Rates & Barrels - We're All Howard Hughes
Episode Date: March 31, 2020Rundown9:16 March Movers18:47 Re-Thinking the Shape of Production in a Shortened Season24:45 Empty Stadiums & Performance33:47 Increased Interest in Top Closers?40:57 Ranking Organizations for Talent ...Development51:23 Talent Development Laggards Follow Eno on Twitter: @enosarrisFollow DVR on Twitter: @DerekVanRipere-mail: ratesandbarrels@theathletic.com Get 40% off a subscription to The Athletic: theathletic.com/ratesandbarrels Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to Rates and Barrels, episode number 82. It's March 31st. Derek Van Ryper here
with Eno Saris. On this episode, we're going to talk about some upcoming adjustments to
our rankings as the calendar flips to April. We're going to answer a lot of questions.
We had a question about the baseball. We had a question about ranking teams for their ability to develop talent.
We'll talk about a few March movers as well.
Eno, how's it going for you on this Tuesday?
It's interesting. I think it's interesting for people like you and I
that work from home and have to watch
the rest of the family get up to speed.
And I think it's been particularly hard for my wife, particularly because she said, like,
you know, in the office, she used to get annoyed that people would come by and ask her questions
all the time when she's trying to work. But now those people have to schedule a Zoom meeting to ask the question.
So everything is on a meeting.
And so everything's even longer and she just has meetings all day.
So I can imagine that.
And then now we're scheduling meetings with our friends,
Zoom meetings with our friends just to see them.
So things are getting bizarre and we're only two weeks in and it looks like we're going to have
another four weeks. So I'm just hopeful that near the end of April, we start getting some better
news. And this all hinges on a date. We need something to look forward to.
The thing that makes it so difficult, I think, is that we're just hanging out, just waiting.
Yeah, we're in a holding pattern that feels indefinite right now, even though eventually it will end.
And I think it's particularly challenging if you live in a place that has bad winters.
Because if you're like me, you're listening to baseball in early March when spring training games begin.
And it's sort of like Bob Uecker, at least in Wisconsin, when he starts popping up on the radio at the beginning of the month, he moves the snow away and the winter away.
He clears it away.
Baseball makes winter end.
Baseball not starting has made it feel like winter hasn't ended yet.
It is a little bit warmer out,
so we've been able to get outside just a little and walk the dog and get her over to the park and everything.
But that sort of, I don't know, life calendar
just being completely erased for a while is disorienting,
and people are all feeling that.
And it is strange to schedule meetings with your friends using the same tools you use at work.
It blurs the lines between home and work.
But yeah, everyone's just kind of figuring things out.
work. But yeah, everyone's just kind of figuring things out. I mean, my wife usually works in a lab and she's now working in the same room where I record the podcast. You're one side of a podcast
when she's in the room and I'm recording. It's just little things like that. But I still feel
like we're lucky in the grand scheme of things, having enough space where we can do this,
having opportunities to continue our work. It's been a strange couple of weeks. And April is
going to be probably even more strange than March. I did hear, I was listening to the radio this
morning. I had made my weekly supply run and threw NPR on for a little while. And I thought I heard that the current modeling
for peaking of the coronavirus is around April 26th or 27th. I think they had a Wisconsin date
and a nationwide date, and they were pretty close together. So that kind of gives us an idea of how
things are tracking that way and how it could move up depending on how people are handling social distancing and other preventative measures. But it was really the first
time I'd heard an actual date put out there for that to take place. And that just made me think,
okay, this is the way things are going to be for at least another month. But at least I know
we have something that we're looking at as a possible beginning of
the end part. Yeah, I think we'll have some clarity in May. I'm hoping for some clarity in
May. It's just clarity that we need. And there are just little glimpses of hopes in the numbers.
If you look at them, I mean, what we're looking for is the derivative to change the derivative of the curve.
Like it's going to if you look at cumulative numbers, it's going to go up because you're going to keep adding.
But we just want to add at a slower rate.
And that that'll mean that we that we've accomplished something. to that and when and how much you were willing to risk another spike uh is is a question of
you know hospital capacity and um uh i guess the need for a functioning economy and all sorts of
different questions that you know people stand on different sides of those of those questions but
when you look at the derivatives of certain curves um new york just had like a day or two of um of the softening basically a flattening
as people might as people might know and then um northern california uh we were one of the first
to socially distance that's why i'm on day, oh God.
You've lost count.
No, I almost, no, I'm keeping count.
I'm on day 16.
And I know from pals like Jason Collette
and Paul Spohr in Texas and North Carolina, respectively,
that they're on sort of day two
of a specific shelter-in-place order,
not necessarily what they've done personally.
And so, you know,
we have one of the flattest curves in America,
in Northern California.
So California as a whole doesn't look as good,
but Northern California, I think,
was out in front on this. And so it hasn't gotten that bad here. I have noticed a field hospital
was built on Stanford campus. On my last run, I noticed that we are trying to do a lot of the
same things that New York is doing because we have the same population base, but we don't have necessarily the same type of problem. Right. It's encouraging to hear that
things, at least in Northern California especially, have been progressing in a way that
seems to be overall much better than expected. But again, you see things that are different in different places.
I was out on Sunday just for a little while.
I had to drop some boxes off, and I saw Home Depot was packed.
I just thought, what are you all doing?
You're all going to get new kitchen backsplashes together?
Why are we doing this like it just
doesn't it doesn't make sense so i hope i hope the message is still being received where it needs to
be heard um but i'm definitely encouraged by what you're saying yeah it's happening around you if
you're on a beach in florida please go home please please, please, please, please go home. I saw this thing
that was like an animation
of cell phones on one
Florida beach.
It just grouped
a bunch of cell phones on a beach
in Florida and then showed
where they went.
Oh, jeez.
I was like, ah.
I immediately washed
my cell phone. it's actually part
of the ritual now and the supply runs when i come back from the store i take the phone out of the
case and break it all down and wipe it all out with clorox wipes and try to just just make sure
that like i didn't accidentally grab the phone to double check something while i was at the store
after i touched something you just you just don't know who's the um who's the uh uh the the famous old billionaire
that uh that howard something he was like a uh he was like a germaphobe?
Famous, old, billionaire, germaphobe.
Let's see what that brings up.
Are you asking Google?
Yeah.
I'm consulting the internet.
Famous germaphobes.
There's a story from New Hampshire Public Radio.
I may have to listen to that later.
Howard Hughes.
Howard Hughes. We're all Howard Hughes.
Yeah.
Hopefully it continues to work.
That reference is going to capture people by the tens.
It really will.
All right.
We'll move away from coronavirus talk.
There are plenty of other places to get that,
but glad to hear things are still going as well as they can
be on your end. Let's talk about some players who have moved a bit in March, and really it's more
like players that we are about to move coming out of March. We can look at NFBC ADP as well. I have
opened that up from March 15th to March 31st. Of course, we had some major injuries that happened over the course of the month.
Luis Severino, Chris Sale, more recently Noah Syndergaard,
all undergoing Tommy John surgery.
So that pulls some players down.
And I think the prevailing thought has been that the innings limited starting pitchers
are getting a bump.
And I saw a draft board from our colleague Matt Modica
that was definitely a reflection of how at least the high stakes arena
is currently viewing Jesus Lizardo.
And in a 15-team draft that was playing out at the end of last week,
Lizardo was a fifth-round pick.
It's the earliest I've seen him go. His min pick in March, in the second half of March, was 68.
So that just kind of gives us a sense of, okay, this is the jump for a guy like that. We've
talked about Julio Urias as being slightly more of a discounted option who does a lot of the same
things. He went in the eighth round of that same draft. I don't know why there's a gap between those two guys of three rounds right now but i really don't expect that to
last you know i think the more people look at both of those guys like the closer they're going to get
in adp i have them right next to each other 38 39 overall um i could see pushing them um ahead of
them are some boring vets like kyle hendricks and hunjan ru um eduardo rodriguez
denelson lamette matthew boyd mike minor i guess i could i could push them ahead of all those if i
was really being aggressive and get them all the way up to sort of zach gallon zach wheeler
territory at the back end of the top 30 um but once you get above that you've got like soroka giolito carasco montas i just just people i think
um you know that uh i think i think they're a little bit better i don't know montas versus
lizardo was a very good question i had on a show where i made an appearance who do you think is
going to get more innings yeah that was a question. That was the live stream we did with Vlad Sedler over at Fantasy Guru last Friday.
It's still up, by the way.
Check out Vlad on Twitter, at RotoGut.
I think Eno and I both shared the link at some point in the last few days as well,
but that was a fun stream.
I think more innings are still probably still coming from Frankie Montes.
Also, I think it's important, I think, more innings per appearance.
That's where I think the difference comes in, right?
I think the usage in terms of being a starter from day one
or whenever the season begins through the end of the year,
that's a level playing field.
Lizardo's often going to go five and probably not more than six,
whereas Montes won't have restrictions.
I don't think he's gone six in his career in the major leagues.
I mean, it's a short career, but yeah.
He's more of like a high-effort, high-pitch count guy
that they have to watch.
I guess Urias
is not that to the same extent.
However, Urias' injury
was more substantial.
I guess that's the three rounds.
Coming back from a shoulder
situation is not good.
Though he's shown himself to be healthy
since, it's still
there. It's still there.
It's still a truth, you know?
Yeah, if you go back to early 2019,
we did see when he was starting,
Urias got six innings in against the Brewers back on April 18th.
Nine strikeouts, six scoreless, one hit.
Yeah, he was shoving that day.
Had a five-inning start against the Brewers six days before that.
Had a five-inning start against the Giants in his first start of last season.
And then was pretty much in the bullpen for most of the rest of the season.
And the starts he did make later in the year were two, three-inning, just quick outings.
So even there, yeah. And wins are harder and harder to get to go by.
And I hate to chase wins,
but you know,
this is,
uh,
it's another thing you have to think about on some extent.
And I wouldn't necessarily,
um,
I wouldn't necessarily use that as a big D marker,
but like,
if you're talking about,
uh,
you know,
Montas and Carrasco,
Carrasco versus Urias and Lizardo,
I think a little bit more likely to take the guys who I think might be able to go pitch
deeper in the games and get wins.
I think the guy that I'm still pretty excited about is James Paxton.
I've got him a few places.
I took him in the Tout Wars auction a couple weeks ago.
He won't have, at least I don't think within starts,
any sort of innings restriction.
As long as he's fully recovered from his injury,
when things ramp up again,
he kind of stands out to me in the 100 to 140 range ADP-wise
as a pitcher who doesn't really have any start-by-start concerns.
And the skills are really solid.
We love the run support.
We love the bullpen.
And I still think there's another level for Paxton to reach
as a member of the Yankees.
I think he can still turn in a season better than what we saw last year,
382 and 128 for the ratios.
The 128 whip just doesn't seem right to me.
I think he could beat that number in particular.
Yeah, you know, we've been drafting for so long
because the baseball season was supposed to start early this year,
and it was crazy, but spring training started like february 24th or something
so i had drafts in february and i remember the the the roller coaster that we bid on like paxton
sort of represents that thing because there was like there were drafts where i took him when he
was healthy and i was like nice paxton and then and then he got hurt and i was like god damn paxton
you know and then there was like a little bit of news before uh everything went to to crap that he
was throwing again already and i was like yeah paxton you know and now i'm like, hey, Paxton, sweet.
So I have a fair amount of shares because I believe in Paxton.
And I also think that, I think I've talked about this a lot,
I just generally think that quality per inning is something I'd rather focus on than a ton of innings because there are so few people doing a ton of innings that I think the bar has been lowered
in terms of what is an acceptable number of innings
to get from your top pitchers.
So if I get one guy who hits 200
and then a couple guys who have 150,
I feel like I have a pretty good basis for my squad.
And if you ask me, do I think
that Paxton in a typical year can get to 150? Yeah, I think so. I'm now going to check his
paragraphs page. He's got to 150 in two-thirds last year, 160 in a third in 2018. Those are
the only two seasons of his career where he's got that many innings he was at 136 back in 2017 and 121 back
in 2016 right he's been injured so often but what's still two straight years 150 i think he
i think he can do 150 but not not necessarily this year god we have to change all our all right well
we don't even know we don't even know how many there are so i can't even tell you what i have to
if you hear me say something like 150, 200,
I'm obviously talking about full season pace,
and we're going to have to adjust all those things
by however many games we do get.
It's still easier, I think, in general
for people listening and for us analyzing players
to put the numbers on at full season
knowing that we're going to reduce them.
If we started shortening up
based on our guesses when the season's going to begin,
that just creates more confusion.
So I think it's the right way to go.
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Is there something about the shape of production though,
that will favor certain players in terms of,
if you're talking about like an auction value or just fantasy value,
like if you think about it,
like if this season was 10 games long,
you would want to own maybe one of 20 starters and, you would want to own maybe one of
20 starters, and
then you would want to have all the closers.
Hmm.
Right?
Not sure.
Why would you want that?
Let's say season's 7 games long.
You get one start. So you get one start out of your guy.
Most likely. Maybe two.
I'm saying ten.
In ten games, you get two
starts out of your guy
and out of your starter.
You might get
three to five saves
from your best closer.
In a Roto League, theoretically, everybody else would have the same or a similar balance, right?
So they'd have the same opportunity.
Well, I just generally think that there's something about volume that accrues.
Yeah, yeah.
No, no.
There's something here. So think about strikeouts as a category,
right? Strikeouts as a category favors starting pitchers, right? But if you're talking about two
starts versus three to five appearances, let's say, let's give them four appearances, two per
week, or let's give it five. So five appearances from the, from the, from the, from the, your closer,
your closer in five appearances might get eight strikeouts, right?
And your starter in two appearances might get 10 to 12.
You get a typical starter. Yeah. The-end guys maybe get a little more but yeah
right so the difference there is smaller than if you take that 10 game stretch and multiply it over
and over and over again you know what i'm saying right so if you had a graph of fantasy value
and you did it for 10 game like started at game 10 and then went over
the the graph of starter and reliever fantasy value they'd have different slopes
they'd they'd start close to each other and then they'd gradually drift away from each other
wouldn't the main issue here be that even in a 10 game schedule the reliever opportunities
to get the saves don't necessarily pop up evenly but you know the starting pitchers are going to
take the ball and at least have those chances so that that workload is just still even in that
smaller cluster that workload from the starters making two starts
is more reliable
than getting
save chances
specifically. Those relievers might get used
but they may not get
used in save chances
simply because of how those
10 games can play out.
I still think that there's something to the
fact that a part of a starter's value is bulk.
And the shorter your season is, the less bulk he has to wield over the reliever, basically.
And I think there's something there. And if that's true, and then you throw in the asterisk of the fact that there might be more injuries this year to starting pitchers who have a more precarious preparation schedule right now for the season.
schedule right now for the season.
Yeah, I mean, I think the other thing that I'm really kind of wondering about right now is if we had an in-season auction calculator from previous seasons that could give us snapshots
of one month at a time, two months at a time, three months at a time, what would those numbers
look like i mean would there be meaningful
conclusions you could draw from the shape of the numbers as you said or would it just be
mostly random you know like that's there's going to be more variance in a short season that's the
fundamental thing we've talked about from like a team standpoint where the mid-pack teams have an even greater chance of reaching the playoffs.
You put the numbers out there for the Jays and White Sox and a bunch of those teams, right?
They're all more likely to make the playoffs in a shorter season than they were in a 162-game season. How does that really change the individual valuations of players who, because of their ability to hit that higher workload ceiling, have a higher baseline value?
Does it completely change them?
Does it somewhat change them?
I don't know how much to correct for it.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah.
And I don't, you know,
for the life of me,
I can't figure out
anything meaningful
when it comes to hitters.
I mean, the closest I've come
is like someone like
Michael Conforto,
who's coming back from an oblique strain,
which is fairly simple,
just a question of, does it hurt? Don't do anything. As soon as it stops hurting,
you can start doing stuff, right? Um, it doesn't, didn't require surgery. Hopefully,
uh, the one thing that would suck is if he did require surgery and he didn't know it because
he's not, you know, going to a hospital right now. Um, but I can't otherwise, uh, put my finger on something.
They're like,
one thing that's interesting that we had a question a while back.
I don't think it's on the docket today was this idea that like,
and apologies for,
for not shouting out your name,
but thank you for sending this idea.
And I'm thinking about it,
which is that we may play in front of no fans.
And so I wonder if there's a class of player
that will like that and a class of player that won't like that yeah yeah it was a question from
splash gordo i remember that coming in yeah he had he had kind of speculated there could be some some groups right yeah certain players who like the noise and certain guys who uh don't like the noise
because they lose focus or it's it's one of those things like you you really i don't think you know
until you see it but maybe there is a way if you know a player well and you know how they handle different circumstances
maybe you can try and at least predict how it might impact them we don't have anything to fall
back on to say oh this is what happened last time you know like we can at least look at 1995 and say
okay when we're probably going to have like a 19 to 21 day spring training because that's what we did in 1995
but there's been one game played without fans that i can think of in like the history of baseball
baltimore yeah and i don't think that going into that one game is going to tell us much
no no that's yeah well think of it this way though i. I mean, players coming up, they played in front of crowds that are huge. They've played in front of crowds that are non-existent. And in a lot of those games, early in their career, especially when they were being heavily scouted prior to being drafted, those were important games. The stakes were high on the individual level for a lot of those players, right? So I guess my snap reaction is to not think too much
about it, even though I thought it was a really interesting question. Because I think when you
play rookie ball and you play at low A, I mean, I've been to a game in Beloit in April before.
There's like 20 people there. You're just playing the game. And maybe it's different in a giant stadium that's empty
because you're used to that place being full
and you quickly adapted to the smaller, low-level minor league park
not having anybody in it.
But I think the players can adapt to this pretty well.
Yeah.
And I don't know how we would identify the players that couldn't.
I mean, I'm looking at clutch and I'm like, okay, maybe clutch players could
be players that need the noise, right?
Number one in clutch last year was Matt Olsen,
who is just a doll, dude.
He's just, like, the nicest dude ever.
He is not about, like, needing to play in tons of fans,
in front of tons of fans.
Like, just, I know this,
we're getting anecdotal here,
but like we're,
of course we're going to,
because there's no roadmap for this.
And I just don't see Matt Olsen.
Now,
when I go down a little bit,
I see Bryce Harper is the ninth clutches,
you know,
and it's possible to me that he needs the roar of the crowds just because,
or that he desires it because of his
personality of my interactions with him of you can just see it you can see that he's been surrounded
by crowds his whole life basically he's a he's like the lebron james of baseball basically
in that we knew about him since he was like he won a home run derby at 14. You know? Yeah, oh yeah.
That LeBron comp,
it's not about what he's achieved,
but it is about how he's been treated
since he was a teenager.
I think that holds up.
But he was clutch last year.
He was not clutch the year before.
He was average clutch the year before.
He was really clutch in 2016.
He was one of the worst clutch
players in 2015 clutch is just i'm sorry man i i'm sorry if people believe in it i think that
uh there are people that have a slow heartbeat uh i think that most of baseball has a slow heartbeat
because i think if you are really jelly-legged at facing Justin Verlander, you're not going to last very long.
Yeah, I guess what I was trying to maybe hint at with the idea of playing in empty stadiums, playing with high stakes when only a few important people are watching.
people are watching i think the the path that brings you to become a major league baseball player puts you through a series of tests where you're kind of weedled out if you have
problems with or without a crowd that's yeah that's kind of my hypothesis here yeah yeah yeah
and and clutch just mathematically clutch does not have a great relationship year to year.
No, it's noisy as F, as the scientists would say.
So I don't think that there's going to be a lot of learned going up and down this clutch list.
I mean, does Charlie Blackman, 13th in clutch, does he need the fans? Kevin Newman?
I mean, Kevin Newman is like a 26-year-old nobody, you know?
Newman. I mean, Kevin Newman is like a 26-year-old nobody, you know?
He probably
enjoyed having a lot of fans for the
first time as a big league player
last year. Yeah, but is that the same thing
as if he starts slumping and
they're yelling at him? I don't know.
No. Yeah.
A lot of Pirates were clutch last year. That's
weird.
Another
knock on clutch, probably. Also, a knock on knock on the pirates if that's how they looked
when they were clutch yeah that that's true sorry sorry pirates fine sorry um any case i i think uh
it's harder to figure stuff out and on the hitting side like uh back to my conforto idea uh they're still asterisk with
conforto and then like if it's any worse than conforto like mitch handiger like you know i
talked with mitch handiger recently and he was talking about you know hey i'd love to have my
my masseuse my masseuse and my my massage therapist and my you know my rehabilitation
therapist and all that stuff um you stuff coming to my house right now.
Is he okay, by the way?
He's been through some stuff.
Yeah.
He said this last thing fixed it,
that he finally feels better,
and he feels like he finally got at whatever it was that was bugging him.
But the whatever it was that was bugging him has been pretty raucous, dude.
I mean, I think he has fractured his testicles.
Ruptured?
He ruptured one.
At least one.
Yeah, I don't know if it was both, but I mean.
He said that was the worst thing that I ever have known.
I have a hard time imagining worse injury you can suffer playing sports.
Like that's like not extreme sports anyway.
You do extreme sports.
Maybe you can add another whole category.
But yeah, when that news came by and other players have had this like
catchers get hit a lot right a foul tip bounces off the ground just catches them the right way and
yeah normally they wait for some protection yeah well i mean you get you hit just right though it
might not it might it might save you from more damage but you're you're still you're still in
trouble yeah that's true.
It's just hard to, like, I think every group that we identify,
we're like, oh, these people should be valued higher.
We still have questions.
Like, oh, Jesus Lazardo should be valued higher.
And that one seems like the easiest.
Lazardo, Puck, Gore, maybe Paddock.
But, you know, young pitchers that you're not sure they had 200 innings in them,
they don't have to have the 200 innings in them, that's great.
But you still might find them coming out of games early and losing wins that way.
Injured players, yeah, great.
They have more time to get ready.
Does Justin Verlander actually have everybody he needs to get ready?
Is he getting the best care that he can be getting right now um i like james passan because he's throwing before like he seems like he was past
the whole like i need a bunch of specialists working on me and now he's throwing already so
he seems like he's ready to go um so maybe maybe there's certain cases where you're like this seems
like an unquestionable good like like Conforto and Paxton.
But it's hard to, and there may be something to this.
Maybe you should invest in the very best relievers.
But, you know, just looking at the reliever pool,
I'm not super excited about the best relievers.
I mean, I think Chapman is fine,
at least for another year or two.
But at some point, he's going to lose a tick and have a fair amount of drop-off.
I don't know.
Did you see that picture of Chapman?
No.
There was a picture of Chapman going around?
Oh, my God.
Dude, his arms look like Mark McGuire's.
Is he just lifting weights every day at home?
I don't know, dude.
He looks bigger than I've ever – I don't know if it was the way the picture was taken,
but there's this picture of him out there
where he looks like his bicep is bigger than my head.
All right.
I'll be checking this out momentarily.
I think maybe Will Carroll, the injury expert, tweeted out.
But anyway, Chapman, I think, is safe.
Osuna has very low strikeout rates for a closer.
And I feel like that could be meaningful at some point.
Liam Hendricks is a total pop-up.
Brad Hand lost velocity already.
I think we're already out of the sure things.
Yeah, that group is still only like seven or eight and I'm seeing this picture of Chapman. Yeah, he looks like an NFL player.
Yeah, it's true. He has linebacker arms now. Yeah, yeah. I mean the funny thing though about
something like Instagram and this is this is something that comes up when workout videos pop up also it's that you don't see other things to compare
it to from the same player like i don't recall seeing aroldis chapman sitting around in the tank
top prior to right now so in my head i'm like wow he's jacked and it's like well maybe he's always
looked like this and he's always wearing sleeves and you can't tell. I think he looks a little bigger than normal.
It certainly seems like he has added muscle at this point.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But, yeah, I think there's fewer sure things.
If it was like a nicer collection of reliever arms at the top, I might say hey uh like maybe it's a good year to get two
elite arms uh two elite relief arms and avoid some of the injury and then just get a bunch of
quantity on the pitching side but uh unless you get chapman and osuna like you know i don't know
yeah the other wrinkle here uh i brought this up on on show on Monday that I did with Matt Medica. It was just that with Corey Knable being near the end of his recovery from Tommy John, I'm kind of curious to
see how the Brewers handle him and how that impacts Josh Hader with regard to save opportunities.
We talked about Hader on the reliever episode. He could still be a very valuable fantasy pitcher,
even with a significantly reduced number of saves.
But that one, when it comes to a snake draft,
especially choosing Josh Hader in the fourth round,
where his ADP has been,
is something that I'm having a really difficult time doing.
I'm much more likely to do it in an auction
where I've got a lot more control
over the combination of players that I put together.
It still kind of baffles me that there are players like that who are not format dependent in terms of daily versus weekly,
but who are format dependent in terms of draft versus auction and your willingness to get them.
It's the Fernando Tatis, Javi Baez problem just applied, I guess, to another player.
Hayter, Hayter, good example, yes.
I should have thought of Hayter.
I do think that there is some risk there in terms of what you're talking about but um maybe it's the year to kind of be interesting to to go you know bueller
hater chat like bueller chapman hater yeah just go a little more aggressive with the early closers
i can see that being the way to go maybe i'm just i not going to push up the back end closers, man.
Well, it doesn't have to be Hayter in particular either.
I think it has to be.
I mean, it has to be.
The only three that I...
Who am I missing?
The only three that I really think are kind of bulletproof in a way
are Chapman, Hayter, and maybe Osuna.
But Yates isn't in that group for you?
I put Yates and Hendrix in a group which is like,
hey, everything looks great, but where were they like two years ago?
You know what I mean?
Right.
How quickly could it fade on them?
Can it fade as quickly as the elite skills kind of popped up?
Yeah.
And as much as I pretend to know these things,
you know,
for a living,
in,
in reliever situations,
you're,
you have to admit it's,
it's harder to project them year to year.
And something like, I think something like two thirds. or 40% or 50% of them lost their jobs.
I think Jeff Zimmerman had some number for last year.
Yeah, the rate is usually between 40% and 50%.
I think that's been pretty consistent for a while.
I think that's something Ron Chandler used to put in the forecaster years ago. It's probably still in the beginning of the abstract. I'm sure they update that every year.
I got to get back into the forecaster. I got more time to dig in, so I should probably take
advantage of that. But I think this is a question we're going to put out to our listeners. I'll put
it out as a poll from the Athletic Fantasy account. Are you going to draft closers earlier
this season, top end closers earlier? I'll put
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All right. We had a few questions come in this week. The first one comes from Isaac. It's about
ranking teams for talent development. He writes, you dudes have mentioned the circle of trust with respect to some organizations and how they handle pitchers.
Also, I believe the new hitting coach in Miami is the guy who was recently the Bomba Whisperer in Minnesota.
It's James Rousen, who I think our friend Nando Dufino has really latched on to.
He's all in on the Marlins.
Certainly interesting to have a new hitting coach there,
and the fences have come in.
In terms of prospects, the Dodgers always seem to get it right,
while, say, the Phillies don't.
Have you ever endeavored to rank the teams in terms of how coaching impacts
hitting and pitching and or how much you trust organizations
to develop their prospects?
Thanks.
Isaac, have you ever tried to do that?
I have in my head.
I don't know the value of doing it on paper
because it would just be so subjective.
I'm not in those organizations.
And when I get a look in,
it's always a highly curated look in that's designed to make them look good
and i have to be aware that like now that this is my beat that player development is one of my beats
that that people know that they want to look good in my eyes um so that's uh something you know I even
discovered recently that
someone that I'd quoted
probably hadn't told me the truth in that quote
so
you know so now I'm even getting
that second level stuff where people are telling me
that other people are lying to me
awesome right
to not get the truth that's fun
don't worry my reporting is still good It's a minor quote in a recent piece.
One thing I would say is that some of it bubbles to the top and some of it gets corroborated even kind of grudgingly from other places. So the gold standard are the Dodgers and the Yankees,
despite the sunny gray piece and despite maybe some small failings when it comes to
their pitching, coaching, and some communication between certain departments at the Yankees.
at the Yankees, I would say that at least in terms of resources, manpower, dedicated researchers,
findings that they've had, being in front of the curve on certain things. I mean,
a lot of the things that we see in today's game have been created by the Yankees and Dodgers.
If you think about the Super Bowl pen, the Yankees and Dodgers. If you think about the Super Bowl pen, the Yankees were there first.
If you think about using high-spin fastballs and using them less often and using them more often as a whiff pitch, that was the Yankees.
If you think about the combination of high-spin high fastballs
and high-spin low-breaking balls, That's the Astros and the Dodgers.
Let me put the Astros in there too. So Astros, Dodgers, and Yankees, they're the ones that are
out in front in terms of finding things, researching things, changing things in their
organization, making wholesale changes, and implementing these best practices with their
minor leaguers to get the most out of them. So I would say that's the gold standard.
That's the gold level, the five-star tier.
It gets a little bit harder after that.
The Twins seem to be very good at pitching.
They were very good at hitting.
I trust the Twins pitching coaches and some of the people they have there.
Josh Kalk is there.
They had Jeremy Hefner, they've made some really good strides with, uh, older with, uh, veteran
pitchers and they developed Jose Barrios. So like they, I think the twins on the pitching side are
good. And then with Ralston on the hitting side, um, I think that, I think you have to, they lead
the league in launch angle since we started tracking launch angle.
So I think that's a meaningful thing.
So let's put the Twins in the next tier, if not the top tier.
I liked what I saw in Mariners camp, the things that they talk about.
I like what I hear out of the Reds, in terms of pitching at least.
They've done some great things with Derek Johnson alone,
and then they added to that by basically hiring all of driveline
to be their minor league guys.
So that has to be good.
On the hitting side, I don't know as much,
but I do know that Donnie, maybe is it Donnie? Let me see here.
The guy who got hired away from the Reds to be a hitting coach on the Giants.
I've heard good things about him. Donnie Ecker. Yeah, that's who I thought it was.
So I heard Donnie Ecker was a, was a really sort thought it was. So I heard Donnie Ecker was a really sort of forward-thinking hitting coach for the Reds.
So it's possible they're good on the hitting side too.
I would say the Phillies are really good on the hitting side.
They've got great coaches up and down.
Jason Ochard is a great hitting coordinator.
I would say that they're behind on the pitching side,
and I think that flows from what you've seen from their major league pitching coaching and their minor league pitching coaching.
So they're behind there.
They get an uneven grade.
You know, I don't, you know, yes, Rosen going to the Marlins is fascinating, but I don't know.
I just don't know if it works like that.
I mean, yes, Derek Johnson went to the Reds and they had one of the biggest turnarounds ever in that starting rotation.
But do you think you just hire a hitting coach and the same thing happens
one year over the next? The research that's
out there that says that hitting coaches mostly benefit
the way that hitting coaches mostly affect their team is that they're either
mostly patient or mostly aggressive. That's a piece that Russell
Carlton did at bit baseball perspectives a
while back. And that seems to be the way that you can mostly affect your team is by either being
more patient or being more aggressive. But maybe it's less binary in the day of launch angle.
Maybe there's something there. What what the Brewers, the Brewwers are teched and data teched up and data up uh in the minor leagues
and they used to have derrick johnson they seem to have a really good eye for for coaches i'm
gonna have to put the brewers there with the twins um do you think of somebody that i'm missing
that no i think that's a really strong list that's that's how i would generally have them
sorted out too i think the the other end of the question or the end of the spectrum is just like,
which teams are still lagging the furthest behind?
Just because we didn't mention them here doesn't mean they're necessarily way behind.
But the extreme laggards and the Orioles, I think, used to be one.
I think they've started to change in the last year plus now where they're probably at least heading in the right direction, whereas maybe previously they weren't really moving in any direction.
I think the same would be said for the Pirates. the Joe Musgrove and some of the approaches they have with their pitching now are very different post-Ray Searidge and post-Neil Huntington's front office now with Ben Charrington at the
helm of the organization. It can change fast too is another thing. Yeah. So think about the Pirates
before they were data darlings. And then all of a sudden they lost it. And now they've got a whole
new team in. What if they get back into the top 10 just by hiring the right people?
Yeah, I think you still need talent, though.
You kind of alluded to this with the Marlins.
Bringing in James Rousen is good,
but if your hitters to their core just don't have enough talent,
you're going to make bad hitters a little better
than brinson can't make enough contact right yeah at a certain point now they they do have some
really interesting tooled up players like lewis brinson when he does make contact actually hit
the ball pretty hard when he's healthy so yeah it's harder to talk crap on on an organization
because then somebody will say oh but what about this coach and you'll be like well i have respect for that coach but are they being listened to like i i i and also like the
white socks are really interesting because i would say that they are not at the forefront of anything
and they have a lot of talent they have a lot of talent and they've developed a lot of hitters so
they must be doing something right on the hitting side but But like, you know, it's not it's not being done the way that, you know, the sort of most forward thinking people think it should be done or, you know, with the with the with the benefit of the most, you know, best researchers out there.
the benefit of the most best research that's out there.
It's being done in a
more old school manner.
It can still work in an old school manner,
so the White Sox are showing us that.
I wonder about the
White Sox.
The Royals
have made a lot of news in terms of
who they've hired and what they're doing.
I've yet to see
changes on the major league level
and they also went and drafted
Daniel Lynch
who just has an old school arsenal
as a sinker slider guy.
Where we're kind of moving more towards four-seamers.
So I think there might be some disconnect in Kansas City.
Let me look at some...
I like what the Rangers have been doing with veteran pitching
the last couple of off-seasons.
We've mentioned that before.
I mean, the success of Mike Miner and Lance Lynn in particular
makes me start to trust them a bit more as they take
shots, right? So the fact that they added Kyle Gibson and Jordan Lyles to me makes me a little
more interested in those two guys than I might have been had they gone to an organization without
similar success stories in the last couple of seasons. I got one for you the rockies as far as just not having
anything figured out they a they should be way more innovative than they are like they should
be the rays of the nl oh yeah we did a pod about them like if we were running the rockies they
should just be completely different they should be a laboratory organization they've got more to crap to deal with than anyone um and then and then they do
weird things like um they they they highlight ground balls because you know they think that
they you got they got to worry about fly balls in that outfield and and babips and home runs and all
that stuff yeah okay good but one of
the ways to like really screw yourself up is to throw four seamers low in the zone and they throw
more four seamers low in the zone than anybody yeah they gotta stop that they gotta stop that
um and they shouldn't be forcing sinkers on people and, uh, you know, just signing Chi Chi Gonzalez was just kind of
hilarious to me. Uh, that was a kind of a Rockies moment. Um, who else, uh, the, the Tigers, uh,
don't seem to be doing much innovative in terms of an organization, uh, in terms of gameplay on
the field and stuff like that. But, you know, I've talked to Matt Boyd a lot. When I talk to Matt Boyd about the coaches he works with
and the things they talk about, he says,
no, he's right at home at driveline,
and he's right at home in Detroit.
So maybe the Tigers is more just a question of talent
than it is coaching.
Yeah, I think that's kind of a reflection
of how they've gone about their rebuild
and they have a lot riding on the health of that group of young pitchers if if that group stays
healthy then their outcome is positive sooner rather than later but if that group doesn't stay
healthy we've talked about their their lack of upper level position player depth in the minors and that is a huge issue for them like they
they seem like they got one foot going in the right direction but the other foot is just kind
of bebopping around not really moving in a direction and the last one might be surprising but the A's I think the A's are brilliant
at acquiring talent
I think the A's are brilliant
at knowing which prospects to fade
which prospects to trade away
I think they have a really good
strategy in terms of building a high variance
kind of 84 win team have a really good strategy in terms of building a high-variance,
kind of 84-win team.
And in the years when they win 78, they trade everyone away.
And in the years when they win 95, they add.
Right.
So they're elite in the front office in terms of managing the roster,
but they're very poor when it comes to using tech to maximize they just don't do it and like chapman has figured out chapman and olsen have figured out a way to to get good
uh simeon was kind of a player acquisition uh a win that just happened to be you know the most um
like he has probably the best makeup in the game.
And so he just got the most out of his skillset. Uh, but you know, uh, in terms of like develop
it, drafting and developing a guy all the way to the top in terms of just what I know of,
you know, what, what their process is like. Um, and, uh, they're're just they just don't invest they don't use money
to invest in tech and data in the same way that other teams do they do seem to have good coaching
though at the big league level so it's it's just a strange they've cycled through their pitching
and hitting coaches pretty fast i don't i don't think they've they've found a guy that
that is amazing i also know they've found a guy that is amazing.
I also know... They've had Walsh as their bench coach for a while.
Yeah.
And a lot of stability with Bob Melvin.
Yeah, Melvin is great,
but I think what Melvin is so great at
is he's like a steady ship guy
who the players love and who communicates well.
And so nobody feels slighted when they lose a role or when
they turn into a halftime player or something. I feel like he's somehow, he's the guy who's
willing to interact with them. Whereas the front office, like Billy Bean doesn't want to be down
there telling them they got cut or whatever. Melvin is a guy who can tell you some bad news
and make you feel good about it. So, you know, I think Melvin is great, but I don't think he's necessarily
telling people to tweak their swings or do this or do that. Um, and so, you know, in terms of
coaching, they've cycled through coaches, um, you know, and I, and I like, uh, their current
pitching coach, Scott Emerson, but he's, um, you know, our conversations have been about why
the sinker shouldn't be
dropped as much as it has been
which is a funny thing to say
because most of the
advanced front offices are thinking that the sinker
that only one or two
guys on your team should really be thrown a sinker
anyway
I just think it's interesting when it comes to the a's that they've still had
success with the players they've gotten oh here's a an anecdote uh that fits into a piece that i've
been researching for a while uh a lot of the a's use an outside source uh for their game day
analytics that's interesting it's really interesting actually like how many teams
have players doing that i only know through this outside source that like i'm profiling
um you know kind of i have a sense of who his uh who his players are but they mostly
have to do with the a's i mean he, he's based out here, so that could be it,
but they're mostly A's.
So I don't know.
I've seen the A's game day analytics package,
and it seems fine,
but they even had some interesting stuff about the umpires
that I hadn't seen on other ones,
where it had the umpires that i hadn't seen on other ones where like had like the umpires pets names
so they could just like make conversation with the umpires and get the umpires on their side
yeah it taps into a psychological element there yeah yeah but um i it seems fine but
um i wouldn't also wouldn't be surprised if like i haven't i don't think i
have i've seen an ipad for every ace player that's not the kind of uh that's not the kind of outlay
they make you know that's not the kind of expense they make yeah you go to the giants clubhouse and
every single player has their own ipad and it's got a charging station in their oversized locker that swivels to the left and has a nice you know
that's a real nice like plush office chair sitting in front of it yeah that's that's what it's like
in in san francisco but in oakland it's a crappy chair and a tiny the folding chair with a little
bit of cushion on it yes exactly in front of like a just a real old school locker no nobody gets
there's like one ipad they all share kind of deal so um i don't you know the a still have a lot of
great teams so i'm not i can't poo-poo them generally and that's another thing that's another
lesson for us trying to uh chase after this and be like oh you know uh the brewers are bulletproof
because they do amazing things with their tech and their
data and their minor league system. They built a lab and they've outdone their projections for
three straight years. And maybe this isn't the year for the brewers, you know?
Yeah. Well, if they have one down year, are people still going to uphold them
in the same high regard? I think that's the other side of this too. Are they just running
really hot right now
with a good process that maybe
isn't necessarily a great one? This is just an
open question, not me speculating
to the quality, just kind of saying, hey.
I was a little surprised they signed Christian Jelic to that deal.
It's a lot of money.
It's a lot of money for a team that
keeps their payroll a little bit low.
It's their same blueprint they followed with braun
though like it yeah it really is so that's funny because it's a totally new front office
yeah but ownership overlapped that deal oh so they they think they've found a face of the franchise
i think so i i think yellow has a good relationship with mark Atanasio's son, Mike. I think he's got a couple sons.
But I think Mike Atanasio is the one who works with the California Strong Charity that Jelic and Ron and Mike Moustakis all do.
And I think Jared Goff is the other famous athlete who's a part of it.
But anyway, I think there was mutual interest on both sides.
And everything I've heard and read about it,
Jelic likes playing in Milwaukee,
and ownership really wanted him to be the face of the franchise since Braun's probably retiring at the end of the season.
The highest paid position player...
I actually mentioned Ryan Braun on the radio the other day
as a secret tragedy if we don't have a season.
It would be kind of sad that this face of the franchise had played his last game as a brewer and didn't know it. Yeah, yeah. I mean,
I think it would be one of those things that you didn't think about at all at the time,
but then you realize later like, oh, that was it. It was a year earlier than we expected.
Thanks a lot for the question, Isaac. A lot of interesting stuff for us to explore with that.
We're going to save a few of the other questions for Thursday's episode.
Please keep sending questions in, ratesandbarrels at theathletic.com.
If you want to email us, just spell out the word and if you send us an email.
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That is going to wrap things up for this episode.
We are back with you on Thursday. Thanks for listening. Thank you.