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Thursday, May 23, 2013

How to get Hunter Pence production for a third of the price

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88 comments

How to get Hunter Pence production for a third of the price

POSTED: Thursday, August 2, 2012, 8:10 AM
Hunter Pence had been the most productive hitter for the Phillies this season. (Tom Mihalek/AP Photo)

There was a lot of head-scratching on Tuesday afternoon when the Phillies traded away Hunter Pence for a package of players headlined by Giants catching prospect Tommy Joseph. In a recent column, esteemed baseball scribe Jayson Stark relays an email he received from a baseball person who wondered, "What the (heck) are the Phillies doing?"

It is a fair question to ask, provided the focus is the totality of their moves over the last few offseasons. The one thing the last few days have shown is that the Phillies' ability to spend on payroll is a serious issue moving forward. Ruben Amaro Jr. consistently deflects questions about his budget, but with a little deductive reasoning, we can get a pretty good idea of the meaning of his maneuvering prior to Tuesday's non-waiver trade deadline. And what I infer is that $189 million is going to be their targeted payroll for the foreseeable future. That is the number of the luxury tax threshold after next season. I infer that they are willing to spend up to that amount next season, meaning they would be subjected to a 17.5 percent tax (an amount that is hardly a deterrent). But they do not seem willing to go over that amount on a consistent basis, as evidenced by the apparent fact-finding mission they conducted with regard to trade interest in veterans like Cliff Lee and Jimmy Rollins. Even the Yankees are trying to get their payroll under $189 million. The new CBA sets up that number as a near-de-facto salary cap, given the penalties for exceeding it multiple seasons in a row. 

So, there we have it: $189 million. 

As I wrote a couple of days ago, the Pence trade made sense when you considered the cost efficiency of his production when compared to potential replacements. In this instance, I am convinced they did the right thing, as I'll attempt to illustrate in a minute. The real time to ask, "What the (heck) are the Phillies doing?" was last offseason, when they decided to allocate $12.5 million a year to a pitcher who will only log 60 or 70 innings in a season. Or a couple years before that, when they decided to give Ryan Howard a $25 million a year contract extension two years before his existing deal expired, in essence guaranteeing him $164 million over seven seasons through his 36th birthday. When you consider that, the following season, the Red Sox signed Adrian Gonzalez to a seven-year, $154 million extension that runs through his 36th birthday, and that Gonzalez was one year closer to free agency when he signed his deal, it is difficult to argue that the Phillies did not take an unnecessary and potentially crippling financial risk when they handed Howard an extension two years before free agency. 

It is even fair to wonder what the Phillies were thinking when they signed Cliff Lee to a five-year, $120 million deal if such a commitment was going to end up being a problem. As far as I can tell, nothing unforeseen has happened since the Phillies made the decision to sign Lee to that deal. They knew Cole Hamels was going to be a free agent. They knew Jimmy Rollins was going to be a free agent and that they would likely have to overpay him because the options for replacing him were so slim. They knew they had already guaranteed Howard significant money. I guess what they didn't know was that Chase Utley would miss five months in 2010 and 2011 because of his knee condition. Still...it is hard to imagine that after only a year-and-a-half the Phillies are suddenly contemplating whether they would be better off without Lee and his salary. Sure, his numbers are down this year. But he was as good as advertised last season. And, frankly, I wouldn't be surprised if, at the end of September, his production for 2012 is right where it has been for his career. The guy has always been streaky, and we might be getting set to enter one of his hot streaks. So again, the question: if the Phillies decided Lee was worth all of that money a year-and-a-half ago, how can they now be thinking that he might not be?

Long story short, you can't afford to overpay at every position if you want to maintain a payroll under $190 million. The Phillies are already overpaying at first base, short stop, closer, and starting pitcher. Which is why Hunter Pence is no longer a Phillie. 

The Phillies knew there was a possibility that Pence could ask for upwards of $15 million arbitration after the season. Essentially, they could end up paying him as much as a free agent corner outfielder. It just didn't make sense, because Pence is not a $15 million-a-year player, especially not for a team that has a finite amount of payroll space. 

In his calendar year with the Phillies, Pence hit .289 with a .357 on base percentage, .486 slugging percentage (.842 OPS) and 28 home runs in 676 plate appearances. Solid production. But not $15 million-a-year production.

Consider what the Phillies could get by pairing newly-acquired right fielder Nate Schierholtz with a right-handed hitting counterpart in a platoon situation. Below are three candidates who will be free agents after the season: Scott Hairston, Jonny Gomes, and Reed Johnson. I took each player's numbers against left-handed pitchers over the last two seasons and added them to Schierholtz's numbers against right-handed pitchers over the last two seasons.

The results: 

Hairston/Schierholtz platoon: .286/.341/.486 (.827 OPS), 24 HR, 118 SO, 662 PA

Gomes/Schierholtz platoon: .288/.367/.467 (.834 OPS), 22 HR, 136 SO, 671 PA

Johnson/Schierholtz platoon: .295/.349/.475 (.824 OPS), 18 HR, 114 SO, 639 PA

Now, compare those lines to the one posted by Phillies right fielders this season:

.271/.333/.449 (.783 OPS), 18 HR, 91 SO, 456 PA

They have gotten more home runs (the equivalent of 26 home runs over a 671 plate appearance season), about the same strikeouts, about the same isolated power, and less base-reaching ability.

All three of the hypothetical platoons are making less than $2.5 million combined this season. Schierholtz should be in line for an arbitration raise in the neighborhood of $2.75 million, but a right-handed platoon-type outfielder goes for between $1 million and $1.5 million on the open market (or, at least, it did on last year's open market). How much more does Hunter Pence give a team than the aforementioned platoons? More importantly, is it worth an extra $10 million to $12 million? 

Rather than Pence alone, the Phillies would be better off with one of the above situations combined with an extra $10 to $12 million spent on a pair of veteran strikeout arms for the bullpen, or a strikeout arm and a $5 million upgrade in center field (Shane Victorino instead of Rick Ankiel?), or a strikeout arm and a $5 million upgrade at third base (Kevin Youkilis instead of Freddy Galvis?). 

The Phillies have made plenty of questionable decisions over the last few seasons. Heck, you can question the return they got for Pence. But the philosophy of the move makes perfect sense, at least now that we know that they have a hard cap on what they can spend. 



88 comments
Comments  (87)
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:37 AM, 08/02/2012
    Ruin Tomorrow Jr finally did something right by getting warm bodies back for two stiffs. Loved Shane for what he gave us over the years but his tank is unquestionably running low. Pence is a disaster and I'm so happy the Giants are stuck with him. We're a better team now than we were on Tuesday morning.
    rockinginthefreeworld
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:44 AM, 08/02/2012
    Lee has been a failure. He was re-signed for one reason, to win one of the three games needed to win a five game post season playoff series in order to get to the World Series. He blew a four run lead in that five game series. How is that not failure?
    Dull
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:13 AM, 08/02/2012
    No, he was re-signed to be an excellent pitcher, which he has been.

    You can't get to the playoffs without good pitching in the regular season and Lee was a big part of the reason they were even in the playoffs in the first place.

    But beyond that, if you're judging the worth of a player based on ONE GAME (during which he didn't pitch particularly poorly, although he did get unlucky with regard to number of hits he gave up) then you're doing it wrong.
    EricL
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 1:20 PM, 08/02/2012
    It's hard to argue that Cliff Lee has been all that bad this year. Compared to the rest of the league, Cliff Lee has actually been pretty good overall. He has a top 20 WAR and a top 5 SIERA among starting pitchers in the MLB. I still think that he's pretty darn valuable.
    46 and 2
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 3:17 PM, 08/02/2012
    You're wasting your breath, most Philly fans including Ruin Tomorrow only think of SIERA as it pertains to the environmentalist organization. And they only think of WAR as the band who sung "Low Rider".
    oyoyer
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:46 AM, 08/02/2012
    the papelbon contract is still the worst. $12.5M for a closer without any other bidders (seemingly). paps' agent must have done a good job convincing rube there were other suitors.
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:46 AM, 08/02/2012
    Smoke and mirrors people. World Series are won every year by teams with a few stars and lots of average role playing guys. Look at the last 10 years of WS Champs....no better example than the '08 Phils. One Ace pitcher, one veteran guy throwing 72 mph, and a couple of merely serviceable 4's or 5's. Bruntlett, Feliz, Jenkins, etc....on the roster. You can't and you don't need to accumulate a Fantasy Team of $15 million dollar players at every position in order to win. Somehow the populace and the front office got carried away and thought you did. Time to fill holes like RF with a platoon just like Murph states above. Maybe at a few other positions, too....mainly 1st base. I'd keep Wiggy and split his time with RH as Howard should never, ever under any circumstances see another LH pitcher the rest of his career. Never, nada.
    Mark1npt
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:52 AM, 08/02/2012
    Amen, brother !
    rockinginthefreeworld
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:49 PM, 08/02/2012
    You forget how World Series the Yankees have won or something?
    JoeinSouthPhilly
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 5:03 PM, 08/04/2012
    Having long term contracts at every position is simply unsustainable. Mark nails it here; you have to find value when and where you can. Perfect example is Gillick finding Werth who, at the time, was truly a reclamation project. Or, who would have expected David Freese production in 2011? Finally, Mark echoes what I have thought for a long time- Howard should be platooned with a low cost option (Wiggy fits) because Howard simply can NOT hit left handed pitching. Period.
    Special Agent Fox Mulder
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:49 AM, 08/02/2012
    jt06, agree, this writer tries to overanalyze stuff. Why sign a player like Hairston, Gomes or Johson when you have that player in Mayberry a lot cheaper and better offensively. Second, platooning works for me and has worked in the past like the aforementioned 1993 team that had more than a platoon in LF: Morandini/Duncan at 2B and Eisenriech/Chamberlain in RF.
    EL Zorro
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 9:49 AM, 08/02/2012
    How bad is Ruin Tomorrow Jr ? Ask yourself this....if we ate $8 million a year of Howard's salary ($40 mill over the life of the contract), is he tradeable ? Was he before his injury ?
    rockinginthefreeworld
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:02 AM, 08/02/2012
    BTW, we can dream of platooning all we want, but as long as Charlie is the manager that won't happen. He falls in love with players and stick with them even when they are struggling and need a day or two off against tough pitcher (see Ibañez, Howard, even Utley against LH or a Polanco against a tough RH hitter). It ain't going to happen with this manager.
    EL Zorro
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:04 AM, 08/02/2012
    I meant to say Mayberry is better defensively and should add more versatile and younger.
    EL Zorro
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:11 AM, 08/02/2012
    Jt06 & El Zorro - couldn't anymore. Platoon OF always are statically strong (that's why they are platoons) and theoretically gives the manager a PH to use and saves a roster spot with the 5th OF. With that in mind, why would you potentially overpay for a FA that other teams can also attract when you have a built in solution. If at the very least, Mayberry would be the cheaper option (like last year) and its a bonus if he plays out of the platoon and really takes off (ie: werth). They argument for a vet FA is his experience. But those vets only became vets b/c at one point a manager had to play them. This is where Charlie needs to step up and eat his pride and play younger guys. If Mayberry & Brown end up as career platoon players at 500K to 1million for the next 1-3 years. That's not such a bad deal.
    PhillyinBmore


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