Showing posts with label 2024 Giants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2024 Giants. Show all posts

Friday, November 01, 2024

Your 2024 Giants: Why Six Years Is Not Enough (also: Posey/Minasian)

[Wrote most of this in mid-October, just never got around to finishing until today's announcement of Zack Minasian as the new GM, so I've added some comments about that]

Just read an article on Fangraphs, written a while ago, regarding how long draft prospects take to reach the majors.  It was going to be a key rebuttal regarding the six years people have been complaining that Zaaidi’s had enough time to rebuild the team. Then reality took a left turn.

I was taking off for a vacation in SoCal, to visit my daughter, and was away from my phone since I was driving my wife and I down.  So after we checked in, I checked my phone and my brother who also follows the Giants text me "Posey!"  And I'm wondering what happened.  Then I see The Athletic notifications of articles about Zaidi being replaced by Posey.

So, now, after he’s been fired and replaced by Posey, instead this post will simply be a learning experience for those who don’t understand the player development process very well (which, based on the vast majority of people commenting on The Athletic, is a vast majority of Giants fans; which aligns well with what I experienced when defending Sabean back in 2007-2010).

Thursday, August 29, 2024

Your 2024 Giants: This Has Been a Transitional Season

Wrote most of this up on The Athletic, posting it here, mostly the same, but I added too.

Tuesday, August 06, 2024

Your 2024 Giants: Rotation Dominance, is it Enough? Maybe

Now that we have seen Robbie Ray grunt through a few starts, and see the benefits of having a good rotation, along with the fact that the Giants have a weaker schedule now (due to having a tougher schedule earlier), and the Cobb trade opening up the rotation for Birdsong, I thought I would run through some possibilities.

Monday, July 08, 2024

Your 2024 Giants: Heliot Evolution

One of the great developments of this 2024 Giants season is the break out of Heliot Ramos. But, as great as his early start was, his BABIP was unsustainably in the .400’s, which even the greatest hitters in MLB history has never sustained over a full season, so I expected a fall, though to still good (800-ish OPS) from great (over .900). I thought I would reinvestigate his stats now that he seems to be sustaining a great OPS, and see what his numbers look like now.  

Especially since he was named to the All Star NL team just the other day.  He's the first home grown Giants OF to make the All Star game as a Giant since Chili Davis did it some 40 or so years ago.  Some call it a curse, some call it a streak, I just call it an anomaly due to Sabean focusing the Giants on pitching since he took over in 1997.  

Friday, June 21, 2024

Giants Long Wait for All-Star Outfielder Was a Feature, Not a Bug

This post was created in response to discussion about the Giants 40 years and counting wait for an All Star Outfielder, which might end soon anyway the way Heliot Ramos has been on fire. It was pulled from some comments I shared on The Athletic, and, of course, I then added more, as usual. 

ogc thoughts 

Many haters of Sabean and/or Zaidi love to bring up the fact that the Giants haven't produced an All Star caliber outfielder since Chili Davis.  It's like producing Will Clark, Matt Williams, Matt Cain, Tim Lincecum, Madison Bumgarner, and Buster Posey with first round picks wasn't good enough for them.  We want outfielders!!!

The thing is, waiting for an OF is understandable when you consider that during the Rosen era, he used his best first round picks to get Will Clark and Matt Williams, then during Sabean’s era, which encompassed most of the rest of those 40 years, he spend almost every first round pick he had on pitchers, selecting Cain, Lincecum, Bumgarner, and Wheeler, and, of course, there was his front office’s rare position pick, arguably his best, Buster Posey.

As well, looking at Zaidi's drafts should not be done with any finality yet because even his first draft, the 2019 draft, has had only three full pro seasons to play (equal to his 2020 draft), because they lost one in the pandemic, and it takes 4 to 6 seasons to get an accurate assessment of how well or poorly that draft went. It takes time for prospects to develop, and as we learned painfully over the years, even good prospects fizzle out, even after a good MLB season (Jerome!), and don't amount to much.

Sabean not only spent most of his first round picks on pitching, but even though rosters then were comprised of more hitters than pitchers (13/12), Sabean’s front office always drafted and signed more pitchers than hitters. They were all in on pitching! Zaidi has been similar overall, but differently, going all in on pitching for his 2021 and 2022 drafts.

Thus, if you thought nothing of Clark, Williams, Cain, Lincecum, Bumgarner, Posey, and especially 3 in 5, then keep on pointing out this lack of producing outfielders as that was the sacrifice made to get these players. No outfielders is a feature, not a bug.  And, ironically, this "streak" may end soon if Ramos makes the All Star game this season, he's on the ballot, and currently leads all outfielders in bWAR, so it seems likely that he (and likely Webb) will end up the Giants All Star representatives, assuming he can continue hitting well enough.

Analysis of Sabean First Round Picks

I thought it would be interesting to see how skewed Sabean was for pitching, by looking at who he picked in the first round, and with which picks. To be clear, when I am talking first round picks, I am talking the proper first round picks, not any supplemental players like McKinley or Crick. So just the first 30 picks of the first round.

That brings me to 24 picks within the first 30 picks for Sabean. Here’s that breakdown:

  • 2 catchers
  • 3 infielders
  • 4 outfielders
  • 15 pitchers (63%) 

As regular readers know, I once analyzed the first 50 years of the draft (and wrote a blog post) and calculated the odds of finding a good (18+ bWAR) player, and if you add the odds up by these positions, that is the number of good players one can expect on average from Sabean’s various first round picks (through simple addition of the odds; for example, if the odds of finding a certain player is 5% or 0.05, and you have four of those picks, you can expect to find that player 0.20 of the time or 0.2 players).

On average, based on Sabean's first round picks, he would have found:

  •  0.46 catchers
  •  0.21 infielders
  •  0.21 outfielders
  •  1.72 pitchers 

Why do it this way? It shows not only what position he picked but also the quality of the pick used for them.

Based on these averages, Sabean needed to have almost 5 times as many similar sets of first round draft picks (another 120 years of drafts, basically) in order to find one good outfielder or infielder with a first round draft pick, because he did not spend a ton of draft bullets on outfielders (19, 24, 29, 29) or infielders (19, 25, 29).

This is unlike catchers (2, 5) or LHP (10,30) or RHP (4, 6, 10, 14, 18, and eight picks, 20-25), where Sabean spent all his best draft picks. Sabean spent way more picks on pitching (almost 4 times as many as on OF, 5 times as many on IF) as well as quality of picks (8 times as much). Even adding up all the position players (0.88) is still roughly half that of pitchers (1.72).

This illustrates what I was talking about, he rarely spent any of his best draft picks on outfielders, because he was using more of them on pitchers, as well as more of the best picks (not one better than 19, whereas six picks from 4-18 we’re used on pitching), and thus the odds were tremendously against him in finding an outfielder while focusing so much on pitching. Similarly for IF in the first round.

Why don’t I look at the other rounds? Picks at the end of the first round became good players about 5% of the time, then it dropped to 2% by the middle of the third round, and 1% by the end of the fourth round. When compared to 1.72 pitchers, they don’t make a lot of difference, 20 drafts of the 5th round adds 0.20 (20 times 1%). Plus, as noted, Sabean spent more picks on pitching than hitters in the draft anyway, so whatever you add in the later rounds for the position players, it would be matched likely by a pitcher selected in the later rounds. The disparity of the first round picks is so great that the position players cannot catch up in odds after the first round.

Sabean Was a Good Drafter

Obviously Sabean did much better than average, which I covered in a series of posts after publishing the draft study linked above. He found a great (certainly HOF caliber) catcher in Posey, and four good to great pitchers in Cain, Lincecum, Bumgarner (he likely would have been HOF caliber if not for his bike accident), and Wheeler. That’s 5 good and better players when the odds expected 2.6 good players in total, or almost double as much. Add in Belt, Crawford, and Reynolds (hmmm, Reynolds has in fact done veery well, I should revisit that analysis and update it) from the other rounds, and he’s doing exceptionally well, and Webb (also doing very well), Rogers, and Ramos (out of the possibles for reaching 18 bWAR) are still on the clock for his drafts.

To show how good that is, Sabean would have to have another 20 or so first round picks that fizzle in order for him to fall back down to average in terms of first round pick success.  That almost doubles his number of first round picks, and that would only bring him to average.  He was clearly very good at drafting in the first round.  

The "Actual" First Round Further Accentuates Sabean's Pitching Focus

Thinking further about this, I realized that the first round is an artifice based on how many teams are in the MLB.  When there were only 16 teams, the first round was only 16 picks, for example.  So I then connected that to the fact that there is a tier of picks, 15-23, which has odds of 10.8%, then the next tier is 24-76, which has odds of 5.2%.  So let's take a look at the distribution of Sabean picks for the first 23 picks (the best picks) of the first round:

  • 2 catchers (13%)
  • 1 outfielder
  • 1 infielder
  • 11 pitchers (73%)

Now it is nearly three quarters of his best picks were used on pitchers, nearly 4 times as much as the other three categories combined.  

And by total bonuses:

  • Catchers: $13.2M (34%)
  • Outfielders: $3.1M (incidentally, the pick of Heliot Ramos)
  • Infielders:  $1.1M 
  • Pitchers:  $21.3M (55%)
Here, now we see the prominence placed on catchers and pitchers, and both catchers (Posey and Bart) were considered good to great defensive catchers, which is key for a team focused on pitching.

And while I'm at it, if we do it by bWAR:
  • Catchers: 46.2 bWAR (24%)
  • Outfielders: 1.9 bWAR
  • Infielders:  7.1 bWAR
  • Pitchers:  135.3 bWAR (71%)
Again, pitchers far outweighted the position players, and catchers (really, just Posey) had a significant portion as well.  And together comprised 95% of the bWAR produced.

Zaidi Drafts

Complain about no outfielders if you want (and many Sabean and Zaidi haters want), but that was the plan for the most part, until recently, when Zaidi drafted Hunter Bishop and, recently, Bryce Eldridge, as OF, with first round picks. To compare, Zaidi has had five drafts so far, and selected outfielders with two of the five. In 24 drafts, Sabean selected three outfielders out of his 24 selections, a wide disparity.

Still, Zaidi has been focused on pitching. He moved heaven and earth to save up enough bonus money in the 2020 draft in order to draft Kyle Harrison in the 3rd round. This was made that much harder because this draft was only 5 rounds, instead of the usual 10 rounds, and thus less rounds to carve out bonus from. Despite this, he still found a Gold Glove caliber starting catcher in Bailey and possibly the 3B of the future in Schmitt.

Then in the 2021 and 2022 drafts, he used 17 of the 20 picks, that he had out of the first 10 rounds picks that he had in each draft, on pitching, and still found interesting prospects in Vaun Brown and Wade Meckler.

As I noted above, it does not make sense to try to judge Zaidi's drafts negatively yet.  Prospects regularly take 4 to 6 years to become good players.  And this makes sense as future major leaguers often take at least a season for each level, and there are five levels:  A, Advanced A, AA, AAA, and MLB.  Sometimes a prospect needs to repeat a level.  And his 2019 and 2020 drafts have only had three full pro seasons so far.

Still, despite this, he has already found a Gold Glove caliber catcher in Bailey who should be the starter for the rest of the decade, at least, and an ace in training pitcher in Harrison, who has done ace type stuff at each level, including the MLB last season, with 9.1 K/9, 2.9 BB/9, and 3.14 K/BB, which only the best pitchers accomplish.  As well, Whisenhunt and Eldridge have both made Top 100 prospect lists, and Crawford has zoomed up to AAA and might pitch in the majors this season, health permitting.  Meckler and Schmitt have also made the majors, and Schmitt is hitting about league average, while playing 3B at an elite level last season.

Lack of Outfielders is a Feature, Not a Bug

Thus, as we can see above, the Giants have not spent a ton of picks, and really, not many (or really, any) good picks, on outfielders over the years, especially after Sabean took over as GM.  They have mostly devoted their top picks on pitchers and catchers, and have done rather well there, Sabean found a lot of pitchers who contributed (five pitchers in total with 10+ bWAR, four good pitchers with 19+ bWAR) plus Posey (and potentially Ramos as well, and now I realize I should add Reynolds into this conversation), and Zaidi has already found a Gold Glove caliber catcher in Bailey, as well as a good starting pitcher in Harrison, health permitting.  

And finding Bailey is amazing because Posey is HOF caliber, so I expected to not be so lucky with our next starting catcher, figuring the new guy won't even be close to what Posey was originally envisioned, a great defensive catcher who can hit, and maybe develop some power eventually (they projected he would eventually get into the 20 homer range eventually, but he got there right away).  Even that is a lofty performance to match, but Bailey has been doing it so far.

So the lack of outfielder development is a feature of Sabean's and Zaidi's draft strategies (didn't bother to look at Rosen's, it was so short and so long ago, it is what it is).  Both have focused a large amount of their picks on pitching and catching.  Zaidi has actually spent two first round picks on outfielders, out of five drafts, but Bishop has been constantly injured and only this season reached AAA (drafted in 2019) and Eldridge not only was drafted last year, but he has also been moved to 1B, and currently not a two-way OF/pitcher, as originally drafted, so he won't be a starting OF unless he changes position again.  

In any case, the outfield of the future looks filled with Matos, Lee, and Ramos, so Zaidi does not look like he needs to develop any outfielders in the near future, at least.  And Ramos has been playing so well, for so long, that he could possibly break that streak by making the All Star game this season.

Wednesday, June 19, 2024

Your 2024 Giants: Zaidi Not Going Anywhere

I wrote most of this post because someone commented about how much they admire the Dodgers, who happened to hit a bunch of homers on a night our offense was limp (albeit against a pitcher who had a 2.78 ERA, so he was’t chopped liver, he was pretty good).

Saturday, May 04, 2024

Your 2024 Giants: StatCast Hitters' Analysis as of May 2nd

There has been so much hew and cry about the Giants offense that I thought I would peep into StatCast's team stats and see how things look.  And as I thought, giant bad luck for the Giants.

Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Your 2024 Giants: Kyle Harrison Ace Analysis

Lots of people are doubting on Kyle Harrison, so I thought I would write a post on him.  In particular, a poster of the name Brian M on The Athletic, said that Harrison is no more than a 3-4 starter in baseball, and dismissed the idea that he could be an ace.  

Thursday, April 18, 2024

Your 2024 Giants: Your Big 6 Prospects

Annually, if I remember in time, I produce a Big 6 List of Giants Prospects.  The 6 for this post are:

  • Kyle Harrison
  • Marco Luciano
  • Jung Hoo Lee
  • Carson Whisenhunt
  • Hayden Birdsong
  • Bryce Eldridge
  • Landen Roupp is the bonus
I usually pull a lot of information from websites like MLB Pipeline, but you can easily read from there, and I don't have time to get all my research done as well as pull information in from other sources and get it out before more of the season goes by.  

Wednesday, March 20, 2024

Your 2024 Giants: Snellzilla Signed!

As reported widely, the Giants signed Blake Snell to a two-year contract for $62M, with an opt out.  They also split each season's contract roughly in half, with half paid one season, the rest paid as bonus two years later, spreading the cash flow over the next four years, essentially.  

Tuesday, February 13, 2024

Your 2024 Giants are now Soler Powered

Per tweet last night by Susan Slusser, Jorge Soler will sign with the Giants.  Per reporting from The Athletic, it will be for 3 years, $42M, no word on any other contract terms, but there does not appear to be any opt outs.  The rumor mill had it that Soler wanted three years, and the Giants eventually gave him that, though perhaps less per season.

Sunday, January 14, 2024

Your 2024 Giants: Where the Roster Stands Today

I posted this comment, and given all the work I put into it, I'm posting it here.  I, of course, added some more content (I tinker constantly) and added headings.  Also, the Giants signed Jordan Hicks in the meantime, so I added some thoughts on that, but didn't add to existing projections to give more buffer for the projection I'm making.

I analyzed where I think the Giants are improved in 2024 vs. 2023, and how many wins that should translate into, and whether they can make the playoffs.

Saturday, January 13, 2024

Saturday, January 06, 2024

Your 2024 Giants: Trade for Ronnie Ray

The Giants traded for former Cy Young winner LHP Ronnie Ray, getting him from the Mariners for Mitch Haniger, DeSclafani, and cash considerations, which makes the deal net zero dollar trade.  Ray is rehabbing from TJS, and is expected to return in July 2024, plus whatever rehab time he needs.  Ray has a player option after the 2024 season, where he can opt into a two year @ $25M per season deal, or make himself a free agent.

Saturday, December 16, 2023

Your 2024 Giants: Jung Hoo Lee is the Giants new CF

As announced and formally presented in the Friday press conference (seems prudent after last year to wait), Jung Hoo Lee has been signed to a six year deal for $113M with a player opt-out after four seasons. Per Andy Baggarly of The Athletic (subscription required):

Lee will receive a $5 million signing bonus and receive salaries of $7 million in 2024, $16 million in 2025, $22 million in 2026, $22 million in 2027, $20.5 million in 2028, and $20.5 million in 2029. He also has the right to opt out of his contract after the 2027 season.

They will also pay nearly $19M in Posting Fee to Lee's former team, the Kiwoom Heroes. Thus, they are paying out $132M for him, over the life of the contract. And the $19M does not get reduced if he should opt out after 2027.

There are a few other good article on Jung Hoo:

  • Fangraphs: 2024 Top 50 MLB Free Agents
    • Lee has been evaluated as a Top 100-quality prospect at FanGraphs since the 2020 KBO season. He is an incredibly skilled contact and defense-oriented outfielder with an important baseball lineage.
    • Jung-Hoo’s career began in precocious fashion, as he was the first player in KBO history to go straight from high school to their top level of play; he won Rookie of the Year as an 18-year-old in 2017. Since arriving in the league, Lee has a career .340/.407/.491 line, has made elite rates of contact (roughly 5.5% K% and 11% BB% combined the last two seasons), and has had a couple of years in which he also hit for meaningful power. 
    • Lee’s carrying tool is his Jedi-esque bat control, which he uses to deflect pitches all over the strike zone to all fields. His swing is incredibly cool and fun to watch, as Lee’s open stance comes closed very early before he takes a huge stride back toward the pitcher and unwinds from the ground up... His hand-eye coordination and ability to manipulate the barrel is amazing, however. 
    • Hitters in Asian pro leagues tend to face premium velocity less often than upper-level domestic prospects and it creates a wide error bar in projecting whether or not their hit tools will translate. Using Synergy to isolate Lee’s performance against fastballs at or above the MLB average (93 mph and up) yields just 154 pitches combined throughout the last two seasons; he slashed .268/.348/.415 against them. Bump the bottom boundary up to 94 mph and he slashed .276/.300/.379 across 96 pitches. 
    • If Lee doesn’t end up hitting for power, his center field defense will help buoy his overall contribution to a team. He’s a plus runner with above-average range and ball skills, and a plus arm. ... The most likely forecast is somewhere in the middle, and here Lee projects as a table-setting center fielder without much pop, though whatever the case, teams should be prepared to make a multi-year project out of Lee so he has time to adjust in the same ways Ha-Seong Kim has.
  • Fangraphs: International Professional Players
    • Current Superstars includes Jung Hoo Lee
  • Fangraphs: Giants Finally Make a Free Agent Splash with Jung Hoo Lee Signing
    • Lee immediately becomes the best defensive center fielder in a crowded Giants outfield group that was toward the bottom of the league in production last year. He’s a plus runner with above-average range and ball skills, and a plus arm. 
    • The scouting and data-oriented projections for Lee are both quite strong, befitting a player who just signed a nine-figure deal. Here are Dan Szymborski’s ZiPS projections for Lee:
    • ZiPS Projection – Jung Hoo Lee
    • Year         BA  OBP SLG AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI BB SO SB OPS+ DR WAR
    • 2024 .288 .346 .416 476 56 137 29 4 8 62 39 38 2 111 1 2.5
    • 2025 .288 .348 .422 486 58 140 30 4 9 63 41 38 2 113 1 2.6
    • 2026 .287 .348 .420 488 58 140 30 4 9 63 42 38 1 112 0 2.6
    • 2027 .281 .343 .409 487 58 137 29 3 9 62 42 37 1 108 0 2.3
    • 2028 .282 .345 .412 478 57 135 29 3 9 61 42 36 1 109 0 2.3
    • 2029 .281 .344 .406 463 54 130 28 3 8 58 41 35 1 108 0 2.2
    • Those are the numbers of an above-average everyday center fielder. With this level of production, per Dan, ZiPS would recommend $132 million for a straight-up six-year deal. 
    • ZiPS evaluates $113 million with an opt-out after four years as having the same value relative to projections as a six-year, $134 million contract.
    • Readers should consider him a contact-only threat at the moment, but he has rare hitting talent, and it’s plausible that with added strength, a swing adjustment, or some other developmental intervention, the Giants could coax more power out of him over time. Here you can see what ZiPS thinks the high-end outcomes look like if that happens:
    • 2024 ZiPS Projection Percentiles – Jung Hoo Lee
    • Percentile 2B HR BA  OBP SLG OPS+ WAR
    • 95%                 44 14 .339 .396 .496 147     4.8
    • 90%                 40 12 .325 .386 .476 137     4.3
    • 80%                 36 11 .314 .373 .456 128     3.6
    • 70%                 33 10 .304 .364 .439 122     3.2
    • 60%                 31 9 .295 .356 .427 117     2.9
    • 50%                 29 8 .288 .346 .416 111     2.5
    • 40%                 27 7 .280 .339 .398 105     2.1
    • 30%                 26 7 .270 .330 .385 99     1.7
    • 20%                 24 6 .258 .323 .371 93     1.3
    • 10%                 21 5 .242 .305 .351 84     0.7
    • 5%                 19 4 .230 .291 .332 75     0.2
    • It may take a little time for Lee to adjust to the quality of big league stuff, but his glove will play right away. His signing brings an element of youth and excitement to the team that the Giants have lacked for the last few seasons.


Saturday, December 09, 2023

Your 2024 Giants: Ohtani to LAD, Giants Potential Next Moves

I read the news today, oh boy, about a lucky lad who made the grade:  The Dodgers signed Shohei Ohtani to the biggest MLB contract ever, 10 years at $700M.  Saw some comments that some of it is deferred, but for payroll tax penalties, the only thing that matters is AAV, and that's $70M AAV.

Tuesday, October 31, 2023

Your 2024 Giants: Alex Cobb Surgery

It was recently announced that Cobb will get hip surgery to fix the problem he had all season. The Giants have a buy-out option with Cobb for the 2024 season, they can buy him out for $2M or sign him to a $10M deal.  Normally this would be obvious, given his performances the past two years, to sign him, but it is complicated by the fact that he likely will need six months to recover, which should take him out to at least the start of May, if not longer.

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