One of the most bizarre statements of the winter that I heard came from one Pirates exec when he said something to the effect of:
Our young players tasted success in the second half that we believe will serve to be their catalyst in 2010.
The ‘taste’ the exec was talking about was the August 17th – 27th homestand where we ran off a 7-2 spurt by pounding out 5 runs per game while holding the Reds, Phillies, and Brewers to under 3 runs per game. Unquestionably, it was the roster’s finest hour over a very poor season.
I’ve talked numerous times this winter about the internal debate on Federal Street regarding this very issue – some believe they have enough pitching to compete even with below average offense. But how realistic is that thinking?
No matter what side of that argument you stand on, the fact remains that our roster limped down the stretch in their last 2300 at bats. Simply put, it’s hard to win games when you can’t crack .700 OPS over an extended period of time. I think the last 36 games is a good example of how this roster will play in 2010 before Alvarez comes up.. they went 9-27 (.300) and were outscored by 2.1 runs per game on average.
Remarkably, they went 3-3 in their last road trip despite being outscored by almost a 1/2 run per game. The Pirates execs might argue they generated luck because of good pitching (sub 4 ERA) and that’s what they hope to accomplish in 2010. I’d argue that we won the doubleheader in Chicago playing in low 50’s, high 40’s weather with wind blowing off the lake, and then got our butts kicked two of three by a mentally defeated Reds squad. It wasn’t a pretty end of the season by any stretch of the imagination and, if anything, we had the wind knocked out of our sails when we couldn’t muster but 2 runs per game against the Dodgers and Astros September 11th – 16th while our pitching posted a sub 4 ERA.
Look closely at those batting averages from July 23rd on — that’s about as ugly as it gets folks with four of the nine groups (24 games) at .225 or less and ERA’s above 5 in five of the nine groups.
How realistic is it to think we have enough pitching to contend with the less-than-impact bats we have? Should we expect 5 runs per game in offense? I think that’s possible, but certainly unsustainable. So let’s assume 4 runs per game is more probable with 3.5 runs average per game most likely. What will be required of our pitching to keep us close every game at 3.5 runs produced on offense? For every 100 games (810 innings pitched) where we allow only 3.5 runs per game on average would require a collective ERA of 3.78 ERA just to keep the opposition at 3.5.
Do you know how improbable it is for a pitching staff to throw a collective 3.78 ERA across 160 games anymore? It’s happened just 12 times since the 2005 season led by such incredible staffs like the Padres with Young and Peavy, the Red Sox in Beckett and Schilling, the Blue Jays with Halladay and Burnett, the Dodgers in Lowe, Kershaw, Wolf, and Billingsley, and the Giants with Lincecum and Cain. I’m sorry to say we don’t have one pitcher – in Pittsburgh or in our minor league system – who resembles any of those men. Not even close.
So something has to give.. either we have to score more than 3.5 runs per game on average or we’re going to lose an obscene number of games again in 2010. Which will it be?
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I’m very, very bummed out about the upcoming year. I realize it’s yet another development year in Pittsburgh, and I realize the fans think they have a possibility of seeing 70+ wins, but I’m here to tell you I can’t get any model run to come out with more than 62 wins. Where PECOTA is finding the other 8 wins is beyond me because this is a 100 loss team no matter how aggressive you get with Alvarez, Clement, and Morton. (Update at 11:08 PM Monday.. PECOTA projection remains at 70 wins despite the fact they just shaved 83 runs scored off from the initial projection. Oh, and they also shaved 80 runs off runs allowed for some reason plus the Cards score the most runs in the division at only 724! Unbelievable stuff.)
We have too little power, a significantly unbalanced defense, and rookies waiting in the wings to add more unstableness. Hammer me all you want but it’s just not going to be a pretty year.
Except for laying down a few bucks on our Bucs, that is. I think Vegas and the rest of the world are going to be fooled by our roster this year leaving a wide open door for some outrageous opportunities for fans like us to make a small fortune from side bets.
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Preliminary Sleepers and Foolers for 2010
Sleepers
Dotel – think Mike Gonzalez on steriods and that’s how much fun Dotel is going to have.
Crosby — someone is going to have to step up and take charge in the Bucs inexperienced infield and Crosby is just the guy to handle the job. Look for a breakout type year from him as a utility man who plays too much.
Veal — the guy nobody believed in goes to 3A and uncoils a ridiculous sub 2 ERA in his first 10 starts and then comes up to Pittsburgh to replace Duke and ends up winning more games than any starter.
Doumit – he smells his exit from Pittsburgh and runs off a .320/.385/.490 line in his first 50 games and is then dealt to the Rangers. If he isn’t dealt, he’ll be on the DL the rest of the year.
McCutchen - April and early May won’t be his best months but by mid-August will be causing a ticket selling frenzy everywhere he plays. It’s the year of the Cutch.
Foolers
LaRoche - he knows if he tanks early he’s going to be dealt away from the land of suits and misery.
Duke – how do you spell ERA above 9?
Jones – he just can’t get around high and tight heat and the league finally adjusts.
Milledge - will he last 40 games before going on the DL? I don’t think so.
Ohlendorf – his head is still in Washington dreaming about all the heifers he met.
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A very special interview with a very special person, he says. Almost has a Pee Wee Herman ring to it, huh? Man I miss Joe Rutter. If you want to skip the interview I’ll give you a quick transcript of what was said that was meaningful:
nothing
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The Reds signed Orlando Cabrera for $4M. Wow. That’s a deal that will come back to haunt the Bucs. Mark it down.
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I forgot to mention that the other day I saw where Huntington was talking about competing and mentioned the 2012 – 2013 seasons. That’s typical for a GM to talk one year further out than he is inked for so I suspect we’re about to see him get a two-year extension.




























74 wins for the year. Pitching starts out strong then starts to flounder the second half. Cutch with a big year. Milledge has a solid year along with Doumit. Doumit gets traded in a package with Mahalom for prospects and a young major league ready SS. I also think the draft will be effected on how the trade dealine goes. Jones hits 28 hrs but around a .240 avg. I agree with you about Veal, but I also think Lincoln comes up and rallies off 4 or 5 wins in the second half.
Random question for everyone… Im in a class called Great Lives at UMW and I have to pick an influential person and read two biographies and write a paper. Obviously I picked Clemente for all of his work on and off the field. Anyone have any suggestions on which biography to read? thanks guys
Clemente: The Passion and Grace of Baseball’s Last Hero – David Maraniss
Excellent read!
Huntington would rather blow 4.1 mill on 3 stiffs named Cedeno, Crosby and Vazquez then sign a guy like Cabrera. Its Huntingtons mo and it will never change.
For all we know Pittsburgh offered Cabrera more than Cincy did and he laughed until they hung up. Joining a losing team is one thing. Joining the laughingstock of the major leagues is another.
How accurate have your prior season projections been? I’m predicting 83 wins on intangibles.
I’ve followed his predictions since 2002 at pirates.mlb.com and he’s usually plus or minus three wins. This year he’s the only one predicting 100 losses.
Harry-
83 wins….I hope to God your joking..I hope your right, but please…I am saying 66…For Mario…
Jake, you put a lot to digest in this piece. Overall, I think I can pretty much agree with you, but I think we’ll be better. I’m not normally too optimistic, but I do think realistically the following are possible for ‘10;
1. an offense which will score 4.35 on average,
2. seven players hitting double figure HRs (most in the 13-16 range),
3. a stable starting five-something which has been prominently missing for a long time,
4. a solid bullpen which actually can preserve leads and has a decent chance of giving us a win when the game is on the line,
5. more speed which will lead to scoring from second on a single and not having so many runners stranded,
7. the probability that come June and July the club stays pretty much intact and,
8. minor leaguers have minimal impact but get their feet wet.
Not saying these guys will contend, but I do feel like there’s a decent shot of being near .500. Defense is going to a huge downfall. The Bucs won’t be shut out as often, but will still have lots of one, two, three run games. Weren’t something like half the games last season games in which the Pirates scored 3 runs or less?
I’m hopeful that there’s a breakthrough from losing 90 games plus. If these guys come through with 73 wins or more, I’d believe we’re on the way to getting better. Another 90 plus loss season will depress me. 73-89 from me, but if things fall in place 77-85.
Anybody want to smoke a little of what I’m having?
as always another Jake piece that is in my mind 80% correct and 20% too negative…but, I do not see this 2010 team hit enough over and off the wall to score enough to win….I am guessing 65 wins…
Ohlendorf – his head is still in Washington dreaming about all the heifers he met.
Thats the best u got for Ross on the Foolers list? Man u must be coming around on the thinking that Ross is more than a seventh inning guy.
I will say 67-95. I think Dotel has a good year which gets him dealt for prospect(s) , donnelly and carrasco are lying in the weeds(major league 2). Jones, Duke, Jeff Clement, the SS position, kevin hart are foolers. Sleepers- Ohlendorf, Veal (replacing duke who we should have dealt in july last season) , Tabata , Aki Iwamura, A-cutch.
how do the Reds continue to spend money ???
this offseason here are the “small” market dollars spent..
Milwaukee 47,650,000
Cincinnati 33,270,000
Kansas City 18,700,000
Pirates 8,275,000
always last..in spending and in the standings…
these numbers were obtained on the ESPN free agent tracker
Reds gave 30,250,000 to Chapman
Royals gave 7,000,000 to Arguelles
Watch out for the Reds – Jocketty knows what he’s doing and he’s building a nice team in Cincy.
lordbyron-
your right…they have some nice power arms in that rotation…
The Fab 4- Cueto, Homer Bailey, Chapman and Volquez – next thing the reds need to do is dump dusty baker for a bud black type to protect these arms.