Showing posts with label brewers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label brewers. Show all posts

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Yovani Gallardo


OMG, OMG, OMG!

The Brewers are going to summon Gallardo and there is a good chance he will start Monday against the Giants. I *think* that this is the beginning of the end for Claudio Vargas in the rotation. Once Capuano comes off of the DL, I think the rotation will be aligned such that Sheets, Gallardo, Cappy, Suppan and Bush will be the starters and Villanueva will continue to move up the bullpen pecking order. Vargas will become what Villanueva was, a long reliever and emergency 6th starter, then finally Elmer Dessens will likely be DFA.

This plan can be knocked off track if the Brewers need to use Gallardo in relief this weekend, which is plausible. Villanueva is not useable this weekend and the bullpen was taxed yesterday, so hopefully they can get nice long starts from their starters starting with Sheets today.

Anyway, get excited for a mid 90's fastball and a killer curveball.

Matt LaPorta


Meet the new Brewers prospect (and immediately one of their top prospects once the call up of Gallardo completely drains teh pool) Matt LaPorta. Or, more like meet Matt LaPorta's swing (scroll down to pick 7):

This guy thinks that he is going to be one of the best hitters to come out of the draft. That being said, if the Brewers can somehow get him to play a passable left field, they may be looking at a 2009 lineup:
C - unknown
1B - Prince
2B - Weeks
3B - Braun
SS - Hardy
LF - LaPorta
CF - Hall
RF - Hart
SP - Gallardo

That is a lineup with a lot of power potential. Every single one of those players could probably be projected to hit 20+ dingers, with Prince and Braun looking at 30+.

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Ryan Braun


Quick must-read if you are wondering why Graffy and Counsell are manning the hot corner for the Brewers.

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Brewers


From Jayson Stark's rumblin stumblin grumblin's

The Maddux who has had the biggest impact on the National League in 2007 might not be Greg. It could be his big brother Mike, who has turned into one of the best pitching coaches in the biz in Milwaukee.

There are plenty of examples of pitchers Maddux has turned around. But how about his three closers -- Dan Kolb (signed after getting released by Texas), Derrick Turnbow (a waiver claim) and Francisco Cordero (who had a 7.50 ERA last year this time in Texas).

"Let's just say it's not by accident these three guys all developed into All-Star closers," said manager Ned Yost. Maddux told Rumblings he doesn't want any accolades. "I'll take the blame," he said. "Let them [the pitchers] get the credit." Sorry. He gets it anyway.

Maddux built back Cordero's psyche and expanded his repertoire. He encouraged Turnbow to go home last winter, after a brutal year, and "hit the eraser button." And now he reminds The Chief constantly to slow down and "control the pace of the game." And how did Maddux figure out the secret to controlling that pace? By doing such a lousy job of it during his own career, he said. "That's how I learned," he laughed. "By looking back on my playing days and figuring out all the things I wish I'd done different."

• While everybody was fixating on J.J. Hardy's home run total, we might have missed his most incredible stat of all. He has been so locked in, 57 percent of his swings have put the ball in play this year. That's the fourth-best percentage in the NL. And no one else in the top 10 has hit more than two homers. "I can't tell you how badly I missed on J.J. Hardy as an offensive player," said one executive who scouted Hardy in high school. "I loved his hands in the field. He had an unbelievable arm. But I thought there was no way his bat would work at all. Too much swinging and missing." Hey, not anymore.


That is amazing!

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Brewers Prediction


Now that I have gotten to see that good and the bad of the Brewers, I am ready to make a final prediction on the Brewers.

I've got them at: 87-77
They are now: 25-14
Their remaining record: 62-63

I think that 87-77 will give them the NL Cental, with the next best team being 1-2 games over .500 (either Houston or Chicago).

I think that JJ Hardy will finish at .305 with 26 HRs and about 90-95 RBI's/runs.
I think that Jeff Suppan will finish with an ERA of 3.8 and 15 wins.
I think that the Brewer's won't, but should trade Geoff Jenkins at the trade deadline.
I think that Yovanni Gallardo will only be brought up if there are injuries to two starting pitchers (Villanueva would get first crack at the rotation).
I think that Ryan Braun will come up this year after a slump for his bat at 3rd, but not for interleague play as a DH because, unlike with Prince Fielder a few years back, there are good players sitting on the bench being good soldiers about their reduced playing time.

Turnbow


I only need to say this once this year: Turnbow is only as good as a well located slider. If he does not have it, you might as well pull him right out of the game. He cannot be successful with just a straight 4-seam fastball (which he is not that great at locating). When his slider is working and located well, it is very difficult for hitters to get on his fastball.

The past two nights, he hasn't been able to rely on his slider. Guess what happened? On Monday, he stopped throwing it after walking the first batter, giving him nothing to retire two batters he had on 0-2 pitches. Last night, he failed to do anything with the slider save spike it in the dirt (which can be effective, but not against a well disciplined hitter who is making you prove you can put the ball over the plate). So, of course, Ruiz waits for the fastball right in his wheelhouse and sends a no-doubter over left-center. Game over.

Monday, May 14, 2007

Brewers


JJ Hardy is a monster. He hit a 3 run jack on a 0-2 mistake. Are you kidding? It was ironic to see Wes Helms come to the plate in the 8th getting it done. He was a terrible Brewer for a few years. A remnant of guys the Brewers used to need and give playing time to, in the mold of John Vander Wal (picture, right) and the like.

The Brewers may have lost with the lauded 8th-9th combo not coming through, but it really didn't seem that bad to me. You lose some of those games. It is just they way baseball is played.

Brewer East Coast Success


I think the three games at NYM were a success for the Brewers despite going 1-2. Why?

1) They learned they are not the greatest team of all time.
2) They learned they are good enough to hand with the big boys on the road.
3) The beat the big boys bad once on the road, lost a toss up game and lost one game bad.

The game they lost was against Oliver Perez. They are historically bad against OP (see below). Further, the type of pitcher that OP is means that he should excel when he gets an early lead like the Mets gave him. He has good stuff and sometimes needs a little boost in confidence to go right after hitters. A few runs and prior success will give you that confidence and keeps him out of the trouble he gets in when he starts walking batters.

Oliver Perez's last 27.1 innings against the Brewers: 37 K's (37:27.1 K/IP) and a .210 BAA.
Over that same time span against all teams he has a .246 BAA and 438:411.2 K/IP ratio.

Friday, May 11, 2007

JJ Hardy

Jason Stark, ESPN.com: Has anybody noticed the one Barry Bonds story lately that the whole world seems to have missed? Bonds' agent, Jeff Borris, has. "If the season ended today," Borris said, "isn't Barry the MVP?" Well, yeah, as a matter of fact -- the brilliance of Jose Reyes, Chipper Jones, Derrek Lee and J.J. Hardy notwithstanding. Bonds is back to being his .800-slugging, .500-on-base-percentage, lead-the-league-in-homers self again. And he's creating three more runs per 27 outs than anyone else in the league. "He's even played left field decently," said one NL exec, with slight amazement.
I don't care at all about the Barry Bonds stuff, but the fact that JJ Hardy is mentioned on the short list of MVP candidates is nothing short of remarkable.
Let's look at his credentials (NL):
-Tied for 6th in HR's with 9
-Tied for 7th in RBI's with 27 (He bats in the 2 hole)
-10th in BA at .331 (22nd in OBP at .384, good for a 2 hitter)
-5th in slugging at .604
-He is currently 8th in fielding % amongst SS at .977, but there are not enough games to separate all those guys out who are essentially within one error of each other.

I'm not sure that's an MVP, but that is damn sure an allstar behind Reyes.

Monday, May 7, 2007

Quick Brewer Prospect Note

One of the advantages the Brewers have this year is the presence of two elite prospects waiting in the wings in Ryan Braun and Yovani Gallardo.

Three of the best indicators of future pitching success are WHIP, K/9 and K:BB ratio.
Gallardo:
WHIP 0.86 - less than a batter reaching base an inning. Ridiculous.
K/9 - 51/37 = 1.38
K:BB - 51:11 or about 5 to 1.

This man does not allow people on base and is powering through AAA hitters.

Braun -
One of the best indicators of future hitting success is OPS (On-base % + Slugging %).
OPS - 1.142. That is outta control high. This kid's going to be good.

The Brewers and the NFL draft (and fantasy)

First, the Brewers:
21-10, are you serious? Everyone else .500 or below. I will take it. I am already beginning the process of figuring out how I am going to drive from Madison to Milwaukee for all of those playoff games.
A couple of thoughts
-JJ Hardy was never predicted to have this much pop. His ceiling as a players was thought to be great defender, .300 hitter, 20 HR's. It looks like he is going to have to have a rough go of the last 4/5 of the season to cap out at 20 HR's.
-Rickie Weeks continues his mysterious play at 2B. It can be a bit weird watching him play 2nd because he, as demonstrated on Saturday night, can make ridiculous plays with his glove. Don't be fooled by his low error total though, he still suffers abnormal lapses on plays that don't end up as errors. His current level of defense is passable enough that it looks like the Crew made the right decision to leave him at 2nd and not think about him in center as opposed to Hall.
-Their pitching is quite a strength, but I think that it is due for a rough patch. Suppan will not pitch this well throughout the season. Vargas is going to allow some of those many base runners he allows to score. Bush's ability to keep guys from getting on base seems to have disappeared (his WHIP is waaaay up). Sheets is a mystery and still an unknown quantity relating to injuries and now his inability to miss bats as much as he is used to.
-Finally, it will be interesting to see what happens with Mench, Hart and Jenkins when they cool down or the Brewers have an inevitable 3-7 streak. Will they keep their mouths shut then?

NFL draft:
I was having this conversation with a friend the other day: Are draft grades actual grades of this draft picks made by a team relative to those players ability and their value, or are draft grades evaluations of how well a team did relative to mock drafts? I would tend to say it is the latter. When a person fills out a mock draft, they are putting themselves inside the head of 32 different GM's and trying to figure out what they would do. Without the benefit of actual player evaluation, they take the general idea that player X is the best player at a position and then determine that team Y needs that player. This is totally fine as a fun little exercise, but using it as an evaluation tool for a teams draft is asinine.
Another point I wanted to make in extention of the last one is that each team is not a comparable unit to each other team. So if I watch tape and determine that a player is the 20th best player in the draft, that does not by any means say that the team that picks 20th needs to take that guy. That label "20th best player" is really, at best, an average of that players ability across 32 different teams. That player might be awful in a cover-2 scheme and excellent in a press coverage scheme. Or that player might not have the right locker room attitude that the team is looking for.

Essentially, who do you trust more? Person A reads the newspapers, looks up 40 yard dash times, keeps his ear to the ground about where prospects may be ranked by teams and watches a lot of college football to determine his draft board. Person B employs a scouting team who watches hours of tape on all of the players in the draft and uses considerable feedback from those people to create a draft board.

As consumers of the media, we get confused sometimes when a pick fails. Matt Millen, for example, is a terrible GM, right? Well, yes, but...remember, a lot of draft picks that get taken high fail. Imagine a hypothetical team that picks 10 picks after the lions each year. Instead of the Lions picking Mike Williams and Joey Harrington, etc. they took someone else. This team would have regularly gotten amazing draft grades because they would have gotten good values. Joey Harrington was widely considered a top prospect and people cringed when they saw that Mike Williams might be standing 8 inches over their nickel cornerbacks. Yet this hypothetical team would have people banging down the door to fire their GM.

The fallacy lies in the fact that every player is drafted not as a point estimate, but as a distribution. Let me explain. When a player is drafted by a team, we consider him to be 20th pick good. A specific level of ability that player has that is his ability level all the way through his career. Instead, there are many factors from the time a player is drafted until the time that he is evaluated 3-4 years later that determine his level of success: Quality of players around him, work ethic, team system, coaching, family issues, money, injuries, etc. Some of these factors are outside of the players control and some outside of the teams control. Back to Harrington. He was consider a very good QB prospect. He went to a team with a suspect offensive line and running game and what appears to be a poorly run organization. If that is the case, the coaching may have been subpar and the team attitude may have been cancerous. So based on his poor performance, we determine that we had it wrong and that Harrington sucks and we should fire Millen. I don't think that we can evaluate his true ability level without considering the factors around his, though. Had he been taken by the Steelers and allowed to sit for a few years before taking over the year that Roethlisburger wound up taking over, how do you think he would have done? My guess is that with good coaching, good players around him, time to sit and learn, he might have been Roethlisburger good.

So I think we can consider a players performance in the 3-4 years following the draft as being taken from a distribution with the mean being that players true ability and some amount of variability affected by different characteristics of the player and the team he is going to.

Packer draft:
The WR situation seemed curious to me. The team will keep 5-6 players, of which Driver and Jennings are 2. Supposedly they are high on something in the Shaun Bodiford, Carlyle Holliday, Ruvell Martin powerhouse trio. They have a returning Koren Robinson. They have Robert Fergueson, special teams gunner. Then they draft James Jones and David Clowney. So I have Driver, Jennings, Jones, Clowney, Fergueson, Bodiford? Does that mean they flat cut Koren Robinson, Holiday and Martin? Personally, I cut Fergueson, Holiday and Ruvell Martin.

I am excited about VT S Aaron Rouse. In college, a player with ideal measureables who has a ridiculous junior year and a bad senior year is an excellent mid-round gamble. There are many non-permanent reasons why you could see that pattern happen to a player.