AL West Players To Watch

DeSheilds

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 five of six, he brings you the American League West:

Part 1: AL East Players to Watch.

Part 2: NL East Players to Watch.

Part 3: AL Central Players to Watch.

Part 4: NL Central Players to Watch.

Houston Astros (more…)

Zero WAR Player

Carlos Quentin

The Wins Above Replacement (WAR) statistic has become one of the most popular sabermetrics out there and it is constantly being used more and more. It is one of my favorite stats to use, as it works great to project and compare players. A replacement level player is typically viewed as a fill in player for a starter in case of injuries, slumps, or anything along those lines. Albert Pujols had a WAR of 7.3 last year which means he was worth 7.3 wins above a replacement level player. Well what exactly is a zero WAR player? Looking up front at the stat, this kind of player was worth zero wins. They did not help or hurt their team.

To get a better grasp of what a zero WAR player is, I have put together a list of all the zero WAR players from the last 5 years with more than 300 plate appearances and included some of their other stats. (The UZR statistic is for the position that they played the most at that year)

2010

Player PA Triple-Slash wOBA UZR HR/RBI
Ryan Theriot 640 .270/.321/.312 .286 -4.3 2/29
Jorge Cantu 515 .256/.304/.392 .305 -7.2 11/56
Carlos Quentin 527 .243/.342/.479 .356 -22.9 26/87

 

2009

Player PA Triple-Slash wOBA UZR HR/RBI
Alfonso Soriano 522 .241/.303/.423 .314 -3.1 20/55
Rick Ankiel 404 .231/.285/.387 .288 -0.3 11/38
Willie Bloomquist 468 .265/.308/.355 .300 -2.1 4/29
Alex Cora 308 .251/.320/.310 .288 -1.7 1/18
Vernon Wells 684 .260/.311/.400 .314 -16.6 15/66

 

2008

Player PA Triple-Slash wOBA UZR HR/RBI
Paul Bako 338 .217/.299/.328 .274 N/A 6/35
Adam Lind 349 .282/.316/.439 .325 -6.0 9/40
Joey Gathright 315 .254/.311/.272 .280 1.7 0/22
Juan Pierre 406 .283/.327/.328 .304 -3.1 1/28

 

2007

Player PA Triple-Slash wOBA UZR HR/RBI
Wily Mo Pena 317 .253/.319/.439 .328 -6.4 13/39
Michael Barrett 367 .244/.281/.372 .280 N/A 9/41
Mike Jacobs 460 .265/.317/.458 .331 -7.5 17/54
Mike Piazza 329 .275/.313/.414 .317 N/A 8/44
J. Saltalamacchia 329 .266/.310/.422 .318 N/A 11/33
Cesar Izturis 337 .258/.302/.315 .273 2.3 0/16
Aaron Miles 449 .290/.328/.348 .301 -1.9 2/32

 

2006

Player PA Triple-Slash wOBA UZR HR/RBI
Scott Podsednik 592 .261/,330/.353 .304 3.0 3/45
Brian Anderson 405 .225/.290/.359 .277 5.7 8/33
Chone Figgins 683 .267/.336/.376 .320 -8.7 9/62

 

2005

Player PA Triple-Slash wOBA UZR HR/RBI
Michael Tucker 307 .239/.318/.362 .302 -0.7 5/36
Carl Everett 547 .251/.311/.435 .317 0.3 23/87
Omar Infante 434 .222/.254/.367 .273 -3.5 9/43

 

As we look at all of those zero WAR players over the last 5 years, there is an interesting mix of players. We have veterans well past their prime; young players beginning to emerge; journeymen playing wherever they are needed; and stars in a slumping season. One thing that caught my eye was that a large majority of these players played with two teams in those zero WAR seasons.

Looking at these players stats, you don’t get much out of a zero WAR player. If they are a decent fielder, then they seem to struggle offensively and vice-versa. It’s weird to think that these players did not help their team at all when looking at the stat. You would think there would be a better option than these players that don’t do much for the team.

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