Tag: AL West

MLB Opening Day 2015: Key Takeaways from Baseball’s Opening Act

The beginning of April means millions of fans tune in for MLB Opening Day 2015, but what did we learn from the first day of meaningful baseball?

Some teams came out of the gate firing like the Boston Red Sox and Oakland Athletics. Both teams crushed their opponents, Philadelphia Phillies and Texas Rangers, with an eight-run shutout performance.

While some teams launched bombs over the outfield walls, others relied on their Aces paired with their bullpens to carry them to opening-day victory. Six teams successfully threw Opening Day shutouts this year.

Both Felix Hernandez and Johnny Cueto struck out 10 batters as their teams won their first game of the season.

Although the above mentions put in solid performances they were not the whole story. Lets take a look at the good, the bad and the funny from Opening Day. 

 

Trout vs. King Felix Part Two

Reigning MVP Mike Trout began the season just the way people expected, but the rest of his team did not follow suit as they fell 4-1 to the Seattle Mariners.

The 23-year-old star hit a home run to center field off Felix Hernandez in his first at-bat of the season Monday.

If this sounds familiar, that is because it is. Trout tagged King Felix for a home run last year in the outfielder’s first at-bat to jump-start his MVP season.

On top of the quick start at the plate, Trout also provided one of his vintage defensive plays by robbing Mariner’s first baseman Logan Morrison of a homer.

However, Hernandez had the last laugh on the day as Trout finished 1-4 from the plate with three strikeouts. The Mariners did not surrender another run on the day and Hernandez only gave up one more hit in his seven innings.

 

Return of Baseball’s Villain

After missing the entire 2014 season due to suspension, Alex Rodriguez returned to the New York Yankees as the biggest villain in baseball.

Villain? Apparently nobody told Yankees fans about the player’s past transgressions. Rodriguez enjoyed a strong ovation as he stepped up to the plate for his first at-bat of the season.

Rodriguez’s on-field performance was nothing to laud as he earned a single and a walk in his three plate appearances.

As the current face of steroids in baseball, his performances will be scrutinized all season, and he will be polarizing wherever the Yankees play.

Some Yankees fans held up signs spelling out “#Forg1v3” during his first at-bat since 2013, but opposing fans may not be so welcoming. 

 

Sometimes You Just Can’t Hold It

The start of the Major League Baseball season officially kicked off with the game between St. Louis Cardinals and Chicago Cubs on Sunday night, but the Cubs defeat was not the only bad part about the night for Chicago fans. 

The Cardinals won 3-0 over the Cubs behind a routinely strong pitching performance by Adam Wainwright, but the renovations to Wrigley Field took the main stage. The new construction is not complete, leaving the bathroom situation at the stadium pretty dire.

The lines for the restrooms left fans waiting 30 minutes or more, and this wait appeared to lower the standard for what qualifies as a toilet.

Some fans opted to relieve themselves at their own convenience through the use of plastic cups. Then these cups were left in corners of the concourse.

There will be plenty of 3-0 games this season, but the Cubs will hope the organization and sanitation failure of Opening Day does not repeat themselves. In order to prevent this, there will be portable toilets installed at the stadium to help make up for the lost amenities until the renovations are finished in late May, according to a report by the Chicago Tribune.

The 2015 Opening Day churned out major headlines all day, bypassing both the San Francisco Giants and Kansas City Royals. Not often does conversation of the previous World Series champs title defense fall by the wayside.

If the rest of the regular season serves to be just as entertaining as the Opening Day, it should be an entertaining season.

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Oakland A’s Biggest Storylines to Follow at the Start of 2015

The Oakland A’s are always filled with entertaining storylines, and 2015 is no different.

The team is fun. From the white cleats to the famed right field bleacher crew, the A’s are exciting and unique. 

They made a big splash this offseason with a ton of moves, and many worried the A’s took a step backward. But then they moved on to spring training, where they finished with the best record of any team.

But is it all a facade?

The A’s have four major storylines to follow with another four that should be fun to watch early on, ranked from least important to most for your convenience. 

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Josh Hamilton’s Free Pass Impacts Angels, Helps Set Stage for Bloody CBA Battle

For a while there, it was possible that Josh Hamilton would not be seen on a Major League Baseball diamond in 2015.

Now we know he’ll be playing ball as soon as he can, and that has ramifications for the Los Angeles Angels and, eventually, for MLB and the MLB Players Association.

Various outlets, including ESPN, reported in late February that Hamilton had suffered a relapse earlier in the offseason, which was said to involve cocaine and alcohol. In light of the 33-year-old’s history with substance abuse, the word a few weeks back was that a yearlong suspension was in play.

That won’t be happening. MLB announced Friday that an independent arbitrator ruled Hamilton will not be punished at all:

If for no other reason, this announcement is surprising for its timing. It’s only been a day since MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred said in an MLB Network Radio interview (via Mike Oz of Yahoo Sports) that he expected a decision on Hamilton’s situation “shortly after” the season opens this Sunday.

But the real surprise? That Hamilton is getting off scot-free.

That seemed unlikely in light of how, unlike his alcohol relapses in 2009 and 2012, Hamilton’s latest relapse involved cocaine. That’s forbidden as a drug of abuse in baseball’s Joint Drug Agreement.

There was also Hamilton’s past to consider. As Nathaniel Grow noted at FanGraphs, MLB hypothetically had grounds to treat Hamilton’s latest relapse as the fifth offense of the drug treatment program that he first entered in 2003. As such, it did indeed have grounds to consider a suspension as long as a year.

But while all of this is worth acknowledging, let’s be real. It may be surprising that Hamilton is getting a free pass, but it’s not outrageous.

Morally speaking, letting Hamilton off the hook is the right call. There were many who argued as much when word of his relapse first came out, and their arguments had an overarching message.

Hamilton’s relapse was the latest reminder that he’s an addict. If the idea is to help addicts get over their addiction, retribution isn’t going to get you anywhere. Helping them is more effective, not to mention more compassionate.

Not punishing Hamilton is also the right call from a practical perspective. This case hinged on the arbitrator’s interpretation of Section 4(C) of the Joint Drug Agreement, which Craig Calcaterra of Hardball Talk summed up like so:

Under that section, a player is said to have committed a violation if the player (a) refuses to submit to evaluations and followup tests; (b) “consistently fails to participate in mandatory sessions with his assigned health care professional”; (c) his health care professional tells Major League Baseball that the player is not cooperating; or (d) the player tests positive for a drug of abuse.

As Calcaterra noted, none of these applied to Hamilton. Baseball didn’t catch him either in the act or through a positive test. What happened instead was he gave himself up and has been cooperating with MLB ever since.

As a result, he’ll get to play baseball in 2015. And while that’s news that doesn’t necessarily make the Angels’ year, it should at least help them on the field.

Hamilton is most certainly not the player he once was. After averaging a .912 OPS and around 30 homers a season between 2008 and 2012, he has only a .741 OPS with 31 home runs in the first two campaigns of his five-year, $125 million contract with the Angels.

He’s also coming off of a season in which injuries limited him to 89 games, and his health woes are ongoing. He had surgery on his right shoulder in early February, and the team put his recovery period around 12 weeks. He’s going to miss at least the first month of the 2015 season.

But as dire as Hamilton’s situation appears, he can still help.

Though his bat has declined mightily in the last two seasons, the 110 OPS+ he’s racked up qualifies him as an above-average hitter. And even if the Angels can’t or don’t want to use him as an everyday player, his recent track record against right-handed pitching says he would actually make a solid platoon player.

The Angels are already loaded with quality hitters even without Hamilton, of course. But because they have the look of a team that will need to hit a lot to make up for a pedestrian pitching staff, having even so much as an extra part-time bat can’t hurt their quest for a second straight AL West title.

As for Hamilton’s relationship with the Angels, it seems the repair work that needs to be done there goes beyond whatever he can do on the field.

The Angels don’t sound thrilled about Friday’s ruling. Though general manager Jerry Dipoto vowed in a statement issued on the team’s official website to do “everything possible to assure he receives proper help for himself and for the well-being of his family,” Dipoto also made it clear they “have serious concerns about Josh’s conduct, health and behavior and we are disappointed that he has broken an important commitment which he made to himself, his family, his teammates and our fans.”

That doesn’t sound like a team brimming with relief. That sounds like a team that was already fed up and is now annoyed that it’s missing out on saving some money on a suspension.

Per Alden Gonzalez of MLB.com, here’s Angels president John Carpino to drive the point home:

This recalls the conversation everyone was having about Hamilton before news of his shoulder surgery and relapse hit. Ken Rosenthal of Fox Sports and Gonzalez both opined that him actually serving out the three remaining years of his contract with the Angels was unlikely.

That sounded reasonable at the time. It sounds even more reasonable now. The bridge between Hamilton and the Angels already appeared to be weakening. After the Angels’ remarks about Hamilton’s suspension, you can practically hear it cracking.

Speaking of which, another thing you can hear cracking right now are the knuckles of Manfred and MLBPA Executive Director Tony Clark. Not that they needed another battle, but now they have one to fight when the war over the next collective bargaining agreement begins, a pact that expires Dec. 1, 2016.

MLB indicated as much in its initial statement when it vowed to “seek to address deficiencies in the manner in which drugs of abuse are addressed under the program in the collective bargaining process.” If the outcome of Hamilton’s case is any indication, that points toward the league pursuing more precise language that puts the final decision in similar situations squarely in the hands of the commissioner and the commissioner alone.

That would mean a big fight for Clark to go with the other big fights he’s already set for.

Those include a revision of the service time rules that the union (rightfully) thinks have screwed over Kris Bryant and so many other young players. They also include possible changes to the qualifying offer system, and a dispute over the players’ share of league revenue. As Grow noted at FanGraphs, player salaries have gone from 56 percent of the league’s revenue in 2002 to just 38 percent last year.

Surprising though it was, the decision to not punish Hamilton is justified from a moral and practical standpoint. Though it’s likely to forever be referred to as “controversial,” the arbitrator made the right call.

But make no mistake, real controversies are coming in the fallout. Though things will die down when the focus shifts to baseball upon Hamilton’s return, shortly after is when Friday’s decision figures to spur heated action in the Angels front office and in the offices of both Manfred and Clark.

The league has a decision on Hamilton’s fate, but this saga isn’t over.

 

Note: Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.

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Josh Hamilton Won’t Be Suspended by MLB: Latest Details, Comments, Reaction

Los Angeles Angels outfielder Josh Hamilton will not be suspended for his substance abuse missteps in the offseason, according to a statement from Major League Baseball:

Ken Rosenthal of Fox Sports reported the Angels’ statement on MLB‘s decision:

MLB.com’s Alden Gonzalez had more from Angels president John Carpino:

CBS Sports’ Jon Heyman noted that credit for Hamilton escaping discipline belongs to the MLB Players Association:

Reports of a potential punishment first began surfacing after Hamilton met with MLB officials on Feb. 25. A source told Rosenthal the meeting concerned a disciplinary issue “worse” than performance-enhancing drugs. Heyman later confirmed with a source that Hamilton admitted to officials he suffered a relapse with cocaine.

The top overall pick in the 1999 MLB draft by Tampa Bay, Hamilton never made the majors with the Rays due to a number of off-field problems—most notably drug addiction. After bouncing in and out of the Tampa Bay system for years, he eventually rejuvenated his career after Cincinnati, via the Chicago Cubs, acquired him in the 2006 Rule 5 draft.

After a year with the Reds, Hamilton spent five seasons in Texas, emerging as one of baseball’s best hitters. He won the 2010 AL MVP, made the All-Star team five times and belted 100 home runs over his final three campaigns with the Rangers. In 2012, Hamilton addressed a relapse with alcohol related to a family matter.

The Angels signed Hamilton to a $125 million contract before the 2013 season. The move has largely been a disappointment, with Hamilton hitting only 31 home runs his first two seasons in Los Angeles. Injury limited him to 89 games last season.

Hamilton underwent offseason shoulder surgery, and his status is unclear for the beginning of the 2015 regular season. However, ESPN’s Jerry Crasnick reported that, “Hamilton is ‘working hard’ to get back on field, sources say. But there’s no specific timetable for his return.”

It’s hard to tell exactly when Hamilton will be ready to take the field for the Angels, but the team now knows that he’ll be able to play once his shoulder heals. That provides a boost for a team already considered amongst MLB’s biggest contenders.

 

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Healthy and Locked In, Albert Pujols Looks Ready to Deliver for Angels

Watch out, American League. Albert Pujols is coming for you.

That’s what he and the Los Angeles Angels would have everyone believe, anyway. And as far as threats go, this one appears credible.

If you haven’t been paying attention, you’ve missed Pujols catch fire. The 35-year-old slugger came into Friday’s action with six hits in his last 18 at-bats, including four dingers (take that, The Associated Press) and a double. This hot stretched upped his spring average to .326, and his spring OPS to .968.

Now, this isn’t totally out of left field. As Alden Gonzalez of MLB.com was quick to note, it’s not unlike Pujols to punish the ball in spring training. As you’d expect for a guy with a .317 career average and 520 career home runs, it’s long been a hobby of his.

But what Pujols is doing this spring is an encouraging follow-up to what happened in 2014. Though he did post a respectable .790 OPS with 28 home runs, he sputtered to the tune of a .745 OPS over his final 127 games

He looks poised to improve greatly on that, and those who are watching up close say it’s no accident. The Angels shared highlights of Pujols’ on-field performance:

As Angels hitting coach Don Baylor told Mike DiGiovanna of the Los Angeles Times“He’s driving off his back leg, swinging with conviction and hitting balls out on a line. He could lead the league in runs batted in because he’s swinging the bat a lot better this spring than he did last spring.”

And Angels third baseman David Freese told Gonzalez: “He looks strong right now. His lower half looks strong; as strong as I’ve seen it over the last few years, watching him and obviously seeing it in person. I think he’s taking care of himself.”

And Angels shortstop Erick Aybar told Gonzalez: “You could tell the difference when you’re in good health, and he is right now.”

There might also be a mental-health component at play. Go and read what Tim Brown of Yahoo Sports has to say about Pujols and you’ll come away believing that he’s in a much better frame of mind than he was heading into more recent seasons.

This is where we acknowledge that this may be nothing more than standard spring training fluff. Since nobody is broken down yet, it’s easy to look healthy in spring training. And as good as Pujols has looked, Baseball-Reference.com rates the quality of the competition he’s faced below MLB-caliber.

However, there might be something to the idea of a rejuvenated Pujols. Health has a lot to do with why the only two sub-.800 OPS seasons of his career have come in the last two, as he was coming off right knee surgery in 2013 and had to rehab from plantar fasciitis after the season. After playing in 159 games in 2014, he got to enjoy a normal offseason for the first time in two years.

If that means that Pujols indeed has his legs under him for the first time in a few years, there are darn good reasons for the competition to be worried.

When you look at what’s gone wrong with Pujols in the last two seasons, the thing that immediately stands out is that his power just hasn’t been the same. 

Take, for example, his isolated slugging. As FanGraphs can show, the .179 ISO he posted in his injury-wrecked 2013 season was the worst of his career. And even in his bounce-back 2014, his ISO only rose to .194. 

And even a modest rise like that looks misleading when we focus on the average distance of Pujols’ batted balls. Courtesy of BaseballHeatMaps.com, here’s some data:

As recently as five years ago, Pujols was routinely hitting balls farther than 300 feet. But there was a notable decline in his first year in Anaheim, and he actually hit a new low in 2014, despite his increased power production.

Sure, being old doesn’t help. But not having a strong base to hit off could also feed into a decline like that. If Pujols’ lower half is as healthy as he and others say it is, then it really wouldn’t be that surprising to see him put a charge into the ball more regularly in 2015.

The result could very well be him pushing his isolated power north of .200 again. Practically speaking, that could mean a run at 30-35 home runs instead of 25-30 home runs.

But there’s another potential benefit of Pujols having a strong base underneath him. In addition to improved power, it could lead to improved consistency.

That Pujols posted the lowest on-base percentage of his career (.324) is testament enough to how he struggled with consistency in 2014. A big reason why has to do with how teams had him figured out.

As Gonzalez noted in February, Pujols was shifted to pull 224 times in 2014. That’s over 30 percent of his 695 plate appearances, which is an absurd rate for a right-handed hitter.

But it’s justified in Pujols’ case. According to FanGraphs, a reasonable 54.4 percent of his career batted balls to his pull side were on the ground before 2014. But in 2014, 63.2 percent of his batted balls to his pull side were on the ground.

That can happen when a guy doesn’t have strong legs underneath him. He’s forced to use more upper-body strength, and that can increase the risk of a hitter rolling over on pitches.

Pujols did a lot of that in 2014, as BaseballSavant.com can show he hit a career-high number of pitches away from him on the ground to the left side. And with so many shifts and so many ground balls, it’s no wonder he only had a .250 average on balls in play to his pull side.

As told by Gonzalez, the Angels haven’t seen as much of that this spring. What they’ve seen instead is Pujols regularly hitting the ball to right field and with authority to boot. It’s hard to confirm that without data, but it’s definitely a portrait of a guy with a strong hitting base.

If Pujols keeps that up, it won’t be so easy to shift on him in 2015. That could allow him to complement his increased power with more base hits, thereby rescuing both his slugging and his on-base habit from downward spirals.

It bears repeating that this is all in theory. Glowing reviews of a guy’s appearance in spring training have been known to go “pluh” once the games start to count. And at Pujols’ age, the odds of him suffering that fate aren’t exactly small.

But then again, a guy who’s able to enjoy a normal offseason for the first time in two years would be healthy. And considering the guy in question, the result would be more power and less predictability.

So, the Angels darn well should be optimistic. Doubly so, in fact, as Pujols returning to something like his vintage self in 2015 would be a huge boost to their chances of authoring a worthy follow-up to last year’s 98-win effort.

What made the Angels tick in 2014 was their offense, as they finished seventh in OPS at .728 and first in runs with 773. But with Howie Kendrick gone via trade and Josh Hamilton potentially missing much of 2015 due to injury and a suspension, repeating last year’s dominant offensive effort figured to be no easy feat if Pujols could only duplicate his good-not-great 2014 season.

So, you could put it this way: By being whole again, Pujols may be able to make the Angels’ offense whole again. Good for them and bad for all those playing against them in 2015.

Given that Pujols is 35 and we’re still only in spring training, this is no promise. It is, however, a warning worth heeding.

 

Note: Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com unless otherwise noted/linked.

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David Rollins Suspended 80 Games: Latest Details, Comments and Reaction

Seattle Mariners relief pitcher David Rollins has been suspended for 80 games by Major League Baseball for violating the league’s drug policy.  

MLB Communications confirmed the ban, which will cover essentially the entire first half of the 2015 regular season:

Buster Olney of ESPN provided some insight into the situation:

The Mariners selected Rollins away from the Houston Astros in the Rule 5 draft during the offseason. He was considered a contender to earn a spot in the team’s bullpen to open the season, likely filling the role of a lefty specialist.

He bolstered his case with a strong spring training. The left-hander had given up just one run in eight innings while allowing just five hits and no walks. He also struck out seven batters.

Bob Dutton of The News Tribune passed along comments from the reliever, who admitted his mistake and said he won’t appeal the suspension: “Just accepting it and trying to move forward from it. It’s been heavy on my heart. It hasn’t been easy for me the past couple of days. I’m just glad I’ve gotten an opportunity to show what I can be. I just made one bad decision. It’s costing me.”

Rollins also released a statement through the Players Association, per Evan Drellich of The Houston Chronicle:

Mariners general manager Jack Zduriencik is quoted in The News Tribune report as saying the organization plans to keep him despite the setback.

“He’s our property during the 80-game suspension,” Seattle’s GM said. “He will be allowed to stay here in Arizona. He will be under our supervision, and he can pitch and continue to work with the extended team.”

Rollins can get placed on the restricted list until the suspension comes to an end, but then, the team will have to decide how to move forward.

 

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With Lessons of Game’s Greats, Mike Trout Poised for Move from MVP to MLB Icon

TEMPE, Ariz. — How did Mike Trout celebrate his Most Valuable Player award?

With a trip to the hospital and an IV hookup. Followed by a week on the couch, sick as he can ever remember.

So the takeaway is, as the celebrated center fielder moves forward as the leader of the Angels and is cemented as one of the game’s post-Derek Jeter pillars, a winter virus finally did what few pitchers have been able to accomplish.

It stopped this man of perpetual motion in his tracks.

“I didn’t get off the couch for a week,” says Trout, who was forced to call in sick to the New York Baseball Writers’ Association of America dinner in late January, where he was supposed to accept his award. “Usually, I can’t sit on a couch longer than 25 or 30 minutes. I like to move around, do stuff, be outside. It put me on the couch for a week, not even getting up.

“Chicken noodle soup every day. Pedialyte. I still can feel it when I talk about it. I couldn’t lift my arms. My dad carried me to the car. It was weird.

“It was probably the first time ever I was down like that. I had no intention of getting up. I couldn’t get up.”

Now, with Opening Day less than two weeks away and another masterpiece waiting to be painted, good luck keeping him down.

Not only is Trout the majors’ best player, in just three full seasons he has ascended into that rarified ambassadorial role reserved for the Jeters and Cal Ripken Juniors and Ernie Banks of the world. Just as you want him at the plate with runners aboard and the game on the line, there are few others this side of Pittsburgh‘s Andrew McCutchen you would rather have pedaling the MLB brand, too.

“He’s 23 years old, and he’s a global brand,” says Eric Kay, the Angels’ longtime director of communications. “And yet, do you know who’s down the line signing autographs every single day? Mike Trout.”

Kay and his boss, Tim Mead, are pivotal gatekeepers, helping Trout manage the crushing demand for his time while making sure he’s rested and ready when 7:05 p.m. rolls around each night.

Already this spring, Trout has shot spots for, among others, Body Armor, Major League Baseball, MLB Network, Nike and Zepp, a company that specializes in analyzing swings in 3-D.

Trout breezes through it all as if he has been groomed for this moment his entire life. Which, in a way, he has.

His parents, Jeff and Debbie, clearly established a model foundation. Veteran Torii Hunter mentored Trout from the day he debuted in the majors at 19 in 2011 until Hunter signed with the Tigers in November 2012. Since then, Trout has grown especially close with teammate Albert Pujols, 35, who knows a few secrets about keeping both eyes on the ball when the world wants several pounds of superstar flesh.

“I have fun with all the stuff,” Trout says during a wide-ranging conversation with Bleacher Report. “If you go in there with a negative, bad attitude, like, ‘Oh, I’ve got to do a photo shoot today, or an interview,’ it’ll just make it longer and even worse.

“Every appearance I do, I try to have fun. It’s good for me, it’s good for the fans, and that’s all that matters.”

His smile comes easy and often. His zest for everything from belting a fastball to making a kid’s day with a selfie at the ballpark is genuine. Growing up in Millville, N.J., he idolized Jeter, and to this day, he sometimes will ask the Angels’ public relations specialists how they think Jeter would handle a particular situation.

Watching Trout and Jeter together at the All-Star Game in Minneapolis last July, in fact, it was difficult not to sense an unofficial passing of the torch.

“I don’t think people have to necessarily appoint someone to a particular position,” Jeter said then. “You know, if he continues to do the things that he’s done, he has his head on right, he plays the game the right way, he plays hard. The challenge for him is going to be like the challenge for most people, to be consistent year-in and year-out.

“But Mike’s going to be in a lot of All-Star Games. He already has the respect from players around the league.”

Says Trout: “For me, personally, being in same All-Star Game, his last one, him being my role model growing up, it was definitely special. Just to be able to talk to him, to have the locker next to him, to eat lunch with him, just being around him.

“It’s incredible what he [went] through, being in New York with media. You saw the cameras following him, the way he handle[d] himself on and off the field, always in the right spot, never in trouble.

“He’s definitely a person to plan your game around.”

In no small way, as seasons pass and generations change, Trout is the latest link in a lineage that traces back through time. In fact, the late Hall of Famer Kirby Puckett, of all people, is indirectly responsible for helping shape him as well. It was Puckett who taught Hunter to find the joy while fulfilling professional responsibilities and obligations each day.

“I remember my first year, I probably talked Torii Hunter’s ear off,” Trout says. “It was all in a good way. When you have a great teammate like that, it’s something special for the young guys.”

Hunter went out of his way to teach Trout, the veteran told the kid, because of, among other things, the lessons he learned from Puckett.

“He always brought that up,” Trout says. “Just having Torii, such an outgoing person. When you were going bad[ly], he would always bring you up. That’s the biggest thing. When you made a mistake, he was always there to pick you up.

“He could feel you out. When he knew you were struggling or down, he could bring out the best in you. And I don’t think I’ve ever seen him without a smile. I think that’s the biggest thing. Some people get down on themselves, but he’s always smiling. I was just very fortunate when I came up to have guys like that take me under their wing.”

Pujols, too. When the All-Star Game was in St. Louis in 2009, Pujols was still with the Cardinals, and he may as well have been the mayor of St. Louis for the week. He set an unofficial record for most promotional commitments in a 72-hour period. It’s a wonder he didn’t need to hibernate like a bear in the winter during that season’s second half.

“He definitely handles it well,” Trout says. “He’s told me some stuff, like, ‘You’re still out here playing a game, you have a job to do, that’s the first thing you’ve got to do. And all of the other stuff comes after that. You can find time for it. Spread it out.'”

So that’s what Trout has tried to do. Spread it out. Don’t overschedule endorsement commitments, commercial shoots, personal appearances and interviews. He shuts most of it down during the winter and schedules most of those things during spring training—sprinkled over time.

“Sometimes if you keep doing it over and over, you get tired,” Trout says. “It beats you up. It’s a long season, and you get to September and you’re exhausted.

“It doesn’t do anybody any good.”

Ask Pujols if he sees his younger self in Trout, and the first baseman quickly says no.

“He has better talent and better skills,” Pujols says. “He’s a better player.”

As for the advice he offers Trout in handling the burgeoning responsibilities of superstardom—advice both solicited and unsolicited—Pujols offers a nod to those who came before him. Much like Hunter, with Puckett. Pujols unspools a long list of those who helped him when he was younger, name-checking Mark McGwire, Mike Matheny, Placido Polanco, Reggie Sanders and the late Darryl Kile.

“My compadre, Polanco, took me under his wing when I wasn’t even on the roster yet,” Pujols says of his first spring training with St. Louis, in 2001. “My wife was pregnant at the time, and he opened his door to me. We lived with him for the first part of that spring training.

“You don’t just learn things. It takes a lot of guys who care about you. Trouty is a great kid. I treat him like my little brother.”

Which is interesting, because during our discussion a little earlier in the morning, Trout said that Pujols is “like a big brother” in looking out for him and helping him thrive both on and off the field as his career has launched toward the stratosphere.

Be in the right spot at the right time, Pujols tells Trout. Don’t get yourself in trouble. Take every at-bat like it’s your last at-bat.

“I’ve really gotten close with him,” Trout says. “He hooks me up with everything. Anything I need, he’s got a hook-up for. Shoes. A golf course—’I’ve got a guy over here.’ Dinner—’Have you been to that restaurant? No? I’ll get you hooked up.’

“It’s something special to have a guy like that in the clubhouse. Especially for young guys. In the blink of an eye, I think about it, four years ago he was sitting over there in the corner of the clubhouse, and I’m, like, ‘Oh, should I go up to him? Should I do this?’ But it’s pretty cool.”

On the field, Trout this summer wants to reduce his strikeouts, which crept up to uncomfortable (for him) levels last summer. He led the league with a career-high 184, up dramatically from his 136 in 2013. But he also led the league in runs (115), RBI (111) and total bases (338).

Though Trout’s strikeout rate tripled when he swung at pitches in the upper third of the strike zone as opposed to the bottom third, according to data from Baseball Prospectus, the adjustments he’s making this spring do not simply involve attempting to lay off of the high strike.

“I’ve been trying to attack the first pitch more,” he says. “I’m not just going up there taking the first pitch as in the past. If you’re laying a cookie down the middle, I’m going to hit it now. I’m comfortable hitting with two strikes. The last couple games in the spring, when I get myself loaded on that first pitch, it gets me locked in later in the at-bat.

“It’s been working. I’m just playing with it. I’m going to definitely try and take it into the regular season.”

One myth from last season is that Trout started chasing too many high pitches. It wasn’t exactly like he was getting himself out by swinging at balls: According to data from FanGraphs’ leaderboards, Trout’s swing rate of 24.5 percent on pitches outside the strike zone ranked 133rd in the majors. In other words, there were 132 players who swung at more pitches outside of the strike zone than did Trout.

“There are spots in games you need to take a first pitch,” he says. “If a guy can’t throw a strike, obviously, you want to be selective. But if I get the pitch I want, I’m going to swing at it.”

He also would like to run more this summer if possible. His 16 steals last year were significantly down from his AL-leading 49 in 2012 but, here again, credit goes to opposing pitchers and scouting reports designed to anchor him to the bag as much as possible. He’ll look for his spots, he says, but if opposing pitchers are 1.1, 1.2 seconds to the plate, it is humanly impossible to beat many throws to second.

Meanwhile, he continues to work diligently this spring, as he did last year, on improving his throwing arm. Of his five tools, arm strength and accuracy has been Trout’s weakest. Now? Angels bench coach Dino Ebel says that through sheer determination and hard work, Trout’s arm has gone from average last spring to above average now.

“He takes pride in that,” Ebel says. “He has a chip on his shoulder.”

It is a chip that keeps him both grounded and moving in the right direction.

“He is a very unique individual,” says Angels third baseman David Freese, who broke into the majors in St. Louis during Pujols’ glory years. “The way he can play the game the way he does, the way he interacts with fans, how genuine his smile is.

“There is nobody like him right now. I see the way he is when nobody’s looking. People see him on camera, fans. But even with the cameras off, he’s the same guy.”

Says Pujols: “He’s a really humble kid who doesn’t let success bother him. That’s the main thing. You can’t allow the game to change who you are.

“At the end of the day, we’re all going to walk out of this game, and how are we going to be remembered? As a great player who didn’t care about his teammates? Or as a guy who was a great player and a great teammate? Because in 10 or 20 years, there’s going to be another Mike Trout. There’s going to be another Albert Pujols.”

For now, though, with the curtain about to raise on 2015 and autographs waiting to be signed, there is only one Mike Trout. And now that he’s back up off of the couch, there’s one thing that is as close to a guarantee as there is in this game: The only thing sick about Trout this summer will be his numbers.

“It’s always a good feeling winning MVP,” says the man most in the industry predict will win several more before he’s finished. “When you go out, it’s definitely a lot different. People notice you.

“For me, it’s just about keeping my head on straight and staying humble. Since I was a kid, that’s what I was taught. I’ve got great family members and great teammates who help me do that.”

 

Scott Miller covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

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Would a Cole Hamels Trade Be Enough to Save Rangers’ 2015 Season?

The Texas Rangers could have chosen to wave a white flag when they found out Yu Darvish had been lost for the 2015 season due to Tommy John surgery, but they’re not.

Instead, they may have it in mind to acquire a suitable replacement: Cole Hamels.

According to Jon Heyman of CBSSports.com, the Rangers are in contact with the Philadelphia Phillies over the 31-year-old left-hander, who is very much attainable. He may be coming off a career-best 2.46 ERA in 2014, but the Phillies have made no secret of the fact that they’re rebuilding. And with Cliff Lee down for the count, Hamels is really their only valuable trade asset.

Mind you, this doesn’t mean that a trade is going to happen. 

“The teams have discussed Rangers prospects who’d go in a package for Hamels, but the sides were said to be still far apart,” Heyman wrote. “At this point, the parties weren’t necessarily expressing great optimism the gap could be closed, but they aren’t closing the door, either.”

One complication is that Darvish’s injury means the Rangers don’t exactly have a leverage advantage. And given what ESPN.com’s Jayson Stark has had to say about Phillies general manager Ruben Amaro Jr., his asking price could very well be too high. From the sound of things, he’s been Mr. Thick Thickity-Thickface from Thicktown, Thickania in Hamels trade talks.

Still. While a deal may not be likely, it’s certainly possible. The Rangers most definitely have a need for Hamels, and Heyman spoke to a rival GM last week who said they have the prospects and the money to acquire him and afford some portion of the $100 million remaining on his contract.

Question is: Even if the Rangers do pull off a trade for Hamels, could he make up for the loss of Darvish and get them to where they want to be in 2015?

First of all, yes, the Rangers did have a shot at the postseason before Darvish went down.

If you go back to when he was healthy, the Rangers were projected to be just good enough. Per OneStrikeAway.com, Baseball Prospectus’ PECOTA projections had them pegged for an 83-win record that would put them within striking distance in the AL West and in the mix for a wild-card spot. In an age where two wild-card teams just played in the World Series, that’s good enough.

And that sounded fair enough. With healthy versions of Derek Holland, Prince Fielder, Mitch Moreland and Neftali Feliz, a new rotation addition in Yovani Gallardo and a potential breakout star in Rougned Odor, the Rangers did look significantly improved over last year’s injury-wrecked 95-loss debacle. 

But then Darvish went down.

His injury cost the Rangers a pitcher with 3.27 ERA and 11.2 strikeouts per nine innings since 2012. That knocked the Rangers’ PECOTA projection from 83 wins to 79 wins, making them a relative long shot to contend in 2015.

We can discuss and debate the numbers all day, but there’s no debating the sentiment. The Rangers just don’t look like they have enough without Darvish. As such, it follows that they won’t look like they have enough until they find somebody capable of being at least as good as Darvish.

So let’s talk about whether Hamels can be that guy.

On the surface, it looks like a yes. Thanks to superior efficiency and superior durability, Hamels has logged nearly 100 more innings than Darvish since 2012. And if you go by ERA+, which adjusts ERAs for parks and leagues, you find that Darvish and Hamels have been pretty much the same pitcher in that time frame. Darvish has a 127 ERA+ to Hamels’ 126 ERA+. 

That alone makes it look like swapping one out for the other would be a fair trade, and you can come to the same conclusion by comparing styles.

Though Hamels hasn’t been nearly Darvish’s equal when it comes to striking batters out, he’s been about as good at limiting home runs and better at limiting walks and getting ground balls. Via FanGraphs, here’s a quick look:

One figures that Rangers general manager Jon Daniels is aware of all this and that he’s therefore privately contradicting what he said last week on KTCK-AM 1310 (h/t the Dallas Morning News) about replacing Darvish not being a “realistic” idea. Hamels may not be a carbon copy of Darvish, but the two are peers in terms of talent.

This is not to say there isn’t a legit concern about the idea of replacing Darvish with Hamels, though.

The Rangers learned the hard way with their recent trades for Ryan Dempster and Matt Garza that National League excellence can have a hard time translating into American League excellence. And Hamels would be a stronger candidate than most to fall prey to that same misfortune.

According to Baseball Prospectus, one reason Hamels had such an awesome year in 2014 is because he faced easier competition than all but three other pitchers. Jeff Sullivan of FanGraphs took a different route in looking beyond just 2014, but came up with the same conclusion, writing that Hamels has basically faced “a bunch of Everth Cabreras” on average since 2012.

The good news? There are positives for the Rangers to hang their hat on to overrule the negative that is Hamels’ recent competition.

Certainly, it’s hard not to be enthused about how Hamels’ velocity is somehow trending upward as he heads into his 30s. Further, Brooks Baseball can show that his pitch repertoire is getting more varied every year. Take those two things and combine them with Hamels’ strong control, and he’s probably never been a more complete pitcher than he is right now.

Darvish and Hamels are two very different pitchers. Of that, there is no doubt. But there’s enough that says Hamels belongs in the same league as Darvish and that he would thus prove to be capable of replacing his lost production on the 2015 Rangers. 

But before we go, let’s acknowledge that this doesn’t mean trading for him is a no-brainer.

Because Darvish’s injury creates a lack of leverage for the Rangers, they’re definitely not going to get Hamels cheap. In all likelihood, they’d be taking on another big contract for an aging star while waving goodbye to a couple of talented prospects.

There’s also Hamels’ long-term health to consider. Though he should be fine for 2015, his career workload of nearly 1,900 innings, his recent velocity increase and his recent arm trouble paint a picture of an ace who may soon run out of bullets.

Lastly, there’s the reality of the Rangers’ current situation. Even if Hamels were to effectively replace Darvish, both the projections and any reasonable pair of eyes can see that this would only succeed in getting the Rangers back in the 2015 chase rather than to the front of it. The Rangers could very well aim high with a Hamels trade and ultimately end up missing short.

So this situation doesn’t really come down to how much sense Daniels can make. It more so comes down to how bold he wants to be.

 

Note: Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com unless otherwise noted/linked.

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Happy and Healthy, Prince Fielder Set to Resume Career He Feared Was over

SURPRISE, Ariz. — It is early morning in the desert, and there is every reason to be half-asleep right now. Gray skies. Chilly rain. Dog days of spring training.

But inside the Texas Rangers clubhouse, Prince Fielder is wide awake. He rags Mitch Moreland about the day’s impending trip to Goodyear to face the Reds. Laughs. Checks on NCAA brackets. Smiles. Sits down to talk about his new lease on life. Smiles some more.

Big, big smiles.

The plate appearances don’t yet count. But Fielder, feeling like a new man, is again having fun on a baseball field. And those who know him best cannot wait to see him in action this summer.

“He’s going to have a big year this year, I promise,” says Colorado Rockies closer LaTroy Hawkins, a teammate of Fielder’s in Milwaukee in 2010 and 2011 and a friend ever since. “He’s in a good place.”

“The energy level he’s brought this spring has been infectious,” says first-year Rangers manager Jeff Banister. “He’s been fun.”

Before the hitting becomes for real next month, that’s the best barometer of all, perhaps, by which to judge Fielder as he prepares for the most pivotal season of his career.

Almost a year ago, Fielder’s prospects felt quite different.

Was he done? At the age of 30?

He pondered this as his milestone birthday approached last May 9. Seriously. Pondered it a lot, as a matter of fact. At the plate, he was deteriorating. With a bat, he wasn’t the same. In his head, he was scared.

Pain, like electric shocks, would shoot down his left arm. Then the arm would go numb.

“Yeah, it was getting pretty serious, man,” he says. “Obviously, I’ve played through injuries for a lot of years in a row. But I was like, ‘Aw, crap, I’ve got no power.’ I was weak in the hands.”

He underwent surgery to fuse the C-5 and C-6 disks in his neck, similar to the procedure that gave NFL quarterback Peyton Manning an athletic rebirth.

Though he played in only 42 games last summer before the surgery (hitting .247/.360/.360 with just three homers and 16 RBI in 178 plate appearances), the time away from the game allowed him to regroup in his personal life. His marriage to Chanel, on the rocks during his last season in Detroit in 2013, again is happy. He has reunited with his father, former major leaguer Cecil Fielder, after years of estrangement.

He declines to speak of any details regarding those two enormous and happy changes in his personal life, other than offering another jumbo smile and saying, “It’s cool.”

As for the baseball end of things, that’s cool again too.

“I really did think I lost my skills when I turned 30 last year,” he says of those dark days before doctors finally gave him a specific diagnosis and strategy for a way back.

“Granted, maybe I overreacted. But when you can’t do what you’re used to doing and what you want to do…. It wasn’t just the slump. When you can’t hit home runs in batting practice, and I was trying, I was worried.”

For a slugger with six consecutive seasons of 30 or more homers until his last summer in Detroit, home runs always had been the least of his worries.

Yet his total declined to 25 in 2013, the lowest count over a full season in his career.

And by last spring, he was frustrated and aching.

It was Sept. 27 when he was cleared to start swinging again after the surgery, and you bet the first steps back were tentative. All sorts of questions, concerns and worries were renting space in Fielder’s head.

“It was more my shoulder, because my neck obviously was hurting, but with that nerve causing sharp pain, I had started to hold my shoulder wrong,” Fielder says. “That was my fear, if I would get that electric shock feeling or if it would go numb again.

“I definitely was worried at first.”

A few swings in, he no longer was quite so tense. Oh, no, it’s fine, he thought.

A few more swings. Oh, yeah, it’s fine.

So here he is this spring, neck good, shoulder sound. He worked out hard during the winter and looks as slim as he’s been in a long time. And he cut his hair. The flamboyant dreadlocks from Milwaukee and Detroit are history.

The other day, he even beat out an infield single and received a standing ovation.

Banister, who spent 29 years in the Pirates organization before the Rangers picked him to succeed Ron Washington over the winter, saw plenty of Fielder in the NL Central—especially in 2010 and 2011 from his vantage point as Pittsburgh’s bench coach before Fielder signed a nine-year, $214 million free-agent deal with Detroit before the 2012 season.

Sure, he says, everyone knows about Fielder’s ability to homer. But what he remembers most is 2009, when Fielder collected a career-high 141 RBI, and even 2011, when he produced 120 RBI.

“He’s an RBI master,” Banister says. “He’s hunted the RBI, and the home runs have showed up.”

That’s what the Rangers most want to see out of Fielder, who always was going to be under the spotlight as the son of Cecil and, even more so, with that gaudy price tag hanging from his uniform jersey.

Now, where the rubber meets the road, that part of the story will begin to play out the first time Fielder steps to the plate on Opening Night in Oakland on April 6. Both his on-base and slugging percentages have declined in each of the past four seasons.

Granted, the painful 42 games he played in last summer are not a fair comparison, but the trend line is there nevertheless. The neck surgery ultimately will wind up either as a mitigating factor for the previous couple of years or as another reason for further erosion in this five-time All-Star’s game.

“He clearly was dealing with this all of last year, and it’s a safe bet to say it probably started in 2013, if not before,” Rangers general manager Jon Daniels says. “With that in the back of my mind, my expectation was that I had full confidence he is going to get back to where he wasthat’s what doctors have saidbut given how long it had been, I thought it might take a little time.

“He’s probably even ahead of where I expected him to be at this point, how free he is swinging the bat.”

Fielder did not pay special attention to Manning during the football season despite knowing that the quarterback went through a similar procedure. Though he quips, “I did realize if he was hit by a 260-pound linebacker after that, the neck can take playing baseball.”

And so he is, like a guy making up for lost time.

“He’s a grown-up man playing with a kid’s heart,” Banister says.

“He’s in good spirits, he looks healthy and he’s having fun,” third baseman Adrian Beltre says. “He looks like the Prince we saw playing in Milwaukee and Detroit.”

“He and Beltre are going to be the best one-two punch in the league,” shortstop Elvis Andrus says.

Even the fact that’s in play on this rainy spring morning is cause for celebration. Done at 30? Who knows, maybe Fielder is just getting started.

“Everything is healthy, and I get to play baseball with no worries,” says Fielder, who had a consecutive-games-played streak of 547 at the time he went down last May. “You just like playing the game. Results don’t matter. They’ll come if you’re out there.

“Just the fact that you can come out here again and do this for your job, and be in the clubhouse with your second family. That’s the part I missed the most.”

 

Scott Miller covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Scott on Twitter and talk baseball.

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Yu Darvish Injury Should Speed Up Power Phenom Joey Gallo’s MLB Path

Before we get to talking about Joey Gallo and the future of the Texas Rangers, let’s talk about Yu Darvish and the present of the Texas Rangers.

Which, yeah, is not a particularly pretty picture.

It was announced last week that Darvish will miss the 2015 season recovering from Tommy John surgery. Like that, the Rangers will have to make do without an ace with a 3.27 ERA and 11.2 strikeouts per nine innings over his three seasons.

It felt like a devastating blow for a team that was on the “maybe” pile of contenders to begin with, and the projections now bear that out. Baseball Prospectus figures the Rangers can win 78 games without Darvish. FanGraphs has them pegged for 73. 

It doesn’t look like 2015 will be a step in the right direction for Texas after the 95-loss, injury-riddled debacle that was 2014. And if there was a sense that the Rangers were perilously short on sturdy building blocks in 2014, it could be even stronger in 2015.

Next to Darvish on the list of Texas’ highest-paid players are guys like Prince Fielder, Shin-Soo Choo, Elvis Andrus, Yovani Gallardo and Matt Harrison, who have been compromised by age, injury and/or declining performances. Adrian Beltre is still awesome, sure, but he’s also nearing his 36th birthday.

In the search for sturdy building blocks, that leaves Derek Holland, Leonys Martin and Rougned Odor. Clearly, that isn’t much of a list as long as Holland continues to be plagued by injuries, Martin continues to be a speed-and-defense-only player and until Odor shows his ability can translate to the majors.

From a baseball perspective, this is not an ideal position for the Rangers. And it might be even worse from a business perspective.

Given that Rangers fans got awfully used to winning between 2010 and 2013, it’s not surprising they didn’t show up in 2015. The club’s TV ratings took a massive hit, and attendance declined by over 5,000 fans per game.

It’s no wonder Maury Brown of Forbes thinks the Rangers could have the largest attendance decline of any team in baseball this season. Last year’s turnout suggests that’s a reasonable conclusion, and the Darvish gut punch is another reason to believe it. 

All told, the Rangers have the look of a team that’s going to need something in 2015. Call it a kick in the pants. Call it a beacon of hope. Whatever it is, it’ll need to be something big.

Which brings us to Joey Gallo.

If you want to know where to find Gallo, you can either check Surprise Stadium in Arizona or in the top 20 of MLB.com’s, Baseball Prospectus, Baseball America’s or ESPN.com’s list of baseball’s best prospects.

And for all of them, the main reason why he’s there is becoming less of a secret every day: Gallo is a very, very, very powerful man.

It’s universally believed that the 21-year-old third baseman from Las Vegas packs 80-grade power from the left side of the plate. He’s shown as much in the minors, slugging 104 home runs in only 296 games between rookie ball and Double-A since the Rangers drafted him 39th overall in 2012.

But enough words. Let’s see it in action, starting with a 442-foot blast that he hit at Petco Park as a mere high schooler back in 2011:

And let’s continue with the moonshot that proved to be the difference in last year’s Futures Game at Target Field:

That looks (and sounds) like 80-grade power, alright. Storybook power, even, if Rangers Triple-A hitting coach Justin Mashore is to be believed.

“When you see him hit something, you won’t forget,” Mashore told Grantland’s Ben Lindbergh. “You’ll tell your grandkids about when you saw him hit those home runs that everybody talks about.”

Gallo’s power makes him out to be quite the attraction, and even more so once you consider the venue.

Globe Life Park in Arlington is obviously well known as a power-hitting haven, but FanGraphs can vouch that it’s an especially welcoming place for left-handed power hitters. It’s not hard to imagine Gallo hitting a lot of homers there and exploring never-before-visited regions of the upper deck in right field.

But we wouldn’t be having this discussion if power was the only tool in Gallo’s toolbox. If it was, we’d be talking about a player who was only capable of being a star attraction during batting practice. Bringing up a player like that wouldn’t do the Rangers any good.

That we are having this discussion, however, is a testament to how Gallo has made himself more than a power-only player.

Though Gallo hit 40 homers and slugged .623 as a 19-year-old in rookie ball and Single-A ball in 2013, he also only hit .251 with a .338 on-base percentage. That’s less-than-awesome consistency, and there were good reasons for it.

One was that Gallo didn’t take his walks as much as you’d like to see in a slugger, as he walked only 10.7 percent of the time, per FanGraphs. An even bigger problem was his huge swing-and-miss tendency, as he struck out a staggering 36.8 percent of the time.

But Gallo turned things around in 2014. In 126 games, he hit .271 with a .394 OBP, upping his walk rate to 16.2 percent and lowering his strikeout rate to 33.3 percent. He’s continued to pile on in spring training, hitting .292 with a .370 OBP and only four strikeouts in his first 11 games.

For his turnaround, Gallo credited changing both his swing and his approach. He told Lindbergh:

My swing last year was way longer, so I’d miss pitches that were thrown 88 miles an hour down the middle just because I had so much movement going on. Now, I really don’t miss too many of those pitches. And it’s a little bit of knowing what a pitcher’s mentality is and how a team’s going to pitch to you. Now I kind of have a plan of what this guy’s best pitch is, what he’ll throw, and am a little smarter than last year. So that helps putting balls in play.

The caveat with Gallo’s breakout in 2014 is that his strikeout tendency did balloon after he was promoted from High-A to Double-A, going from 26.0 percent to 39.5 percent. In light of that, MLB.com and Baseball Prospectus aren’t off-base in thinking that Gallo won’t be ready for the majors until 2016.

That’s not the consensus, however. Having shown that he’s more than just a power-only hitter, Lindbergh, FanGraphs‘ Kiley McDaniel and B/R’s own Mike Rosenbaum figure that a 2015 debut is a possibility for Gallo.

All the Rangers have to do is turn that possibility into a reality. And though that would likely involve them being aggressive with Gallo’s timeline, they’re going to have proper incentive to do so.

Between his whiff-happy 2013 and his strikeout-laden time in Double-A in 2014, Gallo has shown he needs time to get his bearings when the competition gets tougher. If the Rangers’ 2015 season goes as poorly as expected, promoting him would allow for the best of both worlds: valuable on-the-job training but without the added weight of having to make it count in a pennant race.

Now, the Rangers could go for it by installing Gallo at designated hitter. On the other hand, they could install him at third base and try to get a sense of whether he can handle the hot corner at the major league level. That’s a good question given that his arm tends to get much higher marks than his glove.

For now, of course, Beltre is standing in his way. But if Texas’ season does indeed go poorly, the Rangers will have little incentive to keep him. He’s still a very good player and under club control through 2016, so he has some trade value. But because he’s also pushing 36, his trade value is on borrowed time. ESPN.com’s David Schoenfield is right that trading him being a good idea.

Lastly, given what we know about the Rangers’ current fan interest, there’s also the business perspective for the Texas front office to consider. Throwing a bone to the club’s fans by promoting Gallo wouldn’t completely repair the club’s attendance or TV ratings, but it would certainly help. Rangers fans would get to revel in his power bat in the short term and have something to be excited about for the long term.

If Darvish was still healthy, this plea wouldn’t exist. A healthy Darvish might have been able to push the Rangers into 85-win territory in 2015, which is as far as you need to go in the era of two wild cards. In a season like that, Gallo’s timeline would have been a secondary concern.

This is no longer the case. The Rangers don’t have much hope of contending in 2015, much less of appealing to fans who turned away in droves last season. If the Rangers want to see what they have for the future while also giving fans a glimpse of that future, Gallo’s their guy. 

 

Note: Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference unless otherwise noted/linked.

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