened to the clip in its entirety and uh and i stand by
what i said now grant and i never got around to it because we're also driven 115% by apathy and by
laziness and by remembering that whatever jealousy one possesses is fleeting because you become
preoccupied by worries about your own existence and death. So we have not gotten around to writing
a book, but if we did, it would be 110% better than yours. Okay. All right. And then, yeah,
let's just a couple minutes on Adrian Beltre. I think
we probably talked about him last year when he got his 3,000th hit. I know I wrote about him.
I'll link to that. He's had a fascinating career. It is over now. He has announced that he is
retiring, which is sad. I don't think any of us wants to lose Adrian Beltre as a player or as
a personality. He will be missed in GIF gifts and also on the field. And he's just
a really interesting career trajectory. As I think we've talked about before,
he went from being underrated because he was great at defense and we couldn't account for defense.
And he was a good hitter that looked worse because of the park he played in. And so as time went on,
we got better at appreciating how good he had already been in his 20s with the Mariners when he was seen as disappointing with the Dodgers. underrated that whole time. But then after age 30, he became incredible and just got better and
didn't get any worse on defense, but became a better hitter. And I tweeted this earlier, but
in terms of position players from ages 31 to 39, Adrian Beltre ranks eighth all time in war. And
the other names up there are, you know, inner circle hall of famers so he has been that
kind of player for the past decade so he's not just one of the best recent players he's really
one of the best players certainly at that position of all time and it took him a while to get there
and it took us even longer to realize that he had been closer to that for longer than we thought
and this is a player who, Adrian Beltre, if he
were to play next season as a 40-year-old, which he's not going to, but he's projected by Steamer
to be a 2.3 war player. So, you know, you see a lot of players who get to the end of the line,
and maybe they're a little slow to realize it, and they just kind of get worse, and they get
quite bad before they fade away.
Maybe they end up even having to take like a spring training NRI or something.
But Adrian Belcher, last season, he was hurt and he didn't play up to his usual standards.
But Adrian Belcher was a fine player in his final season with the Rangers at the age of 39.
And he would be projected to be an above average player again if he came back.
His defense just never really waned.
He was a great defender at third base almost until the end.
I don't know.
I haven't checked the math to see how many players have been so much more valuable in
their 30s than they were before their 30s.
I'm sure somebody else has already run those numbers or will shortly, or maybe it'll even
be me.
But we figure he would be at or near the top of that list.
Just a really truly remarkable
career it's amazing i know we've talked about this before but it's amazing to me how so much
consensus seems to have built around the idea of him not just being a hall of famer but a first
ballot hall of famer which is one of those honors that is doled out to few and players few and far
between and i i hadn't thought of adrian beltree as necessarily
having a first ballot hall of fame career but then i don't really care about the designations
if a guy's good enough for the hall of fame just put him in right is where where i stand and i i
wouldn't want to visit a hall of fame that didn't have adrian beltree in it now i wouldn't want to
be a baseball fan of a league that doesn't have adrian beltree in it and that's for the first
time in my adult life.
That's something that I will be confronted by, which is sad.
He's been in the major since 1998.
He's been in the major since basically the beginning of what has been called the steroid era.
And or the first juiced ball era, depending on how many Ben Lindbergh articles you've read.
He's just crossed a lot of different eras in baseball he was around
a decade before there's pitch effects I remember in his final season with with the Mariners he was
playing with through some injury problems but he had a WRC plus of 81 he was 30 years old and
he didn't hit for any power he had an isolated power of just 114 that year and he didn't look
like he was very special but I don't know if i've ever seen a player improve his stock as much as beltre did through that pillow contract and it was was
beltre basically the case that put pillow contract in the public vernacular yeah definitely his red
socks year that was that was big yeah yeah i i kind of traced that trajectory in my article last
year of looking how no one referred to Adrian Beltre as a Hall of Famer
for much of his career, and then suddenly everyone did. And it happened just in a few years because
he had really extraordinary seasons in his early 30s. And suddenly it was like, yeah,
lots of guys look like they could be future Hall of Famers from the second they get to the majors.
And no one was really saying that about Adrian Beltre until relatively late
in his career, but he made up a ton of ground. And as you were saying, if you play that long,
generally you will be bad at some point. And Beltre is on a pretty short list of guys who
weren't. I have a Dan Hirsch fun fact for this. I saw the tweet.
Yeah. So there have only been 107 players who have played 21 or more seasons as Beltre did.
So of those, you would think that a good number of them would be good that whole time,
because if you're bad at some point, you don't get to play 21 plus seasons.
But still, of those 107, only 11 never had a negative war season, not at the beginning, not at the end.
And one of those is Adrian Beltre, who never really even got close to that.
He was just a good player all the time.
So he will be missed.
Going all the way back to 2003, there is defensive run saved data existing since 2003.
And the player with the highest DRS since 2003 is Adrian Beltre at plus 222 runs.
And second place is Andrelton Simmons at plus 184.
Now, granted, Simmons has played less than half the innings
and had a more difficult position.
Andrelton Simmons is amazing, but Adrian Beltre just way up there,
blowing everybody else away on the leaderboard.
Very special player, special character.
A player about whom I don't think I ever heard anything particularly negative,
aside from his proclivity to swing at low away sliders in his Mariners years.
But that was about it.
So he is a great character loss and a talent loss for the game of baseball.
His final season, he was worth 10 defensive runs saved at third base as a 39-year-old, which is just incredible.
So going to miss Adrian Beltre is something terrible, but considering how he put his life on the line to play baseball as a teenager,
he has earned just incredible 60 years of retirement and just spoiling his family.
Yes. All right. Well, someone else just tweeted us about the dart farts.
Let's end this intro. We'll take a quick break and we'll be back with Meg Rowley to talk about James Paxton and Meg Rowley. I'm sorry, but I had no place to grow
Oh, James
My life for you is stronger, don't you know
Okay, so last week we were joined by the outgoing managing editor of Fangraphs.
Now we are joined by the incoming managing editor of Fangraphs,
or I guess you've already come in, Meg Rowley.
Hey, Meg.
Hi.
So we had all planned to convene on Monday night
to talk about your new job,
and then Jerry DePoto intervened, as he has before.
It feels sort of strange to joke about Jerry
the way that we normally do at this particular point in time
when both he and the Mariners are being investigated
for allegedly discriminatory behavior.
But this was right out of the DePoto playbook transaction-wise,
except that he didn't do it on Thanksgiving Day.
So I guess that was a small kindness.
Yeah, Jeff and I were joking over text
as we were getting ready to record this
and then realizing that Jeff had to go rapidly write about Paxton.
The timing could be worse,
and I suppose it's not completely off the table knowing DePoto.
So you might hear from us again as you're eating turkey, but hopefully not.
Well, tough first day for you emotionally.
I guess you probably had
plenty on your plate. And then first they came for Mike Zanino, and now they have come for James
Paxton on your very first day. So what are your thoughts? I guess we'll get into the actual
transaction in terms of how it helps or hurts the Mariners and Yankees, but how about how it helps
or hurts you emotionally?
Well, in a weird way, it's like a very small kindness or maybe a not so small kindness of the Mariners to provide for me on my first day an opportunity for Jeff to put Yankees in a headline
and trade at the same time. That tends to do well for us.
Traffic is up in the rally era yeah thanks thanks for
the clicks jerry so i guess in that respect it was nice it's funny i i tweeted about this so i will
do the annoying thing where i reference my own tweets but you know the day that appleman gave me
my like called me to formally offer me a position at fangs last December was the day that Shoei Otani signed
with the Angels. And then on my first day as managing editor, Paxton gets traded to the
Yankees. So I have like this weird link in my own career advancement, though I guess the good news
for Mariners fans is that at least at Fangraphs, there's nowhere else for me to go. So the rest of your roster is safe.
I guess you reflect,
and I mean, not to go all butterfly effect here,
but you figure when Showa Yotani decided on the Angels,
I seem to recall,
I can't put myself exactly in that frame of mind,
but I seem to recall that it felt pretty strong,
like more likely than not
that he was going to end up in Seattle.
So how hard or easy or in between is it to just reflect on that day
and think that had Joey Otani decided what seemed to be the clearer decision
that probably none of this would be happening.
And if anything, the Mariners would have made maybe the playoffs
and they wouldn't have traded their catcher and their best starting pitcher.
What, how do you, I've lost enough of my fandom.
I don't know how much of it you have lost,
but you're still actually in Seattle.
You see that with your own eyes.
Yeah, it's funny to reflect on sort of the change
in my fandom over that time.
You know, the last couple of weeks
have maybe not been a great time to feel enthusiastic
about the Seattle Mariners just in general.
But I remember being in the midst of personally very excited,
like, you know, kind of bummed out that Ohtani was going to LA
and that I wasn't going to get to root for him in a Mariners uniform.
And yeah, I guess the entire shape of this year
would be different in a lot of important ways.
And I might be more enthusiastic still,
but without the same cause to reflect on it.
Because as you said, I think, you know,
if they get Otani, the entire direction of this
probably looks pretty different for them.
Even if, you know, the sort of aging roster issues still exist,
I think the window is perceived to be
and probably would be pried open quite a bit longer.
So yeah, I don't know.
It's weird.
It did happen, the lessening of the fandom i think it was sort of inevitable that when you're faced with
the rest of the league and the option to watch baseball that remains fun the entire year that
you will opt to do that both out of professional obligation and maybe self-preservation. So it's different now. I did not renew my season tickets.
That seemed silly to do.
I was like, if I'm going to go, I should just cowgirl up and go as credentialed media.
So yeah, it's different now than it was.
And in just such a short period of time, it's just only been 11 months.
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
So Robinson Cano, Kyle Seeger, and Felix are the only players remaining from the 40-man
roster that DiPoto inherited.
I guess he can't get rid of those three quite as easily as the others.
If he took Seeger away from from you that would be very cruel but i think he has made some
mention of aiming for a 2020 to 2021 window so he's sort of acknowledging that they're not really
going for it to quite the same extent in the next year at least not that historically it's made much
of a difference whether they're going for it or not they haven't gone so maybe it doesn't feel all that different but does that time frame feel realistic to you or
do you see this trade kind of fitting in with that i mean i i guess i do i think uh there's
been sort of a general feeling of being a bit underwhelmed uh with the return here i mean
there there's interesting stuff and they're interesting players,
but outside of Sheffield, it seems maybe a touch light for Paxton. I don't know. It's an odd thing
because there's so much, when you look at what is left on the major league roster, like outside of
those three guys, you know, who presumably outside of Cano and I guess Felix is done after this year and Seegers through 2020.
I think that's right.
So there's still going to be a lot of churn needed to get this roster up to
playoff standard by 2020.
I mean,
who else do they have to pitch apart from now,
Marco Gonzalez and Sheffield,
you have a bunch of less
good and uh and continually aging as we all are players so I get what he means and presumably they
will look to make other moves that will supplement that core but um there's still there's still a
great deal of churn that's going to be needed to get them to a place where you're like yeah
this roster could compete with the Astros. Sure. That seems like a
thing that could happen. So I think they're making the right decision. I'm glad to see them making a
decision that seems to indicate a clear direction because as you noted, there's been sort of this
in the middle, we'll hope for 85 to 90 wins and a wild card spot mentality in that organization.
And I think that they're getting realistic about how likely that is to happen.
But I don't think we're done with DePoto.
I suppose we never really are.
I feel like your rotation discussion was a little disrespectful.
The Sam Miller Minor League Free Asian superstar, Wade LeBlanc,
who at this point might be the Mariners' number two starting pitcher.
I don't know.
I mean, I own a Wade LeBlanc jersey for reasons that I will not know in five years and be very unclear about.
Yeah, he will be there and he will throw innings and some of them might be fine.
Much like Jerry DiPoto and Scott Service, he was given a contract extension.
So one of the, the question now, because the Mariners have traded two-year player Mike Zanino and two-year player James Paxton,
it's what's going to come next?
And I think at least publicly there have been sort of mixed messages on how far the Mariners are going to go.
But you could at least, I think Jerry DiPoto, based on some tweets, the idea is to kind of reset and hope to be competitive in, say, 2020, 2021.
And many teams have shifted their windows forward or backward.
I guess I don't really know what their perspective is. But one of the things that those teams tend to have in common is that they have good young players and what the mariners have is what was at least a week ago the baseball's
worst farm system now it's a it's a little better because they got three players from from the
yankees but does it feel to you like if the mariners were to stop here or if they were to say trade Gene Segura or
Dee Gordon but keep Mitch Hanegar keep Marco Gonzalez keep Edwin Diaz does it feel like the
Mariners are trying to skip a step or do you think that they can thread the needle where they in 2018
they tried to thread a different needle and couldn't succeed it feels a little like skipping
a step I mean I think the pitching is gonna be a problem until we feel like it's not which is like
a dumb way of saying that but you know like you said they have Wade LeBlanc I think the pitching is going to be a problem until we feel like it's not, which is like a dumb way of saying that. But, you know, like you said, they have Wade LeBlanc.
I think they have Mike Leak for like another year.
Rasmus Ramirez is gone.
Like, you know, they don't have they don't have talent in the high minors that is obviously going to slot into those innings in two years.
in two years. And so I think that we hopefully are seeing like the results of an incomplete project that will start to fill in in the next couple of months and over the course of next season. I mean,
they have said that they're holding on to Edwin Diaz. I think that that will prove to be not true
if I had to hazard a guess that either in short order or around the deadline next year that like
he will be flipped for some, you know, something something meaningful they'll hold on to hanager and as well they should but i mean i think
they still have pieces that they need to fill in to be anything like a competing team those
holes seem the most obvious and glaring in the rotation but you know they're they're not they're
not done by any means and if they say they are I think that they are kind of misjudging exactly how far they have to go to compete even at the wildcard level with some of the other rosters that are out there in the AL.
I mean, this team isn't going to beat, I mean, anything can happen in a one game playoff.
But like on paper, this team doesn't beat either of the, you know, Red Sokees or a's or rays probably and those are the
the teams that you expect are going to be in that conversation at least over the next year it might
shift a little by the time the mariners are actually competing again in earnest but i don't
think that they can be done and and do what they want to so paxton is obviously one of the best
inning per inning starters in baseball over the
past few years he oh oh wait i should i should interrupt you because i wanted to i was we should
convene we should address this this is like a a classic sports writers on television panel this
is like a steven a smith is james paxton an ace is that where you're going is that where you're
going with that because i feel like that's where i'm going yeah pretty much okay'm going. Yeah, pretty much. Yeah, okay. So let's panel this.
Who's going to be affirmative?
Who's going to be negative?
And who's going to be in the middle?
I'm just the moderator, I guess.
All right, you're the moderator.
You're not going to make me take the anti-Paxton position against Jeff, are you?
That seems very rude.
Okay, let's all yell over this.
And whoever is the loudest wins.
I mean.
Okay.
So is James Paxton an ace?
Ace is a word that I don't even know what impression this is.
It's kind of like the Hall of Fame, right?
I saw there was a lot of bipolar Twitter feedback on this because I put ace in my fan graphs headline because go to hell, everybody else.
And I, much like with
The Hall of Fame to whatever extent I care about
The Hall of Fame which is low
I am a big
Hall of guy and I think I'm also
A big ace
Guy in that I think there's
There are a lot of people who feel like there are like five
Aces at a time there was
One person who I saw not to just pick on
Random Twitter people but it was like James Paxton doesn't hold a candle to Chris Sale, which I get in terms of
raw performance. But the idea was, oh, James Paxton has never thrown a full season. Well,
Chris Sale has never thrown a good second half. So what are we even really comparing here? So
James Paxton, ace, go. I mean, I would say yes. And I think to the durability concern,
innings pitch concern, I get that. I mean, I think that people tend to forget that a lot of his injury stuff has been
early was the result of like what appeared to be pretty poor conditioning,
which has been largely addressed.
And then after that was like super fluky.
It was like getting hit by comebackers and never breaking his elbow,
but being hit kind of near it.
And so I think that like the durability stuff is both a real concern
and one that I'm surprised
that we continue to care so much about for a guy who hasn't had Tommy John, doesn't seem
to be damaged in like a real structural way, at least as far as we know yet, which of course
can always change.
But like who's throwing 200 innings anymore?
Like he's an ace enough in 2019 and on a per inning basis he's one of the
best pitchers in baseball so what are we talking about was that a good sports radio impression
yeah uh loud enough yeah i could amplify it in editing maybe just to make you sound you don't
have to make me shout at people i'm not a shouter by nature can you make it more shrill? I think we have to be characters.
That's not what shrill sounds like at all.
I'm just falling down on the job.
Terrible.
Ben, what do you think? The ace
debate I've always found frustrating because
no one can agree on what it means.
It's like arguing about the MVP award
or something where some people think value
matters and some people think it's just best.
With the ace debate, some people think it's the best pitcher on that person's team.
And other people think it's just a nebulous group of like, I don't know, a handful of
pitchers maybe who have earned that label.
So I don't think he compares to like Verlander or Scherzer or like that class of ace that
has been just as good and also pitches a lot of
innings every year. So he's not a workhorse or he hasn't been, but he is, if you want someone to
make a single start, he would be among the first names that you choose. So that's not really an
answer. I guess I would not call him an ace, but I would call him one of the best pitchers
in baseball anyway. I don't know. For me, like, I guess the track record of endurance, however fluky
his lack of endurance is, I think that is a big part of acehood. So I should ask then, because
in my headline, I said, oh, the Yankees now have a second ace. And I saw a lot of people who were also negative about Luis Severino.
The last two years, Luis Severino has been worth 11.4 wins above replacement, according to Fangraphs,
which is the fifth highest for any starting pitcher in baseball.
It's Chris Sale, Max Scherzer, Jacob deGrom, Corey Kluber, and then Luis Severino.
He has a similar RA9, war, whatever.
I know he had like a rough second half half and then he hasn't been great in the
playoffs but are we is luis severino in aces he's sort of an uh iffy ace on the same level as paxton
where it's like ace quality but just doesn't have the consistency or where are we on severino
well he has gone 190 plus innings in back-to-back years so i think he has a better case probably
than paxton does i don't know he's
he was inconsistent last year to the point where by the time the playoffs rolled around no one
really trusted him or knew whether he'd even be the guy who would get the ball in the big start so
that argues against it I guess I mean so I think you're right that like the being on the field is
like an important thing how much of a skill it is
just to go back to the paxton point like it does matter but i think it matters increasingly less
as long as you're able to reliably throw like 170 but uh i don't know severino's pretty good
i think that yankee fans are rude and they should be less rude but it's also a sports radio take
and i think that we tend to perhaps forget how rare like true consistency and
performance is guys tend to be kind of up and down maybe not to the extent that severino was
toward the end of the year but there's a lot of streakiness in in every picture even the very very
good ones and everyone's capable of a bad start so i don't know ace ish ace ish two two two pretty close to
consensus aces with that team makes me uh excited for james paxton because he's going to probably
win a ring sometime according to mlb.com the definition of ace is ace typically refers to a
team's best pitcher though it can also be used to describe an elite pitcher in general therefore a
team with multiple elite pitchers is said to have more than one ace that wasn't helpful at all so
there are 30 number one starters by definition in major league baseball right now of course like
the yankees number four starters better than the marlins number one you know but if you figure
there are 30 number ones then i don't know where where do you draw the line for age 15 should there
like do we is that just do we choose the 10 best starters at any moment?
15, 30, 60, 120?
120 pitchers?
That's a lot of aces.
I don't know.
Kevin Goldstein and Jason Parks used to have this debate
all the time on the Up and In podcast.
And Andy McCullough sometimes just pronounces who is an ace
and who is not based entirely on gut feeling.
Like, I think for him, you don't look at numbers. just pronounces who is an ace and who is not based entirely on gut feeling.
Like I think for him, you don't look at numbers. It's just like if the guy has an aura of acehood, then he's an ace.
And if he doesn't, then he's not, which I kind of think is how a lot of people define
ace.
Maybe should not be how they define ace, but it's such an unspecific term that maybe it
doesn't really matter how you define it.
All right, let's try this.
There are, sorry, Meg, there are four aces in a deck of cards, and there are 52 cards,
right?
So that's 7.7% of cards are aces.
Now, let's say there's 150 rotation slots.
There's 30 teams, five slots, traditionally.
Then if you multiply that by 150 slots, then we would say that 11.5 slots would be aces.
So we're around 10 to 13 pitchers at a time could be aces based on the deck of cards translation.
I will stick with that, actually.
I like that.
That's as good a thing as any.
Yeah.
That's as good a criteria as any. While you were talking, I was looking up a very sports radio fact, which I think settles the Paxton debate.
We think Mike Trout's pretty good at baseball, and he is.
In his career, he has struck out four times in a game, four times,
and one of those times was against James Paxton.
So I think Paxton is an ace
because he did a really hard thing
against the best player in baseball.
Except who are the other three?
Are they also aces?
Forget the other three.
Well, okay.
This is good.
This is gonna...
Oh, no.
This does not...
This does not bolster James's case.
From Juan Lopez.
Ace.
Clearly.
Let's see.
That is Pax.
Oh, who's this other Seattle pitcher?
Wade LeBlanc.
Wade LeBlanc.
Wade LeBlanc.
Wait, I think the other Seattle pitcher is also James Paxton.
He did it twice.
Never mind.
Ace.
He's the only pitcher who has done it twice.
Ace.
Only one who's done it twice.
Mike Trout.
Mike Trout has batted 30 times against James Paxton.
179, 233, 250.
That's a 483 OPS.
That sucks.
Now, sure, you could say, okay, David Fries has slugged 750 against James Paxton, not an ace.
Mike Trout has hit worse than Jake Marisnyk and Delano DeShields against James Paxton, not an ace. Mike Trout has hit worse than Jake Marisnyk and Delano De
Shields against James Paxton. But by the best player criteria, if James Paxton can beat Mike
Trout, he can beat anybody ace. I think one of my favorite things about this is that the Mariners
managed to only win one of those games, despite Paxton only giving up one run across both of them.
Who was involved in this loss?
God damn it, Danny Farquhar.
You're on the mend.
Never mind.
I take it back.
You're an angel.
Dominic Leone also had a bad day.
Oh, no.
I'll be curious to see what Paxton looks like with the Yankees because he's been one of
these high fastball, high four-seamer guys who keeps throwing his four-seamer higher
and higher and striking out more and more guys. And now he's going to a team that throws really fast fastballs, but also throws
really few fastballs and tends to throw a lot of breaking balls. So I wonder whether they will
increase his breaking ball percentage in some way and whether that will help him or hurt him.
Jeff, you wrote about this. Do you have any prospect insights for us with the three guys
that the Mariners got? Well, okay. So Dom Thompson Williams is the least interesting of the three
from a prospect hound standpoint, I guess. But what is fun about him, he's kind of a distant
flyer. He's 23 years old and he topped out on high A, so he's got a long ways to go. But
his first year in the minors, he had three home runs. Second year of the minors, he had three
home runs. And his most recent year in the minors, he had three home runs. Second year in the minors, he had three home runs. And his most recent year in the minors, he had 22 home runs.
So that bodes well.
I think that's a sign of progress.
He's one of those low-level athletic flyer types.
But what is interesting here, I think that from the beginning,
when James Passon was available, the Yankees seemed like a natural fit.
And Justice Sheffield seemed like he was likely to be in the package.
And that is what Jerry DiPoto seems to have demanded for a month.
But the second piece to me, classic Sestouli guy, classic Carson Sestouli guy, Eric Swanson,
who is two and a half years older than Justice Sheffield.
And Sheffield has been a top 100 prospect a bunch of times.
And Swanson has never, to my knowledge, been a top 100 prospect.
But last season in the upper minors, Swanson was as good,
if not better than Sheffield, threw more strikes, missed as many bats, better strikeout to walk
numbers, all that stuff, low ERA, low FIP. And Swanson also throws his fastball in the low to
mid 90s, and he has some extra stuff. So Sheffield has the hype, and he was a first-round draft pick in the past.
Swanson was not.
And Swanson is older and, I don't know, maybe just has a funny-looking delivery.
A lot of people seem to think that Swanson is like maybe a fringe back-end starter,
but maybe a multi-inning reliever, kind of like a Tampa Bay Rays kind of pitcher, if you will,
one of those bulk guys potentially.
But I wonder, with Sheffield, so much of it is going to come down to well can he
learn to throw strikes you know like Sean it's the Sean Newcomb conversation a little bit except
that Newcomb I think missed more bats even in the minors than Sheffield has so there is a stuff
hype that's on Sheffield but I think that looking at these pictures closely my sense is that at
least based on the consensus Sheffield is being overrated and is not a great centerpiece, but that Swanson is being underrated
and is a very interesting second piece in this package.
So I've really come around on Eric Swanson, whose name I had never heard even once before until yesterday.
All right. Do we have any more Mariners, Paxton thoughts?
Well, let's see. Meg had referred to, I think it is worth repeating again,
just because so many people will be pointing to Paxton's durability concerns.
So Meg already said some of these things, but I would just like to hammer the point home.
In 2014, Paxton did miss a lot of time with a strained lat.
And in 2015, he missed a lot of time with a strained tendon in his left middle finger,
a finger that he could put to great use to those critics regarding his durability today. But in around
2016, Paxton put in a lot of work with his conditioning. He lost some weight, looked
better, grew a mustache, which was bad, but then that kind of came and went. But in 2016,
he made 31 starts between AAA and the majors, and the only starts he missed was because he got hit by a comebacker and
had a bruised left elbow now in 2017 there was a strained left forearm and there was a strained
pack those are bad but in 2018 he I think he missed a start or two with pneumonia don't care
he had a sore lower back that I think cost him to miss one start but probably he wouldn't have
missed it if they were in a playoff hunt.
And he missed a few starts with a bruised left forearm because, by the way, he got hit by another comebacker.
So unless you think that James Paxton just has some sort of weird magnetic left elbow
that attracts comebackers, like there's nothing.
Of all of these injuries, only the strained left forearm
that cost him like a month in 2017 is worrisome to me yeah everything else seems like it's it's not that big a deal and you
know meg when when you've watched paxton he when he's going well he goes deep into games he pitches
like an ace like a workhorse he'll go 110 pitches or whatever and he'll he'll keep his velocity deep
in the game so i think that when yankees fans see him for themselves, then they are likely to be very impressed. Yeah, I remember the first time like so and you wrote
about this in your piece. And you know, as people who've like paid maybe too close of attention to
him, this won't be news to either of us. But like, you know, when he started getting really good,
he first had that Padres start, which didn't go well in terms of giving up runs, but he was
throwing strikes. And then he had that really great start against Cleveland, which happened to be the same game
as Edwin Diaz's pro debut.
And I was watching that game with my dad in a bar, and I looked up, and there's James
Paxton at 110 pitches throwing 100 miles an hour.
So he does stuff that is cool and, as you said, workhorsey. And so if we can just cross our fingers and our toes for him,
hopefully he'll finally be able to put together that 180, 190 inning season.
And if he does, I think his team's going to be really good.
We have updated projections now at fangraph so based on steamer this is look i know this is absurdly early but we're doing it anyway based on steamer now uh we have some pretty good separation
here red sox dodgers indians astros yankees all projected for between 93 and 96 wins and nobody else is above 89 the Mariners
have fallen into the same group as with the Reds and the Padres well that sucks but anyway the
Yankees clearly have have gotten close to the Red Sox I mean this is this is so early there's a lot
of stuff that's going to happen but like already you can kind of look at this and say well we have
here's the tier of the top teams it It's going to be the same five teams.
Well, and if they manage to, I mean, Paxton isn't going to be cheap in arbitration, but like compared to other free agent options that they might pursue.
Like they're not like this doesn't tie up money that they can't spend elsewhere.
So I imagine that, you know, they will continue to deploy, and then they'll be really good.
I'm going to have to grapple with weird feelings.
Just go.
You know, I'm not going to say that.
I will not say go Yankees,
but I will say that I am excited to feel irrationally angry at Yankees fans
when Paxton has one bad start and they turn on him.
I'm excited for that.
That's going to be great.
Yeah.
As I think Mark Losanti said in a tweet to you,
as long as he starts well and never slumps, he should be fine.
He should be fine.
Aww.
So in your new role, I guess one of your responsibilities
is to make sure that the website has a post on
James Paxton. I guess in this case, Jeff volunteered, so you didn't have to press
someone into service. But that was the thing I think that caused the most anxiety for me,
not to increase your anxiety, but when I did a similar job at Baseball Prospectus,
I always felt like, okay, something could happen at any moment, and then we have to mobilize and find someone to write about that thing, which can be tough
because these sites only have so many full-time employees, and people have jobs and families
and things and reasons why they can't write an instant reaction post.
So you've been on the job for about a day and a half at this point, and there's been
a Paxson trade trade and Adrian Beltre has
retired. And I guess it's now your job to say, hey, someone do something about this because
otherwise it won't get done. It is my job. And thankfully on the Beltre score, Craig Edwards is
on it. Yeah, it's and I have the added wrinkle. This is just you know meg quality of life concern of being on the west
coast and so my day is starting earlier than it did even a week ago although we have been people
have been good on staff about getting stuff in in the evening so i can not get up at five but
yeah it's it's funny we're fortunate in that we do have a pretty robust staff and everyone does a good job.
So we can kind of spread those poorly timed trades around a little bit.
And I think people are pretty keen to write those posts because they tend to get good engagement and allow you to have a take on relevant baseball news, which is always fun for people.
But yeah, it's a new stress.
for people. But yeah, it's a new stress, different from the hardball times where I just would worry about us not having anything to run and it being very obvious that there was no content on that
website. You know, people volunteer themselves pretty well over at Fangraphs, but I am a worrier
by nature. And so now I have a longer list, which we'll see how that goes.
Well, so one challenge that you face is that teams keep hiring people from
your staff. Now, on the one hand, that has worked out pretty well for you personally, I guess,
in that you got hired after Dave Cameron went to the Padres. And then less than a year later,
Carson Sicily went to the Blue Jays, and you're now the boss of Fangraphs. So you're like a team hiring
David Appelman away from owning Fangraphs probably at this point. So that's good. On the other hand,
it is hard to keep people employed when you are running a site like this. And that is another
thing I have some experience with. And it's tough. I mean, when I was at BP and we would lose Mike Fast or Colin Wires or Max Markey or one of these brilliant stat people, there aren't just a lot of those just hanging around waiting for the next opportunity. of content it produces, which I know that you are also familiar with, because these historically
very statty sites, very sabermetric sites, sort of started out with very statistically flavored
content and research and studies. Not that the writing wasn't good and engaging too, but there
is this resistance among the old guard readers, I think, to the idea that they can be more than that and
that there is more than one way to cover baseball and that you can look at all the stuff surrounding
the game as well as breaking down everything in very complex statistical studies. But even if you
wanted to keep it the same as it was in the beginning and you just wanted literally graphs
in every post because that's the name of the site, it would be harder to do today because
everyone who does those things just gets hired as soon as they do them twice.
So you almost have to adapt.
And yet when I was at BP, I felt a pressure to keep it a place where groundbreaking work
would be done, statistically speaking, too, because that was kind of what distinguished
it from many other sites
yeah i am not above hiring assassins or engaging in very nasty threats to keep our staff intact
no i mean it's like it's the nature of the game i mean there there is a benefit to sites like
fangraphs and bp when teams hire your people because you're able to say to new writers, well, like,
if you want to get hired by a team, this is a good place to cut your teeth, right? And we accept that
we aren't going to get you for very long. But in the meantime, you're going to write good baseball
words for us. So there is some symbiosis to that relationship. But no, it's hard. I think that it
is a, it's the sort of thing that people worry about for like 24 hours
whenever a departure is announced and there's always a bit of hand-wringing about like what is
the you know what is the direction of fan graphs i think that has you know that was especially true
when dave left because he was literally the first full-time employee of the website and so you know
you do worry about it but you there's there's do, right? It's just part of the cycle.
So I think that my approach to it is largely just to think about and try to have a deep
bench of contributors and part-time people who either work for us or who I'm aware of
in the industry more broadly, who, you know, we might look to to be the next whatever,
because we all have supplanted other we might look to to be the next whatever, because we all
have supplanted other people who were thought to be indispensable. And, you know, Jeff,
and like, and they are and they're important voices, and we miss them very much. I mean,
there's always this weird tension, because it's like, you're very happy for your friends getting
to go live their dream. But you also wish that their dream was to stay and hang out with you forever so that you didn't have to replace them. But I think that
having some churn there is actually really healthy for the industry because you're right that this
looks different than it did 10 years ago. It's not, you know, the core of what we do will always
be statistically driven and analytically driven baseball analysis. But there's a lot that you can
build around that, that, you know, takes bits and pieces of it and gives readers a much more
complete understanding of what baseball is, which is all we're trying to do, right, is to understand
baseball. And so I think that some of that forced churn has required us to be creative in the way
that we look at the game and the kind
of writing that we value. And I think that's largely been to the industry's benefit because
some of those big breakthroughs in, you know, sabermetric research have already been done,
right? And we're kind of operating around the margins, at least until, you know, MLB accidentally
releases all of the StatCast data to us. So I think it's good for us
to be forced to be creative. It's like when I was writing about the 2015 Mariners, it was terrible,
but it was an incredible exercise because it forced a, you know, when you write about a bad
baseball team, you have to do a lot more work to make what you're doing interesting. When you face,
you know, staffing changes or a landscape that looks different than it did a decade ago.
I think that it forces a creativity that is really cool.
But I would prefer that everyone stay for now at least.
So related to that, what are your thoughts on sort of like building a bench, so to speak?
Because people, whether they're part-time employees or whether they're full-timers who just get another job or whatever, people do come and go.
There is that churn that you were referring to.
And there is always an effort to replace anyone lost.
And maybe this is anecdotal because a decade ago I was immersed in the team blogosphere.
And so I was more aware of what was going on in the team blogosphere.
And I knew what was going on with maybe newer or more unseen writers.
But how do you think that when a place like Baseball Prospectus or a place like Fangraphs
needs to find a new writer, how do you make sure that there are enough writers out there
and that you know who they are and where they are?
Because, you know, it's when you're writing at the national level, it's quite difficult
to be in tune with everything that's being written, especially from
more unknown sources. It feels a little like there's maybe less generic analytical baseball
writing than there was. Maybe that's wrong. Maybe I'm just not seeing it. But what's your
current philosophy or idea on making sure that there always are replacements and you know
how to find them?
I think that it's really hard because you're right that we can't read the whole internet.
And I don't want to.
I think Twitter is a really good tool to get the cream of the cream of the crop to rise because we actually, I think, do a pretty good job of promoting writers who are new
but really interesting.
I mean, this will be embarrassing
to Rachel, but like Rachel McDaniel is a really good example of this where Rachel was nowhere.
And then Rachel has been everywhere. And that's due in large part to the talent that is evident
in the writing. But so like that is a good mechanism through which to find talent. But I also
am nervous about relying on that exclusively because
there are more good options out there. So I try to read as extensively as I can. Increasingly,
I rely on other people recommending writers to me, which does happen, at least has pretty
consistently in my role at the Hardball Times, where we've been focused in the last couple of
years on sort of helping to build that bench. But there is sort of a feeling right now when I talk to other editors
that the pool is not shallow, but a bit stagnant and we haven't seen quite as much churn there as
we want. So, you know, I think it's reading really widely and then giving people outlets
that are good proving grounds and hoping that
those outlets pay. So like that's been an important part of what we've done at THT where,
you know, our freelance fee isn't like the richest out there, but you do get paid every time you
write. And I want to, I think that, you know, places like the athletic or the hardball times
where everyone's getting compensated for freelance work are good places to start to identify those folks.
But it's hard because you're cognizant of the fact that every staff at these places
is pretty small.
And so a hire that doesn't work out can be a problem and is harder to absorb than it
might be at some place that has a really large staff.
So I think that it's important
to give people a lot of chances in sort of the part-time and freelance realm so that you get a
pretty good sense of like, oh, is this person sort of an obvious, an obvious next full-time person,
but it's hard. So this is my call to the Effectively Wild audience to like, let us know
when you, when you read people who are good, because we
take the responsibility of finding people seriously, but we also know that we can't
read the whole internet. So if there's a team blogger out there that we should be looking at,
let us know. Has working with such a wide array of writers over the past year of varying experience levels and training, given you sort of a conception
of what the most frequent fixes are that you have to make,
not necessarily hyphens,
even though hyphens are very important.
And I want to say that in case Carson is listening.
But in terms of more structural things, stylistic things,
getting to the point things, Just, I don't know,
what are the pitfalls of posts that you read? Some of this is really, this is going to sound
a bit condescending because some of this stuff is really basic, but I see it crop up a lot. So I'm
going to do it. It starts with the pitch. You should pitch. Don't send editors full work.
You should pitch. Save yourself work if they they aren't gonna like what you're writing.
So pitching is good.
But I think, you know, it's a lot of like basic copy stuff
that tends to get in the way.
You know, it's harder as an editor working with freelancers,
it's harder to sort of take responsibility
for fixing the baseball sense that a person might have.
Although sometimes, you know, I will offer feedback if things are obviously wrong, saying,
well, like this isn't how that works.
Or, you know, this is work that exists that you should be aware of that sort of contradicts
what you're saying.
But I don't know, it's like basic copy stuff.
Like give yourself 45 minutes after writing a piece away from it and then you know
read it again because you'll find a comma splice and you know seven times that you used that
unnecessarily a lot of unnecessary that's out in the world people are crazy go nuts for that
as a word that they don't need that's a place where you need that. Other places, not as much. But I think that mostly it's reading broadly yourself as a writer.
So I did not realize how much of my job would be getting a pitch and Googling it and saying,
how is your thing different from this thing?
And the writer saying, it's not different.
And then being done.
So I think that both in terms of your own development
as a writer and your sort of observation and observance of professional niceties with editors,
reading as broadly as you can so that when you're pitching work and writing work,
you're aware of the broader discourse around baseball analytics is really useful because
the places where people turn in stuff that ends up going
through really extensive rewriting is when they will address a point that has been like largely
settled by baseball analytics or isn't settled but is very well sort of established as as a body of
research and they're not engaging with that so it's kind of like the eyes are bad right the article yeah right yeah i mean
like or i've gotten pitches for i'm i am developing a new stat for evaluating pitchers and they'll
tell me what's in it and i'm like but so this is baseball reference war this is what they account
for in baseball reference war so i think that some of it is just making sure that you are yourself well versed but then also just like
being your own voice i read it's very strange knowing both of you i get a lot of like jeff
sullivan and ben limburg and sam miller imitation pieces i'll kill him well and it's just and i got
one a couple weeks ago that was clearly this person, whether they meant to or not, doing a Meg.
And I was like, what is this?
It was wildly disorienting.
And then I had to think a lot about my own writing,
and that was uncomfortable.
So, you know, and it's an understandable impulse,
and I think we all do it when we're starting out,
where we read people we like,
and we like how they think about the game,
and so then our voice tends to
sound like there's a little bit but i think um you know be cognizant of when you're doing that
because often it will be if it's not obvious to you it will be wildly obvious to other people
i'm like oh this is this is a jeff piece cool so jeff didn't write it so it's a little less good
i think like whenever
for the past several years whenever people
have talked to me or sent me an email just asking
for advice because they want to do this for some
weird reason as a job
don't do it
don't do it
oh my god I live in a shoebox
so
the number one piece of advice is always
just write constantly.
Force yourself to write, right?
Make yourself write a few times a week because that way, even if you do begin as sort of derivative,
it only makes sense to be inspired by your favorite writers in whatever field you're writing in.
But the more you write, the more you kind of force yourself to find your own voice because you can only be derivative so often.
But anyway, that wasn't really the point of the thing I was going to say.
That was a follow up. But I guess where we are, we've seen a lot of front office
openings at the executive level this offseason and Kim Ang continues to get opportunities that
don't come to fruition, whether I don't know exactly what she's hoping for or not. But there's
been a broader conversation about having a woman as a general manager. Now, you are not the general
manager of a baseball team, but you are on paper and also in reality, you are a woman who happens
to be now the managing editor of a sports media company, which is a rarity on the internet,
in the world. Now, I understand that this has all happened very quickly for you. You know, Carson
gave notice late in the game and this you have
only just recently wrapped up your first official day in this managing editor capacity. But have you
had a moment to think about what your standing is, how it looks, whether this is a mark of
progression or just kind of good luck? Have you thought about the greater weight of what your role is now? Only a little tiny bit because I worry about feeling overwhelmed by the pressure to do
a good job as a result of that.
I mean, I think that the luck part is good to talk about.
The luck part is good to talk about whenever someone gets a full-time role, which isn't
to say sometimes we overdo it with the luck thing.
So luck really matters and the networking really matters. And both of those things probably matter
too much if what we want is a writing and editorial core that's like broadly representative
of the world. Because, you know, people who are good at this are often obviously good. And the
goal is to get other good people who are also probably similarly obviously good in front of the right people rather than to de-emphasize the quality of those people who are good. and then I was on Jabo and then Sam saw what I wrote on Just a Bit Outside
and asked me to join BP.
And then I went to a Staten Island Yankees analytics event
and you, Jeff, were there and we were like,
hey, let's talk about James Paxton for like an hour
and became friends.
And then when Paul was leaving,
I was a person whose work you knew and you knew I was not
a monster personally and like that helped so that part is lucky and like most people can't go back
in time to like talk to you about James Paxton but there is also a like a part of this that is
I think when you take seriously trying to give other people opportunities that's part of your
responsibility as a as a I don't know what the
right word is as like a person who's doing this, not for the first time. I'm sure there, I know
that there are other women who are managing editors or sports publications, but it is
a rarity. You know, I take seriously the responsibility to try to bring people with me,
um, because there aren't a lot of women in baseball writing, sports writing, generally
baseball writing in particular.
We are particularly underrepresented when it comes to women of color in this field.
So I think that I've mostly looked at it as a thing that happened.
It didn't happen because I was a woman.
I happened to be one.
I didn't want to overemphasize it when writing about my vision for the site.
overemphasize it when writing about my vision for the site. But I do think that I feel a pretty keen responsibility to make sure that like, I am not the last one of these, probably, you know, hopefully
for everyone involved, the last one at Fangrafts for a while, but certainly not the last one in
the industry. So yeah, I take that responsibility to the extent that you could call it that pretty
seriously. And I worry, you know,
I worry about making sure that I'm saying the right thing, especially on sort of socially
charged issues, because for better or worse, I think that I will be looked to as someone who's
like supposed to have a take on this stuff. And so I take that responsibility seriously as well.
But it's also strange because like the day to day of my life
isn't super different than it was. It starts earlier in the day and I'm editing different
people. And at some point I will no longer be directly responsible for all of our freelancers
at the Harville Times. But like, you know, I still work from home and I'm still drinking coffee out
of my fan graphs mug, which is great. And, you know, I was going from home and I'm still drinking coffee out of my Fangraphs mug, which is great.
And, you know, I was going to winter meetings anyway.
But now when I'm there, my, you know, my position is just going to be a little different than it was.
So it's both very weird thing to think about too much, and you will either risk being
overwhelmed or becoming horribly self important. And I don't want to be either of those things.
So yeah, I think so. The last thing I guess I wanted to ask is, the managing editor role, at least at Fangraphs, has changed a little bit.
When Dave Cameron had it, he was doing some editorial work, but also he was doing a lot of writing.
And then when Carson took it over, there was sort of a dispersal of the responsibilities in a sense.
And what I'm getting at is that you first came to the industry's attention as a wonderfully talented
writer. And of course, now as an editor who constantly has things to edit, it forces you
into a position where you are doing less writing. It makes you actually, in a way, it's like a
promotion, but in a sense, it also makes you a little less visible because editors do a lot of
quiet work sort of behind the scenes. So this is not to put you on the spot,
since this is a podcast that people for Fangraphs might be listening to. But what is your ideal
amount of writing output? Because I'm sure writing, it's where you made your name first,
it's where you're very, very talented. You're also a talented editor. But you know, writing
is what I think you like to do the most. So how much writing do you hope to be able to do once
you get settled in this role? That's a good question that you're right. Interested parties might be
listening to the answer too. No, I think ideally what I would like to have it land on is like two
posts a week and the podcast and a chat. You know, it's going to change. The answer is going to
change pretty dramatically once we decide what we're going to do with the Hardball Times editing role, which please don't ask me
because I don't know yet. We don't know yet. We're figuring it out. It's on our list. It's on the
almost the top of my list. And I know it's near the top of David Appelman's list, but we don't
know the answer just yet. We want to take our time, make the right choice. So I think that once that is sorted, things get a lot clearer in terms of what my day is going to
look like. Because right now I'm getting up around six, having been at least in the first two days
graced with content that can go up at 9am Eastern. I don't need to get up earlier than that. And then editing during the day. And I'm,
you know, our sort of publication calendar kind of wraps up in terms of the stuff that I'm
responsible for around one or two, because, you know, if you publish things after that on the
East coast, you're not going to, you're people aren't going to read them until the next day
anyhow. So in theory, once THT is off my plate, I will be able to write in the afternoons.
That sounds lovely.
Sit there in the afternoon, have a glass of wine, write some baseball words.
Sounds like a good day, but we're not quite there yet.
So a couple of times a week, plus a chat, plus the podcast, your rival coming for you.
No.
No, are you actually going to talk about baseball on that podcast?
You know, probably to a shockingly greater degree than Carson ever did.
And I say that with a tremendous amount of affection.
Yes.
I think it's, you know, as both of you know, there's a nice balance to be had there between serious and silly.
And I think that those things in concert can result in some really cool
conversations. So that will be the approach that I take. Having now figured out how to edit podcasts,
we're in business. Sky's the limit. We can go anywhere. Yeah. It's funny you mentioned no one
reading things after a certain hour. It's not until you get access to traffic for a website
that you realize how much people slack off at work. I mean,
maybe you know if you've ever had a job and have slacked off at work. But it's funny how you would think that, hey, after work hours or on weekends or something, that's when people will
read their baseball content because they have so much time to do it. Nope. No one reads anything
then because they want to read it when they're sitting at their desk and bored.
So that's how the economy works, I guess.
Yeah, we are infinitely grateful.
We have just boundless amounts of gratitude for how little you all care about your jobs.
Shout out to the people at work right now listening to this podcast.
Makes our job possible.
I pay my rent because you are weirdly indifferent toward paying yours
oh god when people talk about so i've never been threatened by the talk about like automation
threatening our jobs because no one's going to automate whatever it is that that we do
but if they automate what other people do and then they don't go to the office it's a problem
yeah oh no we're indirectly threatened yeah no we have to take down the robots. They are our enemies.
We should learn from literally every movie and just fight them.
Fight them with all we got.
This is why I don't want robot strike zones.
Yeah, and people say Fangraphs wants everyone to be robots.
No, just the opposite.
Just the opposite. We believe in people and their weirdness, their stats, and their fallibility,
and also the fact that like just on
the strike zone thing we couldn't anticipate them trying to find an out by a guy coming off the bag
for 20 tenths of a microsecond when we did replay we think we know all the stuff that's
going to come out of an auto zone excuse you no we do not Well, that's a topic for another podcast, which we have probably already recorded and probably will record again.
But we should let you go because if we don't, Fangraphs will not publish any posts today.
So that's important.
Yeah.
Okay.
So people can find you on Twitter at Meg Growler, me growler.
I don't know how to say it. Meg growler's right. They can hear you on Fangraphs Audio, and they can read you at Fangraphs and also read
your influence on other people's posts without even knowing it, but it's important.
So thank you, and good luck, not that you need it, in your new role.
Thanks, guys.
You know, I was just on MLB.com, and I saw a headline that said, MLB's best contact
hitter is a free agent.
And I thought, what?
Williams Estadio is a free agent?
Turns out the article is about Michael Brantley,
which I guess, sure, in the group of players
who've played more than 29 Major League games,
Michael Brantley, pretty good contact hitter.
But I think that title is reserved for Astadio at this point.
Small sample and all.
Well, it sounds like there may be another Mariners trade brewing,
but I'm posting this podcast before that trade can be completed.
So that will do it for today. You can support the podcast on Patreon by going to patreon.com
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interested in participating, check the link on the show page. Thanks to Dylan Higgins for his
editing assistance. We will be trying to get in two more episodes this week despite the holiday.
Probably do some emails, probably do something else, maybe with a guest. So we will I don't belong to you.
I belong, I belong, I belong to that steel driving crew.