Rates & Barrels - 2022 Second Base Review
Episode Date: November 1, 2022Eno and DVR discuss the 2022 second base pool. With a steady supply of mid-round value, does it make sense to wait at the position in the future? How much rebound potential will there be across the gr...oup of second basemen that missed considerable time with injuries? Rundown 1:46 Ozzie Albies' Lost 2022 Season 6:23 DVR Confessions 15:59 Andrés Giménez: What's Next? 23:49 Mid-Round Value 32:07 Brandon Drury's Out of Nowhere Excellent Season 39:49 Vaughn Grissom's Debut 52:25 Mulligans for These Injuries? Follow Eno on Twitter: @enosarris Follow DVR on Twitter: @DerekVanRiper e-mail: ratesandbarrels@theathletic.com Subscribe to the Rates & Barrels YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/RatesBarrels Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to Rates and Barrels. It's Tuesday, November 1st.
Derek Van Ryper here with Eno Saris on this episode.
We will discuss 2022 second baseman, taking a look back at a position that is kind of strange
because there aren't that many players who are only second baseman anymore.
If you're a second baseman, you probably
wear a few other gloves. Same hat, but many other gloves now for current second baseman.
It'd be weird if you had another hat on.
Maybe you should have to wear a different hat for each position you play.
Oh, no. Don't give Mattford any idea.
If you're wearing the orange hat, you can only be in the orange circle.
That's where we're headed.
That's definitely where we're headed.
So as we've done throughout the series, we're going to kind of go tier by tier, just looking back to see where there was value, where there wasn't, in hopes of having a good plan as we move forward.
Now, we've talked about a lot of these players on the shortstop review episodes. We'll
try and sidestep some of the guys like Trey Turner, who we talked about in the last episode,
and actually won't even be a second baseman next year, which is the other thing we're keeping an
eye out for is the players that lost eligibility at second base. Many of these players, because
they're multi-position eligible, if a greater need surfer to somewhere else, that's where they
played most of their games this season.
The first player we should talk about, though, is one of the few young, everyday second basemen.
Because a lot of the everyday second basemen, the second base only players, tend to be older.
But we have Ozzy Albies, who missed a ton of time with injuries.
Only played, I think, a total of 64 games in 2022.
You know, he was carrying an ADP inside the top 20.
If we go back and look at what was happening back in April.
So I'm just curious with a lost season, how much you would adjust your expectations, if
at all, for Ozzy Alves going forward?
I mean, if his draft cost goes down, I'll be interested in him again but there's a little whiff oh a little odor of ruj ned about
albies in that he's not as good as his fantasy stats and i don't think that he's anywhere close
to a door in terms of like risking losing playing time but i also am not sure that he's going to get back to 100 runs and 100 rbi
and be necessarily the choice at the top of the order if he's going to be basically a league
average bat you know what i mean i mean we've got a guy who has a career uh 322 obp but that's a
little bit weighted early in his career over the last three seasons his
high is 310 and when you have Michael Harris, Ronald Acuna Jr. and Matt Olsen do you really
need to put Albies in the top three and that starts costing him plate appearances and runs
an RBI so long story short I will buy him you know if he's like maybe a fourth or
something rounder fourth or fifth rounder i haven't like i'm not looking exactly at the
numbers yet but if he drops in a few rounds that i'm interested because this position
frankly is not a good one yeah in a typical year you get power and speed too right so even if you
have some concerns about the obp i don't think it hurts him enough to
cost him playing time.
He's still so young. He's going to be 26
in January. It costs him
plate appearances relative to lineup position,
but I don't think they're going to mix and match him.
I think part of what makes him appealing
is even if he falls in the lineup,
Albies is the kind of player that could be in the
starting lineup 155
times out of 162 games. That's the sort of player that could be in the starting lineup 155 times out of 162 games.
That's the sort of run he could end up with.
So you could put him near max volume in terms of games played.
I think the plate appearances will maybe lag behind the league leaders.
But when you think about all the mixing and matching that teams do, he'll still, I think, come up pretty favorably in that regard.
Because you look back, 2018, 684 played appearances. 2019, 702. 2021, 686. And like you're saying, a lot of those
opportunities did come higher in the order, but I don't think he was a fixture at the beginning of
his career in the early part of the order either. I think he's weathered this a little bit at various
points. So the weird thing was before he was shut down for good, the O-swing
percentage for Albies, which has always been pretty high,
was at 45.2%.
Again, 64 games
he was playing around some injuries.
That is concerning.
That is where I think that Odor comp
starts to make a lot of sense for me.
Yeah, and
there's just also this aspect
of his splits.
He's got a fairly mechanically different swing when it comes to the left and the right.
A career split of 139 WRC plus against lefties, 94 against righties is not enough to ask if he should quit switch hitting.
to ask if he should quit switch hitting.
That's something I might ask of, is it Rodolfo Castro,
who has a much larger split and is a younger part of his career.
We've seen somebody like Cedric Mullins quit switch hitting and have great success with it.
I think Albies is far enough in and has a soft enough split
that that doesn't matter, but it may mean that against righties,
he's low in the order, and against righties, he's low in the order,
and against lefties, he's atop the order.
Still that aspect of where will his plate appearances come,
and how many will he get in a full season.
But yeah, the chase rate's not great.
The barrel rate is up and down.
So there's some softness to it but he has a great
hit tool and uh that's why you would hope for about a 270 average from him uh what 25 homers
20 steals something like that really nice especially if you get any sort of early round
discount i think naturally it just happens you miss half the season guys who played closer to
full seasons tend to move up into those places.
Maybe it's only a round off of the ADP, but perhaps occasionally he will fall more than that.
A few confessions from me as we record on this Tuesday, just turning over a new page since it's November 1st and all.
Confession number one, I nuked the inbox again.
If you sent an email in to us prior to the start of October and I didn't reply to it.
It was one way to get to inbox zero.
I just cheated for the second time in two years.
Once a year, I'm allowed to just wipe the whole slate clean.
I do that because I know I'm just not going to catch up and I appreciate everybody who wrote in.
So if we didn't reply to you, know that we saw the message and considered it in some way,
even if we didn't put it on the rundown or acknowledge it with some kind of response.
Rates and barrels at the athletic.com.
If you want to send another avalanche of emails our way, that would be wonderful.
But I've got a few to get through in the next little while.
Confession number two, I broke Whit Merrifield.
I told people this was going to happen back during draft season for 2022.
I still created $12 or $11.50 of value. It's amazing.
Yeah, he did, but it was a painful $11.50. It was $11.50 that you didn't feel good about it
for most of the season. I even traded for him in a couple of leagues and that made it worse.
I had my loan share. I was like,
this is bad. I don't like this guy. Why did I do
that? And then in midseason, I need
steals. I need someone who runs
and is having a bad year. Oh, everybody
who has Whit Merrifield wants to trade him.
Let me be the buyer in this case.
To varying degrees, it worked out okay.
Still has the second base
and outfield eligibility going into 2023.
But this is just more of a hold your nose and say,
how much of a discount would you need to be interested in this profile going forward?
Because I was always nervous about him as an early round guy.
And at least as a discounted mid-round player,
depending on how the playing time looks like it's going to shake out,
maybe there's actually a case for him in 2023?
Yeah.
This is a guy that I've just, I think I've never had a share.
I'm really proud of you because...
I stuck to my guns.
You stuck to it, yeah.
You didn't cave to the pressure of we really
need steals and the Royals play him every day
which finally after
years of me just saying no
I don't want this
will the Blue Jays play him every day
I don't think so but will he even be a Blue J
by opening day doesn't he seem like a player
that would get moved again
was he just like a
was he like their burner for the playoffs
a very strange acquisition for me uh okay so i'm looking at the blue jays depth chart you know
espinal really fell off and he looks like a guy that you only want to play against lefties
oh ms merfield's a righty too.
Who would want him as an everyday player at this stage?
If anyone.
Somebody to re-establish
his value, but then he's a free
agent.
He's a free agent next year, 2024.
Right.
It has to be a team
that wants to play the middle
and thinks he's an upgrade
over an empty group of second basemen right now.
Would the Cubs put Whit Merrifield next to Nico Horner?
No, because they've got two middle infielders they want to play, right?
They'd rather play Nick Madrigal than trade for Whit Merrifield, I think.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Let me look at the team's depth chart second base. Oh, I found it. I think. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Let me look at the teams,
depth chart, second base.
Oh, I found it. I did it. I have an answer.
Angels.
Oh, yeah.
They could delude
themselves into believing that it's a good
idea to add Whitmerafield.
Because they could also
use the outfield help, and maybe he's a backup
plan for Mickey Moniak in center, or Trout.
Yeah, Trout shouldn't.
I don't think Trout should play center.
Anyway.
Yeah, he wants to, so you're going to be the one to tell him
he can't play out there anymore?
I think the White Sox are also an interesting place.
Right now they've got Romy Gonzalez, Lurie Garcia, and Gilbert Sanchez.
They fit.
As their top three.
I don't think the Nationals would bother.
They'd rather give Luis Garcia
a development year.
I don't think the Tigers would bother.
The Pirates would rather see
what Rodolfo Castro can do, I think.
I want to see what Rodolfo Castro can do.
Yeah, I think we've narrowed it down
to the two teams most likely
to be interested.
Oh, the Mariners will lose Adam Frazier.
Slight possibility there.
I don't know.
Anyway, the point is, I don't like the playing time outlook if he stays in Toronto,
and the list of places where I could see him getting another 600 plate appearances is short.
I think we'd put that list at about two teams right now.
Yeah, I'm not super into him next year.
I think that the price would have to plummet.
You know?
I think I'd have to be choosing between him and Enrique Hernandez or something.
Am I going too far?
No, because I think that's sort of the player type.
Depending on your league rules,
the multi-position eligible guys
that you're not 100% sure will
start at one place.
You could probably use for DCs, for draft
and holds, but you don't
necessarily want to use them
every single week.
I could see that.
Kike, for whatever it's worth, though,
if you're playing in NFPC
leagues, only has outfield eligibility
because he's got 11 games at second
and 10 at shortstop this year, so he
loses some of the versatility
in those leagues, so you've got to check your rules.
You're losing some second basemen here.
Ryan McMahon, you lose.
Trey Turner.
CJ Abrams. Ty France Turner. C.J. Abrams.
Ty France.
Keston Hura.
Garrett Hampson.
You're losing him.
So second base is a tough position, and it's only going to get worse.
I think it's tougher next year.
I mean, you're even losing downhill guys like Michael Chavis and Mauricio de Bon,
like depth guys.
Yep, Javier Baez
had second base eligibility. That's gone.
He's just shortstop only now.
Plus, there's a little bit of this aspect
of the new
rules, the new shift rules.
Cameron Grove
at pitching underscore
bot did a little bit of an analysis and found that second base will actually have the biggest stress on it in terms of the new shift rules and how much range you want from your second baseman.
So a guy like Michael Chavis no longer being second base eligible makes sense.
I don't think he'll get it back.
You know, I think Ryan McMahon is a third baseman now.
It'll be interesting to see what happens with Enrique Hernandez.
But you may not see a lot of guys gain second base eligibility either.
Right?
Because if they lost it this year,
they're not allowed to gain it back
in a year where range
matters more. The only one I could
see maybe gaining it back is like Garrett Hampson
if Rodgers plays
short.
Where was Rodgers
playing? Let me see here.
Rodgers was playing second all the time.
Didn't play any short.
Oh, who's the new guy that
just called up ezekiel tovar he's a shortstop yeah i mean as long as he's in the big leagues i think
he's their regular shortstop so hampson is the center fielder he's just the bench guy yeah they
have to be well past any notion that he's an everyday player i think this is a really tough position and you know i'm
really happy that my plan well not all my plans worked out mostly i had a lot of jose altuve
shares uh and that worked out and you can you can see that the olds did okay uh some of the olds in
terms of like jose altuve and marcus simeon um they did okay. But there are some olds that fell off the table.
Trevor Story comes to mind.
Javier Baez is not one I want in the future.
And then you see this Quetel Marte, Jorge Polanco,
like mid-career veteran that you just thought was pretty bankable
that turned in pretty rough seasons.
So, you know, how many young studs that are on the rise are there in
the position any like who's not who's like who's like oh i'll take an old guy and then later i'll
take this young stud that's coming up like you could do something where you take max muncy and
gavin luxe i'm more of the pick one of those guys
and then go fish in a different team's second base pond
and try and win both playing time battles.
Muncy and Urias.
Something more like that makes sense to me.
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Andres Jimenez. should we talk about him?
He's the up-and-coming.
He was, by the auction calculator,
the, well, with Trey Turner, the fifth best.
But going into next season,
would be the fourth best second baseman.
Do you think he'll be that again next year?
I think he could. I think there's really zero risk
of playing time concerns i think we did see some legitimate skills growth i think i think i'm
struggling the most with with andres jimenez is like how much how much of what he did
is sustainable in the long run i mean mean, we saw a lower K rate.
We saw a very, very slight improvement to the walk rate.
I don't know if he's ever going to be an extremely patient hitter,
just looking at the minor league track record.
And also the chase rate's bad.
Right.
There's enough hit tool.
This is the ongoing debate in my mind,
or one of them is, is it good hit tool,
or is it bad plate skills, or is it a pretty good hit tool and mediocre?
Which combination is it?
And I think with the K rate going down, it's a huge step forward for him because a 25% K rate wasn't going to work for him long term.
But are you buying all the power gains?
Are you buying another high teen sort of home run season from a guy that had a 6.2% barrel rate?
I know he also runs, and he was
very efficient as a base stealer, so
you can probably put the stolen bases
in the bank. Another 20
steals seems very likely.
But I think it's the power that I'm the most skeptical of.
Yeah, it really is.
And
that power-strikeout relationship
is the...
has been the main sort of nexus for his career.
You know, he had no power and didn't strike out.
And then he found a way to tap into the power and struck out more.
There is a decision-making process there because power is out front.
And if you want to get to that power out front,
you have to make your decision earlier,
which does lead to strikeouts.
It's not as much what people say about having a launch angle swing
where you can't match the planes or whatever.
It's more about when do you make the decision to swing.
I think that's a good sign that this year
he made the decision to swing earlier,
got to that power out in front,
and also cut his strikeout rate.
11
homers away, 6 at home.
It's an interesting split.
I wonder
how that fits
into the balance schedule next year.
You know?
If he's going to,
if things are going to balance out
because you're not in the same parks
and you're not facing the same
pitching staffs all the time, right?
You're facing every park
and every pitching staff.
Then maybe he's a true talent
six homer, I'd get home guy.
Maybe he's a 12 homer guy.
So I think my back of the my back of
the back of the uh napkin projection for him is uh like 260 15 30 but that 30 because of the
asterix that's mostly because of the new rules yeah and well and if everybody's running more
it's not like you're getting the same as the 20 last year yeah right it's you know you're just
gonna need more bags so he helps you but it's all sort of relative i think it's interesting because
i look at this profile and ozzy albies has shown us more power at the big league level but i do
think that gives you an idea of where everything could go if the power holds the max exit velocity was decent it is it is power mostly to the pull side which is
fine it's kind of like having a plan and executing it and taking advantage of yeah it's like jerks
like you know 12 of his 14 barrels were pulled you know just when you take that shot take that shot and and pull a homer you
know the very early 2023 adp has albies at pick 42 and jimenez at pick 92 so i'd rather have jimenez
with a 50 pick difference if that gap closes if we're talking about them in the same tier
i'd still prefer albies and it's yeah but especially um because we haven't seen a lot of albies with
this ball we saw a pretty tremendous downturn in iso and you could say well it was in 269 plate
appearances for albies and you wouldn't expect power to uh to stabilize that quickly but at the
same time it is a new ball a new environment uh If you prorate out what he did last year, you're talking about 16 or 17 homers.
So 50 points of ADP difference for what I just did on the back of the napkin,
five homers, may not be worth it.
Going back to Albies again, 30 homers in 2021.
At least the peak in homers didn't come in 2019.
That's the power peak I'd be the most skeptical of.
And we have seen flashes of the 9% bear rate.
They were using some of this ball that they were using in 2022 in 2021.
Right.
So unless all his homers came on like the other ball.
That seems pretty unlikely.
Yeah.
All that is to say,
I do think Jimenez is a good young player.
I think there are reasons to consider him where he's going.
If he stays at this ADP,
I would be surprised when we talk about 2023 second baseman,
looking forward and we have more draft data from the winter.
I would be surprised if Jimenez is still sitting near the back of the top 100. I think he'll get closer to pick 65, pick 70, something in that range,
because the steals alone are going to be something that drive him up a little bit.
And I think the more you look at the power, the more you can talk yourself into the possibility
of one more level maybe being there, and that he doesn't necessarily need that to happen
to return enough value to be a fifth-round pick
in the 2023 season.
Where do you see Semien and Altuve going
in your early draft?
They are very close to each other,
right around pick 42.
Semien goes a little earlier because of the steals.
Where he was, yeah.
After that slow start,
I mean, we talked about him when the season began,
and it was not good.
He turned things around in a big way.
I got to give him a ton of credit for that.
He's a max PT guy.
He will hit high in the order.
God,
he had the same amount of plate appearances,
724 in two straight seasons.
Right.
The only thing,
the best argument against a player like Marcus Simeon is that it's just very
hard to stay that healthy year over year over year.
It's a skill, but it's a difficult thing to do for four or five straight seasons.
I may stay away from the top of this position.
My evidence for that being a good strategy is there's a run here that's actually pretty impressive starting at 102.
You have a rank over here. What's that rank?
That's last year's ADP report that you're looking at.
Rank is the overall pick number.
Rank is the overall pick number. number okay so starting at uh 102 and going down to 212 you couldn't pick a bad second baseman look at this i mean it does some of these names are not like the others and you'll you'll point
them out but tommy edmund max muncy jay cronenworth chris taylor dj lemay he ran brian
nickman glaber torres ty france brendan, Brendan Rogers, Colton Wong, Eduardo Escobar,
Gene Segura. The average production out of that group is around $10. Now, yeah, Chris Taylor was
$1. Max Muncy was $5.50. Eduardo Escobar was $7.30. John Segura was $5.50. But there are also
Gleyber Torres is $17 and Ty Francis $15.
Jack Cronin was $14 and Edmunds $21 that are in there.
So I know a lot of those people are going to graduate, but they can't all graduate.
You know, so some of those guys are going to be there again.
And I think it's a perfectly fine place to shop.
Now, there are some weird fits.
Like if you if Max Muncy stays around there,
then you've created a bit of a batting average problem and you, and you're not getting any steals from your second baseman. So that's something that's usually you kind of want
steals from your second baseman. That's a, that's a concern for Taylor and France and Rogers.
But if you have a high steals approach and you've been taking steals with all your players uh until you get into the
100 to 150 range then there's a great time to just be like yeah brennan rogers thank you
you know why not oh rogers is like the bargain shelf cory seager profile where you're like up
the middle yeah and steal bases but he also doesn't have the same, I don't think he has nearly the batting average floor.
It's still a notch below what Seager brings,
even though he gets to play in Coors.
Rodgers is a strange player.
I keep expecting one more level,
and it's solid, it's fine, it works as an MI.
It just doesn't get you above what you paid for.
I think there could be.
It's not great evidence,
but here's my evidence that he could have another level. above what you paid for him. I think there could be. It's not great evidence,
but here's my evidence that he could have another level.
26, could improve his ground ball rate.
It's a little bit high,
and he still has one or two more years of improvement there by aging curves.
The O-swing has improved in every season he's been
in the big leagues.
The barrel rate has slowly improved,
and he has a 112 max ev so the raw
power is there it's a question of tapping into it a little better than he has uh and the chase rate
is improving showing me that he is uh seeing the ball better at the plate and cores does give him
a big boost in terms of obp and batting average. So, like, what am I saying?
I think next year he could hit 280 with 25 homers
and maybe 80 to 85 runs and 80 to 85 RBI.
Yeah, you do have to love the plate skills getting better, right?
Because the walk rate going up and the camera going down.
The straight guard got better too, yeah.
Yeah, like those core skills got better.
It's just such an unusual player type that you have to plan for it.
To not get speed from the middle infield is always strange,
so just make sure it's taken care of.
By the point where he goes, it kind of should be taken care of.
He's another guy that I guess you want to look at and say,
well, what's the price?
He's cheaper. Brendan Rodgers is cheaper right now than he was
last season in drafts, which doesn't make sense based on the skills
changes. He earned $9 last year. He earned
almost as much as Trevor Story. I guess what I'm trying to get at is
I thought he had an even higher ceiling than what he's
showing hints of.
I just tried to put on the rose-colored glasses, and I got to, what, 280, 25 homers.
No steals.
Here's what I was really getting at.
I remember when he came through in the upper levels of the minor leagues,
he was 12 for 15 as a base stealer, as a 21-year-old at AA.
It's like, okay, that's efficient.
It's only 95 games.
That's close to an 18 to 20 steal pace
over a full season.
So even if you knock him down to like 8 to 10
as a big leaguer, because we know,
you don't get one to one.
Yeah, why is he not stealing three to five
at least or something?
He doesn't, he's never attempted a stolen base.
In the big leagues?
Well, he may, maybe he attempted one
and someone fouled a pitch off or something,
but there are zero caught stealings.
Wow.
Zero steals, zero caught stealings,
and that's over 1,000 played appearances now in the big leagues.
I guess that number, it's still not that much big league experience.
That should be the one other thing that gives you some hope.
The more we talk about him,
the more I kind of like the idea of taking him where he's going
because at pick 250, if he's going in that range 10 bucks is great and there's a chance you get 15 to 18
but i think i've just given up on the possibility of the steals being there and i think i'm tempering
the power expectations a little bit relative to you i think the ceiling's more like a 20 home run
season than 25 plus but 20 in this environment if the run environment in 2023 ends up being like the run environment in 2022,
20 home runs is actually really nice.
It's not the year,
it's not like trick-or-treating,
you know, where it's like everybody's just getting
20 home run seasons anymore.
It's not like that.
It's different.
Yeah.
Those are way down.
Getting, you know,
the handfuls of chocolate bars.
Yeah.
A lot of Twizzlers out there.
Full size.
Twizzlers. Are you kidding me?
People who love Twizzlers?
It's like plastic. You just chew it on plastic.
It's like a straw. You like straws?
You like to eat straws?
I don't.
I will say if I had to eat a straw,
I'd rather eat a straw in California
than in other places. I had to eat a straw I'd rather eat a straw in California than in other places
I like my chances
a little more against the California straws
but you know
I just I find
I think next year
you know I think
could be good
sort of steady Eddie Betts
I do just get nervous
at some age where I'm like,
there's just going to be a knee injury
or something. 32 for Simeon,
Altuve,
it's 32.
It's usually
where the projections
get softer due to
research from Jeff Zimmerman.
It's 32 to 33.
It's usually where the uh-oh part of the aging curve you know like he was really good until he's 32 I feel like you could
say that a lot of players so I I'm just a little bit nervous about that part and um I don't think
I want to play full price for Albies so I think I'll be shopping in you know maybe have a toe in the brandon lau
you know could tell like brandon lau jazz chisholm bounce back you know section maybe uh but i also
just think that i may just wait until pick 100 to see what's left in second base and and uh
and pick from that group i think you can get away with it.
We saw a lot of late values emerge at the position.
Jimenez, we talked about earlier,
he was a $21 player that you were getting
outside the top 250 overall in a lot of drafts.
And even if you were in a draft where someone was aggressive,
pick 150, 175 was the earlier part of the range
for where he was going.
Jeff McNeil, we talked about him, I think,
is just a strange player type to bank on,
but he ended up providing a lot of value.
Somewhat similar to Luis Arias,
who they both ended up around 16 bucks of value.
Those player types are often available.
Yeah.
Josh Rojas returned a lot of value.
He was going pretty late.
Ramon Urias ended up being kind of a good filler type.
Wasn't necessarily someone you could trust all the time, but he was readily available. I think the other thing that was strange about this position, we talked about Tyro Estrada on the shortstop episode, and I think if John Birdie had stayed healthy all season, he might have had a shot at $18 to $20 because he was doing a lot on a per-game basis.
was doing a lot on a per-game basis.
Brandon Drury is one of the most out-of-nowhere relative to ADP players to come close to $20 in recent years.
I mean, barely drafted even in the deepest of leagues back in April.
He ended up playing enough games to qualify going forward at second, third, and first.
Of course, got traded to the Padres mid-season. What do you make of Drury's season,
and how viable do you think he might be going forward?
He's always been kind of a barreler.
This last year was his best barrel rate season,
but his career barrel rate is 7.4%,
which is not something to sneeze at.
That's above average.
So you take a guy whose career
strikeout rate is right around league average
22% and has above average
bail rate and can
play at a lot of different positions and you plug
him in
I think he would
project to be around a league average player next year
which is always problematic you know because you're talking
about a 30 year old league average guy maybe 1.8 win type projection you know so
that's not something that the uh that the marketplace values you know and uh you know
without a position he's kind of like an all like an always position he's kind of like an always position. He's kind of shopping in the utility market.
He either wants to jump on with a really good team
and just be their depth
or a bad team
and try to get 700 plate appearances
and redo what he did and get a better deal later.
I kind of think at 30, like he, for example, this last season, you know, was like didn't have a deal when spring training was starting.
And like was going to go, I forget where it was.
It wasn't Cincinnati.
He was going to go to like the D-backs, I think.
And then he got a call last minute from the Reds, and he said, sure.
Because he just thought maybe there was more playing time there.
So I don't know if it's going to be as bad for him this year,
but I think it's going to be a thing where he's got multiple crappy offers.
You know what I mean?
He's going to have like, There's going to be three teams
that give him the same offer.
The new collusion is
it all spits out dollars per war.
Our models are all the same.
Yeah, exactly. Our models are all the same.
You'll have three
one-year
$8 million
contracts that he can choose between. One of them might be to stay with the Padres. one-year, you know, $8 million contracts
that he can choose between.
One of them might be to stay with the Padres.
I think he'll be a decent depth pick.
I think it'll be hard to know
without knowing exactly where he signs
to know if I want to bet on it.
But, you know, people put guys at second
that
second base is a place where you kind of
fill in sometimes. So I'm also
interested. I think Brandon Drury might be
okay, depending on where he ends up, but I'm also
interested in the question of, like, is there
a Brandon Drury next year?
Can we find
a buried player that actually ends
up playing a ton
and doing some good things?
Could it be
Isaac Paredes?
Could it be Zach McKinstry
in a
either on a new team or
not at second base, but still second
base eligible?
Could it be
Mike Brousseau in a new team yeah i guess i mean this just it comes into
falling into excessive playing time it's almost like this is the this is a player type that a
good team will say we like you we want you here you're gonna get 400 plate appearances here
and a bad team says you're playing every day we're just gonna move you around and we're gonna
catch lightning in a bottle that's why i took the reds over the d-backs right it was
just like oh there's a spot there for me so i guess uh that's the that's the ticket it's it's
about opportunity as much as about uh quality and and and how good the player is. So if the White Sox or Tigers or Angels,
those three teams,
if the White Sox, Tigers, or Angels
sign an interesting veteran at second base,
my ears perk up.
I think the other part of this is
if you look at the Angels,
they have that unsettled spot at second base.
Luis Renjifo was fine.
You could go into the season where he's a starter,
but you maybe want him to be more of a utility guy.
Jared Walsh had a down year at first base,
and Walsh is a lefty, Drury's a righty,
so maybe Brandon Drury fits really well on this Angels depth chart
because they can move him around to a couple spots,
given the injury issues and concerns about Rendon staying healthy.
First, second, third base are all options. Defensively, by outs above average, a couple spots given the injury issues and concerns about Rendon staying healthy first
second third base are all options defensively by outs above average Brandon Drury was not a bad
defender kind of a neutral defender everywhere that doesn't super line up with my eye test but
it's I mean I I would have assumed negative everywhere but maybe yeah play anywhere long
enough to go that direction.
Yeah, I mean, Drury also
seems like a Giants-type player,
right?
Like, has good platoon splits, can play a lot of
places. I wonder how
many times the Giants can press that button.
You know, at some point you're like,
you have 20 of these guys. Is that enough?
Never.
We want 25, Drury's.
Some of them are left-handed.
Yeah, you would want a few
of the left-handed variety, I think.
I guess to get back to your question,
can you find a player like this?
The thing that I think Brandon Drury
did really well in very limited time
in the big leagues in 2021
was we saw the spike in hard hit rate, a 46.8% hard hit rate. The barrel rate was kind of in
line with career norms up to that point, but we saw this spike in just batted balls over 95 plus.
So maybe you find someone who's been a part-time player that just hits the ball really hard and you make an adjustment or you give them more time and kind of see what happens.
So I'm filtering the leaderboard right now at Savant down to 25 batted ball events and trying to find some surprises.
David Bode.
David Bode always pops in StatCast.
It's just to let him play somewhere.
I've had David Bie shares on my DCs
for like two or three years.
It hasn't quite worked out for me yet.
Let's do it again.
Yeah, I mean, it might not be at this position
too. That's the thing. It may not always
be the same spot. But he beats second base eligible, right?
I think Bodie
could be. He was hurt so much
he may have lost some eligibility this year
because he didn't play enough.
Oh yeah, Bodie's number one. That's
great. I love it. Zach Short,
if you have six events.
But he's
the guy who has like a 40% strikeout
rate, right? Yeah.
Jonathan Aranda, but that's
a different... Jonathan Aranda is actually
someone who could be an interesting young prospect type.
And I guess Nolan Gorman.
He's on prospect.
Yeah, yeah, he's on prospect.
Those are kind of prospect types.
The other player that we should talk about
from a prospect perspective is Von Grissom.
Because if Dansby Swanson leaves,
I think they let him play shortstop
because Albies plays second base.
But I think Grissom has the second base eligibility because of Albies' absence.
So they really kind of bailed on him in front of the postseason, which was surprising, given that the alternative was Orlando Arcia.
That was sad in some ways.
Yeah, I wonder if there was an element of being figured out.
Let me look at his O-swing.
No, he wasn't chasing more.
He does chase a fair amount, though.
So maybe they just didn't think he would give them the very best at-bats in the postseason.
For example, his strikeout rate rate the rolling strikeout rate as
the season ended was 30 so i know that's not i don't think that's his true talent i mean if you
look at his minor league levels he made a lot of contact looks like a premium hit to a guy
over the course of season he had a 22 strikeout rate and that that would be a reasonable
expectation going forward but i actually think he might be a reasonable expectation going forward, but I actually think
he might be able to cut that K rate, but
maybe they just didn't think it was going to happen right now
in the Crucible, you know.
And they just wanted to have more
dependable ABs. But
I think Grissom
could hit 280 with
I don't know,
something like 18
homers and 25 steals.
I mean, I think he's going to be really good.
I know that the chase rate is higher than people might be surprised
to look at his chase rate and see me like him,
but we're talking about a young player.
The chase rate can get better,
and then young players can succeed with chase rates.
I get more upset about chase
rates when they turn 28 and 29 30 you know uh because that's when it really starts to fall
apart based on on chase rates so you just look at heavier bias as an example but in the in when
they're young i don't care as much about it also his swing strike rate's really great it's really
good actually uh so i could see him improving that strikeout rate um and the power
you know the max ev wasn't amazing but the barrel rate was above average so i see enough power there
and i think i'm just reading the tea leaves i think they're gonna let dansby go you know i
think they could they've extended everybody around him right like they could have extended dansby
you know they're letting him go. Remember, they let Freeman go.
Same deal.
They could have extended these guys.
They extended all the young guys, and they let Dansby go.
Yeah, it's amazing.
We've talked about Michael Harris a lot on the pod,
and Grissom spent even less time at AA than Harris did.
98 plate appearances before they promoted him to the big
leagues i imagine the adjustment something they were seeing on the micro level is a big part of
why they made that last minute switch but it's just like come on your your fallback option is not
is not a guy that you really feel that good about just let the young guy get the experience i don't
think that's going to break you i think they they would, if they did anyway. If they did give him the opportunity to play every day,
the power-speed combo, that alone, I think makes him fine in the 150 to 200 range.
There's just a lot of uncertainty right now about what happens. If Dansby leaves,
is there a short-term stopgap they can get? Is there an equivalent to this offseason's Carlos Correa
that they could get on a shorter deal with lockouts?
Block him for a year.
Just kind of to give themselves a little bit of protection,
to send them back to the upper levels of the minors,
make sure everything is good to go,
and then they can bring him back up again in 2024?
That's the only thing that i'd be
a little bit worried about given where they're at competing even though they just gave him that
opportunity in the second half of this season yeah i mean i guess there's like a jose iglesias
see i wouldn't i wouldn't send grissom down like i if that's your best option i would play grissom
in the beginning of the season see see what happens, and then figure out
how you're going to solve
the problem in the season.
Yeah, you get that player later
if the young player doesn't
handle the opportunity. That's how I would
want to do it.
And the track record in Atlanta
is they trust their young guys
I think Von Grissom is the opening
shortstop I just do
I mean doesn't that
track with all the rest of their guys I guess
Harris was Harris Harris wasn't
really an opening day guy
nope he wasn't he was an early season
call up and I think many of us expected him
to go back down if he struggled but they
but shortstop is also a place where you,
you can put a guy in the nine hole,
you know,
in your lineup and you say,
Hey,
we're going to,
we love you.
And you're going to move up in this order as you get better and better.
And we think you're going to be a superstar for us,
but we would just,
we want you to pick it at short,
right?
Pick it at short and, and let the, and let the offense develop. I think you can do that at short. And if you look
at it, shortstop is a young man's game. Uh, there are very few sort of past 30 year old shortstops
and Dancy Swanson's arm strength is the worst rated arm strength among the short stops that are available.
So, you know, I think, and people say, well, how much does that matter? I don't know. There are a ton of bang bang plays at short. Just watch a game. You know, there's a ton of bang bang plays
at first base. And I think a little bit of arm strength makes a lot of big difference. We talked
about range too. It can make a difference in where you can play so like are you really gonna pick up elvis andrews and put him there over over
ron grissom i say no you might pick up a shortstop uh a shortstop a player that can play shortstop to
be depth but arcia can play some shortstop right he used to be able to i don't know if he still
can play it well uh the concern i would have with Grissom at shortstop based on this conversation is he's 10th percentile in arm strength himself.
There might be some questions about whether or not he's a second baseman or a shortstop long term.
That is an interesting find. Thank you for that.
You have yucked my yum a little.
I'm very sorry.
I'm still excited about Von Grissom.
Arguing with myself now,
if you played Dansby Swanson at shortstop
with 15th percentile arm strength,
do you care that much about arm strength?
Yeah, maybe.
And there goes the arm of my chair again.
Thanks, Super Glue.
You've always wanted to be part of something bigger than yourself.
You live for experience and lead by example.
You want the most out of life and realize what you're looking for is already in you.
is already in you.
This is for you.
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A message from the Government of Canada.
There's a... I'm going to be talking about this in more
in detail this weekend
at First Pitch Arizona,
so I don't want to give it all away,
but the
balance schedule is going to do some weird stuff to player evaluation.
We're going to have a lot of little small arrows pointing in different directions.
So I think the overall play is trust projections
and reevaluate after next season if you have to.
Because, you know, it'll be really hard to like
parse every little small arrow will all the guys who steal 20 still 27 but the guys who steal 12
will they still 15 and you know what i mean like but oh but now and this is the one that people
aren't talking about so much the balanced schedule so tyra estrada got a lot of playing time in colorado in fact i think he got the most
plate appearances by a non-rocky in colorado he had 68 plate appearances a tenth of his plate
appearances were in colorado he had a 688 slugging in colorado oh that's not good because he slugged 402 overall. Yes.
And I, in fact, I have
it broken down here.
Let me see here.
So 588 slugging
in Colorado, 39 plate. There's actually
names that are worse. He's not
number one. I'll leave those names that are worse
for people attending first pitch.
But with Tyra Strada, because we're on the position 39 plate appearances,
they're five 88 slugging three 85,
everybody everywhere else is five 88 slugging in cores changes three 85 to a
four Oh two overall.
So he's more like a true talent three 85 slugging guy.
Yeah,
but he runs.
No,
I don't want to be the one that sits here
and talks anybody into paying full price here.
But that's what you just did there.
That's what I'm talking about.
There's going to be a little down arrow on Tyra Estrada
because he's not in Coors as much.
There's going to be a little up arrow because he runs.
Maybe just trust the projections.
And the projections, I think, are going to catch on
to what you're getting at with him.
I think the funny thing with Tyro Estrada,
this is like the reverse of Brendan Rodgers.
Brendan Rodgers runs in the upper levels of the minor leagues.
We expect him to run as a big leaguer.
Tyro Estrada went six for 10 as a base dealer at AAA in 2021,
had 52 games in the big leagues, stole one base a season ago,
and then rips off 21 steals in 27 attempts this year.
Because, of course.
And if you go back through his track record,
the best stolen base season he had,
at least for a time and a level,
was all the way back in low A.
He was 11 for 14 in 35 games.
There were some indications at that age in 2016,
maybe someday he'd steal a lot of bases,
but just the lack of opportunities,
even as he moved through the Yankees system and eventually spent a little time at Sacramento with the Giants, that's a weird arc to a 20-steal season.
now are very mathed out where it's all about the numbers of the pop time uh the pitcher's time to home um and their pitch mix and i think you know i think they've mathed it out so heavily that
maybe the go don't go toggle is handled for you better by the coaching staff in the major league
level you know maybe in the minor leagues they're a little bit more like yeah you get the green light
if you want to you know guys are like well no i'm gonna get hurt i just want to get to the big
leagues so yeah yeah in those situations at least all right and and then you'll see some guys who
they're like yeah you have the green light if you want and they're in low a and they want to get on
a prospect list and they'll just they'll like steal 40 out of 65 attempts and you're just like what
am i supposed to do with that you're probably not going to steal that many bases in the big leagues
if you're going to keep being that successful i'll use more sound drops in the near future
and you'll know it's me trying to get on prospect lists for podcasters
when the production quality of the show goes up you'll know that's the reason why
trying to be noticed by the scouts sound drops the stolen bases of podcasting
unnecessary sound drops just littered rates and barrels it used to be a nice conversation
between two people and now it's just utter chaos with out of context jokes and stupid
sounds that don't make any sense.
You know, free agency is not a place to go get a middle infield,
which is why it's a little rough in places like San Francisco
because I just put up the best free agent second base and short stops,
and there are a grand total of six of them that put up more than one win last
year and of those six only one is below 30 and that's danzy swanson so it's a tough place to go
shop even though you have these four guys you know swanson turnerarts, Bogarts is not listed here because he hasn't officially declined the option yet. Bogarts, Turner, Swanson, and Correa, how many of them will be shortstops in three years, two years?
agency at a normal age you tend to lose that ability by the end of a long long-term deal other injuries real quick kind of simple question mulligan or not for these players i think you
mentioned brandon lau in passing i'm intrigued are you in for 2023 on brandon lau i am it was
it was a poor season and i know he has some weird splits and a really soft batting average
where it could be anywhere from 220 to 270.
But I think the power is real.
The max EV was still there.
The barrel rate wasn't, but I chalked that up to at least some to injury.
So I like to see that he had the best max ev that he's
had in the last three years uh even while he struggled with uh such a poor season so i'm gonna
buy brandon lau next year and you know it's not uh a 31 or 32 year old uh trying to come off injury
it's a 28 year old and i think that's significant. Going even younger for injured players,
Jazz Chisholm, whose ADP in early drafts
is already up from where it was last year.
Do you see enough signs of growth to buy in,
and do you trust that the injury he had
will be completely gone going into the next season?
I think that's a weird thing to happen,
is to miss that much time and your ADP go up.
But I guess the real uh, you know, the, the,
the real thing that we were worried about were the kind of the plate skills for him.
And he cut the strikeout rate, uh, in the, in the half season that he did and the power,
I guess there's been sort of up and down, uh, aspect to his power and he had a 17%
barrel rate last year. So, uh, believe it and uh i absolutely have him uh
circled as one of the few guys that i might uh you know jump out before pick 100 yeah had the uh
had the eligibility at both spots and is now just the second base only player so i guess he'd kind
of fit that other description of who's the exciting everyday young second base only player.
Well, Jazz Chisholm has become that guy.
I know you like Jonathan India as a really well balanced player going into this season.
It seemed like every possible injury happened to him.
We talked about Trevor Story on the last episode where it was like a mix of bad luck and chronic stuff.
And you just never seem to get healthy.
You're going to get a uh you're gonna get a
discount at least early in draft season on india i can't imagine there's anyone there to push him
for playing time so this one seems like a pretty easy right off 2022 and take the discount for 2023
yeah i may put india and jazz in a bucket and uh take the guy who falls to me i know the jazz
is better and more exciting um but there is an injury concern
there and if that means i end up with india then i just have to be careful because i don't like the
soft tissue injuries you know i like that his max ev was even better actually than 2021 uh so i think
the raw power was still there but i don't like that a player who stole 12 bases in 2021
only stole three in 2022
and had soft tissue hamstring injuries.
I don't like that at all.
So I have,
there's another way of saying
I have no idea how many bases
you'll steal next year.
Like I have no idea for a lot of players,
but this one is like a big red circle.
Like no idea. He lot of players, but this one is like a big red circle. Like, no idea.
He could steal anywhere from, like, literally he could steal anywhere from 0 to like 25 next year.
Don't you think?
Zero is the hamstring was really hurt and it's still a little bit hurt and he doesn't want to test it and he just doesn't steal bases.
Or maybe make it like 3 again, you know?
25 is the hamstring was hurt, but he fixed it.
He comes back, and the rules are great, and he just runs.
25's a lot.
Even with the new rules, I mean, I guess I thought his previous ceiling was more like 15.
Three to 20, then.
Three to 20.
15? 3 to 20 then.
3 to 20.
Ugh. That's a rough thing to kind of put
in your calculator and
gin up a value for.
I'd buy in more for like 7
to 8 and if you get a lot more than that,
terrific. You're getting him because he can be
a positive contributor in all five categories.
I think that's the main appeal.
I think I still see that. Look at that. The 21%
strikeout rate, 21.8% strikeout rate, that's actually above average.
The 8.6% swinging strike rate suggests that the strikeout rate could actually go lower.
His chase rate is good.
His walk rate wasn't great, but it was a bit of a lost season.
I could see his walk rate being more like 9%, 10% again next year.
That's what it was every year in the minor leagues.
So good plate skills, mostly an above average runner. 9-10% again next year. That's what it was every year in the minor leagues.
Good plate skills.
Mostly an above average runner.
The barrel rate was really good in 21
and the max EV was pretty
good in both years.
I see a pretty complete player still.
Last one because I have a temperamental
golden doodle suddenly standing
behind me looking like she needs something.
Jorge Polanco. Knee injury this year cost him a mental golden doodle suddenly standing behind me looking like she needs something uh jorge palanco
knee injury this year cost him a lot of time played i think 109 games am i doing the math
right on the fly 104 looks like based on the actual counter must have moved around a little
bit uh still hit 16 homers stole a handful of bases but the average dropped i just don't know
how many games he played where he was completely healthy. So there's that to sort of bake in here too.
And kind of in between the age
where you really worry about injuries
and being young, right?
Yeah, he's not young, but he's not old.
And is it an old 29?
No, it's a young 29 at least.
Yeah, and then there's some eligibility questions, given that Carlos Correa may leave town and Royce Lewis is coming back from yet another ACL tear.
There is not necessarily an obvious shortstop replacement, and nobody in Minnesota wants Jorge Polanco to play short.
I don't think,
because they have some PTSD from when it happened before.
So I don't know what's happening there, but playing time should be there.
He's still, you know, as bad as some aspects of his last season were,
he had a 119 WRC+.
You know, so he's going to be in the lineup.
you know so he's gonna be in the lineup um and i know the power went down at the same time that the the ball changed but the max v max ev went up and the barrel rates stay the same
and if you just got if you just even if you just pro rate out what he did to 600 plate appearances
you're talking about 20 homers and 5 steals.
So I think he's a good deep league
by-low.
I think he's a solid MI even for a
12-teamer because I don't think the playing time is
really in any danger at all. I think the
health track record going back to
2019 was actually really good prior
to this season, so I want to give him
the benefit of the doubt here. I think
you're right. Hitting on the barrel rate, it's still above 10% this year, even in a year where a lot of things
went wrong. Definitely in on Jorge Polanco. I think, as you can tell, there's a lot of values
that fell into the range we were talking about earlier. That run of pick 100 to pick 200,
all these guys that, for the most most part didn't crater this year.
Now you've got players that were going in the 50 to 100 range this season
falling down into the 100 to 200 range.
What are your ADPs for Polanco in India right now?
India 159, Polanco 140.
In on both if that's the price, for sure.
I love it, especially if you have
Brandon Rodgers as a
fallback plan.
I love
that group.
I think I'll be shopping there, to be honest.
Brandon Lau and Jazz Chisholm
are...
What are they going at? They're going up higher.
Chisholm is top
50. Lau is actually
in the same range as Polancoanca 147 so you're getting a
steep discount on all palanca will be a tough one for me he's not exactly the type of player that i
love but he is young and if he had a full season you're talking about a guy who could go 30 30 next
year so you know it'll be that'll be touch and go for me.
Like, I think Chisholm, Simeon Altuve, that'll, like, I'll be looking at them, you know, as.
I bet Jazz is the kind of player, if he's really healthy in the spring, he vaults up.
He could be one of those guys that gets into, like, the round two range all of a sudden.
At the very end of draft season in the high stakes market, he's the kind of guy that just, I like him.
He's playing really well.
He's got all the tools he could be.
And then,
then the value's gone.
It's like,
well,
you just crushed it.
You took the,
you took the possibility of having this guy that returns that kind of value
from 20 to 30 picks later.
And you,
you kind of put the expectation right on him by taking him that early.
Yeah.
I guess I,
I,
I'm reading between the lines and I,
I like him maybe where he is now,
especially in like early draft season,
DC draft season.
If you're drafting now,
if you're looking for, you know,
an off-season keeper league target,
I think, you know, Chisholm now
makes sense to get him before the hype
and not after the hype.
But I will, I think just generally, I'll have a difficult time now makes sense to get them before the hype and not after the hype.
But I think just generally I'll have a difficult time putting all my money down at the price it'll take
for Simeon Altuve and Jazz.
And I think especially with Lau falling into that 100s group,
if I have the choice later of Lau, India, Polanco,
choice later of lao india uh palanco you know even rogers like i think i feel like i can uh get better bang for my buck later on at the second base position yeah that's the sense i'm
getting as well just looking at how things are shifting from 2022 and taking the early early
look at 2023 we are going to. Hazel is going to get
a chance to go outside, so have
no fear. If you've got a question for us for
a future episode, ratesandbarrels
at theathletic.com is the email address.
Again, I apologize for going back to inbox
zero, but it was necessary because
it wasn't going to be done
the right way. I wasn't going to dig out of that
hole. On Twitter, you can find
Eno at Eno Saris. You can find me at Derek Van Riper.
We're going to record a little bit later in the week next week.
I've got some time off coming up.
If you're going to first pitch,
enjoy the trip.
It's always a blast.
It's going to be fun.
Eno will be there.
I will not.
Bring in some stuff plus beers.
Yes.
Oh,
that's awesome.
It was really good.
I had mine and it was delicious.
So highly recommend, but have safe travels if you're going. And was really good. I had mine. It was delicious. So highly recommend.
But have safe travels if you're going.
And we are back with you next week.
Thanks for listening. Thank you.