[外電] The case for releasing Ike Davis
In 2014, the Oakland A's got absolutely no production from first base. They
combined Brandon Moss, an injured injured Stephen Vogt, a dash of Callaspo,
an eye of Barton, and a pinch of Blanks and Freiman to concoct an
underwhelming .684 OPS, 26th in MLB. Their total line:
A's 1B, 2014: .230/.303/.381, .684 OPS (26th) 22 HR
Every single one of those players from last year is gone except for Vogt, and
he's back to catching now that his foot has healed. In the offseason, the A's
addressed the position by adding bounce-back candidate Ike Davis,
professional hitter Billy Butler, and unknown slugger Mark Canha, with Ike
slated to get the bulk of the time as the heavy-side platoon starter. And
that is how the A's vastly improved their production at first base for the
2015 season. Let's check in on them and marvel at how much better they've
been:
A's 1B, 2015: .235/.308/.372, .679 OPS (24th) 10 HR
Aw, hamburgers. Their OPS has actually gone slightly down, and at best
they've treaded water from last year's abysmal performance. Ike has gotten
about half the playing time, and his personal numbers are representative of
the overall problem:
Ike: .234/.305/.359, 85 OPS+, 3 HR
He's not the only first baseman who is failing to hit. Canha has an OPS+ of
85 as well, Butler is at 87, and rookie Max Muncy posted a mark of 80 while
filling in short-term. However, Butler (who mostly plays DH anyway) is signed
to a three-year deal so there's not much you can do with him -- bench him, or
keep running him out there in optimal situations and hope he recovers. Canha
and Muncy both still have a lot of team control left, and they also both hold
some positional versatility -- Canha in LF, Muncy at 3B. So, Butler is stuck
here, and Canha and Muncy are pieces the team needs to keep.
What about Ike?
That leaves Ike. When the A's picked him up for a song last winter, I was
excited. He's just their kind of undervalued commodity, a corner player who
has enough skill to be above-average at a position where you would otherwise
be destitute. He had never OPSed less than .727 against right-handers, with a
career split of .813, and he would be protected in a strict platoon in
Oakland. He'd get on base a bit and play slick defense, and as a bonus there
was always a chance of tapping into the power that had led to 32 homers in
2012. He had been slightly above-average at the plate in 2014, and at age 28
there was every reason to hope he was past the worst of his offensive
troubles from the year before and ready to be a productive hitter once more.
But it just hasn't worked out. He was doing fine in mid-May, with a .775 OPS,
but then he pulled a quad while legging out a double and went on the DL for
33 games. Since his return on June 9, he's batting .189/.263/.292 -- he's not
hitting for average, he's not walking or getting on base, and he's hitting
for doubles power at best. He's making a lot of contact, but over half of it
is on the ground and the ones he does hit in the air don't go far. It visibly
appears that he's aiming to spray the ball rather than swing for power, but
the results aren't justifying the approach. Rather than building on his 2014
campaign and bouncing back to become Oakland's next Seth Smith or John Jaso,
he's battling James Loney and Logan Morrison for the worst OPS among all MLB
first basemen. And, while I personally think he plays good defense, the
metrics seem to think he's average at best in the field. He just hasn't
really helped the team much on either side of the ball.
The thing that makes Ike different than the other first basemen is that he
only has one year of team control left. He's eligible for arbitration one
last time next winter, and then he can be a free agent after 2016. That means
two things: The A's don't have long-term control over him, and they aren't
even contractually committed to keeping him next year. He's making $3.8
million this season, and in the arbitration process you still usually get a
raise even after a bad year because you're being rewarded just as much for
your increase in service time. If the A's keep him, he'll almost certainly
make at least $4 million, and possibly even $5 million.
Given that Ike entered with a career history featuring a couple big red flags
and then posted what is currently on pace to be his career-worst season at
age 28, how likely are the A's to tender him a $4+ million contract for 2016?
He seems like an obvious nontender candidate to me -- last winter, he was a
discount replacement for Moss, but next year he'll be on the other end of
that relative spectrum with cheaper guys like Canha and Muncy and even Rangel
Ravelo available. The A's are always looking to get cheaper without getting
worse, and replacing Ike with a group of young lotto tickets is one easy way
to do that. And given that he was acquired for virtually nothing last winter
and is having a bad year, he also won't have any trade value in the upcoming
offseason.
Looking forward
So, if Ike is not a good bet to be in the picture next year, and he's not
helping on the field anymore this year, then why is he still here? The A's
have a bunch of games left, and that could be a chance for Canha to finally
play every day, or for Muncy to continue cutting his teeth in the bigs. And
it's not just that -- some contending team might have use for Ike as a hitter
off the bench, or as an emergency replacement at first base down the stretch.
Maybe Houston could use him, if they aren't thrilled with Chris Carter or
Luis Valbuena and want to cut some of the strikeouts out of their lineup.
Maybe the Cardinals aren't satisfied with Mark Reynolds and a struggling
Moss. The Nationals aren't getting much from the husk of Ryan Zimmerman. Ike
isn't a bad player -- he can help someone out there, but he's not a good fit
at all anymore for the rebuilding A's. So why not set him free now while he
might still be able to catch on elsewhere and play in meaningful games this
season? Perhaps if the Oakland waives him in August, another team will claim
him and take on the rest of the money in his current contract too.
I genuinely like Ike. I know he's having a bad year, but I like his game
because I have a special appreciation for plate discipline and underrated
defense. He was also one of the players present for our BlogFest interviews
at FanFest in February, and he struck me as a nice, humble man, who is aware
of what he's good at and what he's not and is fully confident that he has the
skills to help a team. I really liked him in person. But not everything works
out, and in this case he's just not the right man for this particular roster
anymore.
It's time to let Ike Davis go, both for his own good and the good of the
team. But man, I'll miss him.
POLL What should the A's do with Ike Davis?
(A) Release him now, let him catch on elsewhere, and let the rookies play.
(B) Keep him for the rest of 2015, but then nontender him this winter.
(C) Keep him in 2015, nontender him, but then try to re-sign him cheaper.
(D) Keep him in 2015, tender him this winter, and give him another shot at 1B
in 2016.
個人腦補:放掉Davis 清掉慢跑王的爛約(看有沒有球隊願意收 或者認賠殺出)
明年讓Canha Muncy Ravelo這幾隻多練一些 順便簽朴炳鎬來玩玩看(?)
http://goo.gl/z9VdEv
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※ 編輯: Brothre23 (211.74.184.214), 08/13/2015 19:09:11
推
08/13 20:37, , 1F
08/13 20:37, 1F
我來整理一下 conditon大賭爛Semien nobody大不爽Butler 這樣說沒錯吧XDD
※ 編輯: Brothre23 (211.74.184.214), 08/13/2015 20:39:13
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