NL East Players To Watch

Turner

Dan Marino is trekking through each division in the major leagues and giving you one player he thinks is the: Rookie to Watch, Breakthrough Player, The Party’s Over, Non-Roster Invitee Most Likely to Stick, and Just Not Seeing it.

He has already given us his AL East Players to Watch. Now, in part two of six, he brings you the National League East: (more…)

MLB Top 50 Free Agent Predictions

 

MLB Trade Rumors recently released their top 50 free agents and where they think each player will sign. They had a competition where fans could submit their predictions to win prizes. Here are my predictions for the top 50 free agents.

 

1.  Albert Pujols St. Louis Cardinals
2.  Prince Fielder Chicago Cubs
3.  Jose Reyes Milwaukee Brewers
4.  C.J. Wilson New York Yankees
5.  Yu Darvish Texas Rangers
6.  Edwin Jackson Washington Nationals
7.  Jimmy Rollins Philadelphia Phillies
8.  Aramis Ramirez Los Angeles Angels
9.  Carlos Beltran Boston Red Sox
10.  Jonathan Papelbon Boston Red Sox
11.  Michael Cuddyer Seattle Mariners
12.  Mark Buehrle Florida Marlins
13.  David Ortiz Boston Red Sox
14.  Ryan Madson Philadelphia Phillies
15.  Hiroki Kuroda Los Angeles Dodgers
16.  Carlos Pena Pittsburgh Pirates
17.  Francisco Rodriguez Baltimore Orioles
18.  Roy Oswalt Baltimore Orioles
19.  Javier Vazquez Retirement
20.  Heath Bell Florida Marlins
21.  Coco Crisp Chicago White Sox
22.  Hisashi Iwakuma Minnesota Twins
23.  Kelly Johnson Toronto Blue Jays
24.  Josh Willingham Tampa Bay Rays
25.  Paul Maholm New York Mets
26.  Grady Sizemore St. Louis Cardinals
27.  Bartolo Colon Texas Rangers
28.  Erik Bedard Seattle Mariners
29.  David DeJesus Chicago Cubs
30.  Jason Kubel San Francisco Giants
31.  Ramon Hernandez Pittsburgh Pirates
32.  Jeff Francis Colorado Rockies
33.  Chris Capuano San Diego Padres
34.  Tsuyoshi Wada Toronto Blue Jays
35.  Clint Barmes Detroit Tigers
36.  Casey Kotchman Cleveland Indians
37.  Freddy Garcia New York Yankees
38.  Aaron Hill Los Angeles Dodgers
39.  Johnny Damon Cleveland Indians
40.  Aaron Harang Los Angeles Angels
41.  Jamey Carroll Houston Astros
42.  Rafael Furcal St. Louis Cardinals
43.  Juan Pierre Cincinnati Reds
44.  Frank Francisco Arizona Diamondbacks
45.  Jason Marquis New York Mets
46.  Joel Pineiro Los Angeles Dodgers
47.  Jonathan Broxton New York Mets
48.  Joe Nathan Cincinnati Reds
49.  Kerry Wood Retirement
50.  Bruce Chen Pittsburgh Pirates

 

Mike Napoli’s Underrated Power

Mike Napoli has had quite the exciting offseason thus far. He was first traded to the Blue Jays along with Juan Rivera for Vernon Wells. A questionable move on the part of the Angels but I won’t get into that. The Blue Jays then flipped Napoli to the Rangers for Frank Francisco and cash in the following days. Napoli is nowhere near being a good defensive catcher. What Napoli really brings to the table is his offense. 

Mike Napoli is one of the most underrated power hitters in all of baseball and I will show you why.

Isolated Power (ISO) measures a player’s “true power.” The league average ISO sits around .150. As we look at Napoli’s stats, his career ISO is .234. To get a better grip on how he compares to some of the games top power hitters, let’s compare his ISO stats to Ryan Howard and Adrian Gonzalez. Ryan Howard has a career ISO of .238 and Adrian Gonzalez’s career ISO is .223. We must recognize that Napoli’s number of plate appearances is much fewer than that of the sluggers I listed above, but nonetheless Napoli’s ISO is still very impressive and we need to acknowledge that.

Napoli’s ISO season by season (Blue line represents league average):

Year after year Napoli has posted an ISO that is right up there with the top power hitters in the league. His rookie season, in 2006, he had an ISO of .228 in 325 plate appearances. If we compare that to some of 2010′s top rookie power hitters, it was better then that of Jason Heyward, Carlos Santana, Ike Davis, and a handful of other notable rookies.

 In 2008, Napoli posted huge power numbers despite having only 274 plate appearances. His ISO was a career high at .313. He hit 20 homeruns that year in which he averaged a homerun every 13.7 plate appearances. If he kept this rate up, and saw 500 plate appearances, he would have hit about 36 homeruns. That is terrific power for a catcher. The most homeruns hit by a catcher in a single season is 43 by Javy Lopez in 2003. Napoli’s ISO really stood out in 2008. If you set the minimum plate appearances for 250 which, yes I know is low, then Mike Napoli would have led the league in ISO.

 2010 was no different for Napoli. His ISO was .230 which was better than that of Adrian Gonzalez, Mark Teixeira, Ryan Howard, David Wright, and Evan Longoria. That is some impressive company.

Napoli is now 29 years old and there is no reason why he can’t continue to get better. It is still a bit unclear of where Napoli will factor in to the Rangers plans this year. We could see him at catcher, designated hitter, and first base. Napoli has yet to see 550 plate appearances in a single season and if he gets the time this year, we could really see his homerun totals take off in the hitter friendly Rangers Ballpark in Arlington

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 1,664 other followers