Tag Archives: 25-man roster

Seattle Mariners 2015 Preview, Offseason Plan

Question: How do the Mariners pick up six more wins?

That was the inquiry posed by ownership in the afterglow of missing the playoffs by one game.  Not the standard boiler plate spin from years past such as “we made positive strides forward” and “our young players received valuable experience.”

No hinting towards payroll cuts.

No, this time, it was about wins, and how to get more.  Specifically, it was about finding two more bats for the middle of the order and raising payroll to accomplish that goal.

How GM Jack Zduriencik goes about addressing the need for offense is another big question, with the answer predicated upon where payroll will be set.

For the purposes of our projected 25-man roster for 2015, we’re raising payroll to $125M.   Why $125M, you ask?  Simple. The Mariners can afford it.  Felix Hernandez and Robinson Cano are the team’s only two long-term contracts.  And the revenues from their own Regional Sports Network and MLB’s profit sharing is undoubtedly enough to allow for upwards to a $150M payroll. But even without the RSN and profit sharing, the increase in attendance alone last season – roughly 300,000 – amounts to around $30M in additional revenue from gate and concession receipts.  The Mariners missed the playoffs by one game sporting a $107M payroll for the second half.  If the Mariners are truly intent about raising payroll in order to pick up more wins, it’s logical that payroll should increase from the $107M they ended the season with.  Of course, ownership’s intent could be to increase from the $91M they broke camp with.  Which one they will use as their starting point, no one really knows.  But ownership expressed a desire to pick up six more wins, and in terms of win values – where teams are paying roughly $6M per win – that would mean a bump of $36M, or a $127M or $143M payroll. For the sake of erroring on the safe side, we are using the season starting payroll as our launch point, and come in $2M under budget.

Without further ado…

Trade SP Taijuan Walker, C John Hicks, and RP Tom Wilhelmsen to the Dodgers for OF Matt Kemp and $30M.

The Skinny:  The Mariners are in the market for a “big” bat. Someone who can provide pop from the right side, play a corner outfield position, and hit cleanup behind Robinson Cano. The Dodgers are looking to clear room in their uber-crowded outfield, and have needs in their rotation, bullpen and at catcher. Can you say match made in heaven?

Trade OF Michael Saunders and SS Chris Taylor to the Mets for SP Dillon Gee and OF Matt den Dekker

The Skinny:  Saunders has mysteriously fallen out of favor with Zduriencik, Brad Miller and  Taylor are redundant, and the Mariners need a mid-rotation arm and fourth outfielder.  The Met’s desire ground ball and strikeout type pitchers, both of which Gee is not, seek a young shortstop and corner outfielder with pop, and have an excess of young center fielders. The stars seem aligned for a Mariners-Mets deal.

Sign DH/1B Billy Butler to a 3/$24M contract

The Skinny: Every year Zduriencik looks into trading for Butler. And every year the Royals hang on to him. Not this year. The Royals declined Butler’s $12.5M option, casting him out into the free agency pool ripe for Zduriencik’s picking.

Sign SP/RP Chris Capuano to a 1/$2M contract

The Skinny: Last season the Mariners learned the hard way that you shouldn’t  rely on and expect untested rookies and reclamation projects to pitch a full season. Lesson learned.   Capuano serves as the perfect safety net: a reliable arm that can pitch out of the bullpen and transition seemlessly into the rotation if needed.

Sign 3B Kyle Seager to a 5/$60 extension with an option for a sixth year.

The Skinny: Seager has emerged as the game’s top all-around third basemen not named Beltre. And he’s just entering his prime.  Locking him up for the foreseeable future is a no-brainer.

The Lineup

Position Players
1. Austin Jackson, CF
2. Dustin Ackley, LF
3. Robinson Cano, 2B
4. Matt Kemp, RF
5. Kyle Seager, 3B
6. Billy Butler, DH
7. Logan Morrison, 1B
8. Mike Zunino, C
9. Brad Miller, SS

Bench
1. Matt den Dekker, OF
2. Willie Bloomquist, INF/OF
3. Jesus Sucre, C
4. Carlos Rivera, INF

Rotation
1. Felix Hernandez
2. Hisashi Iwakuma
3. Dillon Gee
4. James Paxton
5. Roenis Elias

Bullpen
1. Charlie Furbush (L)
2. Chris Capuano (L)
3. Brandon Maurer
4. Danny Farquhar
5. Yoervis Medina
6. Dominic Leone
7. Fernando Rodney

Analysis

The Mariners need offense, and they need a big time run producer to hit behind Robinson Cano.  Kemp fills that need in every way: a cleanup hitter with right handed power, capable of slotting into a corner outfield position, and a proven track record against mlb pitching. Yes, trading away one of the top pitching prospects in baseball may seem steep. Let alone the team’s most effective reliever from last season as well as the Mariners’ top mlb-ready catching prospect. But the key to this deal is getting the Dodgers to kick in enough money to get Kemp’s annual average salary down to $15M. And the Dodgers aren’t going to do that for nothing. While Walker, Hicks and Wilhelmsen seem like a lot to give up, all three come from organizational positions of strength, thereby minimizing their ill-effect on depth. Yes, there is some risk with Kemp due to his injury history and remaining length of contract. But Kemp’s relatively young age (just turned 30 in September) and last season’s return to form (.287/.346/.506 and 25 home runs) should relieve any anxiety as to whether or not Kemp is worth acquiring. That said, the Dodgers have made no firm indication they are still in the market of trading one of their most productive hitters. But with Andrew Friedman now in control of things, you can bet the Dodgers will be looking to trade payroll for prospects. And if the Dodgers are intent on retaining Hanley Ramirez, freeing up $75M over the next five years may help in accomplishing that.

The next step is to find a replacement for Walker, ideally someone who can slot behind Hernandez and Iwakuma and give the team 200 innings.   With Citi Field being reconfigured into a more hitter friendly park, reports are that Gee and his fly ball pitching ways no longer fit in with the Mets’ rotation plans.  We profiled Gee last year as a target for the Mariners after he went 12-11 with a 3.62 ERA, tossed 199 innings, and struck out 142 batters while walking only 47.   Gee struggled in 2014 after suffering a lat injury, but is again healthy and should benefit greatly from the pitching-friendly confines of Safeco.  The Mets continue to seek a young shortstop with offensive upside whom they can plug into their everyday lineup, as well as a right fielder with some power.  Saunders’ .800+ OPS potential should be enticing and could be a perfect fit in right field for the Mets.  And Taylor, while not projected to be a star, would certainly meet their wish for a young shortstop with plus potential.  The Mets may prefer Brad Miller, who some feel projects higher both offensively and defensively.  If that was the case, swapping out Taylor for Miller shouldn’t be a deal breaker.  With Ketel Marte perhaps just a year away, both Miller and Taylor are expendable.   As for den Dekker, the emergence of Juan Lagares has blocked his path to centerfield, relegating den Dekker, instead, to backup duties. A solid defender and line drive hitter, den Dekker lacks the power to fulfill the Mets’ everyday corner outfielder need.  And with Kirk Nieuwenhuis on the roster, the Mets already have a left handed hitting outfielder to backup left, center and right fields. With his ability to also play all three outfield positions, den Dekkar would provide the Mariners with an ideal left handed compliment in center and right fields, as well as someone who could step into the everyday lineup should someone go down with injury.

Last season, the Mariners produced just a .190/.266/.301 from their designated hitter position.  Unquestionably, Zduriencik will be looking for an upgrade here.  And possibly a big one.  Victor Martinez seems to be the perfect candidate.  But Martinez is reportedly looking for a deal starting in the three year, $15M per season range, and is attached to a compensation pick.  The Mariners would probably have to guarantee at least four years and upwards to $20M per year to land Martinez, not to mention surrending this years first round draft pick to the Tigers.   And that is a pretty risky commitment to give for someone who will be 36 at the start of the season.  Another option is Cuban sensation Yasmany Tomas. Only 24, Tomas has big power from the right side, and can also play a corner outfield position.  But Tomas is looking to break the seven year, $72.5M deal signed last season by fellow county man Rusney Castillo, and that price is probably too rich for the Mariners considering Tomas has never faced mlb pitching.

As for Butler, there’s no denying he had a down year in 2014. Butler produced just a .271/.323/.379, managed only nine home runs, and struggled against right handed pitching with a .255/.301/.352. But Butler’s BABIP against right handed pitching of .292 was well below his career mark of .322, suggesting he’s a candidate to return to something closer to his career norm. And despite his overall drop in offensive production, Butler still mashed lefties to the tune of .321/.387/.460. Butler is young (28), healthy, and provides power from the right side. He fills the void at DH, can take some innings at 1B, isn’t attached to a compensation pick, and should come at a much more reasonable price than either Martinez or Tomas.  For the Mariners, that checks all the boxes on the wish list.

If there was one area that hurt the Mariners playoff push more than anything season last year, it was a lack of pitching depth.  During the last part of the season, the Mariners’ starting rotation simply fell apart.  Hernandez fell into a three game slump, going 0-2, allowing 10 earned runs in 17.1 innings, and a .948 OPS against.  Iwakuma went winless during a four game stretch, allowing 18 earned runs in 17.1 innings.   And Roenis Elias simply ran out of gas and had to be shut down. Erasmo Ramirez and Brandon Maurer tried to salvage a sinking rotation, but both were erratic and ineffective. With playoff hopes teetering, set-up man Tom Wilhelmsen took the ball on the second to last game of the season hoping to give the Mariners a much needed quality start.  He lasted only two innings.  As a result, Zduriencik has stated acquiring greater pitching depth will be an importance this offseason.  The Mariners will almost certainly try to find some veteran reclamation arms that they can stash in Tacoma. But another option that should be explored is finding a reliable arm that can swing between the bullpen and rotation. Over the past two seasons, Capuano has 32 starts and 32 relief appearances to his credit. In 2014, Capuano pitched out of the pen for Red Sox, and then moved into the Yankees’ starting rotation after being dealt at the trade deadline.

In 2014, Seager slashed a .268/.334/.454, hit 25 home runs, and won his first Gold Glove award. Of all the hoopla over Zduriencik’s ability to evaluate and acquire young talent, Seager is the only position player drafted during the Zduriencik era to have established themselves as a productive everyday player.  With free agency looming in 2018 and offensive production becoming a rare premium, locking up Seager should be near the top of Zduriencik’s to-do list.  A five year, $60M contract with an option for a sixth year should be welcomed with open arms. The yearly payout: $5M; $8M; $12M; $17M; $18M; $21M option.

Conclusion

With the additions of Kemp and Butler to join Cano and Seager, the Mariners would dramatically upgrade their middle of the batting order.  Kemp would provide a legitimate cleanup hitter behind Cano, and Butler would be a solid hitter to slot behind Seager.  Dealing Walker to the Dodgers would be a hard and unpopular decision, but with Hernandez and Iwakuma again at the top of the rotation, and the emergence of Paxton and Elias to anchor the back end, Gee would fill the need for a #3 pitcher who can eat innings.   Capuano would provide flexibility and depth for the pitching staff, as would den Dekker for the outfield.   The bench would be deep and flexible, with Bloomquist able to play the infield or outfield, Rivera able to play 2B, SS, and 3B, and den Dekkar able to fill in at any  outfield position.

For Better or Worse, Mariners Ready to Open 2014 Season

With just hours to go before the Mariner’s 2014 season opener, I thought I would quickly post the 25-man roster with corresponding payroll. As shown below, the Mariners will begin the year with a guaranteed payroll of $89.22M. If Logan Morrison, Corey Hart, Chris Young, and Fernando Rodney all reach their respective incentives, payroll will settle at $98.22M.

Injuries to outfielder Franklin Gutierrez, and starting pitchers Hisashi Iwakuma and Taijuan Walker created a few notable surprises to the 25-man roster. Rookie outfielder Abraham Almonte, expected to battle for a bench spot, will be the starting centerfielder and leadoff hitter. Fellow rookie outfielder Stefan Romero, considered a long-shot to make the club, will begin the season as the fourth outfielder. Rookie pitcher Roenis Elias will make the jump from Class AA and serve as the Mariners’ fourth starter in the rotation. Soon-to-be 35 year old veteran pitcher Chris Young, having logged only 4 2/3 innings for the Mariners this Spring after being picked up from the Washington Nationals, will anchor the rotation as the fifth starter. And underachieving starting pitcher Hector Noesi was assigned to the bullpen.

We here at Mission Mariner have more than adequately addressed our concerns with this year’s roster, so I will refrain from doing so again. But one look at the opening day lineup card and it is safe to say that the team GM Jack Zduriencik has put together is rife with questions and concerns. If the stars and planets somehow align, 82 wins might be attainable. But as things stand now, it’s doubtful the Mariners will be much improved over last season’s 71 win team. I do think the Mariners are good enough to avoid 90 losses, so a 73-89 season sounds about right.

Anyway, without further ado, your 2014 Seattle Mariners:

Position

Player

Salary

 

Position

Player

Salary

C

Zunino

$.500

SP

Hernandez

$22.587

1B

Smoak

$2.6375

SP

Ramirez

$.500

2B

Cano

$24.00

SP

Paxton

$.500

SS

Miller

$.500

SP

Elias

$.500

3B

Seager

$.500

SP

Young

$1.25/$4.725*

LF

Ackley

$1.70

CF

Almonte

$.500

RH

Medina

$.500

RF

Saunders

$2.30

RH

Noesi

$.500

DH

Morrison

$1.75/$2.125*

RH

Farquhar

$.500

RH

Wilhelmsen

$.500

Bench

Hart

$6.0/$10.65*

LH

Furbush

$.500

Bench

Buck

$1.00

LH

Beimel

$.500

Bench

Romero

$.500

CL

Rodney

$7.00/$7.50*

Bench

Bloomquist

$2.80

SP

Iwakuma

$6.50**

SP

Walker

$.500**

SP

Hultzen

$1.70^

RH

Pryor

$.500**

Total:

$44.6875/$49.7125

Total:

$44.537/$48.512

Total Payroll:

$89.2245/$98.2245

* Guaranteed salary/Salary based on reaching all performance incentives.  **Player to start season on Disabled List.  ^Player to miss season with injury.

Jack Zduriencik And His Baffling Roster Construction

Usually during this stretch of Spring Training, optimism runs fairly high within me. As I previously wrote about, it’s around this time where I’m habitually stricken with an unchecked case of sanguinity, causing the unabated belief that that the Mariners will most certainly be playoff bound. And simply believing is never enough. Rather, the fervor becomes so prodigious it’s necessary to enlighten everyone within earshot. But as is the normal course of development, the Mariners will tail-spin out of contention, and I will then spend long hours trying to rationalize why another season failed to extend beyond September.

It’s a vicious cycle I fall prey to each year. My own form of personal purgatory. My Sisyphus, if you will.

But this year is different. This year, even after landing one of the top five hitters in all of baseball, I won’t be overcome with such delusions. This year, I’ve been reminded that I’m better than that.

The other day I was browsing through the Mariner’s blog section at the Seattle Times and came across this interesting snippet from a March 10 article regarding first baseman, Justin Smoak:

“But it’s the hitting that will define Smoak, and he knows it. You can’t be a light hitting first baseman. McClendon isn’t asking him to be Prince Fielder type, but he’d settle for Mark Grace….”

The comment was written by Times’ beat writer Ryan Divish, and was in reference to manager Lloyd McClendon’s announcement that Smoak would be his starting first baseman for the 2014 season. It wasn’t clear whether this was something derived from Divish’s own thoughts, or if he was simply paraphrasing McClendon. But considering the dearth of personal opinion found in any of Divish’s reporting, one can pretty much surmise this was born from McClendon himself.

What makes the statement interesting isn’t the fact that McClendon’s expectations for Smoak are no longer of the prototypical power hitting first baseman that GM Jack Zduriencik and the Mariners have touted Smoak as being since his acquisition from Texas (well, that is interesting, but a discussion for another day). Rather, its McClendon’s temperament and apparent willingness to, instead, settle for Smoak being Mark Grace.

That’s right, settle for Mark Grace.

The same Mark Grace who finished second in the rookie of the year voting in 1988, was a three time all-star, a three time gold glover, a four time MVP candidate, and one of the top hitters in all of baseball during the 1990’s, averaging a slash line of .311/.392/.462 from 1992 to 2001. Call me crazy, but I’m not sure there are many teams today that would look at that type of production as something to settle for.

Now, McClendon’s reconciliation with Smoak has to do with his willingness to trade homeruns for doubles. In fact, a lot more doubles. Forty to forty-five doubles to be exact. But seeing how Smoak’s career high in doubles is 24, as well as the fact he hit only 19 last year, jumping to 40-45 doubles in 2014 would be nothing less than a major achievement. Perhaps even a miracle.

But in the eyes of the Mariners, Grace-like production from Smoak would be settling. And it’s with this one singular verb where clairvoyance materializes, cutting through my haze of romanticism like a Felix Hernandez fastball burning through the night time air. For it’s a stark reminder that much of the Mariners’ success in 2014 teeters on hope and overcoming odds rather than meeting expectations. It’s a memorandum on the fact that although Zduriencik and the Mariners like to tout the possible, the 25-man roster is governed by the plausible.

And since 2009, the “possible” taking precedent over the “plausible” has been the modus operandi of Zduriencik’s roster construction. Whether it has been an undying faith in the progression of the youth, or relying on the rebirth of veterans two or three years past their last productive season, the assemblage of the 25-man roster has consistently been built on the backs of players expected to perform well beyond any sort of reasonableness. And nothing represents the kind of Hail-Mary hopefulness that has long defined Zduriencik’s roster formation than McClendon’s belief that Smoak can be a Grace-like .300/.390/.460, 45 doubles and 20 homerun hitter.

Now, don’t get me wrong. Such an evolution by Smoak is possible, and would pair very nicely with Robinson Cano in the middle of the batting order. And yes, it would be a huge boost for this team.

But so would Corey Hart being able to stay healthy enough to play a decent right field regularly, rookie Abraham Almonte proving to be a solid everyday centerfielder and leadoff hitter, and veteran pitchers Scott Baker and Randy Wolf regaining their old form and solidifying the middle of the rotation, especially with Hisashi Iwakuma and Taijuan Walker out with injuries for at least the first month of the season.    And, of course, questions still remain whether a bullpen that ranked as one of the worst in 2013 can improve despite losing two of their best arms in Oliver Perez and Stephen Pryor, whether Mike Zunino can show he doesn’t warrant further time in Tacoma, whether Brad Miller can prove he has what it takes defensively to stick at shortstop, and whether Dustin Ackley can continue hitting in 2014 like he did during the second half of 2013.

All of which is possible, but, realistically speaking, not plausible. And if the Mariners hope to make any noise in a tough AL West division, they will need most of these possibilities to become realities. But with Zduriencik choosing to once again lean on untested youth and affordable free agent veterans looking to find the fountain of youth and good health, the results have been less than reassuring so far this spring.

Predictably, Hart and his knees have not shown the ability to play the outfield (or anywhere for that matter) regularly. Almonte’s defense in center field has been so-so while his bat at the top of the order has been meager, producing a .174/.237/.304.  And Baker and Wolf have both been released, leaving the Mariners with a questionable opening day rotation consisting of Hernandez, Erasmo Ramirez, rookie James Paxton, rookie Roneis Elias, and one of Blake Beavan or Hector Noesi.

However, recognizing the fragility of their pitching staff, the Mariners promptly went out today and bolstered their rotation by signing soon-to-be 35 year old veteran pitcher Chris Young who was released by the Nationals. Young is coming off shoulder surgery on his throwing arm, hasn’t pitched at the major league level since 2012, and whose last full season as a starter was in 2007 where he made 30 starts for the Padres.

Wait, did I say bolster? Scratch that.

The Mariners entered the offseason needing to address the starting pitching, the outfield and the bullpen. Outside of signing closer Fernando Rodney to replace closer Danny Farquhar, the Mariners elected to ignore all three areas, believing instead that somehow, something will transpire and provide resolution. Perhaps Zduriencik and the Mariners see something the rest of the baseball world cannot?

It’s possible.