Tag: AL West

Oakland Athletics: No Matter What, Billy Beane Will Always Keep A’s Competitive

With the production of the film Moneyball back in 2011, Oakland A’s general manager Billy Beane became a nationally known figure.

Since that outstanding movie’s release, the A’s have been even more successful and Beane has been even more daring.

The Athletics have made the playoffs in each of the past three seasons—two American League West titles and one Wild Card Game appearance—which is the most consecutive postseason appearances under Beane.

Even though they have failed to advance to the next round in any of those years, it’s hard to argue with that kind of success in a frugal environment like Oakland.

Not only is Beane very smart, but he is also so innovative that it’s incredibly hard for the rest of the game to keep up.

Moneyball mainly outlined the importance Beane placed on patience and getting on base, but now he is adjusting his philosophy a bit to concentrate on getting maximum production out of all 25 roster spots. In other words, he feels that loading up on platoon players is the most efficient way to allocate the meager resources he is given.

Joe Lemire summed it up nicely in an article he wrote last year for the Wall Street Journal:

Part of Oakland’s motivation was to maximize all 25 roster spots in a contending season; platoons are a cost effective way of generating production, as two part-time players tend to cost less than one full-time regular. 

Beane was already revered as a genius, and he could have stuck with his notion of getting on base and would still be considered among the best executives in baseball. But he is never satisfied, especially without a ring, and that is why from now on the A’s will always be legitimate contenders.

Because Beane won’t allow them not to be.

How often can a team trade, over the course of 14 months, three Baseball America Top 100 prospects in Grant Green, Michael Choice and Addison Russell, trade an All-Star outfielder in Yoenis Cespedes, trade away one of the best third basemen in the game in Josh Donaldson, fail to re-sign All-Star pitchers Jon Lester and Jeff Samardzija, and still have a legitimate chance to compete in arguably the toughest division in baseball?

Not often at all, but in Oakland it is just another day at the office.

The A’s have 16 players on the roster who weren’t with the club at all last year, including eight pitchers according to ESPN.com’s Christina Kahrl.

This offseason, the Oakland front office has pursued plenty of different faces. Ben Zobrist, Billy Butler, Brett Lawrie and Ike Davis were among the club’s major hitting additions, while Jesse Hahn and Tyler Clippard should contribute to the pitching staff.

While they don’t have any true superstars anymore, they definitely have a slew of above-average players who have the potential to be a very good team.

Baseball Prospectus projects the A’s to win 84 games, finish third in the AL West and make the playoffs as the second wild-card team. Fangraphs is even more optimistic, predicting Oakland to be good for 88 wins.

How a team that overhauled most of its premier players from last year can even be close to competitive is a miracle, and the fact that the A’s have a legitimate chance to make the playoffs is simply remarkable.

I am going to say that they will make the playoffs. I think the Zobrist addition and the host of other platoon options gives Bob Melvin the most flexibility of any manager in the league.

The pitching will be solid, especially in cavernous O.co Coliseum, and they will score just enough runs to win games.

Also, maybe most importantly, if the A’s are in the hunt when the trade deadline comes around, Beane will do everything in his power to add any pieces necessary to win.

Beane has never overseen a World Series victory, and he maybe never will, but the way he is able to maximize his team and keep them toward the top of the standings seemingly every year is absolutely phenomenal.

I’m not a gambler, but if I were to put money on how the A’s will do in 2015, there is no way I could bet against Billy Beane

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Final Prediction for Seattle Mariners’ Key Spring Position Battles

With just over three weeks until Opening Day, the Seattle Mariners are beginning to get a clear idea of who will come out victorious in their most intense position battles.

The Mariners entered spring training with only a couple of spots up for grabs on the 25-man roster. After Seattle shored up its weaknesses from last year’s roster with offseason acquisitions, only shortstop, the No. 5 rotation spot, one position in the bullpen and one on the bench were available at the start of camp.

Clear favorites have emerged in each of those battles, whether it be due to performance or injury. While spring stats shouldn’t mean everything (or even much) when deciding roster spots, Seattle’s position battles feel decided barring something out of the ordinary or further injury.

 

Shortstop

The fight between Brad Miller and Chris Taylor for the starting shortstop job was the most interesting thing to watch in Mariners camp up until Saturday. Both potential candidates were playing well, and it appeared the Mariners would have to wait until the final days of spring training to make a sure decision.

Unfortunately, an examination revealed Taylor suffered a fractured bone in his right wrist and will be sidelined for four to six weeks, according to Ryan Divish of The Seattle Times. That means Miller is guaranteed the job for the first month or so of the season unless he gets hurt himself.

Miller likely had the advantage based on this spring alone, as he has collected seven hits in 17 spring at-bats, including two doubles and two home runs. Of course, Miller had an outstanding spring in 2014 before a terrible first two months of the regular season, but his flashes of upside at the plate may have made him the preferred option to Taylor anyway.

However, Taylor was also hitting well in the spring, with eight hits in 19 at-bats, including a home run, a double and two triples. That power is particularly interesting, as Taylor showed little ability to hit anything but singles during his stint in the big leagues last season.

It’s an unlucky injury for Taylor, who also broke a pinkie last May when he was on the cusp of being called up to the majors. While Miller had the advantage for the starting job, Taylor was certainly making the case that he deserved a 25-man roster spot.

 

Winner: Miller by default

 

No. 5 Rotation Spot

Although there are a few other candidates, the final rotation spot always felt like it would come down to Taijuan Walker and Roenis Elias. With a dominant spring so far, Walker has emerged as the clear front-runner.

In three spring starts, Walker has pitched eight shutout innings while allowing just two hits and one walk and striking out eight. Even if it’s just spring training, Walker is throwing strikes, his fastball is lively and he’s mixing in a changeup better than we’ve seen before.

The stuff appears to be there, but Walker said after Saturday’s outing that he is also improved with maturation, via Greg Johns of MLB.com.

“When I was younger I’d get men on base and I’d get frustrated and try to do so much so they wouldn’t score and it kind of got me in trouble. This year I’m keeping my composure when people get on and just work for ground balls and get the easy outs.”

Elias does have a chance as he as shown he can successfully pitch in the majors for a full season, but Walker’s upside and showing this spring may be too much to ignore. Walker’s potential is looking like it may start to produce some results this season.

 

Winner: Walker

 

Lefty Reliever

The Mariners assembled a pile of left-handed pitchers to compete for a bullpen spot to replace Joe Beimel. A couple of them emerged as front-runners to be the second lefty in the bullpen behind Charlie Furbush: Joe Saunders is one of the few candidates with major league experience and has only allowed a .628 OPS against lefties in his career, while the Mariners saw enough in David Rollins to select him in the Rule 5 Draft.

But it’s been unheralded Tyler Olson who has come out of nowhere to become a potential leading candidate. In six spring innings, Olson has allowed just one hit while striking out eight.

Of course, spring stats can be misleading, and Olson is coming off a decent but not great season as a 25-year-old starter at Double-A Jackson. Still, the upside Olson has shown might be enough to win him a roster spot, and he has looked dominant against batters from both sides of the plate.

Farm director Chris Gwynn offered his thoughts on Olson to Bob Dutton of The Tacoma News Tribune.

“He has a really good change-up, and he changes eye location. He knows what he’s doing.”

If the event of the Mariners carrying only one left-handed reliever, Carson Smith becomes the clear favorite for the spot.

 

Winner: Olson

 

Final Bench Spot

Taylor’s wrist injury also pretty much ends any competition for the final bench spot on Seattle’s roster. Rickie Weeks will make the roster and play some left field and first base, but the Mariners are probably going to want a backup middle infielder who can fill in at other positions in an emergency.

That means it’s going to be Willie Bloomquist, who looked like a prime candidate to be cut just a couple of weeks ago. Bloomquist has proven he has recovered enough from microfracture knee surgery to at least play, collecting three hits in 13 at-bats.

Taylor may have made the roster anyway even if he lost out to Miller. The Mariners could also give the spot to an unappealing outfielder (Stefen Romero, James Jones) or shortstop Ketel Marte, but Bloomquist appears most likely given current roster construction.

When Taylor gets healthy, the Mariners could make a change quickly.

 

Winner: Bloomquist (for now)

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Yu Darvish Injury Update: Rangers Confirm Pitcher Will Miss Entire 2015 Season

The Texas Rangers announced starting pitcher Yu Darvish will undergo Tommy John surgery on his right elbow next week and will miss the entire 2015 season.  

Dr. James Andrews is set to perform the surgery Tuesday, T.R. Sullivan of the team’s official site reported. Darvish felt discomfort in his triceps during his only spring training appearance and was left with two options after further evaluation, per Sullivan: surgery or rest. 

“[Rest] would have kept him sidelined for at least four months with no guarantee that it would fix the problem,” Sullivan wrote, adding that Andrews would perform the surgery in Pensacola, Florida.

Jon Heyman of CBS Sports passed along comments from the ace last week, as he talked about the potential disappointment of missing an entire year: “I will be disappointed if I have to miss the season, but I want to look at all my options, including getting a second opinion, before I make a final decision.”

Aaron Gleeman of Hardball Talk noted that Darvish ended up getting three separate opinions about the best route to take; all of them recommended surgery.

So that’s what Darvish will do. If everything goes smoothly during the operation and the ensuing rehab process, there’s a good chance he’ll be available early in the 2016 campaign.

It’s obviously a significant setback for the Rangers rotation. The 28-year-old right-hander owns a 3.27 ERA and 1.20 WHIP in 83 career starts over three seasons. He’s also punched out an eye-popping 680 batters in 545.1 innings.

Derek Holland, Yovani Gallardo and Colby Lewis will lead the Texas rotation with Darvish out of the picture.

 

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George Springer on the Verge of Superstardom After Breakout Rookie Season

The expectations placed on George Springer have never been higher. 

As a college player at Connecticut, they were already on the rise. After the Houston Astros drafted him 11th overall in 2011, those expectations again grew, and by the time he finished his second full minor league season in 2013 with a .303/.411/.600 line to go with a 1.010 OPS, 37 home runs and 108 RBI, he was a potential star.

Last year, Springer started fulfilling that potential as a major league slugger. Now, with the start of this season less than a month away, expectations surrounding the 25-year-old Springer have completely spiked.

The reason: His breakout 2014 with the Astros has put him on the brink of superstardom. Hitting 20 home runs in 78 games and compiling an .804 OPS as a rookie will do that in a game starved for offense.

“Success definitely breeds confidence,” Astros manager A.J. Hinch told reporters Thursday. “But … you ride that momentum when you can, and dwell on it just enough to take the good out of it without the undue pressure.”

That pressure is going to be difficult for Springer to hide from in his sophomore season.

He started 2014 at Triple-A Oklahoma City, but after just 13 games the Astros realized Springer needed no more minor league seasoning. As the sport’s No. 18 overall prospect prior to last season, as rated by Baseball America, Springer hit .353/.459/.647 with a 1.106 OPS and three home runs in those 13 contests.

It was enough for the Astros to call up their top major league-ready prospect despite no realistic expectations to contend.

“Offensively, he’s been heating up the last week or so, and we want to get a guy when he’s hot,” Astros general manager Jeff Luhnow said upon Springer’s mid-April promotion, according to MLB.com’s Brian McTaggart.

The hot stretch did not bleed into the big leagues right away. Springer compiled a .180 average with 23 strikeouts, five walks and no home runs through his first 15 games (67 plate appearances).

But as the season crept into May, Springer found a stride, birthing this new edition of sky-high expectations.

Starting with a quiet 1-for-3 day on May 5, Springer proceeded to hit .333/.434/.762 with 10 homers and four doubles in 22 games. The league named him the AL’s Rookie of the Month for May, and while his slash line dipped, he still flashed his trademark power with six more homers in June and four more in July despite playing just 13 games in that final month.

A quad strain cut off Springer’s season on July 20, an injury that he tweaked during his rehab stint in August. He ended up ranking second among all rookies with those 20 home runs, third with 51 RBI and fifth with his .804 OPS.

There were also obvious flaws. And it is those, if not remedied, that could stall his climb to becoming baseball’s next young superstar.

Springer struck out 114 times last year, or once in about every three plate appearances, and hit .231/.336/.468. Also keep in mind that a near-league-average .294 BABIP helped his batting average, and his swinging-strike percentage (18.2) was second-worst in the AL among players with at least 300 plate appearances. His overall contact rate of 61 percent was worst in the league.

Plus he did not take full advantage of his power because he hit more ground balls (45.4 percent) than fly balls (39.3).

If those trends continue, Springer’s value could greatly diminish over the course of a full season. That will be especially true if his BABIP fluctuates downward, which it can from year to year.

The failures are something Springer understands, and while they might have frustrated him at times, he believes they are part of his path to eventual success.

“I wouldn’t change a thing,” Springer told The Associated Press. “In order to succeed, you have to fail first, and I think I was able to learn from the failure and the hardships. I learned a lot about myself and about the game.

“My dad used to say that adversity introduces a man to himself, and that really stuck with me. It’s not about how you fail, but how you handle it.”

As the Astros’ rebuild continues to take its eventual form, Springer is already establishing himself as a major part of it. While players like Carlos Correa, Mark Appel and Colin Moran, among other prospects, are still making their way to the big leagues, the Astros were 29-30 in Springer’s final 59 games—starting with the game he hit his first homer—showing that he is a major part of their success now and in the future.

 

All quotes, unless otherwise specified, have been acquired firsthand by Anthony Witrado. Follow Anthony on Twitter @awitrado and talk baseball here.

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Anthony Ranaudo Injury: Updates on Rangers Pitcher’s Arm and Return

The injuries keep piling up for the Texas Rangers in spring training. Right-hander Anthony Ranaudo left Thursday’s game against the Chicago White Sox with an arm injury.    

Continue for updates. 


MLB.com: Ranaudo Dealing with ‘Arm Discomfort’

Thursday, March 12 

According to T.R. Sullivan of MLB.com, Ranaudo was taken out after experiencing discomfort in his pitching arm:

Jeff Wilson of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram added that Ranaudo thinks the discomfort is normal and he expects to make his next start.

The Rangers acquired Ranaudo from the Boston Red Sox in January to give themselves some right-handed pitching depth. He made seven starts last year with the Red Sox, posting a 4.81 ERA with 16 walks and 15 strikeouts in 39.1 innings.   

With Yu Darvish and Derek Holland currently dealing with their own arm issues, the Rangers were already thin on the mound. Ranaudo may have been given a chance to make the rotation out of spring training if he put together a good camp, but this setback could change plans. 

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2015 MLB Spring Training: Marcus Semien Is Turning Heads

Spring is the perfect time for young, inexperienced players to take that next step forward into one of the game’s elites. With the importance of the games, and thus the pressure on the players, decreased compared to that of the regular season, it is a time for youth prospects to thrive.

One such prospect in the early stages of spring training this year has been Oakland Athletics shortstop Marcus Semien.

After spending time with the Chicago White Sox, Semien was sent to Oakland as part of the Jeff Samardzija deal and wasn’t seen as anything special in his limited time in the majors to that point.

Hitting .240 with four home runs and 35 RBI, Semien wasn’t exactly tearing it up, and expectations were middling heading into this spring from everyone outside of the Athletics organization.

But, as has become something of a norm, Oakland proved just how much smarter it is than the experts around the league, as Semien has been nothing short of a star so far in spring training.

In his six games in the Cactus League with the A’s, Semien is hitting .500 with two homers, seven RBI and an OPS of 1.454. His first game in the spring featured a two-homer performance against the defending champion San Francisco Giants.

The power is something that the Athletics were hoping to get out of the 24-year-old, and it wouldn’t be surprising to see that continue as he gets more at-bats throughout the season. With only 85 games in the majors, the sample size for Semien is small, and hopes are his power will benefit as he becomes more comfortable in the majors.

Perhaps the biggest issue Semien has dealt with in his limited career thus far has been on the defensive side of the ball.

After being forced to play at second and third base for most of his time in Chicago, Semien has been inconsistent in the field while playing out of his natural position. But with the issues the A’s have had in recent years at shortstop, it is fair to expect that a long-term stint at shortstop would help boost Semien’s defensive numbers in the season.

“I think the White Sox believed in me at short too, but they had Alexei Ramirez,” Semien said, according to ESPN.com’s Christina Kahrl. “I was happy that they worked with me at those other positions, but now, here? Every rep that I get at shortstop, that’s what I’ve always wanted.”

It is almost always better to keep a player happy and comfortable, and it will usually result in an increase in production, which is exactly what the Athletics were hoping for when they dealt Samardzija.

If Semien can develop into the regular starter at short for Oakland, it will be yet another swing and a hit for one of the smartest franchises in the league.

Although, if he doesn’t, the A’s always have Will Ferrell to fall back on as an everyday shortstop.

In a year where the American League is as wide open as it has been in a long time, every move matters. And if the early parts of spring training are to be believed, Oakland made a good one with the addition of the power-hitting Semien.

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What Should Major League Baseball Do with Josh Hamilton?

At the center of the latest controversy for Major League Baseball is an aging, embattled, injury-prone, high-priced former MVP. And for once, it isn’t Alex Rodriguez.

While Rodriguez is busy getting in at-bats and fielding as many questions as grounders in New York Yankees camp after being suspended for all of 2014 as part of the league’s investigation into Biogenesis, Josh Hamilton is embroiled in his own scandal. But it’s more than that.

For Hamilton, a 33-year-old with a well-known history of abusing alcohol and drugs, it’s a battle for his life and well-being even more than it is a battle for his baseball career.

The Los Angeles Angels outfielder has had an extremely difficult, trying offseason, first undergoing surgery to repair a shoulder that had been bothering him since the end of last year, and then—here’s where that controversy comes in—dealing with the aftereffects of the surprising (but not altogether shocking) news that he had suffered a relapse.

Mike DiGiovanna and Bill Shaikin of the Los Angeles Times initially reported the incident, aspects of which were confirmed by others:

The latest details on Hamilton’s relapse comes from Jeff Passan of Yahoo Sports, who writes:

Multiple sources with knowledge of the situation told Yahoo Sports that Hamilton has told people his latest spiral began around Super Bowl weekend after a fight with his wife. Because he cannot carry cash or credit cards, Hamilton wrote himself a check to cash. He wound up at a strip club and used cocaine. Before his next test, Hamilton admitted to using drugs, which prompted the meeting with MLB in New York that the Los Angeles Times first reported, sending Hamilton’s case into the public view.

Those in and around baseball now await word on how the league will handle this and what sort of punishment Hamilton will face. A decision is expected before Opening Day and could come as soon as this week (i.e., mid-March), according to Ken Rosenthal and Jon Paul Morosi of Fox Sports.

But this decision is anything but simple, and the process has been anything but confidential, as it is supposed to be.

For one, there’s the fact that an arbitrator will need to evaluate the evidence and make a determination about whether Hamilton needs to enter a rehabilitation center or should be suspended for his reported relapse after the four-person treatment panel failed to come to a consensus or even a three-to-one majority.

The panel that was supposed to make the call—and which consists of a pair of representatives each from MLB and the MLB Players Association—deadlocked at two votes apiece, as the Los Angeles Times reports.

For another, if the findings call for a suspension, there’s the question of how long Hamilton should be held out and whether he should be treated as a first-time offender or a multiple offender.

As to the fact that all this has been made public, here is the statement the MLBPA released, via Jerry Crasnick of ESPN.com:

It is regrettable that people who want to see Josh Hamilton hurt personally and professionally have started leaking information about the status of his treatment program and the confidential processes under our Joint Drug Agreement. These anonymous leaks are cowardly, undermine the integrity of our collectively bargained agreements and in some instances have been wholly inaccurate.

The Major League Baseball Players Association will use every right we have under the collective bargaining agreement to make sure Josh gets the help he needs, and the fair and confidential process to which he is entitled.

Clearly, this has become an unfortunate situation for everyone, including new commissioner Rob Manfred, who will have to weigh all matters and angles in handling this.

The thought is that Hamilton likely will be forced to miss at least 25 games, per Rosenthal and Morosi of Fox Sports. But if he’s treated as a multiple offender, then the punishment would be more severe, perhaps up to the entire 2015 season.

As a player with a long and disturbing history of addiction problems and drug use, Hamilton’s case is rare in baseball. After being selected No. 1 overall out of high school in 1999 by the Tampa Bay Rays, he was suspended from the sport altogether from February of 2004 to June of 2006 because of his problems.

That Hamilton was able to overcome everything and contribute anything at all on the major league level—let alone be one of the game’s biggest stars for a half-decade from 2008 to 2012—makes his career even more remarkable and this situation even more atypical.

An argument could be made that keeping Hamilton away from the game too long may be detrimental to his well-being, considering that baseball provides him with all kinds of day-to-day activities to keep him busy and in line, from hours of work in the gym or batting cages to busy travel itineraries to the games themselves.

Buster Olney pointed this out on his Baseball Tonight podcast, citing Darryl Strawberry, another longtime big league star who battled addiction but who found some solace in the clubhouse and on the field while playing with the New York Yankees in the mid to late 1990s.

Perhaps the best—or at least, the most mindful—option, then, would be to suspend Hamilton for, say, 25 games without pay. In a way, that almost would amount to a time-served sentence, since he already is expected to be out until May or June while recovering and rehabbing from surgery on his shoulder, per DiGiovanna.

All that said, the financial factor is one that makes this even stickier. Hamilton’s $25 million salary, as part of the five-year, $125 million deal he inked with the Angels in December of 2012, is among the highest in baseball, and especially steep for a player who—let’s not ignore the facts—wasn’t very healthy (89 games) or even all that good in 2014 (.263/.331/.414).

Were Hamilton to be suspended, he would lose his salary for as long as he’s forced to sit out, according to DiGiovanna and Shaikin. Given the circumstances, that wouldn’t be such a bad thing for the Angels, who could use the saved funds elsewhere. It’s not something that should be a major consideration here, but to pretend it isn’t one is naive.

“If [Hamilton is] in rehab,” Jean-Jacques Taylor of ESPNDallas.com writes, “he would be paid his full salary for 30 days and half his salary for the next 30 days. If he’s suspended, he would not be paid.”

Whenever he’s allowed to come back to baseball, Hamilton should be, as a result of his latest mistake, subject to even more frequent drug testing than he already has been. Not for punitive reasons—merely to make sure he’s not hurting himself or his family or friends.

“[Hamilton] served a 28-month suspension that ended in June 2006 for violating the league’s substance-abuse program,” Taylor reminds. “One of the conditions of Hamilton’s reinstatement in 2006 was that he undergo drug testing three times a week.”

Addiction, after all, is a disease, a battle that isn’t “won” or “lost” but fought daily, constantly even.

As Cliff Corcoran of Sports Illustrated writes:

This is a pivotal moment, not so much for the Angels’ season or Hamilton’s career, but for Hamilton’s future as a human being, a husband and a father. It is also a pivotal moment for MLB to lead by example by considering drug addiction as an illness that needs to be treated as such, and by viewing drug addicts not as criminals who need to be punished, but as victims of their own bad choices who need to be shown compassion and helped back to health.

Obviously, this is a controversy and a very sensitive one at that. There is no “right” way, no precedent to handle something that will impact Hamilton and those around him. But there very well could be a wrong way.

Ultimately, whatever Manfred and MLB decide to do with regards to punishing Hamilton for his most recent transgression, the most important thing is that Hamilton’s life and future—not his past—are the priorities.

 

Statistics are accurate through Monday, March 9 and courtesy of MLB.com, Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted.

To talk baseball or fantasy baseball, check in with me on Twitter: @JayCat11

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Houston Astros: Why George Springer Will Have a Monster Season in 2015

Houston Astros outfielder George Springer made his anticipated big league debut on April 17 last year. Springer, Houston’s first-round pick (11th overall) in 2011, was thrown into the fire immediately and struggled a bit from the start.

He hit .182 with no home runs in the 14 games he played in April, but when the calendar flipped over to May, Springer seemed to get comfortable facing big league pitching and started to thrive.

He hit .294 with 10 home runs in May, then added six round trippers in June and four more in July before he missed the remainder of the season with a left quad injury.

Overall, it was a wild success for Springer in his rookie season. He showed off the light-tower power that made scouts drool from the time he was mashing balls in college at Connecticut, he displayed all five tools and he was just an exciting player to watch.

Coming into his sophomore season, expectations are even higher. A writer for the Astros’ Fansided website, Climbing Tal’s Hill, predicted recently that Springer would hit 37 home runs and finish ahead of Mike Trout in the 2015 AL MVP voting.

While that notion may be a bit far fetched, maybe it isn’t impossible.

Springer dedicated the winter to getting stronger, which is hard to believe considering he looked to already have a chiseled frame last year. He reported to camp at 225 pounds, 10 pounds heavier than last year, and it’s all solid muscle.

He detailed his training changes to Evan Drellich of The Houston Chronicle, explaining a new, intense workout program called JEKL. Springer already had a vicious swing last year that sent pitches deep into the seats, and he might have even more power this year with that added muscle.

He also said that his new routine and diet will help his body sustain the natural blows that occur over the course of the long season. If he can find a way to stay on the field for at least 150 games, the sky is the limit for Springer, who was ranked the 23rd-best prospect in baseball by MLB.com’s 2013 Prospect Watch.

According to FanGraphs, Springer’s 127 wRC+, a sabermetric that measures how many runs a player creates for his team, is well above the MLB average of 100. To put that 127 in perspective, Josh Donaldson and Adrian Gonzalez can be found very near that on the list of league leaders in that category.

Had Springer played a full season, he surely would have improved on his 20 home runs and 51 RBI. It is impossible to extrapolate his stats for the rest of the season due to the small sample size, but he may have topped the 30-home run club and would have had a shot at being the AL Rookie of the Year.

Which is why, coming into 2015, folks are so bullish of the 25-year-old outfielder.

The Astros are one year away from contending for an American League playoff spot, if not this season, and Springer is a huge reason why. He fits the mold of a Mike Trout- or Bryce Harper-type of player: big, fast, athletic, power hitter who effortlessly does everything on the field well.

Another thing that will help Springer drastically is the improving cast around him. With Jose Altuve coming off of a breakout 2014 season in which he got on base at a tremendous .377 clip, the emergence of Chris Carter as a legitimate home run threat and the additions of power hitters Evan Gattis and Colby Rasmus, the Astros have a chance to become one of the most potent offensive units in the league.

With more runners getting on base in front of him and more sluggers offering protection behind him, Springer should see plenty of good pitches to hit. Expect him to have loads of opportunities to score runs as well as drive them in.

FanGraphs’ Steamer projects Springer to hit .236 with 29 home runs and 79 RBI while scoring 77 runs. I think he should be able to maintain a higher batting average than that—he hit .300 in his minor league career—but his high strikeout totals are undoubtedly a source of worry.

He racked up 114 strikeouts in only 78 big league games in 2014, and he didn’t show any signs of slowing down throughout the season.

But that’s the way the MLB is transforming. Power hitters, or any hitters for that matter, are sacrificing strikeouts for homers.

If Springer decides to cut down his swing a little with two strikes and focus on putting the ball in play, his average should creep up.

Ultimately, whatever he decides to do, he is going to be an intimidating presence whenever he steps to the plate. He has unlimited talent and potential, and 2015 is his year to unleash on opposing pitchers.

Trout exploded in his second year in The Show, and Harper had a solid sophomore campaign as well. Springer had a more impressive first season than both of those aforementioned studs, so he should have no trouble amassing monster numbers.

I’m not as optimistic as Climbing Tal’s Hill, but I think Springer will have a tremendous season. I predict him hitting around .250 with 30 home runs and 85 RBI.

He will be one of the most exciting players in the league in 2015, and he will be a key cog in the middle of a productive Astro lineup for years to come. And if he can cut down on his strikeout total, he may be a legitimate MVP candidate in the near future.

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Mark Appel Injury: Updates on Astros Star’s Arm and Return

Houston Astros star prospect Mark Appel is battling for a spot on the team’s 25-man roster and stated he is now able to pitch after deailing with an injury during spring training.

Continue for updates.


Appel Ready to Pitch in Games 

Tuesday, March 10

“Mark Appel threw today and said he is ready to pitch in games. He said he has zero concern,” noted Brian McTaggart of MLB.com.

Yesterday, it appeared Appel‘s spring training had hit a speed bump when McTaggart noted the pitcher was dealing with a potential forearm injury:

Evan Drellich of the Houston Chronicle talked to Appel, who said, “I feel like I could pitch. But I understand the training staff’s decision…and the fact that it is spring training.”

While this doesn’t appear to be too serious at the moment, it could be a setback for the top overall pick of the 2013 draft. Appel, alongside 2012 first-round pick Carlos Correa, is considered the future of this franchise, and the hope will be that he can become an ace for years to come.

At the moment, however, the team would be happy to learn that his forearm tightness isn’t anything to worry about or indicative of a more serious injury. 

 

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Yu Darvish Is the Latest in an Epidemic and the End of Rangers’ Playoff Hopes

This news rarely turns in the other direction. 

The Texas Rangers might not know for sure yet, as Yu Darvish discussed (via Evan Grant of The Dallas Morning News), but the sprain in his ulnar collateral ligament is likely to lead to Tommy John surgery. He will be done for this season.

With that continues the Rangers’ misfortune of injuries and probably ends their chances at postseason baseball in 2015. It also continues a baseball epidemic—we are not using that diagnosis lazily—that has seen elbows fail again and again, with Matt Harvey and Jose Fernandez, two of baseball’s brightest stars, the latest in a dense line of promising or established arms.

Now, Darvish. The New York Times‘ Tyler Kepner provided Jon Daniels’ comments regarding how promising Darvish looked “early in camp”:

Maybe it’s been lost on baseball-watching America because it hasn’t seen much of Darvish in the last year, either because of injury or his team’s irrelevance. But this guy is legit. In an age of pitcher revival, Darvish is an ace.

Since arriving in America prior to the 2012 season, Darvish has struck out hitters at a double-digit-per-nine-inning rate, been an All-Star three times and could undoubtedly be classified as elite.

“When he’s right, he’s one of the best in the game,” Rangers general manager Jon Daniels told ESPN.com’s Jerry Crasnick. “That much is clear. You’re talking about a guy who’s a year removed from being second in the Cy Young voting. It speaks for itself.”

Darvish is now part of the franchise’s ongoing problem. Again.

The Rangers are coming off one of the most injury-struck seasons in recent memory, one that took them from contenders to about the worst record in baseball, and Darvish was a part of the ugly run. Now, after a snag that was hopefully no more than a triceps bug, the Texas ace is likely gone until May 2016 if surgery is needed.

Major League Baseball has taken on the Pitch Smart initiative, which vows, “A series of practical, age-appropriate guidelines to help parents, players and coaches avoid overuse injuries and foster long, healthy careers for youth pitchers.”

But as a culture, worldwide, we are well beyond that for entire generations of pitchers. Harvey, Fernandez and Stephen Strasburg are examples that immediately stick out. Young pitchers all of them. But Darvish is 28, going on 29 by the end of this season. He was supposed to be clear of this sort of trauma. Yet here he is, another casualty of a baseball problem that is far bigger than pace of play or the length of the season.

Darvish is done now. He is the latest. He will not be the last.

And the Rangers are left to continue cleaning up a mess they believed to be tidy.

Prince Fielder, Shin-Soo Choo and even Darvish. The Rangers expected more from them all, at least in terms of them being on the playing surface. But with this Darvish news, spoiling the playoff hopes of the Los Angeles Angels or Seattle Mariners or Oakland A’s is about the best they can hope for.

Last year the Rangers lost 2,116 days to the disabled list, according to Jeff Zimmerman of Hardball Times. That total is the most in the majors, dating back to 2002, and Darvish is likely going to add 162 days to their 2015 total before 2015 even begins, and one-time top prospect Jurickson Profar, who already added 162 last season, could add up to four months to the tally. 

Fielder is healthy. So is Choo. Adrian Beltre is a steady force, and Elvis Andrus will again be counted on. Yovani Gallardo is in the fold, and Derek Holland should be ready to fill his rotation spot once the season starts.

But none of that really matters. Darvish was the key. He was the ace most slumping teams do not have, the guy the Rangers would lean on every fifth game.

There are options to replace Darvish, sure. The Rangers have been interested in Cole Hamels in the past, according to The Dallas Morning News, and now Dillon Gee is an option. So is Cliff Lee. But at this point, does it make much sense? Is it worth giving up a top prospect or two to have what you had just days before? Can the franchise justify moving out a player like Jake Thompson or Jorge Alfaro, two of its best prospects, just to replace Darvish?

No. Because Hamels or Lee or Gee will not make the Rangers a contender. Maybe one of them along with Darvish and Gallardo would have, but that is no longer a plausible scenario.

Anytime an awakening of the Rangers was discussed this offseason, it started with Darvish. Now it ends with his faulty right elbow.

A season after losing Harvey and Fernandez, baseball faces a 2015 without Darvish, stars all of them. It is a true epidemic, and this season already has a feeling of “here we go again” for fans and the Rangers.

 

All quotes, unless otherwise specified, have been acquired first-hand by Anthony Witrado. Follow Anthony on Twitter @awitrado and talk baseball here.

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