Results tagged ‘ Jay Bruce ’

‘Bill James Handbook’ Projects 2010 Reds

The public relations people for the 2010 “Bill James Handbook 2010″ sent out team-specific excerpts Tuesday afternoon to the media in each baseball city. I received the one for the Nationals, which projects Adam Dunn to hit .251-40-103 with a .907 OPS. A buddy forwarded me the excerpt for the Reds and here’s what the book predicts: 

Key Reds Hitters (by OPS)

Player

At-bats

R

HR

RBI

SB

Avg.

OPS

Joey Votto

502

80

27

90

7

.311

.947

Jay Bruce

574

92

38

95

10

.274

.877

Todd Frazier

507

61

17

69

9

.278

.807

Brandon Phillips

613

85

21

81

22

.269

.756

Drew Stubbs

544

76

11

51

51

.267

.726 

Projecting stats for pitchers is very different from projecting offensive stats for hitters.

“We used to believe that pitching performance was much, much less predictable than batter performance,” James says. “This is probably still true. . . due to injuries and other factors. Sometimes a pitcher gets hurt, and when that happens our projections for him are knocked into a cocked hat.” 

Here are three key Cincinnati pitchers for 2010: 

Key Reds Pitchers (by ERA)

Player

IP

W

L

K

SV

ERA

Bronson Arroyo

210

11

12

144

0

4.11

Aaron Harang

211

11

12

179

0

4.18

Johnny Cueto

174

9

10

155

0

4.40

What’s obvious here is James expects Todd Frazier to be a big part of the Reds next season. A lot of fans on the Reds blogosphere have debated the point of Frazier being moved to 2b late last season and this winter. I contend the Reds envision Frazier as the next Mark DeRosa and he plays all around the field because of his athleticism and major-league bat. But perhaps we shouldn’t rule out a Brandon Phillips trade, either.

Offensively, the eye-popping numbers come from Jay Bruce. The 38 homers may not be a stretch in GABP, but 95 RBI? The .274 batting average seems realistic.

But none of that will matter if James’s pitching predictions are anywhere close. Harang and Arroyo finishing under .500? And no forward progress by Cueto? That is bad, bad news for this team.

I don’t have the book, which hit the shelves this week, but if anyone has $21.95 handy and grabs a copy, I’m sure everyone would be interested in knowing James’s projections for Scott Rolen, Paul Janish. Ryan Hanigan and Nick Masset, among others.


–30–

Midseason Report: Looking Back, Looking Forward, Looking at the ‘Now’

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Well, it’s not exactly what I had in mind. It’s not exactly what I spent all night/morning working on. It’s not exactly what you expected, either, I’m sure. Yeah, me neither.

Through most of last week I began compiling all sorts of information and statistics to throw at you for this Midseason Redlegs Report. In the end I tossed most of it in the trash.

That’s because after their (predicted?) 2-5 roadtrip through Philly and New York, the Reds’ season is officially on the brink and, no, I’m not giving one @#$&*! dime to John Feinstein. We can look at the NL Central standings and see the Reds are 42-45 but only five games behind the Cardinals. Yay! We can also look at the NL Central standings and see the Reds are in fifth place and closer to the cellar, only 4.5 games ahead of the Pirates. Boo!

This “Stuck in the Middle With You” groundswell, as Stealers Wheel sang back in the early ’70s, leaves us decidedly split on what direction the Reds should take in the second half: buy players for a playoff run, or sell off parts to build for 2010? The interesting thing about this position is there seems to be hope–hope for immediate improvement after eight straight losing seasons and hope for sustained success in the near future.

Personally, I never believed this roster was playoff material, or even .500 material, coming out of spring training. But many of you are believers, owning that hope (and prayer) that five games can be overcome. It’s not impossible. I want to believe you for believing. I really do. Deep down so do lots of skeptical, cynical Reds fans.

That’s where you are asked to answer: “What should Uncle Walt and the Reds do for the second half?” Buy parts that help for a run now, or sell off assets to build toward next year and beyond? Or, maybe a little of both.

Even though the Reds backslid into the All-Star Game break and did so in pretty ugly fashion, the position of the team is perhaps its best in 10 years. We see the young pitching developing and the farm system sprouting, and only the farsighted can scream for “winning now,” regardless of the cost. In the past couple of weeks, more of the fan base has come around to the notion this roster needs more than one or two established new players to make a playoff run. We’re not talking World Series run or NLCS run. We’re talking about just getting past “Go” and collecting the $200.

So as the first half closed and second half beckons, we’ll take a look at some of the things looking back, forward and in the now. 

NEWS! NEWS! NEWS! Bruce Out 6-8 Weeks: The good news of the day is Reds RF Jay Bruce will not require surgery on his broken right wrist suffered Saturday night in New York. He will be out 6-8 weeks, which raises a couple of interesting points:

1.) Can the Reds place him on the 60-day DL so they don’t have to make a 40-man roster removal if they intend to call up Drew Stubbs or Chris Heisey from Class AAA Louisville? With healing, physical therapy and baseball rehab, eight weeks seems about right, especially since the minors season will be concluded by the 60-day activation date of Sept. 12;

2.) What to do about right field now? Call up one of the youngsters or make a deal? Uncle Walt was already looking for an outfield bat–like, since last winter–but now there is a sense of roster urgency;

3.) Or is there a sense of urgency? SS Alex Gonzalez is due back from the DL in two weeks and Jerry Hairston could then become the extra outfielder, perhaps the starter in left field. It appears Chris Dickerson will take Bruce’s place in right field–at least, for now;

4.) Is the Reds’ season officially over without Bruce? He was hitting just .207/.283/.471 but he has 18 taters with 41 RBI and he was at least a “threat” to do something with the bat. I mean, if they were offensively challenged without Bruce, what are they now? Offensively ravaged?

5.) We know for a fact Uncle Walt was eyeballing 3b Scott Rolen of the Blue Jays. With Bruce’s injury, how does the front office’s plan down the stretch to the trading deadline change their thinking and approach? 

First Half Biggest Surprise: Contrary to the Reds’ blogosophere, there have been several positives in the first half. For one, if someone told us on Opening Day the Reds were only five games out at the All-Star break, would we have been happy? Oh hell yes. So why aren’t we happy?

Glancing over some notes I have taken along the way, it’s actually a terrific debate (and toss-up) on what is the team’s biggest surprise of the first half. I would make the argument for the effectiveness of reliever Nick Massett, acquired in the Junior Griffey deal with the White Sox last summer and a player many Reds fans wanted released in spring training. Who would have guessed he would supplant Jared Burton, if not made him available for trade? Massett’s line: 4-0, 2.29 ERA, 19 hits allowed, 30 strikeouts in 35 innings.

But there are compelling arguments elsewhere. Like, Ryan Hanigan’s performance behind the plate as a 28-year-old rookie. Who expected him to bat .338/.428 and throw out 44 percent of would-be base stealers? What about Coco Cordero earning his $12 million salary by saving 21 of 22 games without all the nail-biting drama of last year? He has posted a 1.75 ERA in 36 appearances and going to the All-Star Game. His performance at the back has shortened the game by an inning.

And let’s not forget reliever Arthur Lee Rhodes, older than dirt, carrying a terrific 1.055 WHIP with opponents hitting just .178 against him. Uncle Walt was heavily chastised for this two-year signing, which has not only worked out great for the Reds but also makes Rhodes an attractive trade possibility.

You can even make a case for the biggest surprise being the effective 1-2 punch of non-roster invitees Laynce Nix and Jonny Gomes in left field. Yeah, it’s not ideal and certainly a vulnerable position, especially with Gomes’ defense and Nix’s inability to hit lefties or anything that isn’t straight. But together they have combined for .266-13-39 with 141 total bases. Not great, not awful, but certainly a surprise.

First Half Biggest Disappointment: You can point a finger at all sorts of things when you have a losing record at the break. But what’s the biggest problem with this team? Lack of execution, fundamental play, inexperience, talent . . . what?

An argument can be made for manager Dusty Baker’s lineup choices and construction. We all know he’s a “player’s manager” and that’s certainly a huge benefit, especially when you are strategy-challenged like Baker. The most ludicrous thing I’ve seen on any Reds blog this year was on Redleg Nation, where someone punched some numbers and determined (with serious conviction) that Baker’s lineups had cost the Reds 11.5 games. In half a season. A 23-game turnaround. Now you know that’s stupid, right?

But Baker’s insistence on playing on-base allergic Willy Taveras at leadoff and center field each night has played a role in this team’s offensive problems. How much? Hard to quantify because you cannot guarantee results of hypothetical replacements because game situations, the opposing pitcher or his approach, and defensive alignments switch from batter to batter. So while Baker has done a remarkable job with a t
eam suffering from so many injuries, how much of the blame does he deserve for the team’s record?

We have to be fair; Baker had been throwing together patchwork lineups since spring training, when he warned about the small margin of error with the Reds’ thin roster depth. He was right. 1b Joey Votto, SS Alex Gonzalez, 3b Edwin Encarnacion and last year’s best pitcher, Voltron, have missed huge chunks of the first half. In fact, the Reds have lost 223 games to injuries. Look at that figure again. Two hundred and twenty-three. Heading into the second half with Bruce sidelined and Voltron’s return unknown, that number is going to skyrocket. 

That leads us to the front office, where Uncle Walt has done zero to fill holes and keep the roster full and fresh in times of need. They played shorthanded for ridiculous spells from late May to mid-June because they didn’t want to put someone on the DL or make a roster move that would force a move on the 40-man roster. Worse, when the team was gasping for air and needing positive energy from the front office, nothing happened. Silence. The lack of any move, like the failed attempt at acquiring Mark DeRosa from the Indians, crippled the team’s resolve and hurt the Reds with the fan base. 

So to me, the biggest disappointment of the first half was the do-nothing approach of Jocketty.

Stats That Tell a Meaningful Story: A look at random first-half numbers. . . .

* Runs are next-to-last in the NL and 26th in MLB in runs scored at 4.09 per game;

* The Reds trail only the Giants in MLB with an OPS of 84, or 32 points lower than No. 1 Yankees;

* The pitching staff ranks No. 13 in MLB and No. 7 in the NL with an ERA of 4.26, just ahead of the average of 4.32. The problem? Walks. Reds have given up 335, ranking No. 3 in the NL and No. 26 in MLB;

* Reds have allowed 35 percent of inherited runners to score, ranking No. 4 in the NL and No. 20 in MLB. Surprising.

The Second Half Storylines: Most everyone knows I’m a “storyline” kind of fan, and as the second half unfolds on Thursday, what will make us follow them if they officially fall out of contention? Finding the storyline is harder than it appears:

* Buy or sell?

* Either way, how do the replacements fit into the future plans?

* Can the Reds have their first winning season since 2000?

* Will this team get healthy and what happens if/when it does?  

* Getting Voltron healthy, Harang consistent and Arroyo traded; 

* The progression of Homer Bailey;

* The progression of the young guys, especially if some of the top minors prospects are promoted;  

* Can Joey Votto win the batting title?

* Will this team play better fundamental ball against a more challenging second-half schedule? 

* Is Baker sitting on a hot seat? 

In Other Things Redlegs Related, or Not . . . 

* Team MVP to this point, Brandon Phillips, Coco Cordero or Joey Votto?

* In the first inning, opponents have outscored the Reds 72-44. Would have guessed the margin to be even wider;

* The Reds were in New York this past weekend and MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann, a sensational baseball historian even if doesn’t know it’s Heisey, not Halsey, gave the Reds a lot of words on his baseball blog. You will probably enjoy his rip job of Dusty Baker, too. Read down, Olbermann has several Reds items from the weekend.

btw: I wonder what Olbermann thinks of Ken Burns deciding to update his PBS documentary “Baseball” from 1994? At the time of the airing, Oldermann found so many factual errors, misrepresentations and misidentified photos in the series that he held a nightly count of the miscues. Plus, according to Burns’s documentary, the entire modern era of baseball revolves around Red Sox vs. Yankees. Geez, who woulda guessed?

Is the fastball still an effective pitch? Bleacher Report takes a look. And FWIW, I wrote this story almost 25 years ago.

* And did you see this story in the Cincinnati Enquirer last week? Marge Schott’s mansion, Ambleside, is for sale. A cool $3.95 mil. Be sure to check out the photo slideshow tour. Seriously, if I had the cake I’d buy it. May not be able to afford heat or air-conditioning, but I’d buy it and hold croquet tournaments on the lawn and barbecue festivals on the grounds. Maybe even a Civil War reenactment, or perhaps a reenactment of the 1990 World Series. Yeah, quick: someone dial up Glenn Braggs, Billy Bates and Ron Robinson, the true creature.

What a nice daydream.

–30– 

Photoblogging from Louisville Bats at Richmond 5.3

Saturday was an interesting and exhausting day that included pro football, Civil War, minor league baseball and lots of time on the road but no stopping at the Cracker Barrel, which I love and many people don’t. Forget the craft-mama atmosphere. I love their catfish, glazed carrots and slice-o-apple pie.

The day began with me swinging by Redskin Park for a couple of hours of mini-camp and liking what I saw of the Redskins’ drafted young receivers and the stern practice run by new coach Jim Zorn. From there I scooted down back highways to the Chancellorsville Battlefield, where Saturday so happened to be the 145th anniversary of the historic battle. There were lots of fun things to do and I saw a fairly ho-hum reenactment. Seriously, all these middle-aged and fat guys (burp) participating in the reenactments is a gut-splitter because a.) they look ridiculous in those outfits with their ***** hanging out; and b.) the war was fought primarily by very young men except for the high-ranking officers.

Anyway, after a couple of hours at Chancellorsville I darted down to Richmond for the R-Braves’ game against the Louisville Bats. I didn’t pick a good night because several of the Bats’ regulars were getting a night off and R-Braves starter Charlie Morton is pretty dang good. He pitched seven innings of one-hit, one-run ball, and received a no-decision in the R-Braves’ bottom-of-the-ninth 4-3 victory. But Morton dropped his ERA to 2.14 and opponents are hitting just 1.71 off him–yet, he’s 1-0 in six starts. He and Adam Harnag should do lunch.

Through all of this I spent batting practice on the field, mingled in the clubhouses and spent much of the game watching Jay Bruce, Paul Janish, Jolbert Cabrera and Chris Dickerson. I also took some photos to share because I’m trying out a new Canon and not sure I like it very much. You be the judges:

The R-Braves play at The Diamond, but not for long. Atlanta owns the franchise and announced earlier this year the team will move to a new facility in Gwinnett County, Georgia, ending an association with Richmond dating to 1966, when the Braves moved to Atlanta from Milwaukee. The Diamond was built in 1985 but looks older than Riverfront, which, as you know, is dead. Atlanta finally gave up trying to get a new facility from the city and control-freak Mayor Douglas Wilder, the former Virginia governor who has an authority complex. He likes being boss. A lot. Word in the pressbox was Richmond is in a twist for getting a new team. Minor League Baseball is meeting with the city this week. There’s no chance of another Class AAA club. There are options in Class AA and Class A, but a lot will depend on getting a new stadium built. The Diamond is a 12,134-seat dumphole, but you are right on top of the game. Only 2,544 paid Saturday night, probably because a 12-ounce cup of beer is $6 and a large soft drink $4. The Mariners and Royals have cheaper beer, and six teams have cheaper soda.


Hey there’s Homer Bailey charting the game. Sunday starter Justin Lehr is next to him charting, too. Homer had quite a few interruptions to sign autographs during the game but declined them all. Can’t blame him. Sign one, gotta sign a thousand. Funny thing was, Homer was reading a bow hunting magazine between innings. Homer is 6-4 and the leanest 205 you ever saw. I think that weight is a stretch. He looks more like 190. He’s also got peggish legs, which makes me wonder how he will handle the weight when he fills out. But perhaps adding a little weight will help his endurance.


Jay Bruce, everyone’s anointed savior. Man, he’s got a gorgeous swing. Balanced, compact, easy. He didn’t have a good night because Charlie Morton pitched him brilliantly by keeping the ball low and in. Bruce only got a couple of pitches to do anything with–in his third AB–and fouled them off. He wore an 0-fer for the night and is in a small skid. Someone in the clubhouse whispered they believe Bruce is putting pressure on himself to get called up. Bruce admits to watching the Reds’ box scores each night and following the big league club closely. He’s extremely itchy to get called up.


I’ve never really gotten into minor league ball. I understand the importance and entertainment value. I do like the ballparks and the gimmicks. It’s a great place for kids. Of course, minors parks are all about promotions and one they have at The Diamond is sensational: each “fowl” pole is sponsored by Chick-Fil-A. Hit the pole and everyone gets a free sandwich. Last year, a player for the R-Braves knocked the “F” off the pole in left, leaving the obvious declaration, “Eat More Owl.” People screamed in laughter. The player took the letter “F” home as a keepsake. Note the cows leaning just over the lef
t field wall. Those bovines are in play.


A good sprinkling of Reds fans were on hand, especially on the visitors side of the field. I talked to one guy who was a little upset that almost none of the Bats came over and signed autographs or gave fans a chance to take their pictures. Like the R-Braves, everyone wanted to get into the clubhouse and watch the Kentucky Derby. If for no other reason, the minors clubhouses should be incentive for players to get to the majors. No joke: the master bedrooom for Ms. R and her pissy li’l dog is almost as big as the clubhouses at The Diamond. And there was Jolbert Cabrera, Andy Phillips, Jim Brower, Gary Majewski and a couple of others–guys with big-league experience–crunched into their dressing spaces, eating a club sandwich on croissant instead of a big-league spread. Todd Coffey, who six days before, was in the major leagues, stayed pretty much in the trainer’s room. He had room to eat back there. And there’s not a more solemn-looking guy than the Majik Man. Cleanly shaven, sitting in his tight little cubicle, saying nothing, just watching and eating. No expression. Given injuries, being traded, the death of his stepsister and his recent career path, it’s been a very tough two years for the Majik Man. Ms. R would say a hug and prayer to one of the saints would do him wonders.


Rick Sweet is the Bats manager and he’s a great quote and a very good minors manager. He knows how to handle people. But he wasn’t too happy this night. Chris Dickerson got picked off first in a weird play in which the first baseman made a wild scoop of a pickoff attempt, then faked out Dickerson as if the ball had gotten by. Sweet’s expression after that play was priceless. He was really upset with a call at third in the eighth when the Bats had the go-ahead run going from second to third. The ball was batted to third, where the defender made a stab and diving lunge to get the Bats runner to end the inning. He looked safe, but then, I was trying to figure out some feature on the new camera that apparently doesn’t exist. I think it’s called “focusing the image.”

Sweet had to laugh with everyone else in the fourth or fifth when Drew Anderson was batting and Ryan Hanigan was on-deck. Anderson, who bats lefty, hit a screamer that almost took off Hanigan’s head. Okay, now Hanigan is awake. And I’ll be damned if Anderson didn’t hit another one that was almost in the exact same spot. Hanigan, looking a bit wide-eyed, walked back into the safety of the dugout steps, drawing applause and smiles. Anderson then hit two long fouls in almost the exact spot down the left field line. Unreal.

Adam Pettyjohn pitched a really nice game, having a three-run burp in the fourth. I stole a few peeks at a gun being used by a scout and I never saw Pettyjohn get above 86 in eight pitches. He’s 31 and has exactly one big-league game, for the Tigers in 2001. He throws really slow, as you can see in the photo below because my new camera was actually able to catch the ball in-flight. Yay! Pay this kinda cake for a camera you expect the sports setting to be able to stop the action. Apparently not. Maybe the user is a dope. Probably.


There’s our old friend Chris Chambliss, now first base coach for the R-Braves. One day you’re the Reds’ batting coach, the next day you’re fired and in the minors, and the following day your successor with the Reds, Brook Jacoby, is on the verge of also being fired. Offensive ineptitude is not a sympton but a disease. Yep, that’s original.

Also ran into journeyman catcher Sal Fasano in the R-Braves clubhouse. Sal is one of the greatest guys in the history of the game. You won’t find anyone who doesn’t like him or respect him or root for him. The minors kids worship Sal. He’s played for nine big league teams and about every organization in the minors. God, he tells great stories and he’s a very interesting guy. At age 37, Sal is talking about going back to school to be a paleontologist. But most everyone believes he’s going to be a very, very good coach or manager. He has a huge fan following, too. I joked with Sal that he was looking lumpy; he said I was looking old. Love the guy.


That’s Drew Anderson safe at second, a call no one on the R-Braves agreed with. Of course, they didn’t. Look closely but the shortstop is clearly on the follow-through of the swipe tag. You’d probably like a little closer angle. Yeah, good luck with that on this night.

Good place to point out that Paul Janish is a major-league defensive shortstop TODAY. Right now. We’ve seen the flashes in spring training and he made two plays this night that Jeff Keppinger has neither the arm nor
quickness to complete. I was also surprised by Janish’s upper-body build. He’s got that young Nomar V-shape with broad, strong shoulders and big pipes, but small hips. He’s also hitting a little thus far this season and I’d guess he’s the call-up if something happens to Keppinger. Dude can flat out pick it.


Jolbert Cabrera is outloud hilarious but he wasn’t too amused by the umpiring this night. Here, Cabrera and Rick Sweet lose an argument with the umpire on a called strike three that didn’t appear to be a strike. Cabrera was robbed of an infield hit earlier. He’s hitting just .240, hasn’t been in the big leagues since 2004 and he’s 35 years old. After a promising spring training, his window for getting recalled might be closing.


The minors and mascots. Sheeesh. You have so few good ones. Here’s Diamond Duck, which amazingly has absolutely nothing to do with Braves. Here the duck carries a 2-year-old around the bases. Cute, but not nearly as funny as Dizzy Bat, which never fails to draw a laugh. There’s just something about people falling down that is funny.


And finally, the above picture is from the Chancellorsville Battlefield, where Gen. Robert E. Lee reached the high-water mark of his career. The campaign the Confederates conducted here defies logic on many levels and is a fascinating study. Read Stephen Sears’ “Chancellorsville.” But something happened on the spot where the X is placed that many historians believe changed the course of this country forever. There’s no historical marker at this spot and I had to ask a Park Ranger to show me the exact location. Do you know what happened here?

Off-Day Notes: Bruce, Uncle Walt and May Flowers

On this off-day before the Reds open a weekend series at Etlanner, we take a look at a few things of the past, present and very near future for this ballclub:

Shaddup! Bruce Ain’t Ready. . . . As for the eternal cries and screams for No. 1 prospect Jay Bruce . . . there’s not a single person in the Reds’ front office who thinks Bruce is ready. Terry Reynolds, director of player development, spent a week doing evaluations at Louisville and his report pointed out things Bruce needs to do for getting called up.

“It’s just small refinements everybody is looking for,” Reynolds told the Louisville Courier-Journal. “He’s had very little time in the minor leagues, especially in Triple-A. Everybody thought it would be to his advantage to get more time.”

“He needs to improve nuances,” said Louisville manager Rick Sweet. “He still throws to the wrong base, still makes baserunning mistakes, still misses cutoff men. Those little things make all the difference in winning and losing ballgames. It’s not that he’s bad at them; he’s learning them at a higher level.”

Bruce is batting .316-5-19 with an OPS of .901. More bothersome are the 24 strikeouts in 98 at-bats with just five walks. That’s fanning almost 25 percent of his ABs? In the minors.

There’s zero reason to rush Bruce, and while he’s antsy, he agrees.  

“Absolutely. When I get up there I don’t ever want to come back to the minors,” he said. “When I get there I want to do well and help the Reds win and have a good time doing it. I have no intentions of going back and forth.”

The feeling here has been the Reds would like to see Bruce get about 400 ABs in Louisville over 2007-08 before making a move. Otherwise, the kid’s talent will tell us organically when he’s ready.

Chhhh-changes. . . . Is Uncle Walt Jocketty closer to making a few changes with the current roster? There may not be anything huge, but sources are whispering a few stirrings are in the works. He has some people scouting specific players for need, and they’re working on some things that ousted GM Wayne Krivsky was eyeballing.

The Reds have two off days–today and May 8–but nothing would probably be done before they return home to play the Cubs on Monday. Uncle Walt conducted his pow-wow with Reds brass during the Cardinals series and the rest of the field operations people were expecting to be apprised today and Friday. Here’s what we know (sorta):

The Reds remain interested in Texas catcher Gerald Laird as a full-time option behind the plate. Now that the Rangers have recalled top prospect Jarrod Saltalamacchia and want him playing every day, there’s a feeling the Rangers might lower their price for Laird. But the Reds would also like to shed David Ross’s salary, and he would be a natural fit as part of a package for Laird so he can mentor and backup Salty. Again, it comes down to contracts.

We also know that Uncle Walt has been taking advice on leadoff options. The Reds are looking. Remember my earlier blog post about this subject? It appears one potential target was not mentioned among any of the names we bandied about. I don’t know the player the Reds are watching but was informed he’s someone below the radar.

As part of a work in progress, moves I’d expect in May: A couple of Krivsky’s lieutenants to be fired; Javier Valentin released; Norris Hopper traded or sent to Louisville; Scott Hatteberg traded; right-handed 1b/OF bat added; another righty in the bullpen; No. 5 starter changed again.

Krivsky had his bungles, as you expect from first-time GMs, but the irony is Uncle Walt finds himself in remarkably similar straits with the big league club as his two most recent predecessors. The Reds need to get younger (average age: 30), more athletic, more consistent and more flexible on payroll. If Uncle Walt has a provision in his contract that he can suddenly spend the extra $30 million a year the Cardinals have over the Reds in payroll, great! Your dog (or k.a.t.) can do the job. But since the payroll is sitting at around $75 million with some dead money on the boards, the chances are there’s no magic button to suddenly make the Reds contenders this year.

The blogosphere has been ripe with silly notions that Adam Dunn has market, that Junior Griffey has market, that spare parts such as Hatteberg, Todd Coffey, Hopper, Corey Patterson and Ryan Freel have
big market. They don’t–at least, not yet. They also have contracts or talent levels that limit their return or movement. So aside from dealing one of the promising young players–Joey Votto, Johnny Cueto, Homer Bailey, Bruce, Daryl Thompson, Josh Roenicke, Adam Rosales, etc.–what players do the Reds have that other GMs are willing to offer quality replacements?

The Reds are stuck in the middle for 2008. We knew this back to 2006. Former GM Dan O’Brien recognized the issues, Krivsky certainly recognized, and now Uncle Walt has the entire scrapbook unfolded before him. Competing in 2008 was never quite realistic as long as the team has two outfield positions limiting payroll, youth advancement and lineup construction.

Uh, Oh, Cueto? . . . I pick on the fantasy-leaguers because, well, it’s so easy. They overreact to each day’s lineup and each day’s performance of a player as though it’s Game 7 of the World Series. “DFA Patterson!” “Griffey Has to Go!” “Trade Dunn NOW!” Nevermind that Dunn has a strict no-trade clause until June 15 with serious limitations even after that date. Or that Griffey has strict 5-and-10 rights that dictate where he wants to be traded. Have you forgotten the ill-fated (and idiotic) Griffey-for-Phil Nevin deal?

So we turn to the recent struggles of phenom Johnny Cueto. Guru Mario Soto has been summoned to the rescue, but a far larger point arises: Neither Cueto nor Voltron has ever pitched more than 161 innings in a season. But some fans are screaming,“Get Fogg Outta Here!” And just who is going to replace Cueto if they need to send him to Louisville? Belisle? Affeldt? Thompson from AA? C’mon.

If Bailey is truly ready, we might see him soon. His 7-inning, 10-strikeout performance Wednesday against Toledo had Bats manager Rick Sweet cooing. By some measures it was Bailey’s best-pitched game at Triple-A. Will Jocketty be as deliberate as Krivsky would have been on recalling Bailey?

“His stuff has just been electric coming out of his hands,” Sweet told the Courier-Journal. “All of his stuff is coming out of his hands better. Fastball, slider, curveball, change-up. All of his pitches are better. . . he’s in much more control of what he’s trying to do.”

As young starters Cueto and Voltron are gonna hit the wall in their first season of starting in the majors. They’re not used to the workload or the pressure. They’re also not used to the MLB umpires and their smaller strike zones, the better hitters who foul off their best pitches and rock their mistakes, or the travel and wide time-zone differences that also affect young players. It’s a season of adjustment and experience for Cueto and Voltron, whose talents are advanced enough to keep them on the big league team through most struggles.

Meanwhile, it’s smart to have experienced options on the roster for spot starting or filling in. The contending teams like to be 6-7 deep with starters just for this reason. It also appears Baker is doing a good job of handling this pitching staff thus far. I really like how he’s shuffled some things around off-days, giving guys an extra day here and there. It’s the first month of the season and Baker’s idea of giving the regulars like Griffey and Dunn more time off early rather than burning them down by July makes sense. That applies to Cueto and Voltron. There’s nothing wrong with pacing them along.

Hey, Corey! Booooo, You Bum! . . . Corey Patterson will never win over Reds fans. They think he’s one of Dusty Baker’s guys, as if managers don’t have “their guys,” and the Bill James Stat Geek Society of Nimrods and Pocket Protectors can’t get off the subject of Patterson batting leadoff because of his lousy career OBP.

The Reds don’t have a prototypical leadoff hitter, and Baker is right about Keppinger in the 2-hole. While the BJSGSNPP can’t see any other stat than OBP, Baker sees Keppinger’s bat-handling ability and the likelihood that the 2-hitter will see more opps to drive in runs than the leadoff. Besides, how many times a game does the leadoff guy actually bat leadoff? I’d like to see a study on that question.

Meanwhile, Patterson plays for a very specific reason–he’s the Reds’ best defensive outfielder, he’s their fastest player, and he’s got statues on each side of him to cover for. Where he bats in the order? Almost by default because of the Reds’ styles of hitters. Is Patterson great? No. Is he a No. 4 outfielder? Yes. Is he the reason the Reds are 12-17? Absolutely not.

Lineup Bickerings . . . . There’s no question Baker has brought some badly needed stability to the Reds’ batting order that was so grossly missing with Jerry Narron’s twitchiness. Now, a month into the season, we see that Baker’s insistence on batting Griffey-Phillips-Dunn in the middle needs adjustment.

A couple of weeks ago, the wacky mathematical genius of blogger Justin Inaz came up with a study on Dusty Baker’s lineups. He to
ok 14 different Reds lineup possibilities, plugged their 2008 stat projections into a spreadsheet, shook the bottle horizontally for 3 minutes, vertically for 2 minutes, and by wishing upon a star after inhaling a cheese Coney with one bite, came up with a fascinating and detailed analysis.

The surprising summation? Dusty’s lineup construction isn’t half bad.

I know, I know . . . you’re saying look at the real results. I agree. But Justin’s study shows that Dusty isn’t a knee-jerk lineup-maker like Narron and Bob Boone, and that Baker figures some of the Reds’ underperformers now will eventually play up to the numbers–everybody all at once now–on the “back of their cards.”

That said, for a number of years I’ve stated that Griffey has no entitlement to batting in the 3-hole. He’s not the Griffey of 1998, so why does he continue to get that privilege? To me, Phillips is the future No. 3, so put him there now. Move Dunn to No. 7 until he starts hitting.

What about cleanup? I’m of the belief, for now, that Joey Votto’s ability to hit lefthanders and his ability to hit for a little power as well as the gaps makes him a cleanup hitter. Will this change as he goes through the league twice and scouting reports catch up with him? Probably. My lineup for now:

1. Patterson/Freel, 8
2. Keppinger, 6
3. Phillips, 4
4. Votto, 3
5. Griffey, 9
6. Encarnicion, 5
7. Dunn, 7
8. Bako/Ross, 2

Oh, Great and Wise One. . . . Some of us who shall remain named (me) warned Reds fans near the end of spring training that this team had to survive April and May. The prediction here was 10 games under .500 by Memorial Weekend. You scoffed. Sure enough, the Reds are right on pace at 12-17. It sure rained on the boys in April–lousy hitting, shaky defense, GM gets fired, manager on the fans’ hot seat, blah-blah. Oh, sweet dalliance, will May flower upon us?

Nah.

You think last month’s trek was hard? May is a doozy: Braves, Cubs, Mets, Marlins, Indians, Dodgers, Padres, Pirates, Braves again. Is there more than one series the Reds can positively win in May? If not, the overhaul begins in June.

Reds Spring Camp Sidebar: Questions in Sarasota, Part 1

First in a Series

When I asked readers and bloggers last week to submit their five top “Reds Spring Camp Storylines” of 2008, the inevitable happened: they sent questions. Lots of questions. Eighty-two questions, in fact.

As Eric Bell, aka “Champ Summers,” blogged at C. Trent’s personal site, “looking at many of the interesting storylines, they seem to be questions. Going into the spring the Reds have a number of things that are just up in the air, lots of unknowns. To me that is the interesting stuff in the spring.”

So, after outlining the five in-depth storylines we’ll be covering here over the next couple of weeks, I leafed through the responses again and came up with more than a dozen legitimate spring questions that we–the fans–would like to see answered in Sarasota.

Starting here, we’ll address a few of those questions in (fairly) short-answer format as a sidebar feature, “Questions in Sarasota,” between each of the five-part mainbar series. These questions and answers are not in any order of importance. Nor are they paralleling the mainbar series.

They’re just relevant or interesting questions to help you enjoy watching the Redlegs prepare for the 2008 season:

Trade Winds
Q: Are the Reds willing to pull the trigger on a trade in spring training if a glaring need is seen, or will they wait until the trading deadline and hope for something there? –Larry Hampton

A: The Reds are in a waiting period for deals on several levels. They need to get a feel on their competition for the center field job, see how the kids pitch the first couple of weeks of spring games, evaluate their platoon at first base and address any health issues. Then, they can react.

If the kid pitchers are getting battered around, don’t be surprised at a push for Oakland’s Joe Blanton or another mid-rotation starter. Even so, there’s more free agents unsigned at this time than most baseball people can recall. It wouldn’t be a shock to see a couple of low-risk veteran moves, like Kenny Lofton for a leadoff and center field platoon, or perhaps a veteran pitcher (Kyle Lohse?) signed on a low-risk, one-year contract.

Most of all, the Reds need some games to gauge whether they are builders or contenders in 2008. If the Reds feel they are one or two parts from making a playoff run, expect activity. If the kids perform, they’ll probably stand still for a while.

While Krivsky’s stealthiness on personnel moves incites the curious fan base, his secrecy is usually grounded in layered logic. But remember, he has yet to concede the present, regardless of standings deficit, by playing for the future. Baseball Prospectus picks the Reds third in the NL Central. That sounds right. I think the Reds are buyers this spring.

Dissin’ the Donkey?
Q: Will Adam Dunn get a long-term contract or will there be speculation of his pending trade all . . . season . . . long once again? –Eric Davis (no, not 44!)

A: Dunn makes $13.5 million this year, the final of his contract, and he can’t be traded until June 15. The owner and player seem to want each other long term, but at what cost for a guy who routinely hits 40 homers, drives in 100, walks 100 times and strikes out enough to wind-power the Delmarva peninsula?

With Brandon Phillips extended and seen as the face of the Reds’ future, what does that mean for Dunn? Some believe he could draw $18 million a year on the open market, but there’s serious question to what a DH-type with poor defensive skills and a reluctance to play first base can objectively bring on the deflated landscape. If nothing else, Dunn’s options for such a payday are probably limited to American League teams. Perhaps his home-state Texas Rangers would pay that kind of cake.

Dunn’s future in Cincinnati will likely be decided by the June 15 deadline and dictated by the Reds’ place in the standings, Dunn’s performance, the readiness of Jay Bruce, and so forth. You can reason the end of Griffey’s contract after this season means the Reds are in financial shape to make a sizable offer to Dunn.

Question is, where does Dunn fit into the Reds’ short-term plans for long-term contending? Do the Reds even know themselves?

You can also reason that at age 28 Dunn is at the midpoint of his career. He is what he is–pros and cons, nothing more or less. Or is he?

Dunn had a very good August and September (.275 average, 13 HRs, 39 RBI), when he finally started driving the ball the opposite way, cutting down on his strikeouts (only 39 the final two months), putting the ball in play, forcing the defense from the extreme shift to the right side and making pitchers re-think throwing him away and down. It was as if there was an all-new Donkey dissin’ his long-time critics while tipping his cap to conventional wisdom.

What will the Reds do? There’s no middle ground among the fan base on Dunn; they love him or hate him. But how would the Reds replace his offense? On the other hand, does Dunn’s defense and spotty performance with runners in scoring position make him expendable for younger, cheaper and more balance from other batting slots?

These are all questions without answers–for now.

Valenzuela–Sergio, Not Fernando
Q: Will the unheralded and unknown Rule V pick Sergio Valenzuela from Atlanta cost someone else a spot on the 25-man roster like he already did on the 40-man? –Ron Adamczyk

A: It was a shock when the Reds released Jorge Cantu, an even bigger shock they replaced him via the Rule V Draft with a 23-year-old Class A pitcher who gives up as many hits as innings pitched and as many walks as strikeouts.

As you likely know, a player drafted in the Rule V must remain on the 25-man roster for a season after he’s selected or be offered back to his original team for a pocket of cash and three buckets of catfish (farm raised, please). Does Valenzuela stick? Not likely, evidenced by the number of pitchers the Reds keep strolling into camp. But in fairness to Krivsky, he plucked Oakland’s Jared Burton from AA-ball last year and made a trade that brought the troubled outcast Josh Hamilton. Seems Krivsky’s eye for hidden talent has worked out pretty well, eh?

But Valenzuela? How does this move make sense on the 25-man? He’s never mentioned in the equation of young pitchers trying to make the team. Nor does there seem to be room for him to get many spring innings. Could the Reds already have a deal in place with the Braves to keep the kid and drop him to the minors, building even more pitching depth?

Probably. Keep an eye on the Reds’ roster squeeze and keep an additional eye on the Braves for potential moves and injuries that might deliver them a major league-ready body from the Reds’ glut of training camp bodies. Perhaps Coffey or Coutlangus? What about Stanton going home to finish his career?

Now we have your attention. . . .

The Ugly Lid
Q: Are the Reds again wearing that terrible-looking spring training cap from last year–the one with the giant red wishbone “C” clashing with the red cap and sporting the stupid black ear trim? –Mr. Redlegs

A: Yes and no. The big red “C” is gone in favor of the traditional white “C” but the mud-flap ear trim is back. This lid is more tolerable although it’s not distinct enough to be immediately recognized as the team’s “spring training cap.”

Teams like the Reds don’t get the attention, creativity or wealth of merchandise MLB Properties affords the Yankees, Red Sox, Dodgers, Cubs and Cardinals, all of whom sell much more garb than the Reds. The last real national bump the Reds had on their merchandise was when Griffey arrived in 2000.

Basically, we get what MLB Properties offers, with no
questions asked.

(Editor’s Prerogative: Some questions are edited for clarity to pertain to the specific subject.)

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