This doesn't have anything to do with the Cubs series. 1 of 3 from the Cubs is what should be expected and seeing Gore look like an ace again is great. However, we are in the "stats are real now" part of the season and last time we looked at the kids whose stats said real good things about them. CJ Abrams continues to be cool but I noted his propensity for extended cold streaks was keeping him from being special. That's not the point, he's still overall good. The only one with a real issue out of that group was Jackson Rutledge. I mentioned he could fall back and he really has. Still he's not young but he IS new to relief pitching. He's still learning. We'll see.
So while there are kids who look good this year there are others who do not.
Keibert Ruiz has been in free fall since a hot start. While there was hope from some on here than his general lack of hitting was due to previous injury and now that he's healthy he would go back to being decent that hasn't been the case. He remains extremely good at squaring up and meeting pitches. This lets him maintain one of the lowest strikeout rates in the game. Unfortunately he's bad at picking which pitches to try to hit (Chase rate is high), he's bad at generating any sort of power (exit velocity, etc. is very low), he doesn't get the ball up enough (launch angle too low), and he's super slow so he's not going to leg anything out. He also doesn't identify pitches well (as noted by that chase rate) so his walk rate is very low. You can sort of take a bad hitting catcher if they can field but Ruiz is generally considered a poor defensive catcher (though one with an ok arm). We're getting very close to having to accept that despite the contract Ruiz is neither the catcher of the future or the catcher of now.
Fleet of foot Jacob Young make Keibert look like James Wood when it comes to power. One of the weakest bats in baseball who gets nothing up in the air, I'm sure this combination worked for him all through his career so far. He could leg out enough hits and play stellar defense. But the margins on that working get slimmer and slimmer and the body gets slower and slower and Jacob is rapidly approaching a point where he has to do something better to stick around. It could be that he walks a bit better. Never really his strong suit but he is a little better this year and he doesn't chase. Maybe if he does that he can set himself up as a 5th OF. That would be a disappointment given the Nats hopes when he rose up the minors at a decent clip but honestly it would be a win given his draft position. He was never a prospect.
Speaking of OFs despite the assurances of the rabble in the comments (rabble I said!) Dylan Crews's too early actual stats meant more than his too early fancy stats, and he's seen his performance level out while his fancy stats drop to meet what he is doing. He strikes out too much and doesn't walk enough in general and his fielding, which was supposed to be stellar, has simply been adequate so far. I don't come here to bury Crewsar though. He immediately improved his walk rate after a dreadful start and before his injury was beginning to generate more power. The fancy stats, now like all stats more real with a third of a season down, suggest unlike Ruiz and Young, the guy can swing a bat. He doesn't chase and he can really nail it when he gets it right. He just doesn't do it often enough yet. It does seem like it's a matter of time before he's a productive major leaguer. From there we can discuss what that means, but we gotta get there first and to do that he's gotta get back from injury. Why is he in the "aren't alright" section? He's alright to me! Well because this isn't what anyone was hoping for the guy when drafted. You wanted an impact star ASAP and he's simply not that. Reset expectations from 10 to 8 and see where he goes and we'll all be fine*
This isn't bad for a split of what kids are working and what aren't, especially when you consider only Ruiz is really crashing out. Young is merely not overperforming like hoped, and Crews is just not an immediate ROY candidate. Both of these guys can still be valuable, even very valuable in Crews' case, hitting below the high targets that had been set.
There is a base, we all can see it. It could be an actual foundation with guys like Garcia and Ferrer being ok and more kids on the way. But what the FAs are doing is killing the team and they are going to need some good FA signings to put this team over the top.
*You're going to yell at me again, aren't you?
I think I've been, at times, among the most vocal proponents of all three of these guys, but I think your takes here are mostly fair.
ReplyDeleteOn Crews, I think we should have been expecting 8 out of 10 from the jump. He was good, not great, in the minors and the stats that made him so famous were all produced with a metal bat. He always felt to me as more of a high-floor prospect than a guy who might take a run at the HOF. He's young and might end up getting a lot better, but it's also decently likely that he doesn't and just settles in as an above-average regular. That's fine, and I think we're pretty aligned on the distribution of potential outcomes here. My only quibble is with your claim that fewer than 200 PAs of poor results / terrible luck should have meaningfully shifted our priors. I think you're 100% wrong about that.
On Ruiz, yeah, it's bad. He gets murdered in the cumulative stats because he plays so much, but even using rate stats, he's very bad at blocking and very bad at receiving. 20th percentile or worse. That, with his average throwing, can play if he's putting up a 90 wRC+, especially given the cheap contract. But the chances of that production being achievable keep dwindling. I'm not throwing in the towel yet, but C is a problem. The FA options aren't great, and I don't think the internal options are better / ready, so the team is really in a tough spot on this one.
For Young, with his other tools, he's an all star with a wRC+ of 95, an above average regular with an wRC+ of 85, and a valuable bench piece with an wRC+ of 75. The first was always overly hopeful speculation, but the second seemed to be possible for a while. I think we've basically seen pitchers and defenses adjust to maximally exploit his extreme lack of power, and I'm not confident that Young will be able to counter adjust. I'm still putting him back in CF when his shoulder is healed, but the clock is ticking, and we can all see that there are a multiple legit prospects vying for those reps.
I've never been that high on Young, what we're seeing this season is what I pretty much expected. He was always a glove first guy and, despite his speed, he wasn't exactly stealing a ton of bases (when he could get on base).
ReplyDeleteRuiz has always been so confusing to me since he's so good at making contact, but his bat is sooooo slow. You'd think the coaches would work on getting that bat speed up even if it results in less consistent contact, but the bat speed has consistently been 3rd percentile year over year. Without improvement to the bat speed, he'll never get much better
As for Crews, I'm taking most of what we've seen with a grain of salt. Rookies rarely come up and are immediately stars. Crews had a better chance than most, but he clearly needs to find his footing. And his advanced stats and the eye test both show a guy who is pressing. Chasing too many balls, off-balance swings inducing weak contact, etc. He was a slugger in college, I have no doubt he'll be a slugger in the pros, just needs to relax or something
On a bright note, if Young doesn’t play any better in his return, Hassell isn’t an awful replacement and might actually be okay. And House should be up sooner rather than later to improve 3b. Cavalli is also gearing up. His last start wasn’t great, but he’s close to being fully stretched out. Unfortunately, there isn’t any catching help coming.
ReplyDeleteFeels like catcher has been a problem ever since Wilson Ramos tore an ACL. Maybe I'm exaggerating. Or am I???
ReplyDeleteGenerally, yes. Weiters was an absolute black hole, but you only have to go back to 2021 (pre-Keibert signing) to see the Nats putting up 4+ WAR from the catcher position - Gomes+Keibert+Barrera+Adams
ReplyDeleteA no hit/good glove in CF isn't a terrible thing as long as the corner OFs and IFs can hit. Lowe has been disappointing and House is a question mark, especially with his high chase and K rates in AAA. It will be interesting to see what FA moves are made in the offseason
ReplyDelete