It is clear watching the games that AJ is a poor defensive catcher. Worse than Gattis.
What other catcher options are reasonable if AJ is traded soon?
Despite his hot start, I don't see AJ bringing much in a trade. He has a bad reputation as you know, that hurts plus no good team wants him starting because they know he is bad defensively. His problem has never been hitting so much, it's everything else.
So it can be to an AL team that is looking for a guy who can get 50% of the DH AB's and 10% of the cather AB's. Not a bad guy to have on your bench. Just looking to get a lottery ticket.
So it can be to an AL team that is looking for a guy who can get 50% of the DH AB's and 10% of the cather AB's. Not a bad guy to have on your bench. Just looking to get a lottery ticket.
Did y'all catch this from MLBTR?: "Twins Rule 5 pick J.R. Graham is here to stay, manager Paul Molitor tells reporters, including Mike Berardino of the Pioneer Press (on Twitter). “He’s going to be here all year,” the manager said. Graham threw two scoreless innings to close out the Twins’ 13-3 beating of the White Sox this afternoon."
It is clear watching the games that AJ is a poor defensive catcher. Worse than Gattis.
I was disappointed when I saw this posted because I like Graham. But he's been pretty mediocre in Minnesota. i had to throw that out there before the Hart pirahnas had a chance to speak.
In his one "serious" appearance, he got totally lit up. He's been used almost exclusively in mop-up situations. That said, he would have been a better option than Jaime and we could have kept him in Gwinnett.
So, any idea where he lost the four defensive runs? Or do we just accept that?
Perhaps the higher ERA for Pierzynski is because the pitcher he was paired with pitched badly? Or the same pitcher pitched well when Bethancourt was catching?
I ask because I've seen Teheran's last three starts and know from observation that Teheran pitched poorly while Pierzynski caught, and Pierzynski had nothing to do with Julio being wild and leaving a bunch of meatballs up. Conversely he had decent to good command with Bethancourt today.
To suggest that delta is Pierzynski's fault would be incorrect, I believe. As usual, I watched the games instead of analyzing the data, so I've left myself open to be a Luddite again.
Since you were kind enough to quote my post, let me point out that it includes the following words: "It is clear watching the games..."
My critique of Pierzynski's defense is based on observing his play (I too occasionally indulge in that sort of Luddite activity). It is interesting to see that we might disagree here, which shows that observation can lead to different conclusions depending upon the observer. Or am I incorrect in inferring from your post that you like AJ's defense.
My main observation with respect to his defense is that he is slow in reacting to balls that bounce away. He seems below average in agility. Also a fair number of catchable balls seem to tick off his glove. Those are my observations from casually watching the games. And yeah his framing seems poor.
Hyuk....No, I agree with you, I think his defense is below average.
My issue, as usual, is with the quantification, in particular the -4 DRS. I'm having a hard time squaring his rather obvious defensive issues with the fact that he's been hitting the dog**** out of the ball for a month.
I don't think the lousy defense comes close to eclipsing hitting.400 with power, which people quote as gospel after looking at a defensive metric system.
Hitting is the hard part. That's why Tulo makes $25m/yr and AJ has a job at 38. Defense is easier, certainly on a marginal utility scale defense is easier, and when I hear Bethancourt is as valuable or more valuable than AJ at this point in the season it rankles me because I know it's not close to true.
Add to that the difficulty various measuring systems have admitted concerning catcher defense and I'm skeptical. Then I see that part of that conclusion is drawn with results of the pitcher throwing to the two different players and I know the derivation of whatever metric they're using, while well-intentioned, is ultimately crap.
Jonathan Lucroy is a fine catcher, offensively and defensively. But now somebody has integrated framing into their measurement and he's worth 7.2 WAR. Using your $8m/WAR rule of thumb that's $65m or so. And while I agree Lucroy is an excellent catcher, I disagree with these crude and short measurements that some are hanging their hats on.
Yknow?
It bugs me. It's quasi science. Or misused and misinterpreted statistical science.
?
He came in down two runs in the eighth with the bases loaded, and, after hitting the first guy, induced a double play ground ball that the SS misplayed. Then he got a strikeout. Then he gave up a hit and a run.
So he could have gotten out of the inning allowing one run, not his own. As it was, he gave up one hit and one earned run. That's not getting lit up.
Having said that, we could have protected him instead of Jaime and let him pitch at Gwinnett.
I watched the game. He stunk. Hit the first guy he faced. Twins yanked him when it was obvious he was on the verge of spinning out of control. 24 pitches, 13 strikes.
They should have taken Martin.
Actually, the Twins drafted Martin at some point. It was frankly out of character for the Twins to draft Graham over Martin, given that Martin fits their profile a bit more closely.
Graham could be fine and I think he was a better option to protect than some of the guys they protected, but I wonder if he'd would have been a substantial improvement over what we've had out there to this point. With the DH, AL teams have a huge advantage with Rule 5 picks. Twins stashed Johan Santana way back when and seem to be doing the same thing with Graham. There are a lot of dead innings in a season for the 12th guy out of the bullpen to absorb. Same thing with fringe position players. You don't have as much of a need for PHs in the AL with the pitcher not hitting, so you can basically have a 25th guy who guards the water cooler from Chris Johnson clones.