作者keyboardmm (大学四年过好快啊..)
看板Cardinals
标题[情报] Stakeholders - St. Louis Cardinals
时间Mon Mar 1 10:03:50 2010
http://baseballanalysts.com/archives/2010/02/stakeholders_st.php
Stakeholders - St. Louis Cardinals
By Patrick Sullivan
From now through the beginning of the regular season, we will not be posting
in-depth round-tables previewing each division like we have in years past.
Instead we will feature brief back-and-forths with "stakeholders" from all 30
teams. A collection of bloggers, analysts, mainstream writers and senior
front office personnel will join us to discuss a specific team's hopes for
2010. Some will be in-depth, some light, some analytical, some less so but
they should all be fun to read and we are thrilled about the lineup of guests
we have teed up. Today it's Bernie Miklasz on the St. Louis Cardinals.
Patrick Sullivan: Let's just get this out of the way right off the bat. I
can't think of a less interesting sideshow of a non-story than the "Big Mac
is a distraction" meme that seems to emanate from mainstream sports media
circles. I think it's petty and self-fulfilling. Where do you come down on
it? Is the team distracted? Do fans that you come across really care that
much if Mark McGwire is the hitting instructor for the St. Louis Cardinals?
Bernie Miklasz:: I happen to agree with your opinion on McGwire. This is
primarily a media-driven story generated to please, well, the media.
Somewhere along the line mainstream baseball writers and columnists -- and I
am a member of that particular tribe -- appointed themselves to sit on the
high court and hand down moral judgments. That's above my pay grade. McGwire
used steroids. He shouldn't have used steroids. He admitted using steroids.
He apologized for using steroids. He'll never get into the Hall of Fame
because of steroids. What else is there to add, really? Whatever McGwire says
won't be good enough for some folks. We're now into dissecting apologies.
We're going line by line and grading the confessor on his sincerity, candor,
style, emotional appeal, etc. The judges at the Cannes film festival aren't
this snooty.
As for McGwire being a distraction ... I'm in Jupiter, Fla. at the Cardinals'
camp. McGwire is working hard. The players clearly enjoy working with him. He
seems to be off to a good start. They're bonding. He's already fixed a loop
in Ryan Ludwick's swing. They all seem to be happy. I don't see any
distractions. I guess it's possible at some point. You never know when
card-carrying members of the BBWAA will show up to deliver another sermon on
the mount. Or mound.
PS: The Cardinals have a nice luxury in that they have three of the very best
players in the game in Albert Pujols, Matt Holliday and Adam Wainwright. You
could throw Chris Carpenter in there too if you'd like. From there, construct
the road map to 90-95 wins for me. Which players have the potential to step
forward this year? Is the back end of the rotation good enough?
BM: The back end of the rotation was pretty weak in 2009. The top three --
Adam Wainwright, Chris Carpenter and Joel Pineiro - combined for a 2.79 ERA
in their 94 starts. The other six pitchers who started games had a 5.16 ERA.
Despite that instability and ineffectiveness in the fourth spots, the team
still won 91 games.
So what's changed? Pineiro left as a free agent. Brad Penny was recruited on
a one-year deal and he seems like an ideal turnaround candidate for Dave
Duncan, the horse whisperer of big-league pitching coaches. Duncan has
coveted Penny for a long time, so I'm assuming Penny will benefit from the
working relationship, as many other starters have before him. Kyle Lohse
wasn't healthy last season - he had a sequence of weird, non-pitching
injuries - and he should bounce back strong in 2010. There are a few decent
options (Kyle McClellan, Jaime Garcia, the surgically-repaired Rich Hill) for
the fifth-starter job, and all of them are better than Todd Wellemeyer, who
was the No. 5 last season. I think there's a fair chance that the Cardinals
will have a better rotation in 2010.
Penny and Lohse are the keys. There's
some anxiety over Ryan Franklin as a closer, but I'm thinking we'll address
this in another question, no?
Offensively, the Cardinals should make gains in at least a couple of areas.
They'll have a full season of Matt Holliday in left field. He likes the
league. He likes the home ballpark. He likes the run-producing opportunities
presented to a man who hits behind Albert Pujols.
Ryan Ludwick's days of
slugging .600 are probably over, but he's been working with batting coach
Mark McGwire to reduce the loop in his swing; will that help Ludwick push his
line-drive rate back to 2008 levels? Possibly. But I'm going to resist
nitpicking Ludwick too much; over the last two seasons he ranks third among
MLB outfielders in RBIs, fifth in homers and 13th in OPS.
Colby Rasmus had a subdued rookie season in 2009; his good start was negated
by a hiatal hernia that sapped his strength. Rasmus is healthy now, and
stronger.
He did a reasonably solid job against lefties during his
progression in the minors, so I'm going to suggest that he'll do a lot better
than hit .160 against LHP's - which was what he did with them last season.
David Freese certainly has a lot to prove at third base, but look at it this
way: Cardinals' third basemen ranked 28th in the majors in OPS last season,
and Freese should ratchet that up a bit. Right now the Cardinals have a
sketchy, thin bench. It will be young. It could be a liability. But I also
think GM John Mozeliak will address the area via trade at some point.
The Cardinals were mediocre at getting on base last season (.332 OBP) and
that's a primary reason for hiring McGwire as the batting coach. He's
emphasizing a more selective hitting approach.
The Cardinals should be better defensively. Brendan Ryan played exceptionally
well at shortstop, but logged only 830 innings (26th among MLB shortstops).
He'll play more (and prevent more runs) in 2010. I don't know what to say
about Skip Schumaker at 2B; his defensive metrics in 2009 were rather
unsightly, and he was almost hopeless in going to his left for ground balls.
But he improved as the year went on. (Will you take my word on that? Probably
not.) Dare we propose that Schumaker can approach average ratings in 2010?
And Freese is a better fielder than the assortment of loose parts used at 3B
by the Cardinals last season.
There's also this Pujols fellow. I'm told he's pretty good in all phases of
the game.
PS: A quick reaction to your last answer: I find your commentary on the
supporting cast to be altogether persuasive. I think there are some really
interesting parts flying under the radar. But I find your remarks about
Holliday and the "top three" (you acknowledge Pineiro's departure will hurt)
a tad problematic because I think their performances are unlikely to hold
constant. Matt Holliday had a .380 in-play average (Pujols' average was .299
by comparison). Without taking anything away from Adam Wainwright or Chris
Carpenter, both out-pitched their fielding independent numbers and I still
have to think Carpenter's health is something of a question. Thoughts?
BM: Granted, Holliday won't be able to sustain the burst of offense (.353 /
.419 / .604) he provided after coming over from Oakland in late July. His
numbers were sick.
But even if Holliday fulfills his CHONE projection for
2010, we're talking about 25 homers, 100 runs, nearly 100 RBIs and an OPS of
around .900. Plus above-average defense. Last season the Cardinals had all
sorts of problems in the outfield. Ludwick's slugging fell off, Rasmus was
diminished by the hernia, Rick Ankiel lost his plate discipline, and the
other corner outfield spot was a wasteland. It explains why the Cardinals'
outfield had a .743 OPS, which ranked 24th in the majors. If everyone holds
up physically, and Holliday-Rasmus-Ludwick start 150 or more games, that OPS
should spike in 2010. If there's any injury, watch out. But isn't that true
of every contender?
As for the rotation, obviously there's a big problem if Carpenter goes down.
When he's been healthy, the Cardinals are a playoff team. When he's been
unable to pitch, the Cardinals don't make the playoffs.
But you may have more
of a reason to worry about Wainwright. He pitched 233 innings last season. He
averaged 106 pitches per start. On the pitcher-abuse points chart, he was No.
6. Will this impact him in 2010? Interesting question. But Wainwright is a
strong guy, and he gets smarter about pitching every year. So we'll see if
all of those innings (and 3,614 pitches) took anything out of him.
PS: It doesn't hurt that the NL Central is awful, right?
BM: No question, that's been a factor in the Cardinals' success over the
years. Interestingly, since becoming the Cardinals manager Tony La Russa has
a higher winning percentage (.562) against NL West teams than he does against
NL Central teams (.558).
But back to the Central question. How much is this a matter of the Cardinals
being good as opposed to the others being so lousy? I suppose it depends on
your perspective. But the Cardinals have had impressive stability and
continuity, and that's a strength. This is La Russa's 15th season in St.
Louis, and during that time the other five NL Central teams have employed 34
managers. And over these 15 years the Cardinals have had one owner and two
GMs. And the second GM, John Mozeliak, was trained by the first, Walt
Jocketty. But look around the rest of the division. Four of the other five NL
Central franchises have been sold at least once, and the fifth, Houston, is
for sale now. And I can't count all of the GMs and various rebuilding
projects. The Cardinals get major points for having a consistent plan,
philosophy, and steady leadership.
PS: There's an Ed Wade joke in here somewhere, but I'll abstain. Thanks so
much for participating, Bernie. Want to offer up a quick 1-6 prediction for
the NL Central and we'll wrap this up?
BM: 1. St. Louis: A lot of terrific pieces are in place, including Albert
Pujols and the strong 1-2 rotation punch of Chris Carpenter and Adam
Wainwright.
But the Cardinals will need Carpenter to make 30 starts. And
watch out for the closer, Ryan Franklin. He got swings and misses only 18
percent of the time last season, and the random nature of luck caught up to
him late in the 2009 season. There isn't a clear alternative closer in the
bullpen.
2. Chicago: I actually think the Cubs will be better than many think. No, the
Cubs aren’t getting good value for their $140 million payroll. I like the
projected Fukudome-Nady platoon in right.
But if Zambrano and Lilly stay
healthy, and if Soriano doesn't have another season in which he plays like an
83-year-old – well, there’s a chance if the Cardinals slip.
3. Cincinnati: The Reds have become something of a trendy pick. Not to win
anything, but to move up. A rising team. I’ll buy some of that stock. I like
the rotation and figure that the offense will wake up a bit in 2010.
4. Milwaukee: Not enough starting pitching.
5. Houston: Bad farm system, strange spending habits, declining stars. The
arrow is definitely pointing down.
6. Pittsburgh: In the words of David Byrne: Same as it ever was.
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