Tag: Chicago Cubs

Cubs Slugger Kris Bryant Goes Undercover to Prank College Baseball Team

The Chicago Cubs‘ Kris Bryant sharpened his already-electrifying batting skills in spring training with Arizona‘s Mesa Community College baseball team.

The team, however, wasn’t aware.

In a prank made possible by Red Bull, the 2015 Rookie of the Year was introduced by Mesa head coach Tony Cirelli as Roy Nabryt, a European “donkey” with “crazy power” who could assist the team in its pursuit of a title.

The catch? Many of the current players would be losing time on the field to the undercover Bryant—a fact they were less than thrilled about.

But seeing him step up to the plate drew the very opposite kind of reaction.

With every crack of the bat, another head turned until the entire team was mesmerized.

And then, the jig was up.

Slowly but surely, the whispers spread: “That’s Kris Bryant.” He was had by his signature swing.

Still, his reveal was met with great laughter, and before he parted, Bryant wished the squad the best, encouraging the team to go “get a ring” (before conveying his own desires for some hardware).

That certainly would be a lot easier if Roy Nabryt were to stick around. 

[YouTube, h/t Sports Illustrated]

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Jake Arrieta Showing No Signs of Slowing Down After Breakout ’15 Cy Young

In the second inning of his second spring start Monday against the San Diego Padres, Jake Arrieta put a man on base for fun.

Well, OK, not for fun. He did it—”it” being an intentional walk to the Friars’ Derek Norrisbecause he wanted to work out of the stretch. Apparently, Arrieta wasn’t confident he’d get a chance if he left it up to the opposition.

That’s about the only thing the Chicago Cubs right-hander and reigning National League Cy Young Award winner isn’t confident in these days.

He’s coming off a career-defining season that saw him fly into the firmament of MLB stars. Now, he’s out to prove it was no fluke.

It seems odd to even talk about a guy who went 22-6 last season with a 1.77 ERA and 0.865 WHIP while twirling a no-hitter, as being underrated. And Arrieta isn’t, really. 

But he might still be underestimated—at least a little.

A fifth-round pick by the Baltimore Orioles in 2007, Arrieta didn’t break out until 2014 when he was 28 years old. He posted a 2.53 ERA in 156.2 innings for the Cubs. Prior to that, he logged an ERA under 4.00 just once and never eclipsed 120 innings in a season.

So while no one disputes the glistening value he delivered on the north side in 2015, there are reasons to wonder if he can do it again in 2016.

Bleacher Report’s Rick Weiner tapped Arrieta as one of the more likely players to regress this season, noting that Arrieta’s 2.35 fielding independent pitching score (FIP) and a 2.61 expected fielding independent pitching score (xFIP) significantly outpaced his ERA.

As FanGraphs’ Eno Sarris put it, “When Jake Arrieta won the Cy Young, there was a smattering of ‘good for him, it probably won’t happen again…'”

Another figure the doubters can point to is the .246 batting average on balls in play (BABIP) opponents put up against Arrieta in 2015, per FanGraphs. That’s well below his career tally of .272 and suggests a regression could be in order.

On the other hand, the additions of free-agent outfielder Jason Heyward and second baseman Ben Zobrist should strengthen Chicago’s defense and benefit Arrieta and the rest of the pitching staff.

Speaking of which, while the Cubs didn’t land an ace in the David Price tier, they did nab veteran John Lackey away from the St. Louis Cardinals to round out a core that already includes left-hander Jon Lester.

Arrieta, however, is the unequivocal ace. He has earned the title, and he’s showing no signs of relenting.

He did seem to tire a bit down the stretch last season, surrendering eight runs in 10.2 innings in the National League Division Series and National League Championship Series after tossing a complete-game masterpiece in the win-or-go-home wild-card showdown against the Pittsburgh Pirates.

This time, Arrieta insists, will be different.

“I knew after a couple weeks of not throwing, letting the body kind of recover, that it was back to normal,” he said, per Bruce Levine of CBS Chicago. “Now, after dealing with the fatigue of last year, I have obviously bounced back. I am in better shape than ever…”

Count Cubs skipper Joe Maddon among the believers in Arrieta’s fitness ethic. “You talk to everybody who watches him, [and they’ll say] it’s kind of freaky,” Maddon said, per MLB.com’s Phil Rogers. “I don’t think anybody else could do what he does. In terms of his flexibility, the ridiculous strength all over his body, how he takes care of himself, all of that stuff matters.”

It’s easy to dismiss that brand of talk as self-serving hyperbole; everyone’s in the best shape of his life in mid-March. 

Arrieta, though, just finished reminding us all what makes him such a special talent, and the early spring returns indicate he hasn’t missed a beat. Why should we doubt that he has more rocket fuel sloshing in the tank?

Will he capture another Cy Young and challenge for another ERA title, which he could win if Zack Greinke toils in the less pitcher-friendly confines of Arizona?

Maybe.

Will he be the best pitcher on a young, hungry Cubs team that seems destined for another deep, possibly curse-busting postseason run?

Count on it, just as if you’re Arrieta counting four balls in a statement-making, springtime intentional walk.

 

All statistics courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com, unless otherwise noted.

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Jake Arrieta Contract: Latest News and Rumors on Negotiations with Cubs

The Chicago Cubs and 2015 National League Cy Young winner Jake Arrieta agreed to terms on a one-year, $10.7 million contract in February, but it appears the deal wasn’t close to what the right-hander wanted.

Continue for updates.


Epstein Comments on Negotiations with Arrieta

Wednesday, March 9

Per Mark Gonzales of the Chicago Tribune:

“Jake’s priority (now) is helping the team come together and prepare for a season,” (Cubs president Theo) Epstein said Tuesday. “The last thing we would want is to create any distraction. (But) there will be quiet moments out of the competitive spotlight in the future when it will make sense to talk again. It’s certainly not something that is going on now or probably will as the season begins.”


Arrieta Comments on Securing New Deal

Wednesday, March 9

Arrieta said, per Gonzales on Tuesday:

There’s a small window you have as a professional athlete, so you want to try to capitalize on that. But financially, whether I signed an extension or not, we’re still going to be able to live a good life. Money can only make you so happy. We’re extremely happy where we’re at. I love my teammates. I love Chicago. So those are more important than the contract extension.


Cubs, Arrieta Far Off on Long-Term Deal

Monday, March 7

According to Jon Heyman of MLB Network, the two sides were working on a megadeal, but their talks ended prematurely because of a “decent-sized gap over the length of the deal.”

Heyman shared the figure Arrieta was hoping for:

However, Arrieta will be arbitration-eligible for the third time after the 2016 season, and free agency could loom following the 2017 season. Heyman reported the Cubs were not going to give him a seven-year deal two years before he is set to become a free agent.

He also noted the Cubs “say they love Arrieta and will try again.”


Arrieta Emerged as Elite Pitcher in 2015

The money top-tier pitchers such as David Price and Clayton Kershaw are making hovers around $30 million per year, and while Arrieta has made more than 25 starts in only two of his six years in the majors, he did finish with a 22-6 record and 1.77 ERA last year. His 222 ERA+ was just three points behind Zack Greinke’s mark of 225, per Baseball-Reference.com.

On top of his stellar pitching, he isn’t lacking confidence. On Monday, when asked on The Spiegel and Goff Show (h/t Chicago CBS) if any hitters in the National League scare him, he gave a simple answer: “Not right now.” 

If he has another solid season next year, the Cubs will need to open their wallets, or they could lose him to another team that does following the 2017 season.

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Shane Victorino to Cubs: Latest Contract Details, Comments, Reaction

Veteran outfielder Shane Victorino signed with the Chicago Cubs on a minor league deal with an invite to spring training on Friday, according to Bruce Levine of WSCR. Ken Rosenthal of FoxSports.com confirmed the report. 

Victorino, 35, struggled in 2015, playing in just 71 games between the Boston Red Sox and Los Angeles Angels. He hit .230 with one home run, seven RBI and 19 runs scored, his worst numbers since very early in his career. 

Injuries have plagued Victorino in his later years, as he’s missed 263 games in the past three years.

But the two-time All-Star and two-time World Series champion is an experienced presence in the clubhouse and can play all three outfield positions in a pinch, making him a nice fourth or fifth outfielder for the Cubs.

Among a slew of talented young players on the roster, Victorino can be a real asset off the field, serving as a mentor for young outfielders Jorge Soler, Javier Baez and Kyle Schwarber. 

Victorino’s prime years are well behind him, but if he can stay healthy, he should still be a nice player coming off the bench for Chicago.

 

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Chicago Cubs’ Shocking Dexter Fowler Steal Boosts World Series-Ready Roster

Call the Dexter Fowler re-signing a fantasy-turned-reality for the Chicago Cubs, because any hope that the team could entice Fowler to come back for the 2016 season didn’t seem possible a short while ago.

When the Cubs signed outfielder Jason Heyward to an eight-year, $184 million contract in December, it essentially took the team out of the Fowler sweepstakes.

He was seeking a lucrative, multiyear deal in a crowded class of 2016 free-agent outfielders. It didn’t appear that the Cubs could meet his demands.

Then nothing happened.

Free agency moved slowly, and the second-tier outfielders like Fowler saw that their value wasn’t as high as they had anticipated. The best option for some free-agent outfielders became signing a one-year deal, giving them the ability to re-enter free agency in 2017 when the outfield class will be weaker.

So Fowler spurned a $35 million offer from the Orioles, which ESPN.com reported to be done pending a physical, and accepted a one-year deal from the Cubs with a mutual option for 2017. The team announced the deal in a press release on Thursday.

The Cubs had a World Series contender. Now, they have their 2016 Dream Team.

“I was happy for Dex,” Cubs president of baseball operations Theo Epstein said to ESPN.com’s Jesse Rogers. “He deserves a great moment. We hatched a little plan and were able to pull it off.”

Prior to the Fowler signing, I’m sure Epstein cooked up all sorts of different scenarios in his sabermetrics lab at Wrigley Field.

And undoubtedly one of those included playing Heyward in center field.

Given an entire season to play the position, Heyward would probably be an above-average center fielder. In 10 games last year in centera small sample sizeHeyward had a defensive runs saved above average of two.

But he is truly a corner outfielder. His high contract value is largely based upon his defensive metrics and capabilities as a right fielder. Last season, Heyward’s defensive runs saved above average as a right fielder was 22.

With Fowler now on the roster, Heyward can play right field the majority of the time. Fowler has been a career center fielder, playing right field for only one game in eight seasons.

A crowded Cubs outfield that includes Jorge Soler and Kyle Schwarberthe Cubs also announced Thursday that they traded outfielder Chris Coghlanmight force Heyward into center on Fowler’s off days.

But Fowler’s presence in the lineup allows Heyward to be the everyday right fielder. That makes the Cubs a more analytically efficient team defensively. With one of baseball’s top starting pitcher trios—2015 National League Cy Young winner Jake Arrieta, Jon Lester and 2016 signee John Lackey—defense is the Cubs’ top priority.

The move also happens to fill a hole at the top of their lineup, though.

Cubs manager Joe Maddon proved last season that he isn’t afraid to experiment with the leadoff spot, even using the power-hitting Schwarber as the team’s table-setter. But the speedy Fowler provides the Cubs a prototypical leadoff player with the proven ability to get on base.

With the Cubs last season, Fowler broke 100 runs scored for the first time in his career (102). However, he posted career lows in batting average (.250) and on-base percentage (.346), though the latter ranked him 52nd in all of baseball.

Considering the Cubs have added Heyward and Ben Zobrist, and their rookies will be playing with major league experience, the residual effect on the lineup will likely allow Fowler more opportunities to get on base.

Fowler’s best season came in 2012 with the Rockies when he hit .300 and posted an on-base percentage of .389. He is a career .267 hitter with a .363 on-base percentage.

A switch-hitter, Fowler also adds balance to a lineup that looked to be more left-handed prior to his signing. Against left-handed pitching last season, Fowler hit .326 with a .399 on-base percentage. So he adds a solid right-handed bat.

Combined with Heyward at the top of the Cubs’ order, the team has a duo apt to get on base for the power-hitting trio of Anthony Rizzo, Kris Bryant and Schwarber.

Realistically, Fowler isn’t going to win any team a World Series.

But the Cubs were already contenders before they signed him. His addition only makes them look that much better, like a $10,000 necklace on a supermodel.

Cubs fans have been dreaming the last 108 years. This season, that World Series dream seemed more like a realityeven a possibility.

Dare I say this? Now it’s likely.

 

Advanced statistics courtesy of FanGraphs.

Seth Gruen is a national baseball columnist for Bleacher Report. Follow him on Twitter @SethGruen and like his Facebook page.

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Dexter Fowler Re-Signs with Cubs: Latest Contract Details, Comments, Reaction

It appears Dexter Fowler had a last-second change of heart, opting to re-sign with the Chicago Cubs for at least one more season. 

The Cubs announced Fowler agreed to terms on a one-year deal for 2016 with a mutual option for 2017.

According to Gordon Wittenmyer of the Chicago Sun-Times, Fowler will make $8 million in base salary this season, with his option for 2017 at $9 million and a $5 million buyout. Per Bob Nightengale of USA Today, Fowler then ends up with $13 million in guaranteed money.

Fowler appeared to be on his way to the American League East, with ESPN’s Buster Olney reporting on Tuesday that the 29-year-old agreed to a three-year, $35 million deal with the Baltimore Orioles

However, per Bruce Levine of 670 The Score, Fowler’s deal with the Orioles fell through because the team didn’t want to give him an early opt-out. 

Fowler said Chicago is “where my heart is” and confirmed he turned down a three-year offer from another club, though he did not say which it was, per Mark Gonzales of the Chicago Tribune

According to Carrie Muskat of MLB.com, Fowler’s deal was announced as he was walking onto the field at Cubs spring training in Arizona, and team president Theo Epstein said he would “never top that.”

While the Orioles will be scratching their heads following another unusual contract situation, the Cubs were happy to welcome Fowler back into the fold:

Bringing Fowler back, though, does nothing to alleviate the logjam already present in Chicago’s outfield.

The team did announce prior to re-signing Fowler that Chris Coghlan had been traded to the Oakland Athletics, but even with Coghlan out of the picture, the Cubs now have Fowler, Jason Heyward, Jorge Soler and Kyle Schwarber all battling for three outfield spots. Javier Baez will also be taking reps in the outfield this spring. 

Epstein said after the deal was announced that Fowler felt there were still things left to accomplish in Chicago, per Sarah Lauch of CSN Original:

There are certainly lineup options Cubs manager Joe Maddon can play with, something he’s loved doing throughout his career. 

One possible solution is having Schwarber, who had a .481 OPS against left-handed pitching last season, sit against southpaws. Fowler, a switch-hitter, has a higher career OPS against lefties (.829) than righties (.761).

Soler is a wildly talented player, but he’s also been susceptible to injury. The 24-year-old missed 61 games last season and played only 62 games in the minors two years ago. Jason Heyward, who is traditionally a right fielder, has never been asked to play center field for a full season.

It’s not necessarily a bad problem to have so much talent in the outfield, but that’s a lot of players battling for playing time. Unless the Cubs are working on a potential deal involving at least one other outfielder, Epstein and Maddon will have to create a lot of at-bats for their crowded roster.

 

Stats per Baseball-Reference.com.

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Dexter Fowler Signs with Cubs Despite Reported Agreement with Orioles

The Chicago Cubs announced they have signed outfielder Dexter Fowler to a one-year contract with a mutual option for 2017.

The news comes after Fowler had reportedly signed with the Baltimore Orioles on Tuesday. ESPN.com’s Buster Olney initially reported Fowler signed a three-year deal, and Roch Kubatko of MASN confirmed the move. 

Jon Heyman of MLB Network reported at the time that the contract was worth $33 million over the three years.

Fowler hit .250 with a career-best 17 home runs as a leadoff hitter with some pop in his bat for the Cubs. He also stole 20 bases and worked a career-high 84 walks, which was seventh-best in the National League. His ability to draw those walks despite a mediocre batting average helped him score a career-high 102 runs as he set the table for sluggers such as Kris Bryant, Anthony Rizzo and Kyle Schwarber.

Fowler’s durability was particularly important in Chicago last season. He played 156 games on a team that was fluid in the outfield around him, as Jorge Soler dealt with injuries and Schwarber, Bryant and Chris Coghlan played a variety of positions.

Now that Fowler has a new contract, he can turn his attention toward improving his defense before Opening Day. According to FanGraphs, he posted a minus-12 mark in defensive runs saved last season even though he did use his speed to cover ground and make a handful of flashy plays.

Fowler still theoretically has a handful of productive seasons ahead of him, as he’s only set to turn 30 in March, making him an important addition to a Cubs squad that has World Series aspirations.

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Cubs’ Former Top Prospect Javier Baez Is One of MLB’s Biggest Wild Cards of 2016

Once an elite prospect destined to help the Chicago Cubs become relevant again, Javier Baez is now a former prospect hoping to latch onto a Cubs team that became relevant without him.

But there’s a line between “former prospect” and “afterthought.” Baez is still only 23, and he still has the talent that made him a top prospect in the first place. He also has what most afterthoughts don’t.

An opportunity.

Coming off a 97-win season that took them to the National League Championship Series, the Cubs don’t have a starting role for Baez in 2016. He’s a natural shortstop, but Addison Russell has that spot on lockdown. Ditto Kris Bryant at third base and newcomer Ben Zobrist at second base. Barring injury, none of them is moving for a dude with a career .201 average and .598 OPS in the majors.

But because Zobrist—whose visage appears next to “versatile” in the encyclopedia—is indeed locked into his own position, it sure would help Chicago’s quest to end its 108-year championship drought if somebody else emerged as a Zobrist-like utility player. As Carrie Muskat of MLB.com noted, whether Baez is up to that challenge is among the big questions the Cubs hope to answer this spring.

Like any other experiment, this one could go awry. Maybe Baez doesn’t have it in him to play all over the field. Or maybe his bat will continue to be the problem. Or both. And though this probably wouldn’t be a staggering blow to the Cubs, it would certainly put Baez back in prospect purgatory.

But then there’s the oh-so-juicy alternative: What if Baez is capable of what the Cubs are asking?

If nothing else, Baez doesn’t have to do much to prove he can handle defensive versatility. When he was considered a top-five prospect by Baseball America and Baseball Prospectus going into 2014, there wasn’t much doubt he had the athleticism and arm strength to play shortstop. In the time since, he’s shown he can also handle second base and third base.

The Cubs are now trying to find out if he can handle center field, and the early vibes are positive. Baez told Bruce Levine of 670 The Score that he felt “really good” playing center field in the Caribbean Winter League, and Cubs manager Joe Maddon expressed his faith last month.

“I definitely think he can,” Maddon said when asked about Baez’s ability to play center field, via Tony Andracki of CSN Chicago. “He’s one of the best on-field defenders I’ve seen, period. The way he plays the infield, he’s never in trouble. He’s very calm, he’s got this really high baseball acumen—he sees things in advance.”

If Baez proves capable of playing center field, it’s not much of a stretch to assume he could also play left or right field in a pinch. As such, his immediate future could involve him spelling not just Russell, Bryant or Zobrist in the infield, but also Jason Heyward, Kyle Schwarber or Jorge Soler in the outfield.

But while all of this gets the optimism gland going, Baez’s glove wasn’t the reason he became a fallen prospect.

No, sir. It was mainly Baez’s offensive potential that stood out. His insane bat speed helped him get picked ninth overall in 2011, and it officially put him on the map when it produced a .920 OPS and 37 home runs in the minors in 2013. Throw in 20 stolen bases, and Baez had the look of a Carlos Correa prototype.

When Baez arrived in 2014, though, his weaknesses stood out like a pink shirt at the Springfield power plant. In 52 games, he hit just .169 and struck out 95 times in 229 plate appearances. That’s a 41.5 strikeout percentage, which made Baez the league’s strikeout-iest hitter.

Alas, it was a perfect storm of whiffiness. By swinging at under 60 percent of the pitches he saw in the strike zone and over 40 percent of the pitches he saw outside the strike zone, Baez validated warnings that he had neither good pitch recognition nor good discipline. And though your humble narrator will leave it to Z.W. Martin’s piece at Deadspin to break down the particulars, Baez’s swing mechanics featured enough moving parts to make a Transformer look like a chump.

But now, for the bright side: Going into the spring, the worst of it appears to be behind Baez.

Though the tragic death of his sister and a broken finger limited him to just 70 games at Triple-A last year, he dropped his K% to 24.3 and hit .324. In 95 total plate appearances between the regular season and the postseason in the majors, he hit .278 with a 29.5 K%. 

This traces back to what was going on a year ago. Tom Verducci of Sports Illustrated wrote about how Baez and the Cubs were responding to his major league reality check by testing out some changes in the batter’s box. The big one involved going to simplified mechanics in two-strike counts and other situations where he needed to prioritize simply putting the ball in play, and he ended up making good on that.

This was Baez with two strikes in 2014:

And this was Baez with two strikes in 2015:

The difference is a triple whammy of increased efficiency. Baez closed his stance to the extreme, with his left foot inside of his right foot. Rather than a big leg kick, his timing device was a small heel lift. He also never let the head of his bat get too far in front of his helmet.

This paid off about as well as that long dinger would seem to suggest. Per Baseball Savant, here’s a look at how much Baez improved in two-strike counts:

Behold the Anthony Rizzo-fication of Javier Baez. The Cubs first baseman looks to drive the ball early in counts, but he calms down his approach and simply looks to put it in play in two-strike counts. It’s worked for him, and Baez teased in 2015 that it could also work for him.

And that’s not the only way he helped himself in 2015. He also got more aggressive in a good way, upping his in-zone swing percentage from under 60 to darn near 70. And as Rian Watt of Baseball Prospectus Wrigleyville covered in detail, those numbers only scratch the surface of the improvement of Baez’s selectivity.

“I’m seeing the ball really well and letting it get deep into the zone,” Baez said last September, via Jesse Rogers of ESPN.com. “I’m trying to get a pitch over the plate.”

Obviously, the sample size we’re talking about is small enough to warrant sarcastic whistling of the “Small Sample Size” song. Nobody can call Baez a competent major league hitter just yet.

However, it bodes well enough that he’s clearly headed in the right direction. And it bodes even better that he’s not yet satisfied. As he told Muskat last week, he’s not done making adjustments.

“I’m just making my adjustments now,” he said. “I feel like I’ve been doing good.”

Which brings us back to our big “What if?” The Cubs are hoping that Baez can be a super utility guy, and he might actually be able to field and hit well enough to make that hope come true.

The door would then be open for him to log regular time all over the field while also getting plenty of at-bats, and his combination of power and speed would put him more in line with 2009-2012 Zobrist or 2014 Josh Harrison than with 2015 Brock Holt. That is, a player good enough to potentially warrant both All-Star consideration and MVP consideration.

That makes Baez one heck of a wild card going into the 2016 season. If he can’t do what the Cubs are asking of him, it’s no big blow to their contention chances. But if Baez answers the challenge, that’ll just be one more reason to believe that a 108-year wait won’t become a 109-year wait.

 

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

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Manny Parra to Cubs: Latest Contract Details, Comments and Reaction

Manny Parra signed a minor league deal with the Chicago Cubs on Monday, according to Carrie Muskat of MLB.com. The left-handed relief pitcher will have an invite to the team’s big league camp, per JW Gravley of 27 Outs Baseball.     

Bruce Miles of the Daily Herald shared that Parra has already reported to the Cubs:

Parra, 33, spent three of his first four seasons as a starter with the Milwaukee Brewers, but he struggled mightily with a 5.13 ERA over 454.1 innings, which forced him to the minors in 2011 and a role in the bullpen upon his return the following year. 

He spent the past three seasons with the Cincinnati Reds, making 40 appearances with a 3.90 ERA in 2015. Over the course of his eight-year career, Parra has been lit up by right-handed batters, which has been a huge pitfall:

Parra has also struggled with wild pitches, leading the league with 17 in 2008. Here is a look at one during the opening series at Busch Stadium against the St. Louis Cardinals in 2013:

The Cubs already have a slew of left-handed relievers competing in camp, slimming Parra’s chances of making the big league team. In addition to those already on the 40-man roster—Travis Wood, Clayton Richard and Rex Brothers—the Cubs also have Jack Leathersich and Edgar Olmos competing this spring, according to Steve Adams of MLB Trade Rumors.

Parra’s signing is a win for the Cubs, who at the very worst get an inexpensive option who adds depth to their relief corps as a minor league option. 

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A Backup Catcher’s Unique Path from Field to Front Office

The weekend-long Cubs Convention wouldn’t start until Friday, but Chicago Cubs fans were already on high alert at the Sheraton Grand Hotel in Chicago on Tuesday night.

The former fan favorite was bundled up in an attempt to counter the freezing Chicago winter, but that didn‘t stop more than a few fans from recognizing and approaching him.

Ryne Sandberg? Billy Williams? Fergie Jenkins? Nope. It was the Cubs’ newest baseball operations assistant.

I don’t feel like I’m a recognizable person, you know. I mean, I was the backup catcher who hit .190 two years ago here,” John Baker said. “But people were coming up to me with blown-up photographs and offering me beers. I understand that they’re extra excited right now, but at the same time, I was just blown away by how nice people have been to me.”

Ask any Cubs fan to rattle off some of the team’s recent backup catchers, and he or she may have trouble coming up with names such as Henry Blanco, Koyie Hill, Steve Clevenger and Dioner Navarro.

You’d be hard-pressed to find one who doesn’t remember Baker.

Understanding why he is so well-liked involves digging a bit deeper than the .192/.273/.231 line he posted over 208 plate appearances in 2014, his lone season on the North Side.

It was his reaction to this walk against Aroldis Chapman in the ninth inning of a tie game:

It was his playing the guitar for teammates in the dugout during a rain delay:

The one highlight that sticks out in the minds of many Cubs fans, though, was his extra-inning performance against the Colorado Rockies on July 29.

Baker entered that game in the top of the 16th inning not to catch, but to pitch for a Cubs team that had exhausted its bullpen.

A foul pop-up by Charlie Culberson, a walk to Drew Stubbs and a double-play ball off the bat of Cristhian Adames—just like that, Baker had thrown a scoreless inning.

He wasn‘t finished.

He led off the bottom of the 16th by drawing a walk, made his way around to third base and then raced home to score on a sacrifice fly off the bat of Starlin Castro.

With one epic slide, he had scored the winning run and made himself the winning pitcher, giving the smattering of fans who’d stuck around for the entirety of the six-hour, 27-minute marathon a reason to cheer.

Moments such as that left an indelible impression on the fanbase, and Baker was just as effective at making one on his teammates.

Current Cubs reliever Clayton Richard just missed playing with Baker in Chicago, but the two were teammates in San Diego during the 2012 season, when Richard saw firsthand the kind of impact Baker can make in a short period of time.

Baker was part of a catching trio that also included 23-year-old Yasmani Grandal, who was in his rookie season, and 28-year-old Nick Hundley, who was just starting to establish himself as an everyday backstop.

The 31-year-old Baker may not have been the primary catcher, but he found himself in the important role of mentor.

“He was a really good sounding board for Nick and Yasmani whenever they had questions or issues,” said Richard. “He was really another coach, and he was able to help those guys out quite a bit.” 

The 2012 season was the first time Richard and Baker played together, but Richard said the two had an immediate connection, and the statistics back that up.

“I think that there was a connection there at all times. There was an immediate line of communication that wasn‘t difficult at all to establish, and it didn‘t seem like there was a huge learning curve for each other,” said Richard.

“A lot of times with a new catcher, it takes a few starts or a few outings to get to know what each other likes and to make those adjustments. With him, it was very fluid and seemed very natural, and I think that’s a testament to how intelligent he is and how well he adapts to new situations.”

That adaptability will now be put to the test, as Baker’s new role in the front office is one new situation after another.

The week of the Cubs Convention was a perfect example. 

Prior to arriving in Chicago, Baker headed to the sunny Dominican Republic on a quick scouting trip to watch some of the team’s prospects in the winter league there.

That was followed by in-depth player development meetings with some of the brightest minds in the game, and then he went on to the convention, with the autograph and photo requests and offers of free beer.

Not a bad gig for Baker—or anyone, for that matter. The process of getting that gig began back in December 2014, when the Cubs let him go but gave him a glimpse into where his future may have been headed.

“When they non-tendered me in 2014, they told me on the phone, ‘Hey listen, when you feel like you’re done playing, we would like you to call us because there’s a home for you here. We’ll figure out where you fit best in our organization, but we want you around,'” Baker said.

The veteran catcher wound up landing in Seattle on a minor league deal that January, but he didn‘t break camp with the big league club and instead began the year in Triple-A Tacoma.

By the end of May, Seattle had released him, and this time, the move would officially mark the end to a playing career that began back in 2002 when the Oakland Athletics selected him in the fourth round as part of the infamous Moneyball draft.

“There’s a list of hitters I want to talk about,” assistant general manager Paul DePodesta said to a group of grizzled Oakland scouts prior to the 2002 draft, as depicted in the pages of the Michael Lewis bestseller. “All of these guys share certain qualities. They are the eight guys we definitely want. And we want all eight of these guys.”

Baker was one of those eight guys, and that shared quality was on-base ability. He had hit .383 with an impressive .516 on-base percentage during his junior season at the University of California.

However, it was as a member of the Florida Marlins that he made his big league debut on July 9, 2008, having been traded by Oakland prior to the 2007 season for prospect Jason Stokes.

He spent four seasons with the Marlins, two with the Padres and one with the Cubs before capping off his career with that brief pit stop in the Seattle organization.

It was only after his release from the Mariners that Baker finally began to think about what his next career move would be.

“When I was playing, I didn’t think about anything else,” he said. “I don’t believe in living any way other than moment to moment if you’re trying to be competitive in a sport. It was nice that I had five or six months at home with my family to talk to as many people as possible and go through what my future is going to look like.”

So what kind of job opportunities await a recently retired baseball player who didn‘t bank tens of millions of dollars over the course of his career and can’t simply retire altogether?

“I got offers to work for some tech-sales companies. I had offers in the medical supplies industrya lot of athletes I think tend to go into that,” Baker said. “But I’m somebody that can’t sit on my hands; I have to be doing something.

“Everybody wants to be more financially successful, but that wasn’t at the top of the reasons why I was looking for another job. It was to find the best fit for me, and everybody I talked to outside of baseball and inside of baseball both said the longer you stay away, the harder it is to get back in.”

And that led him back to that standing offer from the Cubs. The organization hired him in December.

Officially, Baker holds the title of baseball operations assistant, but he’ll be exposed to a number of different aspects within the front office in his first year on the job.

“I get to do everything, and it’s exciting,” Baker said.

“I’ll be doing amateur scouting in the Bay Area and going on an international trip to Japan, Korea and Taiwan,” he said. “I’ll also be doing some targeted roving with some of the catching and working pretty closely with our mental skills department about coming up with strategies to communicate better with players.”

Baker provides a unique perspective for the front office as someone who has only recently stepped away from the game, and his ability to connect with the millennial generation should serve him well.

“I’ve always gotten along well with people much younger than me, and I have an ability to communicate that I think is similar toand I don’t want to compare myself to this personbut I think that’s one of the greatest strengths of Joe Maddon is that he can relate to everybody on his team and guys still think that he’s cool,” Baker said.

“It’s important to have people like that that can communicate to both groups. To communicate to the field staff, the front office staff and have open lines of communication with your players.”

One of Baker’s 15,000 Twitter followers asked him how it felt to be back with the Cubs organization.

His response was simple:

For a professional athlete, no longer playing the game you love is never easy.

For John Baker, it simply means the start of an exciting new chapter in his career and a chance to rejoin an organization that feels like home.

 

All quotes obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted.

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