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  1. I thought this was fascinating: http://www.hardballtimes.com/cold-weather-positions-and-penalties/ This graph in particular was really compelling: http://www.hardballtimes.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/P1-Position.png Food for thought as we enter Soler Kombat season.
  2. [tweet] [/tweet] Gonna get irrationally excited about sending them Castro in a deal for Teheran(and maybe Maybin/Grilli too) now.
  3. Thus far I've seen: Gordon Heyward Lackey Daniel Murphy Ian Kennedy Marco Estrada Teams are pretty much daring any player who isn't terrible to take one at this point.
  4. There's a couple disparate threads where this is touched on, let's round things up to see if we can get a clearer picture, starting with past payrolls. Here's the Opening Day payroll from each year of the Epstein era from Cot's: 2012: 109 million 2013: 107 million 2014: 92 million 2015: 120 million The important thing I'd like to try to do is infer the baseline that the front office was working from prior to new revenue streams(signage, TV, attendance, etc). One thing that gives us a pretty big hint is how Lester's contract is structured and their statements up to and around it. Lester got a 15 million signing bonus paid this April and a healthy 15 million as his salary this year. We've heard allusions to the failed Tanaka pursuit rolling over into future payrolls, and the math seems pretty close here. If you use 105-110 million as the previous baseline, the 15 million saved in 2014 matches up pretty nicely. Add in the fact that Cot's is counting Lester at 20 million towards this year instead of the more appropriate 15, and 2015 is only a mild increase payroll wise. That's important because there's a bunch of new revenue sources that started this year. Radio - The switch to WBBM I doubt paid less than WGN, but I don't think this moves the needle. Signage - The video boards weren't up for the full season, but I imagine those agreements were made ahead of time once ownership flipped the bird to the rooftops last summer. If there's any revenue source that was baked into the 2015 payroll I bet this was it, although because it's not fully realized with the partial season on the video boards I imagine there's more room to grow it. Here's a Chicago Business article where 'experts say' it could bring in between 10 and 20 million per year: http://www.chicagobusiness.com/article/20140527/BLOGS04/140529849/cubs-unveil-new-outfield-signs-wrigley-field-renovation-plans Attendance - A quick yearly comparison of total attendance: 2012: 2.88 million 2013: 2.64 million 2014: 2.65 million 2015: 2.96 million At a conservative $50/person all included, that's 4 million more in revenue than 2012, and at least 15 million more than 2013-14. It's important to note that attendance was 3 million plus in the Hendry era, but this is money that the preceding seasons just did not have. TV - This is where things get more fun. h/t davell for his post here. CSN - Per this link, CSN per-game went up 150k this year. That's about 12 million in new revenue. ABC - The same link says ABC is paying 750k for their 25 games that were previously on WGN at 250k per game. That's another 12 million WGN - There haven't been concrete figures released about WGN's new deal that I've seen. The above link says that the Cubs were hoping to get 500k per game although the Tribune claims the deal was "more favorable" to WGN. That leaves the net change in revenue from losing a couple million to gaining another 10-11 million. Postseason - There was some debate on this in another thread, but the general rule of thumb I've seen and seen loosely validated is that teams get around $5 million per home game. Even taking half that as a conservative estimate, you're looking at another 10-15 million of one time revenue. Add all of that together, and post 2015 the team has somewhere in the neighborhood of 50-75 million more in *recurring* revenue to work with than it has in previous seasons. We don't know if this will go 100% to payroll(the renovations might need to be paid from this for example), and some of it might have been applied to last year's payroll, which with the additions of Haren, Hunter, Jackson and Soriano ended up pushing 125 million. With all of that in mind, what should we expect for next year? That's the point of this thread, as there's lots of room to wiggle numbers and agree/disagree. Personally, my guess is that there is room for the payroll to go to at least 140 million if not 150 million right away. That's not a hard number, my guess is that if they get to 150 million it's because they added/kept multiple somewhat expensive players instead of going big on a couple(e.g. no Heyward + Price/Greinke), but that still gives a lot of room to be creative and not have to slash payroll to add one big fish either. If you've made it this far, I commend you. If I'm missing something, especially with the revenue stuff, I'd be happy to be corrected, this isn't an area where I'm supremely confident so I tried to source everything I could. This thread isn't for me to pontificate though(too late), so curious where you see the overall number landing for 2016.
  5. I'm gonna break this into 2 parts. This first post is just going to focus on the individuals, and then the follow up post below is going to be on the strategy for building the bullpen for next year. THE BACK END Hector Rondon - RH Repertoire: Fastball (96 mph), Slider (86 mph) Level IP ERA FIP xFIP K/9 BB/9 HR/9 MLB 72 1.67 2.68 3.03 8.9 1.9 0.5 Hector Rondon is great. He's one of the more under-appreciated relievers in the game when you consider how good he has been for 2 years now, and this year was the rock-steady closer for a 97 win team in a major market. He does this by combining elite velocity with elite control. Only 22 relievers have a BB% under 6 the last two years(min 100 IP). Only 3 of those also averaged 95 mph on their fastball, and Rondon is one of them. Because he's always in the zone he's vulnerable to the occasional BABIPing, but since he's almost always hitting his spot he's difficult to square up (remember those 22 relievers with elite control? Rondon's HR/9 is 2nd to Melancon). 2016 outlook: 1st year arb eligible (3.6M estimate) - out of options Rondon is going to be back at the end of the bullpen again next year. While there's a slim chance they could add a Chapman or a Kimbrel to push him to an 8th inning role, odds are Rondon will be closing again, and that he'll be very good again. Pedro Strop - RH Repertoire: Fastball (95 mph), Slider (83 mph) Level IP ERA FIP xFIP K/9 BB/9 HR/9 MLB 68 2.91 3.16 3.16 10.8 3.8 0.7 As good as Rondon has been, Strop has been right there with him these last two years. When Strop is putting his biting slider where he wants it, he's borderline unhittable. The combination of velocity you have to prepare for with a slider that disappears from the zone is how he racks up big strikeout numbers(19th of 98 RP in K% the last 2 years, min 100 IP). The operative word in the previous paragraph is 'when' though, Strop has intermittent battles with his command and his slider's sharpness. When the slider backs up into the zone, it gets hit hard. The fact that Strop's overall performance is so good despite those occasional struggles is a good reminder on how fickle relievers are as a group. Any bullpen would kill to have Strop pitching in the late innings, even if he sometimes fights his stuff. 2016 outlook: 3rd year arb eligible (4.7M) - out of options Let's save some words: Strop will be in the 2016 pen, pitching in high leverage spots. THE CASTOFFS Trevor Cahill - RH Repertoire: Sinker (93 mph), Curve/Slider (81 mph), Changeup (84 mph) Level IP ERA FIP xFIP K/9 BB/9 HR/9 MLB 17 2.12 3.13 2.21 11.7 2.7 1.0 Cahill was a revelation after the Cubs picked him up and put him in the pen. While as a starter he had fought injury and ineffectiveness, his sinker went up several mph in the pen, which led to performance befitting an elite reliever. In short, the harder sinker made his changeup even harder to hit, and he leaned on those two pitches with a breaking ball thrown in for good measure. The peripherals didn't lie either, Cahill wasn't catching a lucky break, he was legitimately very hard to hit, setting career bests in every contact/whiff measure you can find. This was only 17 IP(plus 5 more in the playoffs), so forecasting the future too much based on this run isn't a great idea, but make no mistake. Cahill was a great reliever this year. 2016 outlook: 13 million team option (500k buyout) - FA if bought out Cahill's option will certainly be declined, and from there things get interesting. It's hard to imagine the team not wanting him back, and if they believe in what they saw this year I could easily see the money that went to Motte/Hunter this year getting funneled Cahill's way. Pitchers are proud people though, and it's very possible that Cahill sees himself as a productive MLB starter that's just getting back on track. If there's a market for Cahill the SP then it seems unlikely he'll be back. If there isn't(and given his lack of health, performance, and team control that sure seems a possibility), then I have to think the Cubs are the favorites to bring him back and use him in a 7th inning role like they did this fall. Fernando Rodney - RH Repertoire: Fastball (94 mph), Changeup (82 mph) Level IP ERA FIP xFIP K/9 BB/9 HR/9 MLB 12 0.75 3.47 3.12 11.2 3.0 0.7 I know it's right above, but it's worth repeating: Fernando Rodney had a 0.75 ERA as a Cub. I repeat that because Rodney's Cub performance was more mismatched with the response to his usage than any other player. He was very bad in Seattle so I understand the skepticism, and his peripherals were more 'good middle reliever' than 'Mariano Rivera reincarnated', but Rodney was quite good in Chicago. His pitch mix didn't appreciably change so it's difficult to say how much we can chalk up to Bosio's influence and how much we can chalk up to the randomness of 12 innings, but Rodney the Cub was well worth his spot and usage in higher leverage spots. 2016 outlook: Free Agent Of all the castoffs, Rodney seems most likely to be elsewhere in 2016. While I'm sure the team wouldn't thumb their nose at him on a very small deal for depth, he turns 39 in March and his repertoire is vulnerable to things going very bad very quickly if he's not right(see his 2015 in Seattle). Travis Wood - LH Repertoire: Fastball (91 mph), Cutter (86 mph), Etc(Curve, Changeup, Slider) Level IP ERA FIP xFIP K/9 BB/9 HR/9 MLB 58 2.95 2.53 3.46 11.0 4.2 0.3 *The above is just Wood as a reliever Travis Wood isn't really a bad starter. He's not someone who you want starting playoff games, but you could do far worse. If he had his 2015 start in 2013 or 2014, I bet the team would have stuck with him in the rotation through those struggles. I say this to highlight that having Wood in the pen was a big luxury. His fastball ticked up from 88 to 91, his cutter from 85 to 88. Those two made up 85% of the pitches Wood threw this year, and he sprinkled in off speed stuff of various breaks to keep hitters honest. This worked very well, Wood was a perfect complement to RH starters like Hammel and Hendricks who often failed to make it through 6. Wood would come in and throw an inning or 2 against LH-stacked lineups(though he didn't have a big platoon split) and bridge the gap to the back end of the pen. 2016 outlook: 3rd year arb eligible (6.4M) - out of options Wood will likely be one of the fulcrums of the offseason. He's a luxury that fits very well with the way that Maddon likes to manage, but he's also a guy who is at maximum throwing ~75 IP in long relief. If there needs to be payroll sacrifices to allow for additions elsewhere, the Cubs can probably approximate Wood for less than his 6+ million salary. Clayton Richard - LH Repertoire: Fastball (93 mph), Slider (82 mph), Etc(Cutter, Changeup) Level IP ERA FIP xFIP K/9 BB/9 HR/9 MLB 24 4.44 3.26 3.45 5.1 1.8 0.4 *The above is just Richard as a reliever This is getting repetitive, I should have made a template. [Player] washed out as a starter last year, the Cubs put him in the bullpen, his velocity ticked up and he was pretty effective. Richard was bought to be an emergency starter, and his ability to eat innings bought him time on the roster to earn his keep as a 2nd LHRP down the stretch. Like with Wood, 85% of his pitches are hard stuff, with enough breaking pitches/offspeed to keep hitters honest. 2016 outlook: 3rd year arb eligible (1.1M) - out of options Richard's investment for next year seems pretty minimal for a team that isn't overflowing with LH pen options(especially if Wood is gone). However, I think his odds of coming back are less than many think. Richard was effective in the pen, but he also is definitely a specialist(RH hitters lit him up), and he doesn't strike guys out. When it comes to LH specialists, I'm getting the impression that the front office doesn't really see a ton of value in 'who' the guy is, just as long as they have one. The thinking is that this is someone you bring in someone to prey on the hitter's split, and not necessarily because they're great themselves. You see this manifested in how they've treated that role recently, ditching Wright for little reason, and using NRIs and DFA candidates(Coke, Russell, Richard) to have that LOOGY option. I wouldn't be shocked if Richard is brought back, a million bucks isn't much and a strike throwing option is a decent complement to Rosscup's stuff + wildness, but I won't bat an eye if they simply non-tender him. THE OTHER INCUMBENTS Justin Grimm - RH Repertoire: Fastball (95 mph), Curve (83 mph) Level IP ERA FIP xFIP K/9 BB/9 HR/9 MLB 50 1.99 3.11 3.05 12.1 4.7 0.7 Grimm did his best 2014 Neil Ramirez impersonation this year. He missed the start of the year with forearm inflammation, and then was a fireballing high K high BB guy the rest of the year. In the warmest month of the year he was sitting 97 with his fastball but otherwise sat around 95, with a curve that sometimes has slider action serving as ~40% of the pitches he throws. Grimm's NLDS appearance was a peek at how good he is when he's throwing strikes, as he struck out the side in dominant fashion. His BB rate above shows you that was a bit of an infrequent occurrence though, and his fastball is straight which makes him a little more prone to getting smacked around too. 2016 outlook: 1st year arb eligible (1.0M) - option eligible While Grimm isn't someone you want closing games or even consistently pitching in the 8th inning until he can throw more strikes, he'll be back next year in a middle relief role. He's in the upper half of qualified relievers, so having him as the 3rd/4th best RP for a million bucks is a borderline luxury. Neil Ramirez - RH Repertoire: Fastball (93 mph), Slider (85 mph), Curve (77 mph) Level IP ERA FIP xFIP K/9 BB/9 HR/9 MLB 14 3.21 3.21 4.07 9.6 3.9 0.6 After a great 2014, Ramirez took a step back and missed most of the year with injury. Health is always the biggest concern with Ramirez, it's why he's in the pen and why Texas likely included him in the Garza deal, and it bit him this year. Perhaps more concerning was that when Ramirez did pitch in Chicago in September, his velocity had not returned to 2014 levels(graph), so the hope is that the offseason can get Ramirez right so he can contribute in 2016. 2016 outlook: 2nd year renewal - out of options A healthy Ramirez certainly has a spot in the major league pen, the question is whether that's going to happen in 2016. His lack of options means that a judgment day might come relatively quick if Ramirez is healthy enough to pitch but still not able to hit 95 with consistency like he did in 2014. Zac Rosscup - LH Repertoire: Fastball (93 mph), Slider (86 mph) Level IP ERA FIP xFIP K/9 BB/9 HR/9 MLB 27 4.39 4.86 4.03 9.8 4.4 1.7 AAA 11 4.76 2.54 ---- 15.6 3.2 0.8 Rosscup blew a golden opportunity to seize a role in the 2015 pen. Maddon spoke fondly of him from his time in Tampa and a strong spring training, and he had ample chance to stake his claim as the LOOGY after Coke faltered. That didn't happen though, as Rosscup couldn't throw enough strikes or avoid the long ball and had some injury trouble to boot. When he's able to throw enough strikes to get into pitchers counts, Rosscup's fastball/slider combo is classic LOOGY stuff. To that end LH batters only hit .154/.289/.289 against him. Righties absolutely crushed him though(.431 wOBA, for reference Joey Votto was 2nd in MLB with a .427 wOBA), and it's hard to be overly confident in getting a single hitter(even a lefty) with a BB% north of 10. 2016 outlook: 2nd year renewal - option eligible Rosscup will almost certainly pitch for the 2016 Cubs, he's got the stuff, an option to burn, and a lack of in house LH competition. He'll have to earn his way onto the opening day roster though, otherwise it'll take more injury or ineffectiveness for him to get a real shot. Carl Edwards Jr. - RH Repertoire: Fastball (94 mph), Curve (79 mph) Level IP ERA FIP xFIP K/9 BB/9 HR/9 MLB 5 3.86 3.35 3.98 9.8 4.4 0.0 AAA 32 2.84 3.50 ---- 11.1 6.8 0.0 AA 11 2.66 2.97 ---- 13.7 6.5 0.4 Edwards was strictly a reliever this year, and the results were positive although a touch below the collective hopes for a Top 100 SP prospect turned RP. Edwards missed a lot of bats in AA and AAA, although his control went from okay to absent. Part of that could be chalked up to harnessing his stuff in shorter stints(the K rates did tick up too), but the fact that he hasn't yet shown an ability to throw consistent strikes as a reliever is worth noting. What Edwards has working for him though is that along with the strikeouts, he is remarkably difficult to square up, continuing his elite HR prevention as a reliever. That will buy him some slack if he can get his walk rate down to even mediocre levels. 2016 outlook: 1st year renewal - option eligible Between Rondon, Strop, Grimm, Ramirez, a likely external addition(or Cahill), plus one or two LHRPs and long relievers, Edwards has a small hill to climb to be considered a part of the early season pen. He should be one of the first options to fill in when injuries, ineffectiveness, or lack of rest strike. Yoervis Medina - RH Repertoire: Fastball (93 mph), Slider (84 mph) Level IP ERA FIP xFIP K/9 BB/9 HR/9 MLB 9 7.00 4.36 4.55 7.0 4.0 1.0 AAA 34 6.29 4.71 ---- 9.2 5.5 0.8 Better known as 'the guy who we got for Welington Castillo', Medina's Cubs tenure was a bummer, both in that he didn't perform all that great and that said underperformance meant Castillo was basically given away. Medina has the stuff to contribute positively to a MLB pen, but nothing about his Cubs performance has shown he's close to reaching that point in his development. Not enough strikes and too many hard hit balls, even at Iowa. 2016 outlook - 3rd year renewal - out of options Medina's spring training is going to be very important, if he makes it that far. Without a strong showing he'll likely be squeezed off the 40 man. OTHER CHARACTERS OF NOTE Jacob Turner - A candidate for rotation depth too, if he's healthy do they try him in long relief? Jason Hammel - Similarly, if 2 starters get added, does Hammel get the Jackson/Wood treatment if he comes in 6th place? Armando Rivero - A disappointment only matched by Alcantara for prospects expected to impact the 2015 Cubs. The K's went way down, the walks went way back up, and he's still not on the 40 man Eric Jokisch - He holds a 40 man spot for now so he'll have some consideration for a LOOGY spot, but he had a bad year derailed by injury Dallas Beeler - Also holds a 40 man spot but may not for very long. Way down the list of candidates that could have a sustained pen role. Jason Motte/Tommy Hunter - Both more or less were as okay/mediocre as expected, I don't think the FO will be clamoring to bring either back in free agency, but there is some familiarity
  6. Brees @ Philly or Mariota v. Buffalo?
  7. http://www.foxsports.com/mlb/just-a-bit-outside/story/dexter-fowler-switch-hitter-left-handed-pitcher-disparity-062315 The whole link is worth your time, but the gist is: - Fowler is a much better hitter RH than he is LH - This season Fowler's splits are not terribly out of line, but he's not facing nearly as many LHP - The Cubs have faced among the fewest LHP in baseball this year - LHP usage in baseball(especially SP) is nearing historical lows
  8. La Stella's DL is retroactive to April 9th.
  9. http://www.baseballamerica.com/minors/10-youngest-players-every-full-season-league/ Cubs in the list: NL 4. Soler 7. Alcantara PCL 3. Russell Southern League 5. Almora Carolina League 6. Tseng Midwest League 1. Torres Other fun notes: - Bryce Harper is the youngest player in the NL - The Blue Jays have 4 of the 6 youngest players in MLB - Old small friend Torreyes is still 10th youngest in the PCL
  10. I wondered a little why Grimm didn't get an appearance against STL, that problem also explains his infrequent ST usage. Bummer, hope it's more of an Arrieta problem than a TJ precursor, Grimm was awesome in the 2nd half last year.
  11. This was fun to put together last year, so let's do it again. INCUMBENTS Hector Rondon - RH - 3rd year renewal - out of options Level IP ERA FIP xFIP K/9 BB/9 HR/9 MLB 63 2.42 2.26 2.81 8.9 2.1 0.3 Repertoire: Fastball(95.7), Slider(83.5), Cutter(91.2) Rondon built on his velocity increase from the 2nd half of last year and was very good for a full-season at the MLB level. He doesn't have Strop's slider or a fastball that plays quite as well as Ramirez's, but he has better command and control than both, which combined with stuff that is no slouch, led to a terrific season as closer. No reason for him not to continue in that role next year. Pedro Strop - RH - 2nd year Arb eligible - out of options Level IP ERA FIP xFIP K/9 BB/9 HR/9 MLB 61 2.21 2.66 2.82 10.5 3.7 0.3 Repertoire: Fastball(95.0), Slider(82.6) Strop's slider was again one of the best pitches in the game, and that along with very good fastball velocity led to him repeating his Cub success from 2013. Strop was especially unhittable as the season progressed, here's his line after missing most of May with a groin injury: 48.1 IP, 29 H, 8 ER, 56/17 K/BB, 0 HR, 1.49 ERA, 2.12 FIP. Filthy. The only reason he won't be the 8th inning guy is if 1) Rondon falters so he ascends to the 9th, or 2) some other reliever outpitches him(good luck). Neil Ramirez - RH - 1st year renewal - out of options Level IP ERA FIP xFIP K/9 BB/9 HR/9 MLB 43 1.44 2.61 3.48 10.9 3.5 0.4 Repertoire: Fastball(94.3), Slider(86.9), Curveball(79.2) Ramirez was a revelation after joining the MLB pen in April. With his injury past he was handled pretty carefully(he pitched on 0 days rest just 5 times), but with Strop and Rondon shortening games to 7 innings that was an easy sacrifice. Ramirez's stuff and command had peaks and valleys over the year, but he still only had one month with a FIP above 2.80. He should be a fireman again this year, and it'll be a success if he can maintain this performance with fewer playing time restrictions. Justin Grimm - RH - 2nd year renewal - 1 option left Level IP ERA FIP xFIP K/9 BB/9 HR/9 MLB 69 3.78 3.20 3.63 9.1 3.5 0.5 Repertoire: Fastball(94.0), Curveball(78.6), Slider(84.2), Changeup(82.8) Grimm had a pretty good season for his first go at being a full-time reliever, were it not for the 3 excellent relievers in front of him he'd get even more notice. Brett pointed this out earlier in the week, but Grimm's velocity tracked similarly to 2013 Rondon: http://i.imgur.com/vVVG2bP.png And the results validate that too: IP ERA K/9 BB/9 HR/9 BAA FIP 1st Half 41 4.57 8.9 4.6 0.9 .242 4.08 2nd Half 27 2.60 9.4 1.9 0.0 .200 1.90 If 2nd half Grimm with the improved velocity shows up in 2015, he's a 4th dominant reliever for Renteria to have at his disposal. Really easy to look smart managing a bullpen when you can make every game 6 innings and still have guys with FIPs in the 2s leftover. Wesley Wright - LH - 3rd year Arb eligiible - out of options Level IP ERA FIP xFIP K/9 BB/9 HR/9 MLB 48 3.17 3.44 3.80 6.9 3.5 0.4 Repertoire: Fastball(90.2), Curveball(78.8), Slider(83.9), Changeup(84.5) Wright was a very nice pickup last offseason, and he did the job of a LOOGY very well. Fun fact: Wright faced 85 left handed hitters last year. He gave up 0 extra base hits in those 85 PA. With Russell gone and the other internal options not being overwhelming, Wright should be the primary LOOGY this season. HOPEFULS Brian Schlitter - RH - 3rd year renewal (I think) - 1 option left Level IP ERA FIP xFIP K/9 BB/9 HR/9 AAA 8 3.38 3.83 4.5 3.3 0.0 MLB 56 4.15 3.61 3.92 4.9 3.0 0.3 Repertoire: Fastball(92.7), Slider(83.7) Schlitter was a safety blanket early on when the bullpen was on fire(thanks, Veras!), but his role diminished until he was demoted in August. Schlitter doesn't strike anyone out, and his walk rate is too high for someone who never gets K's. However, if there was a reliever that could succeed with a no-K profile, Schlitter could make it work. He gets good movement on his fastball and prevents loud contact(12 XBH in 56 IP, .079 IsoP against), and he's shown an ability to take the ball day after day without losing effectiveness. With 4 superior RHRP ahead of him he has an uphill climb though, especially as more big-stuff guys arrive behind him. Blake Parker - RH - 2nd year renewal - 1 option left Level IP ERA FIP xFIP K/9 BB/9 HR/9 AAA 35 1.77 2.97 13.1 3.3 0.8 MLB 21 5.14 3.28 3.12 10.3 1.7 1.3 Repertoire: Fastball(90.5), Curveball(76.2), Splitter(81.4) I've always had a soft spot for Parker, and I was very happy when he had a strong 2013 at the MLB level. That made it all the more surprising when Parker didn't even make the MLB pen to start 2014. He went back to Iowa and humiliated hitters there, then could not take advantage of limited MLB opportunities. The ERA and FIP/xFIP gap gives some hope that he can still be effective, but bullpen spots are a lot harder to come by than they were in 2012, and while Parker has an option left it comes with several strings attached. Spring Training could be his last shot as a Cub. Zac Rosscup - LH - 1st year renewal - 2 options left Level IP ERA FIP xFIP K/9 BB/9 HR/9 AAA 30 2.10 2.67 11.4 4.5 0.0 MLB 13 9.45 4.63 4.07 14.2 8.1 1.4 Repertoire: Fastball(92.0), Slider(82.2) Rosscup's high K, high walk, hard to hit, fastball/slider profile isn't atypical of relievers, but the fact that he does it from the left side makes him more interesting. He doesn't have the traditional L/R split though, and his brief MLB exposure fell flat, so despite a LHP-sized hole in the bullpen he's no lock to make the team. Arodys Vizcaino - RH - 3rd year renewal - 2 options left Level IP ERA FIP xFIP K/9 BB/9 HR/9 A+ 9 1.00 2.50 10.0 4.0 0.0 AA 13 2.63 2.67 10.5 2.0 0.7 AAA 18 5.40 4.79 7.9 5.4 0.5 MLB 5 5.40 5.93 4.82 7.2 5.4 1.8 Repertoire: Fastball(95.2), Curveball(83.0), Changeup(87.0) Vizcaino's stuff is bigger than any other reliever in the organization, but the command not coming back after all his time off due to injury is concerning. He could play himself onto the opening day roster and even into a setup/closing role by year end if the control is there, but right now it looks like he may be Iowa-bound so he can try and repeat his delivery enough to hit his spots. Eric Jokisch - LH - 1st year renewal - 3 options left Level IP ERA FIP xFIP K/9 BB/9 HR/9 AAA 158 3.58 3.54 8.1 1.8 0.7 MLB 14 1.88 5.30 3.70 6.3 2.5 1.9 Repertoire: Fastball(89.3), Changeup(79.3), Slider(84.2), Curveball(74.2) Jokisch is really interesting to me. He's been an effective starter in the minors and if his stuff plays up at all in relief he could offer a lot to the bullpen. On the other hand, his repertoire is very much a starter's repertoire, and he had zero platoon split at Iowa this year(seriously, it's freaky). If Jokisch can show an ability to get MLB hitters out, he makes a fine 2nd LHRP and long reliever option, and given the crowded pen that's not a bad thing to have both roles tied up in one person. Still, he's never been a prospect darling so he'll have to prove it. Armando Rivero - RH - 1st year renewal - 3 options left (not yet on 40-man) Level IP ERA FIP xFIP K/9 BB/9 HR/9 AA 34 1.56 2.29 14.0 4.1 0.5 AAA 30 2.97 3.57 13.6 3.6 1.2 Repertoire: Fastball(93-96), Slider, Changeup Like Vizcaino, Rivero is a wild card for next year's pen. Those Marmolian K rates are hard to ignore, but the Marmolian HR rate and mediocre control put a damper on the excitement. With the current depth Rivero will have to earn his way to the MLB pen, but he could be there with as little as a single injury or a strong Spring Training. OTHERS OF NOTE - The SP that don't make the rotation - While there's actually a very decent likelihood someone from this group(Jackson, Wood, Hendricks, Turner, Doubront, Straily) end up impacting the pen in a large way, I simply can't bring myself to write up every single one. If one makes the pen it would be as a long reliever, in Doubront's case maybe handling some secondary LOOGY duties like described for Jokisch. - Dallas Beeler - He got to MLB so he deserves a mention, but he's essentially Schlitter without the success. Not much optimism he breaks into that group - EDIT: Joe Ortiz: There's some statistical things you can squint at to like about Ortiz, but hard to tell how much impact he'll have. They claimed guys around this time last year that were gone by the Winter Meetings. - An external acquisition - Like Veras last year, we could see another reliever brought in to hedge against failure and injury. This seems less likely than previous years with Rondon/Strop/Ramirez/Grimm looking so strong. - Kyuji Fujikawa - I could definitely see Fujikawa coming back on a minor league deal and playing a part in next year's pen. His stuff looked like it was still there(17 K in 13 IP), but the command and control(6 BB and 2 HR in 13 IP) still need more time(if they do come back, see Vizcaino, Arodys). - Non-Iowa minor leaguers - Edwards and Johnson both have the stuff to be bullpen guys at the MLB level, Hunter Cervenka is a future LOOGY option, Matt Loosen has the stuff to figure it out, and Zack Godley was a poor man's Rivero at Daytona last year and could move faster given his age and success.
  12. This is worth its own thread: http://www.fangraphs.com/blogs/evaluating-the-prospects-chicago-cubs/
  13. BTBS did a mock expansion draft, which was a lot of fun to read: http://www.beyondtheboxscore.com/2014/9/11/6130703/the-2014-beyond-the-box-score-expansion-draft There's also team-specific rundowns too. http://www.beyondtheboxscore.com/2014/9/13/6135647/the-wholly-fictional-2015-portland-beavers-expansion-draft-rosters-depth-charts http://cdn1.vox-cdn.com/assets/5001084/portlandhitters_medium.png http://cdn3.vox-cdn.com/assets/5001092/portlandpitchers_medium.png http://www.beyondtheboxscore.com/2014/9/12/6133907/introducing-the-expansion-draft-charlotte-divide-baseball-mlb http://i.imgur.com/kxJVI9L.png http://i.imgur.com/5fwerTr.png Some of the individual draft/protection decisions I didn't think were good/realistic, but it's nitpicky for a really fun exercise.
  14. You know the drill, you determine what a "good job" is. Just be consistent in applying it. Past Results: August - 93% yes (28 votes) June - 80% yes (30 votes) April - 69% yes (26 votes)
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