Tag: AL Central

Chris Sale Comments on Kenny Williams’ Handling of Adam LaRoche’s Son

Chicago White Sox veteran Adam LaRoche abruptly retired Tuesday due to the team limiting his 14-year-old son Drake’s access to the clubhouse.

Four-time All-Star pitcher Chris Sale is one notable teammate who’s adamantly come to LaRoche‘s defense. He spoke about the tricky situation on Friday.

“This isn’t us rebelling against rules. This is us rebelling against BS,” Sale said, per Bill Shaikin of the Los Angeles Times. Sale also described what happened between LaRoche and White Sox executive vice president Kenny Williams:

Bob Nightengale of USA Today snapped an image of the LaRoche jerseys hanging on Sale’s locker:

Sale implied Williams should have been the one to leave the organization rather than LaRoche.

“Even the story that everyone is reading isn’t the issue. We have a much bigger problem on our hands,” Sale said, per John Barchard of 97.5 The Fanatic. Sale added, per WGN Radio’s Kevin Powell, “Somebody walked out of those doors the other day, and it was the wrong guy. Plain and simple.”

According to ESPN.com, sources told ESPN’s Karl Ravech that Chicago players were contemplating a boycott for Wednesday’s game against the Milwaukee Brewers. Jeff Passan of Yahoo Sports confirmed that to be the case and indicated players who met with Williams were incensed by the clubhouse policy for LaRoche‘s son.

Ken Rosenthal of FoxSports.com, who initially reported on LaRoche‘s retirement, provided insight with specific regard to Sale and Williams’ exchange on Thursday:

The White Sox ultimately showed up to play versus Milwaukee, but there definitely appears to be lingering tension within the organization.

Williams spoke to Rosenthal about the controversy, per FoxSports.com’s Chris Bahr:

I asked Adam, said, ‘Listen, our focus, our interest, our desire this year is to make sure we give ourselves every opportunity to focus on a daily basis on getting better. All I’m asking you to do with regard to bringing your kid to the ballpark is dial it back.’

I don’t think he should be here 100 percent of the time – and he has been here 100 percent, every day, in the clubhouse. I said that I don’t even think he should be here 50 percent of the time. Figure it out, somewhere in between.

We all think his kid is a great young man. I just felt it should not be every day, that’s all. You tell me, where in this country can you bring your child to work every day?

Chicago center fielder Adam Eaton also spoke in Bahr‘s report, saying, “Adam and Drake are probably the most respected people in baseball I ever played with. Drake would clean cleats, he would help out in drills, pick up baseballs when we needed, he didn’t say boo to anybody and was never a trouble in the clubhouse.”

Per Shaikin, Eaton said on Friday that White Sox players hope to meet with owner Jerry Reinsdorf in the next couple of days.

LaRoche would have made $13 million this season but chose to walk away, confirming his decision on Twitter with “#FamilyFirst” as the hashtag to end his announcement. The 36-year-old was on a two-year contract and still had some baseball left, but he is at an age where retirement is within reason.

If relations are repaired, perhaps LaRoche will reconsider his sudden decision. According to White Sox players Nightengale cited, though, they’re convinced he won’t be coming back.  

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White Sox Players Reportedly Considered Boycott After Adam LaRoche Retirement

Chicago White Sox players considered boycotting Wednesday’s spring training game against the Milwaukee Brewers in support of Adam LaRoche, according to Karl Ravech of ESPN, after LaRoche retired following the organization’s request that he bring his 14-year-old son Drake into the clubhouse less.

Jeff Passan of Yahoo Sports confirmed the report and noted that “F-bombs aplenty flew” during the team’s meeting with their general manager. 

According to the report, White Sox manager Robin Ventura was able to convince the players to play in the contest. However, Ravech added, “Sources said there is a division between those in the front office and Ventura and his players regarding clubhouse access.”

Fox Sports’ Ken Rosenthal reported that ace pitcher Chris Sale was particularly vocal during the meeting and added that he “told Williams unequivocally to get out of the clubhouse and stay out.”

On Tuesday, White Sox vice president Ken Williams spoke with Rosenthal about the situation regarding Drake LaRoche’s access to the clubhouse:

LaRoche signed his retirement papers, as reported by Scott Merkin of MLB.com, but the White Sox have not yet sent them to the league office, which gives him the opportunity to reconsider his decision.

LaRoche, 36, hit .207 with 12 home runs and 44 RBI in 127 games in 2015 as a first baseman and designated hitter. It was a down season for the 11-year veteran, who hit at least 20 home runs and 75 RBI in seven of his first 10 seasons.

LaRoche was due to make $13 million this season, according to Spotrac, after signing a two-year, $25 million deal in 2015. He was apparently willing to forego that money after the White Sox requested he bring his son around the clubhouse less often.

His teammates clearly supported his decision, based on their reported response. The White Sox now must worry about a rift between the players and the front office, an unwanted distraction heading into Opening Day for a team with postseason aspirations.

 

You can follow Timothy Rapp on Twitter.  

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Will Miguel Cabrera’s 40-Home Run Power Return in 2016?

Even if he doesn’t change a thing from last season, Miguel Cabrera should be one of the best hitters in Major League Baseball in 2016. Given that he won his fourth batting title in five years in 2015, that just seems like a safe assessment.

But because we’re all a bunch of spoiled Cabrera-ites, what we really want to know is whether the Detroit Tigers star can be an elite power hitter again. Specifically, the 40-homer variety.

Well, there’s good news and not-so-good news. Which do you want first?

The good news? OK, then.

But first, the obligatory background.

After launching 44 dingers each year en route to back-to-back American League MVPs in 2012 and 2013, Cabrera managed only 25 in 2014 and 18 in 2015. That was the first time he failed to top 20 homers since his rookie year in 2003, when he played in only 87 games.

But Cabrera, who turns 33 in April, is going into 2016 with one advantage he didn’t have in 2014 or 2015: good health. 

After undergoing core muscle surgery before 2014, having right ankle and foot surgery before 2015 and missing over a month with a left calf strain toward the end of last season, right now is the first time in a while that Cabrera hasn’t been broken in some way. Even better, he’s feeling it where it counts.

“I feel the difference,” Cabrera said last month in reference to his swing, via Katie Strang of ESPN.com. “I can feel my back leg more. Also, I can stay more back so I can drive the ball up the gap.”

As if to prove the point, the veteran first baseman’s second hit of the spring season was a three-run homer:

A sight like that is especially encouraging after what happened with Cabrera in 2015, as it wasn’t by accident that he hit for power at the worst rate of his career.

According to FanGraphs, Cabrera posted his lowest fly-ball percentage (32.7) since 2003. Also, he hit fly balls hard at a rate of 43.0 percent. That’s pretty good in a vacuum, but it was roughly a 10 percent decrease from where he’d been the previous three seasons.

Knowing this, it’s somewhat impressive that Cabrera’s .196 ISO (that’s isolated power) was still good enough to rank him among the top 20 power hitters in the American League. If he could do that with such a banged-up lower half, then, hey, you can’t fault Tigers teammate Victor Martinez for being optimistic about what Cabrera could do at full strength in 2016.

“You saw what he did last year. He won a batting title, but maybe those balls weren’t traveling like they used to,” Martinez told Strang. “But this year, given his ankle’s feeling better, he’s able to condition more and strengthen more in his legs, I wouldn’t be shocked if we went out there and hit 40 [homers] again.”

For Cabrera’s 40-homer power to return, maybe it really is this simple.

It would be one thing if his hitting prowess had also crumbled, but his .323 average and .401 OBP over the last two seasons nix that idea. It’s really only his power that’s been missing, and his string of lower-half injuries is a pretty logical place to put the blame for that.

Now that he’s healthy, the other side of that logic coin does indeed state that his power will go back to normal in 2016.

Unless, of course, what’s happened with his power isn’t a fluke. Cue the not-so-good news.

With Opening Day creeping ever closer, now is a good time to look at the projections for 2016. And where Cabrera is concerned, none of the big ones expect him to even come close to 40 homers. According to FanGraphs, ZiPS projects 24 dingers and Steamer projects 26 dingers. Baseball Prospectus’ PECOTA system is a bit more optimistic, but only to the extent of expecting…27 dingers.

Clearly, the projections don’t see Cabrera’s power output over the last two seasons as an injury-induced aberration. They see it as more like a new normal, and history is very much on their side. 

As easy as it is for us to write off Cabrera’s power decline as a casualty of his injuries, his age throws a wrench in that idea. Even putting aside the possibility that the injury bug isn’t done with him yet, there’s the reality that he’s at an age when power declines don’t tend to reverse themselves.

A few years ago, Eno Sarris of FanGraphs presented an aging curve for isolated power that showed a sharp downward slope for players in their 30s. Though Cabrera broke the mold when he hit his power peak in his age-29 and age-30 seasons in 2012 and 2013, where his power is right now is in line with where it’s supposed to be.

In a related story, there’s not a lot of precedent for Cabrera’s power to get back to its peak.

The list of 33-year-olds who have topped 40 homers contains only 17 names. Cabrera adding his name to the list would require him to effectively double his average of 22 home runs per year across 2014 and 2015. The only 33-year-old to ever make a leap that large was Ken Caminiti in 1996, and he famously had some help doing so.

The picture doesn’t change much if the focus is shifted from home runs to isolated power. Cabrera posted a .282 ISO as he was mashing all those dingers in 2012 and 2013, and even so much as getting over—to pick a random but reasonable number.250 in 2016 would make him only the 39th 33-year-old batting-title qualifier to do so.

That would require a 45-point increase over Cabrera’s .205 ISO across his age-31 and age-32 seasons in 2014 and 2015. Of the 38 players who have pushed their ISO across .250 in their age-33 seasons, only 12 experienced an increase that large from their previous two seasons. Not surprisingly, half of them were steroid-era guys.

If there’s a bright side here, it’s that we’re obviously not talking about some random schlub who lucked into a couple 40-homer seasons before falling back to earth.

We’re talking about Miguel Cabrera, who has a firm place among the greatest hitters ever. If he makes it his mission to hit over 40 homers again, it would be foolish to underestimate him.

However, Cabrera doesn’t sound like a guy who’s about to commit to a mission like that.

“I want my power, but you don’t look for home runs,” Cabrera said in January, via Anthony Fenech of the Detroit Free Press. “You look for good contact and try to be consistent. If you look to pull the ball in the gap, the home runs are going to come.”

Consider this a reminder that Cabrera isn’t a great power hitter. He is, and always has been, a great hitter with power. And looking at how he operated in 2015, this may be more true now than ever before.

Cabrera’s .338 average and .440 on-base percentage last season didn’t happen by accident. He tightened up his discipline and took more walks. In lieu of fly balls, he pushed his line-drive rate to a career-high 25.2 percent. He also put on his Derek Jeter hat and went the other way more than ever, hitting the ball to right field a career-high 33.5 percent.

In all, he went from being a tremendously well-rounded hitter to being even more of a tremendously well-rounded hitter. 

Cabrera could abandon the approach he had last year for the sake of hitting a bunch more home runs in 2016. But considering that his mindset is to let home runs come to him, it seems much more likely that he’ll stick with it and run into just a few more home runs.

Of course, it’s still hard to disagree with Martinez. It really wouldn’t be shocking if Cabrera hit 40 homers in 2016. Heck, at this point, nobody should be shocked by anything that Cabrera does at the plate.

But nobody should be disappointed if he doesn’t get there. Cabrera’s improved health makes another 40-homer season an intriguing possibility, but neither his age nor his approach is conducive to him actually getting there.

So, here’s our advice: Rather than 40 homers, just expect another season of great hitting out of Cabrera. With him, that’s never anything less than a certainty.

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted/linked.

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Austin Jackson to White Sox: Latest Contract Details, Comments and Reaction

Free-agent center fielder Austin Jackson signed a one-year contract on Sunday with the Chicago White Sox, confirmed MLB Roster Moves on Twitter.  

Jon Heyman of the MLB Network reported the deal is for $5 million. 

Jackson, 29, spent the first half of 2015 with the Seattle Mariners before being traded to the Chicago Cubs. He hit .267/.311/.385 with nine home runs and 48 RBI in 136 games.

He won’t bring power to the White Sox, but he will make up for that with a good glove in the outfield and above-average speed. He hit at least 10 triples in each of his first three seasons, leading the league twice. He’s also been successful on 106 of his 146 career stolen-base attempts.

The White Sox were 24th in MLB in both stolen bases and fielding percentage last season, while last year’s starting center fielder, Adam Eaton, was among the worst in baseball with a minus-1.1 defensive WAR, per ESPN.com.

Dan Szymborski of ESPN thinks Chicago made a good move by bringing in the center fielder:

Jackson broke into the league in 2010 with the Detroit Tigers and finished second in the American League Rookie of the Year voting behind Neftali Feliz. He was traded to the Mariners in 2014 before eventually joining the Cubs.

His average has dropped the past three years, as he has averaged .265 since 2013 after hitting .280 his first three seasons. Per Mike Axisa of CBSSports.com, Jackson has become a liability against right-handed pitchers, but it’s not time to give up on him:

At this point there’s no real reason to play Jackson against right-handed pitchers. They’ve chewed him up for years. Jackson has managed to hit .290/.345/.408 (113 OPS+) against lefties the last two seasons though, so he remains a viable platoon bat. Plus he still plays outstanding defense.

Jackson is still only 28 years [old], so he’s in what should be the prime years of his career. If nothing else, his defense and ability to hit lefties make him a quality fourth outfielder. He’s still young enough that he could get his career back on track and return to being an everyday player as well.

Jackson became expendable in Chicago after the Cubs signed free-agent outfielder Jason Heyward, who was with the St. Louis Cardinals in 2015.

Maybe a fresh start with the White Sox will help Jackson get back on track. He proved early in his career he can be consistent for a full season, and if that’s the case in 2016, this could turn out to be one baseball’s better offseason deals.

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Kelvin Herrera’s Dominican Republic Home Robbed: Latest Details and Reaction

Kansas City Royals setup man Kelvin Herrera’s home in the Dominican Republic was robbed during the offseason.

The fireballing right-hander took to Twitter on Friday, complaining about the lack of police response to the case, which began in January.

Herrera wrote his post in Spanish, but an editor who speaks the language loosely translated his words, per Matt Snyder of CBS Sports:

Last January, my home in Tenares, DR, was broken into by delinquents while my family and I were not home. The delinquents robbed us of everything of value, including my championship rings from the 2014 American League [Championship], 2013 World Baseball Classic, rings from Escogido and many other things that had incalculable sentimental value. Two months later, the police of Tenares, the town where I was born and raised and never turned my back on, has done absolutely nothing; they don’t have a lead or a suspect, and the situation is frustrating.

Via this message, I’m calling upon the authorities, especially mayor Ermes Rodriguez and the municipal police director Martin Almonte, to wake up and help end the delinquency (crime).

Thankfully, the 26-year-oldwho had a 153 ERA+ and 64 strikeouts in 69.2 innings last year, per Baseball-Reference.comdid not lose his 2015 World Series ring in the robbery because the team will not hand out the rings until Opening Day, per Snyder.

Josh Vernier of Kansas City’s 610 Sports Radio and Jeffrey Flanagan of MLB.com provided updates after Herrera addressed the situation during spring training:

It’s good news that Herrera and his family were not home, and at least they got some sentimental items back.

However, it sounds as though they may never see some items that meant a lot to them again. Perhaps the police can find out who committed the crime, and the upcoming MLB season can provide a distraction for Herrera in the meantime.

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Jarrod Dyson Injury: Updates on Royals OF’s Oblique and Return

Kansas City Royals right fielder Jarrod Dyson strained his right oblique during Wednesday’s spring training game against the Texas Rangers, and it is uncertain when he will be able to return to action.

Continue for updates.


Yost Comments on Dyson’s Timeline for Recovery

Thursday, March 3

Manager Ned Yost told reporters Dyson is “likely” out for six weeks with a Grade 2 oblique strain.


Dyson’s Injury Harms Chances of Winning Starting Job

Over his first six years in the majors, Dyson carved his niche with the Royals as a reserve outfielder who provided blazing speed off of the bench. Since 2012, Dyson has recorded a combined 126 stolen bases in 399 games.

He was a part of one of the biggest moments in Royals history, scoring the go-ahead run on Christian Colon’s single in the decisive Game 5 of the World Series against the New York Mets

Heading into 2016, Dyson had a real chance of winning the starting right field job, per Dodd, as he was set to compete with Paulo Orlando. Last year’s starter, Alex Rios, is still on the free-agent market and won’t return to the team.

Man, I’m ready to play every day,” Dyson told Dodd. “Been ready.”

This injury, though, keeps the door open for the right field competition as Orlando will be in the mix. So will Travis Snider, a 27-year-old who replaced Dyson after he left Wednesday’s game. Snider batted .232 with four home runs last season with the Pittsburgh Pirates and Baltimore Orioles.

Jose Martinez could also be in the mix. He’s another 27-year-old who hit .382 in Triple-A ball last season. 

But we’ll see how it plays. Quite frankly, I’ve been very impressed with Snider. And I know Paulo and Dyson; both of those guys have come in and been very impressive early,” Yost told Dodd before Wednesday’s game. “I’ve been impressed with Martinez. I like what I see out of him.”

The longer Dyson is sidelined, the more likely another player can work his way into the lineup and take playing time away from the 31-year-old when the regular season starts up in April. Instead of focusing on playing every day, he’ll have to prove that he’s healthy and work his way back into the lineup to help the Royals defend their World Series crown. 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com

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Salvador Perez Deal Is Crucial Step in Keeping Royals’ Championship Core Intact

The Kansas City Royals‘ task in 2016 is as simple as it is difficult: defend their World Series title.

But there’s a larger plan brewing in Western Missourione that involves keeping the club’s largely homegrown championship core intact for the long haul. By extending catcher and reigning Fall Classic MVP Salvador Perez at the outset of spring training, the Royals took a crucial step in that direction.

The deal, as Jeff Passan of Yahoo Sports reported Tuesday, locks up Perez through 2021 by picking up three team options and adding an additional two years, plus “at least $30 million” in new money.

Though he’s already logged 545 big league games, mostly behind the dish, Perez is still just 25 years old. And he cemented his durability the past two seasons, shrugging off various dings and bruises during KC’s pair of deep postseason runs.

Before the extension was announced, Perez expressed his desire to remain a Royal in perpetuity.

“I want to be George Brett,” he said, per Sam Mellinger of the Kansas City Star. “I want to be like Frank White, like Alex Gordon. One of those guys.”

Gordon, of course, opted out of his Royals contract this winter but eventually re-signed with the club on a four-year, $72 million pact.

“I want to enjoy the success we have now, and the fun we have with all these guys,” the left fielder and four-time Gold Glove winner said after inking his new deal, per Barry Svrluga of the Washington Post. “I’ve got a lot of friends on this team, and a lot of coaches, that I’ve gone through a lot with. It’s just a more comfortable thing to come back here with all those relationships I have.”

So that’s two key cogs spinning in the machine for the foreseeable future.

There’s more work to do, however, and it remains to be seen if the Royals have the resources to pull it off.

First baseman Eric Hosmer, third baseman Mike Moustakas and center fielder Lorenzo Cain—essentially the remainder of Kansas City’s offensive backbone—are all set to hit the open market after the 2017 season.

That trio, along with Perez and Gordon, combined for 18.3 wins above replacement in 2015, per FanGraphs. And that’s merely a crude, short-hand measure of their actual worth to the franchise.

Hosmer recently indicated he’d be open to an extension, telling MLB.com’s Jeffrey Flanagan, “If this group stays together, the best opportunity is right here.” 

Then again, talk is cheap. Extensions for budding stars generally aren’t.

At a certain point, the Royals will have to decide how far they can stretch financially. Currently, their payroll sits at No. 13 in the game, per Spotrac.com, which is almost exactly the middle of the pack. Championships, however, mean more than confetti and champagne.

They mean an infusion of cash and a swelling, hungry fanbase. If the Royals charge through October again this season, it’s entirely possible the purse strings could loosen enough to accommodate more sizable paydays.

That’s not a given. FanGraphs projects the Royals to finish a pedestrian 77-85, tied for last place in the balanced American League Central. Maybe the starting pitching won’t be enough. Maybe cracks will emerge in the vaunted bullpen. 

More than anything, though, the doubts should provide added motivation and bulletin-board fodder for a team that’s been underestimated before. And it might only strengthen an already cohesive clubhouse.

“As an organization,” Mellinger noted, “the Royals credit much of their success to a relentlessly supportive culture for their players.”

Will that culture be enough to keep all this talent from jetting off to larger markets? Not without some beefy checks to back it up.

But, as it proved with Gordon and Perez, Kansas City is now in the check-cutting business. After years as a perpetually rebuilding afterthought, the Royals have a great thing going.

Now, their simple, difficult task is to keep it going. 

“We fully expect to sign as many of our players that we currently have on our team to long-term contracts,” general manager Dayton Moore said, per Flanagan. “We anticipate that happening as we go forward. Will we get them all? Time will tell.”

Time and, if everything breaks right, another World Series run.

 

All statistics and contract information courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com unless otherwise noted.

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Salvador Perez, Royals Agree on New Contract: Latest Details, Reaction

Catcher Salvador Perez has been an integral part of the Kansas City Royals lineup on a team-friendly deal since the 2012 campaign. Tuesday, the club announced it has rewarded him for his efforts with a new contract.  

Jon Heyman of MLB Network first reported the agreement is for five years and $52.5 million, with Jeff Passan of Yahoo Sports reporting the new guaranteed money is for two years and $36 million. 

This doesn’t come as much surprise, considering Heyman reported earlier in the offseason that the Royals were “quietly trying to rework/extend” the three-time All-Star’s deal.

Perez signed a five-year contract with the Royals worth $7 million before the 2012 campaign. Per Baseball-Reference.com, the deal also included club options worth a combined $14.75 million that could have kept him in Kansas City for three additional seasons.

It was something of a risky move at the time for the front office because Perez was only 21 years old and coming off a mere 39 games played in his rookie season. He did hit .331 in that small sample size in 2011, and Kansas City made a long-term commitment to the prospect.

It certainly worked out well for the Royals, as Perez has developed into an offensive force and one of the best defensive catchers in all of baseball with three Gold Gloves to his name. Perez hit .260 with a career-best 21 home runs and 70 RBI in 2015, although his 2.2 WAR was his lowest mark since his rookie season.

The dip in WAR can be partially explained by a .280 on-base percentage, which was only .020 points ahead of his batting average because of a mere 13 walks in 142 games. However, he was a postseason hero for the World Series champions and belted four home runs in the playoffs. He also hit .364 against the New York Mets in the Fall Classic.

In fact, Perez was named the World Series MVP for his efforts and drove home the tying run in the ninth inning of Kansas City’s title-clinching win.

Royals general manager Dayton Moore discussed the possibility of reworking Perez’s contract in the aftermath, per Jeffrey Flanagan of MLB.com:

That’s a decision we’d have to discuss as an organization. I don’t know when the right time is to do that. I don’t know if there have been examples of [restructuring long-term deals]. But if a player doesn‘t perform, the club is usually often wishing it didn’t [do a long-term deal].

But you know, we love Salvy. He’s family. We’ll see.

Even with the drop-off in WAR in 2015, Perez is still one of the best backstops in the league. According to MLB.com, he was fifth among all catchers in batting average, third in home runs and fifth in RBI. Perhaps more importantly, FanGraphs noted Perez is responsible for 34 total defensive runs saved above average since 2011.

FanGraphs also rated Perez as the second-best defensive catcher in all of baseball from 2013 to 2015.

Catchers are involved in virtually every play on the diamond, and Perez’s fielding ability stands out even more than his traditional offensive power metrics. He will also only be 26 years old during the majority of the 2016 campaign and theoretically has a handful of productive years remaining in his prime.

The postseason production was an indication that he can perform at a championship level in the most important moments, and the Royals would probably gladly pay more money on Perez’s contract if he helps bring home another World Series title.

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Will Justin Verlander’s Vintage End to 2015 Mean Big Things in 2016?

The Detroit Tigers mean to go places this season, so it sure would help if Justin Verlander pitches like an ace.

With the 33-year-old right-hander mired in a cycle of injuries and ineffectiveness, this would have been an iffy proposition a year ago. But after his finish to 2015, it might not be asking too much going into 2016.

The Tigers have already tabbed Verlander to lead their rotation. Though the club recently opened its wallet to drop $110 million on Jordan Zimmermann, Detroit manager Brad Ausmus decided he wants to start the season with the ol’ standby. And as Ausmus indicated to B/R’s Scott Miller, he didn’t tab Verlander for Opening Day just as a courtesy:

This will be Verlander’s eighth Opening Day assignment in nine years, and it positions him for one of those “don’t call it a comeback” comeback seasons. And though one can hesitate to buy into the idea, Verlander is at least trending in the right direction.

Both off the mound and on it, Verlander’s 2015 campaign started painfully. A right triceps injury delayed his debut until June 13, and he then posted a 6.62 ERA in his first six starts. This came on the heels of a 4.54 ERA in a 2014 preceded by offseason core surgery, so Verlander might have been mere minutes away from men in suits showing up at his door to demand his ace card.

But then, salvation. In his last 14 starts, Verlander pitched to a 2.27 ERA across 99.1 innings. He held batters to a .548 OPS and struck out 91 while walking only 20.

In doing so, Verlander didn’t magically transform into the pitcher who used blazing fastballs to carve out a place among baseball’s elite hurlers from 2009-12. But lest it cross anyone’s mind, that doesn’t mean he lucked into such terrific numbers.

Though 14 starts isn’t the smallest sample size, it’s still small enough the possibility of clusterluck has to be considered. With the right amount of luck, even a pitcher who’s getting routinely shelled can trick people into thinking he’s Cy Young material.

But it’s pretty clear Verlander wasn’t skating by on luck at the end of 2015. According to this table full of numbers from FanGraphs, he went from being largely helpless to oddly reminiscent of his 2009-12 self:

When Verlander was at his best, he missed plenty of bats (SwStr%) and got plenty of strikeouts (K/9), and it was no accident he was so good at keeping the ball in the yard (HR/9). He was among the best at collecting pop-ups (IFFB%) and limiting loud contact (Soft% and Hard%).

Early in 2015, Verlander could do none of these things. But later in 2015, he did them as well or better than he did in his prime. He even limited his walks, posting a rock-solid rate of 1.8 bases on balls per nine innings.

What stood out during this stretch was how Verlander used his four-seam fastball. He started going to the heat about 60 percent of the time—something he hadn’t done since 2010. And with an assist from Baseball Savant, we see that he also went back to heavily favoring the high fastball:

Note: This is a percentage of how many of Verlander’s fastballs were high fastballs, not how many of his overall pitches were high fastballs.

And it worked. Verlander held hitters to a .109 average on high heat, which helped drop the overall average against his fastball from .324 in his first six starts to .200 in his last 14 starts. All the high heat may have also made it harder for hitters to adjust to his curveball, slider and changeup, as they went from hitting .254 against those pitches to .213.

What could help explain the high heat is that, as he told Anthony Fenech of the Detroit Free Press in October, Verlander learned to get “a little bit more in-depth” with statistical analysis and scouting reports. As pitchers have trended toward hitting the bottom of the zone, major league hitters have lost their knack for hitting high heat. While the league average against high heat was .250 in 2008, it was just .231 last year. For any pitcher who knows it, that’s practically an open invitation to throw more high fastballs.

Of course, it also helps that these fastballs were aided by more than just their locations.

The reason we can’t say Verlander magically transformed into his old self is because he wasn’t blowing gas by hitters on a pitch-to-pitch basis. He averaged 92.8 mph in his first six starts of 2015 and 92.8 mph in his last 14 starts. He’s still a long way from his 2009 peak of 95.6 mph.

And yet, Verlander regained his unique ability to throw harder as games moved along. Brooks Baseball can show this talent abandoned him in 2014 and then came back in 2015. Never was that clearer than when he blew a 98 mph fastball by Geovany Soto on his 112th pitch of a late September start.

Beyond that, Verlander’s fastball also showed more life than it had in 2014.

“What we noticed after he came back from the injury last year is that his fastball had jump at the end,” former Tigers pitching coach Jeff Jones told Katie Strang of ESPN.com last month. “But that’s what we had seen back when he was healthy in previous years. His fastballs would jump on a hitter. That’s a great thing.”

Jones’ eyes did not deceive him, as Mike Petriello of MLB.com noted Verlander’s four-seamer had the highest spin rate among starting pitchers. That’s a good thing, as spin rate equals late movement, which can mean the difference between a home run and a whiff or a pop-up.

That whole thing with the high fastballs? That’s clearly Verlander using his head. But extra late-inning velocity and elite life on his fastball? That’s clearly him using his health.

As Fenech wrote, former teammate Torii Hunter told Verlander it would take him a year to fully recover from the core muscle surgery he had in January 2014. That would mean he pitched the 2014 season without a 100 percent healthy lower half, which could explain why his arm broke down before 2015 even started.

But at some point last season, Verlander finally felt better.

“I started throwing, and I expected it to hurt like it has the last few years, and all of a sudden, it feels good,” Verlander said in January, per Shawn Windsor of the Free Press. “I’ll go out and play long toss, and the next day I start throwing, and the next thing you know, I’ll start long-tossing again, and it feels good. And I’m like, ‘OK, this is what it used to feel like—fun.'”

This is where you’d expect to be able to see the difference in plain sight. To that end, the credit goes to Jeff Sullivan of FanGraphs for spotting it in Verlander’s follow-through. After looking stiff early in 2015, Verlander was looser toward the end of the year.

While all of this would seem to bode well going into 2016, let’s hold our horses by acknowledging the projections aren’t quite as convincing. At Baseball Prospectus, PECOTA has Verlander posting a 3.97 ERA. At FanGraphs, Steamer and ZiPS also have Verlander with an ERA in the high 3.00s. And according to all three, he’s probably not crossing the 200-inning threshold in 2016.

One doesn’t necessarily need to have a computer for a brain to admit there’s merit to these doubts. As well as Verlander pitched down the stretch in 2015, his 33 years put him smack in post-prime territory. And given all he’s gone through, it can’t be taken for granted that his good health is actually going to last.

But while there’s no ignoring the doubts completely, there’s also no ignoring Verlander is entering the 2016 season with more causes for optimism than he’s had in years.

Physically, this is the first time he would start a season healthy since 2013. And stuff-wise, he showed through a mix of movement, location and extra gas when he needed it that his ability to dominate isn’t necessarily tied to his average fastball velocity.

This all resulted in Verlander pitching like, well, vintage Verlander. If he keeps it up, the Tigers should get more of the same in 2016.

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted/linked.

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Jim Harbaugh to Coach 1st Base for Detroit Tigers in Spring Training Game

Passionate coaching is valuable in any sport.

It’s so valuable, in fact, that for the right man, teams will recruit across league lines.

In the eyes of the Detroit Tigers and Pittsburgh Pirates, Jim Harbaugh is precisely the right man.

For one inning (or possibly more), the Michigan football leader will take on the responsibility of coaching first base for the Tigers come Wednesday afternoon.

Update from Wednesday, March 2

Here’s a look at Coach Harbaugh in action:

[Twitter]

–End of Update–


And he’s already attracted attention from the opposition. According to the Bradenton Herald‘s Jason Dill, Pirates manager Clint Hurdle would like Harbaugh to don black and gold as well:

I told him with his passion for stirring things up, why wouldn’t he just half the game, coach the game for the Pirates. I don’t think that’ll fly, but that’s right up his alley. I’ve encouraged him to try and get out early to spend some time with our group and our team before the Tigers get onto the field.

It’s an easy transition for Harbaugh. He gleefully accepted similar responsibilities for the Oakland A’s a season ago.

The Detroit News‘ Angelique S. Chengelis reported Harbaugh even had aspirations of being a professional baseball player.  

But Michigan football fans needn’t worry about losing their spirited chief. The Wolverines will be taking the trip to Florida along with their khaki-clad coach, and spring practice will occur at IMG Academy. 

What? You didn’t think one of the fieriest men to ever wear a headset would skip out on the opportunity to double his sideline shouting time, did you?

[Detroit News, h/t For the Win]

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