Archive for August, 2014

Giants’ Yusmeiro Petit Retires MLB-Record 46 Straight Batters

San Francisco Giants pitcher Yusmeiro Petit set a major league record during Thursday’s outing against the Colorado Rockies by retiring a 46th consecutive batter, per the Giants’ official Twitter account.

Petit entered Thursday’s game having retired 38 consecutive hitters, thus needing just eight more to break the record of 45, set by Mark Buehrle for the Chicago White Sox in 2009, per ESPN.com.

Making his first start since July 22, Petit proceeded to retire the first eight batters he faced, with the record-setting out coming on a strikeout of Rockies second baseman Charlie Culberson.

Just one batter after breaking the all-time record, Petit surrendered a two-out double to pitcher Jordan Lyles, followed by an RBI single to outfielder Charlie Blackmon.

The 29-year-old righty then settled down to go six strong innings, allowing just the one run on four hits, with nine strikeouts to boot. He improved his record to 4-3 while ensuring that he’ll get another turn in the rotation.

Used as both a starter and reliever over the last two seasons, Petit has been rather successful in both roles, yet the Giants have been oddly hesitant to deploy him as a full-time starter.

It’s not as if the team’s options ahead of Petit have been great, as the Giants suffered from poor starting pitching last season, with the problem carrying over to this year. Both Matt Cain and Tim Lincecum appear to be in the decline phase of their careers, and the Giants went so far as to trade for a struggling Jake Peavy at the trade deadline.

Finally, with few other options available, the team decided to replace Lincecum with Petit, who immediately made the decision look like a smart one.

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Why the Future Pittsburgh Pirates Will Have One of the Best Rotations in MLB

With only 29 games remaining in the regular season, the Pittsburgh Pirates trail the San Francisco Giants by just 2.0 games for the second wild-card spot.  

Currently, the organization cannot be thinking about the future, as it has a chance to win right now.  

Still, when the season is over and talks arise about potential call-ups in 2015, the organizational leaders in Pittsburgh have to smile.  

Lately, fans and analysts across the nation have been talking about just how good the New York Mets can be with a potential pitching rotation consisting of studs Matt Harvey, Zack Wheeler and Noah Syndergaard, but the Pirates have a chance to match or even top that rotation.  

Starting pitcher Tyler Glasnow has been lights-out in 2014 with the High-A Bradenton Marauders.  In 23 games started, Glasnow is 12-5 with an earned run average of just 1.74.  

According to his team’s official Twitter page, Glasnow even set a team record this season:

The 21-year-old right-hander was ranked third among all Pirates prospects entering this season, according to Baseball America.

According to Karen Price of the Tribune Review, Glasnow and teammates Nick Kingham and Josh Bell will play in the Arizona Fall League.  The league serves as a showcase for some of the game’s brightest prospects, providing them a chance to display their abilities deep into the year.  

Glasnow recently was named Florida State League Pitcher of the Year, according to Sam Dykstra of MiLB.com.  There is no doubt this kid has the potential to be the future ace of this organization in the next few seasons.  

Like Glasnow, Kingham has performed well in 2014, going 5-4 with a 3.28 ERA in 13 starts with the Triple-A Indianapolis Indians.  Kingham was called up from Double-A Altoona only 12 starts into the season.  

According to the same report from Baseball America, Kingham is ranked fifth among all Pirates prospects. However, considering he is two years older than Glasnow and has already pitched at the highest minor league level, it is conceivable that he may get the call to the majors first.  

Now, let’s not forget about the most highly touted pitching prospect of all in the Pirates farm system, Jameson Taillon.  

Many believed Taillon would make his major league debut at some point during this season.  However, he was just another victim of a torn UCL leading to Tommy John surgery in April.  

The 22-year-old has played three minor league seasons for the Pirates, averaging 8.4 strikeouts per nine innings pitched.  

Taillon was ranked 22nd among all minor league prospects around the league heading into the 2014 regular season, according to Baseball America.  

Barring any major setbacks in his road to recovery, Taillon should be ready to pitch again next spring, and if he pitches as well as he had prior to the injury, we may see him in a major league uniform sometime during 2015.  

These three prospects alone have the potential to make up one of the strongest starting rotations in baseball in the next few years, and the Pirates have to feel pretty good about that.  

A player who cannot be forgotten about is one who has already proved he can excel at the major league level, starting pitcher Gerrit Cole.  

Over his first two major league seasons, Cole has gone 17-11 with an ERA of 3.42, and he was one of the main reasons the Pirates won 94 games last season.  

Cole is not eligible for arbitration until 2017, and he will not become a free agent until 2020.  The Pirates have locked in a player who has the ability to lead the rotation, which is what they will need going forward.  

Pittsburgh also currently has the four-year veteran Jeff Locke, who has done well in 2014, going 6-3 with a 3.51 ERA in 16 games started.  Locke will not be a free agent until 2019.  

Then there is Francisco Liriano, who led the Pirates to the postseason in 2013 with a 16-8 record and a 3.02 ERA.  Although Liriano has improved during the second half of this season, his poor start to 2014 has resulted in his 3-10 record and 3.98 ERA.  

Liriano will be a free agent at the end of the 2014 season, and unless he is willing to take a short-term deal, the Pirates probably won’t bring him back.  After all, he will turn 31 in October and has made over 30 starts in a regular season just once in his nine-year career.  

With the amount of talented prospects in the farm system, it would not make much sense to sign Liriano to a huge deal, as a number of players are just a few seasons away from making an impact at the major league level.  

As they are led by Gerrit Cole over the next few seasons, the Pirates may have one of the best rotations in baseball for years to come, and while it is certainly true that all prospects do not pan out, it is hard to doubt the talent the Pittsburgh Pirates have in their farm system.  

 

*Statistics Courtesy of Baseball-Reference

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MLB Must Change September Call-Up Rules to Be Fair to All 30 Teams

The final month of Major League Baseball’s regular season is just around the corner. For many teams, that means help is on the way.

Starting Monday, Sept. 1, teams are allowed to carry as many as 40 players on their active roster. And after playing the first five months of the season with a strict 25-man squad, the chance to bolster a roster with upward of 15 additional players, whether it be in the form of serviceable depth or young, talented prospects, can be the deciding factor for teams still in the playoff hunt.  

At face value, the expansion of rosters in September makes for an exciting end to the season—especially after the implementation of a second wild-card spot. However, MLB teams will never be fully on board with the idea until the system itself is reformed to favor all 30 clubs equally.

Outrage over September call-ups is nothing new. Back in 2009, Milwaukee Brewers general manager Doug Melvin blasted the notion of expanded rosters in a conversation with MLB.com:

You play 80 percent of your season with even rosters, and then all of a sudden, you throw that out. It’s like playing three-on-six in basketball or 11-on-18 in football. I don’t know of any sport in the world that does it like ours, with this kind of imbalance of rosters. I’d like to find out if there’s any other sport that does that at the most important time of the year.

Roughly five years have passed since Melvin issued those remarks, but, as you might have guessed, the system is still the same. That hasn’t caused Melvin to back off his stance or stop seeking reform, however, as he told Joel Sherman of the New York Post in 2012 that he still hadn’t received a logical answer from MLB as to why it continues to support the September roster expansions.

About this time last year, Melvin further expressed his frustration with the system, per Bob Nightengale of USA Today:

 

There is no other competitive team sport that allows uneven rosters any time in the year. Any time in the year! And now, in the most important month, we’re doing that.

How does that make any sense?

[…]

We’ve adopted rules to make sure you can’t play a game with a one-guy disadvantage, and then we go into the most important month of the year, and we don’t care if there’s a five-player difference.

As someone who lives and breathes prospects, I’d be lying if I said I didn’t enjoy this time of the year.

Specifically, September roster expansions offer fans a glimpse of some of baseball’s top prospects, many of whom are attempting to open eyes over the season’s final month and earn a spot on the Opening Day roster the following year.

In recent seasons, for example, the roster-expansion rule has given us an early look at highly touted youngsters such as Jurickson Profar, Julio Teheran, Shelby Miller, Billy Hamilton and Yordano Ventura.

Yet, while expanded rosters cater to the interests of baseball fans, critics of the system such as Melvin have every right to take issue with the lack of regulations.

As Sherman argued:

Once rosters expand, however, one team literally can operate with 15 more players than its opponent. Think about that, a game could begin in which one manager has 40 players at his disposal and another has 25. But even if it is 33 vs. 29, how is that fair?

With a spot in the postseason potentially on the line, no one team should be able to gain an unfair competitive advantage via roster expansion.

But, unfortunately, teams do.

Each team’s call-ups usually are based on its outlook for the remainder of the season, as clubs vying for a playoff berth are more likely to promote players who can directly influence their overall success. Therefore, a team with more players at its disposal is, at least in theory, better prepared to endure a potentially grueling final month.

So, how can Major League Baseball reform the roster-expansion system so as to encourage a level playing field for all teams?

Sherman’s desire to completely do away with September call-ups is one idea, albeit an extreme one. However, with the uptick in injuries in recent years—especially in regards to pitchers—it could be a dangerous practice for teams to rely on a firm 25-man roster for a full season.

But if roster expansion is going to continue, there will need to be universal restrictions on the number of players teams can use during that defined period.

Melvin has lobbied for something similar in the past, suggesting that teams should be limited to a 30-player roster in September comprised of 15 pitchers and 15 position players.

In that scenario, every team would have five additional roster spots rather than the 15 permitted under the current system.

Meanwhile, B/R MLB Lead Writer Zach Rymer took Melvin’s idea a step further by proposing that teams should only be allowed to call up six different types of players:

One lefty reliever, one righty reliever, one long man/spot starter, one outfielder, one infielder and one catcher.

Such a system would prevent teams from loading up on southpaw pitchers as part of an effort to gain an edge on a rival with a predominantly lefty-hitting lineup, and it would also force teams to get creative with their call-ups. A team may want to call up two outfielders, but they’ll only be able to call up one. A team may want two lefty hitters, but may be restricted to one because one’s an outfielder and the other’s an infielder. And so on.

Rymer’s intriguing suggestion would have a larger impact on the game, as the option to call up predetermined player types in September would almost definitely impact how teams acquire, develop and sign players. Basically, clubs would know exactly what they’ll need and therefore make more concerted efforts to make that happen.

Major League Baseball’s September call-up system is broken, clearly. For an entity that preaches collective balance and has checks and balances in place for virtually all aspects of player development, it’s shocking that it continues to ignore the unfair advantages associated with the use of a full 40-man roster in the season’s final month.

That being said, MLB clearly means well with the current system. Injuries are always a major concern during the second half of the season, let alone down the stretch, so the ability to call up relatively fresh players is crucial. It also gives non-contenders a chance to evaluate their young players at the highest level without worrying about service time or the displacement of active big leaguers.

While MLB has made significant progress this year with instant replay and home plate collisions, the swelling criticism of the roster-expansion system is a strong sign that it needs to be changed.

Let’s just hope it’s next on MLB’s to-do list.

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Jesus Montero Throws Ice Cream Sandwich at Seattle Scout After Heckling Incident

UPDATE: August 29 at 8:17 p.m. ET

According to ESPN, Montero will not play again this season after this incident.

End of Update—

UPDATE: August 29 at 3:08 p.m. ET

Mariners cross-checker Butch Baccala (the scout involved in this strange incident) denies provoking or taunting Montero on Thursday night.

Baccala told Geoff Baker of The Seattle Times on Friday that he did not attempt to anger the catcher and that the events of the evening are being portrayed incorrectly. First, he denied sending Montero an ice cream sandwich then said he wasn’t allowed to talk about it.

He also told Baker to check whether they even sell ice cream sandwiches at Everett, Washington‘s Memorial Stadium (where the game was played).

“It’s not what is being portrayed,” Baccala told Baker. “Of course I wasn’t [trying to instigate Montero]. Why would I? I work for the Mariners. I’ve worked my [expletive] off for the Mariners. Why would I do anything to hurt anybody? That wasn’t even close to the intention.”

Baccala told Baker he didn’t know what the club intended to do regarding his employment and will not be able to speak further until meeting with Mariners general manager Jack Zduriencik.

—End of Update—

 

In an incident straight out of a Seinfeld episode, Seattle Mariners catcher Jesus Montero threw an ice cream sandwich at an MLB scout after a bizarre heckling incident. 

MiLB.com’s Tyler Maun (h/t HardBallTalk’s Craig Calcaterra) brings news of the strange, ridiculous minor league run-in that occurred on Thursday night. 

According to Maun’s report, the drama occurred during a minor league game between the Everett AquaSox and the Boise Hawks.

Montero, playing with the AquaSox while rehabbing a strained oblique, heard a voice in the crowd yelling “Rapido! Rapido!” as he jogged off the field between innings.

This voice belonged to a “cross-checker,” which is a major league scout who presides over other scouts within a regional territory.

To reiterate the significance of this moment: A professional major league observer decided to put the screws to one of his team’s own players.

The screaming likely surprised Montero, who ignored the taunts and went to the dugout. A stadium employee approached the catcher with a special delivery shortly thereafter: one ice cream sandwich. 

Montero’s not-so-secret admirer? The yelling Mariners scout, who ostensibly sent the dessert over as a means of taunting the catcher’s overweight arrival at spring training in February.

Montero snapped upon receiving the sandwich.

The catcher stormed out of the dugout with a baseball bat and hurled the delicious frozen treat at his tormentor. Maun reports he was restrained by Everett pitching coach Nasusel Cabrera and returned to the dugout. Montero sat out the remainder of the game.

Zduriencik told Maun the team is assessing the situation and cannot comment. 

“I am aware of the incident in Boise,” Zduriencik said. “We are currently in the process of gathering information, but until I have all the details, I cannot comment.”

More details will certainly emerge as this story develops, but for now, it’s safe to say that the Mariners need to get their house in order. 

It’s time for Zduriencik to put on the big-boy pants and straighten out this tussle. You can’t fight ice cream sandwiches with ice cream sandwiches and expect to solve anything.

 

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Randy Johnson Selling Extravagant Arizona Home for $25 Million

When you see that former major league pitcher Randy Johnson is selling his Arizona mansion for $25 million, you may think that is a bit extreme. You’ll understand that price tag once you see the pictures of the home.

Johnson played for six different teams in his 22-year career, but there is no doubt that his best years came when he was a member of the Arizona Diamondbacks. The Big Unit had two stints in the desert, from 1999 to 2004 and again from 2007 to 2008.

He went 118-62 with a 2.83 ERA and recorded 2,077 strikeouts in his eight seasons with Arizona. He won four consecutive National League Cy Young Awards with the team and also helped the Diamondbacks win the 2001 World Series.

Thanks to all of those accomplishments, he was able to afford an incredible house in the desert. It helps that he made more than $175 million in his career, according to Baseball-Reference.com.

According to Joffe Group of Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Arizona Properties, via The Los Angeles Times’ Neal J. Leitereg, Johnson will be putting his Arizona mansion up for sale for $25 million on Monday.

Just look at this view of the house.

If that doesn’t sell you on the house, just wait until you see all of the details.

It includes seven bedrooms, 12 bathrooms, a game room, a billiards parlor with a wet bar and a poker room. That’s just the start of things.

Johnson has an awesome trophy room.

The mansion includes a workout center.

There is also a movie theater with a ticket booth and snack bar in the house.

Johnson’s house has an awesome pool, which includes a water slide.

Check out the view that you can have while playing tennis or basketball.

This mansion is fitting for someone who won 303 games in the majors and ranks second in baseball history with 4,875 strikeouts.

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The Pittsburgh Pirates and the Hunt for a Black October

It’s not a stretch to say the Pittsburgh Pirates’ weak September schedule could propel them into the playoffs if the team takes care of business against a trio of last-place teams.

The Pirates play host this weekend to a faltering Cincinnati Reds squad that currently sits four games under .500, a team that is all but eliminated from the playoff hunt. The Pirates then head to St. Louis for a pivotal three-game set that could go a long way toward determining the Bucs’ playoffs future.

But after that, the seas part and the sun comes out in a big way. The Pirates start a stretch of 13 games against last-place teams that are a combined 43 games under .500.

The schedule opens up with a three-game set in Chicago followed by a four-game series in Philadelphia. The Bucs then head home for another three-game set against the Cubs and follow with a three-game series against Boston.

The Pirates currently sit two games out of the wild card in the National League and four games out of first place in the National League Central Division. There are 29 games left on the schedule before the regular season closes on Sept. 28, giving the team plenty of time to play catch-up in the standings.

The time is coming for the Pirates to make their surge. They took care of business last weekend in Milwaukee, taking two of three from the first-place Brewers on the road. They took care of business at home this week too, taking two out of three from the second-place Cardinals.

Baseball Prospectus currently gives the Pirates a 30 percent change at making the postseason, a number that should rise substantially in the coming weeks.

That’s because these teams are in last place for a reason. That’s also not to mention most of those last-place teams, in particular the Chicago Cubs, have already begun a process that’s very familiar to Pirates fans: calling up prospects and letting them sink or swim in the month of September.

That’s not to say the Pirates should sweep all of those series. The prospects getting called up will be there for a reason, even if they have very little experience in the majors.

But taking two out of three from those teams, even on the road, isn’t too much to ask given the Pirates’ recent strong play against teams above them in the standings.

If the Bucs take care of business like they should, the stage will be set for an epic end-of-September showdown with three games against Milwaukee at home and four games against Atlanta on the road.

Nothing is out of the question yet, not even a first-place finish for the Pirates. If the team can manage to take care of this trio of last-place teams, a sea of black could again wash over PNC Park this October with a second consecutive playoff series in the Steel City.

The hunt for a black October is on.

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Whatever You Do, Don’t Touch Adrian Beltre’s Head!

Why are we here? Is man the product of chance or creation? Where do we go after we shuffle off this mortal coil?

These are all important questions, but today our aim is to discuss a greater quandary in the pantheon of intellectual discourse: Why does Adrian Beltre freak out when you touch his head?

For the uninitiated, over the last 15 years and longer, Beltre has exhibited a deeply entrenched fear of people touching his head. He hates it. Can’t stand it for a second.

It’s a strange side story for the Texas Rangers third baseman, whose career accomplishments include three Silver Slugger Awards, four Gold Gloves, four All-Star selections and over 2,500 hits. He’s a potential Hall of Famer and a respected veteran in the game, but after all this time, people still mess with him due to his gross overreaction to cranial contact.

Before we get into particulars of “why” Beltre is how he is, we must observe his habits. How does it happen?

For starters, the majority of Beltre-bothering comes from his own teammates.

Detroit Tigers designated hitter Victor Martinez personally made Beltre’s life a living hell during their time with the Boston Red Sox.

How much did Martinez bother his teammate? Enough to make murder a semi-viable solution in Beltre’s mind.

“Sometimes I thought about killing him,” Beltre joked with MLB.com’s T.R. Sullivan. “But I thought about it. … I have a family, so I didn’t.”

Martinez didn’t start the tradition, though, as Sullivan reports:

Beltre said the head-rubbing began during his time in Seattle. Again, he won’t reveal who was the first guy to do it.

“It was my fault,” Beltre said. “I don’t remember, but somebody did it and I told them I didn’t like it. That’s like telling them to do it again. You know they’re going to do it because you don’t like it. So they started doing it over and over again.”

Now, Elvis Andrus has taken Martinez’s place as the ringleader. He has Beltre’s buttons on speed dial.

After that come the concerted, team-wide assaults on Beltre. Any time he belts a homer, his head is in for a genie lamp-style rubdown.

Then there are the not-so-sneaky sneak attacks.

It must be noted that the Rangers’ petting of their third baseman paints too narrow a picture of Beltre’s condition. He’s been around the league a long while—long enough to make friends who feel completely justified in picking at his scalp like a loose scab.

Robinson Cano favors bulk attempts over stealth.

Miguel Cabrera prefers to woo Beltre with flattery before making his intentions known.

Even mascots get in on the trolling.

At some point in life, Beltre’s aversion began to manifest itself physiologically. His paranoia has granted him the neck reflexes of a pit viper. Watch as he goes into Bullet Time to avoid a swipe from Cano.

Now, let’s see all these moving parts together. It’s time to take a look at a montage of Beltre’s tormentors and try to piece this phenomenon together, Carrie from Homeland style.

This is an epidemic, and there certainly appears to be no end in sight. Beltre’s aversion to head-patting has reached such fame that one crafty individual took it upon himself or herself to give it a theme song.

All Beltre does is wince—but why?

Why does the merest graze of his head elicit this response? The media has yet to be able to dig the answer out of Beltre, and it’s not for lack of trying.

SB Nation’s Amy K. Nelson traveled to the 2012 All-Star Game for the sole purpose of getting to the bottom of Beltre’s heady hangup. In the gentlest way possible, she tried to get Beltre to open up on the subject.

He barely budged.

“I don’t like it,” Beltre told Nelson. “I don’t let anyone touch my head. Not even my kids.”

His teammates at every franchise admit they’ve tried to psychologically profile Beltre, but to no avail.

At this juncture, I’d like to step in and postulate a few theories as to the roots of Adrian Beltre’s head-touching fear.

 

No. 1: He’s terrified of balding.

At 35 years old, Beltre is under attack from the reaper known as male pattern balding. This is prime molting season for men his age, and any interference with his scalp could disrupt the Rogaine he applied before heading to the ballpark.

 

No. 2: He’s a germaphobe.

Plenty of people can’t stand being touched by strangers, and it would be no large surprise if Beltre is afraid of catching whooping cough from an errant head rub.

 

No. 3: He was abducted by aliens.

The most plausible answer to all of this is rooted in the distinct possibility that Beltre was the victim of an alien abduction at some point in his life.

It’s likely that he was taken long ago—perhaps as a child—and whisked away into a spaceship for testing. Naturally, the extraterrestrials would’ve dug around in his head with sophisticated instruments (I find “probes” derogatory), neuralized his memory and dropped him off none the worse for the wear—save for an acute and persistent fear of people tinkering with his skull.

These are my theories, and I stand by them.

The sad part is, we may never know the cause of this strange phobia. Beltre’s refusal to speak on his discomfort has stonewalled progress in the field of study for years.

Feel free to lay out your own explanations in the comments. Every idea—even the weirdest—could help us crack the hair-trigger lock on Adrian “Don’t Touch Me Bro” Beltre’s head.

 

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MLB Rumors: Analyzing All the Latest Whispers, News and Speculation

Thanks to the endless stream of MLB whispers, news and speculation, it is a fine time to be a fan of the game.

From watching the waiver wire to see who’s cleared and is eligible to be traded to keeping up with the latest rookie call-ups and analyzing the postseason picture, there is always something to grab your attention. 

So what new bits of gossip that made their way around MLB over the last seven days are there for us to dissect?

As a standard note, this won’t be an all-inclusive list. That would take a novel’s worth of reading to digest. Rather, we’ll examine some of the juicier bits.

With that noted, let’s take a look at what’s going on around MLB.

Begin Slideshow


Boston Red Sox’s 5 Best Prospects Who Won’t Be Called Up This September

MLB roster expansions are nearly upon us, and the Boston Red Sox certainly have no shortage of intriguing players they can call up once the calendar turns to September 1.

This is already a team loaded with young talent, to be sure.

Xander Bogaerts, Mookie Betts and Christian Vazquez play nearly every day, while Rubby De La Rosa, Brandon Workman, Anthony Ranaudo and Allen Webster are vying for starts. The bullpen has seen an infusion of youth from the likes of Heath Hembree and Tommy Layne, and relatively young players like Brock Holt and Will Middlebrooks are seeing plenty of time as well.

Yet, Boston could get significantly younger in the coming days, as the likes of many of its remaining top prospects could see their first taste of MLB action when rosters expand. Unfortunately, the Sox have so many deserving or intriguing candidates that some players will inevitably be left out.

To that end, let’s look at Boston’s five best prospects in the upper minors who are least likely to get a call to the majors in September, and who will have to wait for 2015 or beyond for the call instead.

Begin Slideshow


Predicting What the Cincinnati Reds Lineup Will Look Like Next Year

While injuries and bullpen woes have been staples of the Cincinnati Reds‘ 2014 campaign, offense has been similarly woeful. We can’t say for certain whether it’s related to injuries to crucial players or not. Is Jay Bruce suffering his worst professional season in seven years because of the shift or because he had a knee surgery in May?

That much is uncertain. What is certain is that the Reds will probably look a little different next year. They’ll  more than likely drop $4.5 million just to give Ryan Ludwick his walking papers. Zack Cozart may finally have worthy competition next spring.

Per Fox Sports’ Ken Rosenthal, the Reds plan on trading at least one starting pitcher this offseason. 

 

 

If that is indeed the case, it’s likely the team will deal for a new left fielder, assuming Devin Mesoraco isn’t occupying that corner of the outfield.

Per Cincinnati Enquirer beat writer John Fay, the Reds plan on having Mesoraco play different positions next season. The rationale is finding a way to keep his valued bat in the lineup, and with a very capable Brayan Pena, Mesoraco can be liberated to play elsewhere.

Regardless of whether any of the aforementioned actually happens, the 2015 lineup will look different than 2014’s. Here is the lineup that Bryan Price may post on Opening Day of next year:

  1. Billy Hamilton, CFHamilton isn’t going anywhere. Given an entire major league season to showcase his talent and potential, it’s fair to say Hamilton earned his, well, earned his red. Leadoff was a scary topic going into the 2014 season with the loss of Shin-Soo Choo. But when you compare their numbers, and consider the fact that Choo will miss the remainder of the year with an elbow surgery (per CBSSports.com), the Reds somehow got the better of this exchange.

  2. Joey Votto, 1BWhether you love or hate him, expect a healthy Joey Votto to pick up right where the healthy Joey Votto left off: the No. 1 run producer in the NL in 2013. His presence will be significant on a lineup that ranks near dead last in OBP.

  3. Todd Frazier, 3B—Frazier has demonstrated the ability to produce in timely situations and provide power for a lineup that needs it. There’s no reason he can’t bat third next year and hopefully have Hamilton and Votto in front of him more often than not.

  4. Devin Mesoraco, LFAn impressive 2014 campaign should be enough evidence that the Reds can rely on Mesoraco to hit cleanup. While he trails Frazier by two home runs for team leader in the category, it’s worth noting Mesoraco has played in nearly 30 fewer games.

  5. Brandon Phillips, 2B—It’s a better idea to bat Phillips ahead of Jay Bruce. As of August 28, Phillips has nearly 50 fewer strikeouts than Bruce. And while this year may be a statistical aberration for Bruce (he did have knee surgery in May and is coincidentally having his worst professional season in seven years), the Reds cannot afford strikeouts in the middle of the order with guys on base.

  6. Jay Bruce, RF—The Reds need this guy to come back strong. Whether he can beat the shift or not, Bruce has to cut down on the strikeouts and at least put the ball in play more. A promising fact is that what he’s doing now is largely inconsistent with his career slashing line of .252/.326/.470, so there’s little evidence to believe that next season looks like this one.

  7. Brayan Pena, CIf Pena can keep his present-day .259 batting average, there’s no reason he can’t be contributing from the No. 7 spot in the lineup. His OBP isn’t great and neither is his slugging, but this far down, it’s just nice to have a guy who can make contact and hit for an OK average.

  8. Zack Cozart, SS—Assuming Cozart is still the guy next year, and he may be because of his Gold-Glove-worthy performance this season, he’ll be right back where Reds fans are used to seeing him. Hopefully, the performances of both Rey Navarro at Triple-A and Kris Negron will be enough to get either some playing time, as both appear more capable at the plate than Cozart

  9. Homer Bailey, P—Because it is all but certain that one man between Mike Leake, Johnny Cueto and Mat Latos will be moved this offseason, let’s just stick to the one pitcher we know for a fact will be a Red next year.

Does this lineup inspire confidence for the 2015 campaign? There are a couple things that could be assumed with a higher degree of confidence:

  • Jay Bruce will return to his performance of the previous six years instead of the outlier he’s having this year.
  • Joey Votto will finally be healthy. He’s still leading the team in OBP despite playing 62 games on arguably one leg. With two legs, watch out.

Should both of those happen, there’s real hope for the above lineup. Should one of the starting pitchers be moved, it’s a safe bet that it brings in a capable bat in the outfield. That would of course remove Pena from the lineup as Mesoraco moves to the plate.

If said bat were acquired, whoever he his, if he can hit cleanup or fifth, it’s not far-fetched to imagine Bruce hitting seventh. For an NL lineup, that would be impressive. 

 

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