Finally, Casey

Written by Joseph Coblitz on .

The Indians signed 8 year veteran first baseman Casey Kotchman to a one year deal today worth a reported $3 million. The Indians have been linked to Kotchman all off season because signing him made more sense than any other player. Along with his cheap price, his defensive talent is what really makes this a good deal. Offensively, he is worth about the same as Matt LaPorta, giving up a little power for greater consistency at the plate, but defensively, there is a huge difference. In three seasons, LaPorta has made more errors at first (12) than Kotchman has in his entire eight year career (11). A strong defense looks to be a major part of the Indians strategy going into 2012 with a great bullpen and above average defensive players at every position. First base is especially important, because if Asdrubal is going to keep making plays like these, he can't be worried about whether or not the first baseman is going to catch the ball.

Kotchman had the best offensive season of his career last year, breaking into the top ten in the American League in batting average and on base percentage. Most people probably remember him from his time with the Angels, but he has moved around a lot of late, playing with the Braves, Red Sox, Mariners and finally Tampa Bay in 2011. Since this is just a one year deal, it will allow Matt LaPorta to go back to AAA Columbus to try to find his swing, while allowing him a light at the end of the tunnel. If somehow he can get back to the way he used to play in the minors, the starting firstbaseman's job for 2013 could still be his. Either way, Indians fans can finally relax as the question mark that has been sitting on first all season has been replaced by a Kotchmanmark. 

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Dan Wheeler - 2012 Version of Chad Bradford?

Written by Mike Melaragno on .

The relief market is well known for unusual activity during the off-season. For example, the Philadelphia Phillies made a head-turning move with its signing of Jonathan Papelbon to a four-year, $50 million contract this year. Since then, Philadelphia’s former closer, Ryan Madson, signed a one-year deal worth around $8 million with the  Reds — and their former, former closer, Brad Lidge, just just a one-year, $1 million agreement with the Nationals.

In addition to those three relievers just mentioned, Matt Capps received a $4.75 million salary to return to the Twins, and Fernando Rodney got $2 million from the Moneyball Rays. But one of the few relievers who could not find a guaranteed contract was Dan Wheeler, who signed a minor league contract with the Tribe last week.

Wheeler re-joined the Rays in late 2007 after spending a few seasons with the Mets and the Astros. As a member of the Rays’ bullpen, Wheeler posted descending xFIP marks — beginning in 2008 with a 4.50 xFIP, but ending with a nice 3.72 in 2010.

Following the mass exodus from the Rays’ pen after the 2010 season, Wheeler landed with their American League East rival Boston Red Sox on a one-year, $3 million deal. While his ERA jumped a full run with Boston last year, his FIP dropped from 4.11 to 3.78 — and his xFIP dropped to 3.71.

A right-handed reliever with a fastball that lives around 89 mph, Wheeler has historically struggled with the long ball as well as going against the platoon split. His career HR/FB rate of 10.2% is significant for a reliever with a 45.5% flyball rate. Versus lefties, he has a 4.73 career xFIP (3.53 versus righties) and allowed a slash line of .275/.341/.487 (AVG/OBP/SLG.)

Rays manager Joe Maddon did his best to control the platoon issue by limiting Wheeler’s exposure to left-handed batters. After using Wheeler against lefties 39% of the time in 2008, Maddon had him face them 29% in 2009 and just 23% in 2010. In fact, Wheeler pitched with the platoon advantage more than any other reliever in 2010 (minimum 40 innings).

For whatever reason, former Red Sox manager Terry Francona decided to increase Wheeler’s usage against lefties last year and had him face a left-handed batters nearly 40% of the time. Although he fared slightly better than his career numbers against the split, his K/BB rate dropped from a ridiculous 13.50 versus righties to 2.0 versus lefties. He actually allowed a higher HR/FB rate versus right-handers  though his 3.37 xFIP suggests it could have been a blip on the radar.

While Wheeler did not have a pile of saves heading into free agency, one could argue that he has been a better pitcher than a number of others who have guaranteed paychecks in 2012. In the past three years, Wheeler’s 3.84 xFIP is lower than several notable right-handed relievers: Octavio Dotel (3.85), Matt Capps(3.99) , Kerry Wood (4.08), Francisco Cordero (4.18), Jon Rauch (4.38, and Fernando Rodney (4.52) , who all signed one-year, major-league deals totaling $21.25 million this off-season.

Despite having a decent year which warrented a lengthy contract, Wheeler joins the Indians with no guarantees. One rather large piece of information left out thus far is that the 34-year-old Wheeler was shut down in early September with right forearm stiffness. Although he has avoided major injury and averaged 61 appearances and 62 innings each season since 2003, that type of injury could scare off potential suitors. On the flip side, Joel Zumaya — who hasn’t thrown a meaningful pitch since June of 2010 — got a low-risk, major-league deal with the Twins just a few weeks ago.

Maybe Wheeler’s medical records are a bit worse than they appear, or maybe teams are wary of putting his home-run rate in high-leverage situations. Whatever the reason, the lack of interest could pay dividends for the Tribe if Wheeler is both healthy and Manny Acta uses him to his strengths. If those things pan out, Wheeler could be a bargain in an unpredictable relief market. Much like Chad Bradford was to the A's.  

(All stats courtesy of Baseball Prospectus)

dan_wheeler

Dan Wheeler: 2012 Bullpen Mafia don? Maybe

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The New Prince of Michigan

Written by Mike Melaragno on .

In a move no one really saw coming, Prince Fielder has reportedly agreed to a nine-year, $214 million deal with the Detroit Tigers. This impacts the Central division in a big way; not just this season but for years to come. He now returns to the city where his father, Cecil Fielder, made a name for himself in the 1990's. We will discuss the signing implications in this article.

Everything that held true for Albert Pujols' contract -- great for the team in the short term, very risky in the long term -- holds true for Fielder and the Tigers as well. He'll add a little less value in the next year or two than Pujols will to the LA Angels, but I like Fielder's chance to hold value deeper into his contract because, at 28 this year, he's five years younger than Pujols. That said, Fielder's still a corner position player with no speed and no defensive value, a player profile that ages very poorly, and he is going to have to get his weight under control if he wants to be a productive player in the back half of this deal, even though there's no financial incentive for him to do so.

The Tigers recently lost our old friend Victor Martinez for the season with a torn ACL, and that injury cost them three to four wins of value, a range that assumes he would have been the regular DH and occasional catcher without missing any significant time during the season. But adding Fielder more than makes up for what they lost in Martinez's bat, giving them probably an 800 to 825 run offense that should be among the three best in the league when you consider their home ballpark. I think they would have won the weakened American League Central without Fielder, but with him, their odds have increased. He helps make up for the fact that the Tigers' farm system has just one impact hitting prospect, Nick Castellanos, a third baseman -- which is still an area of need for the big club -- who is three years away from the majors.

The Tigers' problem in the short term is where to play everyone. Miguel Cabrera is an indifferent first baseman, but is probably a better option there than Fielder. Delmon Young shouldn't be allowed to play the outfield, and even if he was, the Tigers might prefer to play Ryan Raburn and Brennan Boesch in the corners since Young walks about twice a month. They could put Raburn at second and Young in left, Cabrera at third and just punt defense entirely, hoping to bludgeon opponents into submission, although I wouldn't recommend it. Playing Fielder at first and Cabrera at third would be defensive self-immolation. The best solution might be to have Fielder and Cabrera share time at first base to keep both bats in the lineup as often as possible, since the risk of knee problems for, um, "husky" players is probably tied not just to age but to time standing at a position.

In the long term, of course, this contract won't end any better than Pujols'. It's hard to envision Fielder still producing five wins a year of value at age 36, although I can picture that more easily than I can see Pujols producing that much at 42. But the Tigers are coming off a division title they're likely to repeat in 2012, and there was no better option on the market to help keep them the favorites in this year or next and to increase (however slightly) their chances of advancing to the World Series. It's the type of moral-hazard-laced decision MLB general managers make all the time: If the Tigers' current front office is still in charge as Fielder's contract enters its final years, the team has probably won a championship or two by that point, justifying the deal; if they don't win, it'll be someone else's mess to clean up. And by Years 8 and 9, a mess it will almost certainly be. (Also worth noting that owner Mike Illitch is 82 years old and this move is a sign that he wants to win sooner rather than later.)

The good news, if there is any, for Indians fans is with the the addition of Derek Lowe and the remaining starting rotation of Justin Masterson, Ubaldo Jimenez and "Fausto Carmona", we should expect the starting rotation to keep Fielder in the ballpark. All of the aforementioned pitchers specialize in forcing hitters to hit the ball on the ground At least we can hope in theory. Does this raise the stakes for the Tribe to trade for a 1B, such as Justin Smoak or Logan Morrison? We shall see. Stay tuned.

Prince-Fielder

 

New Tigers 1B/DH Prince Fielder. Will add tremendous value in the early years, very bad value toward the end.

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Roberto Heredia Arrested

Written by Jen Coblitz on .

The Indians pitcher we all know as Fausto Carmona was arrested today in the Dominican Republic for using a false identity. Apparently, the "28 year-old" is actually 31, and his name is not really Fausto Carmona, it is Roberto Hernandez Heredia. Officials in the Dominican Republic discovered this identity falsification when "Fausto" applied for a vista to return back to the States to play ball.

What does this mean for the Indians? Currently, this is unknown. The Indians could take legal action against Carmona because his contract is based on that of a 28 year-old and he is indeed three years older, meaning his career is further along than they once thought. As of right now, the Indians are not commenting on the situation. Carmona currently exercised a $7 million option for 2012 and also has club options for 2013 and 2014. There is also uncertainty if Carmona will be able to report for Spring Training and what impact this will have on his 2012 season.

 

*Information taken from Indians.com "Carmona Arrested for Using False Identity"

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1/17/11 Signings

Written by Joseph Coblitz on .

The Indians came to terms with five players today to avoid salary arbitration as they are wont to do. They are as follows:

Shin Soo-Choo - $4.9 million

This is the most important signing as Choo is guaranteed to be the starting right fielder next season. While the rest of the outfield is in flux, Choo remains the cornerstone that the rest will be built around. The Indians may have lucked out as his subpar 2011 undoubtedly hurt his market value. If Choo has a 2012 season any where near his career average season, he will be an absolute steal at just one million more than his last season's salary. Choo has one more year of arbitration before he can become a free agent.

Justin Masterson - $3.825 million

Masterson quickly became the Indians ace last season and looks to return to that position in 2012. Signing him for the upcoming season was of the utmost importance for the Tribe. This is just Masterson's first year of arbitration so he should be in an Indians uniform through 2014 if the Indians are smart.

Joe Smith - $1.75 million

This is another great deal as Joe Smith was practically unhittable during most of 2011. A good bullpen is extremely important to a championship level team, and a good bullpen is more than a shutdown closer. Keeping Joe Smith around along with Rafael Perez, Tony Sipp and Vinnie Pestano should keep the back of the pen strong. Smith has one more season of arbitration.

Chris Perez - $4.5 million

The Indians closer will be around for another season as he agreed to avoid his second year of arbitration. The object of quite a few trade rumors this offseason, the Indians made the best move they could by keeping him around for 2012. Perez is arguably the most important member of the "Bullpen Mafia" and is well on his way to becoming one of the best Indians closers ever.

Jack Hannahan - $1.35 million

This is the least obvious of the Indians moves today. The Indians have already announced that there will be an open competition for the starting third base job between Jack Hannahan and Lonnie Chisenhall during Spring Training. If Chisenhall does win the spot, as he should, then Hannahan may end up being a very expensive utility player who can only play two positions. The two positions he can play are already stacked with plenty of players who are better offensively than he does. It may be worth it to keep him around as a back up, but he will probably end up costing twice as much as an equivalent replacement player would while being able to play half the positions.

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Stuff

Written by Mike Melaragno on .

*This is part one of a three-part series introducing STUFF, a objective-based statistic using Pitch f/x and available scouting data.

by: Michael Melaragno

Bridging the gap between scouts and the use of statistical analysis is not as hard as we would believe. Since the mainstream indoctrination of Bill James and his baseball abstracts, the constant argument as to which sentiment brings forth a higher probability of an organization building a winning team always seemed needless to me. The question I would always ask is: Why not incorporate both scouts and stats?

The more thought that was given to this question, one realizes that it is just not about the why organizations do not but rather how they go about doing it. There has not been much written about the methodology behind the how, as this is usually kept as proprietary information and under tight scrutiny. The ability to objectively analyze what a scout sees in a player can have tremendous advantages in the marketplace. To the extent that a team utilizes an objective analysis could be the difference between an organization going in the right direction and one going in the wrong direction.

So often we read or hear about a pitchers “stuff.” Also known as his “repertoire” or “tools of the trade,” it is what defines the pitcher. His “stuff” consists of what type of pitch he throws, how and when he throws it, and how good the pitch is compared to his peers.  Every pitcher has the same goal in mind- to keep the batter off the base paths and record the out. However, not every pitcher does this the same way. Scouts, fans and front office personnel grade pitchers based on the different ways in which they record outs. Some pitchers over-power hitters while others use finesse; some have two pitches while others have five. It all depends on what role the organization puts the pitcher in. While we grade these pitchers based solely on subjective analysis, I will propose a method to which we can incorporate relatively new technology and old fashioned scouting methods to come up with a quantitative analysis that would make even Billy Bean proud. But before we get into the dirty little details, I must provide a little primer on PITCH f/x, the data system to which I will use to describe my system, along with the various pitches that are thrown at the Major League level.

PITCHf/x is a system developed by Sportvision and introduced in Major League Baseball during the 2006 playoffs. It uses two cameras to record the position of the pitched baseball during its flight from the pitcher’s hand to home plate, and various parameters are measured and calculated to describe the trajectory and speed of each pitch. It was instituted in most ballparks throughout MLB as the 2007 season progressed, such that we have PITCHf/x data for a little over a third of the games from 2007. MLBAM used the PITCHf/x data in their Enhanced Gameday application and also made the data freely available for downloading and research.

In some ways, PITCHf/x is a bridge between scouting and analysis, giving us an objective window into the batter-pitcher matchup at a level we’ve never seen before. In 2008, the system should be installed in every major-league ballpark, and we will hopefully have complete detail for every pitch, although MLB has not committed to whether all the data will continue to be freely available in the future.

The system enables to graphically Some people are good at identifying pitch types while at the ballpark or from the center field TV camera view. That was a splitter. That was a sinker. That was a slider. Etc. I am one of those people. If you are not one of those people either, PITCHf/x was made for you. Even if you are one of those people, PITCHf/x can be a useful resource for learning about how different pitches move.

A pitcher’s fastest pitch is usually a four-seam fastball. A typical major-league fastball is around 90 mph, many a little faster, some a little slower. The fastball from a right-handed pitcher breaks in toward a right-handed hitter. Pitches from a lefty move the opposite way; a fastball from a lefty breaks away from a right-handed hitter. I’ll describe the movement for pitches from a righty and you can flip the orientation if you want to know how a similar pitch from a lefty would behave.

Pitchers throw variations of the fastball by changing the grip on the baseball or parts of their motion and delivery. The most popular variation is a two-seam fastball, which often thrown a couple mph slower and breaks in more and drops more to a right-handed hitter from a right-handed pitcher than the four-seamer. The cut fastball is also thrown a few mph slower than the four-seamer and breaks away a little from a right-handed hitter, if it breaks at all.

The most popular off-speed pitch is the changeup, which is typically thrown 7-10 mph slower than a pitcher’s fastball. It usually has a similar break to the fastball, in toward a right-handed hitter. Some pitchers employ a grip on their changeup to impart additional movement, usually causing the pitch to break in more and drop more to a right-handed hitter. The split-finger fastball acts much like a changeup except that its velocity and movement are usually somewhere between the fastball and changeup.

Breaking balls include the slider and curveball. The slider is usually thrown at the same speed as the changeup or sometimes a few mph faster. The movement on the slider can vary quite a bit from one pitcher to another. Some sliders move like a cutter, with hardly any left-right break. Other sliders move more like a curveball, which breaks away from a right-handed hitter and down. The curveball is the slowest pitch, thrown in the 65-80 mph range in major league baseball.

The knuckleball is a special case in major league baseball these days. As far as I know, there were only two regular practitioners of the pitch in the majors last year: Tim Wakefield and Charlie Haeger. The pitch is thrown with very little spin such that the airstream interaction with the seam orientation causes the baseball to move unpredictably. Wakefield and Haeger throw the knuckleball about 65-70 mph.

Of course, there are a number of variations and combinations of the above pitches and specialty pitches like the screwball and gyroball and even the 50-mph Orlando Hernandez eephus pitch.

Below is a simple diagram graphically showing what each pitch looks like using Pitch f/x system, view from the catcher:

PITCHf/x analysis and research is a promising field with wide application and broad interest, and there are a number of people who have made important contributions ever since the system application. As a result, there are many different formats for presenting the results. I’ll summarize and explain a few of them here and give a more detailed explanation of some of the graphs that I will use for my new stat.

The most common plots presented by other PITCHf/x researchers include information about the speed and spin-induced deflection of pitches. To the best of my knowledge, Joe Sheehan was the first to produce these plots, showing speed on the vertical axis and the two components of spin deflection as two sets of points on the horizontal axis. Joe hasn’t done much pitch classification work recently, but he deserves a nod as the groundbreaker in that field.

Something you’re more likely to encounter these days is a plot from John Walsh, who wrote for various sabermetric websites. He plots vertical “movement” versus horizontal “movement”, where movement refers to the spin-induced deflection, and indicates speed by color-coding the points on the graph.

Most common of all are the plots from Josh Kalk’s pitcher cards, particularly the plots of vertical “break” versus horizontal “break”. These are similar to John Walsh’s plots except that instead of color-coding for speed, the points on the graph are color-coded by pitch type. Josh has separate graphs that plot speed versus horizontal break and speed versus vertical break, reminiscent of the original Sheehan plots. Josh’s player cards also contain information on release point, which is the height and left-right position of the pitch measured 50 feet from home plate, which is soon after the actual release by the pitcher.

In the past I have presented graphs similar to those of Sheehan and Kalk, but more recently I’ve adopted a graph from Alan Nathan as my mainstay. It is a polar plot, with the speed of the pitch on the radial axis. The faster the pitch, the farther from the center. The slower the pitch, the closer to the center. The angle is the angle of the Magnus force, which is the force that cause the ball to break. Curveballs break down, so they’ll be in the bottom part of the graph. Sliders break away from a right-handed hitter, so they’ll be on the left side of the graph. The Magnus force of a fastball pushes the ball up, causing it to drop less than it normally would due to gravity alone, so the fastballs will be on the top part of the graph.

There is also a graph of what I call “late break”, which is a combination of the effects of spin deflection and gravity as well as the speed of the pitch. The goal is to show something close to what the hitter perceives as the break or movement of the pitch. I calculate the deflection of the pitch due to two forces, spin and gravity, in the last 0.25 seconds of its trajectory before it crosses the plate, an idea I got from Tom Tango. I chose a quarter second because that’s roughly the reaction time of a batter executing a swing. I chose to include the effect of gravity because I believe that more accurately reflects what hitters see. Hitters don’t attempt to hit a gravity-less pitch; they attempt to hit a pitch that’s being affected by gravity and being deflected by spin.

In part two of our series, I will incorporate Pitch f/x data and scouting analysis together. Hold on, it shall be fun.

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There's a New Hero In Town!

Written by Joseph Coblitz on .

This morning the Indians signed Andy LaRoche to a minor league contract, adding him to the list of Spring Training invitees that includes Felix Pie, Jose Lopez and Aaron Cunningham. Those other additions may have been exciting, but this one is the jackpot. LaRoche is a career .267 hitter, averaging over 20 home runs per season. Oops, nevermind, that's his brother Adam LaRoche. Andy LaRoche is a career .226 hitter and has hit just over 20 home runs in his entire 5 year career. He makes Matt LaPorta look like a chump with his .238/.304/.397 line.

There is no question that the Indians would be planning to play LaRoche at first, even though his primary position has been third over the past few seasons. Lonnie Chinsenhall and Jason Kipnis played well enough last year and have enough upside that the Indians shouldn't be looking to give them any more compition. Last year, Andy played games at every infield spot, so he could also technically take Jack Hannahan's tenative spot on the 2012 roster. This seems like a great move to me because LaRoche's numbers far outshine LaPorta's. Since LaPorta's debut in 2009, LaRoche has lower numbers (cumulative and average) in every single statistical catergory when compared to LaPorta. Since, like in golf, the better player always has the lower on base percentage, this is a very good thing for Andy.

The one place LaRoche outshines LaPorta is hitting against left handed pitching (LaRoche vs LHP: .275/.355/.439), a trouble spot (LaPorta vs LHP: .211/.303/.326) for Matt since the beginning of his career. This opens up a situation where the two La's could platoon at first, with LaPorta taking the majority of the at bats against righties and LaRoche hitting against left-handers. It probably wouldn't really increase production at first and may send LaPorta into a depression that makes him unfit to play at all, but it would give the Tribe a chance to increase payroll and would give fans a chance to start calling them LaLeft and LaRight. Either way, hopefully this move will lead to us cheering for a LaHero next October.

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Who's On First? 2012 Projections

Written by Joseph Coblitz on .

There have been a few rumors about the Indians running around during the Winter Meetings. The majority of these have involved an improvement to the offense, specifically first base. The Indians, according to indians.com, have already proclaimed themselves out of the running for Albert Pujols, Prince Fielder and Carlos Pena (who would want him?) so they are currently looking for Matt LaPorta's replacement through trade. They have already signed Matt Pagnozzi to a minor league deal leading to even more rumors of Carlos Santana moving to first to replace LaPorta. Just for a little background information on Pagnozzi, he is a 29 year old career minor leaguer who hit .275 in AAA last year and was dropped by the Rockies and Pirates. Assuming that the Indians do not make a major signing or trade, let me show you some numbers that will hopefully stop the talk of Carlos Santana to first base.

If Santana moves to first, this will completely remove LaPorta from the lineup. This means the two options at first/catcher are LaPorta/Santana or Santana/Marson. For some people seem to be confused and think that Santana will be replacing LaPorta, but that is not the case. Santana is a given either way, so it is actually the back-up catcher who is replacing LaPorta. The reason Santana's numbers are so special are because he plays catcher. Last season he was one of the top two catchers in the AL, but when compared to firstbasemen was closer to sixth.

This is oversimplified, but I took the numbers of Lou Marson, Carlos Santana and Matt LaPorta from their time with the Indians, averaged it out and extrapolated it out over 162 games, since none of them have completed a full season yet (except Santana in 2011). First I added Santana and LaPorta's numbers together the see what we can expect from the combo if they play every single game next year.


G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SB AVG SLG
LaPorta/Santana 324 1111 149 268 69 3 45 151 157 8 0.241 .429

While these numbers aren't spectacular (divide everything by two to see what it is per player), just wait until you see it when you through Lou Marson into the mix.


G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SB AVG SLG
Santana/Marson 324 1059 140 242 62 4 31 121 157 18 0.229 .381

As you can see, the numbers from the first line that were mostly accrued by Santana have stayed the same or increased (walks and steals), but all power and hit numbers have been demolished. Most noteably, the combined slugging percent is .048 points lower. Now, a .400+ slugging percent isn't really anything that great (the Indians record is .690 by Albert Belle) at least it's better than .380. I hate that I have to spell it out like this, but I read comments of people every day talking about how LaPorta should be released in favor of the Marson/Santana combination and hopefully this will do something to eliminate that ignorance. 

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The Return of Grady Sizemore

Written by Joseph Coblitz on .

This is the reason I didn't waste my time writing a long career retrospective on Grady Sizemore when the Indians declined his option last month. Grady has resigned with the Indians for 2012 for a rumored base salary of $5 million with incentives bringing it back up to the $9 million a year salary that the Tribe just rejected. The incentives are based on total plate appearances and winning the 'Comeback Player of the Year'. This way the Indians keep their All-Star center fielder, but won't be completely devastated if he gets injured and misses a lot of time in 2012. This will also solidify the Indians outfield which, while deep, just doesn't have a whole lot of All-Star level talent. As it stands Shin-Soo Choo will remain in right field with Sizemore probably moving to left and Michael Brantley staying in center. There will be a wide selection of reserve outfielders available including Shelley Duncan (who will almost certainly make the team as a back-up outfield/firstbaseman and pinch hitter), Trevor Crowe and Ezequiel Carrera

Hopefully his discounted price will allow Manny Acta to give him a slightly diminished role as well. The Indians now have better lead-off hitters in either Brantley or Jason Kipnis so Sizemore can be moved down into the lineup so he is hitting closer to sixth than first. As already mentioned, Grady should be taken out of the high stress position of centerfield and moved to left. In addition to that, he should probably not start every game as he has done in the past. In order to save his knees and keep him around all season, it would probably be a good move to allow him to split time with either Crowe or Carrera. Overall this signing is a great move and I'm looking forward to seeing Grady back in the outfield in an Indians uniform.

Grady's Back

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New Labor Deal

Written by Joseph Coblitz on .

Major League Baseball owners and players agreed on a new labor deal today that should do a lot to decrease the difference between large and small market teams. Here are some of the basic changes:

  • Random HGH blood testing during the off season and Spring Training. A positive test earns a player a 50 game suspension, the same as a positive steroid test. Players will be able to challenge the results of this test and it will not take place during the season as of now.
  • The agreement includes the Astros move to the American League West and the addition of an extra Wild Card to each league.
  • Luxury Tax will stay at it's current level of $178 million and not increase until 2014.
  • Revenue sharing will be based on team income so large markets will pay more into it and get less out, while small market teams will have to pay very little in.
  • A competitive balance lottery will add more draft picks for small market teams.
  • Overspending on draft picks will be highly penalized. A threshold will be set for each draft pick and if the team that drafts that player goes over the threshold they will have to pay luxury tax and risk losing the next seasons first round draft pick. This rule could be renamed the Scott Boras rule as it should keep good players from falling in the draft as small market teams with high picks will no longer be afraid of not being able to sign them.
  • A luxery tax will also be added to signing international players.

There are also a few more additions that will be beneficial for players, but not necessarily for small market teams.

  • In 2014 the minimum salary will be set at $500,000 and there will be cost of living increases each of the next two seasons.
  • The amount of players eligible for super 2 arbitration status will raise from the top 17% to the top 22%.
  • In order for a team to receive a draft pick for losing a free agent, the original team must make an offer to the player of at least the average of the top 125 Major League salaries. The old system is being thrown out entirely.

Overall this new agreement bodes pretty well for the Cleveland Indians. Going down the list one by one; the new drug testing shouldn't hurt the Tribe at all. Throughout the history of steroids in baseball, the Indians have only had two players with issues (Rafael Betancourt and Paul Byrd) and are generally thought of to be a clean organization.

I wrote an article last week on how the Astros move will help the Tribe.

Keeping the luxury tax at the same level won't hurt the Indians, but it won't really help either. Only two teams (the Yankees and Phillies) are currently obliged to pay more than $178 million in 2012. A few other teams will probably near or pass that level, but it will do nothing to keep teams close to the Indians probable payroll of about $60 million.

The change in revenue sharing should be the biggest help out of all the changes being made. The Indians are one of the smallest market teams currently in baseball so they should get a considerable boost from revenue sharing. Also, because the Tigers are among the top spenders in the league, this change could mean that the Tigers will actually have to give money to the Indians. Hopefully any money earned by the Tribe in this fashion will be used to increase payroll and not be wasted or left to disappear mysteriously.

The changes in the draft and signing foreign players should help keep players within the Indians range a little better, but they haven't had a whole lot of problems in this area to this point. Most of the foreign players who get paid huge salaries are older players from other leagues (mostly Cuba or Japan) and only one of these players (Ichiro Suzuki) has actually been worth the money he was paid. The Indians have done a great job picking up young players like Victor Martinez, Jhonny Peralta and Fausto Carmona through scouting and training at academies, not by paying exorbitant salaries. The changes in the draft may allow the Indians to get more great first round Boras picks like Jeremie Guthrie. For those who don't remember, Guthrie fell much further than expected because of his unsignability. The Indians paid Guthrie $4.5 million for his 4 years of minor league service before releasing him. If this rule was in place back in 2002 when Guthrie was drafted, a team with a better draft pick would have had to deal with him.

The only other change that really affects the Indians is the new rule on free agent draft picks. The Indians have made out in the past with this rule, at least getting something for losing players like Jim Thome, Manny Ramirez and Albert Belle. In recent years players of this caliber have been traded away to get a little more for them than the draft pick. Now, players like Grady Sizemore, who may have been worth a draft pick in the past, will not be worth one, since the Indians wouldn't be willing to offer him a salary higher than $12 million a year. 

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