Days, Dollars, and the DL

In the first of what will be a depressingly long series titled “What went wrong 2005” we’ll take a look at the injuries the Tigers have sustained.

While the Tigers have a higher payroll then most of their AL Central counterparts, their record is better only than the Royals. However, this season is a prime example of A)Why expectations shouldn’t be set by looking at dollars spent, and B)The value of young cheap players.

Below is a table showing the days and dollars that the Tigers have lost to the disabled list this year.

Now the Tigers payroll has been reported to be between $69-$75 million this year (depending on when you look and such). In any more than a quarter of the Tigers payroll has been to players who haven’t been contributing.

Now in all fairness, there was very little expected out of Bobby Higginson, Colby Lewis, Gary Knotts, and Fernando Vina this season. As a matter of fact, if not for the 60 day DL, the Tigers probably wouldn’t have been paying for Knotts or Lewis. In the case of Higginson and Vina, the players probably would have both been released but in each case it was cheaper to retain the players and let the insurance kick in.

On the other hand, the two free agent signings who were expected to help improve the team, Magglio Ordonez and Troy Percival, have combined to miss an entire season. (Maggs salary came from ESPN.com, I don’t think that’s the correct number, but it’s what I had). Also, the Tigers received diminished production from the shortstop position with Carlos Guillen ailing.

Now am I making excuses? Sure I am. The Tigers injuries did have a negative impact on the team. And these are just the guys on the DL. Dmitri Young’s various ailments have sidelined him at various times. Then there is Carlos Pena, who was making $2.575 million but spent 2 1/2 months in Toledo.

But the lesson here is that aging free agents can be a risky proposition. Ordonez isn’t ancient, but the days of expecting him to play everyday are probably gone. Carlos Guillen and Rondell White have had a history of being injury prone. Troy Percival and Bobby Higginson were both pretty close to the end of their careers coming into this year.

Injuries happen to every team, and more expensive injuries happen as well. The Tigers need more talent, and they’ve found some in the minors. But they are still more than one or two players away from being a playoff team, so they will probably need to add additional talent through free agency this year. Once again unfortunately the Tigers will probably be in a position where they have to overpay for free agents that other teams are hesitant to sign. And once again they will probably be susceptible to injury.

How ’bout them Hens

Congratulations to Larry Parrish and the Toledo Mud Hens and their 2005 International League Championship. Toledo completed the sweep of the Indianapolis Indians at Victory Field last night. (Photo Credit: Phil Tesar/Toledo Mud Hens)

Marcus Thames, Jason Karmuth, Jason Grilli, and Mark Woodyard have already been recalled (with Bobby Higginson moving to the 60 day DL). Kenny Baugh probably would have been recalled but was experiencing stiffness. I am surprised to not see Ryan Rayburn among the call-ups.

Touch ’em all

After a couple of weeks of, I’m charged up and ready to go. Thanks for sticking around.

  • Lynn Henning’s article yesterday has a number of quotes from Ivan Rodriguez. Essentially Rodriguez told a number of reporters that he is frustrated by the losing. I view this as a good thing. Nobody should be satisfied with the losing and they should want more.

    He also spoke about taking walks saying:

    “I hate walks,” Rodriguez said Saturday, to which most Tigers fans would respond: “No kidding.”

    “I’m aggressive,” he continued. “I’ve been in baseball 15 years and I’m going to continue being aggressive. I’m going to walk (when?), but for me to get a walk, that’s a hard thing to do because I’m a very aggressive hitter. I hit the ball hard pretty much all the time because I’m aggressive. If I go over there to just take walks, I might not produce the way I can produce.”

    I have no problem with Pudge being agressive, but he is sporting an OBA under .300 (and inexplicably has been holding down the #3 spot in the order). He is swinging at pitches that he can’t hit hard and making more outs in the process. His power numbers are down a little bit, and some regression isn’t expected out of a catcher at this point in his career. It’s the fact that his OBA is 50 points lower than his career average that is most troubling.

    He went on to bash the bullpen trades, which is really old news at this point. The Tigers problem isn’t the lack of a closer – although with the trades the talent in the bullpen has been depleted making it tougher to get to the closer.

    What I would have really liked to have seen is for Rodriguez to take some the responsibility. His offensive performance has been below his standards – and below what the team needs him to contribute. I’m not going to bring up his contract and say he’s not worth what they are paying him, because not a lot can be done about that. But if he wants out because he wants to win, maybe he should have taken a one or two year deal from a team that was closer to contention. The Tigers made a serious effort to add talent last year, and they did manage some upgrades. But they also are still in a position to have to overpay for guys who don’t view this as a great destination.

    I want Pudge back next year, and the Tigers need him back. Even at his lower performance this year, they’d be hard pressed to find a better backstop. I’d just like to see Rodriguez share some of the responsiblity.

  • Jeremey, Justin, and Joel. Those three constitute what many hope will be a very bright spot in the Tigers future. Unfortunately none of the 3 are throwing right now. Zumaya has been shut down for the season with a tired arm, Verlander is just doing bullpen work due to shoulder tightness, and Bonderman is on the shelf indefinitely with elbow problems. Combine those injuries with the Tigers recent track record with Kyle Sleeth, Matt Anderson, Kenny Baugh, Justin Thompson, Rob Henkel, Nate Cornejo, etc. and it seems like the Tigers have a serious problem keeping pitching prospects healthy.

    Well, USS Mariner took a look at all major league teams to find out how they fared in keeping pitchers healthy. Here is the link to the summary, and here is the link to the Tigers page. It turns out that the Tigers are actually in the middle of the pack according to this research with 22% of pitching prospects from 1995-2004 suffereing a major arm injury.

    While I think he missed a couple surgeries (Henkel in particular) the research is pretty impressive. It also showed that the A’s pitching prospects never get injured, and Mariner prospects are most likely to be injured.

  • As for Bonderman’s injury in particular, there are various reports. Will Carroll indicates two things. First, that his mechanics were altered in his first start after the line drive. And second, that the elbow problems may be attributed to him learning a circle change. I’ll continue to be nervous, but I’ll console myself in that it is probably not a bad thing that this will limit his innings this year.
  • As for the recent slide the Tigers have been on, how do you cope? For me, it isn’t so bad. I get to take my 4 year old (and this time the whole family) to a game. He wants the Tigers to win, but he is so enamored with the experience the final score can take a back seat. And for me, I get to watch my boy (and to a lesser extent my 2 year old princess) learn to love the game I love. We were in attendance last night, and made our way down to the third base line before the game to get some autographs.

    In the process, I gained a whole new appreciation for John McDonald. My son had his ball and pen out, but was pretty shy. Without even being asked, McDonald came over to him and started talking to him. Billy was too shy to say anything, but John made a point of paying quite a bit of attention to him. While my son didn’t say anything at the time, he sure did talk about it later on. There is no better way for someone to win over a parent than to be nice to their kid. No matter what John McDonald does on the field. The Billfer family will be pulling for him.

    Also, credit goes out to Placido Polanco, Chris Shelton, and Curtis Granderson who spent quite a bit of time signing right before the game. I understand that players get pestered all the time, and they get put in a tough spot. I’ve seen fans yell at players after they spent ten minutes signing, just because they didn’t get their piece signed. But it is so much fun to see guys that appreciate the fact they are professional baseball players.

If I must

I hate when bloggers apologize for not blogging for an extended period of time. However, I’m sorry that I haven’t posted this week. I’d like to blame it on work, or other committments, but I can’t. I just don’t have anything to write about right now. The team is fading, the pitching is nonexistent, and even some of the recent bright spots are returning to old ways (6 K’s for Carlos Pena in the last 2 games). And even September call-ups aren’t that exciting. The Tigers are waiting for Toledo to finish the playoffs before raiding the Mud Hens roster. In the meantime the Tigers recalled Doug Creek, and there isn’t much to analyze with the recall of Creek. So I apologize to those of you who came here all week looking for anything.

The roundup

Various items of interest to Tiger fans…

  • John Sickels always interesting and informative Minor League Ball has a prospect retrospective on the resurgent Carlos Pena. Given the way things have turned out, it is easy to forget that he was the centerpiece of the Jeff Weaver trade.
    Promoted to Double-A Tulsa in 2000, he broke out with an excellent .299/.414/.533 season, 28 homers, 101 walks, 108 strikeouts in 529 at-bats. He improved his walk rate, cut his strikeouts, and was an all-around devastating hitter. I gave him the rare and coveted pure Grade A rating, and rated him as the Number Seven prospect in baseball.

    Incidentally, if you ask Mrs. Billfer “Who’s your Tiger?” she will enthusiastically answer “Carlos Pena – he rocks”

  • Speaking of the minors, Baseball America lists the rosters for the Arizona Fall League. The Tigers are set to be represented by Preston Larrison, Adam Peterson, Humberto Sanchez, Tony Giarratano, Don Kelly, and Curtis Granderson. However, Danny Knobler reports that Granderson will be headed to the Domican Winter League instead.
  • The Toledo Mud Hens clinched a playoff spot tonight with a 10-2 victory over Louisville. Zach Miner pitched six innings and gave up both runs along with 4 walks, 4 hits, and 4 strikeouts. Marcus Thames homered.
  • While Miner was effective for Toledo, the other pitcher acquired in the Farnsworth trade, Roman Colon had a very strong outing in relief for Detroit. In 3 1/3 innings he allowed 3 hits and no walks while striking out 5. Considering that he went longer than starter Sean Douglass, it maybe time to give Colon a shot in the rotation.
  • Colon was available to pitch tonight because it appears that Jeremy Bonderman will not miss his turn on Monday. Apparently the wrist is doing well. I just hope that he is healthy enough that he doesn’t alter his delivery to compensate for pain in his wrist. I wouldn’t want to see him open himself up to an injury.
  • And finally, Alan Trammell who going into Saturday night’s game had never won in Fenway as a manager. Tonight he took one for the team and got himself tossed. I tried looking to see if there is a “manager of record” or if manager wins is even an official stat. I couldn’t find anything, so I don’t know if Trammell or Gibson would get credit for the win. Interestingly enough, Gibby was given the reigns after Trammell was tossed. Wouldn’t that normally go to bench coach Bruce Fields?

Craig Monroe and the RBI

If you’re interested, I have a piece about Craig Monroe’s RBI total over at Motown Sports.

Also, while the Tigers lost tonight it was a heck of an effort. After two rough games to close out the homestand, they went into Boston and played the World Champs very tough. Of course I’d have rather had the win, but the team played well. Most troubling is the pitching’s inability to prevent runs. At least the bullpen was solid tonight, and for the second time this season Jason Johnson struck out a hitter and it resulted in a run.

There have been better days

Last night I was excited. I was going to a Tiger game for the first time in a month. The team was riding a 5 game win streak with their ace taking the mound, and it was a beautiful night. And then the game started.

Jeremy Bonderman wasn’t ace like, and the Tigers offense sputtered. The baserunners they did get were cut down with double plays while Oakland just kept hitting the ball out of the park.

Then there was that horribly loud “thwack” sound that emanated from Bonderman’s forearm as it was struck by a line drive. After hearing it, and watching Bonderman writhe in pain I couldn’t help but see the next several seasons flash before my eyes. As a Tiger fan, Jeremy Bonderman may be the singular most important ray of hope the organization has seen in a dozen years. Which is why it is understandable that I actually felt a little ill.

Fortunately, the early read of the x-ray is that it is only a bruise. I’m guessing that internist Michael Workings did the initial read at the stadium. Hopefully it will remain negative after a radiologist reads it today, and a subsequent MRI.

The Tigers played a stinker last night. It happens, and is easier to stomach when it happens amidst a string of pretty good baseball. The real test will be to see how the team plays in its next several games. Is the hot streak over, or was this just a bump in the road?

Other notes and thoughts from the game:

  • An umpire problem that occurred at the same time as Bonderman’s injury caused an excruciatingly long delay. The delay was made more frustrating by a complete lack of updates in the stadium as to the nature of the delay, and no activity other than players warming up. An announcement would have been nice, as would utilizing the big fancy scoreboard to show something.
  • Curtis Granderson’s homer saving catch looked pretty spectacular from our seats. I’m glad to see him getting regular playing time.
  • Speaking of playing time, it is basically impossible now to keep Carlos Pena out of the starting lineup. I didn’t want to see Shelton lose at-bats, but Pena has provided all the scoring the last two nights. Last night’s homer was majestic to say the least.
  • Finally, while not a game note, this is fairly significant. Rondell White will undergo surgery to fix his rotator cuff and end his season. According to John Lowe, Mike Illitch called Rondell to say that he wanted White back next year. Now I’m a big White fan, and I love what he’s done for and with the Tigers. But I just don’t see how from a roster perspective this will work out. It may mean that the Tigers are looking to move Craig Monroe. It may mean that the Tigers will rely on Brandon Inge and Chris Shelton to handle back up catcher duties.

    In any case it was a classy thing for Illitch to do for a classy player. It was also the second time that Illitch has gotten involved with the team this week.

I just don’t know

The Tigers are confusing me right now, and I just don’t know what to make of what’s happening.

First, there is the whole Carlos Pena thing. As Jeff asked, what is going on here? My guess is this is simply a hot streak. Of course he won’t hit multiple home runs every game, just like he wasn’t going to continue to be the .180 hitter he was when he was demoted. What’s most frustrating is that this is another glimpse at just how good Pena can be. The trouble is that all these glimpses seem to come in August.

Now I don’t subscribe to the theory that, “he only does it when it doesn’t mean anything.” Because at least for Pena, it does mean something. He’s essentially in a “walk year” so he is playing minimally for his next contract. Not to mention the guy is trying to earn playing time. He has pressure on him.

Now a couple days ago I said there was no way that he would be with the Tiger next year given his contract status. With all of one more game under his belt, I’m starting to question that a little bit. What if Pena really has figured something out? What if his time in Toledo has helped him the way that Inge’s demotion in 2003 helped Brandon? Could the Tigers end up regretting this move the way Minnesota regrets non-tendering David Ortiz? A one year deal for $2 million might be a gamble, but it wouldn’t be crippling to the organization. The question is whether or not you want to pay that much for a left handed bat off the bench/spot starter because I don’t want to see ABs taken away from Chris Shelton. I’m still on the side of letting him walk, but I’m willing to consider the other options.

In any case, Pena has been a big part of the 3 games he’s started so far, and regardless of what happens next year he’s helping the team win now. (without compromising Shelton’s playing time)

The other thing confusing me is the Cameron Maybin situation. John Lowe is reporting that under the direction of Mike Illitch the Tigers have pulled not only their $3.2 million offer, but the previous offer of $2.75 million as well.

On Monday morning, Goldberg said he spoke on the phone with Tigers attorney John Westhoff. During that call, Goldberg said, Westhoff told him Ilitch wouldn’t authorize a deal for $3.2 million — which Maybin was willing to accept — or the $2.75 million the Tigers had offered a few weeks previously. The highest Ilitch would go, Goldberg said he was told, was “in the low $2 millions.”

While classes have started at Southern, it isn’t too late for Maybin to enroll so he still has some leverage – but why turn down that much money? Of course I’m not in the negotiations and everything is speculation, but I have to believe that the kid is getting some very bad advice. I understand wanting more money than what is slotted given the circumstances, but the Tigers came through with a suitable offer. Now his advisors appear to have lost out on three-quarters of a million of guaranteed money as well. I still believe a deal will get done, it’s just too bad that Maybin lost out on a year of development in the process.

Miscellaney

Another great week for the Tigers, just when things looked there darkest. This team has a way of bouncing back when it seems like they are going in the tank. Here’s hoping they keep it going…

  • With their recent string of one run wins, the Tigers have improved their record to 32-30 in games decided by less than two runs. In one run games, their record now stands at 18-20.
  • I don’t know if you’re familiar with Dougs Stats, but it is a website that has various baseball statistics. They are your typical stats, but he has a section for The Last 20 games. A quick check shows that the Tigers are tied for the fewest errors in the AL over the last 20 games with 7. The Tigers still haven’t been walking much, where they are second to last. But fortunately they have cut down the strikeouts and have the 3rd fewest over that timespan.

    On the pitching side they have struck out the fewest hitters over the last 20 games, and allowed the second most home runs which goes along ways towards explaining and ERA of 5.18.

    As far as individual acomplishments, Placido Polanco has more hits than anyone else in the AL over the last 20 games. Chris Shelton has the 5th most strikeouts in the AL, but also the third most walks with 14 (which means he has roughly 1/6 of the teams walks over the last 20 games).

    There are more Tigers on the various leaderboards, and it’s just a fun site to peruse. Dougs Stats – I recommend it.

  • Another great way to spend a lot of time is looking at Fan Graphs. They have presented a ton of information for each player in a graphical format. For example, in the case of Brandon Inge you can see his dropoff in batting average this season:

    But then you can also see that about the time his batting average started dipping, he started hitting a lot more ground balls and fewer line drives and flyballs.

    This is just one example, and they have a ton more charts. Good times for baseball geeks.

  • As for Carlos Pena, it is great to see him hitting the ball like he did against Toronto. The unfortunate thing is that there is pretty much no way the Tigers will keep him, or be able to trade him for much. Pena is making $2.6 million this year – which is quite a bit to pay for someone who spent half the year in the minors. Normally, you’d think that would work to the Tigers advantage when it comes time to offer a new contract. Unfortunately, the CBA dictates that the Tigers offer must be at least 80% of the previous year’s contract. So the Tigers offer would have to be at least $2.08 million which is probably more than they’d want to spend.

    As for trading Pena, the team that acquired him would be subject to the same salary rules. Also, the the other teams will know that Pena is most likely going to be non-tendered, meaning they’d have a shot at him anyways – at a much lower price.

Maybin negotiations

The Free Press is reporting that the Tigers and first round pick Cameron Maybin are still over a million dollars apart. What’s surprising is where the Tigers offer and Maybin’s demands are slotted. The common belief was that the Tigers were offering about $2 million – which is a reasonable number for a number ten pick. According to Baseball America #7 selection Troy Tulowitzki received $2.3 million, and number 11 selection Andrew McCutchen received a $1.9 million deal.

According to the report, the Tigers have offered $2.75 million. That falls in between what the number 4 ($2.975 million) and 5 ($2.45 million) picks received.

However, Maybin was rated among the top players in the draft and is asking to be paid like one of them. According to the Freep report he is asking for $4 million which is substatially more than the $3.4 million that #3 pick Jeff Clement signed for. The top two picks, Justin Upton and Alex Gordon have yet to sign.

I don’t see the Tigers increasing their offer by more than a quarter million so for a deal to get done, Maybin and his advisors are going to have to be more reasonable in their demands. That said, I don’t see a high schooler walking away from $3 million to go to college.

This ain’t right

The title is a quote from color man Rod Allen at some point during the top of the 10th inning last night as the Tiger bullpen disintegrated. In the process a game that the Tigers had in control turned into a blow out. And it was set-up by a decision by Alan Trammell that didn’t work out.

Nate Robertson faced one of the most formidable offenses in baseball, and held them to two hits on 90 pitches through 8 innings. The offense scratched out a run in the 8th inning to give the team the lead with 3 outs to go. I remember thinking between innings about what move I’d prefer to see at that point – and not really coming up with a clear cut answer. On one hand you have a pitcher who has been stifling and efficient. But, he also benefitted from all of the really hard hit balls that night being hit right at people, and the last two outs of the 8th inning were caught on the warning track. His pitch count was low, but how many times can you count on him to get out hitters of the ilk of David Ortiz and Manny Ramirez (who both were due up the next inning)?

You also have a fairly unproven closer who has been both shaky and dominant at various points. This time of year is also a time to evaluate whether or not Rodney will have the stuff and make-up to be a closer. What better situation than protecting a one run lead against the 2-3-4 hitters?

At the time I remember thinking to myself that no matter what decision Trammell makes, it better work out because he’ll get killed for it if they lost.

Trammell decided to go with his closer Rodney who gave up the tying homer to Big Papi – and the subsequent bullpen implosion in the 10th pretty much sealed the Tigers fate.

Trammell didn’t make a bad decision last night. He made a decision that didn’t work out, but it wasn’t a bad decision. It was a decision that a manager of a good team could and would make without being questioned. The Tigers need to find out if Rodney can be a closer, and those are the types of situations he needs to face. And Rodney didn’t lose the game, he blew the save. It was the inability of the remainder of the bullpen to keep the game within reach in the 10th inning that ultimately cost them.

And before you jump on Trammell too much, look at the bullpen that he has been dealt at this point. Half of them weren’t even with the club at the beginning of the season. They have a hodge podge of journeymen arms and guys on the wrong edge of the prospect spectrum.

All that being said, I can’t help but wonder if the game was tied going into the 9th, if Nate Robertson heads out there again. I have a suspicion that he would have as Trammell tried to get him the win. If he was managing for his pitcher’s stats instead of the teams record, then I would have a problem with the decision because I want the guy out there who Trammell thinks has the best shot at getting 3 outs.

A sad, yet somewhat interesting note about the game is that the Tigers became only the 4th team to hit an extra inning grand slam and lose.

For another reasonable take, check out Sam at Roar of the Tigers.