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Rumors for Los Angeles Dodgers

May
03

How much is Andre Ethier worth?

Posted by: juan | Comments View Comments

Dodgers outfielder Andre Ethier is slated to become a free agent at the end of the season unless the Dodgers’ new ownership do something about it. Jon Heyman of CBSSports says that with the new ownership in place the chances of a new deal for Ethier improves “drastically.”

Bill Shakin of the Los Angeles Times mentions that Dodgers’ GM, Ned Colletti met with Ethier’s agent last Friday at Dodger Stadium and negotiating a new deal for the outfielder could be the “first order of business” for them.

Last week, we analyzed Josh Hamilton’s worth, and said that he could manage a seven-year, $152 million deal if he continues to play the way he’s been playing and stays sober and healthy. To know what Ethier could earn in a long term deal, we’re going to analyze both players’ numbers.

Hamilton is a career .311/.368/.550 hitter with 126 HR’s, 443 RBI’s, a 137 OPS+, 20.8 career WARP and -8.2 career FRAA in six years. Ethier is a career .291/.364/.482 hitter with 115 HR’s, 473 RBI’s, a 124 OPS+, 16.7 WARP and -14.0 FRAA in seven years. In the injury department we have Hamilton that has missed 62 games during the past two seasons, without taking into account the games he’s missing currently with back issues, and Ethier 40.

After doing this brief analysis, we can conclude that Hamilton should be worth more than Ethier, but not as much people may think. The problem here is that when the season is over, Ethier will have to compete on the open market with Hamilton and Nick Swisher (.254/.360/.468, 189 HR’s, 601 RBI’s, 13.9 FRAA and 22.7 WARP in nine years), who has missed just 18 games in the past two seasons due to injuries.

In my opinion, Ethier could manage a seven-year, $119 million deal but will probably receive somewhere closer to six-years $100 million. Same length as Hamilton, but for less money. Again, Ethier’s deal will probably be affected by Swisher’s and Hamilton’s deals or vice-verse.

Image by Evan Wohrman under the Creative Commons License Agreement.

Categories : free-agent
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According to Jon Heyman of CBSSports, the Los Angeles Dodgers are in serious talks with recently released Bobby Abreu. He adds that the deal is not done, “as details need to be worked out.”

Abreu, who is making $9 million this year (which will be paid by the Angels minus the pro-rated veterans league minimum which his new team will pay), was released by the Angels last week to make room for top prospect Mike Trout. The 38-year old OF/DH was hitting .208/.259/.333 with 5 RBI’s in 24 AB’s for the Angels this season. He is a career .293/.397/.480 hitter with 284 HR’s and a 129 OPS+.

Image by Keith Allison under the Creative Commons License Agreement.

Categories : contract, free-agent
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May
01

Adiós Frank McCourt

Posted by: Ryan | Comments View Comments

The end of the Frank McCourt era has come and the new reign of Magic Johnson, Steve Kasten and the rest of the Guggenheim Baseball Management group begins. The sale of the Dodgers became official today instead of yesterday with $2 billion changing hands. The delay was a result of excessive paperwork that still needed to be reviewed.

Frank McCourt purchased the Dodgers in January of 2004 for $421 million. After all his debts and bills were paid, McCourt walked away with over $1 billion in pocket and will go down as the smartest investor and business man ever to walk the earth.

“The Dodgers emerge from the Chapter 11 reorganization process having achieved its objective of maximizing the value of the Dodgers through a successful Plan of Reorganization, under which all claims will be paid,” the Dodgers released in a statement. “The Dodgers move forward with confidence – in a strong financial position; as a premier Major League Baseball franchise; and as an integral part of and representative of the Los Angeles community.”

Commissioner Bud Selig had this to say about the sale of the Dodgers. “After a long and difficult road, the sale of the Dodgers is now complete, and I am pleased that the club can have the fresh start it deserves under new ownership. In addition, I want to personally thank all Dodger fans for their patience and loyalty during this trying period. I have said many times that we owed it to them to ensure that the club was being operated properly and would be guided appropriately in the future. It is my great hope and firm expectation that today’s change in ownership marks the start of a new era for the Los Angeles Dodgers and that this historic franchise will once again make the city of Los Angeles proud.”

The Dodgers have won six World Series titles but none since 1988, when they were still owned by the O’Malley family that moved the team from Brooklyn to California after the 1957 season. Fox bought the team in 1998, then sold it to McCourt. Under McCourt’s ownership, the Dodgers reached the postseason four times in eight seasons.

Image taken by brendan-c and used under the Creative Common License Agreement.


Categories : team
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Apr
25

How much is Josh Hamilton worth?

Posted by: juan | Comments View Comments

Rangers outfielder Josh Hamilton will be a free agent at the end of the season because the Rangers didn’t reach an agreement with him before Opening Day and because they don’t negotiate with potential free agents during the season. Now, with the start of the season underway and the start Hamilton is having, one has to wonder how much will he be worth on the open market.

Right now, Hamilton is one of the most feared hitters in the Majors and will be a highly sought after free agent. One of the teams that could give the Rangers a hard time with Hamilton this winter are the Yankees, among others. The Yankees have Nick Swisher as their everyday right fielder, but he’ll be a free agent at the end of the season and nobody knows if they will bring him back.

The problem with Hamilton could be his drug and alcohol abuse past and the fact that he had another alcohol-related episode this past off season. Teams interested in Hamilton might be wary about committing to a long-term deal with him in case he falls off track again. Although I think this won’t keep him away from signing a very lucrative deal next off season either with the Rangers or another team.

Hamilton said back in December that all he wants is to be treated fairly by the Rangers. “Treat me fair,” he said. “Don’t come here with no ridiculously low stuff. You know, just be fair…. Obviously I love it here in Texas, but it always comes down to getting treated fairly.”

Now, what does Hamilton consider fair? The Dodgers signed center fielder Matt Kemp to an eight-year, $160 million extension and to be honest I don’t think Hamilton should surpass that deal, especially the length. Kemp is three years younger than Hamilton but has one more year of Major League service. Besides that Kemp has only one DL stint in his seven year career while Hamilton could be considered “injury prone.”

Taking their numbers into account we have that Kemp is a career .297/.353/.506 hitter with 137 HR’s, 479 RBI’s and a 129 OPS+. Hamilton is a career .311/.368/.550 hitter with 126 HR’s, 443 RBI’s and a 137 OPS+. Definitely better numbers for Hamilton, but not eye popping. Hamilton’s career WARP (Wins Above Replacement Player) is 20.8 and Kemp’s 23.5. Hamilton’s career FRAA (Fielding Runs Above Average) is -8.6, although since 2010 he has recorded positive outcomes, and Kemp is a -18.7 career FRAA, which suggests that he should be moved to a corner outfield position like Hamilton.

If it were up to me, I wouldn’t give Hamilton more than seven-years and $154 million. And that, only if he continues to play the way he’s been playing this season and if he manages to stay healthy, and sober, throughout the season would I give him that deal.

Lets not forget that Hamilton will compete with Swisher (.254/.360/.468, 189 HR’s, 601 RBI’s, 13.9 FRAA and 22.7 WARP) and Andre Ethier (.291/.364/.482, 113 HR’s, 468 RBI’s, -14.0 FRAA and 16.7 WARP), among others, in the open market.

Image by Keith Allison under the Creative Commons License.

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Baseball is definitely a game of strategies, and most of the time, the team with the better strategy wins the game. When I say strategy I don’t mean just bunting, ordering a hit and run, squeeze play, etc. The strategy begins with assembling the team. If you don’t put a good team on the field you’re not going to win.

Also, by putting a team on the field I’m not talking about spending huge amounts of cash. I’m talking about analyzing what you have on your team, what you need, and optimizing your players’ best attributes in order to win ballgames. And that last part of the strategy is what were going to take a look at.

Usually later in games, managers face the decision on whether to use a pinch-hitter, or not, in order to potentially score runs. There’s no way to know beforehand if a hitter is going to get a hit, double, home run or if he’s going to strike out when you send him up to the plate as a pinch hitter. Even if you have a guy who is 10-10 against a specific pitcher that doesn’t mean he’s going to be 11-11 after that particular AB. It only means that the odds are in his favor, but after all they are odds.

Now, there are managers and General Managers that have embraced this new philosophy about advanced stats (sabermetrics), and are using them to gain an edge in the competition. When I mean edge, I don’t mean they are always going to win, I just mean that the odds will favor them slightly more. After all they are statistics, not facts.

If I were a manager, I would use all the information available to gain an edge over my opponent. It doesn’t matter what kind of information, every piece of information can be useful, and pinch-hitting is no different. For example, to maximize the use of a pinch-hitter you could use stats, unless you want to go with the player with the hot streak, or the one with better overall numbers.

Stats that could be used for pinch-hitting could variate depending on what you’re looking for. If you want your pinch hitter to reach base at the beginning of an inning go with the player with highest OBP, but if you’re trying to drive in a run there are a number of advanced stats that might come in handy.

Baseball Prospectus presents a stat called OBI% (Others Batted In Percentage), that is “the fraction of runners on base who were driven in during a batter’s plate appearances.” This stat won’t credit a hitter when hitting a home run (OBI = RBI – HR). With this stat you know how effective a player is when driving in runs.

Now, the guys from Baseball Prospectus take this stat a little bit further to give us the R1BI%, R2BI% and R3BI%. Each one of this stats measure the percentage of runs batted in from the different bases. This stat makes a ton of sense. For example, players with high R1BI% are all sluggers, players able to drive runners from first base.

Among the leaders in this department we have Curtis Granderson, Evan Longoria, Mark Teixeira and Adrian Beltre. To understand a little bit more this stats, I’m going to compare Granderson with Victor Martinez using 2011 data.

Granderson has a career .495 SLG and Martinez .469, also Granderson has 30 home runs more than Martinez in 598 less AB’s. Martinez has 533 career strikeouts in 4,279 AB’s while Granderson has 917 strikeouts in 3,681 AB’s. Martinez has also a higher career OBP (.370) than Granderson (.345). What you can take away from these stats is that Granderson is a better slugger than Martinez, but not as versatile as him.

That’s why Granderson is more likely to drive in a runner from first base (11.2%) than Martinez (6.5%), but when you analyze the percentage of runners driven home from second base Martinez (25%) is better than Granderson (17%), and when you compare them again in R3BI% the difference between them is even bigger, 54.9% for Martinez and 39.7% for Granderson.

Now, what does this tells you as a manager? It tells me that depending on where the runner is located I would go for a slugger with a chance to bring him home from first base with one swing, or a more versatile hitter that is more likely to bring him home from second or third base. Again, this is not a fact, this is just information being used in order to maximize the use of your resources, or, using stats to unfold a better strategy.

Lastly, the make-up of a player is very important for a pinch hitter as some younger players have a hard time waiting around all game and staying ready for potentially one at bat towards the end of the game. This is why most successful bench players are older player that have been around for a bit.

Image by Keith Allison under the Creative Commons License.

Categories : Top Stories, blog
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As some of you know, the guys from 2K Sports have this contest where you can receive $1 million for throwing the first perfect game in the MLB 2K game. This year, T.J. Brida was in the 14th inning of a perfect game when he gave up the first hit of the game to Pirates’ Jose Tabata according to Owen Good of Kotaku.com.

As Good points out, “the minimum requirement to advance is retiring 27 consecutive batters. Brida, using Roy Halladay of his beloved Phillies, sat down 40. But he didn’t get the last one.”

“Trust me, I was pretty pissed,” Brida told Good. Brida failed to score during 13 innings and that’s why he didn’t win the contest. On the website, there’s a nine minute video that begins in the bottom of the ninth and ends when Brida “punches the power button, and the screen goes dark.”

Image by SD Dirk under the Creative Commons License.

Categories : blog
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Apr
05

PRO Rumors 2012 Predictions

Posted by: Allan | Comments View Comments

The sweetest time of the year has come upon us with the start of Major League Baseball.  We hope that you all take time to visit your favorite ballpark in the coming days (we know we will).

In the spirit of predicting the future, here are PRO Rumors’ 2012 predictions:

Writer National League West
Allan Rockies
Ryan Diamondbacks
Juan Giants
Writer National League Central
Allan Cardinals
Ryan Brewers
Juan Reds
Writer National League East
Allan Marlins
Ryan Phillies
Juan Phillies
Writer NL Wild Card
Allan Dodgers, Reds
Ryan Giants, Marlins
Juan Rockies, Braves
Writer American League West
Allan Athletics
Ryan Angels
Juan Angels
Writer American League Central
Allan White Sox
Ryan Tigers
Juan Tigers
Writer American League East
Allan Red Sox
Ryan Yankees
Juan Yankees
Writer AL Wild Card
Allan Rays, Yankees
Ryan Red Sox, Rangers
Juan Rays, Rangers
Writer MVP (NL, AL)
Allan Buster Posey, Alex Rodriguez
Ryan Joey Votto, Albert Pujols
Juan Joey Votto, Miguel Cabrera
Writer Cy Young (NL, AL)
Allan CC Sabathia, Roy Halladay
Ryan Josh Johnson, Justin Verlander
Juan Matt Cain, Felix Hernandez
Writer RoY (NL, AL)
Allan Bryce Harper, Yu Darvish
Ryan Devin Mesoraco, Yu Darvish
Juan Bryce Harper, Yoenis Cespedes

Do you agree? Disagree? Leave a comment and let us know what you think.

Image by Sean Winters under the Creative Commons License.

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Mar
30

PRO Rumors Customer Survey

Posted by: Allan | Comments View Comments

Hi all,

With baseball season coming up, we’d like to poll our readers regarding our current features and see if you have suggestions regarding future features.  We have a really short survey and we’re hoping that you can take less than 5 minutes to help us out.  Thanks!

Click here to take survey

Allan

Categories : PRO Rumors
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Jon Hunton who was the closer of the year in Venezuela,reached out to PRO Rumors earlier this week and explained that he is looking for new representation. Hunton, 29, had a strong 2011 season both in the summer and the winter leagues respectively.

As part of the Grand Prairie AirHogs (The American Association of Independent Professional Basebal) Hunton was named “Reliever of the Year” in 2011 (link here). Hunton went 7-2 with a 1.77 ERA, 25 saves, 47 SO, 0.4 HR/9, 3.5 BB/9 and 8.3 SO/9 in 51.0 innings.

During the winter, Hunton was named “Closer for the Year” again (link here), but this time in Venezuela as part of the Caribes de Anzoategui. He was 2-4 with 3.16 ERA, 18 saves, 0.3 HR/9, 3.5 BB/9 and 7.0 SO/9 in 31.1 games. Then he was selected as a replacement for Tiburones de la Guaira in the Final and was Francisco Rodriguez’s setup man. He also represented Venezuela in the Caribbean Series .

While Hunton was in Venezuela he left a great impression among the other teams, players and the media. He was one of the first foreign players to report and stayed until the last game of the Caribbean Series, his commitment with the Caribes organization and the rest of the league was undeniable.

I had the opportunity to watch Hunton pitch in Venezuela at least a dozen times this winter. The first thing you notice about him is his height, Hunton is 6′9” with a fluid delivery. He’s not a flame thrower, but he will keep hitters off balance with his slider, which has nice movement. Also, his 3/4 delivery makes all of his pitches move. I believe he is a great athlete in good physical condition (he used to play basketball in College), he is also a strong competitor and he definitely showed that in Venezuela.

Most of you don’t have an idea of how hard it is to pitch in winter ball. Fans are harsh with their players and they will let you know when you’re not doing your job right. You have to face strong competitors, not only young Minor Leaguers, but also Major Leaguers as well. There’s also a lot of competitiveness here but Hunton cruised throughout the season without a sweat. This league has chewed up and spit out countless top MLB prospects, but Hunton wasn’t one of them.

Hunton was drafted five times during the June Amateur Draft, the last one in 2004 by the Chicago Cubs in the eleventh round. During his eight years as a professional player Hunton is a career 34-27 with 3.18 ERA, 0.5 HR/9, 4.0 BB/9 and 8.9 SO/9 in 453.1 innings. In 2010, he was 6-6 with a 3.57 ERA, 0.7 HR/9, 3.6 BB/9 and 5.7 SO/9 in 63.0 innings for the A’s Triple-A team.

last offseason we had a Q & A with Hunton. Make sure to check that out if you haven’t.

Having the right representation can sometimes be the key to getting that tryout or invite to Spring Training that can open the door to a big league career. If you wish to contact Hunton you can write or follow him on Twitter (@Big_Jon_Hunton).

Image by Edixon Gamez of LiderEnDeportes.com.

Categories : Agent, blog
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Ken Gurnick of MLB.com is reporting that the Los Angeles Dodgers will be sold to the Magic Johnson and Steve Kasten led group.

Dennis K. Berman of the Wall Street Journal adds that Johnson and Steve Kasten bought the Dodgers for a record $2.15 BILLION!!!!! The deal is set to close no later than April 30th and is reportedly an all cash deal. McCourt has requested all one dollar bills for payment.

Bill Shaikin of the LA Times notes that the deal includes the parkinglots being sold. But McCourt and the new owners will jointly develop the surrounding land. This does not mean that the parkinglots will be developed, it is only an “if” (ok we all know they will at some point), but the new ownership will have veto powers to any ideas McCourt may have.

The Dodgers ownership group would be called Guggenheim Baseball Partners and run by Stan Kasten.

Back in November, McCourt reached an agreement with MLB to sell the Dodgers. MLB was allowed to approve a handful of owners, but ultimately McCourt was allowed to select who he sold the team to.

Here are a few statements from individuals involved in this historic sale.

Frank McCourt: “This agreement with Guggenheim reflects both the strength and future potential of the Los Angeles Dodgers, and assures that the Dodgers will have new ownership with deep local roots, which bodes well for the Dodgers, its fans and the Los Angeles community.  We are delighted that this group will continue the important work we have started in the community, fulfilling our commitment to building 50 Dream Fields and helping with the effort to cure cancer.”

Magic:“I am thrilled to be part of the historic Dodger franchise and intend to build on the fantastic foundation laid by Frank McCourt as we drive the Dodgers back to the front page of the sports section in our wonderful community of Los Angeles.”

The Los Angeles Dodgers and Frank McCourt today announced an agreement under which Guggenheim Baseball Management LLC (“GBM”) will acquire the Los Angeles Dodgers for $2 billion upon completion of the closing process.  The purchasing group includes Mark R. Walter as its controlling partner, as well as Earvin “Magic” Johnson, Peter Guber, Stan Kasten, Bobby Patton and Todd Boehly.  Mr. McCourt and certain affiliates of the purchasers will also be forming a joint venture, which will acquire the Chavez Ravine property for an additional $150 million.

Image taken by brendan-c and used under the Creative Common License Agreement.

Categories : Top Stories
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