Rates & Barrels - 2022 Third Base Review & Arizona Fall League Observations
Episode Date: November 10, 2022Eno and DVR discuss the 2022 third base pool after Eno shares some of his observations from his annual trip to the Arizona Fall League. They examined the surprising consistency atop the position, the ...injuries that limited the value in the middle tier, and the handful of intriguing late options that will carry significantly higher ADP looking ahead to 2023. Rundown 0:30 Arizona Fall League Observations 19:13 Third Base Review 26:09 Focusing on Elite Options in 2023? 33:17 Rafael Devers' Second-Half Slide 40:03 The Fallback Players Are Fine 45:40 Jose Miranda and 2022's Late Risers 56:23 Better Prospects Coming in 2023? Follow Eno on Twitter: @enosarris Follow DVR on Twitter: @DerekVanRiper e-mail: ratesandbarrels@theathletic.com Subscribe to The Athletic at $1/month for the first six months: theathletic.com/ratesandbarrels Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to Rates and Barrels. It's Thursday, November 10th.
Derek Van Ryper here with Eno Saris as we continue our positional review series.
Third base will be the position we focus on today.
But first, an important question for Eno.
Eno, how was Arizona? How was first pitch?
It was a lot of fun.
I stayed hydrated and got to see some games.
A first ever in the Arizona Fall League, a home run derby,
which was weird because it went up against game six of the World Series,
which I was also watching.
of the World Series, which I was also watching. I had a moment where I was watching an 18-year-old first base prospect for the D-backs.
I believe his last name is De Los Santos, and he looks as if he's 45 in the face.
And a prospect I talked to at the Fall League said he is not a baseball player.
And he was hitting 117 mile per hour P missiles, you know, out of the park, second deck, you know, out of a small park.
That was happening as Jordan Alvarez hit a three-run homer in that game.
So a little bit of strange cognitive dissonance,
a little bit of kind of like, what's going on here?
And also at a scouting event to have a home run derby,
which was massively popular, more popular than any other game I had intended to,
and maybe more popular than the All-Star game, really, in terms of fan attendance.
In terms of scouting, not super useful,
although I was hanging out with a scout that mentioned that
at least you can kind of see where people's power is. So Eduardo Julian, who was a surprising entrant
into the home run derby,
because he's kind of like a 20 home run guy maybe,
that is all about on base.
Like that dude gets on base.
Anyway, Julian was in there
and he was trying to hit homers
and I don't think he even made it out of the first round.
One of the things you could tell right away was his homers are oppo center so like he the his swing when it hits for power is the opposite field so there was a kind of for me like oh
i think he might be like sort of a 15 to 18 homer hitter in the majors but maybe with a huge lbp um and you know
wasn't like a negative negative but it was like oh i see where his power is heston kirstad on the
other hand who uh you know smacked the ball around in the fall league and hit the ball hard every
time i saw him real nice sound off the bat which is uh one of the few scouting things I like to do.
That sounded like 102 because they don't have all the StatCast numbers there.
He was spraying it around in games and then showed that he can golf kind of like low inside, low pitches he can golf those out for homers so uh that's an interesting combo a guy who can kind of spray to all fields might have good plate coverage
and then his power is uh sort of low low inside you know as a lefty that's interesting because
sometimes you try they try to back foot you so if they're trying to back foot you with a slider and you've got low and inside power you might you might hit homers that way
while i think his contact rates and his ability to spray the ball speaks well for his batting
average so um i came away really excited about heston kirstead i think uh you know two years
away because of myocarditis related to covid. That's a tough situation to be in.
And yet he looks,
he looked,
he was actually one of my favorites.
Maybe my favorite overall,
which is saying something because Jordan Walker was there and he was
everybody else's favorite.
There was just something weird for me.
And I didn't,
I didn't know how to put my finger on it.
The types of players I like when I'm scouting
and it's definitely not my best foot
forward are
kind of like I've talked about it like sort of
fire
fire plug
fire safety fire hydrant
fire hydrant
you know just like there's a plug
word too anyway spark plug yeah spark plug fire hydrant you know just like there's a plug word too anyway um spark plug yeah spark plug
fire hydrant like like compact with like with whippy hands and like real fast bat speed i really
like that combo i don't even know who who the patron saint of that is but just like when i'm
watching i'm like oh i can see how fast the is, and I can see the hands look like they might be able to get to things.
So Walker is not that.
Walker is a really big dude who looks, to my eye, stiff in his swing across the top, and I don't really see the hands for the variability. To me, Walker is going to strike out 26% to 28% of the time in the major leagues.
I know that he gets to really good 90th percentile or max ev type stuff he definitely has uh power despite you know
to my eye not having the greatest um uh bat speed i mean it's weird i think how you generate the bat
speed makes different bat speeds look more you know what i mean like if you're just like a really
strong guy that comes through like this, like comes through kind of stiff,
then maybe the bat doesn't look as fast,
but is as fast as someone who kind of whips it through.
You know what I mean?
In terms of just how it appears. So I wouldn't be surprised if his bat speed is pretty good,
despite what I was saying,
but I do think he's kind of stiff.
And it is interesting because he struck out 27% of the time at high A
and 21.6 at double A,
but he still had a 16.4% swing strike rate at double A.
So I really see him as ending up on the higher end of that strikeout rate,
26, 27% of the time in the major leagues,
maybe with a good walk rate and good power rates,
but that makes him a little bit more of your traditional power threat guy
with like a 250
average uh maybe a 240 average but with speed so um i don't know i i i wonder if i uh if he's like
immediately jumping into like the nolan arenado like you know top five is his position type guy
like there was a little bit of like,
uh,
I don't,
I don't know if I,
I don't know if I see as like a superstar here.
So that was,
those are some things.
And then,
uh,
some down,
um,
down ballot,
uh,
observations.
Matt Mervis has a really good approach.
I think he's a little stiff too.
Uh,
but he has a really good approach.
So I think he will be that, um, you he has a really good approach. So I think he will be that,
you know,
two 50 hitting slugger guy.
But he,
he's seems really cerebral about his craft.
I I'm,
I'm doing a piece about taking control of your own career.
And he said that when,
you know,
so they had that five round draft because of covid
and he was one of the people that didn't go in the first five rounds and i said well that changed
the power structure like you could go to any team you wanted to they all had twenty thousand dollars
for you so how did you choose the the cubs and he said he made a spreadsheet where he had the
current for all the teams that were talking talking to, the current first baseman,
his production,
his age,
and his contract status,
their minor league
first baseman,
and their production
and age,
and then also
how many everyday
position players
they had produced
out of their system
in the last 10 years
or something.
And I was like,
well, yeah,
once you put it that way,
I can see how you could
exactly get to the Cubs.
He was looking at Rizzo in the final year of his contract, hadn't signed was like, well, yeah, once you put it that way, I could see how you could exactly get to the Cubs. You know,
he was like looking at Rizzo in the final year of his contract,
hadn't signed an extension.
He's going,
they don't have a first base prospect. And they turned out like Wilson Contreras and Brian and Rizzo.
And they turned out a bunch of,
and happen.
So they,
they turned out a bunch of position players.
So I thought that was interesting.
And then there was a couple of players there,
Colt, Keith and Nick York, who are kind of the, the, position players so i thought that was interesting and then there's a couple players there colt keith
and nick york who are kind of the the the body types that i like that kind of compact
baseball player um with whippy hands and the ability to make contact and they're both trying
to do the same thing which is take that ability to make contact and then unlock the power and
what's interesting about that is that power
lives out in front of the in front of the plate so york and keith in the past have been guys who
let the ball travel that helps your contact ability and you spray the ball right uh but if
you want to get to that power you have to start earlier that's how you get to power out in front
if you start earlier your strikeout rate goes up.
And so we've both seen Nick York and Colt Keith's strikeout rate goes up.
Now, Colt Keith in the Tigers organization
has succeeded in unlocking the power.
Nick York has not.
And so I don't know if that's going to continue,
but it is an important moment in their career.
And I asked Colt Keith about that, and he said,
I'm trying to sit 97 if the guy throws 95.
So Keith maybe doesn't have a position defensively.
I think he'll be able to do third base for them.
He's one of their more exciting names in the minor leagues,
and he's exactly the type of guy that scott bush
will like because if he comes from the farhan school colt keith uh has tiny tiny chase rates
like 18 type chase rates uh and also can put the bat in the ball and it looks like right now he can
barrel it so uh if you're just looking for a bat prospect that you know is on everybody's radar
and isn't you know super top top uh col Colt Keith might be an interesting guy to acquire this offseason.
Yeah, I bet as more sites and more analysts update their prospect list, he's going to start appearing probably at the back end of the top 100 somewhere.
I don't know, 50 to 100, somewhere in that range, depending on who saw him and what they like about him.
But he was interesting to me just from a pure numbers perspective in season.
Only played 48 games, I think, during the regular season at high A.
So 2023 is going to be a huge year for Colt Keith,
getting that bump up to double A to see if all those skills hold
against that next level of competition.
But definitely interesting to learn a little more about him
and Mervis being a big spreadsheet guy.
That's kind of a surprise.
I don't always think of young ballplayers as the guys that are going to be the most spreadsheet-oriented people on the planet.
Duke engineer or something.
Nice.
Okay.
So he's got a plan.
I like that.
Anything else from the Fall League, from the conference, from the Fall Stars game?
Anything else that caught your eye?
Because you were my eyes, ears, and liver out there this year.
Yeah, well, I took that bullet for you.
Everyone missed you.
I was asking about you.
And then the other thing was I was on a couple of panels for trying to decide the trends and also what's going to happen with the new rules.
And it's just interesting that there's not really a consensus.
I saw a simulation of a model
of the new shifting rules
where it might add 0.1 runs per inning.
That's a massive change in the aggregate
if you're thinking about it.
That's like, you know, we might jump a run per game.
It's a big jump if that happens, yeah.
It's a really big jump,
and it puts pressure on strikeout rate.
You really want to have pitchers that strike guys out.
Think about the Cardinals pitching staff and how they don't strike guys rate. You really want to have pitchers that strike guys out. Think about the Cardinals
pitching staff and how they don't strike guys out. If all of a sudden you don't have the shift,
maybe they are more in trouble. Then you've got also pressure on teams to have at least one lefty
in the bullpen in the rotation because lefty batters as a group are going to take a bigger lefty batters as a group are going
to take a bigger jump forward than righty batters because lefty batters are more affected by this
shift i still don't know if it's going to be a the funny thing about fantasy is you know do we care
about these huge trends as much as we care about how each particular player is going to be affected
and i still don't know if there's going to be huge uh jumps but
derrick cardi showed that somebody like anthony rizzo who i think uh hit 238 last year uh could
hit as high as 40 points higher i think 35 40 points higher but that's that's if you give a hundred percent of the difference to next year
right you want to regress that because you don't like it does something you know he's also he's
not going to be exactly the same person he was last year right so there's like the players talent
is going to be changing um and then uh you know will teams find ways, like, will they start doing the left fielder plays, you know, rover and right field stuff?
You know, will they start adjusting that way?
So, and then there's just, for me, like, a skepticism that any one rule change will, like, make one player way better.
You know what I mean?
Like, it can change the game overall, but will it make one player like,
will one player play exactly the same way as last year and have a 45 point
higher average next year?
Like I just,
there's just,
I have this like weird internal skepticism.
That's what's how it's going to work out.
But,
uh,
it could be massive changes to the game as a whole and still not be that massive for any one player.
So I can't find a consensus in myself and I'm the king of Wafflers.
So I'm just going to throw that back and forth.
We're going to talk about it more in the preseason.
And as this goes on, there's going to be more research in the fantasy space and in other spaces.
We're going to talk about it all offseason and then we'll finally get to see what it looks like but if you've got an opinion on it um next year is going
to be really interesting when if you act on your opinion and you and you and you and you go hard on
whatever you know wherever you think it's going uh you may end up profiting for it.
Yeah, so I wonder what the most common strategies are going to be. I think there's going to be a lot of people who look at hitters who lost hits to the shift,
as we talked about, geez, probably two months ago now.
It's been a little while since we did that.
I think that's going to be the main thing that a lot of people do on the hitting side.
Seager, Olsen, Freeman, Soto.
Yeah, those types of players are going to get bumps or people are going to try and
punt batting average with a core of players like that and then hope that they actually do really
well in batting average and then have everything else covered and that it's a crush year, a year
where you can win an overall championship if you are right about something like that and you've got a bunch of players
that kind of fall into that bucket.
I do think the possibility
of people pushing even harder on strikeouts
is kind of interesting
because it wasn't necessarily something
that I've seen in the early, early 2023 drafts yet.
But as time passes,
as people think more and more
about how next season could be different,
maybe that'll be one of the corrective actions.
We'll see strikeouts go at even more of a premium on the pitching side.
It also runs counter to some of the newest research when it comes to pitching.
If you think about it, something like Stuff Plus is trained against run value. And so there's inherently a decision being made there by the model to say, you know,
we're just looking like to kind of not throw dips defensive, you know, defense independent
pitching out the window, but to say maybe it's not completely right, right?
Like if you think about it, if you train your model against run value, you're saying, how
do pitchers get outs, right? And you're willing to consider command, you know, locations, if you train your model against run value, you're saying, how do pitchers get outs?
Right.
And you're willing to consider command, you know, you know, locations.
You're willing to consider run like like home run suppression, which people are like, maybe that exists.
Maybe it doesn't.
You're willing to consider it hit suppression, which, you know, for a long time, people think didn't exist at all.
That's dips. Dips says pitchers have no control over hits.
Once the ball's in play, it's 30% of the time it's a hit, no matter what.
And so stuff has been like, oh, no, but maybe there are certain pitch shapes and velocities and locations that suppress hits and pitchers that can do those things over and over again. And so you get somebody like Drew Rasmussen and Tyler Wells
where you're like, I know the strikeouts aren't there,
but the ERA is the run values there.
They're doing something to suppress this.
So that's interesting to think about, you know,
with regards to now there's more pressure on strikeout rate
because of shifts and the fact that stuff plus has only been trained
on 20 21 and 22 in terms of that's the that's the the training data right so that's a different time
than before and now that's coming up this is going to be a different league so as soon as we can start
you know putting more 2023 training data into the model to get
better again but in the meantime we're kind of naked so one thing that i'm trying to do combat
this is to work on creating stuff plus projections where we're projecting it out now you can sort of
see a projected strikeout rate thanks to pitching plus right and um And it'll be an overall projection.
So you can kind of start to make some of your own granular decisions.
You can sort by projected strikeout rate
by Stuff Plus as opposed to, you know,
the other models that are out there.
And then you can still kind of
cue close to strikeout rate,
but still get benefit from Stuff Plus.
Yeah, a lot of exciting stuff ahead
in these next few months.
And before we
start looking forward we will continue to look back and take the last few drops that we can out
of the 2022 season the last few things we can learn before we move on to 2023 so let's be clear
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So the main focus today is the third base review.
And I was a little bit underwhelmed looking at the top end of this pool, you know,
because the best players at the position mostly did what they were supposed to do.
Jose Ramirez, I mean, he was exactly the player you thought and could have been even better if not for the thumb injury.
Rafael Devers, Manny Machado did what you expected.
I mean, there was a late second half fade that we'll talk about with Devers,
but up and down through the first six or seven third basemen on the board,
it's almost like they earned exactly what they were expected to one after another.
It's the weirdest position because it's almost chalk, right?
It's the chalk position.
There are almost no surprises.
I'm picking this number because it makes my point,
but if you could see the spreadsheet that DVR has made for these episodes,
it's so clear.
$19 earned value, right?
So $19 earned value among third basemen.
The only people that created $19 of value at third base
are the first seven players that were drafted
and Brandon Drury.
That's it.
And Brandon Drury was very last.
Brandon Drury was just a pure afterthought during draft season
and then an early season pickup most places.
But this was not
the position for surprises this was not the position for sleepers this was not the position
to be like oh i'll wait on a guy it did not work out if you wake up waited on a guy you know uh
josh donaldson at 168 three dollars and 70 cents value uh uh juan mancada at 159 uh you know $3.70 value. Juan Mankata at $1.59.
What was it?
I lost him in there.
Negative value.
Minus $1, yeah.
Luis Urias, one of my favorite sleepers, only $3.
Gio Urshela, Patrick Wisdom, Eugenio Suarez.
There were some late guys that had some strikeout issues
or some power issues that weren't sexy,
but you knew were going to get playing time.
Those guys returned double-digit value.
But do you think of them as sleepers?
They were just kind of like,
oh man, I missed everybody.
I guess I should take this guy. or like guys you'd have in a dc because they had multiple positions you know where you're like oh george shellac can
play third and short i like that so you know there are ways to describe them but like in terms of
like a true sleeper at the position that was gonna outperform his draft costs when i think
of sleepers going in who who do you think of?
I think of Brian Hayes, maybe Anthony Rendon in a way,
like sort of a bounce-back sleeper type,
and then maybe Luis Urias.
And if you picked those three even,
you had a poor time at third base this year.
Yeah, I think the other two, the older player that I thought was popping later in draft season
as a possible rebound candidate was Eugenio Suarez,
and I think that was definitely a Derek Cardy Twitter thread at one point
where it was like, hey, before the shoulder injury,
before the shortened season in 2020,
look what he was doing year over year over year.
Why are we letting this guy fall this far?
He was a $15 player outside the top 200 overall in ADP,
so that ended up being good.
Then if you go down to Alec Boehm,
that turned out pretty good as well for as late as he went
because Boehm fell quite a bit during draft season in 2022
compared to his previous levels.
$15 player down there, yeah.
But a lot of the other cheap players that did well
also did it with pretty light power.
Gio Urshela, very light power, a lot of batting average.
Boehm, not that great power.
Yeah, Boehm's in that group too.
Yandy Diaz, I mean, it's $11, but is it really that great?
I mean, I guess it's better than some of the alternatives.
But third base is also, it's kind of like getting a middle infielder
who doesn't steal, right?
To get a third baseman who doesn't hit for power.
Then you're like, yes,
I know what the value calculator is telling me.
I know the value calculator says that Gio Urshela
was a fine third baseman that returned $10 of value
and helped my team.
But at the same time, if I'm playing in the third,
I've got a power hole somewhere else I got to fill.
I was trying to
think about why why this position looks this way and I think it's because it is a position where
if you don't have a stud you absolutely can mix and match now and it's kind of part it's treated
a little bit more like second base for teams that don't have the clear everyday player.
I wonder how much that'll change
with the shift because we saw
that research that said the shift
will put pressure on second and third defensively.
So
you're fine if you're Suarez but
there's some guys on here. Bobby Dahlbeck,
Eduardo Escobar,
you know, I don't know
who has bad defense in this position
I guess it's already starting to kind of move towards
better defenders
yeah it is for sure I think you
leak playing time when you share like
this and the positions
where that happens I think are positions now
where you have to be a little more
aggressive early on
you could have survived in the middle.
You could have survived with Ryan McMahon or Matt Chapman
where they were going to pick 140, 150, 160 in that range.
Brian Hayes was a guy that we both liked.
We both liked him for a while.
I think we both had reason to believe he was going to unlock more in-game power,
and it just didn't happen.
It's frustrating because I think they're still going to give him another full season to figure it all out if not more i think i'll probably have
shares again i mean i just love that he steals bases and and i think he'll hit for a better
average going forward considering the strikeout rate and then the the raw power is still there
i don't know why the barrel rate keeps going down.
It doesn't make any sense.
The barrel rate keeps going down, and the max EV keeps going up.
Like, what is going on?
I know it's too many grounders.
I get it.
But his grounder rate also went down from 57% in 2021 to 49% this year.
All the indicators for me are going in the right direction.
Still has a good chase rate.
Still has a good contact rate. Really good good contact rate and still has good max power the only thing that's not there is the barrel rate like he's gotta unlock that andy haynes help me out man
unlock this unlock this very very frustrating though because yeah the barrel rate going down
in the face of other things getting better is just puzzling.
You would have thought this was the year we'd start to see some improvement.
So maybe you get more of a discount on Hayes relative to where he was going in 2022.
That's definitely a possibility.
But seeing how this played out, are you going to continue to be aggressive in the early rounds?
Is getting an elite third baseman one of your core roster priorities?
Seems kind of like that's what this is screaming at me.
Although I guess I would point out that there was a middle class.
Muncy, Turner, LeMahieu, McMahon, and Chapman.
Like it really was chalk.
But you could survive in the middle class too.
Because as long as you missed that anthony rendon landmine uh muncie turner lemahew mcmahon and chapman averaged basically ten dollars
so that's not your 19 dollar first baseman a third baseman but it's still there is a middle
class you know what i mean like it's still and hayes was just below that so um i think that i'm
a little bit more likely if i'm gonna bite uh at hayes again
which i probably will uh just more likely to pick him up at ci or util or you know a second third
baseman and a dc that type deal where um i'm not depending on him and it's more of like you know
could you take a step forward and and help this team more than their draft costs so i'm thinking of him more as
a positionless sleeper not someone where i want to put him at third base so um you know i could
i could shop in in that um in that middle class again um you know i think mcmahon is fine i think
chapman is fine lemay who could have a better year next year. Muncy should have a better year next year. So, you know, any one of those guys is fine. I don't necessarily have to reach for like Alex Bregman, who is clearly the worst of the top, if I think the middle class is there for me.
think that I don't want to make third base the place where I'm picking late you know I want to stay out of the Bobby Dahlbeck Jonathan VR Heimer Candelario Luis Urias Nikki Lopez you know Josh
Harrison Bobby down you know that whole group you know like I don't want to I don't want to be
shopping down there and Donaldson's going to be in there next year, too. So, you know, I want to get my third baseman before pick 200.
That's almost a real rule.
That's almost a fast rule for me.
Donaldson's going to go really late.
So if you want to take a chance in the D.C.
Third baseman in the D.C.
Yeah.
I mean, pick 400 is a possibility for him.
So I think there will be some young players getting opportunities.
We saw Bobby Witt Jr. added third base eligibility,
so he'll at least have it for this season.
He's up in the first round.
There are people in that organization that think he's going to end up there long-term.
In the short term, I don't really see a real defensive problem,
but the fact that he split games there in his
first year and people in the organization think he's going to end up there you kind of where the
smoke there's fire like he may in a keeper league it's something i think about he may not be at
short for a super long time but uh he's an impact bat so i don't know how much you care so the really
early 2023 adps you know jose ramirez early first round wit top 10 Jose Ramirez, early first round, Witt, top 10, Machado
back at the first round. Now, he basically was a first
rounder going in the second round this past season.
Devers hasn't really moved at all.
Austin Riley kind of backed
up 2021. I think
maybe I was in a large group
of people that believe this. I thought 2021
was going to be the best possible season
from Austin Riley. He came out with five more homers
and proved that it actually might not be his best season.
He could have won more level or more seasons
that are similar in quality to these last two.
Arenado's inside the top 50,
and then you get this big drop.
Bregman, even with what he was doing in the postseason
in early drafts, has been discounted.
I think he's going to start moving up
because it's become increasingly clear
that for the better part of the last two seasons,
he wasn't healthy.
But for the later part of this one and the playoffs,
he actually was, and the performance was coming back
to the previously expected levels.
Yeah, it's true.
And, you know, Bregman and Machado both give me
this, uh this an interesting vibe
which is
they're really good players
and
Machado's going to end up top 3
in the MVP race
with like
these weird soft barrel rates
I don't understand it
here are the other players that had the same barrel rate as manny
machado last year juan mancada josh donaldson and gunnar henderson uh i had to keep that was
like a low number there for gunnar but isn't that weird to you uh then again man machado had the
highest hard hit rate of the group.
And the highest max EV.
So he is hitting the ball hard.
And maybe that's not super useful.
But Bregman was also, by barrel rate, not in the top 30 among third base.
That's just not really his strength.
That's just not what he does.
And that's sort of what Manny's like,
right?
Like Manny,
I mean, Manny's better than Bregman,
but Manny doesn't strike out and he walks and he'll steal you a few bases and he hits for enough power.
And because of that strikeout rate,
he's going to drive in a ton of runs and he's had better,
better barrel rates in the past.
And so maybe that'll go back up.
I think he's a good bet but
it is funny that you know i fetishize barrel rate and i love it uh but you know you have
a 30 year old uh manny and a 28 year old uh bregman with these kind of poor barrel rates
relative to their production that are going to be in the top there. Does it matter to you at all?
It matters
some.
This is where
DVR picks nits and people get upset.
Is Manny going to be behind Devers
for you next year?
Probably
not.
But because
Devers will be slightly cheaper,
I'll probably end up with more Devers
because the difference between them is so small.
This is the problem.
I think when Manny Machado returns first round value
and goes at first round ADPs,
I go away.
And when Manny Machado falls a round
or even a round and a half,
whatever it might be,
that's when I'm in so it
just it all my interest in him yeah i was really happy to get him you know he was my second round
pick in in in my main this year and you know there was a couple places where i was really
happy to get him a second round when he goes in the first i'm just like no i mean i could get i
see it you know i see it and maybe he returned $32 this year.
Was the second best third baseman.
Out of position, we just said that it doesn't run deep.
And it's not like he costs you in steals.
He'll probably steal another five bases at least next year.
What do you make of Devers, his second half?
He's just weirdly unproductive in the second half.
I think he hit 22 homers in his first 86 games and only five in his last 55.
He hit.324 in the first half, dropped down to.249 in the second half.
Strikeout rate, I'm looking at the WRC Plus difference too.
The strikeout rate wasn't that different.
He went from 18% to 19.4%, so that doesn't really answer it.
He walked more in the second half.
So what happened?
Was he hiding an injury?
Is there something else that changed with Devers that we don't know about?
I don't know why he was so good in the first half
and why he fell so hard in the second half.
Yeah, I'm looking at his o-swing you know i'd love to do
that rolling o-swing graph on fan graphs um and uh even though he's not good at that it it improved
over the course of the season right um that's where you said he walked more in the second half
you know he wasn't it wasn't because he was swinging at terrible stuff,
even though he does that a lot.
I look at his fly ball rate over time,
and his fly ball rate was higher in the second half.
One thing I was thinking about is that
people talk about him as having some problem with his velo, right?
He's a guy who hits secondary as well.
But I think the book on him is to kind of buzz him, you know, to buzz him with the fastball.
So I'm looking right now at his production against four seamers by month last year.
Four seamers over 96 miles an hour and uh he slugged on four seamers over 96 miles an hour he slugged 125 in august and 143 in september
and in a related matter uh those were the two of the three months
he saw the most four-seamers over 96.
So I think that's a big part of what's going on.
Now, wasn't there some injury,
like a hand injury,
or was that the year before?
Scrolling back through the updates now,
because I don't remember anything being reported
that kept him out for a long time. He had a
hamstring injury
that cost him some time in July
in the very first couple days of
August, but it wasn't a long injury.
He was 21 when he had a hand injury
in the playoffs and stuff.
Yeah, it must have been 21.
Back injury, a little bit in July.
Called lower back
pain back in early July.
He slugged 923 in May and won 167, over 1,000 in June
against four-seamers over 96.
And then he just went in the tank.
So, oh, let me look at where these are actually placed.
So the four-seamers he saw late.
Okay, they were above the zone and high and tight. at where these are actually placed. The four seamers he saw late. Okay.
They were above the zone and high and tight.
And tight.
It was a little bit out. Let me see
when he was slugging well in June.
Where did he see them?
They were...
Oh...
That's
interesting.
They expanded the zone above the zone on him.
That's interesting.
So later when he was slugging really poor on four-seamers,
they were outside of the zone up.
So when they were pitching him up, they went outside of the zone.
And it looks like he was still swinging at them.
That's what I see in august and
september um so he's expanding the zone on pitches especially up out of the zone and it's going
really poorly for him that's i mean is that does that raise the level of they've figured him out took a little time to do it i mean the book was always
on him that that he was really good but he chased right that's that's a but that i've said every
time i've talked about him i think oh man that's difficult you're not really getting a discount i
mean he's going early early drafts going around pick around pick 20. So it's not as though people are backing off.
Yeah, tell me what the ADP is for the top four.
It goes Ramirez, Witt, Machado, Devers.
And Riley's right there with Devers.
I think when we talked about a midseason,
Riley versus Devers was something we thought could become a toss-up.
So it's kind of funny to see those two next to each other.
I mean, Riley versus Devers, if you had to make the decision right now,
you're drafting today for next season.
Riley.
You're taking Riley if the price is equal.
Yeah, I think I have to as well.
So I have Devers as last of that group, I think.
How about Devers versus Arnauto?
That's a 30-pick difference right now in terms of where they're going.
That's probably a bigger difference than there should be.
Yeah, I think I would just look at at arenado and be like i'm gonna pass there is a little bit of game of chicken there right so so that's really interesting so devvers
is the last of like sort of the elite group and then you've got a 30 30 pick difference to arenado
and then bregman's going to be around arenado somewhere he? He'll get there. He's 35 picks behind him now,
but I bet he'll close some of that gap.
So you're going to look at Devers and be like,
I like him.
The auction calculator says I like him,
but I've got this thing about,
oh man, they really kind of figured him out late last season.
I'm just going to pick something else.
I'm going to pick a closer here or a starter.
I'm going to do something different
because I think I can go get arenado and bregman you know in the next round or in you know 30 picks
yeah next round because you're you had to finish your round and then whatever right so yeah i'll
just take i'll just take arenado or bregman the next time we come around what if they both go
then you're in the middle class then you just took a dive from Bregman to Muncy or McMahon.
Yeah, you're back to the guys that got hurt last year
or have some kind of major flaw,
or the younger guys who just haven't done it for very long.
I mean, Gunnar Henderson.
So then you have to be like,
you have to not only be willing to wait for Arnott on Bregman,
which I think is defensible and fine,
have to not only be willing to wait for arnott on bregman which i think is defensible and fine but know that there's a risk that you are taking a third baseman around 150 that's
you're hoping will give you ten dollars value i think i'd rather have an early third baseman
but i'm also not going to panic because i think there are some mid-tier players that are good
enough i think when you look back at the consistency we were talking about, Matt Chapman was fine.
Matt Chapman's not really going that much
earlier than he did last year.
Turner returned 12 bucks somehow.
McMahon's cheaper. I still believe
in Anthony Rendon, so yeah,
I'll wear the doofus
crown on this one.
He hasn't been playing. He's been hurt.
I don't think he has a skill set
that's going to just collapse.
I think it's just a matter of staying on the field.
If he stays on the field, you get him at pick 200,
you're going to be really happy with that.
If he's broken all the time and he's a younger version of Josh Donaldson,
well, I'm really sorry for that.
But I think he's in my group of, oh, crap, I don't have a third baseman early.
What combination of players am I going to get in the middle round
so I think can bail me out of it?
And I don't think you would,
clearly you would not take Rendon as your starting third baseman
without someone else who's third base eligible as part of your core.
You need to get a second one.
I hope that's very clear and obvious.
But then if you're looking back at last year
and you come out of the draft next year
with Rendon and Cabrian Hayes,
and you're like, oh, looks, I got the old guy
and I got the young guy, and I'll be fine.
Look back at last year.
You're way behind your peers.
I am the golden retriever on this show,
and I thought that was a good idea.
If it was a good idea last year, I'm going to try it again.
I'm going to try it again at a discount.
There's another interesting thing that came out of the panels I was on.
Rob Silver was talking about how the NLDH created not specifically $15
$5 players but
basically the value
that you would get from $15 $5
players
by opening up this new roster spot
so that
made me think that
around and then you have
to think about
just how tough pitching is is around five dollars
i'm not as interested in those players anymore on the offensive level i think around and around
five dollars projected value i'm more likely to take the picture and then hope I can just find a $5 player. And looking back on this situation, I think going into the season,
you would have projected Juan Mankata as easily a $5 player, right?
And Cabrian Hayes and Josh Donaldson and Eduardo Escobar,
all those guys that went between $150 and $200,
you would have predicted as five dollar players um
some of them ended up as five dollar players a lot of them didn't i think that's super fungible
at that point um you might as well just go down to the eugenio suarez uh geo urshela packer wisdom
crowd hassan kim you know it's like uh i think and and over the course of the season those guys are
bubbling up if you just held on to josh donaldson at third base all season that is rough dude
getting three dollars out of your third baseman is rough especially since that cost you the chance
to get a pitcher there um so that's just a just a little asterisk is that
the five dollar position player has become less valuable to me because of the nldh
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.
This is for you.
The Canadian Armed Forces.
A message from the Government of Canada.
It's kind of a philosophical question.
Do you find it more difficult to cut a player like Josh Donaldson,
someone at least on the wrong side of 30?
I realize he's even a few years older than that.
But who still projects well and is still barreling the ball and isn't chasing.
Right.
Are you more likely to get caught holding that player
and absorbing more of that disappointing season than you are with a young player?
If you take a chance on this year,
it'll be someone like Josh Young around pick 200.
Are you going to be quicker and more willing to cut the high ceiling young
player if it's not working out?
I mean,
and that's assuming you don't get the obvious cue of option to triple a,
which then is clear in a mixed league drop indication.
But like Bobby Dalbeck,
man,
I would,
I would never would have held on to Bobby Dalbeck man yeah i would i there's i never
would have held on to bobby dalbeck and and heimer candelario i never would have held on to him in
like a nfbc situation i held on to him in some keeper situations but you know i yeah those guys
i would never have held on to i don't think i don't think i held on to urias actually i think
i dropped and picked up louis urias a couple times over the course of the season you know like i was like i'm not i'm not hanging around for this you know um but uh yeah there
were some leagues where i held on to josh donelson and juan macada too long um and they just make you
that's why that's another reason why i think the five dollar player is a little bit of a siren song
you know it's like oh five dollars of siren song. You know, it's like, oh, $5 of production.
This is actual production.
It's real production, except there's 15 new $5 players, you know?
And they're much more fungible than you might think,
especially since projections around that spot, you just,
yeah, it could be $5.
It could be $0.
And the projections wouldn't be necessarily that wrong.
You know what I mean?
Like, there's the error bars on it a five dollar projection means that he could be
anywhere from zero to ten without really breaking the projection system and that means there's a lot
of zeros there a few other pop-up guys from 2022 that will be much earlier picks going into 2023, Jose Miranda is a top 150 guy
now going into next season.
I liked him a lot as a prospect,
as a guy that really did well
in the upper levels of the twin system,
and it seemed like there were
some opportunities for him.
So I had him a few places.
I didn't have him everywhere
because it wasn't crystal clear
at the beginning of the season.
Ended up being 15 homers
in his rookie season.
We saw enough homers in 2021.
It was 30 between AA and AAA in 127 combined games
where I can talk myself into one more level being a possibility for him.
I'm curious.
Even though the max power and the barrel rates aren't amazing.
Right, but we see that from other players, the position,
and we kind of look past it with them.
So I guess it's a question of do we trust the playing time enough
for Miranda to say, yeah, let's go ahead and let's do this again.
Let's get the follow-up year because there could be 20-plus homers there
as he enters the season as a clear-cut starter.
I think I do.
With that, it's a poor chase rate, poor walk rate, poor defensive value,
not great barrel rate, so there's a lot of negatives there.
However, it is a plus contact rate and probably enough power to hit 20 to 25 homers.
If you think about the Twins twins i know that they've put up
good offenses but i think they need to put a premium on offense you know as they are currently
constructed now can they spend that career money on kare again or somebody else that's certainly
possible but as they are currently constructed i need miranda at first base. I don't want Luis Rize at first base. I want Kirilov in the outfield.
So I think he's fine.
I think he'll play.
Especially since DH is open for them now.
Miguel Sano is gone.
Yeah, that helps a lot too, just in terms of having a few spots to play.
Miranda and Alex Kirilov, if he's healthy, or Trevor Larnak,
those guys all should have larger roles over the course of 2023.
Somebody might lose out of their group considering Miranda, Kirilov, and Larnak
are probably all competing for DH left field and first base.
Now you're saying, hey, there's three guys, there's three jobs, that's fine.
But that assumes no more moves.
And also
no more moves at first base where there are guys out there.
They could sign like Jose Abreu. Would that be that weird for this team?
It wouldn't be. No, probably not. They've got to Jose Abreu. Would that be that weird for this team? It wouldn't be.
No, probably not. They've got to figure out
what they're going to do at shortstop, whether that's eventually
turn it over to Royce Lewis
and just with Correa
being a free agent, just saying,
we're not really going to replace him with the other free agents.
We're going to replace him internally.
They need to spend money on pitching.
He's coming off a second ACL tear, right?
Yeah, so it's just hard to rely on him, at least from the start of the season.
I can't imagine he's 100% on opening day.
That would be an incredible recovery.
Hopefully, he could make it, but I don't think they would bank on that.
That seems like a pretty risky thing to do at that position.
And Polanco moving back to short is not something that most Twins fans want to hear about.
No, no, they do not.
I do like Josh Young, though, of the young players.
I get the sense that the Rangers are going to turn that
spot over to him. We've talked about this before.
If not for the foot injury
and the time he's missed, he
probably would have debuted a lot sooner.
I think he saw so
little time in the big leagues that it's difficult
to even take much away
from the results. I know
he struck out 38% of the time.
For the brief time, he was with the Rangers this year, Eno,
but we're talking about 102 plate appearances.
And even the time at AAA.
Yeah, even the time at AAA this year
didn't look nearly as good as what he's doing at AAA
a season ago when he was healthier by comparison.
I'm looking a lot more at those 2021 numbers
and thinking and projecting off of that as opposed to what happened this year.
You know, it'd be interesting to think about when you draft.
And, you know, we talk about spring training numbers not meaning anything.
But however, they're still playing baseball.
And, you know, I think it's a little bit overstated how people say, oh, it's inconsistent competition.
Young will probably be playing the early innings, right?
Like if you've ever watched a spring training game,
there's the early innings and late innings.
Young will probably be starting the early innings,
so he'll probably be hitting against decent pitchers, right?
And it's baseball, and it's high-level baseball still,
and it's information.
And one of the few things that comes out early is strikeout rate
so if you want to like watch for something on young watch his strikeout rate in spring training
it may seem like oh i don't care about spring training but we might get signal out of that noise
if he's striking out 20 of the time in spring training i'm a lot more interested you know what
i mean that looks a lot more like the Josh Young we saw
pre-injury. He's striking out 20%
of the time in swing training. I'm not necessarily projecting
him for 20% in the regular season,
but he might beat that 28%
projected strikeout rate he's got right now.
And then if he beats that 28%
strikeout rate, then he beats the
.237 average he's projected for by
Steamer. And if he beats the.237 average
he's projected for, he's a.250 hitter with 25 bombs next year and probably some stolen bases and probably in the middle
third of a good lineup too yeah so that that that looks like somebody i want i like the chase rate
i like the barrel rate in the short sample last year i like the minor league numbers like
yeah i like him so i think if I'm in that mid-tier,
he's among the players that I'm going to try
and pair with someone who goes a little earlier
because I want some ceilings
and some of the mid-tier guys
don't necessarily have a lot of that.
And by the way, the first player I thought of
when you said spring training stats
and not completely dismissing that,
remember Cody Bellinger's spring in 2022?
18 strikeouts and 36 at-bats. The warning signs
were there, and I was more on the side of, oh, come on. He's just a little rusty,
still dealing with the long-term effects of that shoulder injury. I'm sure I tried to convince
myself that MVP Bellinger was just around the corner, and that was actually a pretty good red
flag. There's a pretty good red flag.
There's a really good piece on Ballinger and it ended up being not so much
the shoulder injury as a foot
injury that he had.
The person who wrote that piece just got hired
by the Dodgers. I recommend looking that up.
Prospects Live, Cody Ballinger.
I'm a forever Cody Ballinger apologist.
I will pick him
three years from now when he's
on his third team.
The other name that I was just circling,
the San Francisco Giants have a big choice to make right now.
They are looking at Evan Longoria.
They can pay him $5 million, I believe, to go away
or $13 million to play for them next year.
Either way,
I think JD Davis is an important name for them because I don't know that
they're going to sign Brandon Bell.
There's just something about how it ended and the fact that they're talking
about wanting to get younger and how well JD Davis played when he came over
that it's possible that Evan Longoria plays third and J.D. Davis plays first
for them next year um you know I think that's in the realm of possibilities but either way
J.D. Davis returns zero dollars which is not negative uh and is one of these is he kind of
like is he almost like Drury-esque why didn't we think of him when we were talking about Drury
it's a it's a veteran who can do certain things and has opportunity
he's a barreler that can play
probably multiple spots in the infield if
needed likely the two corners
universal DH definitely helps him
no doubt about that
and the question is can
can the Giants get the strikeout
rate closer to where it was
pre 2021 because he's been
above 30% going back to the start of the 2021 season.
Prior to that, we saw a 24.5% back in the shortened year.
We saw a 21.4% back in 2019.
It seems like it's in there,
but he is going to be 30 years old in April.
Or is he a guy that can hit the ball hard enough
that he can strike out 30% of the time and still be valuable?
I mean, last year he had a 56% hard hit rate.
Easily a career best.
It's got to be.
Let me see.
That would be if it...
Oh, my God.
If he qualified for the batting title,
that would have been third best in baseball
behind Aaron Judge and Jordan Alvarez
and ahead of Kyle Schwaber. Schwaber.aber that's pretty good that is pretty good i take that i will take that so
that is enough for me to put jd davis as you know i i don't know if i'll push like you think about
i think about dcs with a player like this you know what i mean sure like is he is he like a second
first baseman or is he a third first base he's right he's right in that territory probably a third i would yeah i would
treat him as a third because there is still within his normal range of outcomes he is the darren
rough replacement and he's more part-time player he could be a part-time player he's younger darren
rough if it doesn't really fun third first baseman and i would say be careful about fun third first baseman. And I would say, be careful about your third first baseman.
Do not make him a prospect.
I have made my third first baseman a prospect in the past,
and it has bitten me in the butt.
This is what we've been talking about, right?
First base and third base, these are places where
you can go into part-time play,
and it can get hairy early.
There's usually a guy in the organization,
an older player,
that can play both those spots well enough
with power and ample glove.
That's sort of the way it goes.
Just someone who's good enough
if you are bad to take your job,
even if they're not good enough
to be the long-term solution.
I had no use out of Llewyn Diaz as my third
first baseman in DC's last year.
That's tough. I would recommend
going in a different direction.
I do think this is a better year
for the young third baseman
though. We'll count Gunnar Henderson as part of that.
Josh Young's part of that. Jordan Walker
even though he's going to probably move
into the outfield to get that playing time because of Aronado., even though he's going to probably move into the outfield to get that playing time because of Arenado.
He looks like he's going to step right out of the Arizona Fall League into playing time.
He's a third-base eligible player that we're pretty excited about that can do some things outside of the top 200 in early drafts.
We'll see what happens there.
Brett Beatty, I'm really interested to see if the Mets want another stop gap on the
roster,
a short-term bridge to possibly wait a little longer on him.
But I think there's a chance he could just open up the year as the
starter at third base,
or at least open up the year with a large share of the job at third
base with a chance to earn the everyday role.
Yeah.
Especially because it's a team that frankly is a little bit bloated
like financially right like they think how much more can they spend and they've got Escobar on
the roster would you say he took a step back last year I mean I think at least he took a step back
defensively uh you know offensively he was kind of where he was last year, but in terms of at least fan graphs,
defensive value was his worst year of his career.
And that,
I think passes a little bit,
the eye test for me.
So Escobar for me,
I want to be pushing him towards,
especially with the shift,
with the shift this year,
I feel like Eduardo Escobar,
you kind of,
you know,
we're putting more defensive pressure on third and second.
We may want to push Escobar not necessarily into DH,
but closer to roles where his defense doesn't matter as much,
is what I'm saying.
So if that's true, then you play Escobar at DH,
and maybe start a game with him at third base or something
and move him somewhere else, depending on what's going on.
And then Beatty becomes a better defensive player for you at third base,
I would assume, given that Escobar's defense is falling off.
So there's some moving parts.
There's also, right now, McNeil is listed as playing half the time
in right field ahead of Marcana.
If that's true, then you can move Escobar
to second and play Beatty
and just play McNeil as an outfielder.
That's a possibility.
Or play Beatty in the outfield.
So right now, Beatty is projected
at 16% of the playing time at third base
by Fangraphs and 20%
of the time in left field.
That suggests to me
that's a decent opportunity for
him to uh start start the year with him and and for me the big part of why i believe is because
at double a among qualified hitters brett baity had the highest wrc plus at level this season
160 wrc plus there's a uh there's a i think there's a uh another to-do list item for you in spring training,
if you can wait, is for Beatty, I think it's plate appearances.
How much are they running him out there?
Yeah, if he leads the Mets in plate appearances,
they're trying to give him a good look.
And yeah, I guess then I would then look over at results,
and I don't look over at results and say,
those results are the results he's going to get in the league but if he's if they're giving him a lot of playing time
and he's playing well that that just looks to me that's sort of remember julio Rodriguez it's like
oh they're giving him a ton of playing time and he's playing awesome
like at some point you're like uh should we just put him on the roster
that way that way yeah should we just start the season with him like, should we just put him on the roster? That way.
Yeah.
Should we just start the season with him?
Why are we going to send him down?
There was some point during the offseason,
I looked at the Mariners' projections for last year,
and Rodriguez was projected to be their third or fourth best hitter by the bat.
I looked at him like, they want to go to the playoffs this year.
They kind of need to just let him play and make sure that he's not that good.
If they're,
if they're going to send him down,
like prove it first because they don't have great alternatives.
Steamer is up.
We can do that.
I'm going to do that.
Same game with the Mets.
It won't be as bad because the Mets have a lot of good hitters.
Let me see where Beatty ranks.
Third.
Third.
Yes, we have a new Julio.
He's not Julio Rodriguez.
No, he's not.
I assure you he is not.
Well, that's crazy.
And here's a big one. than daniel vogelbach which might be might be a
bar that people have to clear right because they could trade daniel vogelbach pretty easily
i think vogelbach seems pretty fungible so if they think baby here's a player with defensive
value that we can put in and maybe Escobar starts de-aging.
I love that he's third.
That just,
that just really worked out.
Didn't it? Worked out real.
I didn't know that going in and it,
it's bringing me a lot of joy.
It's a little surprising to me.
Like I am a little skeptical of that,
but it was pretty awesome.
I would have guessed outside the top five.
Yeah,
me too. So, um um a pleasant surprise for me perhaps a slightly unpleasant surprise for mets fans but stop worrying mets fans
you're a limitless budget and an owner that really wants to add and add and add yeah that's the other
thing i mean you want to wait for spring training on some of these teams because you feel like you don't know what the depth chart looks like yet. It's so awful
drafting in November. I think I might not do as much this year.
It's good to keep the juices flowing, but
then you look back and you're like, why did I pick those people? Well, because you didn't know.
I have found in the
handful of very early drafts I've done that i'm a little
ahead of some folks with where i'm at because i didn't stop so it tends to be a slight advantage
but there are plenty of situations that we're all going in blind i think the place where i'm
the weakest this early is actually allocating resources to relievers.
And even with the Pitching Plus model and having access to all that information,
it's still, you could just be wrong,
not because the pitcher isn't good,
but because the roles didn't break the right way.
Or they sign another guy.
They just, the guys, you took shots in a few places
and those guys ended up being the eighth inning guys
that the ninth inning guy won.
Like Stuff Plus, Pitching Plus loves Joe Barlow and Scott Barlow.
He likes the Barlows.
He's got a thing for the Barlows.
And you like Scott Barlow, and then the Royals are like,
we're going to trade him.
We're not going to be great this year.
They've got Piccolo in there now.
He's like, well, the reliever is not worth that much.
Dang it.
Another Yankees middle reliever more likely yeah that's uh that's
the long long-term outcome there yeah we are going to go we're going to continue this series of course
over the next few weeks if you got questions for a future episode you can send those our way rates
and barrels at the athletic.com is the email address. As confessed on a previous episode, yes, I reduced the inbox to zero.
Clean slate here as we look ahead to 2023.
You can find Eno on Twitter at Eno Saris.
You can find me at Derek Van Riper.
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That's going to do it for this episode of Rates and Barrels.
We're back with you next week.
Thanks for listening. Thank you.