Tag: Dan Haren

Dan Haren: Diamondbacks Begin Retooling With Haren Trade

Over the past week, the prospect of the Arizona Diamondbacks trading staff ace Dan Haren went from being highly unlikely to becoming imminent. A good indication of the likelihood of a trade occurred from a rather unconventional source.

As I entered the Team Shops in Chase Field, several employees welcomed me with news of a new sale they were having. For the remainder of this home stand, the Team Shop was offering anyone who purchased either a Dan Haren or Brandon Webb jersey and a T-Shirt with either of these two players’ names imprinted on them would receive a game-used baseball bat from Justin Upton, Mark Reynolds, or all-star Chris Young.

Clearly the team shop was sitting on a lot of inventory of merchandise for these two players that would have to be substantially marked down if either of these players were traded. Given that Webb is still on the disabled list, it seemed likely that Haren would be traded relatively soon.

At the conclusion of the game against the San Francisco Giants, the Diamondbacks announced they had reached a deal with the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim that sends Dan Haren to Anaheim in exchange for three pitchers and the proverbial “player to be named later”.

The known names in this trade are left-handed starter Joe Saunders along with minor league reliever Rafael Rodriguez and starter Patrick Corbin. The rumor mill has identified the player to be named later will be Tyler Skaggs.

Skaggs who is currently playing for the Cedar Rapids Kernals of the Midwestern League is not eligible to be traded until August 7, since he has not yet been under contract for the necessary one year.

Saunders gives the Diamondbacks a left-handed starter who will take Haren’s place in the Diamondbacks starting rotation for the remainder of the season.

Rodriguez, a right-handed reliever in the Angels organization is currently with the Salt Lake Buzz and will likely be sent to Triple-A Reno for the remainder of the minor league season. Chances are, he will be among the September call-ups for Arizona.

The two most important pieces of this trade are probably Corbin and Skaggs, both of whom were identified among the top prospects for the Angels farm system. Corbin projects into a number two or three starter at the Major League Level, as does Skaggs.

This sets the Diamondbacks up with the bridge between the major leagues and minor leagues that interim General Manager Jerry Dipoto described during the Season Ticket Holder town hall meeting.

It gives the Diamondbacks some payroll relief and sets them up to begin building the next wave of pitchers to come through the farm system. Initial assessments by media outlets suggest Los Angeles got the better end of this deal.

From a short-term perspective, it would tend to favor the Angels. Should Corbin and Skaggs develop into the players they are capable of becoming, this trade may favor Arizona in the long run.

Of course a lot could change in that time, so it’s anyone’s guess. Does this trade signal the end to any deals the Diamondbacks might make? That is doubtful. There are other pieces of the current roster that should interest teams making a play-off run, so this is most likely just the first of many changes the Diamondbacks will make before the end of this season and next.

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Stealing Dan Haren in Real Life and in Fantasy Baseball

When I got back into town last night, my friend picked me up from the airport and informed me of a trade that had just gone down between the Angels and Diamondbacks. Dan Haren had been sent to the Angels in exchange for starting pitchers Joe Saunders, Tyler Skaggs, Patrick Corbin, and reliever Rafael Rodriguez.
There has been plenty analysis of the trade today and I’ll leave that to the likes of Keith Law. Instead, I’ll just say that the Angels essentially stole Dan Haren away from the D-Backs and you should follow suit if his fantasy owner is still fretting over a 4.60 ERA and bad career second half numbers.
Haren Headed to Anaheim
Despite his high ERA this season, Dan Haren has continued to show extremely strong peripheral numbers. He has struck out nine batters per nine innings, good for 12th best in baseball (minimum 80 IP), while walking only 1.85 per nine innings, good for 13th best in baseball. That K/BB rate (4.86) ties him with Josh Johnson for the fourth best in baseball. Haren ranked ninth best in FB365’s latest updated RAW Pitcher Ratings
The problem with Haren this season has been home runs allowed, which currently stands at a career worst 1.47 per nine innings. His BABIP against has also been an issue, currently sitting at an inflated .350 despite a 20.3 percent line drive rate allowed, the same line drive rate he finished with last season.

There may have been fewer better places in baseball for Haren to have landed than in Anaheim. According to Stat Corner , Angel Stadium represses home runs (a score of 100 is neutral and Angel Stadium’s score is 94). This is especially true during night games, when the marine layer rolls in from the coast.

The Angels currently have two fly-ball pitchers on their staff that have succeeded despite above average fly ball rates. The most notable is Jered Weaver (career 48.5 percent fly ball rate and 8.2 HR/FB rate) and Ervin Santana (career 43.6 percent fly ball rate and 9.8 HR/FB rate).
Dan Haren currently holds a 38.9 percent fly ball rate and a career worst 13.9 percent HR/FB rate). Despite having a track record of worse numbers in the season’s second half, Haren is almost certain to see a decline in HR/FB rate and BABIP pitching in Anaheim.
There is, of course, the issue of moving from the National League to the American League. However, Haren had plenty of success as a young maturing pitcher in the AL West before he was traded to Arizona. He also caries big-time strikeout potential, which should also help offset pitching in the American League.
The bottom line: Haren is still a dominant pitcher and one that has every chance to provide value in every pitching category (saves aside). Use his 4.60 ERA and move to the American League as reasons your opposing fantasy owner should deal Haren to your club.
Going to Arizona
Joe Saunders is the “big name” heading to Arizona, but he is hardly the key piece to the equation. Saunders has had exactly one above average season in the Major Leagues and that one season can somewhat be cast off as a fluke (1.94 K/BB rate, .267 BABIP).
Also, his line drive rates have been increasing every season since 2008. Saunders is not a big strikeout pitcher (well below average actually) so the move to the National League won’t benefit him as much. He also moves from a pitchers park to one of the best hitters parks in baseball. Having allowed 1.09 home runs per nine innings over his career in a home park that suppresses home runs leads me to believe that the home run ball will become an even bigger issue in his new home.
To me, the key name in this deal for Arizona is Tyler Skaggs. Skaggs is a 19-year-old lefty that stands at a lanky 6’4″. I was able to see him pitch once this year and was thoroughly impressed. His mechanics are sound and he uses his leverage very nicely upon releasing the ball. His fastball is currently sitting in the 89-91 mph range, but most reports point toward his velocity increasing to the 92 mph range as his body matures.
His fastball was clearly dominating opposing Midwest League hitters (aside from Twins top prospect Aaron Hicks, who took him deep in the first inning) while his curve ball looked like a sharp 12-to-6 hammer, an already plus offering. Coming into this season, Skaggs wasn’t ranked as a top five prospect in the Angels system, but he has about as much project-ability as anyone.
I wouldn’t be surprised to see him turn into a solid number two starter if everything goes right. If not, he should still be a very solid mid-rotation arm and a fine prospect in dynasty leagues and minor league roster keeper leagues.
Patrick Corbin is putting up some nice numbers this season, but from what I’ve gathered about his pure “stuff”, he doesn’t have close to the same ceiling as Skaggs. Corbin, who just turned 21 this month, is also a left-handed starter. He features a 88-91 mph fastball with good sink and command.
However, reports about his secondary offerings have been less faltering. He’ll need to come up with a true strikeout pitch, like Skaggs’ curveball, to keep his strikeout totals high at the upper-levels.
The reliever, Rafael Rodriguez (25-years-old), has bounced between the majors and minors for the past two seasons and projects as that type of pitcher going forward.
This deal should be both good for the Angels and Dan Haren owners not only the rest of this season, but for the next two-to-three years.
Charlie Saponara is the owner/author of fantasybaseball365.com and can be contacted at cs.fb365@gmail.com .  Follow FB365 on Twitter .

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LA Angels Insider.com Podcast: Saunders and Reagins React To Haren Trade

On Sunday, the Angels acquired right-handed pitcher Dan Haren from the Arizona
Diamondbacks in exchange for Joe Saunders, minor league pitchers Patrick Corbin, Rafael Rodriguez, and a player to be named later (apparently left-handed pitcher Tyler Skaggs).

In this emotional sound clip, Joe Saunders speaks with Chris Myers after the Angels’ announcement that he had been traded, along with three others, to the Arizona Diamondbacks for Dan Haren.

Saunders pitched for six seasons for the Angels, compiling a 54-32 record with a 4.29 ERA.

Tony Reagins gives his explanation about how the acquisition of Dan Haren effects the ballclub, not just for 2010 but for the future.

Click here for LA Angels Insider Podcast – Joe Saunders and Tony Reagins

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Los Angeles Angels Plan for 2011 in Acquiring Dan Haren

With a week to go before the trading deadline, the Angels have acquired Dan Haren of the Arizona Diamondbacks, who has been a big name on the trading circuit. The Angels gave up three players to get Haren: pitchers Joe Saunders, Patrick Corbin, Rafael Rodriguez, and a player to be named later.

On the surface, it looks like the Angels gave up too much for too little, given that they’re several games behind the now Cliff Lee-led Texas Rangers. Bringing in Haren and his struggling stats this season is not going to push them over that hump. As a result, many are going to bash this trade when the Angels don’t make the playoffs, saying that it was a waste.

This move is not for this year, however.

Haren is 7-8 with a 4.60 ERA this year. He has not had stats that bad since his time in St. Louis many years back. He’s in his pitching prime right now, and working with a good pitching coach in Mike Butcher, who made Jered Weaver into a star and can put Haren in that category again.

If you compare Haren’s and Saunders’ stats this season, the comparison is quite similar. Haren’s and Saunders’ ERAs are nearly identical (4.60 vs. 4.62). In nearly every other stat though, Haren is slightly better than Saunders, and easily has him bested in strikeouts.

Needless to say, if the Angels want a championship in 2011, they’ll have a much better chance with Haren than Saunders.

Nonetheless, Rafael Rodriguez has been putting up solid numbers, and the 20-year-old Patrick Corbin has amazing upside and is pitching well in Rancho Cucamonga, so is there a possibility the Angels gave up too much? Certainly, but it’s a price that teams have to be willing to pay.

Back to my earlier point however, there is one big difference between this deadline trades and many others. Cliff Lee will not be in a Rangers uniform in 2011. Nor will Roy Oswalt be in an Astros uni, or anyone else who gets traded to another team.

While those pieces move on to better places, suddenly the AL West becomes wide open again, as Cliff Lee will disappear and Oakland and Seattle likely will be going nowhere. As a result, by bringing in Dan Haren, the Angels have the inside track on a playoff spot and a World Series appearance in 2011, though they won’t be there this year unless the Rangers implode.

The Angels know what they’re doing, and while it may take some time (they have time; Haren’s contract goes into 2012 with an option), the rewards from Haren should be big.

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Fantasy Baseball Fallout: Dan Haren Traded To Angels

The Los Angels Angels made a huge splash, answering the Texas Rangers acquisition of Cliff Lee by trading Joe Saunders, Patrick Corbin, Rafael Rodriguez, and a player to be named later to the Arizona Diamondbacks in return for Dan Haren, according to Andrew Baggarly of the Mercury News via Twitter.

Let’s take a look at the fantasy fallout from this huge move:

Los Angeles Angels
They clearly have acquired a top of the rotation ace, despite his struggles with the long ball in 2010.  With a career HR/FB of 1.07, he’s posted a 1.47 mark this year.  The problems have been both at home (13 HR) and on the road (10 HR), so the ballpark isn’t the factor.

He also is a notorious slow finisher.  Look at his second half ERAs the past few years:

  • 2007 – 4.15
  • 2008 – 4.18
  • 2009 – 4.62

Just keep that in mind.  Still, the new location has no impact on his fantasy appeal.  He’s a must use option no matter where he’s pitching.

Arizona Diamondbacks
Joe Saunders has been a disappointment this season and now moves from a contending team to a cellar dweller.  Still, his value should improve from this deal.  First, look at his home/road splits:

  • Home – 5.54
  • Road – 3.56

It’s tough to read too much into that considering it’s not a long-term trend, but he does move to the NL, meaning he no longer has to face the DH.  For a pitcher who barely strikes out anyone (4.8 K/9 this year and 5.1 K/9 for his career), you could see a slight bump.  While he’s not about to become a 7 or 8 K guy, you could see him move into the 5-6 K/9 range.

He does sport solid control (3.9 BB/9 for his career) and generates a good amount of ground balls (45.9% for his career).

In total, he has potential and could prove usable down the stretch.  Is he going to be a must use option?  Of course not, but there is potential value there.  In deeper formats, he’s worth stashing if you have room on your bench and are not in need of strikeouts.

Corbin is a 21-year-old starting pitcher who has split the year at two levels of Single-A.  Overall, he’s 13-3 with a 3.87 ERA and 106 Ks over 118.2 innings.  He has some potential, but is still a few years away from making an impact.

Rodriguez is currently working as a relief pitcher at Triple-A.  In 50.1 innings he’s posted a 3.04 ERA and 10 saves, striking out 30 with 15 walks.  Given the struggles of the Diamondbacks bullpen, he’ll likely see time, but shouldn’t have much value.

There’s no word as to who the player to be named later will be, but he will have a huge influence on the value the Diamondbacks received.

What are your thoughts on the deal?  Does Saunders become usable?  Does it change your thoughts on Haren’s value?

Make sure to check out our other trade analysis:

THIS ARTICLE IS ALSO FEATURED ON WWW.ROTOPROFESSOR.COM

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MLB Trade News: Arizona to get Joe Saunders and Tyler Saggs for Haren

The Los Angeles Angels aren’t ready to concede the American League West to the Texas Rangers just yet. 

And Sunday, the organization made an aggressive move to help bolster its chances. 

Los Angeles will send LHP Joe Saunders, LHP Patrick Corbin, RHP Rafael Rodriguez and player to be named later to Arizona in exchange for All-Star RHP Dan Haren. 

According to The Arizona Republic Diamondbacks’ beat writer Nick Piecoro, the player to be named later will be LHP Tyler Skaggs (the No. 40 overall pick in the 2009 Amateur Draft).

Arizona, in addition to getting Haren’s salary off the books, get a proven major leaguer in Saunders (6-10, 4.62 ERA). 

The lefty will cost the Diamondbacks $3.7 million this season and between $6-7 million next year.

Currently six games behind the division-leading Rangers, the Angels came out of nowhere to steal Haren away from a slew of other suitors that included the Detroit Tigers and New York Yankees.

In 2010, Haren has a 4.60 ERA to go along with a 1.35 WHIP. 

His 141 strikeouts lead the National League while his 141 innings pitched ranks fifth. 

Haren is under contract through 2012 with a $15.5 million club option for 2013.  

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MLB Trade Deadline News: Dan Haren Traded to the Los Angeles Angels

With six days remaining until the baseball trade deadline, moments ago another star was traded.

Two weeks ago it was Cliff Lee, now it is Dan Haren to the rival Los Angeles Angels.

Broken minutes ago on the YES Network (network for the New York Yankees), the Arizona Diamondbacks will trade Dan Haren to the Angels for pitcher Joe Saunders and three other prospects.

The Yankees and Twins were among the many teams interested in the star pitcher.

Speculation rose about Haren’s future in Arizona, and he did have his wish of playing for a contender.

As usual, the Angels are in the AL West race, and just got an ace to prove it.

 

Matt Miselis is a Featured Columnist for BleacherReport.com.

Follow me on twitter: http://twitter.com/MattMiselis

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New York Yankees Miss Out as Dan Haren Is Traded to Angels for Saunders

The Arizona Diamondbacks have announced that they have traded RHP Dan Haren to the Los Angeles Angels in return for RHP Joe Saunders and others.

The deal also involves Patrick Corin, Rafael Rodriguez, and a player to be named later for Haren.

This means the New YorkYankees miss out on the second starting pitcher they have been involved with trade talks over. The first one of course was LHP Cliff Lee who was eventually traded from the Seattle Mariners to the Texas Rangers.

With Haren off of the market it becomes more unlikely the Yankees will add a starting pitcher on this deadline. The next biggest names on the trading block that the Yankees could focus on at this point are the Royals closer Joakim Soria and the Nationals slugger Adam Dunn.

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MLB Trade Rumors: Who is Better, Dan Haren or Roy Oswalt?

With only a week left until the July 31 MLB trade deadline, two All-Star aces have emerged as the biggest prizes to be had: Dan Haren and Roy Oswalt.

But which pitcher is better?

Is it the the hard-throwing Astro, or the deceptive Diamondback?

Most casual fans might instantly say Oswalt due to the recent struggles of Haren in 2010; however, just last season, the Astros right-hander finished the year with an ERA well above 4.00.

Here is the breakdown.

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Latest Dan Haren to New York Yankees Trade Rumors

Nothing really happened between the Yankees and the Diamondbacks regrading RHP Dan Haren today. That hasn’t stopped the usual suspects from passing along information they’ve heard throughout the day.

 

Early morning reports

Buster Olney of ESPN tweeted :

To be clear: The Yankees do not value Haren as much as they valued Cliff Lee a couple of weeks ago. They look at Haren as a somewhat risky proposition, because of his performance this year, and they are not willing to take the contract and give up a boatload of prospects. (second tweet ).

Jon Heyman of Sports Illustrated tweeted :

yankees willing to include nova, mcallister and 2 prospects for dan haren, will not eat $ and give up joba. still talking.

Heyman also wrote :

yankees would pay the $33 mil left on haren, but they have balked at taking chad qualls, chris snyder, too.

Ken Rosenthal of Fox Sports tweeted :

Yankees not on Oswalt, remain open on Haren. “Would do something pretty significant” to get him, source says.

Bob Klapisch of the Bergin Record tweeted :

Yanks refusing to include Joba in any potential swap for Haren. Talks are ongoing.

Afternoon update

Here is what Olney had this afternoon :

Heard this: No conversations today between Arizona and the Yankees. The NYY scoffed at reports that they were in the lead of the Haren negotiations, because they have never been close to completing a deal to this point. (second tweet ).

 

Thoughts

It’s interesting that the Yankees won’t include Joba in this deal. Maybe they still really like him. Maybe they are counting on him in the bullpen this year. Maybe they just don’t like Dan Haren that much and think they can get more for Joba.

It does sound like the Yankees might be willing to include Joba in a deal if the D-Backs were willing to include money in the deal to offset the $29 million Haren is guaranteed over the next two years.

 

It does not sound particularly promising at this point, but there is still a chance. The latest report is that they haven’t talked today, but for all we know they could be discussing a deal right now. We’ll just have to wait and see. If the Yankees can get Haren for a package centered around Nova and McAllister they would be stupid not to take it.

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