Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Feldman

Looks like the Cubs search for genuine mediocrity has hit the jackpot once again.  The Cubs announced this morning they had signed Scott Feldman, formerly a kind of glorified swing man with the Texas Rangers, to a one-year deal, presumably to be their fifth starter.

Statistics guys (see Fangraphs) think he is a sleeper, but you've got to wonder.  Sure, some of his stats look good or comparable to Brandon McCarthy's, but come on, this guy gives up a lot of runs and his LOB percentage is next to last in baseball.

So, lets see, last year the Cubs started out with a rotation of Dempster, Samardzija, Maholm, Garza, Volstad, with Wood and Wells in reserve.  They were on a pace to lose around 90 games before the trade deadline.  After disposing of Dempster and Maholm and losing Garza to injury, they were able to hit the 100 loss plateau.

This year right now they go into the season with a rotation of Samardzija, Wood, Baker, Garza, and Feldman.  Do the math.  This is a 90 loss rotation and 100 assuming the Cubs trade Baker and Feldman at the break and maybe Garza as well.

Really, though, the problem with this team is not just pitching, it is hitting.  These guys do not get on base and they do not score runs and they strike out all the time.  Nothing so far in the off-season improves the offense.  The Cubs are set at catcher, first base, second base, and shortstop.  You can even argue for a little improvement as Rizzo enters his first full season and Castillo is a significant improvement over Soto.

But after that, this team has a weak bullpen, no bench and glaring holes at third base and center field.  Not to mention sub-par production in left and right field.  Some people think Soriano and DeJesus had productive seasons in 2012.  They did not and they are not championship players.  I have to eat a little crow on my assessment of Soriano as I expected him to be finished, but this guy is an out 70% of the time and a strikeout a quarter of the time.

So the truth is that next year right now looks as bleak as last year.  Sorry to have become a nay-sayer this soon, but if there is a master plan, I don't see it.

Saturday, November 24, 2012

Odds and Ends

This is shaping up as another rather blah off-season for the Cubs who seem content to rest in mediocrity.  They signed their only free agent, the mediocre middle-reliever Sean Camp who had an up season at age 37 last year.  He's cheap and expendable, but the history of guys like this is to follow a good season with lots of appearances with a truly awful year when they cannot get people out at all.

The Cubs did pick up Donner Navarro as a backup catcher.  This is a good signing.  He can hit in a backup role and he will not embarrass his team defensively.  They also unloaded the useless Jeff Brigham for a Rangers prospect in Barrett Loux.  Loux has been hurt nearly his entire career, but could be a good starter were he to remain healthy.  He went 14-1 at AA last year.



For all the talk of pursuing starting pitchers, the Cubs have been pretty quiet.  I'd like to see them go after Brandon McCarthy for one.  He has a lot of upside if he has recovered from his freak injury last year.

I was a little sad to see Bryan LaHair released to play in Japan.  I never thought he got a fair shake with any of the teams he played for.  When the Cubs decided he could not hit left-handers, he seemed to lose his mechanics altogether.  I wonder why they never tried him at third base.

The Cubs really need to rethink their strategies with respect to free agency.  The market has become both more rational and more irrational.  By that I mean the impact or potential impact players are usually higher risk guys who sign long-term for exorbitant prices.  The rest of the market is usually composed of mediocre role-players, David DeJesus types or worse, players around whom winners are not typically built.  Fewer players with exceptional talent who are eligible for free agency the first time are hitting the market because they are getting locked up in longer term extensions.

The real values in terms of impact players increasingly come from foreign leagues.  On this topic, the Cubs are apparently one of several teams to make an offer to the Japanese closer Kyuji Fujikawa.  This guy is very good and would be a great acquisition.  In the process, he would free up Carlos Marmol to move back to setup or for a trade.

Now if only they could dump Alfonso Soriano.

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Scott Baker

The Cubs signed Scott Baker, formerly of the Minnesota Twins, to a cheap one year contract today.  I can't say anything bad about the move, and it seems consistent with the strategy of the new regime to look for short-term bargains with a relatively high upside.  Baker was a pretty good middle of the rotation guy before he hurt his elbow.  He missed all of last year to Tommy John surgery.

The only gripe I have so far is the Cubs continue to miss out on the genuine impact guys who become available.  I'd have to argue there are no real major league impact guys going in free agency this year.  Greinke and Hamilton have obvious flaws.  Last year there were, I think, only two, Fielder and Pujols, neither of whom the Cubs pursued, for obvious reasons.

The foreign market is now where the genuine impact players are lurking, and, so far, the Cubs have not cashed in there either.  Last year they missed out on Cespedes and Darvish, though they did obtain Soler, who is a much longer term prospect.  This year they have struck out on the Korean pitcher Ryu, although the two Japanese high school prospects, much longer term prospects, are still potentially available.

I'd like to see this team start acting a little more like a major market entity and less like a bottom feeder Pirates/Royals type franchise.  Patience among the fans is starting to wear a little thin.  We all know that Epstein and Hoyer are great talent arbitragers, but I'd like to see them concentrate on building a major league team.

Sunday, November 4, 2012

This is Getting a Little Weird

So this week we saw yet another aborted trade from the Epstein regime.  It is hard to figure this one out.  Apparently the Cubs pulled the deal off the table, either because they did not actually have Marmol's written consent or because they got cold feet over Haren's injuries.

Haren, at his best, was a proven major league pitcher who would eat a lot of innings and could sometimes be a dominant force.  In 2012, however, he slumped a bit, spending some time on the DL with back problems.  He seems to have lost 3-4 mph off his fastball by season's end.  So he was a risk, but a cheap one for a one year deal.  Marmol, on the other hand, is a major league level closer who has proved himself a bit less than reliable over the last two seasons and who carries a heavy contract into his contract year.

Everybody on the Cubs boards and blogs thought this was a great deal because if Haren regained his form, he could be peddled at the trade deadline for big-time prospects.  First of all, lets remember the Dempster debacle.  Secondly, this is a hell of a way to build a team and one that, on balance, is rarely if ever successful.

The truth is that both these players are rentals or will be at the trade deadline and that you don't get big-time can't miss major league prospects at the deadline for rentals.  And big-time can't miss major league prospects are what the Cubs want and need.

Actually, you might argue that a good closer has more value at the deadline than a starter in terms of putting a genuine contender over the top and that a team that is in contention is more likely to roll the dice and give you top value in return.  I would certainly advance that argument.

Maybe the Cubs brass figured this out or maybe they had second thoughts on Haren's physical condition.  Other than that, this potential deal was and is nothing to write home about in terms of building a winning team.  Even if the concern is arbitraging bits of talent, the deal is kind of a wash, other than providing yet another illustration of a sad lack of competence and direction for this accursed franchise.