Important Dates

2017 Champion: Patently Nuts (71.5 points)
2018 Season: March 29 - September 30

Monday, April 11, 2016

Bill's Extremely Belated Bold Predictions

Apologies for these getting in so late. I don't think any are too impacted by week 1 of the season, though feel free to call me out if needed. Most of these were written before the season started, except those marked with an asterisk. 

Adrian Beltre is a top 3 3B
Beltre went for $17 in the draft, less than half of what Donaldson cost and just a hair over what Frazier cost. Throw in Manny Machado as a keeper, as well as Kyle Seager ($24) and Beltre has some stiff competition at the hot corner. Here’s the thing though – after struggling in the first half, Beltre was electric down the stretch (10 HR, 39 R, 56 RBI, .327 average), when he was finally able to put a thumb injury behind him. The Rangers offense clicked in the second half, so I think Beltre will elevate himself to the top of tier 2 at the position, behind Donaldson and Machado.

Mike Moustakas hits 28 HR, with 100 RBI with a .275 average
The power tool was always there with Moustakas, but contact issues and a pull happy approach limited his effectiveness. Moustakas has improved his K rate every year since 2012, even as K rates rose in the majors. In 2015, Moustakas conspicuously made an effort to use the whole field – hitting more balls to the opposite field in 2015 than he did the previous three years combined. I’m hoping that Moustakas can tap into his natural power (36 HR, .300+ ISO in the minors in 2012), while maintaining his more sophisticated approach that keeps defenses honest. Moose is absolutely crushing the ball this spring (1.047 OPS), but he does that every year, so I’m banking more on his scouting than his spring numbers here.

Marcus Semien is a top 2 shortstop
No, he’s not going to touch Carlos Correa, but Semien handled a major shift to shortstop last year including some rough defensive growing pains. He put up a 15 HR / 11 SB line overall, but had a rough midseason swoon before finishing extremely strong. That swoon coincided with an intensive focus on his defense with Ron Washington http://www.fangraphs.com/blogs/the-marcus-semienron-washington-lesson/, and once the defense lessons were done, Semien went back to being a 130 wRC+ hitter. You conveniently set aside his midseason swoon, you get a 23 HR, 16 SB season (prorated for 600 AB). At the thinnest position in the AL, that’s a hell of a lot of production for $8.

Michael Pineda is a top 10 starter
Pineda was spectacular for the better part of the season last year, putting up a spectacular 111 K and only 13 BB in 106 innings before the break last year. Injuries and fatigue appeared to catch up with him, as his ERA was 5.80 in a limited 54 inning sample after the ASB. That shouldn’t be surprising, as Pineda hadn’t thrown that many innings in a season since 2011. With 161 innings under his belt from last year, Pineda is ready to step forward and be a clear cut #1 starter with his great K and walk rates, above average GB %, and a HR/FB rate that will return to league averages (~10%) from its inflated 2015 value (14.7%). My pitching model pegged Pineda as the 18th best starter in all of baseball last year, and this year, he capitalizes on that promise and those underlying numbers en route to a top 10 SP season.

Luis Severino is a top 16 starter (drafted as SP #26)
Another darling of the model, Severino combines excellent control, a high ground ball rate, and very good strikeout numbers. The groundballs, in particular, will serve him well in some of the high HR parks of the AL East. The cherry on top? Severino’s walk rate was ok, but a touch worse than league average last year (8.6% vs 7.7%). However, based on his underlying plate discipline numbers, in particular, getting a first pitch strike 63% of the time, I projected an above average walk rate (7.1%). Some of that gap may be a learning curve dealing with hitters in the majors, but if he bridges even half that gap, his strikeout rate (8.1 K /9) and groundball rate (50%) peg him as a massive breakout.

Kevin Gausman puts his shoulder weakness behind him and breaks out, besting his 2015 season across the board, topping his 2015 K/9 (8.3), BB/9 (2.3) and posting an ERA of 3.50 or better. Gausman has been pegged by many as a breakout year after year, but this is the year he finally puts it all together. He’s generating an increasing number of pop ups and his K rate has been steadily improving. Bonus prediction: Despite a preseason evaluation from Taylor that “he doesn’t fit my current approach to pitching”, Taylor will begrudgingly trade for Gausman in July.

**Hanley takes to 1B, posting a .300 / 25 HR / 10 SB season
Had high hopes for Hanley last year, but that was clearly a disaster. He’s slimmed down this offseason, and crushed the ball in spring training. Back in the infield, he won’t have to worry about his defense as much, and he can get back to being a steady all around performer at first. 25 HR would be the highest total for him since 2008, but he did crack 10 HR in April last year (en route to a terribly disappointing 19 on the year). .300/25/10 doesn't seem like a ton, except no one did it at 1B last year, 1B #3 Eric Hosmer came closest, but only 18 HR. There’s no outfield wall for Hanley to worry about now, so watch out. Bonus prediction: Hanley’s UZR/150 at 1B will be 0 or higher (above average fielder).

**Prorated for 150 games, Devon Travis sets a 40 HR+SB, 100 R pace
The Blue Jays offense is dominant from just about top to bottom, the exception being Ryan Goins and others at the keystone. Travis was a spectacular hitter last season, crushing the ball, walking a ton, and stealing a few bases. Travis stole more bases in the minors, and it looks like at 24 he started to develop a good bit more power, especially on pitches up and in. Put together that profile, plus his relatively diminutive size (5’9”), you’re looking at vintage Pedroia tomahawking balls over the Green Monster. Travis is recovering from significant shoulder surgery now, but is expected to be back in late May. Once he’s back, though, he’ll work his way to the top of the Blue Jays lineup and fill up box scores in a hurry.

**Setting aside saves, Betances is #1 RP in the Yankees bullpen for all 4 categories (via PR score)
He’s up against two truly elite teammates, but Dellin Betances is just absolutely lights out. He has a head start on innings vs. Chapman, and a role more suited to throwing two innings at a time than Miller, and might even pile up 100 IP this season. Miller or Chapman might beat him a bit in ERA or WHIP, but when you weight his still elite performance by innings (as the player rater does) Betances will come out as the across the board champ in the Yankees pen. Combine that with a cheaper (though still significant) $7 price tag, and you’ve got a nice value to limit damage on missing badly on Gausman, Severino, or Pineda.

**Steve Souza combines for 50 HR+SB

Just a year too early Andrew! A year too early. God, what kind of idiot told you to make that trade.

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