Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Jesus Montero and the Yankees' DH Quandary

Jesus Montero is not only the best prospect the Yankees have had in recent years, but also one of the most interesting in all of baseball.

Montero is a true catcher in name only, but has an elite level bat, offering the potential for a Mike Piazza-like career. Here is where Montero’s case starts to become very interesting. Unlike Piazza, who spent his entire career in the National League, Montero is currently with the Yankees, who, conveniently, employ the use of the DH, giving Montero an additional landing spot if his defense is as bad as many scouts suggest. However, using the DH spot as a place to store Montero damages his value, as it is much easier to find a DH than it is a catcher. Furthermore, the Yankees’ 2011 roster will include three position players over 35, and the 2012 roster will include at least two, both of whom (Alex Rodriguez and Derek Jeter) have dealt with nagging injuries and a decline in defensive performance in recent seasons, so leaving the DH spot open for their frequent usage as they continue to age will probably be a consideration. So, essentially, the Yankees’ option for him is to keep him behind the plate, at least for now, while he is young. Given that the only catchers the Yankees have under their control beyond this season are Russell Martin and Francisco Cervelli, one of whom has talent but injury woes and inconsistent past performance, and the other who simply isn’t good, there is definitely room for Montero there. The question is whether or not he will be tolerable defensively, and if he isn’t, then his future with New York becomes very doubtful moving forward. The team cannot move him to first base, where Mark Teixeira resides, and given his struggles as a catcher, it would probably take considerable effort for him to learn another corner position, which may not even ultimately be a successful transition.

The Yankees know he has an elite bat. They know they will need young hitters to supplement Robinson Cano as guys like Rodriguez and Jeter move closer to retirement and Nick Swisher and Teixeira exit their respective primes. One solution would be to trade him now; take advantage of his value by dangling him to add a frontline starting pitcher, but the problem lies in the fact that those guys simply are not available. Not now, anyway. It would probably be in the best interest of the Mariners from a purely baseball perspective to consider moving Felix Hernandez, but it doesn’t appear they will. The Dodgers seem unlikely to move Clayton Kershaw as well, and along with Hernandez, those are the type of young, elite pitchers the Yankees would need to acquire in order to justify trading Montero. Since those pitchers are unavailable, the Yankees only real option appears to be holding onto Montero for now, hoping he improves defensively and can take over as the team’s starting catcher at some point in 2011. If he doesn’t, his trade value will take a hit, along with his actual value to the team.

As a DH, Montero’s value is limited by the lack of defensive value, as well as the abundance of options to fill that spot, and as a catcher, it’s limited by his lack of defensive prowess. His trade value is limited by the above, as well as the lack of available options for trade. Essentially, Montero is one of the least valuable top prospects in baseball, at least until his defense can improve, if it ever does.

Monday, December 27, 2010

2011 Catcher Rankings

This is the deepest the catcher spot has been at any time in recent years, with potential for elite production from as many as 6 players, given the emergence of Buster Posey and Carlos Santana in 2010. If Jorge Posada can stay healthy as a full time DH, the top 7 on this list will all be extremely valuable as starters in all leagues in 2011. Once you get past those guys, if you are willing to sacrifice some certainty for potential, your best bet is probably Matt Wieters, and as far as late round fliers go, Russell Martin could pick up a bunch of R/RBI/SB from the bottom of a stacked Yankees lineup.

Name Tom Alex Overall
Joe Mauer 1 1 1
Buster Posey 2 3 2
Victor Martinez 5 2 3
Brian McCann 4 4 4
Mike Napoli 3 6 5
Carlos Santana 6 5 6
Jorge Posada 7 7 7
Kurt Suzuki 9 8 8
Miguel Olivo 8 12 9
Matt Wieters 10 10 10
Geovany Soto 12 9 11
A. J. Pierzynski 11 14 12
John Buck 14 11 13
Rod Barajas 15 16 14
John Jaso 13 20 15
Carlos Ruiz 20 13 16
Miguel Montero 16 19 17
Ramon Hernandez 21 15 18
Yadier Molina 19 17 19
Russell Martin 17 21 20
Chris Iannetta 18 22 21
Ryan Doumit 22 18 22

Welcome

Welcome to the Roto Baggins: The Fellowship of the (Championship) Ring blog. We are going to focus mainly on fantasy baseball here, but will include posts about other baseball-related topics as well. Our primary goal is to provide the best analysis possible for you to win your fantasy baseball league, so look out for a bunch of content including positional rankings and draft tips as we prepare for the 2011 fantasy baseball season. Our second goal is to entertain you, and we plan on providing interesting and thought provoking posts analyzing teams, baseball economics, and the social aspects of the game as well.

Our first real post should be up soon, with catcher rankings for 2011. Check it out!

Tom and Alex