Thursday, February 27, 2014

The "IF's" for Success in 2014

The outlook for 2014 is rather grim.  There’s no denying that.  Vegas is setting the over/under for wins at 78.  Most knowledgeable analysts are projecting anywhere from 70 to 80 wins.  If I were a betting man (I’m not), I’d take the under without a second’s hesitation because this roster is riddled with “If’s.”  If this happens, and that happens, and he’s healthy, and he produces, and we play good defense, and our rotation eats innings, and our bullpen improves, then we are legitimate contenders for the NL east.  Or as the mastermind Ruben Amaro put it:

“If we do it on the field, then we do it on the field.  If we don’t, we’ll have to make changes to do it better on the field.” 

Genius.

This, though, is about the storylines for 2014 as Spring Training commences, and for the most part this year’s storylines are more like questions than anything.  It is no secret that all of the pieces are going to have to fall perfectly in line to make this season worth watching, so here goes my list of everything that must go right to prove all of the preseason projections wrong.  These are the ‘If’s for Success.”

1.  IF Ryan Howard, Jimmy Rollins, and Carlos Ruiz can return to form

In the past two season, Ryan Howard has played a total of just 151 games.  Four times in his career Howard has played more than 151 games in a single season.  Obviously, injuries have plagued the aging first baseman, but that still ceases to explain the decrease in production.  When he was healthy during that two year span, this power numbers plummeted.

In 260 at-bats in 2012, Howard hit 14 home runs and knocked in 56 RBI, while striking out 99 times.  In 2013, the decline continued as in 286 at-bats he hit just 11 home runs and recorded only 43 RBI, and again continuing his Howard-esque ways, fanning 95 times.  Now these numbers are deceiving, as he had less than half of the at-bats than he normally saw when he was a true threat at the plate.  Even, so, Howard has fallen from baseball’s Mt. Crushmore (it's corny – deal with it) and has been replaced by younger blood.  In other words, he has become almost forgotten in the talks of frightening bats in the bigs, and it will take a miraculous turn-around to even hear his name in the same conversation with Miguel Cabrera, Mike Trout, and Chris Davis. 

IF Howard is even able to give us 25 home runs, and 100 RBI, I would consider it a success.  His numbers still would be far from his glory years, but at least he’d be offering something in the clean-up spot that has been a ghost spot for the past two seasons.  The biggest question for the Big Piece, though, is if he can come up with the big hit.  Can he get that clutch bomb when it really counts?  I’m not sure that he can.  In fact, I’m not sure that he really ever has.  But, this may be the year that his lacking of the clutch gene may become even more obvious, and for Ryan’s sake, that scares me a little.

Jimmy Rollins had 600 at-bats last season.  In those 600 at-bats he managed to produce career-lows in runs, home runs, RBI, and triples for seasons with more than 90 games played.  Long gone are the days of 20 homers and 75 RBI.  Long gone are the days of MVP-like numbers.  No, Jimmy is now just an older version of himself on the field, with the same Jimmy attitude.  He continues walk and talk like he is the toast of the town – like he is the best shortstop in the league.  Unfortunately, he is not.  And I don’t mind the confidence and I certainly don’t mind the swagger (I’ve been told I’m quite the swagger hound myself, so I know where he’s coming from), but I’d prefer that these attributes come secondary to production. 

IF J-Roll is able to give us 10-15 long balls with 50 RBI, and his stolen bases and defenses prowess continue at their normal pace, then he can trash talk and pimp walk all he wants.  As long as he’s helping us win games.

I am excited about Carlos Ruiz this season, though.  It’s not his new contract.  It’s not that he’s cut down the pudginess and turned into a toned, speed demon, but it’s that he received an exemption from the MLB that will allow him to take Adderall in 2014.  I’m not sure how this didn’t make more news this off-season considering this is the banned drug that cost him 25 games last year, but it may be exactly what Chooch needed to return to All-Star form. 

In 2012, when he was supposedly taking his ADD medicine, Ruiz had career numbers.  He hit well over .300, with 16 dingers and 68 RBI.  After last season, I sort of assumed this was just a blip on an otherwise underwhelming career stat sheet, but maybe somehow the Adderall makes the baseball seem more like a beach ball, giving him the little edge he needs to perform at the plate.  Either way, it can’t get much worse than last year, can it? Somehow, 5 home runs and 37 RBI got Chooch a new contract in Philadelphia, so let’s hope he can right that ship, take those drugs, and get back on the right path.

IF Chooch can produce at least 10 long balls, around 50 RBI and continue to call flawless games from behind the dish, I’m a happy fan.  And let’s hope he hits a walk-off or two because his post-game interviews are fantastic entertainment

2. IF the back-end of the rotation can win games

At first, I wasn’t the biggest fan of the AJ Burnett signing.  To me, he’s always underperformed for his talent level, and the inconsistency is obvious.  But, the more I look at, the more I believe this was probably Amaro’s best off-season move.  Without Burnett, our rotation looks something like this:

 1.       Cole Hamels (when he returns to full-strength)
       2.       Cliff Lee
       3.       Kyle Kendrick
       4.       Roberto Hernandez (formerly Fausto Carmona)
       5.       Jonathan Pettibone or Ethan Martin – Wilson Valdez would get my vote in this battle

With Burnett solidifying the third spot in that rotation as a guy with experience and the proven ability to get outs, this staff looks a whole lot better.  By taking away the battle for the fifth spot in the rotation, you move Kendrick to four where he will eat enough innings to make you content, and Hernandez who will probably pitch around .500 this season with some spectacular 15-strikeout performances and some games where he gets absolutely shelled for three innings, this still gives the team a bit more stability at the back end.

IF Burnett can pitch anywhere near his potential (I’m talking ERA around 3.5, 180 SO’s) and leaves most games giving us a legitimate chance to win, then we’re going to have a much more relaxing season having a bit of confidence in our first three guys. 

IF those two back-end starters can offer any consistency, then I think we would be able to consider that a success.  We all know the pain of watching Martin get lit-up the second time through the rotation, or Pettibone’s flat 89 MPH get launched into orbit. Too much of this would be bad for our health.  Let’s just hope Jesse Biddle has a good spring and shows some promise for the future.  He seems like the last real prospect left in the farm system.

3. IF time miraculously finds a way to reverse itself six years

“Old doesn’t necessarily mean bad.  Old just means old. It also means experience.  So, it’s a matter of our players being able to perform.”  - Ruben Amaro (quote from the Mike Missanelli Show.  January 22nd, 2014)

As far as I’m concerned as a baseball fan – at any level – players being able to perform is generally important to winning baseball games.  To me this doesn't truly address the issue that has been the talk of this team for the past couple of seasons – we ARE old.  We’re old at first base, second base, shortstop, right field, catcher, and starting pitching.  Our bench players are even old.  It seems as though all of the players who are expected to produce and are being paid to produce, peaked all at the same time, which happened to be 2007-2009.  Now these guys are getting paid big bucks, and they’re six years removed from the prime of their careers. 

So, what now?  Amaro has left this team handcuffed with players who finally showed their age the past two seasons.  Howard couldn't hit a basketball off of a tee in 2012 or 2013 and has turned into a statue in the field.  Rollins had a career-worst season at the plate in 2013.  Golden boy Chase Utley bounced back from a pretty serious injury that only old-men suffer from, but it’s hard to imagine that he will be as good in 2014.  Plus, his range is decreasing and his noodle-arm is becoming even more of a problem from deep in the hole.  Marlon Byrd had an all-star-type season last year, and he played himself into a well-deserved contract this year.  But, we have to remember – he is still Marlon Byrd.  He’s a 36-year old outfielder who performed really well the past two seasons, but how much does the guy have left in the tank?  His defense is certainly an upgrade in right field (the Laynce Nix and Mayberry platoon never did much for me), but there is a giant question mark next to his name, so he’ll have to prove to the Philly faithfuls that he’s worth the contract he received.  Again, Chooch is old and chubby.  Good news: back on Adderall.  Bad news: still old and chubby with declining skills at the plate.  Eh.  He calls a great game, so I’ll give him a pass if he has another shitty year offensively.  Cliff Lee isn’t getting any younger.  He can’t defy old-man time forever, and eventually there’s going to be arm problems.  This guy eats up innings unlike any other pitcher in the major leagues, and at some point that’s going to catch up to him.  Let’s just hope it’s not this year. Or the next.  Or the next.  We’ll see what we get out of Burnett and Hernandez.  They’re both the kind of guys where it could be pure magic, or it could be pure heinous (look back at your old middle school pictures – yeah I’m talking that ugly).


Listen, I’m no major league GM, but it just seems like this organization is banking on a whole lot of IF’s.  If by some inconceivable circumstance all of these IF’s pan out, then Amaro looks like a genius.  If most of these IF’s don’t come to fruition, as most of us with logical minds assume, then Amaro will look like the dummy that I believe him to be.  Let’s hope for the best, but I just feel like I’m looking at a puzzle with too many missing pieces.   But, hey, that’s why I’m at home blogging about the roster, and Amaro is in the front office putting it together.  He has to know what he’s doing, right?

                          
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Sunday, February 9, 2014

From One Fan to Another: Welcome to my blog

I am a Phillies fanatic.  An absolute die-hard.  I know that in a city like Philadelphia, the title of "die-hard fan" doesn't carry quite as much weight as in other towns because of how incredibly passionate we are as a whole.  I am one of some 46,000 screaming, crying, laughing, cheering die-hard fans every time I walk into our beloved Citizens Bank Park.  I am one of the hundreds of thousand fans who stood along Broad Street, chanting, partying, celebrating in 2008.  I am one of the, probably, millions of fans who long for that feeling of ending another season as the best team in major league baseball.

What is so amazing to me, as a continual supporter of the professional organization that has amassed more losses than any other team in any sport, is how I know that I am never alone.  Never have I felt that I am the only fan feeling a certain way.  When we lose, I know that someone else feels my intense need for negativity.  When we win, I know that someone else agrees that we are the best team in the bigs.  When Ruben Amaro, Jr. trades for Cliff Lee, or Roy Halladay, or Hunter Pence, I know that someone else thinks that we are unstoppable.  When Ruben Amaro, Jr. signs Bobby Abreu at age 39, I know that many other people agree that this is quite possibly the most pointless signing in the history of professional baseball.  The feeling of togetherness, the notion that we are all a part of something so much bigger than ourselves, is what makes me so proud to be a fan of the team wearing red pinstripes.

I know what it's like to be a fan in Philadelphia.  I know the angst.  I know the pain.  I know the heartbreak, the confusion, and the absolute, undying desire to hoist championship trophies.  And I also know that I have an opinion - an opinion shared by so many.  So, I've decided to create a space where I can write about how I feel.

If you've read my other blog (thank you to those who have) you know that much of what I've written in the public sphere has been very diary-like.  I have used that space as an opportunity to reflect on my life.  While, to some readers (very few, I'm sure) this may have been mildly entertaining, I plan on using this blog for Philadelphia Phillies posts only.  This is a place where fans can come and reflect on our season in its current state, written through the eyes of a fellow fan.  I am not a journalist.  I am not a non-biased reporter.  I am, though, a passionate fan with opinions aplenty.

Baseball season is upon us.  Spring Training is just days away.  And I feel like a giddy school girl on Christmas morning.  Let's Go Phillies.