Lukewarm Stove Season Begins

A little roster shuffling. RHP Jay Witasick has been released. RHP Steve Watkins, RHP Ricky Stone, and OF Kerry Robinson have been outrighted to Portland. Witasick was useful when healthy, Watkins didn’t show much in his brief time with the big club, and I have no idea what Stone and Robinson were doing on a team that hoped to contend. Robinson did lead the Padres with 11 stolen bases.

Elsewhere, the playoffs continue. Some teams won, some others lost. You can probably find out which are which by visiting one of those links over on the right.

Have a nice day.

Irritating

The NC Times has an article suggesting that the Padres aren’t going to be real active this winter. A few open questions:

  1. Wasn’t Petco supposed to bring additional revenue that would be re-invested in the team?
  2. Didn’t 3 million customers help reach the goal of #1?
  3. Whose fault is it that Jeff Cirillo is still owed $3.425M?
  4. Whose fault is it that Ryan Klesko and Phil Nevin have no-trade clauses in their contracts?
  5. Why does everyone think speed, in and of itself, is necessary to field a winner at Petco? How about outfielders who can cover the gaps and make throws strong enough to keep baserunners honest? So help me, if Kerry Robinson (or a reasonable facsmile thereof) breaks camp with the Pads next year, I’m going to scream.
  6. If the Padres are so damn poor, then why did they spend an extra $250k to watch David Wells get pounded in his final start at Arizona?

The U-T pretty much corroborates this assessment. Joey Gathright? Yawn. Where are Herb Washington, Donnell Nixon, and Cedric Landrum when you need them?

I hope this is a smokescreen. The Padres need to do something about the outfield situation. And they need to either go out and get a #5 starter or give someone in the organization a legitimate shot at the job. And please, no more Rule V draft.

I think a lot of us were hoping for big things in the off-season. But now it’s looking like more of the same: Try to get rid of bad contracts and hope that the bad contracts we receive in return don’t stink quite as much.

Can you feel the excitement?

Sean Burroughs: Just What Does the Future Hold?

Before we get started talking about Burroughs, I need to mention a couple things:

  • Jon Weisman over at Dodger Thoughts has invited folks around the baseball blogosphere to comment on his team. I grew up a Dodger fan, so I didn’t really have anything mean to say; however, I did thank them for contributing to the Giants’ demise.
  • Final win shares have been posted over at Bryan Donovan’s rockin’ site. What do the following guys have in common: Barry Bonds, Albert Pujols, Scott Rolen, Adrian Beltre, Bobby Abreu, Jim Edmonds, J.D. Drew. They are the only players in MLB this year to finish with more win shares than Mark Loretta.

On to our topic of the day…

One question I’ve been asked a lot this year is, “What’s up with Sean Burroughs? Wasn’t he supposed to be developing power? Is that ever going to happen, or is he just going to keep slapping the ball to left field?”

It is a good question. First, let me say that I hope he develops power. At the very least, he needs to turn on pitches every now and then to keep the defense honest. Watching Burroughs hit soft liners down the line in left that get caught with ease isn’t a lot of fun. If he could drive the ball with authority to right and right-center (as he started to do at the end of the 2003 season), he’d get more of the opposite field shots to fall. Interestingly, an increase in Burroughs’ power could actually lead to an increase in his batting average as well. There really is no downside to his learning to use the entire field and hit the ball with more authority. Home runs? Maybe, maybe not. But there’s no reason a guy like Burroughs shouldn’t be hitting 40+ doubles a year, especially with the spacious outfield of Petco Park. I’m hoping that the regression in power development this year is at least partly due to his placement at the top of the order, where maybe he downplayed the need to hit for power too much. Speculation on my part, but that is the hope. Burroughs still is a strong kid, and I think he’s capable of more than what he’s shown. How much more remains to be seen.

Okay, enough philosophy. How about some comps? I didn’t set up exact criteria for this one, but the general idea was to find hitters who showed only modest power in their first full big-league season and who regressed in their second. The good news is that most of these guys bounced back and had strong follow-up seasons and/or careers.

First, our hero:

Age  AB   BA  OBP  SLG BB/PA  ISO XB/H
 22 517 .286 .352 .402  .078 .116 .270
 23 523 .298 .348 .365  .056 .067 .179

(Note, we’re using the simplified BB/(BB+AB) for BB/PA.)

And now some folks who had similar starts to their careers:

Edgardo Alfonzo
Age  AB   BA  OBP  SLG BB/PA  ISO XB/H
 21 335 .278 .301 .382  .035 .104 .237
 22 368 .261 .304 .345  .064 .084 .219
 23 518 .315 .391 .432  .108 .118 .239

Power bounced back a little in third year, other aspects of game improved dramatically. Continued power development following year, peaking at .324/.425/.542 at age 26. Elite offensive infielder before injuries hit.

Craig Biggio
Age  AB   BA  OBP  SLG BB/PA  ISO XB/H
 23 443 .257 .336 .402  .100 .144 .316
 24 555 .276 .342 .348  .087 .072 .196
 25 546 .295 .358 .374  .088 .079 .193

Showed a good deal more power than Burroughs in his first full season. Regressed the following season and held at roughly that level for two more years before busting out with .287/.373/.474 at age 27. Peaked at .309/.415/.501, at age 31. Generally good for 15-20 homers and 35+ doubles in his prime and beyond.

Carlos Febles
Age  AB   BA  OBP  SLG BB/PA  ISO XB/H
 23 453 .256 .336 .411  .094 .155 .353
 24 339 .257 .345 .316  .096 .059 .172
 25 292 .236 .291 .363  .070 .127 .275

Recovered some power in third year, but the rest of his game deteriorated. Injuries and dwindling offensive performance likely mean that his rookie season was his peak.

Julio Franco
Age  AB   BA  OBP  SLG BB/PA  ISO XB/H
 24 560 .273 .306 .388  .046 .114 .261
 25 658 .286 .331 .348  .061 .062 .160
 26 636 .288 .343 .381  .078 .093 .235

Drop in power from first to second season was very similar to that of Burroughs, and Franco was, um, two years older. Yeah, that’s it. Two years. Recovered some power in his third season, went on to have a fine career as a high average hitter with occasional power. Peaked at .319/.406/.510, at age 35ish.

Carlos Guillen
Age  AB   BA  OBP  SLG BB/PA  ISO XB/H
 24 288 .257 .324 .396  .089 .139 .324
 25 456 .259 .333 .355  .104 .096 .254
 26 475 .261 .326 .394  .088 .133 .315

Injuries and Safeco Field depressed his numbers early on, before he blossomed at age 27 with a .318/.379/.542 season.

Julio Lugo
Age  AB   BA  OBP  SLG BB/PA  ISO XB/H
 24 420 .283 .346 .431  .081 .148 .311
 25 513 .263 .326 .372  .082 .109 .244
 26 322 .261 .322 .388  .080 .127 .286

Best season was rookie season. Hit 40 doubles this year, at age 28. Jury is still out on Lugo.

Rafael Palmeiro
Age  AB   BA  OBP  SLG BB/PA  ISO XB/H
 23 580 .307 .349 .436  .061 .129 .303
 24 559 .275 .354 .374  .101 .098 .227
 25 598 .319 .361 .468  .063 .149 .288

Likely Hall of Famer. It is unreasonable to expect anyone to develop along these lines. First basemen who post a 728 OPS at age 24 simply don’t go on to hit 549 home runs. Peaked at .324/.420/.630, at age 34.

Shannon Stewart
Age  AB   BA  OBP  SLG BB/PA  ISO XB/H
 24 516 .279 .377 .417  .115 .138 .306
 25 608 .304 .371 .411  .088 .107 .222
 26 583 .319 .363 .518  .060 .199 .371

Showed more power than Burroughs initially, rebounded strong in third season, his best so far. Consistent .300 hitter with 35+ doubles and double-digit homers.

B.J. Surhoff
Age  AB   BA  OBP  SLG BB/PA  ISO XB/H
 22 395 .299 .350 .423  .084 .124 .271
 23 493 .245 .292 .318  .059 .073 .215
 24 436 .248 .287 .339  .054 .092 .241

Didn’t regain his power stroke until after moving out from behind the plate full time. Peaked at .308/.347/.492, at age 34. Consistent .280+ hitter with 30+ doubles and 15+ homers. Never walked 50 times in a single season.

And going a little old school:

Ryne Sandberg
Age  AB   BA  OBP  SLG BB/PA  ISO XB/H
 22 635 .271 .312 .372  .054 .101 .262
 23 633 .261 .316 .351  .075 .090 .224
 24 636 .314 .367 .520  .076 .206 .370

Experienced only a slight drop in power from his first year to his second. Bounced back in a big way the following season. Peaked at .306/.354/.559, at age 30. Consistent .290+ hitter with 25-30 doubles and home runs.

Dave Martinez
Age  AB   BA  OBP  SLG BB/PA  ISO XB/H
 22 459 .292 .372 .418  .110 .126 .254
 23 447 .255 .313 .351  .078 .096 .219
 24 361 .274 .324 .382  .070 .108 .263

Weird career. A 790 OPS at age 22 from a center fielder doesn’t suggest a future fourth outfielder. On the other hand, Martinez did end up with 1599 career hits, so it’s hard to be too critical. Peaked at .318/.393/.468, at age 31.

So what do we take home from all of this? A few things:

  • It’s way too soon to give up on Burroughs
  • Some guys don’t really get it going until their 30s
  • Injuries happen and can have a devastating effect on a career

I guess none of this is terribly revealing, but it should give us some hope that Burroughs will get things together. As always, the questions are to what level and how quickly. The good news is that of the guys we looked at, only Febles really tanked. Lugo is in a holding pattern, and cats like Franco and Surhoff didn’t get dangerous till their 30s. Palmeiro’s development is freakish. I suppose the most realistic we can be in our optimism is to hope that Burroughs develops along the lines of Alfonzo, Biggio, and Sandberg. It’s admittedly difficult to imagine Burroughs having that type of career based on what he’s done to this point, but remember that all of those guys were once in the same position. There are no guarantees, but it’s comforting to see that there at least are some reasonable analogs for Burroughs who went on to have fine big-league careers.

Large Hit Men Make Easy Targets

I’m getting tired of this issue, but one wonders what Tony Gwynn ever did to offend the "objective" analysts over at Baseball Prospectus. Memo to anyone who cares: Ichiro Suzuki is a fanstastic ballplayer, but he’s still not in Gwynn’s class. It’s already been done, but someone in that roundtable asked for a side-by-side of their top four seasons. Knock yourselves out (ranked by OPS):

          Suzuki              Gwynn
    Yr  BA OBP SLG OPS  Yr  BA OBP SLG  OPS
#1  04 371 414 454 868  94 394 454 568 1022
#2  01 350 381 457 838  87 370 447 511  958
#3  03 321 388 425 813  97 372 409 547  956
#4  02 312 352 436 788  95 368 404 484  888

Again, Suzuki’s breaking of George Sisler’s single-season hit record is a remarkable accomplishment. But Suzuki’s best season doesn’t even crack Gwynn’s top four. No shame there.

What’s troublesome are statements like "Ichiro is the player that Gwynn fans think Gwynn was, but better." Either someone is confused as to what is meant by "better" or there is another agenda at work. Either way, it’s disappointing to see inaccuracies of this type coming from the Prospectus folks. The evidence is there. It just needs to be examined.

Hey, it could’ve been worse. At least Brian Buchanan didn’t outhit Phil Nevin. Don’t even get me started on Mark Loretta as a mediocre regular. Second basemen of the NL, consider yourselves slapped.

Speaking of Nevin, I still think he, and not Ryan Klesko, should be the one to move this winter. Nevin should have more trade value at this point, and the guy waiting in the wings (Xavier Nady) is right-handed. Klesko cannot patrol the outfield at Petco. He’s not a real good first baseman either, but at least there is less potential for damage on the infield. And his .320/.430/.543 second half numbers tell me he’s still got some juice left in that bat.

We’ll talk more about what to do with the outfield situation in weeks to come, but for now I just wanted to throw that out there and mention that my thoughts on Nevin have nothing to do with his personality. Sure, he drives us all insane every now and then. But ultimately he’s a productive guy who wants to win games. And unlike some people, he isn’t due to make $17M next year, doesn’t skip out on games, and doesn’t publicly rip his own manager.

That’s all for now. Go watch the playoffs or whatever it is you do when the Padres aren’t playing. Tomorrow we’ll talk about the enigmatic and goofy Sean Burroughs.

ROY Watch: Greene/Bay Showdown, with Charlie Wilmoth of Value Over Replacement Blog

So much for going out with a bang. Pads dropped two out of three to the worst team in baseball to finish the season. On the other hand, I did see something in the finale I don’t believe I’ve ever seen. In the sixth inning, both clubs had runners on second and third with nobody out. No runs scored. Hey, I didn’t say it was something good.

Anyway, with the regular season behind us and the playoffs holding little interest to most Padre fans, it’s time to think about the Rookie of the Year Award. Charlie Wilmoth, who runs a great Pirates blog called Value Over Replacement Blog, invited me to discuss the respective chances and merits of the two leading candidates for ROY. I speak, of course, of San Diego shortstop Khalil Greene and Pittsburgh left fielder Jason Bay. So without further ado…

Geoff Young, Ducksnorts: I like the idea of an e-mail conversation about Bay vs Greene. I’ll begin by pointing out that Greene (as you’ve mentioned in your blog) has had the best offensive season of all NL shortstops in a tough park for hitters. He plays a demanding position and has been spectacular on defense. But I honestly think a real compelling case could be made for either of our guys.

Charlie Wilmoth, VORB: I agree that the race for the Rookie of the Year is a close one, and that this isn’t a Pirates fan arguing for Jason Bay versus a Padres fan backing Khalil Greene. I want to give readers a clear picture of what the issues in this debate should be, and you certainly know more than I do about Greene and the factors that might affect his performance, whereas maybe I know some things about Bay and the Pirates that you might not. I agree that a compelling case can be made for either player.

Here are the raw numbers:

Bay    116/410 41 BB 24 2B 4 3B 26 HR 4 SB 6 CS
Greene 132/484 53 BB 31 2B 4 3B 15 HR 4 SB 2 CS

 .283/.355/.551/.910
 .273/.349/.446/.795

These numbers, especially the power numbers, seem to favor Bay. But Greene plays shortstop, which is much more demanding than Bay’s position, left field (even though left field is huge at PNC Park). Also, Petco is a tough park for hitters. It seems to have been especially tough on Greene: he has posted a .683 OPS at home versus an impressive .895 OPS on the road. (It should also be noted that PNC is reputed to be a tough park for right-handed power hitters, although Bay has hit 15 homers and had a .952 OPS there this year.)

What can you tell me about the hitting environment at Petco? Are you aware of any reason why Greene seems to be affected more by Petco than most other Padres, or do you think it’s just a sample size issue? Also, can you comment more specifically on Greene’s defense? His Zone Rating is impressive but his Range Factor is rather low; I think we can agree, however, that he looks very good out there and that those stats don’t always tell the whole story.

Ducksnorts: A few thoughts… First, in addition to the raw numbers you cited, I’ll add Win Shares. Thanks to this great site that I found via David Pinto’s Baseball Musings, we can see the following:

         Bat Fld WS
Greene  15.0 5.5 20
Bay     14.3 1.8 16

This is through 9/23, and Bay probably has bumped up his hitting portion a bit, but Win Shares gives Greene pretty significant extra credit for his defense. Win Shares also gives Jay Payton more credit for his defense than Steve Finley, so who knows how reliable that measure is. I’m pretty comfortable in saying that Greene’s defense has been more important to the Padres than Bay’s has been to the Pirates, but I’m not at all comfortable in attempting to quantify the difference.

As for park factors, ESPN has Petco as the second most difficult place in the big leagues to score runs (just ahead of Safeco). Here are ESPN’s numbers for Petco and PNC (where 1.000 represents average, above is more favorable to hitters, below more favorable to pitchers):

          Runs        HR           H
Petco  0.834 (29)  0.694 (30)  0.892 (29)
PNC    0.898 (26)  0.883 (23)  0.977 (20)

Numbers in parentheses are MLB rank. Obviously neither park benefits hitters, but Petco Park was arguably the most pitcher-friendly park in MLB this year. Anecdotally, I can tell you that Greene hit a lot of balls to the warning track in the power alleys that probably would have been homers in most parks. By the way, this is the first time I’ve really looked at PNC’s factors, and they certainly do make Bay’s already impressive numbers look that much better.

As for Greene’s home/road splits, wow! I hadn’t realized they were so extreme. I’m not sure why this is the case. The best I can do is the anectodal evidence above. Only Brian Giles and Phil Nevin hit more homers than Greene on the road this year, and if you double Greene’s road output he ends up with 24 bombs. Again, going back to my own observations, I think he would have hit 20-25 homers in a neutral park this year. We’re dealing in pretty speculative areas here, I realize, but there you go.

Regarding Greene’s defense, I touched on range factor a little bit last month at Ducksnorts.

In a nutshell, I suspect there are park effects at work here as well. Anyone who has watched the Padres for any appreciable stretch of time this season will tell you that their strength on defense has been the infield. Or they might tell you that the outfield defense has stunk. Both are true, at least to the human eye. But if you check range factors at ESPN, the Padres have the best CF range factor in the NL and fourth best overall OF range factor. Conversely, only the Astros and Cubs have lower team range factors on the infield. I know we’re talking about Greene and Bay here, but just to use Payton again as an example, his range factor in CF is 3.01, tops in the NL. The difference between him and the #2 guy (Mike Cameron at 2.77) is greater than that between Cameron and the #6 guy (Tike Redman at 2.56). Steve Finley, Jim Edmonds? Not even on the map. Again, without having done any real research on the subject, my guess is that Payton’s range factor is more a reflection of (a) the hugeness of Petco’s outfield, (b) the fact that he is flanked by Giles and Ryan Klesko out there, and (c) the fact that many of the Padres pitchers serve up a fair amount of fly balls. And to bring this back (finally) to Greene, I suspect the opposite is true with infielders and that their range numbers are abnormally skewed in the other direction due to those same reasons.

Bottom line: Range factor will tell you that Payton is one of the best CFers in all of baseball and Greene one of the worst shortstops. My own eyes tell me the opposite is true, which leads my mind to believe that maybe range factor isn’t the best determinant of defensive value. And my answer to the inevitable follow-up question is, I don’t know what is.

To conclude (for now), although it’s tough to say for sure based on one season’s worth of data, I believe that Greene’s offensive and defensive numbers are both negatively impacted by his home park.

What about Bay? Other than how he managed to stay in a Lloyd McClendon lineup despite the high strikeout totals, what can you tell me about one of the guys we gave up to get Brian Giles? As an outsider, one of the things that jumps out at me is his remarkable consistency. His OPS ranged from 866 to 1000 in any given month. That tells me he’s making the adjustments, a very good quality in a young player. Also, regardless of whether or not it is a “skill”, you’ve got to respect his numbers with RISP: .323/.415/.677. Very nice. Okay, those are some numbers. What more can you tell me about the guy?

VORB: It seems like we both agree that it’s difficult to evaluate defense with confidence. It takes more than a good Range Factor, or even Zone Rating, to convince me that someone is a good defender. The fact that Tike Redman, who is as hard to watch on defense as any Pirate in recent memory, is ranked in the middle of the pack in range factor among NL center fielders tells me there’s something weird going on there. UZR is the defensive statistic I trust the most, but 2004 UZRs have not been published, so we can’t see how Bay or Greene rates there.

As far as defense is concerned, then, the best we can do is agree that they’re both good at their positions but that we don’t know how good, and that Greene deserves pretty substantial extra credit for playing shortstop. One interesting thing about Bay, though, is that left field is tough to play in PNC because it’s so large, so defensive statistics probably don’t do Bay any favors. I can say for sure that Bay looks very good in the field—he runs well, gets good reads on balls and catches most of the ones he gets to.

Also, I’m not sure anyone should give Bay credit for this as far as the ROY debate is concerned, but the Pirates’ organization is apparently very confident in Bay’s abilities in center field—in fact, Lloyd McClendon has said that center may be Bay’s best position! If he really can play there and the Pirates had let him play there, his case would be even stronger (and the Pirates might have had another ROY candidate in J.J. Davis), but instead they let Redman play there the entire season.

In any case, I suspect that Bay’s defense is more valuable than his Win Shares totals gives him credit for, but I doubt it would be enough to make up the rest of the difference.

I looked at the ESPN park factors you linked and was amazed at how low PNC was ranked. The number listed there (a Park Factor of .898, which would make it the fifth-most pitcher-friendly park in baseball) is way out of line with what I see with my eyes and with previous park factors I’ve seen for PNC. (Baseball Prospectus 2004, for example, rates PNC as a neutral park, although I believe BP’s park factors are based on the total hitting environment the Pirates play in, whereas ESPN’s numbers are just based on games at PNC.) There may be some weather-related reason so few runs have been scored at PNC this year, but I suspect this is just a sample-size issue, and PNC is actually just a neutral park.

I’ve watched ten or so games played at Petco this year, though, and it’s very obviously an extreme pitchers park: very hard-hit balls frequently turn into flyouts there. Park factors are subject to so many variations in weather and sample-size problems that it’s impossible to rate them precisely. Still, there is a class of hitting environments that are obviously extreme in one direction or another—Colorado, Los Angeles, Texas, Seattle—and Petco is one of those. I think it’s very likely that Greene would have hit twenty jacks or more in a more normal hitting environment.

One other problem with park factors is that parks aren’t one-size-fits-all—they may affect different types of players differently, particularly players of different handedness. The conventional wisdom regarding PNC is that it’s much harder on right-handed power hitters than on lefties, since the wall in left is much deeper than the wall in right (although the wall in left is much lower). So I checked the home-road splits of every Pirate power hitter for each full year played since 2002. There haven’t been many, so it didn’t take long. In short, though, the lefties I checked (Brian Giles, Matt Stairs, Rob Mackowiak and Daryle Ward) did tend to get a bigger boost from PNC than the righties (Craig Wilson, Reggie Sanders, and Bay). That isn’t a lot of players, but the numbers do suggest that the conventional wisdom is right. So I think that while PNC is basically a neutral park, it’s harder on righty power hitters. I’m not sure whether Bay deserves some extra credit for that or not.

Whew! What was I talking about? Ah yes: Jason Bay and Khalil Greene. I do think, again, that this is a case where Bay’s play has been a bit better than his Win Shares totals suggest, since I’m sure Win Shares applies a one-size-fits-all park factor rather than one that’s tailored more specifically to the tendencies of the park.

So where does that leave us? I really have no idea, and I think Greene and Bay are so close in value and such different kinds of players that we’re not going to get a definitive answer here. It is fun to try, though.

While I’ve got your attention, though, I would be remiss not to ask for your opinions about Aki Otsuka, another very good Padres rookie who might deserve some consideration. You seem to like him, too. He lags far behind Bay and Greene in cumulative stats like Value Over Replacement Player, but as some folks at Baseball Primer have pointed out, he usually pitches very high-leverage innings, which makes him much more valuable than such statistics suggest. Do you think he should be a real contender here?

Ducksnorts: Regarding Bay’s ability to play center field, that’s where he was playing for the Padres before he broke his wrist last year. My recollection of him in his brief stint in San Diego is that he looked like a pretty good athlete.

I agree that this is going to be a very close call. In most years, either of those guys would win easily. Bay’s production despite missing the a good chunk of the season has been amazing. And Greene has been the best offensive shortstop, qualitatively, in the National League despite playing in the toughest park for hitters.

One other thing we haven’t mentioned is that Bay and Greene were actually roommates at Triple-A. This doesn’t mean anything in terms of analysis but it’s kind of cool. And whoever ends up winning the award, it’s pretty clear that both clubs have a special player on their hands. This isn’t a case of Todd Hollandsworth vs Edgar Renteria, or Pat Listach vs Kenny Lofton. These guys are legit and should be around for a long time to come.

As for Otsuka, I wrote about his chances the other day. Basically, Kaz Sasaki won the AL ROY in 2000 pitching fewer innings than Otsuka has this year and posting inferior qualitative numbers. I’m convinced that the only thing keeping Otsuka from being a serious contender in the race is the presence of Trevor Hoffman. There’s also no doubt in my mind that Otsuka could close games on this side of the Pacific. But he works the eighth rather than the ninth, and nobody really cares if a guy finishes with 34 holds. So I guess my answer is that if Sasaki deserved consideration in 2000, then Otsuka deserves it now. But I seriously doubt he’ll get more than a token vote.

All About Jake

I know nobody comes here on the weekends, but I just have to give our boy some props. Jake Peavy joins Randy Jones as the only Padres ever to lead the league in ERA. Congratulations.

7:39 PM: Padres eliminated from playoff contention with Astros’ 4-2 victory over Colorado.

7:44 PM: Jake Peavy records his fifth out of the game to reach the requisite 162 innings needed to qualify for ERA title.

8:49 PM: Peavy is lifted for a pinch hitter after allowing two runs in six innings to lead the NL in ERA. Peavy ties a career high with 11 punchouts. The pinch hitter, Miguel Ojeda, drives a two-run homer to dead center to give Peavy a 3-2 lead.

9:28 PM: Trevor Hoffman retires Chris Snyder on a sharp liner to end the game with a runner on third. Hoffman’s 41st save of the season preserves Peavy’s 15th win.

Peavy’s stint on the DL back in May and June probably cost him a shot at the Cy Young Award. For grins, here is how he stacks up qualitatively against the top contenders:

                IP  ERA  H/9 HR/9 BB/9  SO/9
Peavy,Ja     166.1 2.27 7.90 0.70 2.87  9.36
Zambrano,Ca  204.0 2.60 7.28 0.57 3.53  8.07
Johnson,Ra   237.2 2.65 6.32 0.64 1.67 10.68
Sheets,Be    228.0 2.80 7.62 0.99 1.22  9.99
Clemens,Ro   214.1 2.98 7.10 0.63 3.32  9.15
Pavano,Ca    222.1 3.00 8.58 0.65 1.98  5.63
Schmidt,Ja   219.0 3.29 6.70 0.74 3.08  9.95
Oswalt,Ro    230.0 3.56 8.92 0.63 2.43  7.83

A lot of worthy contenders; we’ll leave others to sort this one out. But aside from the innings, Peavy is right there with the best of ‘em. Give him seven more starts, and he’s got 18-20 wins.

No worries, this won’t be the last time he’s in contention for that award. Meantime, Peavy has the NL ERA title. Pretty sweet…

Bittersweet

Well, it’s October and technically the Padres still aren’t out of the race. Or, if you’re reading this later in the day, maybe they are.

The Pads have already won 22 more games than they did all last year (and they still have three more to go against the worst team in baseball), and they’re the only NL team that had a losing record in 2003 that managed to push themselves above .500 in 2004. They’ve surpassed my preseason prediction of 84 wins (which I actually worried might be overly optimistic). The Padres will end up within shouting distance of the 800 runs forecast by GM Kevin Towers despite getting virtually no production from the key free agent acquisition (Jay Payton) and a whopping nine homers from Ryan Klesko.

The Padres scrapped and battled, and slowly began to believe they could win. Fan support was tremendous, eclipsing the 3 million mark for the first time in club history on the final day. But for all the positives, we are left frustrated and disappointed by a season that could have been so much more. In what looks to be their fifth best season in 35 years of existence, the Padres repeatedly failed to execute in key situations (how often can a team have two runners on base with nobody out and not score?). They made questionable roster decisions (Eddie Oropesa, Jason Szuminski, Kerry Robinson, the #5 starter revolving door, failure to acquire any names bigger than Rich Aurilia and Dave Hansen for the stretch run) and fielded a squad that collectively wasn’t well suited for their new ballpark and who individually seemed all too aware of and frustrated by that fact.

I should be happy, and for the most part I am. This truly has been a great season of Padres baseball, and Petco Park takes advantage of what San Diego has to offer in ways that the Q never could. Every time I step into the ballpark and look out onto the skyline, I am reminded of how blessed I am to call this city–for whatever faults it may have–my home. Corny as it sounds, I do take pride in Petco and the way it shows off our city. And this year, unlike in years past, I have been able to take pride in the Padres as well. Even when they’ve struggled to execute or blamed the new park for their problems, I’ve never doubted their desire to win. That’s not something I’ve always been able to say about some of the recent editions. Then again, it’s hard to get too worked up about these things when you’re routinely losing 90+ games a year.

And this is where more of the frustration sets in. We were close. Real close. A legit fifth starter and a bat or two off the bench close. A prospect for some help down the stretch close. If the Padres could move two talented young players last summer for a proven veteran in a meaningless stretch run, why not again this year when the games actually counted for something? If nothing else, it sends a message that the club is reciprocating the commitment made by fans to get the club into the new park and support a winner. That was the impetus behind acquiring Brian Giles, right? So why nothing this year, when a key player here or there could have made the difference (and generated some additional revenue from a few home playoff games)?

I’ve no doubt Towers and company tried to pull something off, but the fact remains that nothing happened. Key competitors were able to pick up additional talent, but not the Padres. This is far from the only thing that kept the Pads from the playoffs in 2004, and I don’t want to scapegoat the front office, but one wonders what went wrong. And more importantly, how does the brain trust keep that from going wrong again in the future? Maybe they legitimately exhausted every possibility in trying to acquire help down the stretch. If that is the case, then what more can be done the next time the Padres find themselves in a similar position? What other resources are necessary to make something happen? More money? A stronger farm system? Beats me. I just hope these are the types of questions folks are asking themselves right about now and will continue to ask themselves during the off-season. Because the next time the proverbial golden ring is that close, the Padres need to go out and grab it. Momentum from the excitement of a new ballpark will only last so long. At the risk of sounding negative, the Padres are going to be hard-pressed to win 85 games again next year. With a few shrewd moves and some luck, they can do it. But it’s far from a lock. For one thing, they’re not going to sneak up on anyone again. For another, stuff happens.

The Friars made a lot of improvements in 2004, but there are a lot of questions going into next season. Will David Wells return and if not, who will replace him in the rotation? Can Adam Eaton and Sean Burroughs take their games to the next level? Which of the sluggers who can’t really play the field will be back, and what do the Padres do with Xavier Nady if the answer is both? What do they do with Nady anyway?

We’re going to spend a lot of time this off-season analyzing the events of 2004 and how best to learn from those in preparation for 2005. The golden ring is still in sight. The window is still open. New ballpark rhetoric is great, but if you’re not careful, 1998 turns into 1999-2003 real quick and you’re left with a whole lot of nothing. And then folks stop caring about rings and windows, and you have to start all over again. Here’s hoping the Padres can build on what they’ve done this year and keep moving forward in a positive direction.

. . .

Okay, now that I’ve either depressed you or put you to sleep (or both), let’s go out and beat those Diamondbacks to finish on an up note. Get Jake Peavy that ERA title. Go Astros, go Cubs, go Dodgers (yes, get over it; anyone but the Giants).

Resistable Forces, Movable Objects

The Giants bullpen tried to give the game to the Padres. The Padres hitters tried to give it back. In the end, some sloppy defense and a well-placed fly ball tipped the balance in the Pads’ favor. It may not have been pretty, but it was effective.

Thanks to an extended stop at The Field for prawns and chips, and a pint of Boddington, we didn’t get to the ballpark till the second inning. And, by design, we never did make it to our assigned seats, choosing instead to wander around the park and take in the sights.

As for the game itself, three moments stand out for me:

  1. David Wells struck out Barry Bonds on three pitches to open the sixth. Got him to chase a high fastball for strike three. Sweet.
  2. Ramon Hernandez hit a two-run jack in the bottom half of the sixth. Right before the pitch I said to my wife, "We really need a homer from Ramon" or words to that effect. I say stuff like this a lot, and most times nothing happens. So it’s less about being psychic and more about being very grateful. And let me just say, it was a bomb to dead center. The best part was watching Marquis Grissom go back to the track and turn to play the carom that never came.
  3. Plate umpire Hunter Wendlestedt called Jim Brower’s 3-1 pitch to Rich Aurilia with the bases loaded and one out in the seventh a strike. Let’s just say that one got the Eric Gregg seal of approval. (Even the Giants fans will vouch for me on this one.)

We left in disgust after the Pads failed to score in the seventh. I disowned the club several times during the walk back to the car. But by the time we made it back home I’d cooled off sufficiently to watch the end of the game.

The bottom of the tenth was just surreal. I’m not going to try and describe the sequence of events, but I will say that the throwing error charged to Edgardo Alfonzo never would have happened if J.T. Snow had been playing first base. I don’t know if he was just having a bad game or what, but Pedro Feliz made a pretty strong case last night against the argument that anyone can play a passable first.

As for the play that ended the game, it would’ve been a real close play at the plate with Kerry Robinson tagging on a shallow fly to right. But Dustan Mohr stumbled in the treacherous visitors’ bullpen and was unable to make a throw. Mohr came down very awkwardly on his leg and looked to be in a fair amount of pain. I’m glad the Padres won, but I sure hope Mohr is okay. That looked nasty.

I’ve had concerns about right field at Petco since I got got my first look at the park. My exact words back in March:

Right field is goofy. I don’t know that pictures do it justice, but between the visitors’ bullpen, the little section of seating that juts out to the left of the foul pole, and the deep corner in right-center, this is going to be a bear to cover. Center field looks pretty spacious in itself, but just from the looks of it, a compelling case could be made for sticking one’s best defender in right. There’s a lot of ground to cover, obstacles to avoid, and caroms to learn. I don’t envy Brian Giles (or anyone else who plays there).

I don’t have a lot of complaints about Petco Park after the Pads’ inaugural season there, but I hope the powers-that-be consider moving the visitors’ bullpen at some point. Right field is enough of a challenge at Petco as is, why not make it a little safer for the folks who patrol that area?

Adam Eaton vs Jerome Williams tonight to wrap up the home schedule. We couldn’t knock the Dodgers out of the playoffs. We couldn’t make the playoffs ourselves. Maybe we can at least help send the Giants home early for the winter.

Giant Problem

Brian Lawrence threw too many hittable two-strike pitches and the Giants hit ‘em. Not particularly hard, but well placed. And in a microcosm of the season, the Padres had chances late but couldn’t capitalize. Down two in the ninth, with runners at first and second, nobody out, and Phil Nevin, Ryan Klesko, and Rich Aurilia due up, opportunity knocked. But nobody opened the door, and ultimately the Padres went quietly, their season following close behind.

David Wells vs Noah Lowry tonight. It’s been a great year; go out and cheer on the guys as they wrap up the inaugural season at Petco. Mark Loretta’s chance to win the hits title has all but vanished. Now we’re pretty much down to Jake Peavy’s pursuit of the ERA title and the quest for 3 million fans at Petco. Assuming ESPN’s figures are correct, the Padres need 79,270 these final two nights. We’ll be at both games, savoring the last bit of the season before spending the winter contemplating how to take this club to the next level.

Odds, Ends, and Points Between

Bullet points today:

  • Wells wants guaranteed contract if he returns to Padres (U-T). I love what David Wells has done for this ballclub, in terms of on-field performance and the impact he’s had on the kids. Signing Wells on the cheap this past winter was a brilliant move. But a large part of what made this a brilliant move was the fact that it was on the cheap. The kind of guaranteed money Wells is talking about now doesn’t seem to make a lot of sense for the Padres, especially when there are so many good pitchers hitting the free agent market. Wells is quoted as saying, “I know there will be teams interested. I’m sure I’m going to get a lot of calls . . . probably one from New York.” You know what? I could see the Yankees throwing $7M guaranteed at the guy, but it seems like the Padres could find better ways to use that money. Some of the bigger names on the market include Russ Ortiz, Carl Pavano, Odalis Perez, Kevin Millwood, Eric Milton, Chris Carpenter, Matt Morris, and former Padres Matt Clement and (gulp) Jaret Wright. Even guys like Glendon Rusch, Derek Lowe, and local product Esteban Loaiza could be good bargains. I think there’s a decent chance Wells will get his guaranteed money, I just don’t know that it should be coming from a team that is on such a tight budget. This is the lesson we were supposed to have learned from Bubba Trammell, Wiki Gonzalez, etc., right?
  • Padres need a hope and a prayer for playoffs dream (U-T). Bill Center does a nice job of outlining the club’s post-season chances. Basically, their best shot is to run the table and hope that the Cubs can’t win more than three of their final six games, and the Astros win more than four of their last five. Both clubs have only home games remaining, with the Cubs getting three games against the Reds (72-84), and Houston getting three against the Rockies (67-89). Long odds? Baseball Prospectus gives the Pads a 1.36% chance of making the playoffs.
  • Padres have to keep on winning (NC Times). Great quote from Brian Lawrence, about pitching to Barry Bonds: “There really isn’t a strategy when facing Bonds,” Lawrence said. “I won’t throw him anything good to hit. We’ll just stand up, throw him four balls and let him go to first.”
  • Jake Peavy update: With both Carlos Zambrano and Randy Johnson pitching last night, each has one start remaining. If Zambrano throws a complete game shutout, Peavy will need to allow four runs or fewer in 1 2/3 innings to become the second Padre (Randy Jones was the first) to win the NL ERA title. Peavy also was named NL Player of the Week. I know Peavy keeps saying it’s not about individual achievements, but you gotta love what he’s done this year.
  • Ben Folds Produces William Shatner (Undercover News). Nothing whatsoever to do with baseball, but I heard a cut off this record on a local radio station yesterday and it was the damn funniest thing I’ve heard in a long time. Hint: Shatner shares lead vocals with Henry Rollins on the song I heard.

Okay, enough of that. Time to win some games. Brian Lawrence vs Jason Schmidt tonight at Petco. Usual time, usual channel. Go get ‘em, boys.