AL Central Players To Watch

Bauer

Dan Marino continues his trek 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.

Now, in part three of six, he brings you the American League Central:

Part 1: AL East Players to Watch.

Part 2: National League East. (more…)

2012 Minnesota Twins Preview

Hi there baseball fans, my name is Troy Kocur, I believe I am the only Canadian writer for mlbdirt.com, I will be previewing different teams during Spring Training and giving you the readers where I think certain teams will finish in the standings, and how certain players will perform. I hope that you enjoy the articles that I put on here. The reason I started with the Twins is that they are a team that is due to do better but with so much uncertainty around the ball club it makes for an interesting topic to talk about! So here we go.

I believe that the Minnesota Twins will finish 4th in the American League Central. My reasoning for me saying that is……Which Joe Mauer will show up for the Twins this year? Will Justin Morneau get over the 2 year concussion problems? Is Matt Capps the right answer for the closer role? Will Alexi Casilla be the primary SS all year for the Twinkies? The answer to all of these questions will be answered over the season, but like I said there is a lot of uncertainty in the ball club. I believe the race between 3rd and 4th place in the division will be within 2 games. I project that the Minnesota Twins have a record of 71W-91L. Let’s have a look at what the Twins did this off-season.

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11 Bold Predictions for 2012

A lot of writers over at Fangraphs have been launching their “10 Bold predictions for 2012” and I have enjoyed it and like the idea so I thought I would put together my own bold predictions for this upcoming season. I felt like throwing in a bonus prediction though so I give you 11 bold predictions. The predictions come in no particular order. Let me know what you think. And remember these are BOLD predictions.
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Who Should Represent the Twins in the All-Star Game?

I am gearing up for the All-Star game by issuing a plethora of posts dedicated to the Mid-Summer Classic. Why do I do this? Well, it’s not because I put a ton of validity in the game; after all, it is an exhibition game, but because I am a fan and the MLB All-Star week is the best of all the major sports. And I write these posts to give insight on who I believe actually deserves a trip to the All-Star game and not who the biggest fan bases vote in or which ridiculous returned favor a manager throws a player’s way.

The Minnesota Twins have had a rough year, to say the least. Injuries to stars Joe Mauer, Justin Morneau, Jim Thome, Jason Kubel, and newly acquired Tsuyoshi Nishioka coupled with major declines in production by Delmon Young and Francisco Liriano are the main causes of the team’s failures. But there are a few bright spots and the team does get to have at least one player represent them in the All-Star game. So, who should it be? Here are the top three options

Carl Pavano has been very good this year, much better than his stats show at first glance. He has logged a team high 94.1 innings and has a 2.00 BB/9 but a weak 3.63 K/9. His current ERA is 4.20 but his FIP of 3.88 suggests he has been a bit unlucky. He leads all pitchers on the staff with 1.3 fWAR but his rWAR is only 0.4.

Scott Baker has been slightly better but in a few less innings. In 83.2 innings he has a K/9 of 8.39 to go with a low BB/9 of 2.47. His current ERA sits at 3.55 and his FIP is in line with Pavano’s at 3.93 but his xFIP of 3.49 suggest he’s pitching close to what his ERA suggests. His current fWAR sits at 1.1 and his rWAR at 1.6. I would take Baker over Pavano.

But, the final candidate is easily my choice to represent the Twins although he is on the disabled list. Denard Span currently ranks 5th among ALL American League players in rWAR with 3.3 and his fWAR of 2.8 ranks him 8th in the AL among position players. At first glance Span doesn’t look like much of an All-Star. His offensive line sits at .294/.361/.385 for a wOBA of .338 but that equals an OPS+ of 108 and wRC+ of 114. His .361 on-base percentage is bested only by Jacoby Ellsbury among AL center fielders. Most of Span’s value is in his Major League leading +10.7 UZR and 1.9 dWAR which actually ties Brett Gardner‘s last year total which lead the AL.

The choice seems obvious: Denard Span, concussion and all, deserves a spot on the All-Star team and, quite frankly, it has nothing to do with being the sole representative of his team, it is because he deserves to be there among the best players in the game this year because he has been one of the best, not just the best on the Twins.

-Jonathan C. Mitchell can be found writing about the Tampa Bay Rays at DRaysBay and you can follow him on twitter at @FigureFilbert

2011 NL Central Preview

2011 NL Central Preview

1. Cincinnati Reds

The Good: The Reds have a solid combo of strong bats and strong starting pitching. Bronson Arroyo, Edison Volquez, Travis Wood, Homer Bailey, Johnny Cueto and Mike Leake form a formidible rotation. While the offense is spearheaded by triple crown candidate/MVP Joey Votto, Brandon Phillips, Scott Rolen, Drew Stubbs and Jay Bruce. Two things the Reds offense has is power with some speed.

The Bad: The back end of the bullpen is a cause for concern. Francisco Cordero has logged a lot of innings the past few years and looked like he was tired the 2nd half of last year. The Dusty Baker effect once again if you ask me. I am not buying all the hype surrounding Aroldis Chapman. Chapman can throw 115MPH for all I am concerned but, his control, mechanics and lack of developed secondary pitches raise some flags. Realize, the Reds are now expected to win and will be targeted by other teams, that changes the perspective for the young Reds a lot. Another crucial question: Can Scott Rolen stay healthy and productive for 2 straight years?

What to Look For: The continued development Drew Stubbs, Jay Bruce, Homer Bailey, Aroldis Chapman, Edison Volquez, Travis Wood and Mike Leake will determine how far the Reds will progress this season. The Reds are following the right path in terms of a successful long term plan.

Projection: The Reds definitely seem to be trying to follow the Phillies blueprint: A solid starting rotation, good defense and plenty of power bats with some speed. The Reds weren’t a fluke last year and this year they should prove that.

92-70 (1st Place)

Milwaukee Brewers

The Good: The Brewers made massive upgrades to a pitching rotation that sorely needed it. 2009 1-2 starters Yovanni Gallardo and Randy Wolf get bumped down to 3 and 4 to make room for new ace Zack Greinke and Shaun Marcum. These were two very high impact moves by the Brew Crew and I am sure Marcum and Greinke will benefit from pitching in the NL and having strong offensive support. While being dominated by right handers, the Brewers can score runs. The offensive attack of Ryan Braun, Prince Fielder, Corey Hart, Casey McGehee and Rickie Weeks is very impressive.

The Bad: The Brewers defense can be down right dreadful and that will cost them some games. John Axford, Zach Braddock, 41 year old Takashi Saito and Kameron Loe will have to shore up a bullpen that had plenty of leaks last season. Another critical question: Can Carlos Gomez be an everyday CF?

What to Look For: If the right deal comes along would the Brewers deal Prince Fielder and move Mat Gamel to 1B? That should be interesting to see. Also, the development of John Axford and Zach Braddock to the late inning roles is something the Brewers need to take shape if they want to be serious contenders.

Projection: If the Reds falter the Brewers are most likely taking the division. The Brewers are taking their shot this year realizing it most likely is their last with big slugging 1B Prince Fielder. Should be an exciting summer in Milwaukee.

89-73 (2nd place)

Chicago Cubs

The Good: The Cubs offense should be able to produce runs with the likes of Aramis Ramirez, Starlin Castro, Alfonso Soriano, Carlos Pena, Marlon Byrd, Geovany Soto and Tyler Colvin. The Cubs front 3 starting pitchers of Carlos Zambrano, Matt Garza and Ryan Dempster give their fans plenty of reason to think they can contend and Randy Wells and Andrew Cashner are not bad options out of the 4 and 5 spots.

The Bad: The Cubs have been awful at situational hitting the past few years and adding more strikeouts with Carlos Pena will not help. Alfonso Soriano and Aramis Ramirez looked old and worn out last year which is not a good sign. Middle relief was a disaster for the Cubs last year and outside of Carlos Marmol the closer, there are too many question marks for the Cubs.

What to Look For: Will be interesting to see how Cubs skipper Mike Quade is able to keep the usually hotheaded Carlos Zambrano and Matt Garza on track. This is a transition year for the Cubs. I strongly believe Carlos Pena is a 1 year rental before the Cubs land Albert Pujols, Justin Morneau or Prince Fielder to play 1B.

Prediction: The Cubs will shine and have their moments but, unless they get some critical big hits, cut down on the strikeouts and get decent middle relief help they are only a decent team not a good team.

84-78 (3rd Place)

St. Louis Cardinals

The Good: The offense should be OK considering it has Albert Pujols, Matt Holliday and Colby Rasmus at its core. Chris Carpenter, Jake Westbrook and Jaime Garcia should help steady a questionable rotation.

The Bad: Plenty. Adam Wainwright and his Cy Young Award type numbers are gone for the year and more importantly, this could be Albert Pujols last year as a Cardinal. This is a major year of flux for the Cards who could also deal free agent to be Chris Carpenter at the trade deadline if they fall out of contention. Is RF Lance Berkman still an everyday player? What kind of production do the Cardinals get from the middle infield of Ryan Theriot and Skip Schumaker? Can the Cardinals recover from losing Adam Wainwright for an entire season?

What to Look For: If Carpenter, Tony LaRussa and Pujols leave within the next year the Cards could be in a full blown rebuilding phase. Dave Duncan is one of the best pitching coaches ever with all the pitching projects he has taken on and transformed. Duncan will have to use all of his skills this season to help the Crads overcome the loss of Adam Wainwright. Fireballer Carlos Martinez may arrive into the bullpen for the Cardinals this summer.

Projection: It already looks like this could be a rough year for the Cardinals will all the questions left unanswered. Where does this team go past 2011 is the most important question of them all.

79-83 (4th Place)

Houston Astros

The Good: The Astros GM Ed Wade did a heck of a job rebuilding the core of this team midseason in 2009 and finally has the Astros younger and cheaper then they have been in a while. 1B Brett Wallace, RF Hunter Pence and 3B Chris Johnson help give some much needed youth into the Astros everyday lineup. They may not jump out at you but, J.A. Happ, Brett Myers, Wandy Rodriguez and Bud Norris give Houston a decent starting rotation. Closer Brandon Lyon, Fernando Abad, Wilton Lopez,  and Mark Melancon are pretty decent options out of the bullpen too.

The Bad: The Astros are still a ways off in terms of getting younger better position players and are stuck with some stopgap solution players in their middle infield. Also, the Astros are saddled with the bloated Carlos Lee contract. Losing young catcher Jason Castro for the year to a knee injury is a blow not easily recovered from either.

What to Look For: The Astros can only pray that Carlos Lee has a big first half and can convince someone crazy or desperate enough to take him off the Astros hands even for half price.

Projection: When you have pitching you can win or in the Astros case, be representable. The Astros need to find position players but, are heading in the right direction with their relatively young pitching.

73-89 (5th Place)

Pittsburgh Pirates

The Good: Well, at least the Pirates have some good talent in the field eveyday and should score some runs with CF Andrew McCutchen, 3B Pedro Alvarez, 2B Neil Walker and LF Jose Tabata. James McDonald and Ross Ohlendorf give the Pirates a prayer that they can give up less than 5-10 runs at least 2 days out of the week. Evan Meek, Chris Resop and Joel Hanrahan provide some actual relief for a bullpen that’s pretty rotten.

The Bad: Are you kidding me?!?!? Well, the worst is the ownership who cares nothing about the franchise or the fan base because they maintain the lowest MLB payroll while turning one of the highest profits. Pathetic. As a Pirates player you are encouraged to play your best because the sooner you do the sooner you are traded from the team. Hard to believe the Pirates share the same city as one of the NFL’s all time elite/successful franchises and a very successful NHL franchise as well. The Pirates pitching staff was abysmal last year. When you have the worst team ERA and you are not in the AL or playing half the time in Cincinnatti, Houston or Philadelphia (3 great band boxes) you have major issues. Oh, yeah, and if that was not bad enough, the Pirates have plenty of problems catching and throwing the baseball consistently in the field too.

What to Look For: To see the Pirates roll out a borderline MLB team and not lose a 100 games. MLB should assume ownership of this franchise because the Pirates front office is a disgrace.

Projection: See the past 18 years. Somehow I think they will only lose 98 games this year. Yet, I cannot substantiate why.

64-98 (6th Place)

2011 Fantasy Rankings – Firstbasemen

Albert Pujols

As I was reading through some of my favorite blogs today I came across a great bit by Jess Coleman at Seamheads.com about Major Leaguers born in August. The article showed that the Majors far and away have more players born in August than any other month, especially among American born players. This made me sad because, well, I was born in August and I missed my calling. Who would’ve known my birth month would’ve been my ticket to the Majors? I kid. But since I never made it, or even tried to make it, I resort to playing softball with my buddies and fantasy baseball, and I do them shamelessly!

I only play in keeper leagues and I love dynasty leagues. My favorite league is my Franchise Fantasy Baseball League. For a deeper rundown check my boy Charlie Nehl’s post about it here. Basically we took a real team in the beginning with their current year’s contract and minor league system and assigned an allotted amount of years to players. The rest became free agents and were open for bidding. We have $210M salary caps and deep rosters that in includes minor leagues and minor league drafts. This is by far my favorite league I have ever done and I base all my rankings off this league’s scoring. Our offensive stats are AVG, OPS, HR, SB, R, and RBI and we start one each at C, 1B, 2B, 3B, SS, MIF, CIF, and 4 in OF, and 2 UT.  Also, my rankings at a position do not include versatility. This is where I rank players if I were to play them at the listed position only.

With that, here are my rankings:

 Rank  Player  Tier
 1  Albert Pujols  1
 2  Adrian Gonzalez  2
 3  Miguel Cabrera  2
 4  Joey Votto  2
 5  Prince Fielder  3
 6  Mark Teixeira  3
 7  Ryan Howard  3
 8  Kevin Youkilis  3
 9  Adam Dunn  4
 10  Justin Morneau  4
 11  Kendry Morales  4
 12  Buster Posey  4
 13  Billy Butler  4
 14  Paul Konerko  4
 15  Victor Martinez  4 
 16  Aubrey Huff  5 
 17  Ben Zobrist  5 
 18  Carlos Pena  5
 19  Mike Napoli  5 
 20  Derek Lee  5 
 21  Adam Lind  5
 22  Adam LaRoche  5
 23  Gabby Sanchez  5
 24  Russell Branyan  5
 25  Carlos Lee  5
 26  Lance Berkman  5
 27  Pablo Sandoval  5
 28  Luke Scott  6
 29  Ike Davis  6
 30  James Loney  6
 31  Justin Smoak  6
 32  Howie Kendrick  6
 33  Freddie Freeman  6
 34  Dan Johnson  6
 35  Michael Cuddyer  6

 

Three I’d Reach For  Reason
Adrian Gonzalez His move out of Petco and into Fenway I feel equates to .300/.400/.575 with 40 bombs, 100 runs, 100 RBI.
Mike Napoli Love the park, love the power, love the lineup, love the potential.
Russell Branyan Always loved the power. Mark it down, if he gets 500 at-bats he will hit 35+ homeruns, but a big if.

  

Three I’ll Let Pass  Reason
 Ryan Howard ISO that has dropped 5 years in a row and BB% that has dropped 4 years in a row.
 Aubrey Huff 34 years old and set too many career highs in age 33 season for me to expect a duplicate.
 Carlos Lee Dwindling power, can’t run anymore, and does not get on base enough. Aging poorly.

 

Top 3 Rookie 1B Reason
 Freddie Freeman Hit .319/.378/.518 as a 20 yr  old in AAA. 1B job is his in ATL.
 Eric Hosmer My #4 prospect in baseball is going to hit and hit and hit.
 Brandon Belt No one doubts his hitting tool but Huff blocks him at 1B. Could get PT in OF.

-Jonathan C. Mitchell can be found writing about the Tampa Bay Rays at his other site Figure Filbert and on twitter at @FigureFilbert

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