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Laddie Up, Punto on DL

Punto on the DL with a bad bat groin.

Mugshot Purgatory: IF and Ms

With roster changes in the middle infield, I thought I'd highlight a few of the relevant players.
Demoted: Alexi "Laddy" Casilla, the second best second-baseman named Alexi in the Division.
casilla_alexi_2009casilla_alexi_2008aaacasilla_alexi_2008casilla_alexi_2007
(Casilla '09, '08AAA, '07, '06)
Laddy's beard assymmetry disturbs me. My high school job was grocery bag-boy. One of the other bag-boys was a semi-retired farmer who went by "Laddy." He didn't look much like Casilla.

Recalled: Matt "2-hole" Tolbert, and Waiting in AAA: Luke Hughes and Trevor "The Blogger" Plouffe.
tolbert_matt_2009aaahughes_luke_2009aaaplouffe_trevor_2009aaa
tolbert_matt_2009hughes_luke_2009plouffe_trevor_2009
(Tolbert '09AAA, '09; Hughes '09AAA, '09; Plouffe '09AAA, '09)
I have no photos before this year for any of them.

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Alexi Casilla Is An Awful Fielder?/Expect Team Defense To Improve

The question mark is there because I'm a little surprised--though not completely surprised. (Also, I know it kind of seems like I'm rubbing salt in his finger or something, but sometimes you can't help but notice things at the wrong time.

I was going to write about Adam Everett, since I advocated acquiring him in the offseason and so far he's given the Twins jack squat. And I'll get to that in a second.

But what I really wanted to emphasize was that defense has been a problem for the Twins (and I'm hardly the first person to point this out around here.) I thought that I would probably wind up arguing that Casilla was an average defender, so it would be tough for the Twins to improve much by replacing him defensively, but then the silly facts got in the way of my thoughts. Here's a list of RZR for qualified second basemen this year:

.903 -- Mark Ellis
.835 -- Robinson Cano
.833 -- Placido Polanco
.831 -- Grudz
.823 -- Pedroia
.815 -- Roberts
.800 -- Lopez
.799 -- Kinsler
.799 -- Iwamura

Now, the first thing that stands out to me in that list is that Mark Ellis is lapping everyone else at second base in the AL. Just smoking them. It's almost like when Tiger Woods won the 2000 Masters by shooting 12 under par while the runners up shot 3 over par. That's just a huge, huge gap.

Everyone else is pretty closely bunched around .815. (If you include the NL, almost the only difference is that Brandon Phillips is pretty good at .863, but otherwise you still basically have a clump of guys from .800 to .830.) Now, let's take a look at Twins second basemen who have had at least 150 balls-in-zone in some season from 2004-8:

.847 -- Punto, 2005
.831 -- Castillo, 2006
.801 -- Castillo, 2007
.789 -- Rivas, 2004
.768 -- Casilla, 2008

And, well, that doesn't look so great for Casilla, does it? Now, that's only 151 BIZ, which is really a very small sample size, so that's another reason for the question mark on the title of this post. But it's not exactly making me feel good about his defense. Also, in 2007, Casilla had a .784 RZR with 134 BIZ. Somewhat better, but still bad.

RZR isn't everything, but it's just about all the fielding information I know of for Casilla. The only other bit that I've run across is Dan Fox's* Simple Fielding Runs--a stat he devised while he was at Baseball Prospectus. SFR had Casilla down as 4.5 runs below average (on ~150 plays) at second base in Rochester last year, and 5.1 runs below average (on ~150 plays) at shortstop. For reference, Luis Rivas was at 5.4 runs below average (on ~190 plays) at second base and 6.6 runs below average (on ~250 plays) at shortstop.

*Dan now has a position as a sort of data consultant for the Pirates' new front office, if memory serves.

Also potentially of note, SFR had Deibinson Romero as the best infielder in the 2007 Appy league, at 13 runs above average on about 185 plays.

Anyway, all of the data I have points to Casilla being below average as a defender. When I watch him play, I am unimpressed. Yes, he's got some speed, but I don't feel like he gets great jumps on the ball, or plays deep enough to get to a lot of stuff up the middle or in the hole. He also doesn't seem to have great hands and has a decent but not great arm. Plus, there are the mental lapses. As much as we might think that they will go away with more experience, I don't think that that is necessarily a good assumption.

The Hardball Times has the Twins at -16 runs on defense overall, which puts them about even with the Tigers, but ahead of Seattle, KC, and Texas. (Holy crap do KC and Texas have awful fielding numbers.) When you break it down between infield and outfield contributions, the outfield is below average (.829) at an .821 RZR, but not by a ton, and their out-of-zone plays are pretty close to average. The infield, though, has the worst RZR in the AL, and the second-fewest out-of-zone plays. So if we're going to point to a defensive weakness, it's gotta be in the infield somewhere.

Certainly, I can't imagine that Brendan Harris has been helping matters whatsoever, SSS RZR at 2B notwithstanding, he's been a defensive disaster basically everywhere he's gone. Mike Lamb was pretty awful at 3B (just as bad as Batista in 2006 by most measures I can find), so getting him out of the mix helps. Buscher has been better, but it's been an improvement from awful to bad--Buscher has a .702 RZR compared to Lamb's nearly unfathomable .602, but .702 puts him at the back of the pack in the AL, with guys like Alex Gordon and Casey Blake. (Adrian Beltre's .707 RZR makes a bad first impression, but his 55 out-of-zone plays is far and away the best in the league. He's not the best fielding 3B in the AL, but he's above average.)

So that brings us to shortstop. I remember not many people being impressed with Adam Everett when he came up, and certainly his shoulder injury made his fielding look horrific at times. But, let's check the record:

.861 RZR, 79 BIZ -- Everett
.860 RZR, 86 BIZ -- Punto
.790 RZR, 119 BIZ -- Harris

At least going by RZR, Everett was as effective as Punto, and that was with a limp noodle for an arm. I have no idea what kind of shape is arm is in now, but I imagine that we will find out. .861 is pretty decent though, tops in the AL is .869 (from Captain Maybe I'll Actually Position Myself Where The Coaches Suggest) and second is Orlando Cabrera at .863.

My main impression of Adam Everett's fielding, though, is from Bill James' essay in John Dewan's The Fielding Bible on Jeter vs. Everett. If you can still find a cheap copy, I recommend it. Here's the part that seems most relevant to this discussion, where James is discussing the video he was given of Jeter's and Everett's 20 best and 20 worst plays:

That being said, watching Derek Jeter made 40 defensive plays and then watching Adam Everett make 40 defensive plays at the same position is sort of like watching video of Barbara Bush dancing at the White House, and then watching Demi Moore dancing in Striptease. The two men could not possibly be more different in the style and manner in which they run the office. Jeter, in 40 plays, had maybe three plays in which he threw with his feet set. He threw on the run about 20-25 times; he jumped and threw about 10-15 times, he threw from his knees once. He threw from a stable position only when the ball, by the way it was hit, pinned him back on his heels.

That you probably didn't need any special video sessions to realize--Jeter's a total drama queen out there.

Everett set his feet with almost unbelievable quickness and reliability, and threw off of his back foot on almost every play, good or bad. Jeter played much, much more shallow than Everett, cheated to his left more, and shifted his position from left to right much, much more than Everett did (with the exception of three plays on which Everett was shifted over behind second in a Ted Williams shift. Jeter had none of these.)

This sounds like something that's going to generally be tough to pick up by watching someone make 3-4 plays per game, but would be easier to notice watching 40 consecutive plays that Everett makes.

Jeter gambled constantly on forceouts, leading to good plays when he beat the runner, bad plays when he didn't. Everett gambled on a forceout only a couple of times, taking the out at first base unless the forceout was a safe play.

This makes it seem as though Everett is pretty conservative out there, though given how much he has dominated the defensive metrics in the past, making the sure out might not be sexy, but could be pretty good regardless.

Many or most of the good plays made by Jeter were plays made in the inield grass, slow rollers that could easily have died i nthe infield, but plays on which Jeter, playing shallow and charging the ball aggressively, was able to get the man at first. These were plays that would have been infield hits with most shortstops, and which almost certainly would have been infield hits with Adam Everett at short.

For Everett, those type of plays were the bad plays, the plays he failed to make. The good plays for Everett were mostly hard hit groundballs in the hole or behind second base, on which Everett, playing deep and firing rockets, was able to make an out. These, conversely, were the bad plays for Jeter--hard-hit or not-too-hard-hit groundballs fairly near the shortstop's home base which Jeter, playing shallow and often positioning himself near second, was unable to convert.

James goes on to talk about how that he's merely described a difference in style here, and from these observations alone, he can't tell anything about which is good or bad. Then he goes to quote some data that indicate Everett was very effective with his style, while Jeter was not even as effective as a normal SS.

Why am I going to all this trouble here? Well, it seems to me that Everett's arm is a key part of what has made him a special defensive shortstop. If he can't make really strong throws, he can't position himself as far back, and he won't get to as much in the hole or up the middle. However, as we saw above, even without a strong arm, Everett looks like an above average defender at shortstop. A weak arm will almost certainly keep him from being an elite defender, though, which he has been in the past.

I tend to think that even if Everett gets the job done as well as Punto, because of his style, he's simply not going to receive as much praise. He's the guy in the back of the class who doesn't talk to anyone but still gets good grades, whereas Punto's the guy who sits in the front row, volunteers to answer every question and gives the teacher an apple every day. Also, given the way that TV broadcasts focus so much on showing us the batter and pitcher between pitches, or close-up shots of whatever, it's going to be tough to notice a guy whose calling card is that he positions himself a little differently and doesn't do anything flashy.

In closing, I'd like to emphasize that this is much more a description of how things have been in the past rather than a prediction of how things will be in the future. As I noted, I have no idea what condition Everett's arm is compared to earlier this year, let alone compared to how it was last year or earlier in his career. Still, I would expect Everett-Punto-Harris(3B)-Span to be a lot better than Harris(SS)-Casilla-Lamb/Buscher-Cuddyer/Kubel/Monroe. So in the near term, the Twins will probably move towards playing more low-scoring games than they did early in the season.

Sustainability Report: Alexi Casilla

Alexi Casilla has been great so far this year for the Twins, but can he keep it up?

First, let's look at what he's done in the minors:

.270/.346/.348 -- age 19, Rk/A
.311/.378/.383 -- age 20, A/AA/AAA
.318/.385/.398 -- age 21, A+/AA
.269/.345/.344 -- age 22, AAA
.219/.350/.250 -- age 23, AAA (2008)

.293/.367/.366 -- overall

Since Casilla came up and got a cup of coffee two years ago, I think it tends to get lost in the mix, but Alexi Casilla is really young. Delmon and Gomez are younger, but not in a meaningful way.

Casilla has also been asked to play for a lot of different teams in a lot of different places in his rather brief career. That certainly happened a bit more with the Angels than it did with the Twins (one side effect of their patience with prospects is that you basically never look back and say that they jerked a player around between levels in the minors), but it still happened.

Last year seemed to be something of a step back for Casilla, but it wasn't really that bad of a year when you adjust for factors like: age, position, and sample size. Yes, overall it was about 550 PA (and about the worst 200 PA of his career when he was with the Twins), but in the scope of a career, 550 PA is not that much (and 200 PA is especially miniscule within that scope.) The list of players who have struggled to hit in the majors when they are 22 years of age is a long one, filled with both distinguished and undistinguished players, so I don't know that that really helps us to judge him any more than his ~200 PA this year helps us to judge him.

Getting back to his minor league performance--through all of the level switches, when you look at the aggregate numbers, he's been able to hit for average. A .293 average for that age at those levels is nothing to sneeze at, and with just 178 strikeouts against 158 walks in 1686 plate appearances, mixed in with some speed, hittng for average looks like a sustainable skill for Casilla.

Casilla's walk rate has also been above average, though not completely stellar. As long as he can hit for a high average, though, pitchers will be careful enough with him that he should be able to keep up a reasonable walk rate.

Alexi hasn't had much power. That's a negative, and with the low strikeout rate, it seems unlikely that he'll develop anything more than gap power. On the other hand, I've seen Billy Beane quoted as saying, essentially, that good hitters can become power hitters but power hitters don't become good hitters. The idea is that power tends to be one of the last tools to develop and if you hit for a high average, you're probably good at making contact, and those hits might eventually go for more bases, but if you're not good at making contact, you can't usually develop that skill. So there's a chance that Casilla could hit for a ~.150 ISO in a couple of his peak seasons. That's not Ruthian, but it would be Alomarian. Either way, power or no power, he's a middle infielder so it's not a huge concern if he can continue to get on base.

From a fielding standpoint, I just don't know what to make of Casilla at this point. It's tempting to think that his speed should give him good range, but he also doesn't seem (to me) to have great hands and in the past he's been prone to making silly mistakes. I'm essentially pleading not enough information here, but in the absence of more information, I'd say that he'll probably wind up being closer to average than he'll be to great or terrible.

Overall, I look at Alexi, and I see a guy with a better track record than Luis Rivas. I know that doesn't carry a lot of weight with Twins fans, but Rivas wasn't as bad as he was made out to be. He was a replacement level player who got essentially replacement level dollars. Rivas never really helped the team win, but he wasn't actively hurting them either. (And the Twins did manage to win a lot of games with Rivas around.)

So it seems completely plausible to me that Alexi can be an above replacement level player on a yearly basis. Just how far above replacement level is tricky to say. The tools are there for him to be a borderline All-Star (or even a full-fledged All-Star) every now and then--in the same way that Luis Castillo was a borderline All-Star some years and managed to actually make the team 3 times--but there are enough question marks that you wouldn't want to count on it.

I don't expect Alexi to hit .321/.366/.455 for the rest of the season, but .290/.350/.375 seems like a reasonable expectation to me. Going back to Luis Castillo, he hit .323/.383/.395 in the second half of 2006. The gap between that performance and my expectation for Casilla is not that big.

Great Moments in Enhanced Gameday History – 1 July 2008, inning 3

gameday Casilla foul
Casilla vs. Robertson


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Game 80: Milwaukee at Minnesota

McClung vs. Blackburn

Blackburn looked pretty good at the convention, but I'm posting this a fair bit in advance so I can't be 100% sure he's going to make this start. His xFIP of 4.19 would look a little better in recent years gone by. This year, it makes him just a bit above average for a starting pitcher.

Team leaders and trailers in VORP as of June 23rd:

23.7 -- Prince Fielder
23.4 -- Ryan Braun
15.6 -- Corey Hart
13.5 -- Russell Branyan
10.5 -- Gabe Kapler

-1.4 -- Hernan Iribarren
-1.9 -- Jeff Suppan
-2.2 -- Tony Gwynn
-2.2 -- Ben Sheets
-5.4 -- Bill Hall

22.5 -- Joe Mauer
19.9 -- Justin Morneau
7.6 -- Alexi Casilla
7.5 -- Jason Kubel
2.9 -- Nick Punto

-0.4 -- DSPAN2
-0.6 -- Harris
-0.9 -- Monroe
-3.4 -- Adam Everett
-11.5 -- Mike Lamb

Game 77: Minnesota at San Diego

Slowey vs. Peavy

Going into the series, team leaders in VORP:

30.1 -- Adrian Gonzalez
18.5 -- Brian Giles
9.2 -- Jody Gerut
6.5 -- Edgar V Gonzalez
5,4 -- Kevin Kouzmanoff

22.4 -- Joe Mauer
19.8 -- Justin Morneau
7.7 -- Alexi Casilla
7.5 -- Jason Kubel
2.9 -- Nick Punto (this is not a typo)

I heard someone recently say that Adrian Gonzalez might be creeping into the NL MVP debate, but I don't see that. Adrian's had a good season so far, but Lance Berkman and Chipper Jones have just been out of their minds, and have something like a 20+ run lead in VORP so far.

Game 50: Twins at Tigers

Gotta love a good night of sleep. I went to bed at 10:30 last night and my wife was in bed reading magazines. She was more than a little disgusted with me as she wanted to continue to read those rags right there. I calmly informed her that she could read them anywhere else but our bed because it was 10:30 and I was going to bed. But, it's Saturday night!, she exclaimed. In a sign that I'm getting old, I said, So?

Twins fans retired early last night after the Tigers piled on 19 runs in the first five innings. I'm a fan and everything, but I'm not interested in watching them get pummeled. Nope, last night was a good night to watch Celtics basketball, go out for a late night garage cleaning, rearrange your sock drawer, etc. But, as most self-absorbed character in cinematic history once said, "Tomorrow is another day."

Well, "tomorrow" sees the Twins trying to win a rubber game in their 3-game series against the Tigers. Thank goodness those 19 runs don't carry over to today. It'd be nice, though, if the Twins got a good start out of Glen Perkins today. Perkins has gobbled up six innings in each of his three starts and last time out he went out for a seventh inning and ran into a heap of trouble, giving up three runs -- the only three runs he allowed all game -- while recording just one out. So, pencil Perkins in for about six innings and see what the bullpen can do. We won't see Rincon or Bass today as they each threw over 40 pitches last night. Reyes threw 16 pitches, so he is probably available.

The Tigers are rolling Justin Verlander out there today. Verlander hasn't been the same pitcher this year that he was last year. His strikeouts are down significantly and his walks and home runs allowed are up.

A couple of notes from last night's game. Matt Macri (pronounced, apparently, ma-CREE) got a couple of hits in his first major league game, including a hit in his first at bat. Alexi Casilla passed Jason Tyner and Al Newman (among others) on the career home run list, when he belted his second of the year (and his career). He's also tied for fifth on the team for this season. Sigh.