Tag: Jon Lester

Chicago Cubs: If They Miss Out on Lester, Scherzer Is an Excellent Plan B

In only about three years, Theo Epstein has built the Chicago Cubs farm system into one of the game’s best.  Kris Bryant, Addison Russell, Javier Baez and Jorge Soler are four of the most exciting young prospects in the league, and 28-year-old right-hander Jake Arrieta emerged on the scene as a potential ace with a sterling year in 2014.

The Cubs also made national headlines recently with their hiring of Joe Maddon, one of the best managers in the league.  Maddon found a way to win with a Tampa Bay Rays team that was young and fairly talented.  Give him a loaded roster of perennial prospects, and the ceiling seems limitless.

However, they still need to add one more very important piece: a dominant starting pitcher who can pitch deep into games every fifth day and take the ball in the first game of the playoff series the Cubs hope to be in, possibly this year.

Jon Lester seems to fit the bill.  He is as durable as they come, recording at least 31 starts in each of the past seven years and pitching at least 200 innings in six of those years.

Unfortunately for the Cubs, it looks like their chances of signing Lester might be slipping away.  The Cubs made their pitch to the southpaw Tuesday, but Peter Gammons said on Dennis & Callahan, via WEEI.com, that his sources lead him to believe Lester will end up signing elsewhere.

“I think the one thing—obviously the Cubs are going to make every play—I get the feeling the Cubs think he’s going to go back to Boston,” he said. “I think it’s very smart for Lester and his agents to hold for another week.” 

However, it’s not like the Cubs need to put all their eggs in the Lester basket.  There is another superb starting pitcher on the free-agent marketa guy by the name of Max Scherzer.

Scherzer and Lester are both 30 years old, but Scherzer doesn’t have nearly the experience or the postseason pedigree Lester has.  Scherzer was a late bloomer, a former elite prospect who finally came into his own when he was traded to the Detroit Tigers from the Arizona Diamondbacks.

Scherzer has actually been a better pitcher than Lester over the past three years:

  W-L ERA IP K
Max Scherzer 55-15 3.24 622.1 723
Jon Lester 40-33 3.65 638.1 563

While Lester has a few more innings pitched over that span, Scherzer has a much better win-loss record, a lower ERA and 160 more strikeouts.

I still think Lester would be a better fit due to his longer track record of success and his sterling postseason statistics, but if the Cubs cannot convince him, Scherzer is a terrific option.

He has put together a tremendous three-year run in the American League, so he should be even more dominant in the National League, where he would have the luxury of facing the pitcher’s spot instead of a designated hitter.

However, Scherzer is going to demand a huge payday.  A Scott Boras client, the 2013 Cy Young Award winner turned down a six-year, $144 million extension from the Tigers before the 2013 season.  

The fact that he rejected such a lucrative offer means he is going to relish his time on the open market, with Boras viciously negotiating with as many teams as he can get in the ring plus the “mystery team” he can engender to raise the stakes.

The Cubs are hoping to win now, and they are not going to let money stand in the way of winning their first World Series ring since 1908.  

With Scherzer headlining a rotation that features Arrieta, Edwin Jackson and Travis Wood, the Cubs would have plenty of pitching to complement their potentially dominant offense. 

If they do sign Scherzer or Lester, the Cubs could be legitimate contenders to make the playoffs in 2015. Once they get in, anything could happen.  And a dominant ace would give them a much better chance of making a deep postseason run.

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Boston Red Sox Rumors: Pros and Cons of Top Offseason Targets

The hot-stove season is less than a month underway, but the Boston Red Sox have wasted no time stealing plenty of headlines.

The Sox figured to be active players in the market this year, and the early rumors surrounding the team haven’t disappointed. They’ve been linked to many of the most prominent free agents and players available on the trade market and seem serious about rebuilding for 2015.

Keep in mind that the offseason rumor mill is an industry unto itself, and that many of the rumors you hear will be contradicted by additional reports just hours after they hit Twitter, MLBTradeRumors.com or whatever resource you use. That being said, reports as to what the Red Sox have been up to so far are instructive in terms of letting us know what the team is planning and how they operate under Ben Cherington.

With that in mind, let’s take a look at the three biggest rumors associated with the Red Sox over the past few days and weigh the pros and cons of each deal being considered.

 

Red Sox Offer Six-Year, $110-120 Million to Jon Lester

According to Nick Cafardo of The Boston Globe, the Red Sox are legitimately pursuing Lester, offering the type of six-year contract that should at least bring the left-hander back to the table. Given that the Sox offered Lester a four-year, $70 million extension last spring, the team is clearly willing to spend more now to land its former ace.

 

Pros

The pros here are pretty obvious: The Red Sox need a top-of-the-rotation starter, and many fans and analysts alike are united in the belief that Lester should represent Boston’s top free-agent target.

Yes, $19-20 million a year is expensive, but that’s what pitchers of Lester’s caliber cost nowadays, and that’s on the low end of the spectrum. While investing in any pitcher is a scary proposition, Lester has the track record of health, performance and character you want to bet on.

According to Jeff Moore of Baseball Prospectus (subscription required), Lester projects as a top-end starter for the next three-to-four seasons. The Red Sox can live with whatever comes on the back end of the deal if Lester is truly that dominant through 2018.

 

Cons

The only real con here is the overall poor track record for long deals for pitchers in their 30s. Plus, adding Lester for $20-plus million per season will take a nice chunk out of the financial flexibility the Sox have built for themselves.

But assuming that acquiring Lester would indeed be a good thing, the real “con” associated with this offer is that it probably won’t be enough. ESPN Insider Jim Bowden (subscription required) predicted that Lester will receive offers in the six-year, $138 million range, and CBS Sports’ Jon Heyman even threw out a possible $189 million asking price for Lester.

That last number seems a bit crazy, and it’s hard to see a team truly going to those lengths for Lester. There’s no doubt that $110-120 million seems a bit low, though, and if that’s the Red Sox’s final offer, it would be surprising to see a Lester reunion this winter.

The good news, per WEEI.com’s Rob Bradford, is that the Red Sox are apparently willing to continue to negotiate. Plus, Lester’s agent, Sam Levinson, told WEEI.com that the Sox “showed great respect” to Lester through their recent offer.

Red Sox Make (or Prepare to Make) Offer to Pablo Sandoval

This situation is a bit less clear than Lester’s, as we’ve seen conflicting reports as to weather Sandoval has actually received an offer from the Red Sox to this point. Sean McAdam of CSNNE.com maintained early yesterday that the Sox were still waiting to get an offer out to Sandoval, while Cafardo stated that an offer’s already been made.

Either way, Sandoval was in Boston on Tuesday, and the Red Sox’s interest appears to be quite legitimate.

 

Pros

Sandoval would represent a massive upgrade over anything the Red Sox have had at third base for the past two seasons. He’s a good defender at this point in his career, brings a contact-heavy approach that the Red Sox lack and is an obscene postseason performer.

Adding Sandoval’s switch-hitting bat to, say, the fifth or sixth spot in the lineup would break up Boston’s litany of right-handed pitchers and would add depth and reliability to an offense that’s likely going to rely on four unproven players: Xander Bogaerts, Mookie Betts, Rusney Castillo and Christian Vazquez.

There are legitimate reasons to be concerned about giving Sandoval a long-term deal, but there’s no way to argue that he wouldn’t make the 2015 Red Sox much better.

 

Cons

ESPN.com’s Jerry Crasnick reported that Sandoval had discussed deals in the five-year, $90 million range with both the Red Sox and Giants. The money involved is fairly reasonable at that level, but it’s understandable why some won’t want to give Sandoval a five-year deal.

On Wednesday, the Providence Journal’s Brian MacPherson gave a phenomenal breakdown of the assumptions many make about Sandoval, and his conclusions give reason for pause when you think about Sandoval in, say, 2018 and beyond.

Most notably, MacPherson shows that if Sandoval has to move to DH in a few years, he’ll actually be a below-average offensive player. Further, he notes that Sandoval is really better as a down-the-order bat than a true middle-of-the-order impact hitter.

Still, MacPherson also rejects the notion that Sandoval’s weight is destined to hurt his career later on, and cites a five-year, $90 million deal as reasonable in today’s economic climate.

 

Red Sox Among Favorites for Yoan Moncada

On Tuesday, Baseball America’s Ben Badler broke down the market for Moncada, a star Cuban infielder/outfielder who could be cleared to sign with a major league organization fairly soon. Badler included the Red Sox among the eight teams he listed as most likely to make a play for the 19-year-old’s services, though the details as to when Moncada will even be allowed to sign are sketchy.

 

Pros

What’s not to like about a 19-year-old stud prospect who Badler writes has more upside than Castillo or Yasmani Tomas? Moncada would be a prospect more in the Jorge Soler mold in that he’d need some MiLB seasoning before making it to the majors. But the Cubs should be pretty happy with Soler right now, and if Moncada can also play the infield, it would add tremendously to his value.

Plus, as Badler notes, because the Red Sox have already blown past their international spending allowance by grabbing Anderson Espinoza and Christopher Acosta, they’re really not further penalized by doubling down and making a play for Moncada too.

Don’t worry about where Moncada would play or who at the MLB level could potentially block him; too much talent is never a bad thing. It would be great for the Red Sox to acquire Moncada and figure out where he fits in their long-term plans later.

 

Cons

None, really. The biggest con I can think of is that Moncada isn’t a No. 1 MLB starter who’s ready to pitch right now, as that’s Boston’s biggest need. But given that the Sox can’t be penalized more and can always use more prospects, signing Moncada would be a coup.

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MLB Rumors: Latest Buzz Surrounding Jon Lester, Jason Heyward and More

The MLB offseason figures to be a busy one for many teams across the league, and we can expect to see many familiar faces in new places once the dust settles.

Some notable transactions have already come to fruition, most recently a one-year deal for A.J. Burnett with the Pittsburgh Pirates. With a healthy amount of coveted players sitting on the free-agent market or rumored to be involved in trade talks, there will be no shortage of gossip floating around the Web any time soon.

A few pieces of information regarding some of the league’s well-known players have recently surfaced from trusted sources across the Internet. Here’s a look at the latest and greatest rumors as a frenzied offseason continues.

 

Jon Lester Latest

Lester really stepped up during his short time with the Oakland Athletics last season. Through 11 starts with the club, he allowed 66 hits, 20 earned runs and 16 walks while striking out 71 for a 6-4 record and a 2.35 ERA. He also tallied one complete-game shutout over that span.

That late-season success has piqued the interest of several clubs, via Peter Gammons:

Although, two stand out above the rest as very intriguing options.

According to Jeffery Flanagan of Fox Sports, the Kansas City Royals had discussions with the southpaw’s agents. This is interesting considering Lester pitched against the Royals in the American League Wild Card Game, going 7.1 innings and allowing eight hits and six runs for a 7.36 ERA.

The Royals have a phenomenal bullpen but could use some depth in their starting rotation, making Lester a nice fit.

Perhaps more interesting is discussions between Lester’s camp and his former team, the Boston Red Sox. The left-hander was traded to Oakland after spending the better part of nine seasons with Boston, and now it appears as though they want him back.

According to Gordon Edes of ESPNBoston.com, the interest is expected to be real, and he gives some insight into what the team could be offering:

By now, both sides have a pretty good idea what it will take to get a deal done. Agent Seth Levinson would not be wasting Lester’s time, nor his own, with this meeting unless he had received a direct signal, from Cherington or, just as likely, Lucchino, that the Sox are prepared to make an offer that will not insult the intelligence of the parties involved.

That means an offer of at least five years, more likely six. Anything below $120 million is probably a nonstarter.

We probably shouldn’t expect a deal of this magnitude to be completed once the meeting ends; however, we should have a great idea of just how good the changes are of these parties hammering out a deal.

 

Jason Heyward Latest

There’s a strong possibility the Atlanta Braves will look to deal Heyward during the offseason. The 25-year-old outfielder is entering the final year of his contract, and there’s a chance Atlanta may not be able to ink him to a long-term deal.

According to David O’Brien of the Atlanta Constitution-Journal, the Braves are looking to add pitching, and if they do enter a rebuilding phase, a trade could be expected:

Whatever the eventual stated goal is, it became pretty clear to me the past few days that the Braves are likely to trade at least one of their corner outfielders, Jason Heyward and Justin Upton, both of whom are eligible for free agency a year from now and can probably expect to command long-term contracts worth at least a combined  $35 million annually and perhaps closer to $40 million annually.

If Atlanta does look to trade Heyward, which team is a likely suitor?

Jon Heyman of CBS Sports did tweet that several teams have already called about the outfielder:

Bernie Miklasz of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported the St. Louis Cardinals “are said to like Heyward.”

St. Louis will be looking to improve its lineup, and Heyward would be a valuable addition. The outfielder tallied 74 runs, 155 hits, 26 doubles, three triples, 11 home runs, 58 RBI, 20 stolen bases and batted .271 last season. He’s a do-it-all player on offense.

Heyward has really improved his fielding as well over recent years. He only recorded one error last season and was responsible for nine assists and two double plays while maintaining a .997 fielding percentage.

 

Justin Masterson Latest

Masterson spent the better part of six seasons with the Cleveland Indians until he was dealt to the Cardinals last season. He appeared in nine games for St. Louis, starting six, and didn’t produce as efficiently as expected, totaling a 7.04 ERA during that span.

Interestingly enough, the Indians could be thinking about bringing the right-hander back to Cleveland, according to Paul Hoynes of the Cleveland Plain DealerHoynes put it simply, “Yes, the Indians have talked to Masterson about returning to Cleveland.”

If the Indians do offer the pitcher a deal, expect it to be a short one—perhaps just a year. After all, the team couldn’t have much confidence in Masterson after he slipped from its No. 1 starter to No. 5 in its rotation before being traded.

Bringing the pitcher back would most likely hinge on Cleveland thinking he can get back to the form he displayed in his All-Star 2013 season.

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Jon Lester-Theo Epstein Reunion Is Must-Have Splash to Make Young Cubs a Threat

You’ll know President of Baseball Operations Theo Epstein finally has the Chicago Cubs ready to make a run at ending their 106-year championship drought when he strikes a deal with an old associate of his: Jon Lester.

Granted, we’re technically in the realm of “if” rather than “when.” The Cubs aren’t any more assured to sign the 30-year-old left-hander than any other club eyeing him in free agency.

The Cubs are definitely in line for Lester, though; Bruce Levine of 670 The Score says the two sides are ready to meet formally:

It was going to come to this eventually. The rumor mill has been linking Lester and the Cubs for months, with the connection between him and Epstein from their days with the Boston Red Sox often cited as a potential deal-maker.

For his part, Epstein hasn’t been shy about his desire for a No. 1 starter. He told Patrick Mooney of CSN Chicago the following in October: “You get aggressive and you try to find the right players. You don’t put a deadline on it. You don’t say: ‘We have to come out of this offseason with a No. 1 starter’ or you lock yourself into a bad deal. But over time, when the opportunity’s there, you pounce on it.”

Lester fits the bill of a guy for the Cubs to pounce on. In 32 starts for the Red Sox and Oakland A’s in 2014, he posted a 2.46 ERA across 219.2 innings. Over his last 51 starts overall, his ERA is 2.50.

Now, Mooney acknowledged that the Cubs could wait until next winter—when David Price, Jordan Zimmermann, Doug Fister and Jeff Samardzija could be availableto pursue an ace. And even if they do go after an ace this winter, maybe they’ll trade for Cole Hamels or sign Max Scherzer or James Shields instead of Lester.

Which leads us to two questions: Why now, and why Lester?

That first question is easy: Why wait when the Cubs are ready to break from their rebuilding phase now?

Sure, they only went 73-89 in 2014. But that involved a respectable 33-35 finish in the second half, a run that was largely characterized by the team’s offensively focused rebuilding effort beginning to bear fruit.

Established cornerstones Anthony Rizzo and Starlin Castro both had excellent second halves, hitting over .300 with OPS’s of .978 and .804, respectively. And while all three had their growing pains, top prospects Javier Baez, Arismendy Alcantara and Jorge Soler arrived to combine for 24 home runs.

Following in their footsteps in the near future should be Kris Bryant, who won Baseball America‘s Minor League Player of the Year Award for 2014 on the strength of a 1.098 OPS and 43 homers. When he takes his place at the hot corner, the Cubs are going to have young, high-ceiling hitters at six of eight spots.

You could see this Cubs-topian future forming during the team’s strong second-half run, and Rany Jazayerli of Grantland nailed it when he wrote in August: “If they do sign a Max Scherzer or a Jon Lester this offseason, the Cubs won’t just be a sexy pick to make the playoffs in 2015 — they might be a smart one. This franchise is a whole lot closer to being a contender than most people realize.”

The missing link may indeed be that simple.

The Cubs recently picked up arguably baseball’s best manager in Joe Maddon. They definitely have hitters. In Hector Rondon and Pedro Strop, they have the foundations for a dangerous bullpen. With Jake Arrieta’s 2014 breakout having established him as a top-of-the-rotation starter, the Cubs will have a one-two rotation punch as good as anyone’s if they add an ace this winter.

To that end, Lester being a perfect fit for the Cubs goes beyond just the numbers he’s put up recently.

For beginners, there’s Lester’s cost. He probably isn’t going to come as cheap as Shields, but he’s bound to cost less money than Scherzer. Given that acquiring Hamels would likely require a $100 million commitment and a sacrifice of several top prospects, Lester should be cheaper than him too.

Even more important, though, is how Lester comes off as a good bet to age well.

Obviously, there’s a built-in injury risk with every pitcher. But Lester has never suffered a major arm or shoulder injury, and he has made at least 30 starts every year since 2008. The concern is of that workload catching up to him, but his 6’4″, 240-pound frame and low-effort delivery help alleviate it somewhat.

As for how Lester’s stuff will hold up, that’s admittedly always more of a concern with power pitchers. Power stuff doesn’t tend to age well, and some (see Verlander, Justin) have trouble adjusting to life without it.

But that’s the hidden beauty of Lester’s 2014 season. In it, he proved that he’s already capable of being dominant without power stuff.

Per FanGraphs, check out Lester’s velocity in 2014 compared to the three prior seasons:

Lester hit his age-30 season, and BAM! His velocity went south. That’s ordinarily a recipe for the struggle becoming real, not a 9.0 strikeout-per-nine rate, a 2.0 walk-per-nine and, of course, a 2.46 ERA.

Success like that is either the product of a whole lot of luck or a transformation. In Lester’s case, it was the latter.

Shane Ryan of Grantland did a fine job illustrating what Lester was all about in 2014. He was better than ever not just at spotting his fastball and cutter, but at using the movement of the two pitches to toy with the edges of of the strike zone and, thus, with opposing hitters. Also, he only threw his curveball where hitters could do little except swing over it.

Here, these moving pictures can illustrate the point:

Lester’s new-and-improved approach not only led to his best swinging-strike rate since 2010, but also much weaker contact. Which leads us to Ryan’s conclusion: “And that, of course, comes down to location, particularly with the fastball and cutter that make up the bulk of his arsenal. He’s maximized his natural talent, achieved a kind of wisdom about how to use his pitches, and stands now at the apex of his career.”

The gist is that Lester has evolved. He still has very good stuff, but it’s made that much more dangerous by location and deception. Those are two talents that aren’t necessarily as doomed by age as power is. This is also where Lester differs from Scherzer, Shields and Hamels.

They’re in Lester’s age range, but all three sat in the 92-93 level with their heat in 2014. That’s above-average velocity, and they’re going to continue to be excellent pitchers as long as it holds. Excellent enough, even, to outperform Lester in 2015.

But in the long run, that above-average velocity will inevitably go away. When it does, that could be the reason why their talent didn’t age as well as Lester’s.

Certainly, every team interested in signing Lester is going to be mindful of his long-term outlook, and here’s guessing that I’m not the only one who’s thinking it looks pretty darn good.

But for the Cubs, Lester’s long-term future is doubly important.

The Cubs wouldn’t just be signing Lester to go for it in the short term. The idea would be to have him atop their rotation for the long haul as the team looks to build an empire in the NL Central. That Lester’s long-term performance projects as being equal to the task is reason enough to sign him. 

But it’s easy to think about Lester also being something of a staff wizard in addition to a staff ace. As a guy who’s turned himself into an ace pitcher with command and smarts, Lester could conceivably be a part-time pitching coach who teaches valuable lessons to any young hurlers who come along.

The Cubs really aren’t far off from being a contending team as they’re situated now. If they sign Lester, they’ll have taken care of the missing link and should reap the benefits for years to come.

Assuming Epstein already knows all this, he won’t let Lester leave next week’s meeting without an offer he can’t refuse.

 

Note: Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com unless otherwise noted/linked.  

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Jon Lester vs. Max Scherzer: Which Superstar Free Agent Is the Safer Bet?

Both Max Scherzer and Jon Lester will command big-money contracts this upcoming offseason. 

But because this is the offseason, it’s only natural to compare the two most coveted free agents in the 2015 class.

Although each pitcher is regarded as a top-tier starter, the similarities end there. Scherzer is a flame-throwing right-hander, capable of posting high strikeout totals any time he takes the hill. While Lester is no slouch when it comes to velocity, the southpaw mostly depends on heavy movement to induce weak contact on the ground.

2014 produced another stellar chapter in the careers of the two studs. Lester went 16-11 in 32 starts, posting a career low 2.46 ERA. Scherzer was equally impressive, winning 18 games and striking out over 10 per nine innings.

But who is the safer bet going forward? 

Using a variety of advanced metrics gathered from FanGraphs, we can dig deeper into each pitcher’s performances and come up with a fair comparison. However, instead of focusing on just one season of sample data, the stats used throughout the article took place over a three-year span from 2012-14.

 

Standard Statistics 

On the surface, the two aces have posted similar numbers when it comes to typical pitching stats. 

Age is often a critical factor when evaluating free agents, but in this case, both pitchers enter the market at 30 years of age. 

Lester and Scherzer have also been able to remain relatively healthy over the past three seasons. You won’t find two more durable guys in all of MLB, as each ranks in the top 10 in starts and top 11 in innings pitched since 2012. 

Standard stats provide enough data for the casual observer to judge if a player is good or not, but they lack the necessary detail that allows for meaningful comparisons.

So let’s move on to the more advanced metrics, starting with some rate statistics. 

 

Rate Statistics 

Strikeout rate and walk rate are two stats that a pitcher actually has control over.

Obviously, more strikeouts and fewer walks are the ultimate goal for any pitcher, but using a metric that measures on a nine-inning scale helps the stats become easier to understand.

Strikeout percentage and walk percentage are similar methods that factor how many strikeouts or walks a pitcher records in relation to batters faced. 

Here’s how Lester and Scherzer compare in this aspect:

As the numbers show, Scherzer is a strikeout machine. Over the last three seasons, only Yu Darvish ranks higher in K/9 and strikeout percentage. His ability to fan opposing hitters is Scherzer’s biggest asset, as he can wiggle out of jams by allowing no contact. 

Scherzer’s knack for the strikeout is obviously aided by a blazing fastball. But Scherzer’s average fastball velocity of 92.8 in 2014 was actually the lowest of his career. To counter this inevitable drop in velocity, his changeup usage increased to a career-high last season. Continued strikeout numbers with diminishing velocity and the continued improvement of his changeup bode well when projecting Scherzer’s future production.

Need some evidence? How about Scherzer’s nine-strikeout performance against the Twins in September? Check out the 33-second mark to see his changeup in action against Kennys Vargas:

For Lester, seven strikeouts a game is still impressive. The keys to this comparison are virtual dead-even walk statistics.

Scherzer is striking out nearly three more batters a game than Lester while walking an almost identical amount. This isn’t a knock on Lester, but strikeouts are arguably the most translatable stat for a pitcher. With more strikeouts and similar walk totals, Scherzer bests Lester in this aspect of pitching.

To better understand the difference in strikeouts between the two aces, let’s see how the stat impacts each starter’s run prevention.

 

ERA Simulators 

Now we’re getting to the good stuff. 

ERA has widely been regarded as one of the most important stats when evaluating a pitcher’s performance.

The problem with ERA is that it is highly dependent on luck, sequencing and defense. Fielding Independent Pitching, Expected Fielding Independent Pitching and Skill-Interactive ERA have actually started to become more appropriate than ERA in recent years. 

The below table shows the difference between Lester and Scherzer in ERA simulators:

Pretty convincing, right? Scherzer is better than Lester in every category and by significant margins. 

To better explain FIP, here’s a quote from FanGraphs:

FIP is a measurement of a pitcher’s performance that strips out the role of defense, luck, and sequencing, making it a more stable indicator of how a pitcher actually performed over a given period of time than a runs allowed based statistic that would be highly dependent on the quality of defense played behind him, for example.

FIP focuses on the results a pitcher can control: strikeouts, walks, HBP and home runs. Scherzer betters Lester in each of those stats, aiding his FIP supremacy.

SIERA and xFIP take that concept further. SIERA is especially useful at predicting future production, because it takes into account balls in play. As FanGraphs puts it, SIERA “attempts to explain why certain pitchers are more successful at limiting hits and preventing runs.”

Any way you want to slice it, Scherzer’s been better over the past three seasons at preventing runs from crossing the plate. FIP, xFIP and SIERA are the most accurate ERA simulators, and the data they provide are a great indicator of what the future holds.

The name of the game for a pitcher is keeping runs off the board. Once again, Scherzer is much more reliable in regard to run prevention.

 

Win Probability 

With the advancement of modern-day statistics, players can now be given values representing how they individually affect their team’s chances of victory. 

If you’ve been paying attention up to this point, then you’ll surely be able to guess which free-agent ace has impacted his team’s success the most since 2012:

Win Probability Added captures how an individual affects his team’s win expectancy. Not only has Scherzer been more important to his team than Lester since 2012, but the right-hander ranks fifth in WPA and third in pitching WAR in MLB during that time.

By analyzing the advanced metrics best suited to project going forward, it’s clear that Scherzer has been the better pitcher over the past few seasons.

His strikeout numbers and run prevention statistics should lead you to believe his success is more sustainable than Lester’s reliance on good defense and luck on balls in play. 

Don’t get me wrong—Lester is an elite starter in MLB. But when comparing him with Max Scherzer, there’s really no question who the stud of this free-agent class is. 

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5 Dream Free-Agent Pickups for the Boston Red Sox

The Boston Red Sox figure to be active players in the free-agent market, and they’ll need to be if they hope to compete once more in 2015.

The Red Sox need to add significant pieces to their starting rotation. They need to shore up their bullpen. And they must seriously considering pursuing upgrades at the hot corner and at backup catcher, too.

With a glut of young talent, live arms and outfielders, the Red Sox can fill some of these holes by turning to the trade market. Yet more are likely to be filled through free agency, as the Red Sox have plenty of cash to work with.

In fact, by WEEI.com’s Alex Speier‘s estimates, the Red Sox had about $52 million to spend this offseason. They’ve already spent $9 million of that retaining Koji Uehara, but that leaves plenty of cash left for one or two major acquisitions and some minor moves, too.

With that in mind, let’s take a look at five free-agent “dream acquisitions” for the Red Sox. Keep in mind that these perfect deals exist independent of one another, and that they certainly represent best-case scenarios for the Red Sox.

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Biggest Winners and Losers of the 2014 MLB Regular Season

From the historic dominance of Clayton Kershaw to the epic collapses of the Milwaukee Brewers and the Atlanta Braves, it’s been a memorable 2014 MLB regular season.

Simply put, there have been major winners and serious losers from all around the league. Jon Lester falls onto the right side of that equation thanks to a brilliant second half, which has set him up for a winter payday. 

There’s even room on the list for an ace and an executive who could still end up in either the winner’s or loser’s camp. 

Begin Slideshow


Jon Lester Says He Still Uses GPS Directions When Driving to Oakland’s Coliseum

Driving to work is the worst.

Spending hours of your life shoving a vehicle through traffic is tantamount to torture, but not knowing exactly how to get to your destination makes it that much worse.

This is Jon Lester’s daily grind, and he’s using technology to help make his adjustment to life with the Oakland A’s easier.

Lester told The Dan Patrick Show, via NBC on Yahoo Sports (h/t For The Win’s Nate Scott), Thursday that he’s still using the GPS on his smartphone to make his 40-minute commute to O.co Coliseum: “Every day, I do the GPS on my phone, so I don’t get lost.”

Lester also confirmed that he’s renting a home in the area. The A’s acquired Lester from the Boston Red Sox on July 31, trading away prized slugger Yoenis Cespedes to bolster their rotation with the 30-year-old lefty. 

Grantland’s Jonah Keri believes Lester could end up back in Boston after the season: “Lester, a free agent after this season, has already expressed his interest in re-signing with Boston, and will be out of Oakland’s price range regardless. He’s a rental for a team committed to going for broke.”

In any case, I sympathize with Lester’s GPS usage.

I moved to Chicago earlier this summer, and after two months in the city, I’m still all shoulders when drivers ask the best way to a destination. I have no idea. I just want to get to The Hangge-Uppe before 3 a.m., preferably alive.

The new-city struggle is real, Lester. Just keep using the GPS. We’ll figure it out or fall in an open manhole trying.

 

Follow Dan on Twitter for more sports and pop culture news.

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Will Billy Beane’s Win-Now Trade Deadline Philosophy Pay Off or Backfire?

Oakland Athletics general manager Billy Beane is tired of his team being “one-and-done” in the playoffs.

The A’s have been to the postseason seven times during Beane’s 17-year tenure, but they reached the American League Championship Series just once. More recently, the A’s have won the American League West in each of the last two seasons only to lose to the Detroit Tigers in the American League Division Series.

This year, however, Oakland officially is “all-in.” And based on Beane‘s aggressive trades over the last month, he surely will be disappointed if the A’s season concludes with anything less than a World Series title.

Beane bookended the month of July with blockbuster trades for a pair of front-line starting pitchers, acquiring Jeff Samardzija and Jason Hammel from the Chicago Cubs on July 5 and then Jon Lester (and Jonny Gomes) from the Boston Red Sox hours before the July 31 non-waiver trade deadline.

However, the A’s were forced to part with big pieces of the future in both trades.

To land Samardzija and Hammel, Beane traded a pair of highly touted prospects in shortstop Addison Russell and outfielder Billy McKinney, the team’s respective first-round draft picks from 2012 and 2013, as well as right-hander Dan Straily. Meanwhile, the opportunity to acquire both Lester and Gomes pushed Beane to trade All-Star outfielder Yoenis Cespedes, who previously was viewed as a main cog in the A’s future success.

Yet, for Beane, that was a small price to pay for a chance to win a World Series in 2014.

“We have a team that can win right now,” Beane said earlier this month, via Bob Nightengale of USA Today. “Just collecting young players is not something in our marketplace we can do.”

In general, both trades came as a complete surprise—at least to those outside the organization. Beane has a history of making blockbuster deals, but none of them involved the acquisition of “rental” players such as Lester and Hammel, both of whom will hit the open market after the season. Samardzija is at least under team control through 2015.

However, a closer look at Beane’s recent trade history suggests we should have seen these types of deals coming, as they represent the next logical steps for the A’s in their pursuit of a World Series.

After enduring a five-year playoff drought from 2007 to 2011, the A’s sneaked into the postseason in 2012 with a dramatic sweep of the Texas Rangers in the final series of the regular season. That taste of success—as well as the subsequent anguish of losing to the Tigers in a hard-fought ALDS—convinced Beane that he had a special team on his hands, a team with considerable room left to improve.

However, instead of targeting pricey free agents during the offseason, Beane capitalized on a leaguewide overvaluation of prospects and used the organization’s farm system to secure major league assets.

In fact, he went so far as to trade away a majority of the organization’s top-ranked prospects (as determined by Baseball America at the time of the trades), choosing to play the odds and not to buy into his young players’ long-term potential in the major leagues.

It goes without saying that the A’s would not be chasing their third consecutive AL West title this season if not for the returns in those trades.

R.J. Anderson of Baseball Prospectus (subscription required) explored Beane’s approach to prospects back in May:

The timing also provides a good spot to acknowledge an obvious truth: prospects can see their stock change in a hurry. The A’s had enough firsthand experience with the traded prospects by this point to determine whether they were overvalued by other teams; self-evaluation, such an underrated skill for front offices to possess, might have spurred the moves.

But no one can say for sure, and there are other potential explanations: maybe Beane (correctly) foresaw the AL West being more open than anyone anticipated, or maybe this was just an extension of the A’s longstanding strategy to push for the postseason.

And that brings us to Cespedes.

With the sixth-lowest payroll among all 30 teams (as of Opening Day) and a farm system that now ranks 28th overall after losing Russell and McKinney, the 2014 season will likely be the A’s last chance at winning a World Series for the next three to five years.

In previous years, Beane would have traded a young pitcher or two from depth in exchange for prospects, which then could be used to acquire a more established arm. However, Jarrod Parker and A.J. Griffin’s respective elbow injuries early in the spring made that impossible. Therefore, Cespedes represented Beane’s best chance at landing an ace before the deadline.

The 28-year-old outfielder, who’s in the third year of a four-year, $36 million contract, will become a free agent after the 2015 season, and by then he’ll be well out of Oakland’s spending range given the perpetual market for right-handed power.

Plus, as Anderson posited in regard to prospects, the team’s firsthand experience with Cespedes over the last two-and-half seasons surely played a key role in Beane’s decision to trade him Thursday.

On paper, Cespedes has come nowhere close to matching his 2012 production as a rookie, when he batted .292/.356/.505 with 23 home runs, good for a 137 wRC+ and 2.9 fWAR, via FanGraphs. Unfortunately, it’s hard to see him eclipsing a 3.0 WAR if he hasn’t already. Cespedes’ only redeeming quality is his .208 career ISO, but beyond that, his production has tapered off across the board.

For Beane, the philosophy behind trading Cespedes at the deadline for a two-plus-month rental of Lester wasn’t any different than his philosophy behind dealing Russell and McKinney for Samardzija; all-in means all-in.

With the A’s window of opportunity closing quickly, Beane jumped at the chance to turn his team into a legitimate World Series contender, knowing that the organization wouldn’t be any worse off moving forward regardless of how the 2014 season unfolded.

Obviously, any number of things could transpire between now and the end of the regular season, but there’s no question that Beane’s blockbuster trades in July have the A’s primed for a deep run into the postseason.

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Jon Lester Scratched from Wednesday’s Start for Red Sox Amid Trade Rumors

Jon Lester has made all 241 of his career major league starts with the Red Sox. He may not get a chance for No. 242 with Boston, though. 

The team’s official Twitter feed confirmed that the 30-year-old will be scratched from Wednesday’s start, sparking speculation that he will be dealt before Thursday’s trade deadline:

However, it’s not time to throw your No. 31 Red Sox jersey on eBay quite yet. According to the New York Post‘s Joel Sherman, a trade is not imminent: 

Still, rumors surrounding Lester have been heating up over the past couple of days. The Boston Globe‘s Pete Abraham reported earlier on Tuesday that the Sox “want to deal him,” and this move suggests at the very least that they are close to finding a trade partner.

If that indeed happens, there would be many disappointed individuals in Boston, including fellow starter Clay Buchholz, via ESPNBoston.com’s Joe McDonald:

Lester has spent the last nine seasons with the Red Sox, has won 110 games and has been an important part of the franchise’s last two World Series runs, but he is currently in the midst of his best season. 

Through 21 starts, the left-hander owns a sparkling 2.52 ERA and 1.12 WHIP. His strikeout/9 ratio (9.4) is the best it has been since 2010, and his strikeout-to-walk ratio (4.66) is easily the best of his career. Moreover, with trade talks increasing, he has only gotten better: In four July starts, he has been nearly untouchable, giving up three earned runs in 29.0 innings (0.93 ERA). 

Tuesday morning, he appeared to address the rumors via Twitter:

If he’s traded, Lester may just be a midseason rental, as he’s set to hit free agency in the winter. Still, he should be able to return an impressive haul for the Sox. 

CBS Sports’ Jon Heyman reported the Los Angeles Dodgers, Pittsburgh Pirates, Milwaukee Brewers and Baltimore Orioles were the front-runners for Lester, while Yahoo Sports’ Jeff Passan and Tim Brown called the Pirates a “dark-horse candidate.”

The latter would certainly make sense for both sides. The Buccos, in the middle of the NL Central race, rank just 14th in starting rotation ERA and could use an upgrade. With arguably the best farm system in baseball, they could also entice Boston into a deal. 

In any case, it’s starting to look more and more like Lester will be wearing a new uniform for the first time in his career. 

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