Slump
Geovany Soto’s Interesting Line
May 30, 2009 by kris · 2 Comments
Geovany Soto followed up his 1.100 OPS cup-of-coffee (60 PA) in 2007 with a Rookie Of The Year performance in 2008. Big things were expected from Soto entering the 2009 season; fantasy experts generally had him in their top-60 overall and the third or fourth best catcher available. Read more
Slump
Yet Another David Ortiz Article…
May 14, 2009 by kris · Leave a Comment
Basically, every single fantasy baseball website has put together a piece of David Ortiz and his incredible homerless streak. With so many articles delving into Ortiz’s advanced statistics, I’m going to play this a bit differently and merely brush on the indicator statistics. Mainly, I’m going to go on my gut and my gut says, “Mmm, that was delicious Brie. Feed me more. Trade for Big Papi if you can…”
The unfortunate thing is that there are a handful of players that are almost impossible to trade for at a reasonable price. If a player plays in one of the major Northeastern markets, they’re going to be overvalued coming into the draft and a slump merely corrects their perceived value down to their actual value. In expert leagues it’s a bit different, but for the most part if you’re trying to acquire Ortiz or Teixeira you’re still going to have to give their owner 90-95 cents on the dollar. When you’re paying that kind of a premium, the players have to turn it around within a week of you trading for them – I think Teixeira will do it, but Ortiz? Well, that’s what this articles all about.
Watching Ortiz hit, you can tell that something’s wrong. His bat just appears slow through the zone and while it’s been speculated that his wrists are at fault, it’s equally as likely a result of his lower body. Conversely, looking at his advanced statistics, nothing particularly stands out.
BB:K
Ortiz is walking (‘09-14%, AVG-15%) and striking out (‘09-22%, AVG-21%) well within recent career norms.
Batted Ball
BABIP: Ortiz’s batting average on balls in play is a little bit low (.281), but a 20pt difference really doesn’t account for a 50 pt batting average dip.
GB/FB: Ortiz is actually hitting more Line Drives and Fly-Balls when he does make contact. Ortiz normally floats around a 0.80 GB / FB rate, but has decreased that to .40 GB/FB.
HR/FB: This obviously sits at 0%, and while you should assume Ortiz should return to his 15-20% range; this might be an indicator of aging, injury, or just bad-luck.
Plate Discipline
Zone: Ortiz is seeing a career-low amount of pitches inside the strike-zone this year. Maybe it’s Youkilis’ lack of smash-kill power that’s causing pitchers to avoid Big Papi. Basically, a pitcher needs to make two mistakes after walking Ortiz to allow the run. Even if Youkilis hits one of his patented doubles, odds are Ortiz is only getting to third. This stands in stark contrast to previous years, where walking Ortiz was normally followed by a 2-run homer.
Swing: Ortiz is swinging at about 4% more pitches in general, which is more than likely a result of pressing due to frustration and a small sample size.
Contact: Ortiz’s contact within the zone has dipped, but 2 percent is nothing. We’re basically looking at the same over-all plate discipline for Ortiz.
So Why Does Ortiz Suck Again?
First off, the season’s still very early and historically Ortiz’s best months have been May, June, and July. It’s pretty clear that Ortiz starts off slow, so I wouldn’t worry too much at this point.
Secondly, Ortiz has noticeable lefty/righty splits. Historically, Ortiz hits about 150 points less in OPS against lefties than righties. This normally works out just dandy as only a quarter of his PA in 2008 were against lefties. In his killer 2007 season, he faced lefties a third of the time.
In 2009, Ortiz has faced lefties about 35% of the time and this has lead to a concerning statistic. Ortiz has taken 1 BB in 45 Plate Appearances against lefties. For his career, we’re looking at taking a BB every 8 to 10 Plate Appearances — so, this is concerning. I’m not sure if Ortiz is judging pitches anywhere near as well as he has done throughout his career.
The interesting part, at least for me, is the microcosm that is Ortiz vs. Tampa. Against Rays’ starters (Kazmir, Garza, Shields, Sonnanstine, and Niemann,) Ortiz is a combined 2-for-21 or 0.095 AVG. Ortiz does have 8 walks against the starters, which puts him at a respectable .344 OBP. Against all Rays’ pitchers, Ortiz is 4-for-31 which is good for a .129 BA and a .380 OBP.
It’s fairly clear that pitchers aren’t giving Ortiz anything to hit, and at this point, especially with Youkilis on the DL, there’s no reason for this to change.
Ortiz has faced some tough pitching match-ups thus far, but the rest of the Red Sox line-up seems to be performing quite well.
While Ortiz hasn’t hit a single homer yet, he’s still hitting around the same amount of doubles. There’s quite a few reasons to believe that once Ortiz gets that first home-run out of the way, they should start coming in bunches. Age has effected Ortiz and he’s no longer a 40-HR threat, but at this point in his career he’s still got 30-HR power.
Unfortunately, Ortiz also tends to sit out due to injury or interleague-play quite often. If you assume Ortiz gets to around 500 AB, expecting 23-25 HR seems reasonable.
Ortiz does have a hole in his swing, but it’s not a big one. Once it starts getting warmer, I’d expect Ortiz to start loosening up and return to his smash-killing ways.
Who knows what they did in the Dominican Republic Hotel at the WBC, but everyone seems to be starting off slower than expected.

