Kendrys Morales

Mariners Trade Mike Carp for Something Determined to be Something Yet to be Determined

When Mike Carp has a beard he looks like what Brian Posehn would look like if Brian Posehn was skinny. Skinnier, anyways.

Mike Carp is gone. That’s really only terrible news if you rode the wave and bought a Carp jersey in mid-August 2011. That would be the month when Carp was amid his second consecutive month with an incredibly unsustainable BABIP (.392 in August) and an even less sustainable HR/FB (24.0 percent). It’s only shocking if you didn’t read that the team DFA’d Carp.

For some historical reference, the highest ever BABIP for a player with more than 5,000 plate appearances is Ty Cobb at .378, and only Jim Thome and Ryan Howard have higher HR/FB since batted ball type has been recorded in box scores, considerably after Ty Cobb’s career ended. Carp was truly incredible in those months, and he has the 169 and 152 wRC+ to prove it.

He’s been significantly worse outside of those two months, but he’s not a bad hitter overall. He’s got a career 109 wRC+ and some of his 2012 struggles can be written off to injury, or even bad luck.

It’s also very possible that Carp will always be better than Justin Smoak, who has become the go-to comparison for Carp since Carp got DFA’d. Smoak, however, has a remaining minor league option. His potential is arguably higher. His ceiling upon entering the league was believed be higher at least.  It won’t take coaxing much of that potential out before Smoak could be a better player than Carp.

Of the players without options: Carp, Casper Wells, Robert Andino, and Josh Kinney, it is easy to conceive that Carp’s chances of being on the 25 man roster—a necessity to keep him within the organization—was the… Continue reading

Latest Kendrys Morales News, and Burying Your Head in the Sand

For a large chunk of the past year the Mariners have seemed intent on over thinking the 1B/C/DH/Cleanup hitter spots on their roster. I wasn’t a fan of the trade that sent John Jaso to Oakland and ensured that Jesus Montero would receive an inordinate amount of time behind the plate for another season. I wasn’t a fan of the signing of Raul Ibanez. I wasn’t a fan of a potential trade for Justin Upton either.

And while I was deeply and madly in love with the trade that brought Kendrys Morales to Seattle, according to Greg Johns the use of Morales, much like the use of many other players in those positions in the past year, is a bit perplexing:

“Right now the plan coming in is we see him getting the bulk of his at-bats at DH,” Wedge said, “but we want him to get reps at first base because that’s an option for him as well.”

You may remember a couple weeks ago when I pointed out that Morales has been statistically good at first base defensively. One of the reasons I thought Morales made sense was that it basically guaranteed that Justin Smoak would end up spending some time in AAA this year. He’s got a remaining option and hasn’t done the big club much good, and hasn’t really “earned his spot.”

So here’s my new approach to this topic, per phrases.org.uk:

Bury your head in the sand

Meaning

Refuse to confront or acknowledge a problem.

Origin

This comes from the supposed habit of ostriches hiding when faced with attack by predators. The story was first recorded by the Roman writer Pliny the Elder, who suggested that ostriches hide their heads in bushes. Ostriches don’t hide, either in bushes or sand, although they do… Continue reading

Kendrys Morales Probably Isn’t as Bad a Fielder as You Think

For many people the idea that Kendrys Morales will play most of his games at designated hitter has become basically a foregone conclusion. Morales came over for Jason Vargas after a year in which he played 92 games at DH.

Morales and his first base defense have been scoffed at, and written off. We’ve assumed he’s a butcher at first base, but that’s really not true.

One of the things that fuels this belief is that I think we assume that Kendrys Morales is fat, and that fat guys can’t play good defense. There’s logic behind this. According to Body Mass Index Kendrys Morales is obese. Don’t get me wrong, Morales isn’t modeling a two piece swimsuit any time soon, but Body Mass Index is a system of measure that really shouldn’t apply to professional athletes. Professional athletes are outliers, and Marshawn Lynch is also considered obese by BMI standards.

Morales moves substantially slower than Lynch, and one of the hallmarks of a bad fielder is being slow. That’s why it’s important that we compare apples to apples. Usain Bolt and Yuniesky Betancourt weigh basically the same amount, but they play different sports and are similar only in the way that a greyhound is similar to a bag of liposuction fat: they were-from/are both living creatures on this earth. Betancourt is the liposuction fat. I don’t know if they put liposuction fat in bags.

Most first baseman aren’t small guys. A lot of them may be less stocky, they may be equally stocky. Morales, is certainly stocky, and while height and weight likely correlate well with body fat percentage, and body fat percentage likely correlates well with speed, which correlates reasonably well with fielding ability, the amount of outliers increases at each level.

We also think that Morales is… Continue reading

Kendrys Morales for Jason Vargas a Significant Net Gain for the Mariners

The Mariners made a trade this afternoon that is quite frankly phenomenal. There’s no sense being poetic or cryptic over the Jason Vargas for Kendrys Morales swap that the Mariners pulled off today, and it probably isn’t difficult for anyone to see the benefit, or how the Mariners got objectively better.

In a post in early November I detailed my Mariners offseason plan that was an alternative to the one that Dave Cameron posted over at U.S.S. Mariner. In my post, one of my ideas was to trade for Kendrys Morales:

Trade Chone Figgins, cash, Shawn Kelley, and a mid-level prospect for Kendrys Morales

Despite the assumption in that post that the Mariners would pay Figgins entire salary, the biggest pushback I got was that it would be impossible for the Mariners to trade Figgins for Morales, ignorning the additional value in this trade in the form of Shawn Kelley and a prospect. And this certainly wasn’t a trade that I expected to be fair. The Angels have more to gain from a marginal value gain than the Mariners, who weren’t “One Josh Hamilton” away from a playoff surge. Even before they signed Hamilton the Angels had a log jam in their lineup. I wrote this in November:

Morales is coming off the first full season he’s played since 2009. He broke his leg celebrating a walk off homerun halfway through 2010, and missed all of 2011 because of complications from the same injury. Last year he became the third man where the Angels should really only field two guys: their first base and DH positions.

That logjam got no more clear when the Angels inked Hamilton, but it finally forced their hand that they’d have to trade from their surplus of position… Continue reading

An Alternative Mariners 2013 Offseason Plan

At some point somebody conducted a study in which they asked people what forms of flattery they were aware of, and of those, which was the most sincere. The result of this scientific study was “imitation” and so was born an oft-used phrase designed to legitimize copycats. It’s in the spirit of that moment in science that I present my offseason plan for the Mariners, borrowing a page from the king of all things Seattle sports blogging, Dave Cameron. My plan is significantly different than Dave’s, and I’ve taken the liberty of waiting a couple weeks to let the beginning stages of free agency shake themselves out (including the Hisashi Iwakuma signing). Here it is:

Sign Kelly Shoppach for a one-year, $2 million deal.

Sign Cody Ross for two-years, $12 million

Trade Chone Figgins, cash, Shawn Kelley, and a mid-level prospect for Kendrys Morales

Offer Joe Blanton , Ryan Dempster, and Shaun Marcum one-year, $6 million, and sign whoever agrees first.

I feel pretty strongly about signing Shoppach, and I’d actually be willing to go two years for him personally. When I initially started looking at this year’s free agents, I noticed that not many people are talking about Mike Napoli. Napoli had a really rough 2012 in terms of batting average, which falsely drives opinion in many cases, but he’s always been a guy that hits for a lot of power, and that mashes lefties. He’s a notch below average defensively, but his bat, and ability to play first base could have made him a particularly good fit for the Mariners. That’s not to say he couldn’t be a fit even with the signing of Shoppach, but Napoli’s price tag is almost assuredly higher than I’d like to pay for him.

Napoli… Continue reading

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Seattle Mariners 2013 Top 25 Prospects
Seattle Mariners Top Prospects

It’s that time of the year again to take a look at the Mariners top prospects. A lot has changed this year, and there are several guys, namely Carlos Triunfel, Stephen Pryor, and Carter Capps that won’t be included...

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