2007 Arizona Diamondbacks Season Preview
Wednesday, March 14 2007 @ 04:07 AM EDT
Contributed by: Mike Green
When does the future begin for the young Diamondbacks? Maybe it will be 2007.
The offence
What a fine young collection of talent the Snakes have. In the outfield, Eric Byrnes, Chris Young
and Carlos Quentin should give them good offence and good defence. The
defensive improvement of Byrnes over Luis Gonzalez in left, Young over Byrnes
in center and Quentin over Shawn Green in right should be considerable. Scott
Hairston makes an excellent 4th outfielder, with Byrnes sliding back
into center if required. Toiling away
in the minors will be hot prospect Carlos Gonzalez and Alex Romero.
Arizona is set for a long time in the outfield.
The infield is similarly set. Chad Tracy at third, Stephen Drew at short, Orlando Hudson at
second and Conor Jackson at first, with Miguel Montero catching should also
provide good offence and good defence. Albert Callaspo backs up the middle infielders and Chris Snyder is the
second catcher.
Here are the Marcel projections and 2006 Dial ratings, where available
for the Arizona hitters, with modifications as follows. I have
projected Carlos Quentin and Chris Young as the everyday right-fielder
and centerfielder, and reduced Jerry DaVanon's playing time
accordingly. I have projected Stephen Drew as the everyday shortstop
and , but discounted playing time somewhat because of durability
issues. I projected Conor Jackson as the everyday first baseman. I
increased Montero's playing time to reflect his likely role as a
starter against right-handed pitching most of the time; I decreased
Snyder's playing time.
Player |
PA |
AVG. |
OBP. |
SLUG. |
Dial |
Quentin |
575 |
.273 |
.350 |
.492 |
(none) |
Young |
575 |
.274 |
.345 |
.439 |
(none) |
Byrnes |
549 |
.262 |
.320 |
.446 |
+11 |
Hairston |
210 |
.266 |
.321 |
.432 |
(none) |
Davanon |
250 |
.266 |
.354 |
.403 |
(none) |
Tracy |
586 |
.293 |
.352 |
.474 |
0 |
Drew |
500 |
.304 |
.360 |
.491 |
(none) |
Hudson |
575 |
.279 |
.340 |
.439 |
-4 |
Callaspo |
224 |
.276 |
.345 |
.437 |
(none) |
Jackson |
575 |
.286 |
.363 |
.443 |
0 |
Montero |
400 |
.280 |
.348 |
.446 |
(none) |
Snyder |
250 |
.253 |
.336 |
.440 |
+11 |
I have the Diamondbacks scoring about 800 runs next year. There is
more variability than usual here, because of the youth of the club. The
club lacks, as of this moment, what Bill James described as a "locus of
danger". Quentin and Young could leap into the role of bangers, but
that is more likely to happen in 2008 than in 2007.
The rotation
What a difference 8 months makes. As of the All-Star break last year, Arizona had Brandon Webb and not much else in the rotation. Since then, they have added Livan Hernandez, Doug Davis and Randy Johnson in trades. Behind those front four, they have Edgar Gonzalez, Dustin Nippert, Dana Eveland and Micah Owings. Webb is one of the three best starters in the National League, along with Roy Oswalt and Chris Carpenter. Johnson
is 43 years old, and coming off an off-season for him. He will probably
start the season on the DL after off-season back surgery. He pitched
better than his 5.00 ERA would indicate, but there was a red flag or
two, between the declining K rate (though it was a still healthy 7.7)
and the abysmal performance with runners on. Hernandez
seems to take abuse better than just about anybody, and deliver league
average pitching year after year. His K rate is however falling
slightly each year; it was 5.1 last year at age 31, and that is getting
close to the danger zone for a right-handed pitcher without exceptional
control. Old friend Davis
continued his 3 year streak of .500 pitching in 2006, but was
noticeably less effective than previously in all departments, although
he did pitch better than his 4.91 ERA would suggest. Gonzalez seems to have a leg-up on the 5th starter role at this point, and has a reasonable chance to perform decently. Eveland is probably the better choice long-term; he
is an extreme ground-ball pitcher, who also struck out more than a
batter per inning in triple A at age 22. He may start the season in the
pen, as the second lefty there.
The bullpen
What do you make of Jose Valverde?
He will probably be Arizona's closer to start the season. I will tell
you what I think. In a fantasy league, he is the one player I would
want to get. He posted an ERA of 5.82 in 49 innings last year, so he
may come cheap. Here is what I like about him. He pitched much better
than his ERA would suggest, with his FIP of 3.28 better capturing his
ability to punch out hitters at an almost-Wagnerian pace, while not
walking too many. What afflicted him last year was two things: the
inability of his defence to turn balls in play into outs and his own
uncharacteristic failures with runners on base. Valverde is a fly-ball
pitcher, and the Arizona outfield defence should be much, much better
this year. I expect a return to 2005 form from him.
Contenders for the other spots in the pen are Brandons Medders and Lyon, Juan Cruz, Jorge Julio, Tony Pena and Doug Slaten. Medders
would be my bet for the set-up role, and is at this point not a likely
candidate for the Duane Ward comp award. The pen is right now the
obvious weakness on the club.
The pitching projections
I
have monkeyed with Marcel's projections a little. The D'Back
fly-ball defence should be much improved, and so the flyball pitchers
get a boost. Randy Johnson gets a boost in all performance
categories from leaving the AL, but I have reduced his innings
projected from 185 to 155 in light of his age and the injury that will
keep him from starting the season in the rotation. Jose Valverde's
strikeouts have been increased from 9.5 to 11.3, consistent with his 3
year record.
Pitcher |
IP |
ERA |
K/9 |
W/9 |
HR/9 |
Webb |
200 |
3.64 |
6.9 |
2.7 |
0.8 |
Johnson |
155 |
3.83 |
8.3 |
2.4 |
1.1 |
Hernandez |
193 |
4.44 |
5.7 |
3.2 |
1.1 |
Davis |
184 |
4.35 |
7.4 |
4.0 |
0.9 |
Gonzalez |
95 |
4.84 |
6.5 |
3.0 |
1.4 |
Valverde
|
56
|
3.00
|
11.3
|
3.5
|
1.1
|
Medders
|
68
|
3.94
|
6.8
|
3.4
|
0.8
|
Lyon
|
63
|
4.50
|
6.3
|
3.1
|
1.1
|
Julio
|
65
|
4.64
|
9.0
|
4.0
|
1.4
|
Cruz
|
84
|
4.39
|
7.9
|
4.2
|
1.0
|
Slaten
|
28
|
4.18
|
6.8
|
3.2
|
1.0
|
Eveland
|
48
|
4.34
|
7.7
|
3.9
|
1.1
|
Nippert
|
66
|
5.05
|
7.0
|
4.0
|
1.4
|
I have the Diamondbacks allowing about 750 runs this year.
What does it all add up to?
Looking
purely at runs scored and allowed, one would say 84 wins. The team
undershot their Pythagorean in 2006 by 4 games, and the bullpen does
remain a weakness. The bench, however, is upgraded, and I expect
Valverde to be much, much better, so let's say this year that they make
it close, and end up with 83 wins. A couple of seemingly minor bullpen
acquisitions though might very well push them into serious contention
in a fairly weak division. I imagine that they will wait to the
All-Star break to see how the young players are developing, and to
watch Johnson's health.
83 wins would make a very nice start for
the Snakes to a long run of greatness. That seems to me to be where
this club is at. Think 1983-84, Jay fans. Do you remember Randy
Moffitt, Joey McLaughlin, Roy Lee Jackson and Dave Geisel in the
bullpen and young Barfield and Moseby in the outfield? That's where the
Snakes are.
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